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A34797 The interpreter, or, Book containing the signification of words wherein is set forth the true meaning of all ... words and terms as are mentioned in the law-writers or statutes ... requiring any exposition or interpretation : a work not only profitable but necessary for such as desire thoroughly to be instructed in the knowledge of our laws, statutes, or other antiquities / collected by John Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1658 (1658) Wing C6644; ESTC R31653 487,806 288

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Nisi prius which came to his hand that term which received he bindeth into a bundle and bestoweth them The Custos breviam also maketh entry of the Writs of Covenant and the Concord upon every Fine and maketh forth exemplifications and Copies of all Writs and Records in his office and of all Fines levied The Fines after they be ingrossed the parts thereof are divided between the Custos brevium and the Chirographer whereof the Chirograper keepeth alwayes with him the Writ of Covenant and the note the Custos brevium keepeth the concord and the foot of the Fine upon the which foot the Chirographer do because the Proclamations to be endorsed when they be all proclaimed This Office is in the Princes gift Custos placitorum coronae Bracton l. 2. cap. 5. This seemeth to be all one with him whom we now call Custos rotulorum Of this Officer I find mention in the Writ odio acia Regist orig fol. 133. b. Custos rotulorum is he that hath the custodie of the Rolls or Records of the Sessions of Peace and as some think of the commission of the Peace it self Lamb. Eirenarch lib. 4. ca. 3. pag. 373. He is alwayes a Justice of Peace and Quorum in the County where he hath his Office Idem eodem and by his Office he is rather termed an Officer or Minister than a Judge because the Commission of the Peace layeth by expresse words this especial charge upon him quòd addies loca praedicta brevia praecepta praecessus indictamenta prodictacoram te dictis sociis tuis venire facias Idem eodem where read a competent tract of other things belonging to this Office Custos of the spiritualities custos spiritualitatis vel spiritualium is he that exerciseth the Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of any Dioces during the vacancie of the See the appointment of whom by the Canon Law appertaineth to the Dean and Chapter ca. ad abolendā Extra Ne sede vacante aliquid innovetur But with us in England to the Arch-bishop of the Province by Prescription Howbeit divers Deans and Chapters if M. Gwin say truly in the Preface to his Readings do challenge this by auncient Charters from the Kings of this Land Cutter of the tayls is an Officer in the Exchequer that provideth Wood for the Tayles and cutteth the sum paid upon them and then casteth the same into the Court to be written upon DA DAmmage cometh of the French dam or domage signifying generally any hurt or hinderance that a man taketh in his estate But in the Common law it particularly signifieth a part of that the Jurours be to enquire of passing for the Plaintiff or Demandant in a Civil action be it personal or real For after verdict given of the principal cause they are likewise asked their consciences touching costs which be the charges of sute called of the Civilians expensae litis and Dammages which conte in the hindrance that the Plaintiff or Demandant hath suffered by means of the wrong done to him by the Defendant or Tenant Dane-gilt Dane-gold or Dane-gelt Dane-geldum is compounded of Dane and gelt i. pecunia and was a Tribute layd upon our Ancestors of twelve pence for every hide of Land through the Realm by the Danes that once got the masterie of us in regard as they pretended of clearing the Seas of Pyrates which greatly annoyed our Land in those dayes Cambd. Britan. 83. with whom agree the laws of Edward set out by M. Lamberd cap. 11. Stow in his annals pag. 118. saith that this tribute came to 40000. pounds by the year and that it was released by Ed. the Confessor The Author of the new terms of Law saith that this tribute began in the time of King Etheldred who being sore distressed by the continual invasion of the Daue to procure his peace was compelled to charge his people with importable payments For first he gave them at five several payments 113000. pounds and afterward granted them 48000. pounds yeerly See Roger Hoveden parte poster suorum annalium in Henrico secundo fol. 344. a. Dareyn continuance See Continuance Darein is a corrupt word of the French dernier i. ultimus Darrein presentment ultimae prasentatio See Assise or Darreyn presentment Dates dactyli is the plumme or fruit of the tree in Latine called palma in English the Date-tree well known to most men by sight And he that will farther understand the nature or diversities of this fruit may repair to Gerards Herbal lib. 3. cap. 131. They be numbred among Spices and Drugs to be garbled 1 Jacob. 19. Day dies is sometime used in the Law for the day of appearance in Court either originally or upon assignation and sometime for the returns of Writs For example dayes in bank be dayes set down by Statute or order of the Court when Writs shall be returned or when the party shall appear upon the Writ served And of this you may read the Statutes anno 51 H. 3. cap. 1. 2. Marlb cap. 12. anno 52 H. 3. and the Statute de anno bissextili anno 21 H. 3. and lastly anno 32 H. 8. cap. 21. To be dismissed without day is to be finally discharged the Court Kitchin fol. 193. He had a day by the Roll Kitchin fol. 197. that is he had a day of appearance assigned him Day Yeer and waste See Dies and Year DE Deadly feud feuda is a profession of an unquenchable hatred until we be revenged even by the death of our enemy It is deduced from the German word Feed which as Hotoman saith in verbis feudalibus modo bellum modo capitales inimicitias significat This word is used anno 43 Eliz. cap. 13. Dead pledge mortuum vadium See Mori gage Dean decanus is an Ecclesiastical Magistrate so called of the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because he hath power over ten Canons at the least Howbeit in England we use to call him a Dean that is next under the Bishop and chief of the Chapter ordinarily in a Cathedral Church and the rest of the Society or Corporation we call Capitulum he Chapter But this word how diversly it is used read Lindwood titulo de judic ca. pri verbo Decani rurales where Dean Rurals are said to be certain persons that have certain jurisdiction Ecclesiastical over other Ministers and Parishes neer adjoyning assigned unto them by the Bishop and Archdeacon being placed and displaced by them As there be two foundations of Cathedral Churches in England the old and the new the new be those which Henry the eighth upon suppression of Abbyes transformed from Abbot or Prior and Covent to Dean and Chapter so be there two means of creating these Deans For these of the old foundation are brought to their dignity much like Bishops the King first ending out his Congé d'eslire to the Chapter the Chapter then chusing the King yeelding his royal assent and the Bishop confirming him and giving his mandate to install him
to discontinew from their benefices for their particular service Chapiters capitula cometh of the French chapitre i. caput libri It signifieth in our Common law a summary or con ent of such matters as are to be inquired of or presented before Justices in Eyr Justices of Assise or of Peace in their sessions So it is used anno 3 Ed. 1. cap. 27. in these words and that no Clerk of any Justice Escheatour or Commissioner in Eyr shall take any thing for delivering chapiters but onely Clerks of Justices in their circuits and again anno 13 ejusdem cap. 10. in these words and when the time cometh the Sheriff shall certifie the Chapiters before the Justices in Eyr how many Writs he hath and what c. Britton likewise useth the same word in this signification cap. 3. Chapiters or capitula be now called articles most ordinarily and are delivered as well by the mouth of the Justice in his charge as by the Clerks in writing to the Enquest whereas in auncient times as appeareth by Bracton and Britton they were after an exhortation given by the Justices for the good observation of the laws and kings peace first read distinctly and openly in the whole Court and then delivered in writing to the grand Enquest And the same order doth M. Lamberd wish to be kept in these dayes also Eirenar lib. 4. cap. 4. pag. 393. Horn in his mirrour of Justices calieth them articles and expresseth what they were wont to contain lib. 3. cap. des articles in Eyr An example of these chapters or articles you have in the book of assises fol. 138. num 44. as also in Roger Hoveaen parte poster suorum annal i● Richardo primo fol. 423. Chapter capitulum signifieth in our Common law as in the Canon Law whence it is borrowed congregationem clericorum in ecclesia cathedrali conventuali regulari vel collegiata and in another signification locum in quo fiunt communes tractatus collegiatorum It hath other significations though not greatly worth the repeating in this place which you may read in Linwoods provincials glos in ca quia incontinentiae de constitutionibas verb. Capitulis Why this collegiat company should be called capitulum of the Canonists a man may make a question and for answer it may be said that it is metaphorically so termed the word originally signifying a little head For this company or corporation is a kind of head not onely to rule and govern the Diocesse in the vacation of the Bishoprick but also in many things to advise the Bishop when the See is full See Panormitan in ca. capitulum extrade rescriptis Charta perdonationis se defendendo is the form of a pardon for slaying another in a mans own defence Register original fol. 287. Charta perdonationis Utlagariae is the form of a pardon for a man that is out-lawed Regi orig fol. 288.388 Charter chartea cometh of the French chartres i. instrumenta It is taken in our law for written evidence of things done between man and man whereof Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 1. saith thus Fiunt aliquando donationes in scriptis sicut in chartis ad perpetuam rei memoriam propter brevē hominū vitā c. and a little after num 12. Et sciendum quòd chartarumalia regia alia privatorum regiarum alia privata alia cōmunis aliauniver salis Itemprivatorum alia de puro feoffamēto simplici alia de feoffamento conditionali sive conventionali secundùm omnia genera feoffamextorum fieri potest Item privatorum alia de recognitione pura vel conditionali Item aliam de qutete-clamantia Item alia de confirmatione c. and so through the chapter Briton likewise in his 39. chapter divideth Charters into the Charters of the King and Charters of private persons Charters of the King are those whereby the King passeth any grant to any person or more or to any body politick as a Charter of exemption that a man shall not be empaneled upon any Jury Kitchin fol. 114. fol. 177. Charter of pardon whereby a man is forgiven a felony or other offence committed against the Kings Crown and dignitie Broke tit Charter of pardon Charter of the Forest wherein the lawes of the forest are comprised anno 9 H. 3. Cromptons jurisd fol. 147. Pupilla oculi parte 5. cap. 22. Manwood parte 1. of his Forest laws fol. 1. where he setteth down the Charters of Canutus and fol. 17. where he hath set down that which was made anno 9 H. 3. with the Charter of the Forest which we use M. Skene saith that the laws of the Forest in Scotland do agree De verbo signif verbo Venison Charter of land Broke eodem titulo That which we call a Charter the Lombards in libris feudalibus call praeceptum praeceptionem Hotama verbo praeceptum in verbis feudalibus Of these Charters you have also along discourse in Fleta lib. 3. cap. 14. who expoundeth every substantial part of a deed of gift particularly in order Charter land terra per chartam is such as a man holdeth by Charter that is by evidence in writing otherwise called-Free hold anno 19 H. 7. cap. 13. and Kitchin fol. 86. and these in the Saxons time were wont to be called Bockland Idem fol. 89. and Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo Terra ox Scripto which was held as he there saith with more commodious and easier conditions than Folkland was that is land held without writing And the season he giveth because that was haereditaria libera atque immunis whereas fundus sine scripto censum pensitab at annuum a que officiorum quadam servitute est obligatus Priorem viri plerumque nobiles atque ingenui posteriorem rustici ferè pagani possidebant Illam nos vulgò free-hold per chartam hanc ad voluntatem domini appellamus Thus farre M. Lamberd Charta partie charta partita is nothing but that which we call a pair of indentures containing the covenants and agreements made between Merchants or Sea-faring men touching their maritine affairs anno 32 H. 8. cap. 14. Chartis redd ndis is a Writ which lyeth against him that hath Charters of Feofment delivered him to be kept and refuseth to deliver them Old nat br fol. 66. Register orig fol. 159. Chase See Chace Chatel See Catel Chaunce medley Infortunium cometh of the French words chance i. lapsus and mester i. miscere It signifieth in our Common law the casual slaughter of a man not altogether without the fault of the slayer Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 8. calleth it homicide by misadventure West calleth it Homicide mixt part 2. symbol titulo Indictments sect 50. and there defineth it thus Homicide mixt is when the killers ignorance or negligence is joyned with the chance as if a man lop trees by an high way side by which many usually travel and cast down a bow not giving warning to take
joyntly to the Husband and the Wife and after to the Heirs of their bodies whereby the Husband and Wife be made joynt tenants during the coverture Coke lib. 3. Butler and Bakers case f. 27. b. See Frank mariage Joynture is also used as the abstract of Joynt tenants Coke lib. 3. the Marquess of Winchesters Case fol. 3. a. b. Junctura is also by Bracton and Fleta used for joyning of one bargain to another Fleta lib. 2. cap. 60. touching the self-same thing and therefore joynture in the first signification may be so called in respect that it is a bargain of livelihood for the wife adjoyned to the contract of mariage Journ Choppers anno 8 Hen. 6. cap. 5. be regraters of yarn Whether that we now call yarn were in those daies called journ I cannot say but Choppers in these dayes are well known to be changers as choppers of Churches c. Journeyman commeth of the French Journee that is a day or dayes work which argueth that they were called Journeymen that wrought with others by the day though now by Statute it be extended to those likewise that covenant to work in their occupation with another by the year anno quinto Elizabeth cap. quarto IS Issue Exitus commeth of the French Issir i. emanare or the Substantive Issue i. exitus eventus It hath divers applications in the common Law sometime being used for the children begotten between a man and his wife sometime for profits growing from an amercement or fine or expences of sute sometime for profits of lands or tenements West 2. anno 13. Edw. prim cap. 39. sometime for that point of matter depending in sute whereupon the parties joyn and put their cause to the trial of the Jury and in all these it hath but one signification which is an effect of a cause proceeding as the children be the effect of the mariage between the Parents the profits growing to the King or Lord from the punishment of any mans offence is the effect of his transgression the point referred to the trial of twelve men is the effect of pleading or processe Issue in this last signification is either general or special General issue seemeth to be that whereby it is referred to the Jury to bring in their verdict whether the Defendant have done any such thing as the Plaintiff layeth to his charge For example if it be an offence against any Statute and the Defendant plead not culpable this being put to the Jury is called the General issue and if a man complain of a private wrong which the Defendant denieth and pleads no wrong nor disseisin and this be referred to the 12. it is likewise the General issue Kitchin fol. 225. See the Doctor and Student fol. 158. b. The Special issue then must be that where special matter being alleged by the Defendant for his defence both the parties joyn thereupon and so grow rather to a Demurrer if it be quaestio Juris or to tryal by the Jury if it be quaestio facti See the new Book of Entries verbo Issue JU Juncture See Joynture Jure patronatus See the new Book of Entries verbo Jure patronatus in quare impedit fol. 465. col 3. Jurie Jurata commeth of the French Jurer i. jurare it signifieth in our Common law a company of men as 24. or 12. sworn to deliver a truth upon such evidence as shall be delivered them touching the matter in question Of which trial who may and who may not be empanelled see Fitzh nat brev fol. 165. D. And for better understanding of this point it is to be known that there be three manner of trials in England one by Parliament another by Battel and the third by Assize or Jury Smith de Repub. Anglorum lib. 2. cap. 5 6 7. touching the two former read him and see Battel and Combat and Parliament the trial by Assise be the action civil or criminal publike or private personal or real is referred for the fact to a Jury and as they find it so passeth the Judgement and the great favour that by this the King sheweth to his Subjects more than the Princes of other Nations you may read in Glanvil lib. 2. cap. 7. where he called it Regale beneficium clement is principis de consilio procerum populis indultum quo vitae hominum Status integritats tam salubriter consulitur ut in jure quod quis in libero soli tenemento possidet retinendo duelli casum declinare possint homines ambiguum c. see the rest This Iury is not used only in Circuits of Justices Errant but also in other Courts and matters of Office as if the Escheatour make inquisition in any thing touching his Office he doth it by Jury or Inquest if the Coroner inquire how a subject found dead came to his end he useth an Inquest the Justices of Peace in their Quarter Sessions the Sheriff in his County and Turn the Bayliff of a Hundred the Steward of a Court Leet or Court Baron if they inquire of any offence or decide any cause between party and party they doe it by the same manner So that where it is said that all things be triable by Parliament Battel or Assise Assise in this place is taken for a Jury or Enquest empanelled upon any cause in a Court where this kind of trial is used and though it be commonly deemed that this custom of ending and deciding causes proceed from the Saxons and Britons and was of favour permitted unto us by the Conquerour yet I find by the grand Customarie of Normandy cap. 24. that this course was used likewise in that Country For Assise is in that Chapter defined to be an assembly of wise men with the Bayliff in a place certain at a time assigned forty dayes before whereby Justice may be done in causes heard in the Court. Of this custom also and those Knights of Normandie Johannes Faber maketh mention in the Rubrique of the Title de militari testamento in Institut this Jury though it appertain to most Courts of the Common law yet is it most notorious in the half-year Courts of the Justices errants commonly called the great Assises and in the quarter Sessions and in them it is most ordinarily called a Jury And that in civil causes whereas in other Courts it is oftener termed an Enquest and in the Court Baron the Homage In the general Assise there are usually many Juries because there be store of causes both civil and criminal comonly to be tried whereof one is called the Grand Jury and the rest Petit Juries whereof it seemeth there should be one for every Hundred Lamb. Eirenar lib. 4. cap. 3. pag. 384. The Grand Jury consisteth ordinarily of 24. grave and substantial Gentlemen or some of them Yeomen chosen indifferently out of the whole Shire by the Sheriff to consider of all Bils of Inditement preferred to the Court which they doe either approve by writing upon them these
domini si quem habuerit accedat c. And to help this probability I find that the Steward of a manner is termed serviens manerii Coke Vol. 4. Copihold cases fol. 21 a. Then is there a Sergeant at arms serviens ad arma whose Office is to attend the person of the King An. 7 H. 7. ca. 3. to arest Traitors or men of worth or reckning that do or are like to contemn Messengers of ordinary condition for other causes and to attend the Lord high Steward of England sitting in judgement upon any Traitor and such like pl. cor lib. 3. cap. pri Of these by the Statute anno 13 R. 2. cap. 6. there may not be above thirty in the Realm This sort is called del espee In the custumary of Nor. car 5. which read There be also some two of these Sergeants of the Parliament one for the upper another for the lower house whose Office seemeth to serve for the keeping of the Doors and the execution of such Commandements especially touching the apprehension of any offender as either house shall think good to enioyn them See Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. nono See also Vowels aliâs Hookers book of the order of the Parliament There is one of these that belongeth to the Chancery who is also called a Sergeant of the Mace as the rest may be because they carry Maces by their office He of the Chancery attendeth the Lord Chancellor or Keeper in that court for the means to call all men into that Court is either by this Officer or by sub poena West pa. 2. Symb. tit Chauncery Sect. 17. Then be there Sergeants that be the chief officers in their several functions within the Kings houshold which be chief in their places of which sort you may read many named in the statute anno 33 H. 8 cap. 12. There is also a more base kind of Sergeant of the Mace whereof there is a troop in the City of London and other Towns corporate that serve the Maior or other head Officer both for mesnial attendance and matter of Justice Kitchin fol. 143. And these are called Serviontes ad clavam New book of Entries ver scire facias in Mainperners fol. 538. cap. 3. Sergeantie Serriantia commeth of the French Sergeant i. satelles and signifieth in our Common law as service due to the King from his Tenent holding by such service For this service cannot be due to any L. from his Tenent but to the King only And this is either grand or petit as you shall find at large set down in Chivalry Of this also you may read Bra. l. 2. c. 16. c. 37. n. 5.4 et Brit. c. 66. n. 1. et 2. See Servies M. Skene de ver signif calleth this Sergeantery defining and dividing it as we do in England Servientihus as certain writs touching servants and their Masters violating the statutes made against their abuses which see in the Regist. orig fo 189. et 190 et 191. Service servitium though it have a general signification of duty toward them unto whom we owe the performance of any corporal labor of function yet more especially in our Common law it is used for that service which the Tenent by reason of his fee oweth unto his Lord. And so doth it signifie among the Feudists also For Hotoman thus defineth it Servitium est munus obsequit clientelaris verbo Servitium De verbis feudal or rather declareth it so to be defined lib. feud 2. titulo 51. Sect. 8. It is sometime called servage as anno 1 R. 2. cap. 6. This service is either military and noble commonly called Knights service or clownish and base commonly called Soccage of both which read Chiry as also scecage And Bracton lib. 2. ca. 16. Service is divided by Britton into personal and real cap. 66. where he maketh wards mariages homage Reliefs and such like to be real services personal I imagine may those be called that are to be persormed by the person of the Tenent as to follow his Lord into war c. The Civilians divide munera in this sort either in personalia or patrimonalia Then Bracton ubi supra num 7. distributeth servitium in intrinsecum extrinsecum aliâs forinsecum medium Servitium intrinsecum is that which is due to the capital Lord of the Mannro Forinsecum is that which is due to the King and not to the capital Lord but when he goeth in his own person to serve or when he hath satisfied the King for all services whatsoever And again in the same place he saith it is called Fornisecum quia fit capitur foris sive extra servitium quod fit Domino capitali See Forein service Of this read him ubi supra more at large and Fleta lib. 2. cap. 14. § Continetur Servitia quae nec intrinseca necforinseca sunt Bract. handleth in the same Chapter nu 8. saying thus sunt etiam quaedam consuetudines quae nec dicuntur intriasecae nec forinsecae sed sunt quaed im servitia concomitantia sicut servitia regalia militaria etiambemagia adeo in cbartis non sunt exprimendae Quia si homagium praecesseris et regale servitium sequitur exinde quod ad capitalem Dominum pertinebit Relivium et custodia et maritagium sive servitium sit militare vel seriantia propter exerci●um c. Here then Relief Ward and Mariage be those services which he calleth nec intrinseca nec forinseca sed concomitantia Service is also divided into frank service and base or villeinous service the one Bracton calleth liberum servitium the other servitium villanum or villenagium lib. 2. cap. 8. num pri This villenagium is Soccage in base tenure as to dung the Lords ground to serve him so many daies in harvest to plash his hedges c. or else copyhold All other services seem to be frank Service consiste●h some in seisance some in render Perkins Reservations 696. Service seemeth also to be divided into continual otherwise annual and casual or accidental An example of the sormer is the seisin of rent and of the other seisin of Relief Sir Edward Cokes Reports lib. 4. Bevils case fol. 9. a. See Copy hold See Soccage See Ayd Service secular anno 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. which may be contrary to spiritual viz. the service divine commanded to spiritual men by their founders Servitours of Bills seem to be such servants or messenger of the Marshal belong-to the Kings Bench as were sent abroad with Bills or Writs to summon men to that Court being now more ordinarily called Tipstaffs Servitiis acquietandis is a Writ judicial that lyeth for one distreined for services by Iohn which oweth and performeth to Robert for the acquital of such services Register judicial fol. 27. a. et 36. b. Sessions Sessiones signifieth in our Common law a sitting of Justices in Court upon their commission as the Sessions of oyer and terminer pl. cor fol. 67. Quarter Sessions
otherwise called general Sessions an 5 Elizabeth cap. 4. or open Sessions ibidem Opposite whereunto are especial otherwise called privy Sessions which are procured upon some special occasion for the more speedy expedition of Iustice in some cause Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 110. what things be inquirable in general Sessions See Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 109. Petit Sessions or Statute Sessions are kept by the high Constable of every Hundred for the placing of servants anno 5 Eliz. cap. 4. in fine Sessour an 25 Ed. 3. cap. 6. seemeth to signifie so much as assessing or rating of Wages at this day Set Cloathes anno 27 Hen. 8. cap. 13. Setwell Valeriana is a medicinal herb the nature and divers kinds whereof you have in Gerards herbal lib. 2. cap. 424. The root of this is mentioned among drugs to be garbled an 1 Iac. cap. 19. Severance is the singling of two or more that joyn in one Writ or are joyned in one Writ For example if two joyn in a VVrit de Libertate probanda and the one afterward be nonsute here severance is permitted so that notwithstanding the nonsute of the one the other may severally proceed Fitzherbert natura brevium fol. 78. l. K. Of this see Brook titulo Severance and Summons fol. 238. For it is harder to know in what cases severance is permitted than what it is There is also severance of the Tenents in an Assise when as one or two or more disseisours appeareth upon the VVrit and not the other New Book of Entries fol. 81. col 4. And severance in Attaints eod fo 95. col 2. And severance in Debt verbo debt fol. 220. col 1. see the said Book verbo Severance Seneral tayl tallium separatum is that whereby Land is given and entayled severally to two For example land is given to two men and their VVives and to the Heirs of their bodies begotten the Donees have joynt estate for their two lives and yet they have several Inheritance because the issue of the one shall have his moyetie and the issue of the other the other moyetie Kitchin ibid. Several tenancy tenura separalis is a Plee or exception taken to a writ that is laid against two as joynt which are several Brook titulo Severall tenancie fol. 273. Sevantly woven anno 35. Eliza. cap. 10. Sewer hath two significations with us one applyed to him that issueth or commeth in before the meat of the King or other great personage and placeth it upon the table the other to such passages or gutters as carry water into the sea or river in Lawyers Latine called Sewera an 6. H. 6. c. 5. which is also used in common speech for commissioners authorised under the broad seal to see drains and ditches well kept and maintained in the Marish and Fenne Countries for the better conveyance of the water into the Sea and the preserving of the grasse for seed of Cattel stat an 6. H. 6. cap. 5. It is probable to bring this word from the French issir or issue as if we should call them Issuers because they give issue or passage to the water c. And the Latine word suera some time used in these commissions for these drains is a competent reason of this conjecture See Fitz. nat brev in Oyer and Terminer Yet I find in an old French Book containing the Officers of the King of Englands Court as it was antiently governed that he whom in Court we now call Sewer was called Asseour which may seem to come from the French Asseour wherein his Office in setting down the meat upon the Table is well expressed And Sewer as it signifieth an Officer is by Fleta latined Assessor li. 2. c. 15. All which argueth that the descent of this word is from the French Asseoir as signifying a disposing or placing of any thing or as we say in English an assessing of any person toward the performance of a Duty Sexagesima See Septuagesima SH Shanck See Fur. Share See Flotzon Shewing is to be quit of Attachment in any Court and before whomsoever in plaints shewed and not avowed New exposition of law terms verbo Shewing See Scavage Shipper An. 1 Iac. ses 1. cap. 33. is is a Dutch word signifying the Master of the ship Shire Comitatus shyra is a Saxon word signifying Satrapian of the verb scyran 1. partiri Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo Centuaria The word is in use so rife that every Child understandeth it Who first thus divided this land into shires appeareth by M. Cambdens Britan. pag. 102. in these words Nec dum tamen florente Hepterchia Anglia it a in Comitatus divisa sic enim vulgò vocant sed pestea cum solus aluredus rerum potiretur Vt enim Germani majores nostri teste Tacito jura per pagos vicosque reddebant et centeni ex plebe comites adrem admistrandam adjungebantur sic ille ut ingulfi Croulandenfis verbis utar pr mus Angliam in Comitatus divisit qued indiginae rapinas committerent exemplo et colore Danorum Comitatus porro in Centurias i. Hundreds et Decimas i. Tythings distribui fecit praecipitque ut omnis indigena in aliqua esset Centuria Decima Praefectos etiam provinciarum qui antea Vicedomini vocabantur in duo officia divtsit viz. Iudices nunc Iusticiarios Vicecomites qui adhue idem nomen retinent See the rest Shereeve Vicecomes is compounded of these Saxon words Scyre i. satrapia and Reeve i. praefectus and accordingly he is the chief Officer under the King of his Shire or County See Ferme in Lacies Nobility pag. 12. M. Cambden pag. 104. Thus describeth his Office Singulis verò annis nobilis aliquis ex incolis praeficitur quem Vicecomitem quasi vicarium comitis nostrâ linguâ Shyref i. Comitatus praepositum vocamus qui etiam comitatus vel provinciae Quaestor rectè dici potest Ejus enim est Publicas pecunias provinciae suae conquirere mulctas irrogatas vel pignoribus ablat is eolligere aerario inferrae Iudicibus praesto adesse eorum mandata ex●qui duodecim viros cogere qui in causis de facto cognoscunt et ad Iudices referunt Iudices enim apud nos juris solum non facti sunt Iudices condemnatos ad supplicium ducere in minoribus litibus cognoscere in majoribus autcm jus dicunt justiciarii quos itinerantes ad Assisas vocant qui quotannis hos Comitatus bis adeunt ut de causis cognoscant et ad carceratis sententiam ferant Henricus secundus hos itinerantes instituit vel potius restituit Ille ut inquit Mathaeus Parisiensis consilio filii sui et Episcoporum constituit Iusticiarios per sex paertes regni in qualibet parts tres qui jurarent quod cuilibet jus suum conservarent illaesum Of the antiquity and authority of this Officer read Sir Edwards Cooks Reports lib. 4. Mittons Case The manner of appointing
the same signification See Advowzen and Avowè AE Aetate probanda is a Writ that the Kings Tenent holding in chief by Chivalry and being Ward by reason of his nonage obtaineth to the Eschetour of the County where he was born or some time where the Land lyeth to inquire whether he be of full age to have delivery of his Lands in his own hand Register orig fol. 294. 295. Fitzh nat br fo 253. who also fo 257. saith that this Writ is sometime directed to the Sheriff to empanell a Jury for this is inquiry against a day certain before Commissioners authorized under the broad Seal to deal in such a cause Aerie of Coshawkes aeria accipitrum commeth from the French aiere signifying so much as par in Latine or a pair in English For the French-man saying that one is un houme de boun aiere signifieth that he commeth of a good Paire that is a good Father and a good Mother It is in our Language the proper word in Hawks for that we generally call a nest in other birds So it is used anno 9 H. 3. c. 13. in the Charter of the Forest and in divers other places AF Affeerours afferatores aliâs affidati may probably be thought to proceed from the French affier i. confirmare affirmare It signifieth in our Common Law those that be appointed in Court-leets c. upon Oath to mulct such as have committed faults arbitrably punishable and have no express penalty set down by Statute The form of their Oath you may see in Kitchin fol. 46. The reason of this appellation may seem to be Because they that be appointed to this Office do affirm upon their Oaths what penalty they think in Conscience the Offendour hath deserved It may likewise probably be thought that this commeth from feere an old English word signifying a Companion as gefera doth amongst the Saxons by M. Lamberd● testimony verbo contubernalis in his explication of Saxon words And so it may be gathered that M. Kitchin taketh it ca. Amercements fo 78. in these words Mas file amercement soit affire per pares where pares be put for Affeerors And there may be good reason of this because they are in this business made companions and equals You shall find this word used anno 25 Ed. 3. st 7. viz. And the same Justices before their rising in every Sessions shall cause to be affeered the amercements as pertaineth and also to the same effect anno 26 H. 8. cap. 6. Kitchin fo 78. joineth these 3 words together as synonyma Affidati amerciatores affirours Affidare in the Canon law is used for fidem dare ca. fina de cognatio spiritua in Decretal ca. super ●o de testibus Bracton hath Affidare mulierem for to be betrothed to a Woman li. 2. cap. 12. But I find in the customary of Normandy ca. 20. this word affeurer which the Latine Interpretour expresseth by taxare that is to set the price of a thing as aestimare indicare c. which Etymologie of all the other pleaseth me best leaving every man to his own Judgement Affirme affimare commeth either of the Latine or French affirmer it signifieth in our Common law as much as to ratifie or approve a former Law or Judgement So is the Substantive affirmance used anno 8. H. 6. c. 12. And so is the verb it self by M. West parte 2. symbolai titule Fines sect 152. And if the Judgement be affirmed c. as also by M. Crompton in his divers Jurisd fo 166. Afforest afforestare is to turn ground into Forest Charta de foresta c. 1. 30. an 9 H. 3. What that is look more at large in Forest Affray affreia commeth of the French affraier i. horrificare terrere it signifieth in our Common law a Skirmish or fighting between two or more M. Lambert in his cirenarcha lib. 2. cap. 3. saith that it is oftentimes confounded with an assault but yet he is of opinion that they differ in this that where an assault is but a wrong to the Party an affray is a common wrong and therfore both enquirable and punishable in a Leet It might be said likewise that an assault is but of one side and an affray of two or more I think this word affray to be two waies used one as I have already described it another for a terror wrought in the subject by any unlawfull sight of violence or armor c. tending toward violence For so is it used an 2. Ed. 3. cap. 3. AG Age atas commeth from the French aage and signifieth in our Language that part of mans life which is from his birth unto his last day But it is in the Common Law particularly used for those especial times which enable men or women to do that which before for want of age and so consequently of Judgement they might not do And these times in a man be two in a woman six The age of 21 years is termed the full Age in a man the age of fourteen years the age of discretion Littleton lib. 2. cap. 4. In a Woman there are six several ages observed that severally enable her to do six several things Broke Gard. 7. First at 7 years of age the Lord her Father may distrain his Tenents for aid to mary her for at those years she may consent to matrimonie Bracton lib. 2. cap. 36. nu 3. Secondly at the age of nine years she is dowable for then or within half a year after is she able promereri dotem virum sustinere Fleta lib. 5. cap. 22. Littleton lib. prim cap. 5. which Bracton loco citato doth notwithstanding limit at 12 years Thirdly at twelve years she is able finally to ratifie and confirm her former consent given to Matrimony Fourthly at fourteen years she is enabled to receive her Land into her own hands and shall be out of Ward if she be of this age at the death of her Ancestor Fiftly at sixteen years she shall be out of Ward though at the death of her Ancestor she was within the age of fourteen years The reason is because then she may take a Husband able to perform Knights-service Sixtly at 21 years she is able to alienate her Lands and Tenements Instit jure com cap. 24. Touching this matter take further these notes perspicuously gathered At the age of fourteen years a Striplin is enabled to chuse his own Guardian and to claim his Land holden in socage Dyer fol. 162. which Bracton limiteth at fifteen years li. 2. cap. 37. num 2. with whom Glanvile also agreeth lib. 7. ca. 9. And at the age of fourteen years a Man may consent to mariage as a Woman at twelve Bracton ubi supra At the age of fifteen years a man ought to be sworn to keep the Kings peace anno 34 Ed. 1. Stat. 3. The age of 21 years compelleth a man to be Knight that hath twenty pounds Land per annum in fee or for term of
que lieu is interponere judicium suum Of this Verb commeth the Participle assis as estre assis i. sedere And this Participle in the grand Customary of Normandy c. 68. is used as we would say appointed limited or determined viz. au jour qui est assis àfaire la battaille se doibuent les champions offrir à la justice That is At the day which is appointed for the combat the Champions ought to offer themselves to the Iustice So that by all these places compared together it is evident whence the original of this word assise floweth How diversly it is used in our Common law it followeth that we declare First Littleton in the Chapter Rents saith that it is aequivocum where he setteth down three several significations of it one as it is taken for a Writ another as it is used for a Iury the third as for an Ordinance And him he that listeth may read more at large My Collections have served me thus first assise is taken for a Writ directed to a Sheriff for the recovery of possession of things immoveable where of your self or your Ancestors have been disseised And this is as well of things corporal as incorporeal rights being of four sorts as here they follow in their order Assise of novel disseisin assisanovae disseisinae lyeth where a Tenent in fee-simple fee-tail or for term of life is lately disseised of his Lands or Tenements or else of a Rent-service Rent-seck or Rent-charge of common of Pasture of an office of toll tronage passage pownage or for a Nusance levied and divers other such like For confirmation whereof you may read Glanvile li. 10. c. 2. Bracton li. 4. tract 1. per totum Britton c. 70. seq Reg orig fol. 197. Fitz. Nat. br fo 177 178 179. New book of Entries fo 74. col 3. West 2. c 25. anno 13 Ed. 1. And to this may aptly be added the Bill of fresh force friscae fortiae which is directed to the Officers or Magistrates of Cities or Towns corporate being a kind of Assise for recovery of possession in such places within forty daies after the force as the ordinary Assise is in the County Fitzh Nat. br fol. 7. c. This the Civilians call Judicium possessorium recuperandi Assise of mort d'auncester assisa mortis antecessoris lyeth where my Father Mother Brother Sister Uncle Aunt c. died seised of Lands Tenements Rents c. that he had in Fee-simple and after his death a Stranger abateth and it is good as well against the Abatour as any other in possession How likewise this is extended see Bracton lib. 4. trast 3. per totum Britton ca. 70. cum multis sequent Fitzh Nat. br fo 114. Regist. orig fo 223. This the Civilians call Judicium possessorium adipiscend● Assise of darrein presentment assisa ultimae praesentationis lyeth where I or mine Ancestor have presented a Clark to a Church and after the Church being void by the death of the said Clark or otherwise a Stranger presenteth his Clark to the same Church in disturbance of me And how otherwise this Writ is used see Bracton l. 4. tract 2. Reg. orig fo 30. Fitzh Nat. br fo 195. Assise de utrum assisa utrum lyeth for a Parson against a Lay-man or a Lay-man against a Parson for Land or Tenement doubtfull whether it be lay-fee or free-alms And of this see Bracton li. 4. sract 5. ca. 1. seq Britton ca. 95. The reason why these Writs be called assises may be divers First because they settle the possession and so an outward right in him that obtaineth by them Secondly they were originally sped and executed at a certain time and place formerly appointed For by the Norman law the time and place must be known forty days before the Iustices sate of them and by our Law there must be likewise fifteen daies of preparation except they be tryed in those standing Courts of the King in Westminster as appeareth by F. N. B. fo 177. d e. Lastly they may be called Assises because they are tryed most commonly by especial Courts set and appointed for the purpose as may be well proved not only out of the Customary of Normandy but our books also which shew that in antient times Iustices were appointed by special Commission to dispatch controversies of possession one or more in this or that only County as occasion fell out or disseisins were offered and that as well in Term time as out of Term whereas of later daies we see that all these Commissions of Assises of Eyr of Oyer and Terminer of Gaol-delivery and of Nisi prius are dispatched all at one time by two several Circuits in the year out of term and by such as have the greatest sway of Iustice being all of them either the Kings ordinary Iustices of his Benches Sergeants at the Law or such like Assise in the second signification according to Littleton is used for a Jury For to use his own example it is set down in the beginning of the Record of an Assise of novel disseisin assisa venit recognatura which is as much as to say as Juratores ven●unt recognituri The reason why the Iury is called an Assise he giveth to be this because by writ of Assise the Sheriff is commanded quod faciat duodecim liberos legales homines de viceneto c. Videre Tenementum illud nomina corum imbreviari quòd summoneat eos per bonas summonitiones quòd sint coram Justiciariis c. parati inde facere recognitionem c. This is as if he should have spoken shorter Metonymia effecti For they are called the Assises because they are summoned by vertue of the Writ so termed And yet the Iury summoned upon a Writ of right is likewise called the Assise as himself there confesseth Which writ of right is not an Assise but this may be said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or abusively so termed Assise in this signication is divided in magnam parvam Glanvile li. 2. c. 6 7 c. and Britton c. 12. where it appeareth wherein the great Assise differeth from the petit Assise whom I wish to be read by those who would be further instructed in this point For this place thus much in short The former four kinds of Assises used in actions only possessory be called petit assises in respect of the grand Assise For the Law of fees is grounded upon two rights one of possession the other of property and as the grand Assise serveth for the right of property so the petit assise serveth for the right of possession Horns mirror of Justices l. 2. c. de novel disseisin Assise in the third signification according to Littleton is an Ordinance or Statute as the Statute of bread and ale made anno 51 H. 3. is termed the assise of bread and ale assisa panis cervisiae Register orig fol. 279. b. The Assise of Clarendon
parchment rolles for their better keeping to all posterity Of these there be two one of the higher another of the lower or Common house Cromptons Jurisd fol. 4 8. Smith de republ Anglorum pag. 38. See also Vowels book touching the order of the Parliament Clerk of the Crown in the Chancery clericus coronae in Cancellaria is an Officer there that by himself or his Deputy is continually to attend the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper for special matters of estate by commission or the like either immediately from his Majesty or by order of his councel as well ordinary as extraordinary viz. commissions of Lieutenancies of Justices errant and of Assises of Oyer and Terminer of Gaol-delivery of the peace and such like with their writs of Association and Dedimus potestatem for taking of oaths Also all general pardons upon grants of them at the Kings coronation or at a Parliament where he sitteth in the higher-house at the Parliament time he writs of Parliament with the names of Knights and Burgesses which be to be returned into his office He hath also the making of all special pardons and writs of execution upon bonds of statute of the Staple forfeited which was anne●ed to his office in the reign of Queen Mary in consideration of his continual and chargeable attendance both these before being common for every Cursitour and Clerk of Court to make Clerk of the Crown clericus coronae is a Clerk or officer in the Kings Bench whose function is to frame read and record all indictments against Traitors Felons and other offendors there arraigned upon any publike crime He is otherwise tearmed Clerk of the Crown-office And anno 2 H. 4. cap. 10. he is called Clerk of the Crown of the Kings Bench. Clerk of the Extreats clericus Extractorum is a Clerk belonging to the Exchequer who termely receiveth the Extreats out of the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer his office and writeth them out to be levied for the King He also maketh schedules of such summes extreated as as are to be discharged Clerk of assise clericus assisae is he that writeth all things judicially done by the Justices of assise in their circuits Cromptons Jurisdict fol. 227. Clerk of the Pell clericus Pellis is a Clerk belonging to the Exchequer whose office is to enter every Tellers bill into a parchement rolle called Pellis receptorum and also to make another rolle of payments which is called Pellis exitum wherein he setteth down by what warrant the money was payd Clerk of the Warrants clericus Warrantorum is an officer belonging to the Court of Common Plees which entreth all warrants of Atturney for Plaintiff and Defendant and intolleth all Deeds of Indentures of bargain and sale which are acknowledged in the Court or before any Judges out of the Court. And he doth extreat into the Exchequer all issues fines and amerciaments which grow due to the King any way in that Court and hath a standing fee of ten pounds of the King for making the same ex treats See Fitzh nat br fol. 76. in prin Clerk of the pety Bag clericus parvae bagiae is an Officer of the Chauncerie of which sort there be three and the Master of the Rolles their chief Their office is to record the return of all inquisitions out of ●every Shire all Liveries granted in the Court of Wards all ouster le maines to make all patents of Customers Gaugers Controllers and Aulnegers All conge de eslires for Bishops All liberateis upon extents of statute staples the recovery of Recognisances forfeited and all Elegits upon them the summons of the Nobility Clergy and Burgesses to the Parliament Commissions directed to Knights and other of every Shire for seising of the Subsidies Writs for the nominations of Collectours for the fifteenths and all traverses upon any office bill or otherwise and to receive the mony due to the King for the same This Officer is mentioned anno 33 H. 8. cap. 22. Clerk of the Kings great Wardrobe clericus magnae garderobae regis is an Officer of the Kings house that keepeth an account or Inventary in writing of all things belonging to the Kings wardrobe This Officer is mentioned an 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. Clerk of the Market clericus merketi is an Officer of the Kings house anno 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. anno 13 R. 2. cap. 4. whose duty is to take charge of the Kings measures and to keep the standards of them that is the examples of all the measures that ought to be through the Land as of Elns Yards Lagens as Quarts Pottles Gallons c. of Weights Bushels and such like and to see that all measures in every place be answerable unto the said Standard Fleta lib. 2. cap. 8.9.10.11.12 of which office as also of our diversity of weights and measures you may there find a Treatise worth the reading Britton also in his 30 chapter saith in the Kings person to this effect We wil that none have Measures in the Realm but we our selves but that every man take his Measures and Weights from our Standards and so goeth on with a Tractat of this matter that well sheweth the ancient law and practice in this point Touching this Officers duty you have also a good statute anno 13 R. 2. c. 4. Clerk of the Kings silver clericus argenti Regis is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common plees unto whom every fine is brought after it hath been with the custos Brevium and by whom the effect of the Writ of Covenant is entred into a Paper-book and according to that note all the fines of that term are also recorded in the Rolles of the Court. And his entrie is in this form He putteth the Shire over the Margin and then saith A.B. dat domino Regi dimidium merkam or more according to the value pro licentia concordandi C. cum C.D. pro talibus terris in tali villa habet chirographum per pacem admissum c. Clerk of the Peace clericus pacis is an Officer belonging to the Sessions of the peace His duty is in the Sessions to read the Endictments to enrol the Acts and draw the Processe to record the Proclamations of rates for servants Wages to enrol the discharge of Apprentices to keep the Counterpain of the Indenture of Armour to keep the Register book of Licenses given to Badgers and laders of corn and of those that are licensed to shoot in gunnes and to certifie into the Kings Bench transcripts of Indictments Outlawries Attainders and Convictions had before the Justices of the peace within the time limited by statute Lamberts Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 3. fol. 379. Clerk of the Signet clericus signeti is an Officer attendant continually on his Majesties principal secretary who alwayes hath the custody of the privy Signet as well for sealing his Majesties privat Letters as also such grants as passe his Majesties hand by bill assigned Of these there be four
33. So that hereby I gather that of later times this word signifieth nothing but such an one as by oath of loyalty to his Prince for surety none ordinarily findeth at these dayes is setled in the combination or society of a Dozein And a Dozein seemeth now to extend so farre as every Leet extendeth because in L●ets onely this oath is ministred by the Steward and taken by such as are twelve years old and upwards dwelling within the compasse of the Leet where they are sworn Fitzh nat br fol. 161. A. The particulars of this oath you may read in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 1. num 1. in these words Quibus propositis that is the Commission of the Justices being read and the cause of their coming being shewed debent Justiciarii se transferre in aliquem locum secretam vocatis ad so quatuor vel sex uel pluribus de ma oribus de comitatu qui dicuntur Busones Comitatus ad quorum nutum dependent vota aliorum sic inter se tractatum habeant Justiciarii adinvicem ostendant qualiter à Don●ino Rege erus concilio provisum sit quàd omnes tam milite quàm alii qui sunt quindecim ann●rum ampliùs jurare debent quòd utlagatos murditores robbatores burglatores non recepta●●nt nec eis consentient nec corum receptatoribus si quos tales noverint illos attachiari facient hoc Vicecomiti balivis suis monstrabunt● si hutesium vel clameum de talibus audiverint statim and to clamore sequantur cum familia hominibus de terra sua Here Bracton setreth down fifteen years for the age of those that are sworn to the Kings peace but lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 11. num 5. he nameth 12 years See Inlaughe A man may note out of the Premisses diversities between the ancient and these our times in this point of law and government as well for the age of those that are to be sworn as also that Decennier is not now used for the chief man of a Dozen but for him that is sworn to the Kings peace and lastly that now there are no other Dozens but Leets and that no man ordinarily giveth other security for the keeping of the Kings peace but his own oath and that therefore none answereth for anothers transgression but every man for himself And for the general ground this may suffice See Franke pledge Declaration declaratio is properly the shewing forth or laying out of an action personal in any sure howbeit it is used sometime and indifferently for both personal and real actions For example anno 36. E. 3. cap. 15. in these words By the ancient terms and forms of Declarations no man shall be prejudiced so that the matter of the action be fully shewed in the Demonstration and in the Writ See the new Terms of Law See Cownte Dedimus potestatem is a Writ whereby commission is given to a private man for the speeding of some act appertaining to a Judge The Civilians call it Delegationem And it is granted most commonly upon suggestion that the party which is to do something before a Judge or in Court is so feeble that he cannot travel It is used in divers cases as to make a personal answer to a Bill of complaint in the Chaunce●ie to make an Atturney for the following of a sute in the Countie Hundred Wapentake c. Old nat br fol. 20. To levie a Fine West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 112. and divers others effects as you may see by Fitzh nat br in divers places noted in the Index of the Book In what diversity of cases this VVrit or Commission is used see the Table of the Regist orig verbo Dedimus potestatem Deeds Facta signifie in our Common law-writings that contain the effect of a contract made between man and man which the Civilians call Literarum obligationem And of Deeds there be two sorts Deeds indented and Deeds poll VVhich division as M. West saith parte 1. Symbol lib. 1. sect 46. groweth from the form or fashion of them the one being cut to the fashion of teeth in the top or side the other being plain And the definition of a deed indented hee expresseth thus Sect. 47. A Deed indented is a Deed consisting of two parts or more in which it is expressed that the parties to the same Deed have to every part thereof interchangeably or severally set their several seals See the rest where at the last he sheweth the cause of the name viz. for that consisting of more parts each part is indented or cut one of them into the other that by the cut it may appear they belong to one businesse or contract A Deed poll or polled he describeth thus Sect. 46. Q. A polled Deed is a Deed testifying that onely the one of the parties to the bargain hath put his seal thereunto after the manner there by him described which read for your better understanding See the new Terms of law verbo Fait where he sheweth that each Deed consisteth in three points writing sealing and delivery Deer Hayse anno 19 H. 7. cap. 11. seemeth to be an Engine of cords to catch Deer De essendo quietum de telonio is a VVrit that that lyeth for them which are by privilege freed from the payment of Toll which read at large in Fitzh nat br fol. 226. Defalt Defalta cometh from the French Defaut and is an offence in omitting that which we ought to do West parte 2. symbol titulo Indictment sect 2. Of this hath Bracton a whole Tractate lib. 5. tractat 3. By whom it appeareth that a Default is most notoriously taken for non appearance in Court at a day assigned Of this you may read also in Fleta lib. 6. cap. 14. Defeisance defeisantia cometh of the French Desfaire or Deffaire i. infectum reddere quod factum est and signifieth in our Common law nothing but a condition annexed to an Act as to an Obligation a Recognisance or Statute which performed by the Obligee or Recognizee the Act as disabled and made void as if it never had been done whereof you may see West at large part 1. symb lib. 2. Sect. 156. Defendant defendens is he that is sued in an Action personal as Tenant is he which is sued in an Action real Terms of the Law Defendemus is an ordinary word in a Feofment or Donation and hath this force that it bindeth the Donour and his Heirs to defend the Donee if any man go about to lay any servitude upon the thing given other than is contained in the Donation Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 10. See also Warrantizabimus Acquietabimus Defender of the Faith defensor fidei is a peculiar title given to the King of England by the Pope as Catholicus to the King of Spain and Christianissimus to the French King It was first given by Leo Decimus to King Henry the 8. for
2. 14. Forein answer that is such an answer as is not triable in the County where it is made an 15. Han. 6. ca. 5. Forein service forinsecum servitium that is such service whereby a mean Lord holdeth over of another without the compasie of his own fee. Broke●titulo Tenur●● fo 251. num 12. et 28. et Kitchin fol. 209. or else that which a Tenent performeth either to his own Lord or to the Lord paramount one of the fee. For of these services Bracton speaketh thus lib. 2. cap. 16. n● 7. Item su●t quedam forvitia quae dicuntur forinsoca 〈◊〉 sunt in charta de feoff mento expressa et nominata et quae ideo dici possut forinfeca quia perti nent ad Dominum R●gem et non ad Dominum capitalem nisi cum in propria persona profectus fuerit in servi●i● volnisi cum pro servitio suo satisfecerit domina Regi quocu● que modo et fiunt 〈◊〉 certis temporibus cum casus et necessitas evene●it et varia habent nomina et divorsa Quando● enim vominantur fori●s●●a Largè sumpto vocabitlo quo ad sorvitium Domint Regis quandoque scutaginm quandoque servitium Domini Regis et ideo forinsecum dici potest quia st at capitur foris sive extra servitium quod fit Domino capitali v. Brooke Tavuras 28.95 Fore in service seemeth to be Knights service or Es●uage uncertain P●rkins Reservation 650. Forein attachment Attachiamentum forinsoeum is an attachment of foreiners goods found within a Liberty or City for the satisfaction of some Citised to whom the said foreiner oweth money Forein apposer forinsecarum oppositor is an officer in the Exchequer to whom all Sheriffs and Bayliffs doe repair by him to be opposed of their green waxe and from thence draweth down a charge upon the Sheriff and Bayliff to the Clerk or the pipe Forest foresta is a French word signifying a great or vast wood Lieu forestier et sauvage locus-sylvestris et saltuosus The writers upon the Common law define it thus Foresta est locus ubi ferae inhabitant vel includuntur Gloss in ca. cum dilecti extra de donatio et Felinus in cap. Rodulphus versu quid antem foresta extra de rescriptis speaketh to the same effect Some other writers doe say it is called foresta quasi ferarum statio vel tuta mansio ferarum But as it is taken with us M. Manwood in his second part of Forest Lawes ca. 1. nu 1. thus defineth it A forest is a certain territory of woody grounds and fruitfull pastures privileged for wilde beasts and fouls of forest chase and warren to rest and abide in in the safe protection of the King for his princely delight and pleasure which territory of ground so privlieged is meered and bounded with unremoveable markes meers and boundaries either known by matter of record or else prescription and also replenished with wild beasts of Venery or chase and with great coverts of vert for the succour of the said wilde beasts to have their aboad in for the preservation and continuance of which said place together with the vert and venison there are certain particular laws privileges and officers belonging to the same meet for that purpose that are only proper unto a Forest and not to any other place The same definition he hath parte 1. pa. 139. which though it have many superfluities yet it well expresseth the nature of the thing especially the explication adjoyned which there is set down by the said Author in both places in his first part pag. 16. where he fetcheth a forest from such overgrown antiquitie alleging for it the 2 book of Kin. ca. 2. ver 24. ca. 19. ver 23. and the 104 Psalm vers 20. the 131. vers 6. hee taketh license to sport himself for though our English translation have the word Forest to expresse the vastnesse of the desart yet if we look to the original idiome wee shall find no more reason to call those places forests than either chases or parks The manner of making forests as the same Author well setteth down parte 1. pag. 142. is this The King sendeth out his Commission under the broad Seal of England directed to certain discreet persons for the view perambulation meering and bounding of the place that he mindeth to afforest Which returned into the Chancery proclamation is made throughout all the shire where the ground lieth that none shall hunt or chase any manner of wild beasts within that precinct without the Kings speciall license after which he appointeth ordinances lawes officers fit for the preservation of the vert venison so becometh this a forest by matter of record The properties of a forest are these in speciall first a forest as it is truly strictly taken cannot be in the hands of any but the King the reason is given by M. Manwood because none hath power to grant commission to be a justice in Eire for the forest but the King par 1. pag. 87. The second property be the Courts as the Justice sent every three years the Swainmoot thrice every year Idem eod pag. 90. et parte 2. ca. 1. nu 4. et 5. and the attachment once every forty dayes Idem eod pag. 92. The third property may be the officers belonging unto it for the preservation of the vert and venison as first the Justices of the forest the Warden or Keeper the Verders the Foresters Agistours Regarders Bayliffs Bedels and such like which you may see in their places See Manwood parte 2. ca. 1. nu 4. 5. But the chief property of a Forest both by Master Manwood parte 1. pa. 144. and Master Crompton pa. 146. is the Swainemore which as they both agree is no lesse incident unto it than the court of Pye owders to a Fair. Other Courts and Offices are not so requisite in those forests that are in the hands of subjects because they be not truly forests But if this fail then is there nothing of a forest remaining but it is turned into the nature of a Chace See Chace I read of thus many forests in England The forest of Windsor in Berkshire Cambd. B●it pag. 213. of Pickering Crompt 190. of Shirwood idem fol. 202. of Englewood in Cumberland an 4. Hen. 7. ca. 6. and Crompton fol. 42. of Lancaster idem fol. 196. of Wolmore Stowes Annals pa. 462. of Gillingham idem pa. 113. Knaresborow an 21. H. 8. c. 17. of waltham Cambd. pa. 328. of Breden idem pag. 176. of Whitehart idem p. 150. of Wiersdale idem pa. 589. Lownesall ibidem of Deane idem pa. 266 an 8. H. 6. c. 27. an 19. Hen. 7. ca. 8. of Saint Leonards in Southsex Manwood parte 1. pa. 144. of Waybridge and Sapler Idem codem pa. 63. of Whitvey pa. 81. Of Fekenham Camden pa. 441. of Rockingham idem pag. 396. Forest de la mer idem pag. 467. of
quod constituimus vos Justiciarium nostrum capitalem ad placita coram nobis terminandum durante bene-placito nostro Teste c. And Bracton in the place now recited speaking of the Common Plees saith that Sine Warranto jurisdictionem non habet which I think is to be understood of a Commission under the great Seal This Court was first called the Kings Bench because the King sat as Judge in it in his proper Person and it was moveable with the Court. See anno 9 H. 3. cap. 11. More of the jurisdiction of this Court see in Crompton ubi supra See Kings Bench. The oath of the Justices see in the Statute anno 18 Edw. 3. stat 4. See Oatb Justice of common plees Justiciarius communium placitorum is also a Lord by his Office and is called Dominus Justiciarius communium placitorum and he with his assistants originally did hear and determine all causes at the Common law that is all civil causes between common persons as well personal as real for which cause it was called the Court of Common Plees in opposition to the Plees of the Crown or the Kings Plees which are special and appertaining to him only Of this and the Jurisdiction hereof see Cromptons jurisdiction fol. 91. This Court was alwayes setled in a place as appeareth by the Statute anno 9 H. 3. cap. 11. The oath of this Justice and his Associates see anno 18 Edw. 3. Stat. 4. See Oath Justice of the Forest Justiciarius Forestae is also a Lord by his Office and hath the hearing and determining of all offences within the Kings Forest committed against Venison or Vert of these there be two whereof the one hath jurisdiction over all the Forests on this side Trent the other of all beyond The chiefest point of their Jurisdiction consisteth upon the articles of the Kings Charter called Charta de Foresta made anno 9 H. 3. which was by the Barons hardly drawn from him to the mitigation of over cruel ordinances made by his predecessors Read M. Camdens Brit. pag. 214. See Protoforestarius The Court where this Justice sitteth and determineth is called the Justice seat of the Forest held every three years once whereof you may read your fill in M. Manwoods first part of Forest lawes pag. 121. 154. pag. 76. He is sometimes called Justice in Eyre of the Forest See the reason in Justice in Eyre This is the only Justice that may appoint a Deputy per statutum anno 32 H. 8. cap. 35. Justices of Assise Justiciarii ad capiendas Assisas are such as were wont by special Commission to be sent as occasion was offered into this or that County to take Assises the ground of which polity was the ease of the Subjects For whereas these actions passe alway by Jury so many men might not without great hinderance be brought to London and therefore Justices for this purpose were by Commission particularly authorised and sent down to them And it may seem that the Justices of the Common Plees had no power to deal in this kind of businesse until the statute made anno 8 Richard 2. cap. 2. for by that they are enabled to take Assises and to deliver Gaols And the Justices of the kings Bench have by that Statute such power affirmed unto them as they had one hundred years before that Time hath taught by experience that the better sort of Lawyers being fittest both to judge and to plead may hardly be spared in term time to ride into the Countrey about such businesse and therefore of later years it is come to passe that these commissions ad capiendas Assisas are driven to these two times in the year out of term when the Justices and other may be at leasure for these Controversies also wherupon it is also fallen out that the matters wont to be heard by more general Commission of Justices in Eyr are heard all at one time with these Assises which was not so of old as appeareth by Bracton l. 3. c. 7. 2. nu Habet etiam Justiciarios itinerantes de Comitatu in Comitatum quandoque adomnia placita quandoque ad quaedam specialia sicut Assisas c. et ad Gaolas deliberandas quandoque ad unicam vel duas non plures And by this means the Justices of both Benches being justly to be accounted the fittest of all others others their Assistants as also the Sergeant at law may be imployed in these affaires who as gravest in years so are they ripest in judgement and therefore likest to be void of partiality for being called to this dignity they give over practice anno 8 R. 2. cap. 3. but this alway to be remembred that neither Justice of either Bench nor any other may be Justice of Assise in his own Countrey anno 8 R. 2. cap. 2. anno 33 H. 8. cap. 24. Lastly note that in these dayes though the self same men disparch businesse of so divers natures and all at one time which were wont to be performed by divers and at severall times yet they doe it by several commissions Cromptons jurisdictions fol. 210. For those who be in one word called Justices of Circuit and twice every year passe by two and two through all England have one Commission to take Assises another to deliver Gaols another of Oyer and Terminer That Justices of Assise and Justices in Eyre did antiently differ it appeareth anno 27 Ed. 3. cap. 5. and that Justices of Assise and Justices of Gaol delivery were divers it is evident by anno 4 Ed. 3. cap. 3. The oath taken by Justices of Assise is all one with the oath taken by the Justices of the Kings Bench. Old abridgement of Statutes titulo Sacramentum Justiciariorum See Oath Justices of Oyer and Terminer Justiciarii ad audi●ndum Terminandum were Justices deputed upon some especial or extraordinary occasion to hear and deter mine some or more causes Fitzherbert in his natura brevium saith that the Commission a'Oyer and Terminer is directed to certain persons upon any great assembly insurrections hainous demeanure or trespasse committed And because the occasion of granting this commission should be maturely weighed is provided by the Statute anno 2 Ed. 3. cap. 2. that no such commission ought to be granted but that they shall be dispatched before the Justices of the one Bench or other or Justices errants except for horrible trespasses and that by the special favour of the King The form of this commission see in Fitzh natur brev fol. 110. Justices in Eyre Justiciarii itinerantes are so termed of the French Erre i. iter which is an old word as a grand erre i. magnis itineribus proverbially spoken the use of these in antient time was to send them with Commission into divers Counties to hear such causes especially as were termed the Plees of the Crown and therefore I must imagine they were so sent abroad for the ease of the Subjects who must else have been
hurried to the Kings Bench if the cause were too high for the County Court They differed from the Justices of Oyer and Terminer because they as is above-said were sent upon some one or few especial cases and to one place whereas the Justices in Eyre were sent through the Provinces and Counties of the land with more indefinite and general Commission as appeareth by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 11 12 13 and Britton cap. 2. And again they seem to differ in this because the Justices of Oyer and Terminer as it is before said were sent uncertainly upon any uproar or other occasion in the countrey but these in Eyre as M. Gwin setteth down in the Preface to his Reading were sent but every seven year once with whom Horn in his mirrour of Justices seemeth to agree lib. 2. cap. queux point estre actourrs c. and lib. 2. cap. des peches criminels c. al suyte de Roy c. and li. 3. ca. de Justices in Eyre where he also declar●th what belonged to their office These were instituted by Henry the 2. as M. Camden in his Britannia witnesseth pag. 104. And Roger Hoveden parte posteri annalium fol. 313. b. hath of them these words Justiciarii itinerantes constituti per Henricum secundum i. qui divisit regnum suum in sex partes per quarum singulas tres Justiciarios itinerantes constituit quorum nomina haec sunt c. Justices of Gaol delivery Justiciarii ad Gaolas deliberandas are such as are sent with Commission to hear and determine all causes appertaining to such as for any offence are cast into the Gaol part of whose authority is to punish such as let to Mainprise those prisoners that by law be not baileable by the Statute de finibus cap. 3. Fitz. nat br fol. 151. I. These by likelihood in antient time were sent to Countries upon this several occasion But afterward Justices of Assise were likewise authorised to this anno 4 Ed. 3. cap. 3. Their oath is all one with other of the Kings Justices of either Bench Old Abridgement of Statutes titulo Sacramentum Justiciariorum See Oath Justices of labourers were Justices appointed in those times to redresse the frowardnesse of labouring men that would either be idle or have unreasonable wages See anno 21 Edvardi 3. cap. primo anno 25 ejusd cap. 8. an 31 ejusd cap. 6. Justices of Nisi prius are all one now adayes with Justices of Assises for it is a common Adjournment of a cause in the Gommon Plees to put it off to such a day Nisi prius Justiciarit venerint ad eas parte ad capiendas Assisas and upon this clause of Adjournment they are called Justices of Nisi Prius as well as Justices of Assises by reason of the writ or action that they have to deal in their Commission you may see in Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 204. yet M. Crompton maketh this difference between them because Justices of Assise have power to give judgement in a cause but Justices of Nisi prius only to take the verdict But in the nature of both their functions this seemeth to be the greatest difference because Justices of Nisi prius have to deal in causes personal as well as real whereas Justices of Assise in strict acception deal only with the possessory writs called Assises Justices of trial baston aliàs of trayl baston were a kind of Justices appointed by King Edward the first upon occasion of great disorder grown in the Realm during his absence in the Scotish and French warres they are called in the Old nat brev fol. 52. Justices of trial Baston but by Holynshed and Stow Ed. pri of Trail baston or trailing or drawing the staff as Holynshed saith Their office was to make inquisition through the Realm by the verdict of substantial Juries upon all officers as Maiors Sheriffs Bayliffs Escheators and others touching extortion briberies and other such grievances as intrusions into other mens lands and Barratours that used to take money for beating of men and also of them whom they did beat by means of which inqusitions many were punished by death many by ransome and so the rest flying the Realm the land was quieted and the King gained great riches toward the supporting of his wars Inquire farther of the name Baston is thought by some to be the beam of a pair of Scoales or Weights And this is in this place metaphorically applied to the just peising of recompence for offences committed My poor opinion is that the etymologie of this title or addition groweth from the French Treilles i. cancelli bars or lettises of what thing soever a grate with crosse bars or of the singular Treille i. pargula an house arbour a rail or form such as vines run upon and Baston a staff or pole noting thereby that the Justices imployed in this Commission had authority to proceed without any solemn Judgement Seat in any place either compassed in with railes or made Booth or Tent-wise set up with staves or poets without more work wheresoever they could apprehend the malefactors they sought for See libro Assisarum folio 57.141 Justices of Peace Justiciarii ad pacem are they that are aprointed by the kings Commission with others to attend the peace of the Countie where they dwell of whom some upon special respect are made of the Quorum because some businesse of importance may not be dealt in without the presence or assent of them or one of them Of these it is but folly to write more because they have so many things appertaining to their Office as cannot in few words be comprehended And again Justice Fitzherbert sometime sithence as also Master Lamberd and Master Crompton of late have written Bookes of it to their great commendation and fruitfull benefit of the whole Realm See also Sir Thomas Smith de repub Anglorum lib. 2. cap. 19. They were called Gardians of the Peace until the 36. year of king Edward the third cap. 12. where they be called Justices Lam. Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 19. pag. 578. Their oath see also in Lamberd lib. 1. cap. 10. Justices of Peace c. within Liberties Justiciarii ad pacem infra libertates be such in Cities and other Corporate Towns as those others be of any County and their authoritie or power is all one within their several precincts Anno 27 H. 8. cap. 25. Justicies is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the dispatch of Justice in some especiall cause wherewith of his own authoritie he cannot deal in his County Court lib. 12. cap. 18. whereupon the Writ de Excommunicato deliberando is called a Justicies in the Old nat brev fol. 35. Also the Writ de homine replegiando eodem fol. 41. Thirdly the Writ de secunda superoneratione pasturae eodem fol. 73. Kitchin fol. 74. saith that by this writ called Justicies the Sheriff may hold plee of a great summe whereas of his ordinary authoritie he cannot hold plees but
be impeached or excepted against either in this or any other thing The next chapter viz. the 103. sheweth how many persons suffice to make a Record in the Exchequer The next how many in an assise c. I find not that we in our Courts especially the Kings Courts stand much upon the numbers of Recorders or witnesses for the strength of the testimony which the Record worketh but that we take it sufficient which is registred in each Court Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 37. num 4. Bretton in the Proeme of his book saith that the Iustices of the Kings Bench have a Record the Coroner Vicounr Iustices of the Exchequer Iustices of the Gaol delivery the Steward of England Iustices of Ireland Iustices of Chester Iustices assigned by the Kings letters patents in those causes they have Commission to take knowledge of All which as I take it must be understood with that caveat of Brook titulo Record num 20. 22. that an act committed to writing in any of the Kings Courts during the term wherein it is written is alterable and no record but that term once ended and the said act duly enrolled it is a record and of that credit that admitteth no alteration or proof to the contrary Yet see Sir Edward Cooks Reports lib. 4. Rawlius case fol. 52. b. anno 12 Ed. 2. cap. 4. It is said that two Iustices of either Bench have power to record Non-sutes and defaults in the Country It appeareth by Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. cap. 1. et 11. that quatuor milites habent recordum being sent to view a party essoined de malo lecti and lib. 5. tract 1. cap. 4. nu 2. that Serviens Hundredi habet recordum in testimonio proborum hominum And in the Statute of Carleil made anno 15 Ed 2. it is said that one Iustice of either Bench with an Abbot or Prior or a Knight or a man of good fame or credence hath a record in the view of one that is said by reason of sickness to be unable to appear personally for the passing of a fine And anno 13 H. 4. cap. 7. et anno 2 H. 5. cap. 3. that two Iustices of peace with the● Shyreeve or Under-shyreeve have power to record what they find done by any in a ryot or rout c. That which is before mentioned out of Briton touching the Shyreeve seemeth to be limited by Fitzh nat br fol. 81. D. Who alloweth him a record in such matters only as he is commanded to execute by the Kings Writ in respect of his office And thence it commeth that Kitchin fol. 177. saith that the Escheator and Shyreeve be not Iustices of record but officers of record In which words he signifieth that their testimony is authentical only in some certain things that are expresly injoyned them by vertue of their Commission as Ministers to the King in his higher Courts whereas Iustices of record have in generality a record for all things within their cognisance done before them as Iudges though not expresly or particularly commanded Fitzh in his Nat. br fol. 82. in principio something explaineth this point writing to this effect Every act that the shyreeve doth by vertue of his commission ought to be taken as matter of Record no lesse than the Justices of peace His reasons be two the former because his patent is of record the other because he is a conservatour of the peace And then he addeth that the plees held before him in his County be not of record Yet is the County called a Court of record Westm 2. cao 3. anno 13 Ed 1. But it seemeth by Briton cap. 27. that it is only in these causes whereof the shyreeve holdeth plee by especial writ and not those that he holdeth of course or custome And in that case also it may be gathered out of the same Author that he hath a record but with the testimony of those annexed that be suters to the Court. Which seemeth to agree with Bractons words above specified Scrviens Hundredi habet recordum in testimonio proborum hominum And to this purpose read Glanvile l. 8. c. 8 9 et 10. One Iustice upon view of forcible detinue of land may record the same by statute anno 15 R. 2. cap. 2. the Maior and Constables of the staple have power to record recognisances of debt taken before them anno 10 H. ● ca. 1. Brook titulo Record seemeth to say that no Court ecclesiastical is of record how truly it is to be inquired For Bishops certifying bastardy bigamy excommunication the vacancy or plenarty of a Church a mariage a divorse a spiritual intrusion or whether a man be professed in any religion with other such like are credited without farther enquiry or controlment See Brook titulo Bastardy See Fleta lib 6. cap. 39 40 41 42. Lamb. Eirenarcha lib. pri cap. 13. Glanvile lib. 7. cap. 14 et 15. the Register original fol. 5. b. Bracton lib. 5. tractat 5. cap. 20. nu 5. Briton cap. 92 94 106 107 109. Doct. and Stud. lib. 2. cap. 5 but especially Cosius apology parte pri cap. 2. And a testament shewed under the seal of the Ordinary is not traversable 36 H. 6.31 Perkins Testament 491. Fulb. paral fol. 61. b. But it may be that this opinion groweth from a difference between that law whereby the court Christian is most ordered and the Common law of this Land For by the Civil or Canon law no instrument or record is held so firm but that it may be checked by witnesses able to depose it to be untrue Co. plus valere quod agitur quàm quod simulate concipitur ca. cum Johannes 10. extra de fide instrumentorum Whereas in our Common law against a record of the Kings court after the term wherein it is made no witnesse can prevail Briton cap. 109. Coke lib. 4. Hinds case fol. 71. lib. assisarum fol 227. nota 21. This reconciliation may be justified by Brook himself titulo Testaments num 4.8 14. and by Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. The King may make a Court of record by his grant Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. Briton cap. 121. as for example Queen Elizabeth of worthy memory by her Charter dated 26 Aprilis anno 3. regni sui made the Consistoty court of the University of Cambridge a court of record There are reckoned among our common Lawyers three sorts of Records viz. A record judicial as attainder c. A record ministerial upon oath as an office found A record made by conveyance by consent as a fine deed inrolled or such like Coke lib. 4. Andrew Ognels case fol. 54. b. Recordare facias or recordari facias is a writ directed to the Shyreeve to remove a cause depending in an inferiour court to the Kings bench or common plees as out of a court of antient Demeasn Hundred or County Fitz. nat br fol. 71. B. out of the county court idem fol.
Reg. orig f. 206 207. Reddioion is a judicial confession and acknowledgement that the land or thing in demand belongeth to the demandant or at the least not to himself a. 34 35 H. 8. ca. 24. Perkins Dower 379 380. Redubhours be those that buy cloath which they know to be stollen and turn it into some other form or fashion Briton cap. 29. Cromptons Viconat fol. 193. a Reentry commeth of the French rentrer i. rursus intrare and signifieth in our Common law the resuming or taking again of possession which we had earst foregone For example If I make a Lease of land or tenement I do thereby forego the possession and if I do condition with the Leassee that for non payment of the rent at the day it shall be lawfull for me to reenter this is as much as if I conditioned to take again the lands c. into mine own hands and to recover the possession by my own fact without the assistance of Iudge or proces Reere County See Rier County Reextent is a second extent made upon lands or tenements upon complaint made that the former extent was partially performed Brook titule Extents fol. 313. Regard regardum is borrowed of the French Regard or regardere i. aspectus conspectus respectus and though it have a general signification of any care or diligence yet it hath also a special acceptance and therein is used only in matters of the Forest and there two waies one for the office of the Regarder the other for the compasse of ground belonging to the regarders office or charge Cromptons jurisd fol. 175.199 Toaching the former thus saith M. Manwood parte pri of his Forest laws pag. 198. The Eire general Sessions of the Forest or Justices seat is to be holden and kept every third year and of necessity before that any such sessions or Iustices seat can be holden the Regarders of the Forest must make their Regard And this making of the regard must be done by the Kings writ And the regard is as he afterward there saith to go through the whole horest and every Bayliwick of the same to see and enquire of the trespasses of the Forest which he compriseth in these four viz. ad videndum ad inquirendum ad imbreviandum ad certificandum Of every of which branches you may read there his exposition Touching the second signification the compasse of the Regarders obarge is the whole Forest that is all that ground which is parcel of the Forest For there may be Woods within the limits of the Forest that be no parcel thereof and those be without the Regard as the same Author plainly declareth parte pri pag. 194. and again parte 2. cap. 7. nu 4. where he sheweth the difference between these words Infra regardum or Rewardum infra Forestam Regarder regardator commeth of the French Regardeur id est Spectator and signifieth an Officer of the Forest Cromptons jurisdict 153. where it is thus defined A Regarder is an Officer of the Forest appointed to surview all other officers He saith there also that this officer was ordained in the beginning of King Henry the seconds daies M. Manwood in his first part of Forest lawes pag 188. thus defineth him A Regarder is an Officer of the Kings forest that is sworn to make the regard of the Forest as the same hath been used to be made in antient time And also to view and enquire of all offences of the Forest as well of vert as of venison and of all concealments of any offences or defaults of the Foresters and of all other officers of the Kings forest concerning the execution of their offices He saith there also that a Regarder may be made either by the Kings letters patents or by any one of the Kings Iustices of the forest at his discretion in the general Eyr or at such time as the regard is to be made by vertue of the Kings writ directed to the Shyreeve of the County for that purpose The form of which writ he there setteth down After that pag. 192. he setteth down his Oath in these words You shall truly serve our Soveraign Lord the King in the office of a Regarder in the Forest of Waltham You shall make the Regard of the same in such manner as the same hath been accustomed to be made You shall raunge through the whole Forest and through every Bayliwick of the same as the Foresters there shall lead you to view the said Forest. And if the Foresters will not or do not know how to lead you to make the regard or raunge of the Forest that they will conceal from you any thing that is forfeited to the King you your selves shall not let for any thing but you shall see the same forfeiture and cause the same to be enrolled in your roll You shall enquire of all wastes pourprestures and Asserts of the Forest and also of concealments of any offence or trespasse in the Forest and all these things you shall to the uttermost of your power d● So help you GOD. Then you may read farther the particulars of his office eadem pag. 195. And pag. 207. he saith that their presentments must be upon their view and so recorded and that the Regarders of themselves have power to hear and determine the fine or amerciament for expeditating of dogs See Regard Regio assensis is a writ whereby the King giveth his Royal assent to the election of a Bishop or Abbot Register origin fol. 294. b. Registrie registrum commmeth of the French Registre i. liber librarium codex ratiocinarius ephemeris commentarius it signifieth with us the office or books or rolls wherein are recorded the proceedings of the Chancery or any Spiritual Court. The writer and the keeper whereof is called the Register in Latine Registrarins Register is also the name of a book wherein are expressed all the forms of writs used at the Common law called the Register of the Chancery Anno 13 Ed. pri cap. 24. Some say it is termed Registrum quasi regestum Prataeus Regrator regratator commeth of the French regratter i. desquamare Regratter quelque vielle robe la faire neufue is to scoure or furbish an old garment and to make it new again Also regratteur signifieth as much as Mango in Latine which kind of men sold children and to sell them the better mentiendi coloris artem optime callebant Martialis Plinius This word in our Common law did antiently signifie such as bought by the great and sold by the retayl Anno 27 Ed. 3. stat prim cap. 3. but now it signifieth him that buyeth and selleth any wares or victuals in the same market or fair or within five miles thereof Anno 5 Ed. 6. cap. 14. anno 5 Eliz. ab cap. 12. anno 13 Eliza. cap. 25. See Forestallers and Engrossers Rehabere facias seifinam quando Vicecomes liberavit seifinam de majore parte quam deberet is a writ judicial Register
used in our vulgar talk for the petit Sessions which are yearly kept for the disposing of Servants in service by the Statute anno 5 Elizabeth cap. 4. See Recognisance Statute sessions otherwise called Petit Sessions are a meeting in every Hundred of all the Shires in England where of custome they have been used unto the which the Constables do repair and others both Housholders and servants for the debating of differences between Masters and their Servants the rating of Servants wages and the bestowing of such people in Service as being fit to serve either refuse to seek or cannot get Masters anno 1 Eliz. cap. 4. Statu'o stapulae is a writ that lyeth to take his body to Prison and to seise upon his Lands and goods that hath forfeited a bond called Statute staple Regist orig fol. 151. a. Statutam de laborariis is a writ Iudicial for the apprehending of such labourers as refuse to work according to the Statute Reg. judi fol. 27. b. Statuto Mercatorio is a writ for the imprisoning of him that hath forfeited a bond called the Statute Merchant untill the debt be satisfied Regist origin fol. 146. b. and of these there is one against Lay persons ubi supra and another against Ecclesiastical 148. Stavisaker staphis agria vel herba pedicularis is a medicinable herb the kind and vertues thereof you have set forth in Gerards Herbal lib. 1. cap. 130. The seed of this is mentioned among drugs to be garbled anno 1 Jacob. ca. 19. Stenrerie is used for the same that Stannaries be in the statute anno 4 H. 8. cap. 8 See Stannaries Sterling Sterlingum is a proper epitheton for mony currant within the Realm The name groweth from this that there was a certain pure Coyn stamped first of all by the Easterlings here in England Stows Annals pag. 112. The which I rather believe because in certain old Monuments of our English and broken French I find it written Esterling so Roger Hoveden writeth it parte poster annalium fol. 377. b. M. Skene de verborum sipnific verbo Sterlingus saith thus Sterling is a kind of weight containing 32 corns or grains of wheat And in the Canon law mention is made of five shilling sterling and of a merk sterling ap 3. de arbitriss c. constituit 12. de procurator And the sterling peny is so called because it weighs so many grains as I have sundry times proved by experience and by the law of England the peny which is called the sterling round and without clipping weigheth 32 grains of wheat without tails whereof twenty make an ounce and 12 ounces a pound and eight pound make a gallon of wine and eight gallons maketh a bushell of London which is the eighth part of a quarter Hitherto M. Skene Buchanan lib. 6. saith that the common People think it so termed of Sterling a Town in Scotland Our Lyndwood saith that it is called sterling of the bird which we call a sterling which as he noteth was ingraven in one quarter of the coin so termed cap. Item quia de testamentis vaerb Cent. solides in Glos Stews are those places which were permitted in England to women of prosessed incontinency for the proffer of their bodies to all commers it is derived from the French Estuves i. thermae vaporarium Balneum because wantons are wont to prepare themselves to these venerous acts by bathing themselves And that this is not new Homer sheweth in the 8 book of his Odiss where he reckneth hot bathes among the effeminate sort of pleasures Of these stewes see the statute anno 11 Hen 6. ca. pri Steward See Seneschall and Stuward Steward of the Kings house an 25 Ed. 3. statute 5. cap. 21. Stily ard Guilda Theutonicorum anno 22 H. 8. ca. 8. et anno 32 ejusdem ca. 14. is a place in London where the fraternity of the Easterling Merchants otherwise the Merchants of Hawnse and Almain an pri Ed. 6. cap. 13. are wont have their abode See Geld. It is so called of a broad place or Court wherein Steel was much sold upon the which that house is now founded Nathan C●itraeus See Hawnse Stone of wool Petra lanae see Weights See Sarpler It ought to weigh 14 pounds yet in some places by custome it is more See Cromptons Justice of peace f. 83. b. Straife aliâs Stray See Estry Straits anno 18 H. 6. ca. 16. Streme works is a kind of work in the Stanaries for saith M. Camden titulo Cornwall pa. 119. Horum Stanario●um five metallicorum operum duo sunt genera Alterum Lode-works alterum streme works vo cant Hoc in lecis inferioribus est cum Fossis agendis stanni venas sectantur et fluvierum alveos subinde defl ctunt illud in locis aeditiorsbus cum in montibus puteor quod Shafts vcc in t in magnam attitudinem defodiunt et cuniculos agunt These you may read mentioned an 27 H. 8. cap. 23. Stirks Strip See Estreapement SU Suard aliâs steward senescallus seemeth to be compounded of Steed and ward and is a word of many applications yet alway signifieth an officer of chief account within the place of his sway The greatest of these is the Lord high Steward of England whose power if those Antiquities be true which I have read is next to the Kings and of that height that it might in some sort match the Ephori amongst the Lacedemonians The custom of our Common-wealth hath upon great consideration and policie brought it to passe that this high Officer is not appointed for any long time but only for the dispatch of some especiall businesse at the arraignment of some Nobleman in the case of treason or such like which once ended his Commission expireth Of the high Steward of Englands Court you may read Cromptons Jurisd f. 28. I have read in an antient Manuscript of what credit I know not that this Officer was of so great power in antient times that if any one had sought justice in the Kings Court and not found it he might upon complaint therof made unto him take those Petitions and reserving them to the next Parliament cause them there to be propounded and not only so but also in the presence of the King openly to rebuke the Chancellor or any other Judge or officer whom he found defective in yeilding Justice And if in case the judge or Officer so reprehended did allege that his defect grew from the difficultie of the case insomuch as he durst not adventure upon it then the case being shewed and so ●ound the Lord Steward together wich the Constable of England there in the presence of the King and Parliament might elect five and twenty persons or more or fewer according to their discretion and the case or cases in question some Earls some Barons some Knights some Citizens and Burgesses which upon deliberation should set down what they thought just and equal and their decree being read and allowed by Parliament did