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A19476 The interpreter: or Booke containing the signification of vvords wherein is set foorth the true meaning of all, or the most part of such words and termes, as are mentioned in the lawe vvriters, or statutes of this victorious and renowned kingdome, requiring any exposition or interpretation. ... Collected by Iohn Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1607 (1607) STC 5900; ESTC S108959 487,900 584

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his assistants in causes of iustice betweene the king and his subiects touching causes appertaining to the Exchequer The Lord chiefe Baron at this day is the chiefe Iudge of the court and in matter of lawe information and plea answereth the barre and giueth order for iudgment thereuppon He alone in the terme time doth sit vpon Nisi prius that come out of the Kings Remembrancers office or out of the office of the clerke of of the please which cannot be dispatched in the mornings for want of time He taketh recognisances for the Kings debts for appearances and obseruing of orders He taketh the presentation of all the officers in court vnder himselfe and of the Mayor of London and seeth the Kings Remembrancer to giue them their oathes He taketh the declaration of certaine receiuers accompts of the lands of the late augmentation made before him by the Auditors of the shires He giueth the two parcel makers places by vertue of his office The second Baron in the absence of the Lord chiefe baron answereth the barre in matters aforesaid he also taketh recognisances for the kings debts apparences and obseruing of orders He giueth yearely the oath to the late Maior and escheatour of London for the true accompt of the profits of his office He taketh a declaration of certaine receyuers accompts He also examineth the letters and summes of such Shyreeues foraine accompts as also the accompts of Escheatours and Collectours of Subsidies and Fifteens as are brought vnto him by the auditors of the Court. The third Baron in the absēce of the other two answereth the barre in matters aforesaide he also taketh recognisances as aforesaide He giueth yerely the oath of the late Mayor and gawger of London for his true accōpting He also taketh a declaration of certaine receiuers accompts and examineth the leters and sūmes of such of the former accountants as are brought vnto him The fourth barons is alwaies a coursetour of the court and hath bene chosen of some one of the clerks in the remembrancers offices or of the clerke of the pipes office He at the daies of prefixion taketh oth of al high shyreeus and their vndershyreeues and of all escheatours baylifs and other accountāts for their true accounting He taketh the oath of al collectours controllers surueyours and serchers of the custome houses that they haue made true entrances in their bookes He apposeth all shyreeues vyon their sūmons of the pipe in open court He informeth the rest of the Barons of the course of the court in any mater that concerneth the kings prerogatiue He likewise as the other Barons taketh the declaration of certaine receiuers accompts and examineth the leters and summes of such of the former accountants as are brought vnto him These barons of the exchequer areauncient officers for I finde them named westm 2. ca. 11. anno 13. Ed. 1. and they be called barons because barons of the realme were wont to be employed in that office Fleta li. 2. ca. 24. S. Thomas Smith saith of them that their office is to looke to the accompts of the Prince and to that end they haue auditors vnder them as also to descide all causes appertaining to the Kings profits comming into the exchequer by any meanes This is in part also proued by the statut anno 20. Ed. 3. ca. 2. anno 27. eiusdem stat 2. ca. 18. anno 5. R. 2. stat 1. ca. 9. 12. anno 14. eiusd ca. 1● And hereupon they be of late men learned in the common lawe of the realme wheras in auncient times they were others viz. maiores discretiores in regno siue de clero essent siue de curea Ockam in his lucubrations de fisci regij ratione Horn in his mirrour of Iustices saieth that barons were wont to be two and they Knights ca. De la place del Eschequer Then be there in this signification Barons of the Cinque portes anno 31. Ed. 3. stat 2. ca. 2. et anno 33. H 8. ca. 10. which are two of euery of the seuen towns Hastings Winchelsey Ry Rumney Hithe Douer Sandwiche that haue places in the lower house of Parlament Cromptons iurisd fo 28. Baron in the the third signification is vsed for the husband in relation to his wife which is so ordinary in all our lawe writers that wright in french as it were superfluous to confirme it by any one Baronet I reade this word anno 13. R. 2. stat 2. ca. 1. but I hould it falsely printed for Baneret or els to signifie all one with it Baronye baronia baronagium is the fee of a baron In which accompt are not only the fees of temporall Barons but of Bishops also who haue two respects one as they are spirituall men without possessions as was the tribe of Levy among the Israelites being susteined by the only first frutes and tenthes of the other tribes Iosue ca. 13. versue 14. The other respect they haue groweth from the bountie of our english Kings whereby they haue baronies at the least are thereby Barons or Lords of the Parlament This baronie as Bracton saith li. 2. ca. 34. is a right indiuisible and therefore if an inheritance be to be divided among coparceners though some capitall messuages may be divided yet si capitale messuagium sit caput Comitatus vel caput Baroniae he saith they may not be parcelled The reason is ne sic caput per plures particul as diuidatur plura iura comitatuum baroniarum deveniant ad nihilum per quod deficiat Regnum quod ex Comitatibus Baronys dicitur esse constitutum Barre barra commeth of the French barre or barriere i. repagalum obex vectis It is vsed in our common law for a peremptory exception against a demaūd or plaint and is by the author of the Termes of law defined to be a plee brought by the defendant in an action that destroieth the action of the plaintiffe for euer It is divided into a barre to common intent and a barre speciall Abarte to a common intendment is an ordinarie or generall barre that ordinarily disableth the declaration or plee of the plaintiffe a barre speciall is that which is more then ordinarie falleth out in the case in hand or question vpon some speciall circumstance of the fact Plowden casu Colthirst fo 26. a. b. For exāple an executor being sued for his testators debt pleadeth that he had no goods left in his hands at the day when the writ was purchased or taken out against him This is a good barre to common intendment or prima sacie But yet the case may so fall out that more goods might come to his hands sithence that time which if the plaintiffe can shew by way of replication then excep the haue a more especiall plee or barre to alleadge he is to be condemned in the action See also Plowden in the case aofre named fo 28. a. b. and Brooke titulo Barre nu
and in euery action reall as also euery action personall where the debt or dammages amount to 40. merks it is a good chalenge to any man that he cannot dispend 40. shillings by the yeare of Free-hold anno 11. H. 7. cap. 21. and Termes of the lawe verbo Chalenge The ground of this chalenge you may see farder in Fleta lib. 4. cap. 8. Chalenge vpon reason or cause is when the partie doth alledge some such exception against one or more of the Iurors as is not forthwith sufficient vpon acknowledgement of the truth thereof but rather arbitrable and considerable by the rest of the Iurors as for example if the sonne of the Iuror haue maried or espoused the daughter of the aduerse partie Termes of lawe vbi supra This chalenge per cause seemeth to be tearmed by Kitchin chalenge for fauour fol. 92. or rather Chalenge for fauour is said there to be one species of chalenge per cause where you may read what chalenges be commonly accounted principall and what not See the new booke of Entries verbo Chalenge and the old nat br fol. 158. 159. That this word chalenge is long sithence latined by the word calumnia appeareth by Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 18. li. 4. tract 3. cap. 6. lib. 5. cap. 6. But I doubt Priscian will neuer forgiue him that first strooke this blowe at him Of chalenge you may farder read Fleta lib. 1. cap. 32. § Ad quem diem seqq Chamberdekins are Irish beggers anno 1. H. 5. cap. 8. Chamberer is vsed for a chamber maide anno 33. H. 8. cap. 21. Chamberlaine camerarius vel camberlingus commeth of the French chambellan i. cubicularius vel praefectus cubiculi It is diversly vsed in our Chronicles Lawes and Statutes as Lord great Chamberlaine of England Lord Chamberlain of the kings house the kings Chamberlaine anno 13. Ed. 1. cap. 41. anno 17. R. 2. cap. 6. to whose office it especially appertaineth to looke to the kings chambers and wardrobe and to gouerne the vnder ministers belonging vnto the same Fleta lib. 2. cap. 6. 7. Chamberlaine of any of the kings courts anno 7. Ed. 6. cap. 1. Chamberlaine of the Exchequer anno 51. H. 3. stat 5. anno 10. Ed. 3. cap. 11. anno 14. eiusdem cap. 14. anno 26. H. 8. cap. 2. Chamberlaine of north Wales Stow. pag. 641. Chamberlaine of Chester Cromptons iurisd fol. 7. This Officer is commonly the receiuer of all rents and reuenues belonging to that person or citie whereunto he is chamberlaine v. Fletam li. 2. cap. 70. § Si autem The Latine word seemeth to expresse the function of this officer For camerarius dicitur à camera i. testudine sive fornice quia custodit pecunias quae in cameris praecipuè reservantur Onyphrius de interpret vooum ecclesiasticarum It seemeth to be borowed from the Feudists who define the word camera thus Camera est locus in quem the saurus recolligitur vel conclave in quo pecunia reservatur Zasius de feudis part 4. num 7. and Peregrinus de iure fisci lib. 6. tit 3. saith that camerarius vel camberlingus quē quaestorem antiqui appellârunt in rebus fisci primum locum tenet quia thesauraruis custos est publicae pecuniae Sane officium hoc primipilatus fuisse nonnulli senserunt There be two officers of this name in the kings Exchequer who were wont to keepe a controlment of the pels of receipt and exitus kept certaine keyes of the treasure cofers which is not now in vse They keepe the keyes of the Treasurie where the leagues of the Kings predecessors and diuers auncient bookes doe remaine There is mention of this officer in the Statute anno 34. 35. H. 8. cap. 16. There be also vnder-chamberlaines of the Exchequer which see in Vnder-chamberlaine Champartie cambipartita aliàs champertie seemeth to come from the french champart 1. vectigal and signifieth in our common lawe a maintenance of any man in his suit depending vpon condition to haue part of the thing be it lands or goods when it is recouered Fitzh nat br fo 171. and champertours be they that moue plees or suites or cause to be moued either by their owne procurement or by other and persyew at their proper costs for to haue part of the land in variance or part of the gaines anno 33. Ed. 1. stat 2. in fine Whereunto adde the third statut made the same yeare This seemeth to haue bene an auncient fault in our realme For notwithstanding these former statutes and a forme of writ framed vnto them yet anno 4. Ed. 3. ca. 11. it was againe inacted that whereas the former statute prouided redresse for this in the kings bench onely which in those dayes folowed the court from thence forth it should be lawfull for Iustices of the common plees likewise and Iustices of assises in their circuits to inquire heare and determine this and such like cases as well at the suite of the king as of the party How farre this writ extendeth and the diuers formes therof applied to seuerall cases see Fitzh nat br fo 171. and the Register orig fo 183. and the new booke of entrise verbo Champertie Euery champertie employeth maintenance Cromptons iurisd fo 39. See also his Iustice of peace fo 155. b. c. These with the Romans were called redemptores litium qui sc quotidianas lites mercantur aut quipartem litis paciscuntur l. si remunerandi § Maurus Π. Mandati l. si contra l. per diuersas Co. eodem 13. Champion campio is thus defined by Hotoman in verbis feudalibus Campio est certator pro alio datus in duello a campo dictus qui circus erat decertantibus definitus In our common lawe it is taken no lesse for him that trieth the combat in his owne case then for him that fighteth in the place or quarell of another Bracton li. 3. tracta 2. ca. 21. nu 4. who also seemeth to vse this word for such as hould by sergeanty or some service of another as cāpiones faciunt homagium domino suo li. 2. ca. 35. Of this reade more in Battell and Combat 30. Chanceler cancellarius commeth of the french chaneelier Vincentius Lupanus de magistratibus Francorum saith that cancellarius is no latine word how be it he citeth diuers latine writers that doe vse it With him agreeth that excellent man Petrus Pithaeus libro 2. aduersariorum ca. 12. and whereas Lupanus would deriue it from the verb cancello Pithaeus confesseth he hath good colour for his opinion though he thinke it not sound and therefore rather deduceth it a cancellis Cancellare is literas vel scriptum linea per medium ducta damnare and seemeth of it selfe likewise to be deriued a cancellis which signifie all one with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in greeke which we in our tong call a letis that is a thing made of woode or iron
the rols to euerie officer and the receiuing of them againe when they be written and the binding and making vp of the whole bundels of euerie terme and this he doth as seruant to the cheife Iustice For the cheife Iustice is at charge for all the parchemēt of all the rols Clerk of the outlawries clericus vtlagariarum is an officer belonging to the court of common plees being onely the seruant or deputie to the kings atturney generall for making out the writs of capias vtlagatum after outlawrie And the kings atturneis name is to euerie one of those writs And whereas seuen pence is paide for the seale of everie other writ betwixt partie party there is but a peny paid for the seale of this writ because it goeth our at the Kings suite Clerk of the sewers clericus sucraerum is an officer apperteining to the commissioners of sewers writing all things that they doe by vertue of their cōmission for the which See Sewers and see the statute anno 13. Elizabe ca. 9. Clerk controller of the kings house whereof there be two is an officer in court that hath place and seate in the compting house and authoritie to allow or disallow the charges and demands of pursuivants or messengers of the greene cloth purveiours or other like He hath also the ouer-sight and controlling of all defaults defects and miscariages of any the inferiour officers and to sit in the counting house with the superiour officers viz. the L. Steward treasurer controller and coferer either for correcting or bettering things out of order and also for bringing in country provision requisite for the Kings houshold and the censure for fayling of cariages and carts warned charged for that purpose This officer you haue mentioned anno 33. H. 8. ca. 12. Clerk of the Nihils clericus nihilorum is an officer in the Exchequer that maketh a rolle of all such summes as are nihiled by the shyreeues vpon their estreats of greene waxe and dilivereth the same into the Lord treasurers remembrancer his office to haue execution done vpon it for the king Clerk of the check is an officer in court so called because he hath the check and controlment of the yeomen of the gard and all other ordinary yeomen and huissiers belonging either to his maiesty the Queene or Prince either giuing leaue or allowing their absences or defects in attendance or deminishing their wages for the same He also nightly by himselfe or depute taketh the view of those that are to watch in the court and hath the setting of the watch This officer is mentioned anno 33. H. 8. ca. 12. Clerk marshiall of the kings house seemeth to be an officer that attendeth the marshiall in his court and recordeth all his proceedings anno 33. H. 8. cap. 12. Clothe of raye anno 27. Ed. 3. sta 1. cap. 4. Closhe is an vnlawfull game forbidden by the statute anno 17. Ed. 4. cap. 3. which is casting of a bowle at nine pinnes of wood or nine shanke bones of an oxe or horse Clove is the 32. part of a weigh of cheese i. 8. pound anno 9. H. 6. cap. 8. Cloues caryophylli are a spice knowne by sight to euery man They be flowers of a tree called caryophyllus gathered and hardened by the Sunne Of their nature you may reade in Gerards Herball lib. 3. cap. 144. This is cōprised among such spices as be to be garbled anno 1. Iacob cap. 19. Cocket cokettum is a seale appertaining to the kings custome house Regist orig fol. 192. a. also ascrow of parchement sealed and deliuered by the officers of the custome house to merchants as a warrant that their merchandize be customed anno 11. H. 6. cap. 16. which parchment is otherwise called literae de coketto or literae testimoniales de coketto Regist vbi supra fol. 179. a. So is the word vsed anno 5. 6. Ed. 6. cap. 14. and anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. cap. 21. This word is also vsed for a distinction of bread in the statutes of bread ale made anno 51. H. 3. where you haue mention of bread coket wastell bread bread of trete and bread of common wheate Coferer of the Kings houshold is a principal officer of his Maiesties court next vnder the Controller that in the counting house and elsewhere at other times hath a speciall charge and ouersight of other officers of the houshold for their good demeanure and cariage in their offices to all which one and other being either Sergeants Yeomē groomes pages or children of the kitchin or any other in any roome of his Maiesties seruants of houshold and payeth their wages This officer is mentioned anno 39. Elixab cap. 7. Cogs anno 23. H. 8. cap. 18. Conisour of a fine is he that passeth or acknowledgeth a fine in lands or tenemēts to another Cognise● is he to whom the fine is acknowledged West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 2. Cognizance commeth from the French cognisance i. intelligentia intellectus notio cognitio with vs it is vsed diuersly some time signifying a badge of a seruingmans sleeue whereby he is discerned to belong to this or that Noble or Gentleman somtime an acknowledgement of a fine or confession of a thing done as cognoscens latro Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 3. 20. 32. cognoscere se ad villanum Idem lib. 4. tractat 3. cap. 16. As also to make cognisance of taking a distresse somtime as an audience or hearing of a mater iudicially as to take cognisance sometime a power or iurisdiction as cognisance of plee is an habilitie to call a cause or plee out of another court which no man can doe but the king except he can shew charter for it Manwood parte 1. Of his Forest lawes pag. 68. See the new tearmes of the lawe and the new booke of Entries verbo Conusance Cognatione See Cosenage Cognisour see Conisour Cognitionibus mittendis is a writ to a Iustice or other that hath power to take a fine who hauing taken knowledgement of a fine deferreth to certifie it into the court of common plees commanding him to certifie it Regist orig 68. b. Coin cuneus vel cuna seemeth to come from the French coin i. angulus which probably verifieth the opinion of such as doe hould the auncientest sort of coyne to be cornered and not round Of this Lawyers substantiue cuna commeth the Lawyers verbe cunare i. to coyne Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 220. Coliander seede or rather Coriander seede Semen coriandri is the seede of an herbe so called medicinable and wholesome for diuers good purposes which see in Gerards Herball lib. 2. cap. 3. 79. It is numbred among the drugges that be to be garbled anno 1. Iacob cap. 19. Collaterall collateralis commeth of the Latine laterale i. that which hangeth by the side Lateralia viatoria Π. de lega fideium tertio l. 102. seeme to signifie a budget or capcase to hang by a saddle pomel Collaterall
pr. cap. 18. which reade See Fine Common plees communia placita is the kings Court now held in Westminster hall but in auncient time moueable as appeareth by the statute called Magna charta cap. 11. as also anno 2. Ed. 3. cap. 11. and Pupilla oculi parte 5. cap. 22. But M. Gwin in the Preface to his readings saith that vntill the time that Henry the third granted the great charter there were but two courts in all called the Kings courts whereof one was the Exchequer and the other the kings bench which was then called curia Domini regis and aula regia because it followed the court or king and that vpon the grant of that charter the court of common plees was erected and setled in one place certaine viz. at Westminster And because this court was setled at Westminster wheresoeuer the king lay thereupon M. Gwin vbi supra saith that after that all the writs ranne Quòd sit coram Iusticiariis meis apud Westmonasterium whereas before the partie was cōmanded by thē to appeare coram me vel Iusticiariis meis simply without addition of place as he well obserueth out of Glanvile and Bracton the one writing in Henry the seconds time before this court was erected the other in the later end of Henry the thirds time who erected this court All ciuill causes both reall and personall are or were in former times tryed in this court according to the strict lawe of the realme and by Fortescue cap. 50. it seemeth to haue bene the onely court for reall causes The chiefe Iudge thereof is called the Lord chiefe Iustice of the common plees accompanied with 3. or 4. assistants or associates which are created by leters patents from the king and as it were enstalled or placed vpon the bench by the Lord Chaunceler and lord chiefe Iustice of the court as appeareth by Fortescue cap. 51. who expresseth all the circumstances of this admission The rest of the officers belonging to this court are these the custos breuium three Protonotaries otherwise called Prenotaries Chirographer Filazers 14. Exigenters 4. Clerke of the warrants Clerke of the Iuries or iurata writs Clerke of the Treasurie Clerke of the kings siluer Clerke of the essoins Clerke of the outlawries Whose distinct functions looke in their places See Common bench Common day in plee of land an 13. R. 2. stat 1. cap. 17. signifieth an ordinarie day in the court as Octavis Michaelis quindena pascae c. as you may see in the statute made anno 51. H. 3. concerning generall dayes in the bench Common house of parlament is vsed for the nether house because the commōs of the realme that is the knights of the shires and burgeses possesse that house Crompton iurisd 9. Commotes seemeth to be compounded of the prepositiō con and mot i. dictio verbum and signifieth in Wales a part of a shire as a hundred anno 28. H. 8. ca. 3. It is written commoithes anno 4. H. 4. ca. 17. and is vsed for a gathering made vpon the people as it seemeth of this or that hundred by welsh minstrels Common law comunis lex hath three diuers significatiōs which see in the author of new termes of law verbo Common law Communi custodia is a writ that lyeth for that lord whose tenent houlding by knights seruice dyeth and leaueth his eldest sonne vnder age against a straunger that entreth the land and obtaineth the ward of the body It may seeme to take the name from the common custom or right in this case which is that the lord haue the wardship of his tenent vntill his full age or because it is common for the recouery both of land and tenent as appeareth by the forme thereof Old nat br fo 89. See also the Register orig fo 161. a. Communi placito non tenendo in scaccario is a writ directed to the treasurer and barons of the exchequer forbidding them to hould plee betweene two common persons in that court neither of them belonging toward the said court Register orig fo 187. b. Companion of the garter is one of the knights of that most noble and honourable order anno 24. H. 8. ca. 13. See Garter Compromis compromissum is a mutuall promise of two or more parties at difference to referre the ending of their controuersies to the arbitriment and equitie of one or more arbitratours West defineth is thus parte 2. Symbol titulo Compromise sect pri A compromise or submission arbitrium compromissum submissio is the faculty or power of pronouncing sentence betweene persons at controuersie giuen to arbitratours by the parties mutuall priuate consent without publique authority Computo is a writ so called of the effect because it compelleth a baylife chamberlaine or receiuer to yeld his accoumpt Old nat br fo 58. It is founded vpon the statut of Westm 2. ca. 2. anno 13. Ed. i. which for your beter vnderstanding you may read And it lyeth also for executours of executours anno 15. Ed. 3. statut de prouis victuall ca. 5. Thirdly against the garden in socage for waste made in the minority of the heire Marlb ca. 17. And see farder in what other cases it lyeth Register orig fo 135. old nat br vbi supra Fitzh nat br fo 116. Concealers be such as finde out concealed lands that is such lands as priuily are kept from the king by common persons hauing nothing to shew for them anno 39. Eliza. ca. 22. They be so called a concelando as mons a mouendo per antiphrasin Concord concordia is in the common law by a peculiar signification defined to be the very agreement betweene parties that intend the leuying of a fine of lands one to the other how and in what maner the land shall passe For in the forme thereof many things are to be considered West parte 2. Symbol titulo Fines and concords sect 30. whome read at large Concord is also an agreement made vpon any trespas cōmitted betweene two or more and is diuided into a concord executory and a concord executed See Plowden casu Reniger Fogassa fo 5. 6. where it appeareth by some opinion that the one bindeth not as being imperfect the other absolute and tyeth the parties and yet by some other opinion in the same case it is affirmed that agreements executory be perfect and doe noe lesse binde then agreements executed fo 8. b. Concubinage concubinatus is an exception against her that sieweth for her dower whereby it is alleadged that shee was not a wife lawefully maried to the party in whose lands shee seeketh to be endowed but his concubine Britton ca. 107. Bract. li. 4. tract 6. ca. 8. Condition conditio is a rate maner or lawe annexed to mens acts staying or suspending the same and making them vncertaine whether they shall take effect or no West parte 1. symb li. 2. Sect. 156. In a lease there may be two sorts of conditions condition collaterall or condition annexed to
craftie wilie or subtill sometime as much as artificiall curious singular exact or perfect as Rien contrefaict fin i. nihil simulatum aut adimitationem alterius expressum potest esse exactum vel ita absolutum quin reprehensionem vel offensionem incurrat as is set downe in that worke truly regal intituled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pa. 115. so that this fine force with vs seemeth to signifie an absolute necessitie or constreint not avoidable and in this sence it is vsed old nat br fol. 78. and in the statute anno 35. H. 8. ca. 12. in Perkins Dower fo 321. and Plowden fo 94. Coke vol. 6. fol. 111. a. Fine adnullando levato de tenemento quod fuit de antiquo dominico is a writ to Iustices for the disanulling of a fine levied of lands holding in auncient demesn to the preiudice of the Lord Register originall fol. 15. b. Fine capiendo pro terris c. is a writ lying for one that vpon conviction by a Iury hauing his lands and goods taken into the kings hand and his body committed to prison obteineth fauour for a summe of money c. to be remitted his imprisonment and his lands and goods to be redeliuerd vnto him Register orig fo 132. a. Fine levando de tenementis tentis de Rege in capite c. is a writ directed to the Iustices of the cōmon plees whereby to licence them to admit of a fine for the sale of land holding in capite Regist originall fol. 167. a. Fine non capiendo pro pulchre placitando is a writ to inhibit officers of courts to take fines for faire pleading Register original fol. 179. See Beau pleder Fine pro redisseisina capienda c. is a writ that lieth for the release of one laid in prison for a redisseisin vpon a reasonable fine Register originall fol. 222. Finarie See Blomarie Finours of gold and siluer be those that purifie and part those metals from other courser by fire and water anno 4. H. 7. ca. 2. They be also called parters in the same place sometime departers Fireboote for the composition looke Hayboote It signifieth allowance or Estovers of woods to maintaine competent fire for the vse of the tenent First fruites primitiae are the profits of every spirituall liuing for one yeare giuen in auncient time to the Pope throughout all Cristendome but by the statute anno 26. H. 8. cap. 3. translated to the Prince for the ordring wherof there was a court erected an 32. H. 8. ca. 45. but this court was dissolued anno pri Mar. sess 2. ca. 10. sithence that time though those profits be reduced againe to the crowne by the statute anno 1. Eliz. ca. 4. yet was the court neuer restored but all maters therein wont to be handled were transferred to the Exchequer See Annats Fishgarthe anno 23. H. 8. ca. 18. Fitche See furre Fitzherberd was a famous lawyer in the daies of King Henry the eight and was chiefe Iustice of the common plees he wrot two worthie bookes one an abridgement of the common lawes another intituled de Natura brevium Fled●it commeth of the Saxon word Fled that is a fugitiue wit which some make but a termination signifiing nothing of it selfe how be it others say it signifieth a reprehen sion censure or correction It signifieth in our auncient lawe a discharge or freedome from amercements when one hauing been an outlawed fugitiue commeth to the peace of our Lord the King of his owne accord Rastall Exposition of words or being licensed Newe termes of lawe See Bloodwit and Childwit See Fletwit Fleete Fleta is a famous prison in London so called as it seemeth of the riuer vpon the side whereof it standeth Camden Britannia pag. 317. Vnto this none are vsually committed but for contempt to the king and his lawes or vpon absolute commaundemēt of the king or some of his courts or lastly vpō debt when men are vnable or vowilling to satisfie their creditours Flemeswit or rather Fleherswit commeth of the Saxon word Flean which is a contract of Flegen that is to flie away It signifieth with our lawyers a libertie or charter whereby to chalenge the catel or amercements of your man a fugitiue Rastall Exposition of words See Bloodwit Fleta writeth this word two other waies as Flemenesfree vie or Flemesfreicthe and interpreteth it habere catalla fugitivorum li. 1. ca. 47. Fleta is a feigned name of a learned lawyer that writing a booke of the common lawes of England and other antiquities in the Fleete termed it thereof Fleta He seemeth to haue liued in Ed. the 2. time and Edw. the 3. idem li. 1. ca. 20. § qui ceperint li. 2. ca. 66. § item quod nullus Fletwit aliâs Fredwit Skene de verborum significatione verb. Melletum saith that Flichtwit is a libertie to courts and to take vp the amercements pro melletis he giueth the reasō because Flicht is called Fliting in french Melle which sometime is conioyned with hand-strookes And in some bookes Placitum de melletis is called the moote or plee of beating or striking Flight See Finer Florences anno 1. R. 3. ca. 8. a kinde of cloth so called Flotsen aliâs Flotzam is a word proper to the sease signifiing any goods that by shipwrecke be lost and lie floting or swimming vpon the toppe of the water which with Ietson and lagon and shares be giuen to the Lord Admirall by his leters patents Ietson is a thing cast out of the shippe being in daunger of wrecke and beaten to the shore by the waters or cast on the shore by the marriners Coke vol. 6. fo 106. a. Lagon aliâs Lagam vel Ligan is that which lyeth in the bottome of the sea Coke ibi Shares are goods due to more by proportion Foder fodrum signifieth in our English tongue a course kinde of meate for horses and other catell But among the Feudists it is vsed for a prerogatiue that the prince hath to be provided of corn and other meate for his horses by his subiects towards his wars or other expeditions Arnoldus Clapmarius de arcanis imperii lib. 1. ca. 11. And reade Hotoman de verbis feudalibus litera F. Folgheres or rather Folgers be folowers if we interpret the word according to the true signification Bracton saith it signifieth eos qui alii deserviunt lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 10. Folkmoote is a Saxon word compounded of Folk i. populus Gemettan i. convenire It signifieth as M. Lamberd saith in his explication of Saxon words verbo Conuentus two kind of Courts one nowe called the countie court the other called the Shyreeues turne This word is still in vse among the Londoners and signifieth celebrem ex omni ciuitate conuentum Stowe in his Suruey of London but M. Manwood in his first part of forest lawes pag. 111. hath these words Folkemote is the court holden in London wherein all the folke and people of the citie did complaine on
latine word for him was Iusticia and not Iusticiarius as appeareth by Glan lib. 2. cap. 6. Roger Houeden parte poster suorum annalium fo 413. a. and diuers other places which appellation we haue from the Normans as appeareth by the grand custumary cap. 3. and I doe the rather note it because men of this function should hereby consider that they are or ought to be not Iusti in their iudgements but in abstract ips● iusticia how be it I hould it well if they performe their office in concreto Another reason why they are called Iusticiary with vs and not Iudices is bicause they haue their authority by deputation as Delegates to the king and not iure magistratus and therefore cannot depute others in their steed the Iustice of the Forest onely excepted who hath that liberty especially giuen him by the statute anno 32. H. 8. cap. 35. for the Chanceller Marshall Admirall and such like are not called Iusticiarii but Iudices of these Iustices you haue diuers sorts in England as you may perceaue heare following The maner of creating these Iustices with other appertenences reede in Fortescu cap. 51. Iustice of the Kings bench Iusticiarius de Banco regis is a Lord by his office and the cheife of the rest wherefore he is also called Capitalis Iusticiarius Angliae his office especially is to heare and determine all plees of the crowne that is such as concerne offences committed against the crowne dignitie and peace of the King as treasons felonies may hems and such like which you may fee in Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. per totum and in Stawnf treatise intituled the plees of the crowne from the first chapter to the 51. of the first Booke But either it was from the beginning or by time it is come to passe that he with his assistans heareth all personall actions and reall also if they bee incident to any personall action depending before them See Cromptons Iuridict fol. 67. c. of this court Bracton lib. 3. cap. 7. nu 2. saith thus placita verò ciuilia in rem personam in Curia Domini Regis terminanda coram diuersis iusticiarus terminantur Habet enim plures curias in quibus diversae actiones terminantur illarum curiarum habet vnam propriam sicut aulam regiam iusticiarios capitales qui proprias causas Regis terminant aliorum omnium per querelam vel per priuilegium siue libertatam vt si sit aliquis qui implacitari non debeat nisi coram Domino rege This Iustice as it seemeth hath no patent vnder the broad seale For so Crompton saith vbi supra He is made onely by writ which is a short one to this effect Regina Iohanni Popham militi salutē Sciatis quod consistuimus vos Iusticiarium nostrum capitalem ad placita coram nobis terminandum durante beneplacito nostro Teste c. And Bracton in the place nowe recited speaking of the common plees saith that sine warranto inrisdictionem non habet which I thinke is to be vnderstood of a commission vnder the great Seale This court was first called the kings bench because the King sate as Iudge in it in his proper Person and it was moueable with the court See anno 9. H. 3. cap. 11. more of the Iurisdiction of this court see in Crompton vbi supra See Kings bench The oath of the Iustices see in the statute anno 18. Ed. 3. stat 4. See Oathe Iustice of common plees Iusticiarius communium placitorum is also a Lord by his office and is called Dominus Iusticiarius communium placitorum and he with his assistants originally did heare and determine all causes at the common lawe that is all ciuil causes betweene common persons as well personall as reall for which cause it was called the court of common plees in opposition to the plees of the Crowne or the Kings plees which are speciall and appertaining to him onely Of this and the Iuridisdiction hereof see Cromptons Iurisdiction fo 91. This Court was alwaies setled in a place as appeareth by the statute anno 9. H. 3. cap. 11. The oath of this Iustice and his associats see anno 18. Ed. 3. stat 4. See Oath Iustice of the Forest Iusticiarius 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 bee two whereof the one hath Iurisdiction oueral the forests on this side Trent the other of all beyond the cheifest point of their Iurisdiction consisteth vpon the articles of the Kings Charter called Charta de Foresta made anno 9. H. 3. which was by the Barons hardly drawne from him to the mitigation of ouer cruell ordinances made by his predecessors Reade M. Camdens Britan. Pag. 214. See Protoforestarius The Court where this Iustice sitteth and determineth is called the Iustice seate of the Forest held euery three yeares once whereof you may reade your fill in M. Manwoodes first part of Forest lawes pag. 121. 154. pag. 76. He is sometimes called Iustice in Eyre of the forest See the reason in Iustice in Eyre This is the only Iustice that may appoint a deputy per statutum anno 32. H. 8. cap. 35. Iustices of Assise Iusticiarii ad capiendas Assisas are such as were wont by speciall 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 subiects For whereas these actions passe alway by Iury so many men might not without great hinderance be brought to London and therefore Iustices for this purpose were by commission particularly authorised and sent downe to them And it may seeme that the Iustices of the common plees had no power to deale in this kinde of busines vntill the statute made anno 8. Rich. 2. cap. 2. for by that they are enhabled to take Assises and to deliuer Gaols And the Iustices of the kings Bench haue by that statute such power affirmed vnto them as they had one hundred yeares before that Time hath taught by experience that the beter sort of Lawyers being fittest both to iudge and plead may hardly be spared in terme time to ride into the country about such busines and therefore of later yeares it is come to passe that these commissions ad ●apiedas Assisas are driuen to these two times in the yeare out of terme when the Iustices and other may beat leasure for these controuersies also whereupon it is also fallen out that the maters wont to be heard by more generall Commissions of Iustices in Eyre are heard all at one time with these Assises which was not so of ould as appeareth by Bracton lib. 3. c. 7. nu 2. Habet etiam Iusticiarios itinerātes de comitatu in Comitatum quandoque ad omnia placita quandoque ad quaedam specialia sicut Assisas c. ad Gaolas
deliberandas quandoque ad vnicam vel duas non plures And by this meanes the Iustices of both benches being iustly to be accounted the fittest of all others and others their assistants as also the Sergeants at law may be imployed in these affaires who as grauest in yeares so are they ripest in iudgement and therefore likest to be voide of prociality for being called to this dignity they giue ouer practise anno 8. R. 2. cap. 3. but this alway to be remembred that neither Iustice of either bench nor any other may be Iustice of Assise in his owne country anno 8. Rich. 2. cap. 2. anno 33. H. 8. cap. 24. lastly note that in these daies though the selfe same men dispatch busines of so diuers natures and all at one time which were wont to be performed by diuers and at seuerall times yet they doe it by seuerall commissions Cromptons Iurisdictions fo 210. For those who be in one word called Iustices of circuit and twice euery yeare passe by two and two through all Englād haue one cōmission to take Assises another to deliuer Goales another of oyer and terminer That Iustices of Assise and Iustices in Eyre did aunciently differ it appeareth an 27. Ed. 3. cap. 5. and that Iustices of Assise Iustices of goale deliuery were diuerse it is euident by anno 4. Fd. 3. cap. 3. The oath taken by Iustices of assise is all one with the oath taken by the Iustices of the kings bench Ould abridgement of statutes titulo Sacramentum Iusticiariorum See Oath Iustices of oyer and terminer Iusticiarii ad audiendum terminandum were Iustices deputed vpon some especiall or extraordinary occasion to heare and determine some or more causes Fitzherberd in his natura beruium saith that the commission d' oyer and terminer is directed to certaine persons vpon any great assembly insurrection hainous demeanure or trespasse committed And because the occasion of granting this commission should be maturely wayed it is prouided by the statute anno 2. Ed. 3. cap. 2. that no such commission ought to be graunted but that they shal be dispatcheo before the Iustices of the one bench or other or Iustices errāts except for horrible trespasses that by the especial fauour of the King The forme of this cōmission see in Fitzh natura breu fol. 110. Iustices in Eyre Iusticiarii itinerantes are so termed of the French Erre i. iter which is an old word as a grand erre i. magnis iteneribus prouerbially spoken the vse of these in auncient time was to send them with commission into divers counties to heate such causes especially as were termed the plees of the crowne and therefore I must imagine they were so sent abroad for the ease of the subiects who must els haue beene hurried to the kings bench if the cause were too high for the countie court They differed from the Iustices of oyer and terminer because they as is aboue said were sent vpon some one or fewe speciall cases and to one place whereas the Iustices in Eyre were sent through the prouinces and counties of the land with more Indefinite and generall commission as appeareth by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 11. 12. 13. and Britton cap. 2. And againe they seeme to differ in this because the Iustices of oyer and terminer as it is before said were sent vncertainly vpon any vproare or other occasion in the country but these in Eyre as M. Gwin setteth downe in the preface to his reading were sent but euery seuen yeare once with whome Horn in his myrrour of Iustices seemeth to agree lib. 2. cap. queux poient estre actours c. and lib. 2. c. des peches criminels c. al suyte de Roy c. and lib. 3. c. de Iustices in Eyre where he also declareth 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 fo 313. b. hath of them these wordes Iusticiarij itinerantes constituti per Henricum secundum i. qui diuisit regnum suumin sex partes per quarum singulas tres Iusticiarios itinerantes constituit quorum nomina haec sunt c. Iustices of Gaol deliuery Iusticiarii ad Gaolas deliberandas are such as are sent with commission to heare and determine all causes apperteining to such as for any offence are cast into the Gaol part of whose authoritie is to punish such as let to mainprise those prisoners that by lawe be not bayleable by the statute de finibus cap. 3. Fitzh nat br f. 251. I. These by likelyhoode in auncient time were sent to countries vpon this seuerall occasion But afterward Iustices of Assise were likewise authorised to this anno 4. Ed. 3. cap. 3. Their oath is all one with other of the kings Iustices of either bench Ould Abridgement of statutes titulo Sacramentum Iusticiariorum See Othe Iustices of labourers were Iustices appointed in those times to redresse the frowardnesse of labouring men that would either be idle or haue vnreasonable wages See anno 21. Eduardi 3. cap. primo anno 25. eiusd cap. 8. anno 31. eiusdem cap. 6. Iustices of Nisi prius are all one now a daies with Iustices of Assises for it is a common Adiournment of a cause in the common plees to put it off to such a day Nisi prius Iusticiarii venerint ad eas partes ad capiendas Assisas and vpon this clause of Adiournment they are called Iustices of Nisi prius as well as Iustices of Assises by reason of the writ or action that they haue to deale in their commission you may see in Cromptons Iurisdsctious fol. 204. yet M. Crompton maketh this difference betweene them because Iustices of Assise haue power to giue iudgement in a cause but Iustices of Nisi prius only to take the verdict But in the nature of both there functions this seemeth to be the greatest difference because Iustices of Nisi prius haue to deale in causes personall as well as reall wheras Iustices of Assise in strict acception deale only with the possessory writs called Assises Iustices of trial bastō alias of trayl baston were a kind of Iustices appointed by King Edward the first vpon occasion of great disorder growne in the Realme during his absence in the Scottishe and French warres they are called in the ould nat bre f. 52. Iustices of triall Baston but by Holynshed and Stow in Edw. pri of Traile baston of trailing or drawing the staffe as Holinshed saith Their office was to make inquisition through the Realme by the verdict of substantiall Iuries vpon all officers as Mayors Shyreeues Bailifes escheatours others touching extortion briberies and other such greeuances as intrusions into other mens lands and Barratours that vsed to take mony for beating of men and also of them whom they did beate by meanes of which inquisitions many were punished by death many by ransome and so the rest flying the
Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 3. and Britton cap. 39. For hee pardoneth life and limme to offendours against his crowne and dignitie except such as he bindeth himself by oath not to forgiue Stawnf pl. cor lib. 2. cap. 35. And Habet omnia iura in manu sua Bracton lib. 2. cap. 24. num prim And though at his coronation he take an oath not to alter the lawes of the land Yet this oath notwithstanding hee may alter or suspend any particular lawe that seemeth hurtfull to the publike estate Blackwood in Apologia Regum c. 11. See Oath of the king Thus much in short because I haue heard some to be of opiniō that the lawes be aboue the king But the kings oath of old you may see in Bracton lib. 3. cap. 9. nu 2. for the which looke in Oath of the King The kings oath in English you may see in the old abridgement of Statutes titulo Sacram. Regis Fourthly the kings only testimonie of any thing done in his presence is of as high nature and credit as any Record Whence it cōmeth that in all writs or precepts sent out for the dispatch of Iustice he vseth none other witnesse but himselfe alwaies vsing these words vnder it Teste me ipso Lastly he hath in the right of his crowne many prerogatiues aboue any common person be he neuer so potent or honourable whereof you may reade your fill in Stawnf tractate vpon the Statute thereof made anno 17. Ed. 2. though that containe not all by a great number What the kings power is reade in Bracton lib. 2. cap. 24. nu prim 2. King of Heradls Rex Heraldorū is an officer at Armes that hath the preeminence of this Society See Herald This officer of the Romans was called Pater Patratus Kings Bench Bancus Regius is the Court or Iudgment seate where the Kinge of England was wont to sitte in his owne person and therefore was it moueable with the court or kings Houshould And called Curia domini Regis or Aula Regia as M. Gwine reporteth in the preface to his readings and that in that and the Exchequer which were the only courts of the king vntill Henry the thirds daies were handled all maters of Iustice as well Ciuill as Criminall whereas the court of common plees might not be so by the statute anno 9. H. 3. cap. 11. or rather by M. Gwins opinion was presently vpon the graunt of the great charter seuerally erected This court of the Kings bench was wont in auncient times to be especially exercised in all Criminall maters plees of the crowne leauing the handling of priuate contracts to the cownty court Glanuil lib. 1. cap. 2. 3. 4. li. 10. cap. 18. Smith de Repub Anglicana lib. 2. cap. 11. and hath president of it the Lord Cheife Iustice of England with three or foure Iustices assistaunts four or fiue as Fortescu saith cap. 51. and officers thereunto belonging the clearke of the crowne a Praenatory or Protonotari and other sixe inferior ministers or Atturnies Camd Britan pag. 112. See Latitat How long this court was moueable I finde not in any wrighter But in Brittons time who wrot In K. Ed the 1. his daies it appeareth it followed the court as M. Gwin in his said preface wel obseruethout of him See Iustice of the Kings Bench. Kings siluer is properly that mony which is due to the king in the court of common plees in respect of a licence there graunted to any man for passing a fine Coke vol. 6. fo 39. a. 43. b. Kintall of woad iron c. is a certaine waight of merchandize to the valew of a hundred or something vnder or ouer according to the diuers vses of sundry nations This word is mentioned by Plowden in the case of Reniger and Fagossa Knaue is vsed for a man seruant a. 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. ca. 3. And by M. Verstigans iudgemēt in his Restitutiō of decaied intelligence ca. 10. it is borowed of the dutch cnapa cnaue or knaue which signifie all one thing and that is some kinde of officer or seruant as scild-cnapa was he that bore the weapon or shield of his superior whom the latines call armigerum and the French men escuyer Knight Miles is almost one with the Saxon Cnight i. Administer and by M. Camdens iudgment pag. 110. deriued from the same with vs it signifieth a gentleman or one that beareth Armes that for his vertue and especially Martiall prowes is by the King or one hauing the Kings authority singled as it were from the ordinary sort of gentlemen and raised to a higher accompt or steppe of dignity This among all other nations hath his name from the Horse Because they were wont in auncient time to serue in warrs one horsbacke The Romans called them Equites the Italians at these daies terme them Cauallieri The French men Cheualliers The German Reiters The Spaniard Caualleros or Varoncs a Cauallo It appeareth by the statute anno 1. Ed. 2. cap. 1. that in auncient times gentlemen hauing a full knights fee and houlding their land by knights seruice of the king or other great person might be vrged by distresse to procure himselfe to be made knight when he came to mans estate for the answerable seruice of his Lorde in the Kings warres To which point you may also reade M. Camden in his Britannia pag. 111 But these customes be not nowe much vrged this dignity in these dayes being rather of fauour bestowed by the Prince vpon the worthier sort of gentlemen then vrged by constraint The maner of making knights for the dignitie is not hereditarie M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 111. shortly expresseth in these words Nostris verò temporibus qui Equestrem dignitatem suscipit flexis genibus educto gladio leuiter in humero percutitur Princeps his verbis Gallicè affatur Sus vel sois Cheualier au nom de Dieu id est Surge aut Sis Eques in nomine Dei The solemnitie of making Knights among the Saxons M. Stow mentioneth in his Annals pag. 159. See the priuiledges belonging to a knight in Fernes Glorie of Generositie pag. 116. Of these knights there be two sorts one spirituall another temporall Cassanaeus in gloria mundi parte 9. Considerat 2. of both those sorts and of many subdiuisions reade him in that whole part The temporall or second sort of knights M. Ferne in his Glorie of generositie pag. 103. maketh threefold here with vs. Knights of the sword Knights of the Bath and Knights of the soueraigne Order that is of the Garter of all which you may reade what he saith I must remember that mine intent is but to explain the termes especially of our common lawe Wherefore such as I find mentioned in Statutes I will define as I can M Skene de verb. significat verbo Milites saith that in the auncient lawes of Scotland Freeholders were called Milites Which may seem to haue bene a custome with vs
either Bench Barons of the Exchequer Iustices of peace c. And those that be meere recognisances are not sealed but inrolled And execution by force thereof is of all the recognisours goods and chatels except his draught beasts and implements of husbandrie and of the moitie of his lands West parte prim symb lib. 2. titulo Recognisances sect 149. And of these you may see there great diuersitie of presidents Note farder that a Recognizance though in the speciall signification it do but acknowledge a certaine debt and is executed vpon all the goods and halfe the lands of the recognisour yet by extention it is drawne also to the Bonds commonly called Statute Merchant and Statute of the Staple as appeareth by the Register original fol. 146. 151. 252. and by West vbi supra and others See Statute Merchant and Statute Staple Recognisance hath yet another signification as appeareth by these wordes in the statute West 1. c. 36. anno 3. Ed. 1. It is prouided also and agreed that if any man be attainted of disseisin done in the time of our King that now is with roberie of any maner of goods or moueables by recognisance of Assise of nouel disseisin the iudgement shall c. In which place it is vsed for the verdict of the twelue men empaneled vpon an Assise which twelue are also called recognitours of the Assise Litleton fol. 72. So also Bracton calleth them lib. 5. tractat 2. cap. 9. num 2. in these words In essonio verò reddendo exigentur omnes illi quos causa tetigerit sicut particeps Warantus alii vt supra Recognitores in Assisis Iuratores in Iuratis Inquisitores in Inquisitionibus c. And againe lib. 3. tract prim cap. 11. num 16. See the Statute anno 20. Ed. prim stat 4. See the newe book of Entries ver Recognisance Recognitione adnullanda per vim duritiem facta is a writ to the Iustices of the common Bench for the sending of a record touching a recognisance which the recognisour suggesteth to be acknowledged by force and hard dealing that if it so appeare it may be disanulled Register original fol. 183. a. b. Recognitours recognitores is a word vsed for the Iurie empaneled vpon an assise The reason why they be so called may be because they acknowledge a disseisin by their verdict See Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. cap. 9. nu 2. lib. 3. tract prim cap. 11. num 16. Record recordum commeth of the Latine recordari The word is both French and English and in both tongs signifieth an authenticall or vncontroulable testimonie in writing Britton cap. 27. and Lamb. Eirenarch lib. 1. cap. 13. In the Grand Custumarie of Normandie there are seuerall Chapters of diuers records expressing whose presence in each of the Courts is sufficient to make that which is enacted to be a record viz. the 102. chapter where you haue wordes to this effect The record of the Kings Court is a record of things done before the King All things done before the King so he haue one other witnesse This record may he and other make if he himselfe will not make it it may be made by three others And his person may not bee impeached or excepted against either in this or any other thing The next chapter viz. the 103. sheweth how many persons suffise to make a record in the Exchequer The next how many in an assise c. I find not that wee in our Courts especially the Kings Courts stand much vpon the number of recorders or witnesses for the strength of the testimonie 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. Britton in the Proeme of his booke saith that the Iustices of the Kings Bench haue a record the Coroner Vicount Iustices of the Exchequer Iustices of Goale deliuerie the Steward of England Iustices of Ireland Iustices of Chester Iustices assigned by the Kings leters patents in those causes they haue commission to take knowledge of All which as I take it must be vnderstood with that caueat of Brooke titulo Record num 20 22. that an act committed to writing in any of the Kings Courts during the terme wherein it is written is alterable and no record but that terme once ended and the said act duly enrolled it is a record and of that credit that admitteth no alteration or proofe to the contrarie Yet see Sir Edward Cookes Reports lib. 4. Rawlins case fol. 52. b. ann 12. Ed. 2. cap. 4. It is said that two Iustices of either Bench haue power to record Non suites Defaults in the countrey It appeareth by Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. c. 1. 11. that quatuor milites babent recordum being sent to view a partie essoined de malo lecti and lib. 5. tract 1. cap. 4. nu 2. that Seruiens Hundredi habet recordum in testimonio proborum honinum And in the Statute of Carleil made anno 15. Ed. 2. it is said that one Iustice of either Bench with an Abbot or a Prior or a Knight or a man of good same and credence hath a record in the view of one that is said by reason of sicknesse to be vnable to appeare personally for the passing of a fine And anno 13. H. 4. cap. 7. anno 2. H. 5. cap. 3. that two Iustices of peace with the Shyreeue or Vndershyreeue haue power to record what they find done by any in a ryot or route c. That which is before mentioned out of Britton touching the Shyreeue seemeth to be limited by Fitzh nat br fol 81. D. Who alloweth him a Record in such maters onely as he is commaunded to execute by the Kings writ in respect of his office And thence it commeth that Kitchin fol. 177. saith that the Escheatour and Shyreeue be not Iustices of record but officers of record In which words he signifieth that their testimony is authenticall onely in some certaine things that are expresly inioyned them by vertue of their Commission as ministers to the King in his higher Courts whereas Iustices of record haue in generality a record for all things within their cognisance done before them as Iudges though not expresly or particularly commaunded Fitzherbert in his Nat br fo 82. in principio something explaneth this point writing to this effect Euery act that the Shyreeue doth by vertue of his commission ought to be taken as mater of record no lesse then the Iustices of peace His reasons be two the former he cause his patent is of record the other because he is a conseruatour 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. ca. 3. anno 13. Ed. 1. But it seemeth by Britton cap. 27. that it is onely in these causes whereof the Shyreeue houldeth plee by especiall
a man vpon breach of a statute to be resembled in mine opinion to any action giuen in the lawe imperiall either vpon edictum praetoris plebiscitum or senatusconsultum For as the Pretour so the common people in comitijs tributis the Senatours or nobility in curia vel senatu had power to make lawes wherevpon the Pretour or other Iudges permitted action And euen so our high court of Parlament maketh Statutes against such offēces as are either newly grown or more and more increased and our Iudges intertaine their plees that commence actions against the breakers of them Action is perpetuall or temporall perpetua vel temporalis and that is called perpetuall the force whereof is by no time determined Of which sort were all ciuill actions among the auncient Romaines viz. such as grew from lawes decrees of the Senate or constitutions of the Emperors whereas actions granted by the Pretor died within the yeare de perpet tempor actio in Institut So we haue in England perpetuall and temporarie actions and I thinke all may be called perpetuall that are not expresly limited As diuers Statutes giue actions so they be pursued within the time by them prescribed namely the Statute anno 1. Ed. 6. cap. 1. giueth action for 3. yeares after the offences therein shall be committed and no longer and the Statute anno 7. H. 8. cap. 3. doth the like for foure yeares and that anno 31. Eliz. cap. 5. for one yeare no more But as by the ciuill lawe no actions were at the last so perpetual but that by time they might be prescribed against as actiones in rem decem aut viginti terminantur annis personales verò triginta § 1. de perpet temp actio in Institutio l. 3. Co. de praescript 30. annorum so in our common law though actions may be called perpetual in comparison of those that be expressely limited by statute yet is there a means to prescribe against reall actions within fiue yeares by a fine leuied or a recouerie acknowledged as you may see farther in the word Fine and Recouerie And for this also looke Limitation of assise Action is farther diuided in actionem bona fidei stricti iuris Which diuision hath good vse in our common lawe likewise though the tearmes I find not in any of their writers But of this and such like diuisions because they haue as yet no apparent acceptance amongst our Lawyers but onely a hidden vse I referre the reader to the Ciuilians and namely to Wesenb in his Paratitles Π. De obligatio actio Addition additio is both the English and French word made of the Latine and signifieth in our common law a title giuen to a man ouer and aboue his Christian and surname shewing his estate degree occupation trade age place of dwelling c. For the vse wherof in originall writs of actions personale appeales and indictments it is prouided by Statute anno 1. H. 5. cap. 5. vpō the penaltie therein expressed Tearmes of the lawe Broke farder addeth that it is likewise requisite in townes and gates of townes parishes in great townes and cities where there may be any doubt by reason of more townes gates or parishes of the same name titulo Addition See also M. Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 95. 96. Adeling was a word of honor among the Angles properly apertaining to the Kings children whereupon king Edward being himselfe without issue and intending to make Eadgare to whome he was great Vnkle by the mothers side his heire to this kingdome called him Adeling Roger Houedine parte poster suorum Annal. fol. 347. a. Adiournment adiurnamentum is almost all one with the French adiounrement i. denunciatio vel diei dictio and signifieth in our commō law an assignement of a day or a putting off vntill another day Adiournment in eyre anno 25. Ed. 3. Statute of pourveyers cap. 18. is an appointment of a day when the Iustices in eire meane to sit againe Adiourn anno 2. Edw. 3. cap. 11. hath the like signification And this whole title in Broke his abridgement proueth the same The bastard Latine word adiurnamentum is vsed also among the Burgundians as M. Skene noteth in his booke De verbo signi verbo Adiurnatus out of Chassaneus de consuet Burg. Ad inquirendum is a writ iudiciall commanding inquirie to be made of any thing touching a cause depending in the Kings court for the better execution of iustice as of bastardie of bondmen and such like whereof see great diuersitie in the Table of the Register iudiciall verbo Ad inquirendum Admeasurement admensuratio is a writ which lyeth for the bringing of those to a mediocritie that vsurpe more then their part And it lyeth in two cases one is tearmed admeasurement of dower admensuratio dotis where the widow of the deceased holdeth from the heire or his guardian more in the name of her dower then of right belongeth vnto her Register orig fol. 171. a. Fitzh nat br fol. 148. The other is admeasurement of pasture admensuratio pasturae which lieth betweene those that haue common of pasture appendant to their free-hold or common by vicenage in case any one of them or more doe surcharge the common with more cattell then they ought Register orig fol. 156. b. Fitzh nat br fol. 125. Administer administrator in our common law is properly taken for him that hath the goods of a man dying intestate committed to his charge 〈…〉 y the ordinary is accountable for the same whensoeuer it shall please the ordinarie to call him thereunto I finde not this word soe vsed in all the civile or canon lawe but more generally for those that haue the gouernment of any thing as the Decrees can 23. quaest 5. c. 26. Administratores plane saecularium dignitatum c. and extrava com ca. 11. Grangias autem alia loca Cisterciensium ordinis aliorum Regalium in quibus Gubernatores seu custodes vel administratores ponuntur c. Howsoeuer the signification of this word grew to be restrained amongst vs it greatly booteth not But there was a statute made anno 31. Ed. 3. ca. 11. whereby power was giuen to the ordinarie to appointe these administratours and to authorize them as fully as executors to gather vp and to dispose the goods of the deceased alway provided that they should be accountable for the same as executors And before that viz. Westm 2. anno 13. Ed. 1. ca. 19. it was ordeined that the goods of those that died intestate should be committed to the ordinarie his disposition and that the ordinarie should be bound to answer his debts so far forth as the goods would extēd as executors And I perswade myselfe that the committing of this burden vnto Bishops to those that deriue ecclesiasticall authoritie from them grew first from the constitution of Leo the Emperour Co. de Episco cleri l. nulli licere 28. Where it is saide that if a man dying
summonitiones quòd sint coram Iustitiarijs c. parati inde facere recognitionem c. This is as if he should haue spoken shorter metonymia effecti For they are called the assises because they are summoned by vertue of the writ so termed And yet the Iurie summoned vpon 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 abusiuely so tearmed Assise in this signification is diuided in magnam paruam Glanvile lib. 2. ca. 6. 7. c. and Britton c. 12. where it appeareth wherein the great assise differeth from the petit assise whome I wish to be read by those that would be furder instructed in this point For this place thus much in short The former 4. kindes of assises vsed in actions only possessory be called petit assises in respect of the graund assise For the law of feese is groūded vpon two rights one of possession the other of propertie and as the grand assise serueth for the right of property so the petit assise serueth for the right of possession Horns myrror of Iustices lib. 2. cap. de novel disseisin Assise in the third signification according to Litleton 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 ceruiciae Regist orig fol. 279. b. The assise of Clarendon assisa de Clarendon wherby those that be accused of any hainous crime and not able to purge themselues by fire and water but must abiure the realme had libertie of 40. daies to stay and trie what succour they could get of their friends toward their sustenance in exile Stawnf pl. cor fol. 118. out of Bracton li. 3. tract 2. cap. 16. num 2. Of this also Roger Hoveden maketh mention and more particularly then any that I haue read parte poster suorum annalium fol. 313. b. in Henrico secundo Assise of the Forest assisa de Foresta which is a statute or constitution touching orders to be obserued in the kings forest Manwood parte 1. of his Forest lawes pag. 35. Crompton in the Court of the Iustices of the Forest per totum fol. 146. seq And the assise of the king anno 18. Ed. 3. stat 1. called the statute for view of Francke pledge And these be called assises because they set downe and appoint a certaine measure rate or order in the things which they concerne Of assise in this signification doth Glanvil also speake lib. 9. cap. 10. in fine Generaliter verum est quod de quolibet placito quod in comitath deducitur terminatur misericordia quae inde prouenit vicecomiti debetur quae quanta sit per nullam assisam generalem determinatum est And thus much touching Litletons diuisiō But if we marke well the writers of the lawe we shall find this word assise more diuersly vsed then this author hath noted For it is vsed sometime for the measure or quantity it selfe and that per Metonymiam effecti because it is the very scantline described or commaunded by the ordinance as for example we say when wheate c. is of this price then the bread c. shall be of this assise This word is furder taken for the whole processe in court vpon the writ of assise or for some part therof as the issue or verdict of the Iury. For example assises of new disseisin c. shall not be taken but in their shires and after this maner c. mag char cap. 12. And so it seemeth to 〈…〉 nifie Westm 2. cap. 25. anno 13. Ed. 1. in these words let the disseisiours alledge no false exceptions whereby the taking of the assises may be deferred c. And anno 34. Ed. 1. stat 2. if it be found by assise the assise in arrained to averre by the assise the assise by their default shal passe against them and also an 1. H. 6. cap. 2. assises awarded by default of the tenents c Lastly by Merton cap. 4. anno 20. H. 3. certified by the assise quite by the assise c. And in this signification Glanvile calleth it magnam assisam domim regis quae ex duodecim ad minus legalium hominum sacramentis consistit lib. 2. cap. 7. Bracton vseth it in like sort as assisa cadit in transgressionem lib. 4. cap. 30. assisa cadit in perambulationem codem cap. 31. num 2. Fleta defineth an assise in this signification thus Assisa in iure possessorio est quaedam recognitio duodecim hominum iuratorum per quam Iusticiary certiorantur de articulis in breui contentis An assise also thus signifying is said sometime to passe per modum assisae and sometime in modum 〈…〉 ata in maner of an assise when onely the disseisin in question is put to the trial of the twelue in maner of a iurie when as any exception is obiected to disable the interest of the disseisee and is put to be tryed by the twelue before the assise can passe As for example Quaestio status causa successionis causa donationis pactum siue conditio vel cōnentio voluntas dissimulatio transactio vel quietaclamatio vel remissio confirmatio siue consensus propria vsurpatio rei propriae difficultas iudicij iustum iudicium finis chirographum intrusio in rem alienam vel disseisina si in continenti reijciatur negligentia quae per transitum temporis excludit actunem Fleta lib. 4. cap. 10. § 1. whome reade also to this point cap. 11. § Siautem à Domino and at large cap. 16. eiusdem libri lib. 5. cap. 6. § Item vertitur assisa seq And note that assise in this signification is taken foure waies Old nat br fol. 105. The first is assise at large which is taken aswell vpon other points as vpon the disseisin For example where an infant bringeth an assise and the deed of his auncestor is pleaded whereby he claimeth his right or foundeth his title then the assise shall be taken at large that is the Iurie shall enquire not only whether the plaintiffe were disseised or not by the tenent but also of these other points viz. whether his auncestor were of full age of good memorie and out of prison when he made the deed pleaded Another example out of Kitchin fol. 66. The tenent pleadeth a forraine release in barre to an assise whereupon the cause was adiourned At the day the tenent maketh default Therefore the assise was taken at large that is not onely whether the plaintiffe were disseised but also whether there be any such forraine release A third example you may reade in Litleton cap. Estates vpon condition The second maner of assise in point of assise assisa in modum assisae which is when the tenent as it were setting foote to foot with the demandant without furder circumstance pleadeth directly
contrarie to the writ no wrong no disseisin The third manner is assise out of the point of assise assisa extra assisam vel in modum iuratae viz. when the tenent alledgeth some by exception that must be tried by a Iurie before the principall cause can proceed as if he pleade a foreine release or foreine mater tryable in another countie For in this case the Iustices referre the record to the Court of common plees for the triall of the foreine plee before the disseisin can come to be discussed Of this sort reade diuers other examples in Bracton lib. 4. part 1. cap. 34. For there be of them as he saith and Britton also cap. 52. both dilatorie and peremptorie The fourth and last manner is assise of right of dammages and that is when the tenent confessing a putting out and referring it to a demurter in lawe whether it were rightly done or not is adiudged to haue done wrong For then shall the demandant haue a writ to recouer dammages which is called assise to recouer dammages as also the whole processe Assise is further taken for the court place or time where and when the writs and processes of assise be handled or taken And in this signification assise is generall as when the Iustices passe their seuerall circuits euery couple with their commission to take all assises twice in the yeare For he that speaketh of any thing done at that time and in that place will commonly say that it was done at the generall assise It may likewise be speciall in this signification as if an especiall commission should be granted to certaine as in ancient times they often were Bracton lib. 3. cap. 11. in fine for the taking of an assise vpon one disseisin or two any thing done in the court before them a man would say it was done at such an especiall assise And in this very signification doth Glanvil vse it lib. 9. cap. 12. in these words Si contra dominum suum non infra assisam tunc distringitur ipse occupator c. and lib. 13. cap. 32. in these words cum quis itaque infra assisam domini regis i. infra tempus à domino rege de consilio procarum ad hoc constitutum quod quandoque maius quandoque minus censetur alium iniustè sine iudicio disseisiver 〈…〉 c. Of this word assise you may reade in M. Skene de verbo signif verbo Assise and by him vnderstand that in Scotland also it is diuersely vsed viz. in 5. seuerall significations And touching the fifth signification he hath these words An assise is called a certaine number of men lawfully summoned receiued sworne and admitted to iudge and discerne in sundrie civil causes syke as perambulations cognitions molestations pourpresture division of lands seruing of brieues and in all and sundrie criminall causes decided and tried by an assise whereof there are two kinds one ordinarily in vse which may be called a litle assise of the number of 13. or 15 persons the other called a great assise which consisteth of 25. persons c. The rest is very worthe the reading Assisa continuanda is a writte directed to the Iustices assigned to take an assise for the continuance of the cause in case where certaine records alleaged cannot in time be procured by the party that would vse it Reg. orig f. 217. Assisa proroganda is a writ directed to the Iustices of assise for the stay of proceeding by reason of the Kings buisnes wherein the partie is imploied Register orig fo 208. and fo 221. Association associatio is a patent sent by the King either of his owne motion or at the suite of the plaintife to Iustices appointed to take assises of novel disseisin or of oyer and terminer c. to take others vnto them as felowes and collegues in that busines The dirivation is plaine the examples and sundrie vses hereof you may finde in Fitz● nat br fo 185. E. fo 111. B. but more particularly in the Reg. orig f. 201. 202. 205. 206. 207. 223. 224. Assoile absolvere commeth of the French absouldre and signifieth to deliuer or set free from an excommunication Stawnf pl. cor fo 72. in words to this effect Otherwise the defendāt should remaine in prison vntill the plaintiffe were assoyled that is deliuered from his excommunication Assumpsit is a voluntarie promise made by word whereby a man assumeth or taketh vpon him to performe or pay any thing vnto another This word containeth any verball promise made vpon consideration which the Civilians expresse by divers words according to the nature of the promise calling it sometime pactum sometime sponsionē sometime promissionem pollicitationem or constitutum the word seemeth to be drawne from the latine assumptio quae significat professionem l. Π. ad municipalem Attache attachiare cōmeth of the French attacher i. figere nectere illigare defigere alligare In our common lawe it signifieth to take or apprehend by commaundement or writte And M. Lamberd in his eirenarch li. 1. cap. 16. maketh this difference betweene an arrest and an attachement that an arrest proceedeth out of lower courts by precept and an attachment out of higher courts by precept or writ and that a precept to arrest hath these formall words duci facius c and a writ of attachment these words praecipimus tibi quòd attachies talem habeas eum coram nobis c. whereby it appeareth that he which arresteth carieth the party arrested to another higher person to be disposed of forth with he that attacheth keepeth the party attached and presenteth him in court at the day assigned in attachement yet I obserue out of Master Kitchin that an attachement issueth out of a court baron which is a lowe court cap Attachment in court baron fo 79. Another difference there is that an arrest lieth onely vpon the body of a man and an attachement some time vpon his good as shal be shewed in the sequele It may be likewise asked how an attachement and a capias doe differ how an attachement and a cape and an attachement and a distresse First that an attachement differeth from a capias it appeareth by Kitchin in these words fo 79. Note that in a court Baron a man shal be attached by his goods and a capias shall not goe out thence wherby I gather that an attachement is more generall taking hold of a mans goods and a capias of his body onely Then an attachement differeth from a cape in this because a cape be it cape magnum or cape parvum taketh hold of immoveables as lands or tenements and are properly belonging to action reall as you may gather out of their formes in Fitzh nat br whereas attachemēt hath rather place in actions personall as Bracton plainly setteth downe li. 4. tracta 4. ca. 5. nu 3. Where neuerthelesse it appeareth that a cape may be likewise vsed in an action personall An attachement as it
the partie himselfe detaineth it and refuseth to bring it in Regist orig fo 152. b. In like maner may be said of certificando de statuto mercatorio eodem fo 148. and de certificando in cancellarium de inquisitione de idemptitate nominis fo 195. and certificando quando recognitio c. and certificando quid actum est de breui super statutum mercatorium fo 151 certificando si loquela Warantiae fo 13. Cessor is he that ceseth or neglecteth so long to performe a dutie belonging vnto him as that by his cesse or cessing he incurreth the daunger of lawe and hath or may haue the writ cessavit brought against him Old nat br fo 136. And note that where it is saide in diuers places the tenent cesseth without any more words such phrase is so to be vnderstood as if it were said the tenent ceseth to doo that which he ought or is bound to doe by his land ortenement Cessavit is a writ that lyeth in diuers cases as appeareth by Fitzh nat br fo 208. vpon this generall grounde that he against whome it is brought hath for 2. yeares foreslowne to performe such seruice or to pay such rent as he is tied vnto by his tenure and hath not vpon his land or his tenement sufficient goods or catells to be distreined Consult more at large with Fitz. vpon this vbi supra with Fleta li. 5. ca. 34. § visa sunt and with the Termes of lawe See Cessauit de cantaria Register orig fo 238. Cessavit de feodi firma eodem fo 237. Cessavit per biennium eodem folio etiam eodem See the newe booke of entrise verbo Cessavit Cestui qui vie is in true French cestui a vie de qui i. he for whose life any land or renement is graunted Perkins graunts 97. Cestui qui vse ille cuius vsui vel ad cuius vsum is broken french and thus may be bettered Cestui al vse de qui It is an ordinarie speech among our common lawyers signifying him to whose vse any other man is infeoffed in any lands or tenements See the newe booke of entrise verbo vses and in Replevin fo 508. colum 3. verbo Trespas fo 606. fo 123. a. b. colum 3. n● 7. Chafe waxe is an officer in chauncery that fitteth the waxe for the fealing of the writs and such other instruments as are there made to be sent out This officer is borowed from the French For there calefactores cerae sunt qui regiis literis in Cancellaria ceram imprimunt Corasius Chase chacea commeth of the French chasser 1. sectari belluas apros cervos It signifieth two things in the commō lawe First as much as actus in the civil lawe that is a dryving of catell to or from any place as to chase a distresse to a fortlet Old nat br fo 45. Secondly it is vsed for a receite for deere and wilde beasts of a middle nature betweene a forest and a parke being commonly lesse then a forest and not endued with so many liberties as the courtes of attachment Swaine mote and Iustice seate and yet of a larger compas and stored with greater diuersity both of keepers and wilde beasts or game then a park And Crompton in his booke of Iurisdictions fo 148. saith that a forest cannot be in the hands of a subiect but it forthwith looseth the name and becommeth a chase and yet fo 197. he saith that a subiect may be lord and owner of a forest which though it seeme a contrariety yet be both his sayings in some sort true For the king may giue or alienate a forest to a subiect yet so as when it is once in the subiect it leeseth the true property of a Forest because that the courts called the Iustice seate the Swain mote and Attachment foorthwith doe vanish none being able to make a Lord chiefe Iustice in Eyre of the Forest but the king as M. Manwood well sheweth parte 2. of his Forest lawes cap. 3. 4. And yet it may be granted in so large a maner that there may be Attachement and Swainemote and a court equiualent to a Iustice seat as appeareth by him in the same chapter num 3. So that a chase differeth from a Forest in this because it may be in the hands of a subiect which a Forest in his proper true nature cannot and from a Parke in that that it is not inclosed and hath not onely a larger compasse and more store of game but of Keepers also and ouerseers See Forest Chalenge calumnia commeth of the French chalanger i. sibiasserere and is vsed in the commō lawe for an exception taken either against persons or things persons as in assise to the Iurors or any one or more of them or in a case of felonie by the prisoner at the barre Smith de rep Anglor lib. 2. cap. 12. Britton ca. 52. Bracton lib. 2. tract 2. cap. 22. Against things as a declaration old nat br fol. 76. Chalenge made to the Iurours is either made to the array or to the polles Chalenge to the array is when the whole number is excepted against as partially empaneled chalenge to or by the polle when some one or more are excepted against as not indifferent Termes of the law Chalenge to the Iurours is also divided into Chalenge principall and Chalenge per cause i. vppon cause or reason Chalenge principall otherwise by Stawnf pl. cor fol. 157. 158. called peremptorie is that which the lawe alloweth without cause alledged or farder examination Lamberd Eirenar lib. 4. cap. 14. as a prisoner at the barre arraigned vpon felonie may peremptorily chalenge to the number of 20. one after another of the Iurie empaneled vpon him alledging no cause but his owne dislike and they shall be still put off and new taken in their places But in case of high treason no Chalenge peremptorie is allowed an 33. H. 8. cap. 23. Fortescue saith that a prisoner in this case may chalenge 35. men c. 27. but that law was abridged by anno 25. H. 8. cap. 3. I cannot here omit to note some difference that in mine opinion I obserue betweene Chalenge principall and Chalenge peremptorie finding peremptorie to be vsed onely in maters criminall and barely without cause alledged more then the prisoners owne phantasie Stawnf pl. cor fol. 124. but principall in ciuill actions for the most part and with naming of some such cause of exception as being found true the lawe alloweth without farder scanning For example if either partie say that one of the Iurors is the sonne brother cousin or tenent to the other or espoused his daughter this is exception good and strong enough if it be true without farder examination of the parties credit And how farre this chalenge vpon kinred reacheth you haue a notable example in Plowden casu Vernon against Maners fol. 425. Also in the plee of the death of a man
is vsed in the common law for that which commeth in or is adhering of the side as collaterall assurance is that which is made ouer and beside the deede it selfe For example if a man couenant with another and enter bond for the performance of his couenant the bond is termed collaterall assurance because it is externall and without the nature and essence of the couenant And Crompton in his Iurisd fol. 185. saith that to be subiect to the feeding of the kings Deere is collateral to the soyle within the Forest In like maner may we say that the libertie to pitche boothes or standings for a Faire in another mans ground is collaterall to the ground The priuate woods of a common person within a Forest may not be cut without the kings licence For it is a prerogatiue collaterall to the soyle Manwood parte 1. of his Forest lawes pag. 66. Collaterall warrantie See Warrantie Collation of a benefice collatio beneficii signifieth properly the bestowing of a benefice by the Bishop that hath it in his owne gift or patronage and differeth from Institution in this for that Institution into a benefice is performed by the Bishop at the motion or presentation of another who is patron of the same or hath the patrons right for the time Extra de Institutionibus De concessione praebendarum c. And yet is collation vsed for presentation anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 6. Collatione facta vni post mortem alterius c. is a writ directed to the Iustices of the cōmon plees commanding them to direct their writ to a Bishop for the admitting of a clerk in the place of another presented by the king that during the suit betweene the king and the Bishops clerk is departed For iudgment once passed for the kings clerk and he dying before he be admitted the king may bestow his presentation vpon another Register orig fo 31. b. Collatione heremitagii is a writ whereby the king conferreth the keeping of an ermitage vpon a clerk Register orig fo 303 308. Colour color signifieth in the common law a probable plee but in truth false and hath this end to draw the triall of the cause from the Iury to the Iudges Of this see two apt examples in the author of the new tearms Verbo Colour who also referreth you to the Doctor and student fo 158. c. See Broke tit Colour in assise trespas c. fo 140. Collusion collusio is in our common law a deceitfull agreemēt or compact between two or more for the one party to bring an action against the other to some euill purpose as to defraude a third of his right c. See the new tearms and Broke titulo Collusion See also one case of collusion in the Register orig fo 179. a. Combat duellum is a french word signifiing as much as certamen decertatio dimicatio discrimen praelium pugna but in our common law it is taken for a formall triall of a doubtfull cause or quarrell by the sword or bastons of two champions Of this you may reade at large both in diuers ciuilians as Paris de Puteo de remilitari duello Alciat de duello Hotomam disputatio feudalium ca. 42. and others as also in our common lawyers of England namely Glanuile li. 14. ca. 1. Bracton li. 3. tracta 2. ca. 3. Britton ca. 22. Horns mirrour of Iustices li. 3. ca. des exceptions in fine proxime ante c. Iuramentū duelli Dier fo 301. nu 41. 42. That this also was aunciently the law of the Lombards before they inuaded Italy which was about the yeare of our Lord 571 appeareth by Sigonius in his historie De regno Italiae lib. 2. de Ari●aldo rege who there reporteth that the said king hauing put away his wife Gundeberga vpon a surmise of adulterie with Tato Duke of Etruria at the priuate suggestion of Adalulphus a great man among the Lombards and being charged by Clotharius the king of France his Ambassadors of whose bloud she was that he had done her wrong he answered that he had done her no wrong Whereupon Ansoaldus one of the ambassadors replyed that they would easily beleeue him if he would suffer the truth to be tried by combat betweene some one of the Queens friends and her accuser according to the custome of the Lombards And the king yeelding vnto this Adalulphus was vanquished by one Pitto otherwise called Charles set foorth for the Queenes chāpion and she restored to her former place and honour Cominseede aliâs Cumin seed Semen cumini is a seede brought foorth by an hearbe so called which you may see described in Gerards Herball lib. 2. cap. 416. This is placed among the garbleable drugges anno 1. Iacob cap. 19. Comitatu commisso is a writ or a commission whereby the Shyreeue is authorized to take vpon him the swaye of the countie Regist orig fol. 295. a. b. and Co 〈…〉 Reports li. 3. fol. 72. a. Comitatu castro commisso is a writ whereby the charge of a countie together with the keeping of a castell is committed to the Shyreeue Reg orig fol. 295. a. Commaundrie praeceptoria was by some mens opinion a maner or chiefe mefuage with which lands or tenements were occupied belonging to the Priorie of S. Iohns in Hierusalem in England and he which had the gouernement of any such maner or house was called the commaunder who had nothing to dispose of it but to the vse of the Priorie taking onely his sustenance thence according to his degree and was vsually a brother of the same Priorie Author of the new tearmes of lawe verbo Commaundrie By some other bookes it appeareth that the chiefe Prior of S. Iohns was a cōmaunder of a Nunnerie and cōstituted the Priores of the said Nunnerie who was vnder his obedience and remoueable at his will notwithstanding that shee had covent and common seale and had her possessions seuerall and was wont to lease the land for terme of yeares Fulbecks Paralels fol. 2. a. Of these commādries also Petrus Gregorius lib. de beneficiis cap. 11. num 11. hath these words Praeceptoriae dictae commendae sacrorum militum 〈…〉 eluti ordinis hospitalii Sancti Ioannis Hierosolymitani beneficia quidem secundum quid Ecclesiastica dic untur à Barbatia ad Clement causam col 51. de Electione Tamen non propriè dicuntur ex genere communium beneficiorum eo quòd personae conferentes quibus conferuntur non sunt laicae vel ecclesiasticae sed tertu ordinis De hiis beneficiis ●fit mentio cap. exhibita de priuilegiis in extravag com in cap. Dudum de decimis These in many places of our realme are termed by the name of temples because they sometime belonged to the Templers Of these you reade ann 26 H. 8. cap. 2. anno 32. eiusd ca 24. And of these the said Gregorius Tolosanus li. 15. sui syntagmatis cap. 34. hath these words Monuimus superiori capite
that they were neuer the lesse called by the name of their office only some others had it simply as of it selfe and were thereof named custodes pacis wardens or conservators of the peace The former and later sort he againe subdivideth Which read in his eirenarcha li. 1. ca. 3. Consideration consideratio is that with vs which the Grecians called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the materiall cause of a contract without the which no contract bindeth This consideration is either expressed as if a man bargain to giue 20. shillings for a horse or els implyed as when the law it selfe inforceth a consideration as if a man come into a common Inne and there staying sometime taketh both meat and lodging or either for himselfe and his horse the lawe presumeth that he intendeth to pay for both though nothing be farder couenanted betweene him and his host and therefore if he discharge not the house the host may stay his horse Fulb parel tracta Contracts fo 6. a. b. Consistory consistorium is a word borowed of the Italians or rather Lombards signifing as much as praetorium or tribunal vocab vtriusque iur It is vsed for the place of iustice in the courte christian Convocation house domus convocationis is the house wherein the whole clergie is assembled for consultation vpon maters ecclesiasticall in time of parlament And as the house of Parlament so this consisteth of two distinct houses one called the higher conuocation house where the Archebishops and Bishops sitte seuerally by themselues the other the lower conuocation house where all the rest of the clergy are bestowed See Prolocutor Conusance See Cognisance Conuzour See Cognizour Consolidation consolidatio is vsed for the combining and vniting of two benefices in one Brooke titulo Vnion This word is taken from the civile lawe where it signifieth properly an vniting of the possession occupation or profit with the propertie For example if a man haue by legacie vsumfructum fundi and after ward buy the propertie or fee simple as we call it of the heire hoc casu consolidatio fieri dicitur § 3. De vsufructu in Institut See Vnion and Vnitie of possession Conspiracie conspiratio though both in Latine and French it be vsed for an agreement of men to doe any thing either good or bad yet in our lawyers bookes it is alway taken in the evill part It is defined anno 34. Ed. pri statut 2. to be an agreement of such as doe confedre or binde themselues by oath covenant or other allyance that everie of them shall beare and ayde the other falsly and malitiously to indight or falsly to mooue ormaintaine plees and also such as cause childrē within age to appeale mē of felonie whereby they are imprisoned and sore grieued and such as reteine men in the contries with liueries or feese to maintaine their malitious enterprises And this extendeth as well to the takers as to the givers And Stewards and baylifes of great lords which by their seignorie office or power vndertake to beare or maintaine quarels plees or debates that concerne other parties then such as touch the estate of their lords or themselues anno 4. Ed. 3. cap. 11. anno 3. H. 7. ca. 13. of this see more an 1. H. 5. c. 3. an 18. H. 6. c. 12. as also in the new book of ētries ver Cōspiracy Conspiracie in the places before mentioned is taken more generally and is confounded with maintenance and champertie But in a more speciall signification it is taken for a confederacie of two at the least falsly to endict one or to procure one to be indicted of felonie And the punishment of conspiraciē vpon an endictment of felonie at the kings suyte is that the partie attainted leese his franke lawe to the intent that he be not empaneled vpon iuries or assises or such like employments for the testifiing of truth And if he haue to doe in the kings court that he make his atturney and that his lands goods and chatels be seysed into the kings hands his lands estreaped if he finde no better fauour his trees raced and his body committed to prison 27. lib. assis 59. Cromptons Iustice of peace fo 156. b. This is called vilanous iudgement or punishment See Vilanous iudgement But if the partie greiued siew vpon the writ of conspiracie then see Fitzh nat br f. 114. D. 115. I. Conspiracie may be also in cases of lesse weight Idem fo 116. A. c. See Franke law Conspiratione is a writ that lieth against conspiratours Fitz. nat br fo 114. d. Cromptons iurisd fo 209. See also the Regist fo 134. Constable constabularius vel conestabulis is a Saxon word compounded of cuning or cyng and staple which doe signifie the stay and hold of the king Lamb. duties of constables nu 4. But I haue heard it made heretofore of these two words comes stabuli which seemeth to me the more probable because we haue this officer from France as most others and not from the Saxons And Tilius in his commentaries de rebus gallicis li. 2. ca. de conistabili hath the same etymologie giuing the reason thereof quia praeest stabulo i. equiliregis which office is auncient heere in England and mentioned by Bracton seeming to answere him that was called tribunus celervm vnder the first kings of Rome and Magister equitum afterward The Germans that inhabite the side of the riuer Rhene note him by this title die constofler and in counterfeit latine constofelerus and in owlder time constafolarius that the Romanes were wont to tearme assessorem iudicij And as Spiegelius in his lexicon noteth deriue the word a stafolo comitis i. gradu Iudicis fiscalis For staffel in their language as he saith signifieth a grees or steppe of a paire of staires And therevpon staffelstein being a word vsed in their very awncient writings signifieth as much as praetorium But a man many times may shew in this kinde more curiositie then discretion as perhaps some will iudge me heere to haue done And therefore enough of this This word is diuersly vsed in our common law first forthe cunstable of England who is also called marshiall Stawn pl. cor fo 65. of whose great dignitie and authoritie a man may find many arguments and signes both in the statutes and chronicles of this realme His sway consisteth in the care of the common peace of the land in deedes of armes and maters of warres Lamb. vbi supra with whome agreeth the statut anno 13. R. 2. ca. 2. statu 1. Smith de Repub. Anglo li. 2. c. 25. Of this officer or magistrate M. Gwyn in the preface to his readings saith to this effect The court of the constable and marshiall determineth cōtracts touching deeds of armes out of the realme and handleth things cōcerning wars within the realme as combats blasōs of armorie c. But it may not deale with battel in appeales nor generally with any
from the French the other from the Saxons both conteining a circuit or portion of the realme into the which the whole land is diuided for the beter gouernment thereof and the more easie administration of iustice So that there is no part of the kingdome that lieth not within some countie and euery county is gouerned by a yerely officer whom we cal a Shyreeue which among other duties belonging to his office putteth in execution all the commandements iudgments of the kings courts that are to be executed within that compasse Fortescue cap. 24. Of these counties there be foure of especiall marke which therefore are tearmed countie Palatines as the county Palatine of Lancaster of Chester of Durham of Ely ann 5. Eliz. 1. c. 23. I read also of the county Palatine of Hexam an 33 H. 8. ca. 10. Vnde quaere And this county Palatine is a Iurisdiction of so high a nature that whereas all plees touching the life or mayhem of man called plees of the crowne be ordinarily held sped in the kings name cannot passe in the name of any other the chiefe gouerners of these by especiall charter from the king did heretofore send out all writs in their owne name and did all things touching iustice as absolutely as the Prince himself in other counties only acknowledging him their superiour and Soueraigne But by the statute anno 27. H. 8. c. 25. this power is much a bridged vnto the which I refer the reader as also to Crom. Iuris fo 137. for the whole course of this court Besides these counties of both sorts there be likewise counties corporate as appeareth by the statute anno 3. Ed. 4. 5. and these be certaine cities or auncient boroughs of the land vpon which the Princes of our nation haue thought good to bestow such extraordinary liberties Of these the famous city of London is one and the principall Yorke another an 32. H. 8. cap. 13. the city of Chester a third an 42. Eliz. cap. 15. Canterburie a fourth Lamb. Eiren. l. 1. cap. 9. And to these may be added many moe but I haue onely obserued out of the statutes other writers the county of the towne of Kingston vpon Hull anno 32. H. 8. cap. 13. the county of the towne of Havorford West anno 35. H. 8. cap. 26. and the county of Litchfield Cromptons Iustice of peace fo 59. a. County is in another significatiō vsed for the County court which the Shyreeue keepeth euery moneth within his charge either by himselfe or his deputie anno 2. Ed. 6 ca. 25. Cromptons Iuris fo 221. Bract. li. 3. c. 7. li. 3. tract 2. cap. 12. Of these counties or shires one with another there are reckoned in England 37. beside twelue in Walet 〈…〉 The word comitatus is also vsed for a iurisdiction or territorie among the Feudists Countie court curia comitatus by M. Lamberd is otherwise called conuentus in his explication of Saxon words and diuided into two sorts one retaining the generall name as the county court held euery moneth by the Shyreeue or his deputie the vnder-shyreeue whereof you may reade in Cromptons iurisd fol. 231. the other called the Turne held twice euery yeare which see more at large in his place and Cromptons Iurisd fol. 231. This countie court had in auncient times the cognition of these and other great maters as may appeare by Glanvile lib. 1. cap. 2 3. 4. by Bracton and Britton in diuers places and by Fleta li. 2. cap. 62. But that was abridged by the statute of Magna charta cap. 17. and much more by 1. Ed. 4. cap. vnico It had also and hath the determination of certaine trespasses and debts vnder forty shillings Britton cap 27. 28. what maner of proceeding was of old vsed in this court see Fleta vbi supra Coursitour See Cursetour Court curia commeth of the French court which signifieth the kings palace or mansion as curtis doth among the Lombards All these spring of the Latine curia which signifieth one of thirty parts into which Romulus diuided the whole number of the Romaines sometime also the Senate house as appeareth by Tully in his Offices nihil est quod dignum nobis aut in foro aut in curia agere possumus which in his oration pro Milone he calleth Templum sanctitatis amplitudinis mentis consilii publici caput vrbis c. Court with vs signifieth diuersly as the house where presently the king remaineth with his ordinarie retinue and also the place where iustice is iudicially ministred of which you finde 32. seueral sorts in M. Cromptons booke of Iurisdictions well described And of them most be courts of record some be not and therefore are accompted base courts in comparison of the rest Beside these also there are courts Christian Smith de repub Anglor lib. 3. cap. 9. which are so called because they handle maters especially appertaining to Christianitie and such as without good knowledge in diuinity cannot be well iudged of being held heretofore by Archb. and Bishops as from the Pope of Rome because he chalenged the superioritie in all causes spirituall but sithence his eiection they hold them by the kings authoritie virtue magistratus sui as the Admirall of England doth his court Whereupon it proceedeth that they send out their precepts in their owne names and not in the kings as the Iustices of the kings courts doe And therefore as the appeale from these courts did lie to Rome now by the statute an 25. H. 8. cap. 19. it lyeth to the king in his Chauncerie Court baron curia baronis is a court that euery lord of a maner which in auncient times were called barons hath within his owne precincts Barons in other nations haue great territories and iurisdiction from their Soueraignes as may be proued out of Cassanaeus de gloria mundi parte 5. consideratio 56. by Vincentius de Franchis descis 211. and many others But here in England what they be and haue bene heretofore see in Baron Of this court Baron you may reade your fill in Kitchin that writeth a large booke of it and of a court leete S. Edward Coke in his fourth booke of Reports amongst his copyhold cases fol. 26. b. saith that this court is two after a sort and therefore if a man hauing a maner in a towne and do graunt the inheritance or the copyholders thereunto belonging vnto another this grantee may keep a court for the custumarie tenents and accept surrenders to the vse of others and make both admittances and graunts the other court is of Freeholders which is properly called the court baron wherein the suyters that is the Freeholders be Iudges whereas of the other the Lord or his steward is Iudge Court christian curia christiana See Court Court of Pypowders See Pypowders Court of Requests curia requestarum is a court of equitie of the same nature with the Chancerie principally instituted for the helpe of such
for the view perrambulation meering bounding of the place that he mindeth to afforest which returned into the chauncerie proclamation is made throughout all the Shire where the ground lieth that none shal hunt or chace any maner of wilde bests within that precinct without the kings speciall licence after which he appointeth ordinances lawes and officers fit for the preseruation of the vert and venison and so becommeth this a forest by mater of record The properties of a forest are these in speciall first a forest as it is truly and strictly taken cannot be in the hands of any but the king the reason is giuen by M. Manwood because none hath power to graunt commission to a Iustice in Eire for the forest but the king parte 1. pag. 87. The second propertie be the courts as the Iustice seate every three yeare the Swainemoote thrice every yeare Idem eodem pag. 90. parte 2. ca. 1. nu 4. 5. and the attachement once every fortie daies Idem eod pag. 92. The third propertie may be the officers belonging vnto it for the preservation of the vert and venison as first the Iustices of the forest the warden or keeper the verders the foristers Agistours Regarders Bailiffes Bedels and such like which you may see in their places See Manwood part 2. ca. 1. nu 4. 5. But the cheife propertie of a forest both by M. Manwood parte 1. pa. 144. and M. Crompton pag. 146. is the Swainmote which as they both agree is no lesse incident vnto it then the court of Pyepowders to a faire Other courts and offices are not so requisite in those forests that are in the hands of subiects because they be not truly forests but if this faile then is there no thing of a forest remaining but it is turned into the nature of a chace See Chace I reade of thus many forests in England The forest of Windsour in Berkshire Cambd. Britan. pag. 213. of Pickering Crompton 190. of Shirwood idem fol. 202. of Englewood in Cumberland anno 4. H. 7. ca. 6. Crompton fol. 42. of Lancaster Idem fol. 196. of Wolemore Stowes Annals pag. 462. of Gillingham Idem pag. 113. of Knaresborow anno 21. H. 8. ca. 17. of Waltham Camd. pag. 328. of Breden Idem pag. 176. of Whiteharte Idem pag. 150. of Wiersdale Idem pag. 589. and Lownsedall ibidem of Deane Idem pag. 266. anno 8. H. 6. ca. 27. anno 19. H. 7. cap. 8. of Saint Leonards in Southsex Manwood parte 1. pa. 144. of Waybridge Sapler Idem eodem pa. 63. of Whitvey pag. 81. of Fekenham Camd. pa 441. of Rockingham Idem pag. 396. Forest de la mer. Idem pag. 467. of Huckstowe Idem pa. 456. of Haye Manwood part 1. pag. 144. of Cantselly eadem pag. of Ashdowne in the county of Sussex anno 37. H. 8. ca. 16. Forests of Whittilwood and Swasie in the countie of Northampton anno 33. H. 8. ca. 38. of Fronselwood in com Somerset Cooke li. 2. Cromw case f. 71. b. I heare also of the forest of Exmore in Deuonshire There may be more which he that listeth may looke for Forester forestarius is a sworn officer of the Forest appointed by the Kings leters patents to walke the forest both earely and late watching both the vert and venison attaching and presenting all trespassers against them within their owne bayliwicke or walke whose oath you may see in Crompton fol. 201. And though these leters patents be ordinarily graunted but quam diu bene se gesserint yet some haue this graunt to thē and their heires and thereby are called Foristers or Fosters in fee. Idem fol. 157. 159. Et Manwood parte prima pag. 220. whome in Latine Crompton calleth Foristarium feudi fol. 175. Foreiudger forisiudicatio signifieth in the common lawe a iudgement whereby a man is depriued or put by the thing in question It seemeth to bee compounded of fo rs i. praeter iuger i. iudicare Bracton lib. 4. tract 3. cap. 5. hath these words Et non permittas quòd A. capitalis dominus feudi illius habeat custodiam haeredis c. quia in Curia nostra forisiudicatur de custodia c. So doth Kitchin vse it fol. 209. and old nat bre fol. 44. 81. and the statute anno 5. Ed. 3. cap. 9. and anno 21. R. 2. cap. 12. Foriudicatus with authors of other nations signifieth as much as banished or as deportatus in the auncient Romaine lawe as appeareth by Vincentius de Franchis descis 102. Mathaeus de Afflictis lib. 3. feudorum Rub. 31. pag. 625. Foregoers be pourveyours going before the king or queene being in progresse to prouide for them anno 36. Ed. 3. cap. 5. Forfeiture forisfactura commeth of the French word forfaict i. scelus but signifieth in our language rather the effect of transgressing a penall lawe then the transgression it selfe as forfeiture of Escheates anno 25. Ed. 3. cap. 2. Statut. de Proditionibus Goods confiscate and goods forfeited differ Stawnf pl. cor fol. 186. where those seeme to be forfeited that haue a knowne owner hauing committed any thing whereby he hath lost his goods and those confiscate that are disavowed by an offendour as not his owne nor claymed by any other I thinke rather that forfeiture is more generall and confiscation particular to such as forfeit onely to the Princes Exchequer Reade the whole chapter lib. 3. cap. 24. Full forfeiture plenaforisfactura otherwise called plena vita is forfeiture of life and member and all else that a man hath Manwood parte prim pag. 341. The Canon Lawyers vse also this word For forisfacta sunt pecuniariae poenae delinquentium Glos in cap. Praesbyteri extra de poenis Forfeiture of mariage forisfactura maritagii is a writ lying against him who houlding by knights seruice and being vnder age and vnmaried refuseth her whome the Lord offereth him without his disparagement and marieth another Fitzh nat br fol. 141. H. I. K. L. Register orig fol. 163. b. Forfeng quiet antiam prioris prisae designat in hoc enim delinquunt Burgenses Londonenses cum prisas suas ante prisas regis faciunt Fleta lib. 1. cap. 47. Forgerie See here next following Forger of false deeds Forger of false deedes commeth of the french Forger i. accudere fabricare conflare to beate one an anvile to fashion to bring into shape and fignifieth in our common law either him that fraudulently maketh and publisheth false writings to the preiudice of any mans right or else the writ that lyeth against him that committeth this offence Fitzh nat br fol. 96. B. C. calleth it a writ of deceite See Tearmes of law verbo Forger and Wests Simbol parte 2. Indictments sectio 66. See the new booke of Entries verbo Forger de faits This is a branch of that which the ciuilians call crimen falsi Nam falsarius est qui decipiendi causa scripta publica falsificat Speculator de crimine
is a breach of peace For Grith is a word of the old Angles signifiing peace Roger Hovedin parte poster suorum annal fo 346. b. See Greachbreach Grills anno 22. Ed. 4. ca. 2. Grocers be merchants that ingrosse all merchandize vendible anno 37. Ed. 3. ca. 5. Groome anno 33. H. 8. ca. 10. Valletus is the name of a seruant that serueth in some inferiour place M. Verslegan in his restitution of decayed intelligence saith that he findeth it to haue beene in times past a name for youths who albeit they serued yet were they inferiour to men seruants and were sometimes vsed to be sent on foote of errands seruing in such manner as lackies doe nowe Growme anno 43. E. ca. 10. seemeth to be an engine to stretch wollen cloth withall after it is wouen Guydage Guydāgium is that which is giuen for safe conduct through a strange territorie Cassan de consuet Bourg pag. 119. whose words be these Est Guidagiū quod datur alicui vt tutò conducatur per loca alterius Guylde See Gyld Guylhalda Teutonicorum See Gild. Gule of August Gula Augusti anno 27. Ed. 3. stat 3. cap. vnico Fitzh nat br fol. 62. I. aliâs Goule de August Plowd casu Mines fo 316. b. is the very day of Saint Peterad vincula which was wont and is still within the limits of the Roman church celebrated vpon the very Kalends of August Why it should be called the gule of August I cannot otherwise coniecture but that it commeth of the latine gula or the French gueule the throate The reason of my coniecture is in Durands rationali diuinorum li. 7. ca. de festo Sancti Petri ad vincula who saith that one Quirinus a tribune hauing a daughter that had a disease in her throat went to Alexander then Pope of Rome the sixt from Saint Peter and desired of him to borow or see the cheines that Saint Peter was cheined with vnder Nero which request obteined his said daughter kissing the said cheine was cured of her disease and Quirinus with his family was baptised Tunc dictus Alexander papa saith Durand hoc festum in Kalendis Augusti celebrandum instituit in honorem beali Petri ecclesiam in vrbe fabricavit vbi vincula ipsa reposuit ad vincula nominavit Kalendis Augusti dedicauit In qua festivitate populus illic ipsa vincula hodie osculatur So that this day being before called onely the Kalends of August was vpon this occasion afterward termed indifferently either of the instrument that wrought this miracle Saint Peters day ad vincula or of that part of the maiden wheron the miracle was wrought the Gule of August Gultwit seemeth to be compounded of Gult i. noxa and wit which is said by some skilfull men to be an auncient termination of the words in the Saxon tongue signifiing nothing in it selfe but as dom or hood and such like be in these english words Christendom and Manhood or such others others say and it is true that wit signifieth blame or reprehension Gultwit as Saxon in his description of England ca. 11. doth interpret it is an amends for trespas Gust Hospes is vsed by Bracton for a straunger or guest that lodgeth with vs the second night lib. 3. tracta 2. ca. 10. In the lawes of Saint Edward set forth by M. Lamberd num 27. it is written Gest of this see more in Vncothe Gumme gummi is a certaine clammie or tough liquor that in maner of a swetie excrement issueth out of trees and is hardened by the sunne Of these ther be diuers sorts brought ouer seas that be drugs to be garbled as appeareth by the statute anno 1. Iaco. ca. 19. Gutter tyle alias corner tyle is a tile made three cornerwise especially to be laid in gutters or at the corners of tyled houses which you shall often see vpon douehouses at the foure corners of their rofes anno 17. Eduardi 4. ca. 4. H A HAbeas corpus is a writ the which a man indited of some trespas before Iustices of peace or in a court of any franchise and vpon his apprehension being laid in prison for the same may haue out of the kings bench thereby to remooue himselfe thither at his owne costs and to answer the cause there c. Fitzh nat br fol. 250. H. And the order is in this case first to procure a Certiorari out of the Chaūcerie directed to the said Iustices for the remoouing of the Inditemēt into the kings bench and vpon that to procure this writ to the Shyreeue for the causing of his body to be brought at a day Register iudiciall fol. 81. where you shall finde diuers cases wherein this writ is vsed Habeas corpora is a writ that lieth for the bringing in of a Iurie or so many of them as refuse to come vpon the venire facias for the tryall of a cause brought to issue old nat br fol. 157. See great diuersitie of this writ in the table of the Register Iudiciall verbo habeas corpora the new booke of Entries verbo eodem Habendum is a word of forme in a deede of conueyance to the true vnderstanding whereof you must knowe that in euery deede of conueyance there be 2. principall parts the premisses and the habendum The office of the premisses is to expresse the name of the grauntour the grauntee and the thing graunted or to be graunted The office of the habendum is to limite the estate so that the generall implication of the estate which by construction of lawe passeth in the premisses is by the habendum controlled and qualified As in a lease to two persons the habendum to one for life the remainder to the other for life altereth the generall implication of the ioynt tenancie in the freehould which should passe by the premisses if the Habendum weare not Cooke vol. 2. Bucklers case fo 55. See Vse Habere facias seisinam is a writ Iudicial which lyeth where a man hath recouered lands in the kings court directed to the Shyreeue and commaunding him to giue him seisin of the land recouered old nat br fol. 154. Termes of the lawe whereof see great diuersity also in the table of the Register Iudiciall verb. Habere facias seisinā This writ is issuing sometime out of the Records of a fine executorie directed to the Shyreeue of the countie where the land lyeth commanding him to giue to the Cognizee or his heires seisin of the land whereof the fine is levied which writ lyeth within the yeare after the fine or Iudgemēt vpon a scire facias and may be made in diuers formes West parte 2. symb titulo Fines sect 136. There is also a writ called Habere facias seisinam vbi Rex habuit annum diem vastum which is for the redeliuery of lands to the Lord of the fee after the king hath taken his due of his lands that was conuicted of felonie Register orig fol. 165.
Mulmutius lawes saith out of Geruasius Tilburiensis that of the other three William the Conquerour chose the best and to them adding of the Norman lawes such as he thought good he ordeined lawes for our kingdome which we haue at this present or the most of them Lawe hath an especiall signification also wherein it is taken for that which is lawfull with vs and not els where As tenent by the courtesie of England anno 13. Ed. 1. cap. 3. and againe to wage lawe vadiare legem and to make lawe facere legem Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 37. is to chalenge a speciall benefite that the lawe of this Realme affordeth in certaine cases whereof the first sc vadiar● legem is to put in securitie that he will make lawe at a day assigned Glanuile lib. 1. cap. 9. and to make law is to take an oath that he oweth not the debt chalenged at his hand and also to bring with him so many men as the court shall assigne to avowe vpon their oath that in there consciēces he hath sworne truly And this lawe is vsed in actions of debt without specialty as also where a man comming to the court after such time as his tenements for default be seised into the Kings hands will denie himselfe to haue beene summoned Glanuile lib. 1. cap. 9. 12. and See Bracton vbi supra nu 1. v. Kitchin fol. 164. See the newe exposition of lawe Termes verbo Ley this is borrowed from Normandie as appeareth by the grand Custumarie cap. 8y But Sir Edward Cooke saith it springeth originally from the iudiciall lawe of god li. 4. of his reports Slades case fol. 95. b. alleaging the 22. cap. of Exodus versu 7. Whether so or not the like custome is among the Feudists by whome they that come to purge the defendant are called Sacramentales libro feud 1. tit 4. § 3. titulo 10. titulo 26. Lawe of armes ius militare is a law that giueth precepts rules how rightly to proclaime warre to make and obserue leagues truce to set vpon the enemie to retire to punish offendours in the campe to appoint souldiers their pay to giue euery one dignitie to his desert to diuide spoiles in proportion and such like for farder knowledge wherof reade those that write de iure bells Lawe day signifieth a leete Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 160. and the county court anno 1. Ed. 4. cap. 2. Lawles man is he qui est extra legem Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 11. nu 1. See Outlawe Lawe of Marque See Retrisalles This word is vsed anno 27. Ed. 3. stat 2. ca. 17. and groweth from the German word March i. limes a bound or limite And the reason of this appellation is because they that are driuen to this lawe of reprisall do take the goods of that people of whome they haue receiued wrong and cannot get ordinary iustice when they can catch them within their owne territories or precincts Lawe Merchant is a priuiledge or speciall lawe differing from the common lawe of England and proper to merchants and summary in proceeding anno 27. Ed. 3. stat 8. 9. 19. 20. anno 13. Ed. 1. stat tertio Lawing of dogs expeditatio canum See Expeditate Mastifs must be lawed euery three yeare Cromptons Iurisd fol. 163. Lease lessa commeth of the French laysser i linquere relinquere omittere permittere It signifieth in our common lawe a dimise or letting of lands or tenements or right of common or of a rent or any hereditament vnto another for terme of yeares or of life for a rent reserued And a lease is either written called a lease by Indenture or made by word of mouth called a lease paroll See the newe Termes of the lawe The party that letteth this lease is called the leassour and the partie to whom it is let the leassee And a lease hath in it sixe points viz. words importing a dimise a leassee named a commencement from a day certaine a term of yeares a determination a reseruation of a rent Coke vol. 6. Knights case fol. 55. a. Leete leta is otherwise called a lawe day Smith de Republ. Anglor lib. 2. cap. 18. the word seemeth to haue growne from the Saxon Lethe which as appeateth by the lawes of king Edward set out by M. Lamberd num 34. was a court or iurisdiction aboue the Wapentake or Hundred comprehending three or foure of them otherwise called Thryhing and contained the third patt of a Prouince or Shire These iurisdictions one and other be now abolished and swallowed vp in the Countie court except they be held by prescription Kitchin fol. 6. or charter in the nature of a franchise as I haue said in Hundred The libertie of Hundreds is rare but many Lordes together with their courts Baron haue likewise Leetes adioyned and thereby do enquire of such transgressions as are subiect to the enquirie and correction of this Court whereof you may read your fill in Kitchin from the beginning of his booke to the fifth chapter and Briton cap. 28. But this court in whose maner soeuer it be kept is accompted the kings court because the authoritie thereof is originally belonging to the Crowne and thence deriued to inferiour persons Kitchin fol. 6. Iustice Dyer saith that this Leete was first deriued from the Shyreeues Turn fol. 64. And it enquireth of all offences vnder high treason committed against the Crowne and dignitie of the king though it cannot punish many but must certifie them to the Iustices or Assise per Statut. anno 1. Ed. 3. cap. vlt. Kitchin fol. 8. but what things bee onely inquirable and what punishable see Kitchu in the charge of a court Leet fol. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. See also the Statute anno 18. Ed. 2. The Iurisdiction of Bayliffes in the Dutchy of Normandie within the compasse of their Prouinces seemeth to be the same or very neare the ●ame with the power of our Leete cap. 4. of the grand Custumarie Legacie legatum is a particular thing giuen by last will and testament For if a man dispose or transferre his whole right or estate vpon another that is called Haereditas by the Ciuilians and he to whome it is so transferred is tearmed haeres Howbeit our common Lawyers call him Heire to whom all a mans lands and hereditaments doe descend by right of bloud See Heire See Hereditaments Leproso amouendo is a writ that lyeth for a Parish to remoue a Leper or Lazar that thrusteth himselfe into the company of his neighbours either in church or other publike meeting and communeth with them to their annoyance or disturbance Regi orig fol. 267. Fitz. nat br fol. 234. Lestage aliâs lastage lastagium proceedeth from the Saxon word last i. onus and is a custome chalenged in Faires markets for carying of things Rastals Exposition of words or a custome chalenged in cheapings or Faires Saxon in the description of England
Mearc which signifieth a peece of mony worth thirty siluer pence Lamb. explicat of Saxon words verbo Mancusa what it now signifieth in our coyne euery man knoweth But in auncient times I find a merke of gold which was the quantitie of eight ounces Stowes annals pag. 32. and againe pag. 691. 12. merkes of golde Troy weight the which was 200. pounds of English mony after which rate euery merke valued 16. pounds 13. shillings 4. pence M. Skene de verbor signific verbo Merke saith that in tractatu de ponderibus mensuris a Mercke signifieth an ounce weight or halfe a pound wherof the dramme is the eighth part like as the ounce is the eighth part of a marcke citing Cassanaeus de consuet Burgund Rub. prim § 7. verbo Solz Turnoys hiis verbis Solidus inquit in iure capitur pro auro quorum 72. faciunt libram auri duodecim vncia faciunt libram octo vnciae mercā Market mercatus commeth of the French marche i. emporium forum nundinarium it signifieth with vs the same thing and also the liberty or priuiledge whereby a towne is enabled to keepe a market Old nat br fol. 149. So doth Bracton vse it lib. 2. cap. 24. num 6. lib. 4. cap. 46. where he sheweth that one market ought to bee distant from another sex lencas dimidiam tertiam partem dimidiae The reason thereof both he and Fleta giueth in these wordes Quia omnes rationabiles dietae constant ex 20. milliaribus Diuidatur ergo dieta in tres partes prima autē matutina detur euntibus versus mercatum secunda detur ad emendum vendendum quae quidem sufficere debet omnibus nisi sint forte mercatores statarii qui merces deposuerint exposuerint venales quibus necessaria erit prolixior mora in mercatu tertia pars relinquitur redeuntibus de mercatu ad propria Et quaequidem omnia necesse erit facere de die non de nocte propter infidias incursum latronum vt omnia sint in tuto c. lib. 4. cap. 28. § Item refert Marle is a kind of stone or ●halke which men in diuers countries of this Realme cast vpon their land to make it the more fertile It is some where called Malin anno 17. Edvard 4. cap. 4. Marque seemeth to bee a French word signifying notam vel signum or else to come from the German march i. limes it signifieth in the aunciēt statutes of our land as much as reprisals as anno 4. H. 5. cap. 7. Marques and Reprisals are vsed as synonyma And leters of Marque are found in the same signification in the same chapter The reason may be because ●●e griefes wherevpon these le●●rs are sought and graunted are commonly giuen about the ●ounds and limits of euery contrey or at least the remedie for the same is likest there to bee had by some sodaine inrode happing of such recompence of the iniurie receiued as may most conueniently be lighted vpon See Reprisals See Marches Marquis Marchio by the opinion of Hotom verbo Marchio in verbis feudalibus commeth of the German March i. limes signifiing originally as much as Custos limitis or Comes praefectus limitis of these Zasius thus writeth de Marchione nihil compertū est nisi quod Gothicum vocabulum putamus And afterward thus Huiusmodi Marchionum siue vt nos appellamus Margraphiorum origo in limitaneos praepositos siue duces referenda Margraphis dicti quòd limitibus quos vulgò marken appellamus graphii id est praepositi fuerunt c. For in those teritories that haue naturally noe bounds of great strength or defence there is neede of wise and stout men toward their borders for the keeping out of neighbour enemies But here in England though we haue a Lord warden of the marches northward and a warden of the cinque ports toward the south east and were wont to haue Lo. Marchers between vs and Wales that serued this turne yet those which we call Marquises are lords of more dignity without any such charge and are in honour and accompt next vnto Dukes At this day I know but one in England and that is the Marquis of Winchester being of that noble familie of the Powlets See Cassanaeus de consuetud Burg. pag. 15. Marrow was a lawyer of great accompt that liued in Henry the seuenth his daies whose learned readings are extant but not in print Lamb. Eiren. li. pri cap. 1. Marterns see Furre Master of the Rols Magister rotulorum is an Assistāt vnto the Lord Chauncelour of England in the high court of Chauncery and in his absence heareth causes there and giueth orders Crompt Iurisd fol. 41. His title in his patent as I haue heard is Clericus paruae bagae custos rotulorum domus conuersorum This domus conuersorum is the place where the rols are kept so called because the Iewes in auncient times as they were any of them brought to christianity were bestowed in that house separatly from the rest of their nation But his office seemeth originally to haue sprong from the safe keeping of the Roules or records of inditements passed in the kings courts and many other things He is called clerke of the rols anno 12. R. 2. ca. 2. and in Fortescue his booke cap. 24. and no where master of the rols vntil anno 11. Hen. 7. cap. 20. and yet anno 11. einsdem cap. 25. he is also called clerk In which respect Sir Thomas Smith li. 2. ca. 10. de Repnb Angl. well saith that he might not vnfitly be called Custos Archiuorum He seemeth to haue the bestowing of the offices of the sixe clerks anno 14. 15. Hen. 8. cap. 8. Master of the mint anno 2. Hen. 6. cap. 14. he is now called the Warden of the mint whose office see in Mint Master of the court of Wards and Liueries is the cheife and principall officer of the court of wards and liueries named and assigned by the king to whose custodie the seale of the court is committed He at the entring vpon his office taketh an oath before the Lord Chauncelour of England well and truly to serue the King in his office to minister equal iustice to rich poore to the best of his cunning witte and power diligently to procure all things which may honestly and iustly be to the kings aduātage and profit and to the augmentation of the rights and prerogatiue of the crowne truly to vse the kings seale appointed to his office to end eauour to the vttermost of his power to see th 〈…〉 king iustly aunswered of all suc 〈…〉 profits rents reuenewes a 〈…〉 issues as shall yearely rise grow or be due to the king in his office from time to time to deliuer with speed such as haue to do before him not to take or receiue of any person any gift or reward in any case or mater depending before him or wherein the king shall be party
by misprision of Clerks no processe shal be admitted Misprision of treason is the concealement or not disclosing of knowne treason for the which the offendours are to suffer imprisonment during the Kings pleasure loose their goods and the profits of their lands during their liues Crompton in his Iustice of peace cap. Misprision of felony fol. 40. West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditements sect 63. in siue Misprision of felonie seemeth only finable by the Iustices before whome the party is attainted Crompton Iustice of peace vbisupra The Iustices of the common place haue power to assesse fines and amerciaments vpon persons offending for misprisions contempts or negligences for not doing or misdoing any thing in or concerning fines West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 133. Iustices of Assise shall amend the defaults of Clerks misprising of a sillable or leter in writing Cromptons Iurisd fol. 208. But it is to be noted that other faults may be accompted misprisions of treasons or felonie because certaine later statutes doe inflict that punishment vpon them that of old hath beene inflicted vpon misprisions whereof you haue an example anno 14. El. ca. 3. of such as coine foreine coines not current in this Realme and of their procurers aiders and abetters And see the newe exposition of lawe Termes Misprision signifieth also a mistaking anno 14. Ed. 3. stat pri ca. 6. Misses See Mise Misuser is an abuse of libertie or benefite As he shall make fine for his misuser old nat br fol. 149. Mistery mysterium commeth of the latine Mysterium or rather from the French Mestier i. ars artificium an art or occupation Mittendo manuscriptum pedis finis is a writ Iudiciall directed to the Treasurer and Chamberlaines of the Exchequer to search and transmit the foote of a fine acknowledged before Iustices in Eyre into the common plees c. Register fol. 14. a. b. Mittimus signifieth a precept sent by the King out of his Bench to those that haue the custodie of fines levied that they send them by a day assigned to his Bench West parte 2. symbol titulo Eynes sect 138. F. 154. B. and also to the Exchequer for certificate that Iudgment is giuen for the liuerie of lands to such or such a one out of the Kings hands whervpō he is dismissed also out of the exchequer a. 5. R. 2. c. 15. of diuers other vses and applicatiōs of this Mittimus see the Register originall in the table of the booke Moderata misericordia is a writ that lieth for him that is amersed in court Baron or other being not of Record for any transgression or offence beyond the qualitie of a fault It is directed to the Lord of the court or his Bayliffe commanding them to take a moderate amerciament of the party and is founded vpon Magna charta ca. 14. Quòd nullus liber homo amercietur nisi secundùm qualitatem delicti c. The rest touching this writ see in Fitzh nat br fol. 75. See Misericordia Modo forma are words of art in a processe and namely in the answer of the defendant wherby he denieth himselfe to haue done the thing layde to his charge modo forma declarata Kitch fol. 232. It signifieth as much as that clause in the ciuile lawe Negat allegata prout allegantur esse vera Moitye commeth of the French Moitiè id est coaequa vel mediapars and signifieth the halfe of any thing Litleton fol. 125. Monks clothes anno 20. Hen. 6. cap. 10. Moniers Monetari● Register original fol. 262. b. anno 1. Ed. 6. ca. 15. be ministers of the Mint which make and coine the Kings mony It appeareth by some antiquity which I haue seen that in auncient times our kings of England had mints in most of the countries of this Realme And in the tractate of the Exchequer writen by Ockham I finde that whereas the Shyreeues ordinarily were tyed to pay into the Exchequer the kings sterling for such debts as they were to answer they of Northumberland and Cumberland were at libertie to pay in any sort of mony so it were siluer And the reason is there giuen because those two shires monetarios de antiqua institutione non habent Monstrance de droyt is as much to say as shewing of his right It signifieth in our cōmmon lawe a sulte in Chancerie to be restored to lands or tenements that indeede be mine in right though they were by some office found to be in possessiō of another lately dead See Stawnf praerog ca. 21. at large and Brooke titulo Petition of this also reade Sir Edward Cookes reports lib. 4. fol. 54. b. c. the Wardens of the Sadlers case Monstrauerunt is a writ that lieth for tenents that hold freely by charter in auncient Demeane being distreined for the payment of any tolle or imposition contrary to their libertie which they do or should enioy which see in Fitzh nat br fol. 14. Morian is all one in significatiō with the french Morion i. cassis a head peece which word the french man boroweth from the Italian morione anno 4. 5. Phi. Ma. ca. 2. Morlinge aliâs Mortling seemeth to be that wolle which is taken from the skinne of a dead sheep whether dying of the rotte or being killed anno 27. H. 6. ca. 2 This is writen Morki● anno 3. Iaco. ca. 8. Mort d'auncester See Assise Mortgage Mortuum vadium vel Morgagium is compounded of 2. French words Mort id est mors and Gage id est pignus merces It signifieth in our common lawe a pawne of land or tenement or anything moueable laid or bound for mony borowed peremptorily to be the creditours for euer if the mony be not paide at the day agreed vpon And the creditour holding land or tenement vpon this bargaine is in the meane time called Tenēt in mortgage Of this we reade in the grand Custumarie of Normandie cap. 113. in these wordes Notandum insuper est quod vadiorum quoddam viuum quoddam mortuum nuncupatur Mortuum autem dicitur vadium quod se de nihilo redimit acquietat vt terra tradita in vadium pro centum solidis quam cum obligator retrahere voluerit acceptam pecuniam restituet in solidum Vivum autem dicitur vadium quod ex suis prouentibus acquir atur Vt terra tradita in vadium pro centum solidis vsque ad tres annos quae elapso tertio anno reddenda est obligatori vel tradita in vadium quousque pecunia recepta de eiusdem proventibus fuerit persoluta Glanvile likewise lib. 10. cap. 6. defineth it thus mortuum vadium dicitur illud cuius fructus vel reditus interim percepti in nullo se acquietant Soe you see by both these bookes that it is called a dead gage because whatsoeuer profit it yeeldeth yet it redeemeth not it selfe by yelding such profit except the whole somme borowed be likewise paid at the day See M. Skene de
Policie of assurance is a course taken by those which do aduenture wares or merchandize by sea whereby they loche to hazard their whole aduenture do giue vnto some other a certaine rate or proportion as tenne in the hundred or such like to secure the safe arriuall of the ship and so much wares at the place agreed vpon So that if the ship and wares do miscarie the assrer maketh good to the venturer so much as he promiseth to secure as 20. 30. 100. more or lesse and if the ship do safely ariue he gaineth that clearely which the venturer compoundeth to pay him And for the more euen dealing betweene the venturer and the securer in this case there is a certaine Clerk or officer ordained to set downe in writing the summe of their agreement that they afterward differ not betweene themselues vpon the bargaine This is in course Latine elsewhere called assecuratio This terme you haue anno 43. Fliz. cap. 11. Pondage See Poundage Pone is a writ whereby a cause depending in the County court is remoued to the common Banke old nat br fol. 2. See in what diuersitie of cases it is vsed in the table of the Originall Register Pone per vadium is a writ commaunding the Shyreene to take suretie of one for his appearance at a day assigned of this see fiue sorts in the table of the Regists Iudic. verbo Pone per vadium Ponondis in Assisis is a writ founded vpon the statute of Westm 2. cap. 38. and vpon the statute Articuli super chartas cap. 9. which statutes do shew what persons Vicounts ought to impanell vpon Assises and Iuries and what not as also what number he should empanell vpon Iuries and Inquests which see in the Register orig fol. 178. a. and in Fitz. nat br fol. 165. Ponendo in ballum is a writ whereby to will a prisoner held in prison to be committed to baile in cases baylable Register orig fol. 133. b. Ponendo sigillum ad exceptionem is a writ whereby the king willeth Iustices according to the statute of Westm 2. to put their seales to exceptions laid in against the plaintiffes declaration by the defendant Pontage pontagium is a contribution toward the maintenance or reedifying of bridges Westm 2. cap. 25. anno 13. Ed. pri It may be also tolle taken to this purpose of those that passe ouer bridges anno 39. Eliz. cap. 24. anno 1. H. 8. cap. 9. and see the statute anno 22. H. 8. cap. 5. Pontibus reparandis is a writ directed to the Shyreeue c. willing him to charge one or more to repaire a bridge to whom it belongeth Regist orig fol. 153. b. Portgreue portgreuius is compounded of two words port greue or graue i. praefectus It signifieth with vs the chiefe magistrate in certaine coast townes and as M. Camden saith in his Britan. pag. 325. the chiefe magistrate of London was termed by this name in steed of whom Richard the first ordained two Bayliffes but presently after him King Iohn granted them a Maior for their yearely Magistrate Porter of the doore of the Parlament house is a necessary officer belonging to that high court enioyeth the priuiledges accordingly Cromptons Iurisd fol. 11. Porter in the circuit of Iustices is an officer that carieth a verge or white rodde before the Iustices in Eyre so called a portando virgam anno 13. Ed. 1 cap. 24. Porter bearing verge virgator before the Iustices of either benth anno 13. Ed. 1. cap. 41. See Vergers Portemote is a word compounded of port i. portus and the Saxon Gemettan i. conuenire or of the French mot i. dictio verbum It signifieth a Court kept in hauen townes as Swainmote in the Forest Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pa. 111. It is sometime called the Portmoote Court anno 43. Eliz. cap. 15. Portsale anno 35. H. 8. cap. 7. id est sale of fish presently vpon returne in the hauen Possession possessio is vsed two waies in our common lawe First for lands and inheritance as he is a man of large possessions In which signification it is also vsed among the Ciuilians sc for the thing possessed l. possessionum Cod. commun vtriusque Iudic. Next for the actuall enioying of that which either in truth or pretence is ours And in this signification there is possession indeed and possession in lawe pl. cor fol. 198. The example there is this Before or vntill an office to be found the king hath onely possession in law and not in deed speaking of the lands escheated by the attainder of the owner See praerog fol. 54. 55. In this signification also there is an vnitie of possessiō which the Ciuilians call Consolidationem Take an example out of Kitchin fol. 134. if the Lord purchase the tenancie held by Heriot seruice then the Heriot is extinct by vnity of possession that is because the seigneurie and the tenancie be now in one mans possession Many diuisions of possession you may reade in Bracton lib. 2. cap. 17. per totum Post See Per. Post diem is a returne of a writ after the day assigned for the returne for the which the Custos breuium hath foure pence whereas he hath nothing if it be returned at the day or it may be the fee taken for the same Post fine is a duty belonging to the king for a fine formerly acknowledged before him in his court which is paid by the cognizee after the fine is fully passed and all things touching the same wholly accomplished The rate thereof is so much and halfe so much as was payed to the king for the fine and is gathered by the Shyreeue of the Countie where the land c. lyeth whereof the fine was leuyed to be aunswered by him into the Exchequer Post terme is a returne of a writ not onely after the day assigned for the returne thereof but after the terme also which may not be receiued by the Custos brevium but by the consent of one of the Iudges it may be also the fee which the Custos breuium taketh for the returne thereof which is twenty pence Postea is a word vsed for a mater tried by Nisi prius and returned into the court of common pleas for Iudgement and there afterward recorded See Plowden casu Saunders fol. 211. a. See an example of this in Sir Edw. Cokes reports volum 6. Rowlands case fol. 41. b. 42. a. See Custos breuium Post disseisin post disseisina is a writ giuen by the statute of West 2. cap. 26. and lyeth for him that hauing recouered lands or tenements by praecipe quod reddat vpon default or reddition is againe disseised by the former diffeisour Fitz. nat br fol. 190. see the writ that lyeth for this in the Register originall fol. 208. a. Posteriority posterioritas is a word of comparison and relation in tenure the correlatiue whereof is prioritie For a man holding lands or tenements of two lords holdeth of
if they thinke good And the later course is taken most commonly where there is feare of strife and contention betweene the kindred and freinds of the party deceased about his goods For a will proued only in common forme may be called into question any time within 30. yeares after by common opinion before it worke prescription Procedendo is a writ whereby a plee or cause formerly called from a base court to the Chaūcerie Kings bench or commō plees by a writ of priuiledge or certiorare is released and sent downe againe to the same court to be proceded in there after it appeareth that the defendant hath no cause of priniledge or that the mater comprised in the bille be not well proned Brooke hoctitulo and Termes of lawe Cooke vol. 6. fol. 63. a. See anno 21. R. 2. cap. 11. in fine leters of procedendo graunted by the keeper of the priuie scale See in what diuersitie it is vsed in the table of the originall Register and also of the Iudiciall Proces Processus is the maner of proceeding in euery cause be it personall or reall ciuile or criminall even from the originall writ to the end Britton fol. 138. a. where in there is great diuersitie as you may see in the table of Fitzh br verbo Proces and Brookes Abridgement hoc titulo And whereas the wtitings of our common lawyers sometime call that the proces by which a man is called into the court and no more the reason thereof may be giuen because it is the beginning or the principall part thereof by which the rest of the busines is directed according to that saying of Aristotle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diucrs kinds of proces vpon Inditements before Iustices of peace See in Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 133. b. 134. 135. But for orders sake I referre you rather to M. Lamberd in his tractat of ptocesses adioyned to his Eirenarcha who acording to his subiect in hand diuideth criminall proces either into proces touching causes of treason or selonie and proces touching inferiour offēces the former is vsually a capias capias aliâs exigi facias The second is either vpon enditement or presentment or information that vpon enditement or presentment is all one and is either generall and that is a venire facias ' vpon which if the partie be returned sufficient then is sent out a Distringas infinite vntill he come if he be returned with a Nibil habet then ifsueth out a Capias Capias aliâs Capias pluries and lastly an Exigifacias The speciall proces is that which is especially appointed for the offēce by statute for the which he referreth his reader to the 8. Chapter of his 4. booke being very different Processium continuando is a writ for the continuance of a proces after the death of the cheife Iustice in the writ of oyer and terminer Register originall fol. 128. a. Prochein Amy Proximus amicus vel propinquior is word for word a neere freind It is vsed in our common lawe for him that is next of kinde to a childe in his nonage and is in that respect allowed by lawe to deale for him in the managing of his affaires as to be his Gardian if he hold of any in socage and in the redresse of any wrong done vnto him be it by his Gardian if he be ward and hold in Chiualrie or any others Statut. West pri cap. 48. 3. Ed. pri and Westm 2. cap. 15. anno 13. Ed. pri Profe aliâs Prove is vsed for an Enquest anno 28. Ed. 3. cap. 13. Proclamation Proclamatio signifieth a notice publikely giuen of any thing whereof the King thinketh good to advertise his subiects So it is vsed anno 7. Rich. 2. ca. 6. Proclamation of rebellion is a publike notice giuen by the officer that a man not appearing vpon a Sub poena nor an attachment in the Starre Chamber or Chauncerie shal be reputed a rebell except he render himselfe by a day assigned Cromptons Iurisd fol. 92. See Commission of rebellion Proclamation of a fine is a notice openly and solemnly giuen at all the Assises that shall be holden in the Countie within one yeare after the ingrossing of the fine and not at the foure generall quarter sessions And these proclamations be made vpon transcripts of the fine sent by the Iustices of the Common plees to the Iustices of Assise and the Iustices of peace West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 132. where also you may see the forme of the proclamarion Proclamare est palā valde clamare vsed by Tullie Liuie and the Civilians Π. Quibus ad liberta proclamare non licet And Proclamator signifieth him qui litem intendit vel causam agit Cicero de oratore lib. pri Non enim causidicum nescio quem neque proclamatorem aut rabulam hoc sermone conquirimus c. I reade in Fitzh nat br fol. 85. C. that the kings proclamation is sufficient to stay a subiect from going out of the Realme See the force of proclamations anno 31. H. 8. cap. 8. see also Proclamations in diuers cases Newe booke of Enteries verbo Proclamation Procters of the clergie procuratores cleri are those which are chosen and appointed to appeare for cathedrall or other Collegiat churches as also for the common clergie of euery Dioces at the Parlament whose choice is in this sort First the king directeth his writ to the Archebishop of each province for the summoning of all Bishops Deanes Archdeacons cathedrall and collegiat churches and generally of all the clergie of his prouince after their best discretion and iudgement assigning them the time and place in the said writ Then the Archebishops proceede in their accustomed course One example may serue to shew both The Archebishop of Canterbury vpō his writ receiued directerh his leters to the Bishop of London as his Deane provincial 1. § statuimui de poenis verb. tanquam in glos first citing himselfe petemptorily and then willing him to cite in like maner all the Bishops Deanes Archedeacons cathedrall and collegiate churches and generally all the Clergie of his Prouince to the place and against the day prefixed in the writ But directeth withal that one Proctor sent for euery Cathedrall or Collegiat Church and two for the bodie of the inferiour Clergie of each Diocesse may suffice And by vertue of these leters authentically sealed the said Bishop of London directeth his like leters seuerally to the Bishop of euery Diocesse of the Prouince citing them in like sort and commaunding them not onely to appeare but also to admonish the said Deanes and Archdeacons personally to appeare and the Cathedral 〈…〉 and collegiat Churches as also the common Clergie of the Diocesse to send their Proctors to the place and at the day appointed and also willeth them to certifie the Archbishop the names of all and euery so monished by them in a shedule annexed to their leters certificatorie The Bishops proceed accordingly and the
writ and not those that he houldeth of course or custome And in that case also it may be gathered out of the same authour that he hath a record but with the testimony of those annexed that be suiters to the Court. Which seemeth to agree with Bractons words aboue specified Seruiens Hundredi habet recordum in testimonio proborum hominum And to this purpose read Glanuile lib. 8. cap. 8. 9. 10. One Iustice vpon view of forcible detinew of land may record the same by statute anno 15. R. 2. cap. 2. the Maior and Constables of the Staple haue power to record recognisances of debt taken before them anno 10. H. 6. ca. 1. Brooke titulo Record seemeth to say that no court ecclesiasticall is of record how truly it is to be inquired For Bishops certifiing bastardy bigamy excommunication the vacancy or plenarty of a Church a mariage a diuorce a spirituall intrusion or whether a man be professed in any religion with other such like are credited without farder enquiry or controlment See Brooke titulo Bastardy See Fleta lib 6. ca. 39. 40. 41. 42. Lamb. cirenarcha lib pri cap. 13. Glanuile li. 7. ca. 14. 15. the Register originall fol. 5. b. Bracton lib. 5. tracta 5. ca. 20. nu 5. Britton ca. 92. 94. 106. 107. 109. Doct. and Stud. li. 2. ca. 5. but especially Cosius apologie parte pri ca. 2. And a testament shewed vnder the seale of the Ordinary is not trauersable 36. H. 6. 31. Perkins Testament 491. Fulb. paral fol. 61. b. But it may be that this opinion groweth from a difference betweene that law whereby the court Christian is most ordered and the common law of this land For by the ciuile or canon law no instrument or record is held so firme but that it may be checked by witnesses able to depose it to be vntrue Co. plu● valere quod agitur quàm quod simulate concipitur ca. cùm Iohannes 10. extra de fide instrumentorum Whereas in our common law against a record of the Kings Court after the terme wherein it is made no witnes can preuaile Britton ca. 109. Coke lib. 4. Hindes case fol. 71. lib. assisarum fol. 227. nota 21. This reconciliation may be iustified by Brooke himselfe titulo Testaments num 4. 8. 14. and by Glanuile lib. 8. cap. 8. The King may make a court of record by his graunt Glanuil li. 8. ca. 8. Britton cap. 121. as for example Queene Elizabeth of worthy memory by her Charter dated 26. Aprilis anno 3. regni sui made the Consistory Court of the Vniuersity of Cambridge a Court of record There are reckoned among our common lawyers three sorts of records viz A record iudiciall as attainder c. A record ministeriall vpon oath as an office found A record made by conueyance by consent as a fine deede enrolled or such like Coke li. 4. Andrew Ognels case fo 54. b. Recordare facias or recordari facias is a writ directed to the Shyreeue to remoue a cause depending in an inferiour court to the Kings bench or common plees as out of a court of auncient Demesn Hundred or Countie Fitz. nat br fol. 71. B. out of the countie Court idem fo 46. B. or other courts of record idem fol. 71. C. 119. K. Howbeit if you will learne more exactly where and in what cases this writ lyeth reade Brooke in his Abridgm titulo Recordare pone It seemeth to be called a recordare because the forme is such that it commaundeth the Shyreeue to whom it is directed to make a record of the proceeding by himselfe and others and then to send vp the cause See the Register verbo Recordare in the Table of the originall Writs See Certiorart See Accedas ad Curiam Recorder recordator commeth of the French recordeur i. talis persona quae in Ducis Curia â iudicio faciendo non debet amoueri Grand Custumarie of Norm cap. 107. 121. Whereby it appeareth that those which were necessarie Iudges in the Duke of Normandies Courts were called Recorders and who they were is shewed in the ninth chapter of the said booke And that they or the greater part of them had power to make a record it is euident in the chapter 107. Here in England a Recorder is he whome the Maior or other Magistrate of any citie or towne corporate hauing Iurisdiction or a Court of record within their precincts by the Kings graunt doth associate vnto him for his beter direction in maters of Iustice and proceedings according vnto lawe And he is for the most part a man well seene in the common lawe Recordo processis mittendis is a writ to call a Record together with the whole proceeding in the cause out of one court into the Kings Court Which see in the Table of the Register orig how diuersly it is vsed Recordo vtlagariae mittendo is a writ Iudiciall which see in the Register iudicial fol. 32. Recouerie Recuperatio cōmeth of the French Recouvrer i. Recuperare It signifieth in our commō lawe an obteining of any thing by Iudgement or triall of lawe as evictio doth among the Ciuilians But you must vnderstand that there is a true recouerie and a feigned A true Recouerie is an actuall or reall recouerie of any thing or the value thereof by Iudgement as if a man siewed for any land or other thing moueable or immoueable and haue a verdict and Iudgement for him A feigned recouerie is as the Ciuilians call it quaedam fictio iuris a certaine forme or course set downe by lawe to be obserued for the beter assuring of lands or tenements vnto vs. And for the beter vnderstanding of this reade West parte 2. symbol titulo Recoveries sect pri who saith that the end and effect of a Recouerie is to discontinue and destroy estates Tayles Remainders and Reuersions and to barre the former owners thereof And in this formality there be required 3. parties viz. the Demaundant the Tenent and the Vowchee The Demaundant is he that bringeth the writ of Entrie and may be termed the Recouerer The Tenent is he against whom the writ is brought and may be termed the Recoveree The Vowchee is he whom the tenēt vowcheth or calleth to wartantie for the land in demaund West vbi supra In whom you may reade more touching this mater But for example to explane this point a man that is desirous to cut of an estate tayle in lands or tenements to the end to sell giue or bequeath it as him self seeth good vseth his frend to bring a writ vpon him for this land He appearing to the writ saith for him selfe that the land in question came to him or his auncesters from such a man or his auncester who in the conueiance thereof bound him selfe and his heires to make good the title vnto him or them to whome it was conueied And so he is allowed by the court to call in this third man to
reade Gerards Herball lib. 2. cap. 425. The fruite or eare of this for it bringeth forth an eare like Lauender is a drugge garbleable anno 1. Iacob cap. 19. Spoliation spoliatio is a writ that lyeth for an incumbent against another incumbent in case where the right of patronage commeth not in debate As if a Parson bee made a Bishop and hath dispensation to keepe his Rectorie and afterward the patron present another to the Church which is instituted and inducted The Bishop shall haue against this incumbent a writ of spoliation in Court Christian Fitz. nat br fol. 36. see Beneuolence Squalley anno 43. Elizab. cap. 10. Squyers See Esquires Stablestand is one of the foure Euidences or presumptians whereby a man is convinced to intend the stealing of the Kings Deere in the Forest Manwood parte 2 of his Forest lawes cap. 18. num 9. the other three be these Dogdrawe Backbeare Bloudie-hand And this stablestand is when a man is found at his standing in the Forest with a Crosse bowe bent ready to shoote at any Deere or with a long bowe or else standing close by a tree with Greyhounds in a lease ready to slippe Idem eodem Stalkers a kind of net anno 13 R. 2. stat 1. cap. 20. anno 17. eiusdem cap. 9. Stallage stallagium commeth of the French Estaller i. merces exponere expedire explicare It signifieth in our common law money payed for pitching of stalles in Faire or Market See Scavage This in Scotland is called stallange Skene de verbor signif verbo Stallangiatores And among the Romaines it was termed Siliquaticum à siliqua primo minimo omnium pondere apud illam nationem Stannaries stannaria commeth of the Latine stannum i. tynne signifying the Mines and workes touching the getting and purifying of this mettall in Cornewall and other places Of this read Camden Britan. pa. 119. The liberties of the stannarie men graunted by Ed. 1. before they were abridged by the statute anno 50. Ed. 3. see in Plowden casu Mines fol. 327. a. b. Staple Stapulum signifieth this or that towne or citie whether the Merchants of England by common order or commandement did carie their wolles wol-fels cloathes lead and tinne and such like commodities of our land for the vtterance of them by the great The word may probably be interpreted two wayes one taking it from staple which in the Saxon or old English language signifieth the stay or hold of any thing Lamb. in his duties of Constables num 4. because the place is certaine and setled and againe from the French estape i. forum vinarium because to those places whether our English Merchants brought their commodities the French would also meete them with theirs which most of all consisteth in wines but I thinke this latter the truer because I finde in the Mirrour of the world written in French these words A Calais 〈◊〉 auoit Estape de le laine c. Which is as much to say as the staple for wols c. You may read of many places appointed for this staple in the statutes of the land according as the Prince by his Councell thought good to alter them from the second yeare of Ed 3. cap. 9. to the fifth of Edw the sixth cap 7. what officers the staples had belonging to them you may see anno 27. Ed. 3. stat 2. ca. 21. Starre chamber Camera stellata is a Chamber at Westminster so called as Sir Tho. Smith coniectureth lib. 2. cap. 4. either because it is full of windowes or because at the first all the roofe thereof was decked with Images of guilded starres And the later reason I take to be the trewer because anno 25. H. 8. ca. 1. It is written the Sterred Chamber In this Chamber euery weeke twice during the terme and the very next day after terme is there a Court held by the Lord Chaunceler or Keeper and other honourable personages of the Realme This Court seemeth to haue taken beginning from the statute anno 3. H 7. ca. pri Whereby it is ordained that the Lord Chaunceler and Treasurer of England for the time being and the Keeper of the Kings priuy seale or two of them calling to them a Bishop and a temporall Lord of the Kings most honourable Councell and the two cheife Iustices of the Kings Bench and common place for the time being or other two Iustices in their absence should haue power to call before them and punish such misdoers as there be mentioned The faults that they punish be Routes Riots Forgeries Maintenances Embraceries Periurics and such other Misdemeanures as are not sufficiently prouided for by the common law It appeareth both by Sir Tho Smith lib. 2. de Rep Anglo cap. 4. and by experience also that at this day the whole number of the Princes most honourable priuy Councell and such other Barons spirituall or temporall as be called thither by the Prince haue place in this Court with those aboue named Of this Court thus speaketh M. Gwin in the preface to his readings It appeareth in our bookes of the termes of K. Edward 4. And of the report of cases hapning vnder the vsurpation of Richard the third that sometime the King and his Councell and sometime the Lord Chaunceler and other great personages did vse to sit iudicially in the place then and yet called the Starre Chamber But for as much as be like that assembly was not ordinary therefore the next Kings Henry the seuenth and his some H. 8. tooke order by two seuerall lawes viz. 3. H. 7. ca. pri 21. H. 8. ca. 2. That the Chaunceler assisted with others there named should haue power to heare complaints against Retainours Embraceours misdemenures of officers and such other offences which through the power and countenance of such as do commit them do lift vp the head aboue other faults and for the which inferiour Iudges are not so meete to giue correction And because that place was before dedicated to the like seruice it hath bene euer since also accordingly vsed Touching the officers belonging to this Court see Camden pag. 112. 113. Statute statutum hath diuers significations in our common lawe First it signifieth a Decree or act of Parlament made by the Prince and three estates which is the bodie of the whole Realme And though it borow the name from that kind of Decree which those cities that were vnder the Romaine Empire made for the particular gouernment of themselues ouer and aboue the vniuersall or common lawe of the Empire yet in nature it commeth nearest to that which the Romaines called legem for that as that was made by the whole people noble and ignoble so this is ordeined by those that represent the whole number both of prince and subiects one and other through the whole kingdome The difference neuerthelesse was this that Lex was offered to the consideration of the people by the Magistrate of the Senate or Consull but the bils or suggestions whence
from A. to C. Warranty collaterall is that wherevnto he is called by the tenent vpon the couenant of him from whome the land could not descend to the party called For example B. the sonne pourchaseth tenements in fee whereof A. his father disseiseth him and selleth them to C. with a clause of warranty A being deade C. is impleaded for the tenements and calleth B. to warranty This warranty wherevnto B. is caled is collaterall by cause the tenements if the warrnty had not beene couenanted by A. could not haue descended from him to his father A. for they were his owne by Pourchase Many other exāples there be of this in Litleton And this very case he maketh his example of warranty by disseisin as also of warranty collaterall which plainly argueth that warranty by disseisin and warranty collaterall are not distinct members of warranty but may be confounded though one warranty may cary both names in diuers respects For there is some warranty collaterall that beginneth not by disseisin For example A. tenent in taile alienateth to B. in fee and dieth leauing issue C. Afterward D. brother to A. and vncle to C. releaseth to B. with warranty and dying leaueth C. his heire being next of blood vnto him This warranty is collaterall because it descendeth vpon C. from his vncle D. and yet it beginneth not by desseisin of his said vncle Warranty hath a double effect one to debarre him vpō whome it discendeth from the first warranter as his next of blood from claiming the land warranted and another to make it good to the tenent if by him he be vouched thereunto or els to giue him as much other land by exchange But as the former of these effects taketh place with all heires except those to whome the land warranted was intailed and that reape no equiualent benefit by the first warranter anno 6. Ed. pri ca. 3. soe the latter preiudiceth none that receiueth not sufficient land from the first warranter to make it good Bracton lib. 5. tractat 4. ca. 8. nu pri cap. 13. nu 2. In the custumaric of Norm ca. 5. you haue vouchement degarant which the Interpreter translateth Vocamentum Garanti a voucher or calling of the wartanter into the court to make good his sale or gift Warantiadiei is a writ lying in case where a man hauing a day assigned personally to appeare in court to any action wherein he is siewed is in the meane time by commaundement imployed in the Kings seruice so that he cannot come at the day assigned This writ is directed to the Iustices to this end that they neither take nor record him in defaulte for that day Register originall fol. 18. Of this you may read more in Fitzh nat br fol. 17. and see Glanuile lib. pri ca. 8. Warantia chartae is a writ that lieth properly for him who is infeoffed in land or tenements with clause of warranty and is impleaded in an Assise or writ of Entrie wherein he cannot vouche or call to warranty for in this case his remedy is to take out this writ against the seoffour or his heire Register orig fol. 157. Fitzh nat br fol. 134 Of this you may likewise reade Fleta lib. 6. ca. 35. and West parte 2. simb titulo Fines sect 156. Warrantia custodia is a writ Iudiciall that lyeth for him that is challenged to be ward vnto another in respect of land said to be houlden in Knights seruice which when it was bought by the auncesters of the ward was warranted to be free from such thraldome And it lieth against the warranter and his heires Register Iudiciall fol. 36. Warrant of Atturney See Leter of Atturney and Waranty Wardwite significat quietantiam misericordia in casu quo non invenerit quis hominem ad wardam faciendam in castra vel alibi Flet a lib. 1. cap. 47. Warren Warrenna aliâs varrenna commeth of the French Garrenne 1. vivarium vel locus in quo vel aves vel pisces vel ferae continentur quae ad victum di●ntaxat pertinent Calapine out of Aulus Gellius lib. 2. Noct. Attica cap. 20. A warren as we vse it is a prescription or graunte from the king to a man of hauing fesants partridges connies and hares within certaine of his lands Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 148. where he saith that none can haue warren but onely the King no more then Forest or chase Because it is a speciall priuiledge belonging to the King alone And a little after he hath words to this effect The king may graunt warren to me in mine owne lands for fesants and partridges onely And by this graunt no man may there chase them without my licence And so of Hares but not of Connies For their property is to destroy the 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 as to eate corne and pille the barke of apple trees M. Manwood in his first part of Forest lawes saith thus of it A warren is a fraunchise or priuiledged place of pleasure onely for those beasts and foules that are beasts and foules of warren tantùm campestres non syluestres viz. For such beasts and foules as are altogether belonging to the feilds and not vnto the woods and for none other beasts or foules There are but two beasts of warren that is to say Hares and Connies and there are also but two foules of warren viz. Fesants and partridges And none other wild beasts or birds haue any firme peace priuiledge or protection within the warren If any person be found to be an offender in any such free warren he is to be punished for the same by the course of the common law and by the statute auno 21. Ed. 3. called the statute de male factoribus in parcis chaceis c. For the most parte there are not officers in a warren but the master of the game or the keeper A free warren is some time in closed and also the same some time doth lie open for there is no necessity of inclosing the same as there is of a park for if a park be suffered to lie open it ought to be seised into the kings 〈…〉 Manwood Warscot is the contribution that was wont to be made towards armour in the Saxons time In Canutus his charter of the Forest set out by M. Manwood in the first part of his Forest lawes num 9. you haue these wordes Sint omnes tam primarii quàm mediocres minuti immunes liberi quietiab omnibus prouincialibus summonitionibus popularibus placitis quae Hundred laghe Angli dicunt ab omnibus armorum oncribus quod Warscot Angli dicunt forinsecis querelis VVarwit aliâs VVardwit is to be quite of giuing money for keeping of watches New exposition of lawe termes VVaste vastum commeth of the French gaster i. populari It signifieth diuersly in our common lawe first a spoile made either in houses woods gardens orchards c. by the tenent for terme of life or for terme of anothers life
quanta per confessionem partis adversae vel per probationes legitimas in fine litis apparebit And againe in the conclusion of all Non astringens se ad singula probanda sed potens vtquatenus probauerit in praemissis aut eorum aliquo eatenus obtineat By vertue of which clauses the plaintiffe faileth not in the end by any ouer or vnder demand neither is driuen to begin his action againe but obtaineth for so much as he proueth to be due though not to the heithe of his demaund Abridgement abbreuiamentum see Abridge A C ACcedas ad Curiam is a Writ that lieth for him who hath receyued false iudgement in a court Baron being directed to the Sheriffe as appeareth by Dyer fol. 169. nu 20. Like as the writ De falso iudicio lyeth for him that hath receiued false iudgement in the county Court the forme whereof you may see in Fitzh nat br fol. 18. d. and in the Register fol. 9. b. where it is said that this writ lyeth for iustice delayed as well as falsly giuen It is a species of the writ called Recordare Register originall fol. 5. b. and Fitzh vbi supra Accedas ad Vicecomitem is a writ directed to the Coroner cōmanding him to deliuer a writ to the Sheriffe that hauing a pone deliuered vnto him doth suppresse it Regist origin fol. 83. Accessory Accessorius vel Accessorium is vsed in our common lawe otherwise then among the Ciuilians For whereas with them it is generally takē for any thing depending vpon another here though it be so likewise yet most commonly and notoriously it signifieth a man that is guiltie of a fellonious offence not principally but by participation as by commandement aduice or concealement And a man may be accessorie to the offence of another after two sorts by the common lawe or by statute and by the common lawe two waies also that is before or after the fact Before the fact as when one commaundeth or aduiseth another to commita felony and is not present at the execution thereof For his presence maketh him also a principall wherfore there cannot be an accessorie before the fact in manslaughter because man-slaughter is sodaine and not prepensed Cooke lib. 4. fol. 44. a. Accessorie after the fact is when one receiueth him whom he knoweth to haue committed felonie Accessorie by statute is he that abetteth councelleth or hideth any man committing or hauing committed an offence made felony by statute For though the statute make no mention of abettours c. yet they are by interpretation included Of all these consult with Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 45. 46. 47. 48. There is also an accessorie of an accessorie as he that wittingly receiueth an accessorie to felonie lib. Assis 26. pl. 51. Coron Fitzh 196. Stawnf pl. cor li. 1. cap. 48. And the lawe of England is that so long as the principall is not attainted the accessorie may not be dealt with Stawnf vbi supra The reason whereofyou may see Cooke lib. 4. fol. 43. b. And this is also true by the ciuill lawe Claudius de Battandier in pract crim regula 101. at the least vntill the principall be certainely knowne Of this subiect reade M. Cromptons Iustice fol. 37. b. 38. 39. Acceptance is a receiuing of a rent whereby the receiuer bindeth himselfe for euer to allow a former fact done by another whether it be in it selfe good or not new tearmes of law Accompte computus is in the cōmon lawe taken for a writte or action brought against a man that by meanes of office or businesse vndertaken is to render an account vnto another as a bailife toward his Master a guardian in socage toward his ward such others as you shall find particularly named by Fitzh in his nat br fo 116. where you may also haue the forme and further vse of this writte See ex parte talis Accroche See enchrochement This word accroche is vsed ann 25. Ed. 3. Stat. 3. ca. 8. Achat commeth of the french achet 1. emptio nundinatio and is vsed for a contract or bargain Broke tit contract Acquitall signifieth in our cōmon law most ordinarily a deliuerance setting free from the suspicion or guiltines of an offence and is twofold acquitall in law or acquital in fact Acquitall in law is when two be appealed or endicted of felony one as principall the other as accessorie the principall being discharged the accessorie by consequent is also freed And in this case as the accessorie is acquitted by law so is the principall in fact Stawnf pl. cor fo 168. Acquittance Acquietantia cōmeth from the french quicter or quitter i. acceptò ferre or quictance i. acceptitatio apocha and signifieth a release or discharge from a dept formerly due But the verbe acquite the participle acquited the nowne acquital signifie also a discharge or cleering from an offence obiected as acquited by proclamation Smith de rep Anglo pa. 76. Stawnf pl. cor fo 168. Broke tit Acquitall See the new tearmes of lawe verbo acquitall acquittance Acquietandis plegiis is a Writ lying for a suretie against the creditour that refuseth to acquite him after the debt is paid by the debtour Register ori fol. 158. where it appeareth that this is a Iusticies Acre acre is a certaine quātitie of land containing in length 40. perches and foure in breadth or to that quantitie be the length more or lesse And if a man erect any new cotage he must lay 4. acres of land to it after this measure anno 31. Eliza. cap. 7. and with this measure agreeth M. Crompton in his iurisdiction of Courts fol. 222. though he say also that according to the diuers customes of diuers countries the perche differeth being in some places and most ordinarily but 16. foot dimid But in the Counties of Stafford 24. foote as was adiudged in the case betweene Sir Ed. Aston and S. Iohn B. in the Exchequer In the Statute made of sowing of Flaxe ann 24 H. 8. cap. 4. eight score perches make an acre which is 40. multiplied by 4. See also the ordinance of measuring land made anno 34. Ed. 1. Stat. 1. which agreeth with this accompt The word acre seemeth to come from the Germane word acker which is all one with the Latine ager Action actio is defined by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 1. as it is by Iustinian li. 4. Instit titulo de actionibus viz. Actio nihil aliud est quàm ius persequēds in iudicio quod alicui debetur Action is principally diuided by Iustinian in personalem realem by Bracton into personall reall and mixt action personall is that which belongeth to a man against another by reason of any contract offence or cause of like force to a contract or offence made or done by him or some other for whose fact he is by law to answer Bract. lib. 3. cap. 3. nu 2. Action reall is defined to be that which is giuen to any
bequeath any thing to the redeeming of captives c. and appoint one to execute his will in that point the partie soe appointed shall see it performed and if he appointe none to doe it then the Bishop of the citie shall haue power to demaund the legacie and without all delay performe the will of the deceased Admirall Admiralius cometh of the frenche amerall and signifieth both in France and with vs an high officer or magistrate that hath the gouernement of the Kings navie and the hearing and determining of all causes as well civile as criminall belōging to the sea Cromptons diuers iurisd fo 88. and the statutes anno 13. R. 2. ca. 5. anno 15. eiusdem ca. 3. an 2. H. 4. ca. 11. anno 2. H. 5. ca. 6. an 28. H. 8. ca. 15. with such like This officer is in all kingdomes of Europe that border vpon the sea and his authoritie in the kingdome of Naples is called magna Curia Admirariae quae habet iurisdictionem in eos qui vivunt ex arte maris Vincent de Franch descis 142. nu 1. This Magistrate among the Romanes was called praefectus classis as appeareth by Tully in Verrem 7. but his authoritie was not continuall as the Admirals is in these daies but onely in time of warre Neither doe I finde any such officer belonging to the Emperours in our Code And M. Guyn in the preface to his reading is of opinion that this office in England was not created vntill the daies of Edward the third His reason is probable Britton that wrote in Edw. the firsts time and in the beginning of his booke taking vpon him to name all the courts of Iustice maketh no mention of this courte or magistrate And againe Richard the second finding the Admirall to extend his iurisdiction over farre ordeined by statute made the 10. yeare of his reigne that the limits of the admirals iurisdiction should be restrained to the power he had in his grandfather Edward the thirds daies whereby the saide Master Gwin coniectureth that he did nought els but reduce him to his originall But contrarily to this it appeareth by auncient records the copies whereof I have seene that not onely in the daies of Ed. the first but also of King Iohn all causes of Merchants and mariuers and things happening within the fludde marke were ever tried before the Lord admirall Adiura Regis is a writ for the Kings Clerke against him that seeketh to eiect him to the preiudice of the Kings title in the right of his crowne Of this you may see diuers formes vpon divers cases Register orig fo 61. a. Admittendo clerico is a writte graunted to him that hath recouered his right of presentation a-against the Bishop in the common bank the forme whereof read in Fitzh nat br fo 38. the Register orig fo 33. a. Admittendo in socium is a writ for the association of certaine persons to Iustices of assises formerly appointed Register orig fol. 206. a. Ad quod damnum is a writ that lyeth to the escheater to inquire what hurt it will be to the King or other person to graunt a Faire or market or a mortmaine for any lands intended to be giuen in fee simple to any house of religion or other body politicke For in that case the land so giuē is said to fal into a dead hād that is such an estate and condition that the chiefe Lords do leese all hope of heriots seruice of court and escheates vpon any traiterous or felonious offence committed by the tenant For a bodie politicke dieth not neither can performe personall seruice or commit treason or felonie as a singular person may And therefore it is reasonable that before any such grant be made it should be knowne what preiudice it is like to worke to the graunter Of this reade more in Fitzh nat breu fol. 221. and look Mortmaine Ad terminum qui praeteriit is a writ of entrie that lyeth in case where a man hauing leased lands or tenements for terme of life or yeers and after the terme expired is held from them by the tenant or other stranger that occupieth the same and deforceth the leassour Which writ belongeth to the leassour and his heire also Fitzh nat br fol. 201. Aduent aduentus is a certaine space of time comprising a moneth or thereabout next before the feast of Christs natiuitie Wherein it seemeth that our ancestors reposed a kind of reuerence for the neerenesse of that solemne feast so that all contentions in lawe were then remitted for a season Whereupon there was a statute ordained Westm 1. cap. 48. anno 3. Ed. 1. that notwithstanding the said vsuall solemnitie and time of rest it might be lawfull in respect of iustice and charitie which ought at all times to be regarded to take assises of nouell disseisin mort d'auncester and darrein presentment in the time of Aduent Septuagesima and Lent This is also one of the times from the beginning whereof vnto the end of the Octaues of the Epiphany the solemnizing of mariage is forbidden by reason of a certain spiritualioy that the church so consequently euery member thereof for that time doth or ought to conceiue in the remembrance of her spouse Christ Iesus and so abandon all affections of the flesh See Rogation weeke and Septuagesima Advocatione decimarum is a writ that lyeth for the claime of the fourth part or vpward of the tythes that belong to any Church Register orig fol. 29. b. Advow aliâs avowe advocare commeth of the French advoüer aliâs avoüer and signifieth as much as to iustifie or maintaine an act formerly done For example one taketh a distresse for rent or other thing and he that is destreyned sueth a Replevin Now he that tooke the distresse or to whose vse the distresse was taken by another iustifying or maintaining the act is said to avowe Tearmes of the lawe Hereof commeth advowant Old nat br fol. 43. and advowrie eodem folio Bracton vseth the Latine word in the same signification as advocatio disseisiuae li. 4. cap. 26. And I find in Cassauaeus de consuet Burg. pa. 1210. advohare in the same signification and pag. 1213. the Substantine desavohamentum for a disavowing or refusall to avowe Advowzen advocatio signifieth in our common law a right to present to a benefice as much as ius patronatus in the canon lawe The reason why it is so tearmed proceedeth from this because they that originally obtained the right of presenting to any Church were maintainers and vpholders or great benefactors to that Church either by building or increasing it and are thereupon tearmed sometime patroni sometime Advocati cap. 4. cap. 23. de iure patronatus in Decretal And advowzen being a bastardly French word is vsed for the right of presenting as appeareth by the Statute of Westm the second anno 13. Ed. 1. ca. 5. Advowsen is of two sorts advowsen in grosse that is sole or
kings house whose function is fragmenta diligenter colligere ea distribuere singulis diebus egenis agrotos leprosos incarceratos pauperesque viduas alios egenos vagosque in patria commorantes charitative visitare item equos relictos robas pecuniam alia ad eleemosynae largita recipere fideliter distribuere Debet etiam regem super eleemosynae largitione crebris summonitionibus stimulare praecipuè diebus Sanctorum rogare ne robas suas quae magni sunt pretii histrionibus blanditoribus adulatoribus accusatoribus vel menestrallis sed and eleemosinae suae incrementum iubeat largiri Fleta lib. 2. cap. 2. Almoine eleemosina See Frank almoyne Almond amygdalum is well knowne to euery mans sight it is the kirnell of a nut or stone which the tree in Latine called amygdalus doth beare within a huske in maner of a wal nut of whose nature and diuersities you may reade Gerards Herball lib. 3. cap. 87. This is noted among merchandize that are to be garbled anno 1. Iaco. ca. 19. Alnegeor aliâs aulnegeor vlniger vel vlnator cometh from the French aulne an elle or elwand and signifieth an officer of the Kings who by himselfe or his deputie in places conuenient looketh to the assise of wollen cloth made through the land and to seals for that purpose ordained vnto them an 25. Ed. 3. Stat. 4. cap. 1. anno 3. R. 2. cap. 2. who is accomptable to the king for euery cloth so sealed in a fee or custome therunto belonging anno 17. R. 2. cap. 2. Reade of this more anno 27. Ed. 3 cap. 4. anno 17. R. 2. cap. 2. 5. anno 1. H. 4. cap. 13. anno 7. eiusdem cap. 10. anno 11 eiusd cap. 6. anno 13. eiusd cap. 4. anno 11. H. 6. cap. 9. anno 31. eiusdem cap. 5. anno 4. Ed. 4. ca. 1. anno 8. eiusdem cap. 1. an 1. R. 3. cap. 8. Ambidexter is that iurour or embraceour that taketh of both parties for the giuing of his verdict He forfeiteth ten times so much as he taketh anno 38. Ed. 3. cap. 12. Cromptons iustice of peace fol. 156. b. Amendment emendatio commeth of the French amendement and signifieth in our common lawe a correction of an error committed in a processe and espyed before iudgment Terms of the lawe Broke titulo Amendement per totum But if the fault be found after iudgment giuen then is the party that wil redresse it driuen to his writ of errour Tearmes of the lawe Broke titulo Error Amerciament amerciamentum signifieth the pecuniarie punishment of an offendor against the King or other Lord in his court that is found to be in misericordia i. to haue offended and to stand at the mercie of the King or Lord. There seemeth to be a difference betweene amerciaments and fines Kitchin fol. 214. And I haue heard cōmon Lawyers say that fines as they are taken for punishments be punishments certaine which grow expresly from some statute and that amerciaments be such as be arbitrably imposed by affeerors This is in some sort confirmed by Kitchin fol. 78. in these words l'amerciamēt est affire per pares M. Manwood in his first part of Forest lawes pag. 166. seemeth to make another difference as if he would inferre an amerciamēt to be a more easie or more mercifull penaltie and a fine more sharpe and grieuous Take his wordes If the pledges for such a trespasse saith he do appeare by common summons but not the defendant himselfe then the pledges shall be imprisoned for that default of the defendant but otherwise it is if the defendant himselfe do appeare and be ready in Court before the Lord Iustice in eyre to receiue his iudgment and to pay his fine But if such pledges do make default in that ease the pledges shall be amerced but not fined c. The author of the new tearmes of lawe saith that amerciament is most properly a penalty assessed by the peeres or equals of the partie amercied for an offence done for the which he putteth himselfe vpon the mercie of the Lord. Who also maketh mentiō of an amerciament royal and defineth it to be a pecuniarie punishment laid vpon a Sheriffe Coroner or such like Officer of the kings amercied by Iustices for his offence See Misericordia Amoveas manum Looke ouster le r●aiue An tour waste annus dies vastum Looke yeare day and waste Ancaling of tile anno 17. Ed. 4. ca 4. Annats Annates seemeth to be all one with first fruites anno 25. H. 8. ca. 20. looke First fruites The reason is because the rate of first fruites payed of spirituall liuings is after one yeares profite Of which Folydore Virgil de inuētione rerum lib. 8. cap. 2. saith thus Nullum inuentum m●iores Romano Pontifici cumulavit opes quàm annatum quas vocant vsus qui omnino multò antiquior est quàm recētiores quidam scriptores suspicantur Et annates more suo appellant primos fructus vnius anni sacerdatii vacantis aut danidiam eorum partem Sanè hoc vectigal iam pride cùm Romanus Pontifex non habuerit tot possessiones quot nunc habet eum oportuerit pro dignitate pro officio multos magnosque facere sumptus paulatim impositum fuit sacerdotiis vacantibus quae ille conferret de qua quidem re vt gravi saepe reclamatum fuisse testatur Henricus Hostiensis qui cum Alexandro 4. Pontifice vixit sic vt Franciscus Zabarellus tradat post hac in concilio Viennensi quod Clemens quintus indixit qui factus est Pontifex anno salutis humanae 135. agitatum fuisse vt eo deposito annatum onere vigesima pars vectigalium sacerdotalium penderetur quotannis Romano Pontifici id quidem frustrà Quare Pontifex annatas in sua nassa retinuit vt ne indidem exire possent lege caetera Anniented commeth of the French aneantir i. se abiicere atque prosternere It signifieth with ourlawyers as much as frustrated or brought to nothing Litlet●n lib. 3. cap. warrantie Annua pensione is a writte wherby the king hauing due vnto him an annuall pension from any Abbot or Prior for any of his Chaplaines whom he shal think good to name vnto him being as yet vnprouided of sufficient liuing doth demaund the same of the said Abbot or Prior for one whose name is comprised in the same writ vntill c. and also willeth him for his Chaplaines better assurance to giue him his leters patents for the same Register orig fol. 265. 307. Fitzh nat br fol. 231. where you may see the names of al the Abbeyes and Priories bound vnto this in respect of their foundatiō or creation as also the forme of the leters patents vsually graunted vpon this writ Annuitie annuus reditus signifieth a yearely rent to be paide for tearme of life or yeres or in fee and is also vsed for the writ that lyeth against a man for
termed the Deane of the Arches or the officiall of the Arches court Deane of the Arches because with this officialtie is commonly ioyned a peculiar iurisdiction of thirteene parishes in London tearmed a Deantie being exempted from the authoritie of the Bishop of London and belonging to the Archbishop of Canterburie of which the parish of Bow is one the chiefe because the Court is there kept Some others say that he was first called Deane of the arches because the officiall to the Archbishop being many times employed abroad in ambassages for the king and realme the Deane of the Arches was his substitute in his court and by that meanes the names became confounded The iurisdiction of this Iudge is ordinarie and extendeth it selfe through the whole Prouince of Canterburie So that vpon any appeale made he foorthwith and without any farder examinatiō of the cause sendeth out his citation to the party appealed and his inhibition to the Iudge from whome the appeale is made Of this he that will may reade more in the booke intituled De antiquitate Eccelesiae Britānicaehistoria Arma moluta seeme to be sharpe weapons that doe cut not blunt that doe onely breake or bruise Bracton li. 3. tract 2. ca. 23. Stawnf pl. cor fo 78. 79. whereof Bracton hath these words arma moluta plagam faciunt sicut gladius bisacuta huiusmodi ligna verò lapides brusuras 〈…〉 bes ictus qui iudicari non possunt ad plagam ad hoc vt inde veniri possit ad duellum Armour arma in the vnderstanding of our common lawe is extended to any thing that a man in his anger or furie taketh into his hand to cast at or strike another Cromptons Iustice of peace fo 65. a. So armorum appellatio non vtique scuta gladios galeas significat sed fustes lapides l. 42. Π. de verbo significatione Array arraia aliàs arraiamentum commeth of the French array i. ordo which is an old word out of vse or it may be well deduced from raye i. linea It signifieth in our commō lawe the ranking or setting forth of a iurie or enquest of men impaneled vpō a cause a. 18. H. 6 c. 14. Thence is the verb to array a panel owld nat br fo 157. that is to set forth one by another the men empaneled The array shal be quashed owld nat br fo 157. By statute every array in assise ought to be made foure daies before Broke titulo Panel nu 10. to chalenge the array Kitchin fo 92. Arreyers seemeth to be vsed in the statut anno 12. Rich. 2. ca. 6. for such officers as had care of the souldiers armour to see them duly appointed in ther kindes Arraine arraniare commeth of the French arranger i. astituere ordinare that is to set a thing in order or in his place and the same signification it hath in our common law For example he is saide to arraine a writ of novel disseisin in a countie that fitteth it for triall before the Iustices of that circuit owld nat br fo 109. Litleton fo 78. vseth the same word in the same sence viz. the lease arraineth an assise of nouel disseisin Also a prisoner is said to be arrained where he is indighted and brought forth to his triall Arrained within the verge vpon murder Stawnf pl. cor fo 150. The course of this arrainment you may read in S. Thomas Smith de repub Anglo li. 2. ca. 23. Arrearages arreragia commeth of the French arrierages 1. reliqua It signifieth the remaine of an account or a summe of mony remaining in the hands of an accoūtant It is vsed sometime more generally for any mony vnpaide at the due time as arrearages of rent That this word is borowed from France it appeareth by Tiraquel de vtroque retractu tomo 3. pa. 32. nu 10. Arrest arestum commeth of the French arrester i. retinere retare subsistere or rather it is a French word in it selfe signifying a setling stop or stay and is metaphorically vsed for a decree or determinatiō of a cause debated or disputed to and fro as arrest du Senat. i. placitum curiae In our comon law it is taken most of all for a stay or stoppe as a man apprehended for debt c. is said to be arrested To pleade in arrest of iudgment is to shew cause why iudgment should be stayed though the verdict of the 12. be passed To plead in arrest of taking the enquest vpon the former issue is to shew cause why an enquest should not be taken c. Broke tit Repleder Take this of learned M. Lambard in his eirenarch li. 2. ca. 2. pa. 94. Budae saith he in his greeke commentaries is of opinion that the French word arrest which with them signifieth a decree or iudgment of court tooke beginning of the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. placitum and as we might say the pleasure and will of a court And albeit it were not out of the way to think that it is called an arrest because it stayeth or arresteth the partie yet I beleeue rather that we receiued the same from the Normane lawes because we vse it in the same sence with thē For commonly with vs au arrest is taken for the execution of the commaundement of some court or of some officer in iustice But howsoeuer the name began an arrest is a certaine restraint of a mans person depriuing him of his owne will and libertie and binding it to become obedient to the will of the lawe And it may be called the beginning of imprisonment Precepts writs of the higher courts of lawe do vse to expresse it by two sundry words as capias and attachies which signifie to take or catch hold of a man But this our precept noteth it by the words duci facias that is cause him to be conueyed c. For that the officer hath after a sort taken him before in that he commeth vnto him and requireth him to go to some Iustice of the peace Thus farre M. Lamberd And by like this word is spred farder then France For Gaile a Germaine writer sheweth by his Tractate de arrestis imperii that it is vsed also in the imperiall territories in the same significatiō c. 1. n. 1. Arrestandis bonis ne dissipentur is a writ which lyeth for him whose catell or goods are taken by another that during the controuersie doth or is like to make them away and will be hardly able to make satisfaction for thē afterward Reg. orig fol. 126. b. Arrestando ipsum qui pecuniam recepit ad proficiscendum in obsequium Regis c. is a writ that lieth for the apprehension of him that hath taken prest money towards the kings warres and lieth hidden when he should goe Register orig 24. b. Arresto facto super bonis mercatorum alienigenorum c. is a writ that lyeth for a denizen against the goods of strangers
is vsed anno 20. Ed 1. anno 11. H. 6. cap. 2. in these words Iustices assigned to take assises And the Substantiue assignement hath the same signification Wests symb parte 1. lib. 2. sect 496. seq In which maner is also vsed the adiectiue assignee assignatus viz. for him that is appointed or deputed by another to do any act or performe any businesse or enioy any commoditie And an assignee may be either in deed or in law Assignee in deed is he that is appointed by a person an assignee in lawe is he whom the lawe so maketh without any appointment of the person v. Dyer fol. 6. num 5. Perkins in Grauntes saith that an assignee is he that occupieth a thing in his owne right and deputè he that doth it in the right of another Assise assisa commeth of the French assise which in the grand custumarie of Normandy cap. 24. is defined to this effect Assise is an assembly of Knights and other substantiall men with the Bailiffe or Iustice in a certain place and at a certaine time appointed And againe cap. 55. Assise is a court in the which whatsoeuer is done ought to haue perpetuall strength This Normane word assise commeth of the French asseoir ● collocare to settle or bestow in some place certaine as s●asseoir is to sit downe by another And metaphorically it is vsed of things incorporeall as asseoir son iugement sur quelque lieu is interponere iudicium suum Of this verbe commeth the participle assis as estre assis i. sedere And this Participle in the grand custumarie of Normandie cap. 68. is vsed as we would say appointed limited or determined viz. au iour qui est assis à faire la battaille se doibuent les champions offrir á la iustice that is at the day which is appointed for the combat the champions ought to offer themselues to the Iustice So that by all these places compared together it is euident whence the original of this word assise floweth How diuersly it is vsed in our common lawe it followeth that we declare First Litleton in the chapter Rents saith that it is aequivocum where he setteth downe three seuerall significations of it one as it is taken for a writ another as it is vsed for a Iurie the third as for an ordinance And him he that listeth may reade more at large My collections haue serued me thus first assise is taken for a writ directed to the Shyreeue for the recouerie of possession of things immoueable whereof your selfe or your auncestor haue bene disseised And this is as well of things corporall as incorporeall rights being of foure sorts as here they follow in their order Assise of novel disseisin assisa nova disseisina lyeth where a tenent in Fee-simple Fee-taile or for tearme of life is lately disseised of his lands or tenements or else of a rent seruice rent seck or rent charge of common of pasture of an office of tolle tronage passage pownage or for a nusance leuied and diuers other such like For confirmation whereof you may reade Glanvile lib. 10. cap. 2. Bracton lib. 4. tract 1. per totum Britton cap. 70. seqq Register orig fol. 197. Fitz. nat br fol. 177. 178. 179. new booke of entries fol. 74. col 3. West 2. cap. 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 Townes corporate being a kinde of assise for recovery of possession in such places within 40. daies after the force as the ordinarie assise is in the countie Fitzh nat br fo 7. c. This the Civilians call iudicium possessorium recuperandi Assise of mort d' auncester assisa mortis antecessoris lyeth where my father mother brother sister vncle aunte c. died seised of lands tenements rents c. that he had in see simple and after his death a straunger abateth an it is good as well against the abatour as any other in possession How likewise this is extended see Bracton li. 4. tract 3. per totum Britton ca. 70. cum multis sequent Fitzh nat br fo 114. Register orig fo 223. This the Civilians call Iudicium possessorium adipiscendi Assise of darrein presentment assisa vltima praesentationis lieth where I or mine auncestor haue presented a Clerke to a Church and after the Church being voide by the death of the said Clerke or otherwise a straūger presenteth his Clerke to the same Church in disturbance of me And how otherwise this writ is vsed See Bracton li. 4. tract 2. Register orig fo 30. Fitzh nat br fo 195. Assise de vtrum assisa vtrum lieth either for a parson against a lay man or a lay man against a parson for land or tenement doubtfull whether it be lay see or free almes And of this see Bracton li. 4. tract 5. cap. 1. seqq Brit. ca. 95. The reason why these writs be called assises may be diuers First because they settle the possession and so an outward right in him that obteineth by them Secondly they were originally spedde and executed at a certaine time and place formerly appointed For by the Norman law the time and place must be knowne 40. daies before the Iustices sate of them and by our lawe there must be likewise 15. daies of preparation except they be tried in those standing courts of the king in Westminster as appeareth by Fitzh nat br fo 177. D. E. Lastly they may be called assises because they are tried most commonly by especial courts set appointed for the purpose as may be well proved not onely out of the custumarie of Normandie but our bookes also which shew that in auncient times Iustices were apointed by especiall commission to dispatch controversies of possession one or more in this or that onely countie as accasion fell out or disseisins were offered that as well in terme time as out of terme whereas of later daies wee see that all these commissions of asseses of eyre of oyer terminer of gaol deliuerie and of nisi prius are dispatched all at one time by two severall circuits in the yeare out of terme and by such as haue the greatest sway of Iustice being al of them either the Kings ordinarie Iustices of his benches Sergeants at the lawe or such like Assise in the second signification according to Litleton is vsed for a Iurie For to vse his owne example it is set downe in the beginning of the record of an assise of novel disseisin Assissa venit recognitura which is as much to say as Iuratores veniunt recognituri The reason why the Iurie is called an assise he giueth to be this because by the writte of assise the Shyreeue is commaunded quòd faciat duodecim liberos legales homines de viceneto c. videre tenementum illud nomina eorum imbreviari quod summoneat eos per bonas
is formerly said taketh hold of moueable goods or the bodie For it appeareth by Kitchin fo 263. that a man may be attached by a hundred sheepe Reade Skene de verbo signific verbo attachiamentum Now it followeth to shew how attachement differeth from a distresse For so it doth as may be shewed out of Kitchin fo 78. where he saith that processe in court baron is summons attachment and distresse out of the owld nat br fo 27. where it is said that a processe in a quare impedit is summons attachement and one distresse and againe fo 28. wheare speaking of the writ ne admittas he saieth thus and the processe is one prohibition and vpon the prohibition an attachment and distresse and fo 32. in a writ of Indicauit you haue these words and after the attachment returned the distresse shall goe out of the rols of the Iustices Bracton on the other side li. 5. tract 3. ca. 4. nu 2. sheweth that both attachiamentum magnum cape districtiones sunt of which opinion Fleta also is li. 5. ca. 24. § si autem ad But there also he saith that attachiamentum est districtio personalis cape magnum districtio realis So that by his opinion districtio is genus to attachement Britton in his 26. chapter hath words to this effect but in attachement of felony there commeth no distresse otherwise then by the body And if the Shyreeue return in the cases aforesaid that the trespassours haue nothing in his bayliwick by the which they may be distreined it must be awarded that he take their bodies c. In which place an attachement is plainly vsed for an apprehension of an offender by his goods So that to conclude I finde no difference between an attachment and a distresse but these two● that an attachement reacheth not to lands as a distresse doth and that a distresse toucheth not the bodie if it be properly taken as an attachement doth yet are they diuers times confounded as may appeare by the places formerly alleadged and by Glanvile li. 10. ca. 3. and Fleta li. 2. ca. 66. seqq How be it in the most common vse an attachment is an apprehēsion of a man by his body to bring him to answer the action of the plaintiffe a distresse is the taking of another mans goods for some reall cause as rent seruice or such like whereby to driue him to replevie and so to be plaintiffe in an action of trespas against him that distreined him And so much for the difference and coherēcie of these words See also Distres I finde in West parte 2. symbolaio titulo proceedings in chauncerie sect 22. 23. that attachemēt out of the chaūcery is two-fold one simple and originally decreed for the apprehension of of the partie the other after return made by the Shyreeue quod defendens non est inventus in baliva sua with proclamations made through the whole courtie in such places as he shall thinke meete that the partie appeare by a day assigned and that he attached never the lesse if he may be found This second kinde hath an affinitie with the canonists vijs modis at the which if the partie appeare not he is excommunicate or with the Civilians vijs modis vnâ cum intimatione For in the chaūcerie if he com not vpō this he is forth with pressed with a writ of rebellion There is an attachment of priviledge which is a power to apprehend a man in a priviledged place or els by vertue of a mans priuiledge to call another to this or that courte whereunto he himselfe belongeth and in respect whereof he is priviledged Newe booke of entrise verbo priviledge fo 431. col 2. There is also a foreine attachement which is an attachement of a foriners goods found within a libertie or citie to satisfie some creditour of his within the citie There is also an attachement of the forest which is a court there held For as M. Manwood saith in his first parte of forest lawes p. 90. 92. 99. there be three courts of the forest wherof the lowest is called the Attachement the meane the swaynemote the highest the Iustice seate in eyre This court of attachement seemeth so to be called because the verderours of the forest haue therein no other authoritie but to receiue the attachements of offenders against vert and venison taken by the rest of the officers and to enrol them that they may be presented and punished at the next Iustice seate Manwood parte 1. pa. 93. And this attaching is by three meanes by goods and catels by body pledges and mainprise or by the body onely The courte is kept euery 40. daies throughout the yere And he that hath occasion to learne more of this I refer him to M. Manwood loco quo supra to M. Crompton in his courte of the forest Attachement is commaunded in writs the diversitie whereof you may see in the Register originall vnder the word Attachiamentum in indice At large see assise at large in the word assise and owld nat br fo 105. Verdict at large Littleton fo 98. To vouch at large owld nat br fo 108. To make title at large Kitchin fo 68. See Barre Attaint attincta commeth of the French as you shall see in the word attainted But as it is a substantiue it is vsed for a writ that lyeth after iudgement against a Iurie that hath giuen a false verdict in any court of record be the action reall or personall if the debt or dammages surmount the summe of 40. shillings what the forme of the writ is and how in vse it is extended see Fitzena br fol. 105. and the new booke of entries fol. 84. colum 1. The reason why it is so called seemeth to be because the partie that obtaineth it endeuoureth thereby to touch deprehend or staine the Iurie with periurie by whose verdict he is grieued What the punishment of this periurie is or of him that bringeth the writ against the Iurie if he faile in his proofe see Glanvile lib. 2. cap. 19. Fitz. nat br fol. 109. K. Io. 110. A. B. C. D. c. the termes of the lawe verb. Attaint Fortescue cap. 26. Smith de rep Anglo lib. 3. cap. 2. and anno 11. H. 7. cap. 21. an 23. H. 8. cap. 3. and others In what diuersitie of cases this writ is brought see the Register orig in Indice Attainted attinctus commeth of the French teindre i. tingere the participle whereof is teinct i. tinctus or else of attaindre i. assequi attingere It is vsed in our common lawe particularly for such as are found guiltie of some crime or offence and especially of felonie or treason How be it a man is said to be attainted of of disseisin Westm 1. cap. 24. 36. anno 3. Ed. 1. And so it is taken in French likewise as estre attaint vayncu en aucun cas is to be cast in any case
water comming out of them by a passage or flud-gate called the penstocke and falling vpon the said wheeles This word is mentioned in the statute anno 27. El. cap. 19. Bayle Ballium plevina manucaptio commeth of the French bailler i. attribuere tradere tribuere It is vsed in our common lawe properly for the freeing or setting at liberty of one arrested or imprisoned vpon action either civill or criminall vnder suretie taken for his apparence at a day and place certainely assigned Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 8. num 8. 9. The reason why it is called Bayle is because by this meanes the party restrained is deliuered into the hands of those that bind themselues for his forth-comming There is both common and speciall baile Cōmon baile is in actions of small preiudice or flight proofe being called common because any sureties in that case are taken whereas vpon causes of greater weight or apparent specialtie speciall baile or suretie must bee taken as subsidie men at the least and they according to the value Master Manwood in his first part of Forest lawes pag. 167 maketh a great difference betweene bayle and mainprise in these words and note that there is a great diuersitie betweene bayle and mainprise For he that is mainprised is alwaies said to be at large and to go at his own libertie out of ward after that he is let to mainprise vntill the day of his appearance by reason of the said common summons or otherwise But otherwise it is where a man is let to bayle by foure or two men by the Lord chiefe Iustice in eyre of the Forest vntill a certaine day For there he is alwaies accompted by the lawe to be in their ward and custodie for the time And they may if they wil keepe him in ward or in prison at that time or otherwise at their will So that he which is so bailed shall not be said by the lawe to be at large or at his owne libertie See Lamberds eirenarcha lib. 3. cap. 2. pag. 330. Bayle is also a certaine limit within the forest accordingly as the Forest is diuided into the charges of seuerall Foresters Crompton in the oath of the bow-bearer fol. 201. See Maynprise Baylife ballivus commeth of the French bailif i. diaecetes nomarcha praefectus Prouinciae and as the name so the office it selfe in auncient time was very aunswerable to that of Fraunce and Normandie for as in France there be sixteene Parlaments Lupanus de Magistratibus Francorum lib. 2. cap. Parlamentum which be high courts whence lyeth no appeale within the preeincts of those seuerall parts of that kingdome that belong to each Parlament there be seueral prouinces vnto which within themselues iustice is ministred by certaine officers called bayliffes so in England we see many seuerall counties or shires within the which iustice hath bene ministred to the inhabitants of each countie by the officer whome we now call Shyreeue or Vicount one name descending frō the Saxons the other from the Normans And though I cannot expressely proue that this Shyreeue was euer called a bailiffe yet is it probable that that was one of his names likewise because the countie is called many times balliva that is a Bayliwicke as namely in the returne of a writ with non est inuentus he writeth thus A. S. infra scriptus non est inventus in balliva mea post receptionem huius brevis Kitchin returna brevium fol. 258. and againe in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 33. num 3. and anno 5. Eliz cap. 23. and anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. cap. 6. And I thinke the word bailife vsed cap. 28. of Magna charta compriseth as well Shyreeues as bailiffes of hundreds as also anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. cap. 9. But as the realme is diuided into Counties so euery Countie is againe diuided into hundreds within the which it is manifest that in auncient times the kings subiects had iustice ministred vnto them by the seuerall officers of euery hundred which were called bailiffes as those officers were and are in Fraunce and Normandie being chiefe officers of iustice within euery Prouince Lupanus de Magistratibus Francorum lib. 2. cap. Balivi and the grand custumary of Normandie cap. 1. And that this is true among many others I bring Bracton for my witnes li. 3. tract 2. cap. 34. n. 5. where it appeareth that bailiffes of hundreds might hold plee of appeale and approuers But fithence that time these hundred courts certain franchises excepted are by the statute anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. cap. 9. swalowed into the Countie courts as you may reade in countie and hundred And the Bailiffes name office is growne into such contempt at the least these bailiffes of hundreds that they are now but bare messengers and mandataries within their liberties to serue writs and such like base offices their office consisting in 3. points onely which see in Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 49. a. Yet is the name still in good esteeme some other way For the chiefe Magistrates in diuers townes corporate be called Bailiffes as in Ipsewitch Yarmouth Colchester and such like And againe there be certaine to whom the kings castels be committed which are called Bailifs as the Bailiffe of Dover castell These ordinary bayliffes are of two sorts baylifs errant and baylifs of franchises Baylifes errant ballivi it inerantes be those which the Shyreeue maketh and appointeth to goe hither thither in the countie to serue writs to summon the countie sessions assises and such like Baylifs of franchises ballivi franchesiarum aut libertatum be those that are appointed by euerie lord within his libertie to doe such offices within his precincts as the baylife errant doth at large in the countie Of these read S. Thomas Smith de repub Anglo li. 2. ca. 16. There be also baylifes of the forest Manwood parte 1. pa. 113. There be likewise baylifes of husbandrie belonging to priuate men of great substance who seeme to be so called bycause they dispose of the vnder servants every man to his labour and taske check them for misdoing their buisenes gather the profits of their lord and master and deliuer an accompt for the same at the yeares end or otherwise as it shall be called for The word baylife or balivus is by Rebuffus deriued from Baal i. dominus quia ballivi dominantur suis subditis quasi eorum magistri domini Rebuf in constitut regias de senten executionis art 7. glos 1. The office or dutie of a bayliffe of a maner or household which in aunciēt time seemeth to haue beene all one Fleta well describeth li. 2. ca. 72. 73. This word is also vsed in the canon lawe ca. dilect● de sentent excom in sexto ca. pri de poenis in clement wher the glossographer saith it is a French word signifiing as much as praepositus balia or balivatus is vsed among our later interpreters of
and true inquisition make as well of swornemen as vnsworne in euerie bayliwick both in the north bayle and south bayle of this forest and of all maner of trespasses done either to vert or venison I shall truly endeavour my selfe to attach or cause them to be attached in the next court Attachement there to be presented without any concealment had to my knowledge so helpe me God c. Bracton otherwise called Henry of Bracton was a famous lawyer of this land renowmed for his knowledge both in the common and civill lawes as appeareth by his booke every where extant He liued in the daies of Henry the third Stawn praero fo 5. b. and as some say Lord cheife Iustice of England Bread of treate and bread of coket anno 51. H. 3. statuto 1. of bread and ale Bred signifieth broade This word Bracton vseth li. 3. tracta 2. ca. 15. nu 7. proverbially thus to lange and to bred the meaning whereof you may there finde word for word it is as we now speake two long and two broad or two in length and two in breadth Breuibus ra 〈…〉 liberandis is a writ or mandat to a Shyreeue to deliuer vnto the newe Shyreeue chosen in his roome the county with the appertenances together with the rols briefes remembrances and all other things belonging to that office Register original fo 295. a. Bribours commeth of the french bribeur i. mendicus It seemeth to signifie with vs one that pilfreth other mens goods anno 28. Ed. 2. stat 1. ca. vnico Brief breve commeth from the French brefou breif i. brevis and in our common lawe signifieth a writ whereby a man is summoned to answer to any action or more largely any precept of the king in writing issuing out of any court whereby he commaundeth any thing to be done for the furtherance of iustile or good order The word is vsed in the ciuile lawe some time in the singular number and masculine gender as l. vlt. Coa de conueniendis fisci debitoribus li. 10. tit 2. you haue these words Inter chartulas confiscati brevis quidam adseueratur invētus qui nomina cōtineba● debitorū Where it is vsed for a short note Again I finde a title restored by Gothofred in the first booke of the Code de quadrimenstruis brevibus Quadrumenstrus autem breves erant qui de singulis indictionum pensionibus quarte quoque mense fo●utis confic●e● antur Also Lampridius in Alexandro hath it singularly thus notarium qui falsum causae brevem in consilio imperatorioretulisset c. And in the Authētiques Novel 105. ca. 2. you haue this word breviatores i. brevium proscriptores Breves autem brevia brevicula sunt chartae sive libelli breves as Galbofred there noteth Where he noteth likewise out of Zonaras in Garthagin Cōcilio that this is a greeke word thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 See Skene de verbo signif verbo Breue Of these breifes see also Bracton li. 5. tract 5. ca. 17. nu 2. Breve quidem cùm sit formatum ad similitudinem regula iuris quia breviter paucis verbis intentionem proferentis exponit explanat sicut regula iuris rem quae est breviter charrat Non tamen ita breve esse debet quin rationem vim intentionis contineat c. Brigandine lorica is the french brigandine that is a coate of maile This is vsed anno 4. 5. Ph. Mar. ca. 2. Brigbote significat quietantiam reparationis pontium Fleta li. 1. ca. 47. It is compounded of brig a bridge and bote which is a yeelding of amends or supplying a defect See Bote and Bruck-bote Britton was a famous Lawyer that liued in the daies of K. Edward the first at whose commandemēt by whose authority he writ a learned booke of the lawe of this realme The tenure wherof runneth in the Kings name as if it had beene penned by himselfe answerably to the Institutions which Iustinian assumeth to himselfe though composed by others Stawnf prare fo 6. 21. S. Edward Cooke saith that this Britton writ his booke in the fifte yeare of the said King reigne li. 4. fo 126. a. lib. 6. fo 67. a. M. Guin in the preface to his reading mencioneth that this Iohn Britton was bishop of Hereford Broke commonly called S. Robert Broke was a greate lawyer and lord chiefe Iustice of the cōmon plees in Queene Mar. 〈◊〉 time Cromptons Iustices of peace fo 2● b. he made an abbridgement of the whole lawe a booke of highe accoumpt Broker brocarnis seemeth to come from the French broieur tritor that is a gryneder or breaker into small peaces Because he that is of that trade to deall in maters of mony and marchandise betwene Englishe men and Strangers doth draw the b●rgaine to particulars and the parties to conclusion not forgetting to grinde out somthing to his owne profit Those men be called broggers anno 10. R. 2. ca. i. It may not improbably be said that this word commeth from carder i. cavillari because these kinde of men by their deceitfull 〈…〉 ches and abusing their true made many times inuegle others In Scotland they be called broccary and in their owne idiome blockers or brockers that is mediators or intercessors in any trāsaction paction or contract as in buying or selling or in contractting mariage Skene de verbo signi verbo broccarij He that will know what these brokers were wont ought to be let him read the statut anno 1. Iacobi ca. 21. These in the civile lawe are called proxenetae as also of some licitatores mediatores titulo de proxeneticis in Digestis This kind of dealer is also of the Romanes called pararius Senece li. 2. de benef ca. 22. Caelius Rhideginus libro 6. ca. 32. li 3. cap. 35. Broderers commeth of the French brodeur and that commeth of bordure i. fimbria limbus the edge or hemme of a garmet And that because it is distinguished frō the rest most cōmōly by some conceipted or costly worke he that worketh it is called brodeur in French and broderor or embroderer with vs. Brode halpeny commeth of the three Saxon words bret or bred 〈◊〉 aboord and halve that is for this or that cause cuius rei gratie as the Latinists speake and penning it signifieth a tolle or custome for setting vp of tables or boords in a Faire or Market From the which they that are freed by the Kings Charter had this word mentioned in there leters patents In so much as at this day the freedome it selfe for shortnesse of speech is called by the name of brodehalpenie Broggers See Brokers Bruckbote Pontagium is compounded of two German words bruck i. pons and bote i. compensatio It signifieth with vs a tribute contribution or ayde toward the mending or reedifiing of bridges whereof many are freed by the kings charter And thereupon the word is vsed for the very libertie or exemptiō from this tribute
or reall Personall may be so called in two respects one because they belong immediatly to the person of a man as a bowe horse c. the other for that being any way withheld iniuriously from vs we haue no meanes to recouer them but by personall action Chatels reall be such as either appertain not immediatly to the person but to some other thing by way of dependencie as a boxe with charters of land the body of a ward apples vpon a tree or a tree it selfe growing on the ground Cromptons Iustice of peace fo 33. B or els such as are necessary issuing out of some immoveable thing to a person as a lease or rent for tearme of yeares Also to hould at will is a chatell reall New tearmes verbo Chatell The ciuilians comprehend these things as also lands of what kin de or hould so euer vnder bona bona autē diuiduntur in mobilia immobilia mobilia verò in ea quae se movent vel ab aliis moventur v. legem 49. l. 208 〈◊〉 de verb. significa interpretes ibidem Bract. also ca. 3. li. 3. nu 3. 4. seemeth to be of the same iudgement Catallis captis nomine districtionis is a writ which lyeth within a borowe or within a house for rent going out of the same and warranteth a man to take the doores windowes or gates by way of distresse for the rent Old nat br fo 66. Catallis reddendis is a writ which lyeth where goods being deliuered to any man to keepe vntill a certaine day and be not vpon demande deliuered at the day And it may be otherwise called a writ of detinew See more of it in the Register orig fo 139. and in the ould nat br fo 63. This is answerable to actio depositi in the ciuile lawe Catchepolle though it now be vsed as a word of contempt yet in auncient times it seemeth to haue bene vsed without reproch for such as we now call sergeants of the mace or any other that vse to arrest men vpon any cause anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 4. ca. 2. Cathedrall See church Casu matrimonii praelocuti is a writ which lyeth in case where a woman giueth lands to a man in fee simple to the intent he shall mary her and refuseth so to doe in reasonable time being required thereunto by the woman The forme and farder vse hereof learne in the Register orig fol. 233. and in Fitzh nat br fo 205. Causam nobis significes is a writ which lyeth to a Mayer of a towne or city c. that formerly by the kings writ being commaunded to giue seisin vnto the kings grantee of any land or tenements doth delay so to do willing him to shew cause why he so delayeth the performance of his charge Coke li. 4. casu communalty des Sadlers fo 55 b. Cautione admittenda is a writ that lyeth against the Bishop houlding an excommunicate person in prison for his contempt notwithstanding that he offereth sufficient caution or assurance to obey the commandments and orders of holy church from thence forth The forme and farder effect whereof take out of the Regist orig pa. 66. and Fitzh nat br fol. 63. Century centuria See Hundred Cepi corpus is a returne made by the Shyreue that vpō an exigēd he hath taken the bodie of the partie Fitzh nat br fo 26. Certiorari is a writ issuing out the chauncerie to an inferiour courte to call vp the records of a cause therein depending that conscionable iustice therein may be ministred vpon complaint made by bill that the partie which seeketh the said writ hath receiued hard dealing in the said court Termes of the lawe See the diuers formes and vses of this in Fitzh nat br fo 242. as also the Register both originall and iudiciall in the tables verbo Certiorari Cromptō in his Iustice of peace fo 117. saith that this writ is either returnable in the Kings bench and then hath these wordes nobis mittatis or in the chauncerie and then hath in cancellaria nostra or in the common bench and then hath Iusticiariis nostris de banco The word certiorare is vsed diuers times in the digest of the ciuile lawe but our later Kritiques think it soe barbarouse that they suspect it rather to be foisted in by Tribonian thē to be originally vsed by those men of whose workes the saide digest is compiled Prataeus in suo lexico Certificat certificatoriū is vsed for a wirting made in any courte to giue notice to another courte of any thing done therein As for example a certificate of the cause of attainte is a transcript made briefely and in few words by the clerke of the Crowne clerke of the peace or clerke of assise to the courte of the Kings benche conteying the tenure and effect of everie endictment outlawrie or conviction and clerke attained made or pronounced in any other court an 34. H. 8. c. 14. Of this see more in Certificat d'evesque Broke f. 119. Certification of assise of novel dissessin c. Certificatio assisae novae disseisinae c. is a writ graunted for there examining or reuew of a mater passed by assise before any Iustices and is called certificatione novae disseisine Old nat br fo 181. Of this see also the Register Original fo 200. and the newe booke of entrise verbo Certificat of assise This word hath vse where a man appearing by his bayliffe to an assise brought by another hath lost the day and hauing something more to pleade for himselfe as a deede of release c. which the bayliffe did not or might not pleade for him desireth a farder examination of the cause either before the same Iustices or others and obteineth leters patents vnto them to that effect The forme of these leters patents you may see in Fitzh nat br fo 181. and that done bringeth a writ to the Shyreeue to call both the party for whome the assise passed and the Iurie that was empaneled vpon the same before the said Iustices at a certaine day and place And it is called a certificate because in it there is mention made to the Shyreeue that vpon the parties complainte of the defectiue examination or doubts yet remaining vpon the assise passed the King hath directed his leters patēts to the Iustices for the beter certifiing of themselues whether all points of the said assise were duly examined yea or not See farder old nat br and Fitzh vbi supra Of this also you may reade Bracton li. 4. ca. 19. nu 4. in fine 5. 6. where he discusseth the reason of this pointe very learnedly and lastly Horn in his Myrrour of Iustices li. 3. ea finali § en eyde des memoyres c. Certificando de recognitions Stapulae is a writte directed to the Mayor of the staple c. cōmaunding him to certifie the chaunceler of a statute of the staple taken before him betweene such and such in case where
capriuis pellibus quibus olim altaria tegebantur secundùm Archidiaconum Arbitrarer a simplici tecto quo oratorium campestre operitur lateribus vndiquaque patentibus patulis Tectum enim Gallis simpliciter dicitur chapelle a capite Vnde formata aliqua nomina chapean cape c Aut capella locus qui minoris spatii sit quam ecclesia quòd tot homines non capiat vt ecclesia Ita altare capella est ca. quaesitum ca. penult i. quaest 3. Iohan. Andraeas in ca. i. de succes ab intesta praebenda cum onere quotidie celebrandi sacram liturgiam ca. significatum 11. de praebend oratorium ca. authoritate de privilegiis in 6. quòd in co loco orationes non aliae res profanae peragi debeant ca. pen. fina 42. distinct The same author in his booke de beneficiis ca. 11. nu 10. hath these words Dicti porro primitùs capellani a cappa Sancti Martini quam Reges Francorum ob adiutorium in praelus solebant secum habere quam ferentes custodientes cum caeteris sanctorum reliquiis clerici capellani caeperunt vocari vr omnia refert Valafridus Strabo Abbas Augensis ca. fina de incrementis rerum ecclesiastica There is of these chapels one kinde called a free chapell which seemeth to be such as hath maintenance perpetuall toward the vphoulding thereof and wages of the curate by some land charitablely bestowed on it without the charge of the rector or parishe anno 37. H. 8. cap. 4. anno 1. Ed. 6. ca. 14. Chapellaine capellanus is he that performeth diuine seruice in a chappell and therefore in our common law it is vsed most ordinarily for him that is depending vpon the king or other man of worth for the instruction of him and his family the executing of praiers and preaching in his priuate house where commonly they haue a chappell for that purpose as anno 21. H. 8. ca. 13. where it is set downe what persons may priuiledge one or moe chaplaines to discontinew from their benefices for their particular seruice Chapiters capitula commeth of the French chapitre 1. caput libri It signifieth in our common lawe a summary or content of such matters as are to be inquired of or presented before Iustices in Eyre Iustices of assise or of peace in their sessions Soe is it vsed anno 3. Ed. 1. ca. 27. in these words and that no clerke of any Iustice Escheatour or Commissioner in Eyre shall take any thing for deliuering chapiters but onely clerkes of Iustices in their circuits and againe anno 13. eiusdem ca. 10. in these words and when the time commeth the shyreeue shall certifie the chapiters before the Iustices in Eire how many writs he hath and what c. Britton likewise vseth the same worde in this signification ca. 3. Chapiters or capitula be now called articles most ordinarily and are deliuered as well by the mouth of the Iustice in his charge as by the clerks in wrighting to the enquest whereas in auncient times as appeareth by Bracton and Britton they were after an exhortation giuen by the Iustices for the good obseruation of the lawes and kings peace first red distinctly and opēly in the whole court and then deliuered in writing to the grand enquest And the same order doth M. Lamberd wish to be kept in these daies also Eirenar li. 4. ca. 4. pa. 393. Horn in his mirrour of Iustices calleth them articles and expresseth what they were wont to containe li. 3. ca. des articles in Eire An exāple of these chapters or articles you haue in the booke of assises fo 138. nu 44. as also in Roger Houeden parte poster suorum annal in Richardo primo fo 423. Chapter capitulum signifieth in our common lawe as in the canon lawe whence it is borowed congregationem clericorum in ecclesiae cathedrali conuentuali 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 Linwods prouineials glos in ca. quia in continētiae de constitutionibus verb. Capitulis Why this collegiat companie 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 signifiing a litle head For this companie or corporation is a kinde of head not onely to rule and gouerne the dioces in the vacatiō of the Bishoprick but also in many things to advise the Bishop when the See is full See Panormitan in ca. capitulum extra de rescriptis Charta perdonationis se defendendo is the forme of a pardon for slaying another in a mans owne defence Register original fo 287. Chartae perdonationis vtlagariae is the forme of a pardon for a man thatis outlawed Reg. orig fo 288. 38● Charter charta commeth of the French chartres i. instrumenta It is taken in our lawe for written evidence of things done betweene man and man whereof Bracton lib. 2. 〈◊〉 ca. 16. num 1. saith thus Fiunt aliquando donationes in scriptis sicut in chartis ad perpetuam rei memoriam propter brevem hominum vitam c. a litle after nu 12. Et sciendum quòd chartarū alia regia alia privatorum regiarum alia privata alia communis alia vniuersalis Item priuatorum alia de puro feoffamento simplici alia de feoffamento conditionali sive conventionali secundùm omnia genera feoffamentorum fieri potest Item privatorum alia de recognitione puravel conditionali Item alia de quiete-clamantia Item alia de confirmatione c. and so thorough the chapter Britton likewise in his 39. chapter diuideth charters into the charters of the King and charters of priuate persons Charters of the King are those whereby the King passeth any graunt to any person or more or to any bodie politique as a charter of exemption that a man shall not be empaneled vpon any Iurie Kitchin fo 114. fo 177. charter of pardon whereby a man is forgiuen a felonie or other offence committed against the Kings crowne and dignitie Broke tit charter of pardon Charter of the forest wherein the lawes of the forest are comprised anno 9. H. 3. Cromptons Iurisd fo 〈◊〉 47. Pupilla oculi parte 5. ca. 22. Manwood parte 1. of his forest lawes fo i. where he setteth downe the charters of of Canutus and fo 17. where he hath set downe that which was made anno 9. H. 3. with the charter of the forest which we vse M. Skene saith that the lawes of the forest in Scotland doe agree de verbo signif verbo Venison Charter of land Broke codem titulo That which we call a charter the Lombards in libris feudalibus call praeceptū praeceptionem Hotama verbo praeceptū in verbis feudalibus Of these charters you haue
nat br fol. 138. To this is answerable in some sort actio depositi in the ciuile lawe And hee taketh his action of ditinew that intendeth to recouer the thing deliuered and not the dammages sustained by the detinew Kitchin fol. 176. See the new booke of Entries verbo Detinew Devastaverunt bona testatoris is a writ lying against executors for paying Legacies and debts without specialties to the preiudice of the creditours that haue specialties before the debt vpon the said specialties be due For in this case the executors are as lyable to action as if they had wasted the goods of the testatourriotously or without cause New termes of lawe Devest devestire is contrarie to Invest For as Investire signifieth possessionem tradere So devestire is possessionem auferr● feud libro primo cap. 7. Devise aliâs divise commeth of the French diviser i. disper●iri discernere separare distinguere as diviser par ci par la distribuere This word is properly attributed in our common lawe to him that bequeathes his goods by his last will or testament in writing and the reason is because those that now appertain onely to the Devisour by this act are distributed into many parts Wherefore I thinke it better written divise thē deuise howbeit it were not absurd to deriue this word from the French deuiser i. sermocinari fabulari consilium conferre For in this sence it agreeth in some sort with the nature of the act of the testator and with the Etymologie of a testament set downe by Iustinian who saith that testamentum is quaesi mentis testatio titulo de Testa ordinan in Institut and testatio mentis cannot be so well as by talke and conference with our wise and skilfull friends Devoires of Cales anno 2. R. 2. Stat. 1. cap. 3. anno 5. eiusdem stat 2. cap. 2. were the customes due to the king for merchandize brought to or caried out from Caleis when our Staple was there The word is French signifying as much as officium dutie Devorce aliâs divorce divortium is with our common Lawyers accompted that separation betweene two de facto maried together which is à vinculo matrimonii non solùm à mensa thoro And therefore the woman so divorced receiueth al againe that shee brought with her This is not but onely vpon a nullitie of the mariage through some essentiall impediment as consanguinitie or affinity within the degrees forbidden precontract impotencie or such like See the new Tearmes of lawe Diem clausit extremum is a writ that lyeth for the heyre of him that holdeth land of the Crowne either by Knights seruice or in soccage and dyeth be he vnder or at full age directed to the escheatour of the county for inquirie to bee made by him of what estate the partie deceased was seised and who is next heyre vnto him and of what valew the land is The forme thereof and other circumstances you may learne in Fitzh nat br fol. 251. Dyer was a learned Lawyer and Lord chiefe Iustice of the Common plees in the dayes of Queene Elizabeth who writ a booke of great accompt called his Commentaries or Reports Dies datus is a respight giuen to the tenent or defendant before the court Brooke titulo Continuance Dicker of lether is a quantitie consisting of tenne hides The name may seeme to come from the Greeke decas which is also a Latine word signifying tenne in number Dignitie ecclesiasticall dignitas ecclesiastica is mentioned in the statute anno 26. H. 8. cap. 3. and is by the Canonists defined to be administratio cum iurisdictione potestate aliqua coniuncta Glos in cap. 1. de consuet iu sexto whereof you may reade diuers examples in Duarenus de sacris eccles minist benefic lib. 2. cap. 6. Dioces dioecesis is a Greeke word compounded of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signifieth with vs the circuit of euery Bishops iurisdiction For this realme hath two sorts of diuisions one into Shyres or Counties in respect of temporall policie another into Diocesses in respect of iurisdictiō ecclesiasticall Dieta rationabilis is in Bracton vsed for a reasonable daies iourney lib. 3. parte 2. chap. 16. It hath in the ciuile law diuers other significations not needfull heere to be set downe v. vocab vtirusque iuris Dimy haque See Haque Disalt signifieth as much as to disable Litleton in his chapter of Discontinance Disceite See deceite and deceptione See the new booke of Entry verbo Disceit Discent Discensus in the french Descente signifieth in the common law an order or means whereby lands or tenements are deriued vnto any man from his auncestours as to make his discent from his Auncestours Old nat br fol. 101. is to shew how and by what degrees the land in question cam to him from his auncestours as first from his great grandfather to his grandfather from his grandfather to his father and so to him Or in such other like sort This discent is either lineall or collaterall Lineall discent is conueied downeward in a right line from the Grandfather to the father and from the father to the sonne and from the sonne to the Nephew c. Collaterall discent is springing out of the side of the whole blood as Grandfathers brother fathers brother c. See the new Tearmes of law Disclamer Disclamium is a plee containing an expresse deniall or refusall as if the tenent siew a replevin vpon a distresse taken by the lord and the lord avow the taking of the distresse saying that he houldeth of him as of his Lord and that he distreined for rent not paid or seruice not perfourmed then the tenent denying himselfe to hould of such Lord is said to disclaime and the Lord prouing the tenent to hould of him the tenant leeseth his land Tearmes of law Of this see Skene de verb signif verbo Disclamation Also if a man deny himselfe to be of the blood or kindred of another in his plee he is said to disclaime his blood Eitzh nat br fol 197. G. See Brooke titulo Disclaimer If a man arraigned of felonie do disclaime goods being cleared he leeseth them Stawnf pl. cor fol. 186. See the new booke of Entries verbo Disclamer Discontinuance Discontinuatio commeth of the french Discontinuer i. cessare intermittere and signifieth in the common law nothing els but an interruption or breaking of as discontinuance of possession or discontinuance of proces And the large discourse that Litleton hath about this Discontinuance is rather to shew cases wherein it is or wherein it is not then to define the thing The effect of discontinuance of possession is this that a man may not enter vpon his owne land or tenement alienated whatsoeuer his right be vnto it of his owne selfe or by his owne authority but must bring his writ and seeke to recouer possession by law Examples you may haue store in his Terms of law verbo Discontinuance And in Litleton
eodem capite with whom agreeth another in these words But discontinuance of possession is indeed an impediment to a man for entring into his owne land or tenements caused by the fact of one that alienated them contrary to right and gaue Liuery and seisin of them whereby the true owner is left only to his action See the new tearmes of law and the Institutes of the Common Law ca 43. see S. Ed. Cokes reportes l. 3. the case of Fines fo 85. b. The effect of discontinuance of plee is that the instance is fallen and may not be taken vp again but by a new writ to begin the suite a fresh For to be discontinued and to be put without day is all one and nothing els but finally to be dismissed the court of that instance West parte 2. Simbol titulo Fines sect 115. So Crompton in his diuers Iurisdictions fol 131. vseth it in these words If a Iustice seate be discontinued by the not comming of the Iustices the king may renew the same by his writ c. In this signification Fitzh in his nat br vseth the word diuers times as discontinuance of a corody f. 193. A. To discontinew the right of his wife fol. 191. L. 193. L. Discontinuance of an assise fol. 182. D. 187. B. Disgrading Degradatio is the punishment of a Clerk that being deliuered to his Ordinary cannot purge himselfe of the offience whereof he was conuicted by the Iury and is nothing but the depriuation of him from those orders of Clerkship that he had as Preistehood Deaconship c. Stawnf pl cor fol. 130. 138. There is likewise disgrading of a knight Stowes Annals pag. 865. And it is not to be omitted that by the Canon law there be two sorts of disgrading one summary by word onely and another solemne by deuesting the party degraded of those ornaments and rites which be the ensignes of his order or degree Dismes Decimae is made of the french Decimes and signifieth tithe or the tenth part of all the fruites either of the earth or beastes or our labour dew vnto God and so consequently to him that is of the Lords lot and hath his share viz. our pastour It signifieth also the tenthes of all spirituall liuings yearly giuen to the Prince called a perpetuall Disme anno 2. 3. Ed. 6. ca. 35 which in auncient times were paid to the Pope vntill Pope Vrbane gaue them to Richard the second to aide him against Charls the french king and those other that vpheld Clement the seuenth against him Polidor Virgil. Angl. hist lib. 20. Lastly it signifieth a tribute leuied of the Temporalty Holinshed in Henry 2. fol. 111. Disparidgment Disparagatio is by our common lawyers vsed especially for matching an heire in mariage vnder his or her degree or against decencie See my Institutes titulo de nuptiis § 6. Disseisin Disseisina commeth of the french Disseisir and signifieth in the common lawe an vnlawfull dispossessing of a man of his land tenemēt or other immoueable or incorporeall right Iustitut of the the com lawe ca. 15. And how farre this extendeth See Bracton libro quarto cap. tertio And therefore the Assises bee called writs of disseisin that lie against disseisours in any case whereof some bee termed little writs of disseisin being vicontiel that is siewable before the Shyreeue in the countie court old nat br fol. 109. because they are determined by the Shyreeue without assise Register Original fo 198. b. as for Nuissances of no great preiudice Disseisin is of two sorts either simple disseisin committed by day without force and armes Bracton li. 4. ca. 4. Britton ca. 42. 43. 44. where you shall finde in what especially it is lawfull in what not Britton ca. 53. And Disseisin by force for the which see Defersour See fresh Disseisin See Redisseisin and Postdisseisin See Skene de verbo significat verbo Dissaisina Disseisin how many waies it is committed See Fleta li. 4. ca. 1. § Fit autem c. when it is lawfull ca. 2. Distresse Districtio Districtus cōmeth of the French Distresse augustiae It signifieth most commonly in the common law a compulsion in certaine reall actions whereby to bring a man to appearance in courte or to pay debt or dutie denied The effect whereof most commonly is to driue the party distreined to replevie the distresse and so to take his action of trespasse against the distreiner or els to compound neighbourly with him for the debt or dutie for the which he distreineth In what cases a distresse is lawfull see the newe termes of lawe The Civilians call it pignorum captionem Brissonius de verbo significa lib. 14. This compulsion is by Britton ca. 71. diuided into a distresse personall and distresse reall distresse personall is made by surprising a mans moueable goods and deteining them for the securitie of his appearance to the suite and to make him plantiffe A distresse reall is made vpon immoveable goods as the Grand Cape Petit Cape And thus it is interpreted by Hotoman de verb. feudal verbo Districtus This differeth from an attachement in this point among others that a distresse cannot bee taken by any common person without the compasse of his owne fee. Fitzh nat br fol. 904 except it bee presently after the catell or other thing is driuen or borne out of the ground by him that perceiueth it to bee in danger to be distreined New termes of the lawe verbo distresse Districtus is sometime vsed for the circuit or territorie within the which a man may be thus compelled to apperance Ca. ne Romani de electione in Clem and Cassan de consuetud Burgand pa. 90. Britton ca. 120. and so likewise is Districtio in the Register originall fol. 6. b. And so it seemeth to bee vsed in pupilla oculi parte 5. c. 22. Charta de foresta See also Mynsing in the chapter licet causam 9. extra de probationibus nu 5. Zasius in his 16. councell nu 47. Distresse in the former signification is diuided first into finite and infinite Finite is that which is limited by lawe how often it shall be made to bring the partie to triall of the action as once twice Old nat br fo 43. Distresse infinite is without limitation vntill the partie come as against a Iurie that refuseth to appeare super certificatione Assisae the processe is a venire facias habeas corpora and distresse infifinite Old nat br fol. 113. Then it is diuided into a graund distresse anno 52. H. 3. ca. 7. which Fitzherbert calleth in latine magnam districtionem nat br fol. 126. A. and an ordinarie distresse A graund distresse is that which is made of all the goods and catels that the partie hath within the Countie Britton ca. 26. fol. 52. but see whether it be sometime not all one with a distresse infinite Idem fol. 80. with whom also the Statute of Marlbridge seemeth to agree anno 52.
authoritie ouer the Countie nor any part of the profit rising of it but onely some annuall stipend out of the Exchequer rather for honours sake then any great commoditie And these bee in other nations accompted Earles improperly Quia illi dicuntur verè Comites quibus datur Comitatus in feudum illi Comites abusivè qui non habent administrationem Vincentius de Franchis descis 115. nu 7. The maner of creating Earles is by girding them with a sword Camden pag. 107. but see the solemnitie thereof described more at large in Stowes annals pa. 1121 The occasion why these Earles in later time haue had no swaye ouer the Countie whereof they beare their name is not obscurely signified in Sir Thomas Smith lib. 2. cap. 14. Where he saith that the Shyreeue is called Vicecomes as Vicarius Comitis following all maters of iustice as the Earle should do and that because the Earle is most commonly attendant vpon the king in his warres or otherwise So that it seemeth that Earles by reason of their high employments being not able to follow also the businesse of the countie were deliuered of all that burthen and onely enioyed the honour as now they doe And the Shyreeue though he be still called Vice-comes yet all he doth is immediatly vnder the king and not vnder the Earle See Countie see Hetoman de verb. feudal verbo Comes and Cassan de consuetud Burg. p 12. Easement esamentum is a seruice that one neighbour hath of another by charter or prescription without profite as a way through his ground a sinke or such like Kitchin fol. 105. which in the ciuill lawe is called Seruitus pradii Eele fares aliâs Eele Vare an 25. H. 8. cap. 7. be the frie or brood of Eeles Egyptians Egyptiani are in our statutes and lawes of England a counterfeit kinde of roagues that being English or Welch people accompany thēselues together disguising themselues in straunge roabes blacking their faces and bodies and framing to themselues an vnknowne language wander vp and downe and vnder pretence of telling of Fortunes curing diseases and such like abuse the ignorant common people by stealing all that is not too hote or too heauie for their cariaage anno 1. 2. Phi. M. cap. 4. anno 5. Eliz. cap. 20. These are very like to those whom the Italians call Cingari of whom Franciscus Leo in suo the sauro fori ecclesiastici parte prim cap. 13. thus writeth Cingari qui corrupte vocabulo quandoque etiam Saraceni nominantur permissione principū ac aliorum dominorum per Italian vagantur nec vnquam viderunt partes infidelium minusque legem Mahome it noverunt sed sunt ferè omnes Itali male habituati ex rebus furtivis vivunt ac fraudulentis earum permut ationibus ludis in quibus vt plurimum fraudes committunt sunt baptizati Eiectione custodiae Eiectment de gard is a writ which lyeth properly against him that casteth out the Gardian from any land during the minority of the heire Register origin fol. 162. Fitz. nat br fol. 139. Tearmes of the law verbo Gard. There be two other writs not vnlike this the one is tearmed Droit de gard or right of guard the other Rauishment de Gard. Which see in their places Eiectione firmae is a writ which lyeth for the Leassee for terme of yeares that is cast out before the expiration of his tearme either by the leassour or a straunger Register fol. 227. Fitz. nat br fo 220. See Quare eiecit infra terminum See the new booke of Entries verbo Eiectione firmae Einecia is borowed of the French Aisne i. primogenitus and signifieth in our common lawe Eldership Statute of Ireland anno 14. Hen. 3. Of this see M. Skene deverb signif verbo Eneya Eyre aliâs Eyer Iter. Bracton lib. 3. cap. 11. in Rubrica commeth of the old French word Erre i. iter as à grand erre i. magnis itineribus It signifieth in Britton cap. 2. the court of Iustices itinerants and Iustices in Eyre are those onely which Bracton in many places calleth Iusticiarios itinerantes of the Eyre reade Britton vbi supra who expresseth the whole course of it And Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. cap. 1. 2. The Eyre also of the Forest is nothing but the Iustice seate otherwise called which is or should by auncient custome be held euery three yeare by the Iustices of the forest iourneying vp and downe to that purpose Cromptons Iurisd fol. 156. Manmood parte prima of his Forest lawes pag. 121. See Iustice in Eyre Reade Skene de verborum significa verbo Iter whereby as by many other places you may see great affinitie betweene these 2. Kingdomes in the administration of Iustice and gouernment Election de Clerke Electione clerici is a writ that lyeth for the choyce of a clerke assigned to take and make bonds called statute Merchant and is graunted out of the Chauncerie vpon suggestion made that the Clerke formely assigned is gone to dwell in another place or hath hinderance to let him from following that businesse or hath not land sufficient to answer his transgression if he should deale amisse c. Fitzh nat br fol. 164. Elegit is a writ Iudiciall and lyeth for him that hath recouered debt or dammages in the kings court against one not able in his goods to satisfie and directed to the Shyreeue commaunding him that he make deliuery of halfe the parties lands or tenements and all his goods oxen and beasts for the plough excepted Old nat br fol. 152. Register originall fol. 299. 301. and the Table of the Register Iudiciall which expresseth diuers vses of this writ The author of the new terms of law saith that this writ should be siewed within the yeare whom read at large for the vse of the same Elk a kinde of ewe to make bowes of anno 33. H 8. cap. 9. Empanel Impanellare Ponere in assisis Iuratis commeth of the french Panne 1. pellis or of Pannequ which signifieth some time as much as a pane with vs as a pane of glasse or of a windowe It signifieth the wrighting or entring the names of a Iury into a parchment schedule or Rolle or paper by the Shyreeue which he hath sommoned to appeare for the perfourmance of such publique feruice as Iuries are imployed in See Panell Emparlance commeth of the french Parler and signifieth in our common lawe a desire or petition in court of a day to pause what is best to doe The ciuilians call it petitionem induciarū Kitchin fol. 200. interpreteth it in these words If he imparle or pray continuance For praying continuance is spoken interpretatiuè in that place as I take it The same author maketh mention of Emparlance generall fol. 201. and Emparlance speciall fol. 200. Emperlance generall seemeth to be that which is made onely in one word and in generall terms Emparlance speciall where the party requireth a day to deliberate adding also
the statute for view of Frankpledge made anno 18. Ed. 1 See Deoennier Leete vew of Frankpledge and Freoborghe That this discipline is borowed by vs of the Romane Emperours or rather Lombards appeareth most manifestly in the second booke of Feuds ca. 53. vpon which if you reade Hotoman with those authors that he there recordeth you will thinke your labour well bestowed Reade more of this viz. what articles were wont to be inquired of in this court in Hornes mirrour of Iustices li. 1. ca. de la veneudes francs pleges and what these articles were in auncient times see in Fleta li. 2. ca. 52. Fredwit See Fletwit Free chapell libera Capella by some opinion is a chapell founded within a parish for the seruice of God by the deuotion and liberalitie of some good man ouer and aboue the mother Church vnto the which it was free for the parishioners to com or not to come ēdowed with maintenance by the founder and therevpon called free I haue heard others say and more probably that those only be free chapels that are of the Kings foundation and by him exempted from the Iurisdiction of the Ordinarie but the King may licence a subiect to found such a chapell and by his charter exempt it from the Ordinaries visitation also That it is called free in respect it is exempted from the iurisdiction of the Diocesan appeareth by the Register originall fol. 40. 41. These chapels were all giuen to the King with chaunteries anno 1. Ed. 6. ca. 14. Free chapell of Saint Martin le grand anno 3. Eduardi 4. capite quarto anno 4. Eduard quarti ca. 7. Free hould liberum tenemētum is that land or tenement which a man holdeth in see see taile or at the least for terme of life Bract. li. 2. ca. 9. The newe expounder of the lawe termes saith that free hold is of 2. sorts Freehould in deede and freehold in lawe Freehold in deede is the reall possession of land or tenements in fee fee tayle or for life Freehould in lawe is the right that a man hath to such land or tenements before his entry or seisure I haue heard it likewise extended to those offices which a man holdeth either infee or for terme of life Britton defineth it to this effect Frank tenement is a possession of the soile or seruices issuing out of the soile which a free man holdeth in fee to him and his heires or at the least for tearme of his life though the soile be charged with free services or others ca. 32. Free hold is sometime taken in opposition to villenage Bract. li 4. ca. 37. 38. M. Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo Terra ex scripto saith that land in the Saxons time was called either Bockland that is holden by booke or writing or Folcland that is holden without writing The former he reporteth was held with farre better conditions and by the beter sort of tenents as noble men and gentlemen being such as we nowe call free hould the later was commonly in the possession of clownes being that which wee nowe call at the will of the Lord I finde in the Register iudiciall fol. 68. a. and in diuers other places that he which holdeth land vpon an execution of a Statute merchant vntill he be satisfied the debt tenet vt liberum tenementum sibi assignatis suis and fol. 73. b. I reade the same of a tenent per elegit where I thinke the meaning is not that such tenents be free-houlders but as freehoulders for their time that is vntill they haue gathered profits to the value of their debt Freehoulders in the auncient lawes of Scotland were called Milites Skene de verb. signif verb. Milites The D. Student saith that the possession of land after the lawe of England is called franck tenement or free hould fol. 97. a. Frenchman Francigena was wont to be vsed for euerie out-landish man Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 15. See Englecerie Frendwite vel Infeng significat quietantiam prioris prisae ratione convivii Fleta li. 1. ca. 47. Frendles maen was wont to be the Saxon word for him whome we call an outlawe And the reason thereof I take to be because he was vpon his exclusion from the kings peace and protection denied all helpe of freinds after certaine daies Nam forisfecit amicos Bract. li. 3. tract 2. ca. 12. nu 1. whose words are these Talem vocant Angli vtlaugh alio nomine antiquitùs solet nominari sc Frendles man sic videtur quod forisfecit amicos vnde st quis talem post vtlagariam expulsionem scienter paverit receptaverit vel scienter cōmunicaverit aliquo modo vel receptauerit veloccultauerit eadem paenâ puniri debet quâ puniretur vtlagatus ita quòd careat omnibus bonis suis vita nisi Rex et parcat de sua gratia 〈◊〉 Fresh disseisin Frisca disseisina commeth of the french Fraiz 1. recens and disseisir i. posessione eiicere It seemeth to signifie in our common law that disseisin that a man may seeke to defeate of himselfe and by his owne power without the helpe of the king or his iudges Britton ca. 5. that is such disseisin as is not aboue 15. daies olde Bract. li. 4. ca. 5. whome you may reade at large of this mater concluding that it is arbitrarie and so doth Britton ca. 65. but ca. 43. he seemeth to say that in one case it is a yeare See him also ca. 44. Fresh fine is that which was levied within a yeare past Westm 2. cap. 45. an 13. Ed. 1. Fresh force Frisca fortia is a force done within 40. daies as it seemeth by Fitzh nat br fol. 7. C. For if a man be disseised of any lands or tenements within any city or borough or deforced from them after the death of his auncester to whome he is heire or after the death of his tenent for life or in taile he may within 40. daies after his title accrued haue a bille out of the chauncerie to the Mayor c. See the rest Fresh suite recens insecutio is such a present and earnest following of an offendour as neuer ceaseth from the time of the offence committed or espied vntill he be apprehended And the effect of this in the pursuite of a felon is that the partie persiewing shall haue his goods restored him agine whereas otherwise they are the kings Of this see Stawnf pl. cor li. 3. ca. 10. 12. where you shall finde handled at large what suite is to be accounted fresh and what not And the same author in his first booke cap. 27. saith that fresh suite may continue for seuen yeres See Cookes reportes l. 3. Rigewaies case Fresh suite seemeth to be either within the view or without for M. Manwood saith that vpon fresh suite within the view trespassers in the forest may be attached by the efficers persiewing them though without the limits
to the crowne or graunted vnto some great subiect and so remaine still in the nature of a Fraunchise And this hath beene euer sithence the stat anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. ca. 9. whereby these Hundred courts formerly fermed out by the Shyreeue to other men were reduced all or the most part to to the countie court and so haue and doe remaine at this present So that where you read now of any hundred courts you must know that they be seuerall fraunchises wherein the Shyreeue hath not to deale by his ordinarie authoritie except they of the Hundred refuse to doe their office See West parte 1. symbol lib. 2. sect 288. See Turn The newe expounder of lawe termes saith that the latine Hundredum is sometime vsed for an immunitie or priviledge whereby a man is quit of mony or customes due to the gouernours or Hundreders Hundreders Hundredarii be men empaneled or fit to be empaneled of a Iurie vpon any controversie dwelling within the Hundred where the land lieth which is in question Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 217. anno 35. Henrici 8. cap. 6. It signifieth also him that hath the Iurisdiction of a hundred and holdeth the hundred court anno 13. Ed. pri ca. 38. anno 9. Ed. 2. stat 2. anno 2. Ed. 3. ca. 4. and sometime is vsed for the Bayliffe of an hundred Hornin his mirrour of Iustices li. 1. ca del office del coroner Hundredlaghe signifieth the Hundred courte from the which all the officers of the Kings forest were freed by the charter of Canutus ca. 9. Manwood parte 1. pag. 2. Huors See Conders Huseans commeth of the French houseaux i. ocrea aboote It is vsed in the Statute anno 4. Ed. 4. ca. 7. Hustings Hustingum may seeme to come from the French Haulser i. tollere attollere suberigere for it signifieth the principall and highest court in London anno 11. H. 7. ca. 21. Fitzh nat br fol. 23. See anno 9. Ed. pri ca. vnico Other Cities and townes also haue had a court of the same name as Winchester Lincolne Yorke and Sheppey and others where the Barons or Citizens haue a record of such things as are determinable before them Fleta libro 2. cap. 55. Husfastene is he that holdeth house and land Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. ca. 10. His words be these Et in franco plegio esse debet omnis qui terram tenet domum qui dicuntur Husfastene etiam alii qui illis deserviunt qui dicuntur Folgheres c. I A I Arrock anno 1 Rt. 3. ca. 8. is a kinde of cork so called Identitate nominis is a writ that lyeth for him who is vpon a Capias or Exigent taken and committed to prison for another man of the same name whereof see the forme and farder vse in Fitzh nat br fol. 267. see the Register originall fol. 194. Idiot and he that afterward becometh of insane memory differeth in diuers cases Coke fol. 154. b. lib. 4. See here following Idiota inquirenda Idiota inquirenda vel ex aminanda is a writ that is directed to the excheatour or the Shyreeue of any county where the king hath vnderstanding that there is an Idiot naturally borne so weake of vnderstanding that he connot gouern or mannage his inheritance to call before him the partysuspected of Idiocie examin him And also to inquire by the oaths of twelue men whether he be sufficiently witted to dispose of his owne lands with discretion or not and to certifie accordingly into the Chauncery For the king hath the protection of his subiects by his prerogatiue the gouernmēt of their lands and substance that are naturally defectiue in their owne discretion statut de praerogatiua Regis editum anno 17. Ed. 2. cap. 8. wherof read Stawnf praerog cap. 9. and of this writ read Fitzh nat br fol. 232. see the register orig fol. 267. Ietzon se Flotzon Ieofaile is cōpoūded of 3. french words I' ay faille i. ego lapsus sum signifieth in our commō lawe an ouer-sight in pleading touching the which you haue a statute anno 32. H. 8. cap. 30. whereby it is enacted that if the Iury haue once passed vpon the issue though afterward there be found a Ieofaile in the pleading yet iudgement shall likewise be giuen according to the verdict of the Iury. See Brooke tit Rrepleder the author of the new tearms of law saith that a Ieofaile is when the parties to any suite haue in pleading proceeded so farre that they haue ioyned issue which shal be tried or is tried by a Iury or inquest and this pleading or issue is so badly pleaded or ioyned that it will be errour if they proceed then some of the said parties may by their councell shew it to the court as well after verdict giuen and before iudgement as before the Iury be charged the shewing of which defects before the Iury charged was often when the Iury came into the court to trie the issue then the councell which will shew it shall say this inquest you ought not to take and if it be after verdict then he may say to Iudgement you ought not to goe and because of this many delayes grew in suites diuers statutes are made to redresse them viz. 32. H. 8. c. 30. others in Q. Elizabethes daies and yet the fault litle amended Ignoramus is a word properly vsed by the grand Enquest empaneled in the inquisition of causes criminall and publique and writen vpon the bill whereby any crime is offered to their cōsideration when as they mislike their euidence as defectiue or to weake to make good the presentment The effect of which word so written is that all farder inquiry vpon that party for that fault is thereby stopped and he deliuered without farder aunswer It hath a resemblance with that custome of the auncient Romans where the Iudges when they absolued a person accused did wright A. vpon a litle table prouided for that purpose i. Absoluimus if they iudged him guilty they writ C. id est Condemnamus if they found the cause difficult and doubtfull they writ N. L. id est Non liquet Asconius Pedianus in oratio pro Milone Alexander ab Alexandro Genial dierum li. 3. ca. 14. Ikenildstreate is one of the four famous wayes that the Romans made in England taking the beginning ab Icenis which were they that inhabited Northf Southf and Cambridg shyre Camd. Britan. fol. 343. See Watlingstreat Imparlance interlocutio vel interloquela is a petition made In court vpon the count of the Demanndant by the tenent or declaration of the plaintife by the defendant whereby he craueth respight or an other day to put in his aunswer See Brooke titulo Continuaence See Dies datus Imparlaunce seemeth to be generall or speciall speciall imparlaunce is with this clause saluis omnibus aduantagiis tam ad iurisdictionem curiae quàm breue narrationem Kitchin fol. 200. Then generall in reason must be that which
Regale beneficium clementis principis de consilio procerum populis indultum quo vitae hominū status integritati tam salubriter consulitur vt in iure quod quis in libero soli tenemento possidet retinendo duells casum declinare possint homines ambiguum c see the rest This Iury is not vsed onely in circuits of Iustices errant but also in other courts and maters of office as if the Escheatour make inquisition in any thing touching his office he doth it by a Iury or inquest if the Coroner inquire how a subiect found dead came to his end he vseth an inquest the Iustices of peace in ther quarter Sessions the Shyreeue in his county and Turne the baylife of a Hundred the Stewarde of a court Leete or court Baron if they inquire of any offence or descide any cause betweene party and party they doe it by the same maner So that where it is said that all things be triable by Parlament Battell or assise Assise in this place is taken for a Iury or Enquest empaneled vpō any cause in a court where this kind of triall is vsed and though it be commonly deemed that this custome of ending and desciding causes proceede from the Saxons and Brittons and was of fauour permitted vnto vs by the Conquerour yet I finde by the grand Customarie of Normandie cap 24. that this course was vsed likewise in that countrie For Assise is in that Chapter defined to be an assembley of wise men with the Bailife in a place certaine at a time assigned 40. daies before wherby Iustice may be done in causes heard in the court of this custome also and those Knights of Normandie Iohannes Faber maketh mention in the Rubrique of the title de militari testamento in Institut this Iury though it appertaine to most courts of the common law yet is it most notorious in the half yeare courts of the Iustices errants commonlie called the great assises and in the quarter Sessions and in them it is most ordinarily called a Iurie And that in ciuile causes wheras in other courts it is oftener tearmed an enquest and in the court Baron the Homage In the generall Assise there are vsually many Iuries bicause there be store of causes both ciuil and criminall commonly to be tried wherof one is called the Grand Iury and the rest petit Iuries whereof it seemeth there should be one for euery Hundred Lamb. Eirenar l. 4. cap. 3. pa. 384. The Grand Iurie consisteth ordinarily of 24. graue and substantiall gentlemen or some of them yeomen chosen indifferently out of the whole shyre by the Shyreeue to consider of all bils of Inditement preferred to the court which they doe either approoue by writing vpon them these words billa vera or disallowe by writing Ignoramus such as they doe approoue if they touch life and death are farder referred to another Iury to be considered of because the case is of such importance but others of lighter moment are vpon their allowance without more worke fined by the bench except the party travers the Inditement or chalenge it for insufficiencie or remooue the cause to a higher court by certiorarie in which 2. former cases it is referred to another Iurie and in the latter transmitted to the higher Lamb. Eire l. 4. c. 7. presently vpon the allowance of this bill by the Grand Enquest a man is said to be indighted Such as they dissalowe are deliuered to the benche by whome they are forthwith cancilled or torne The petit Iury consisteth of 12. men at the least are Empanelled as well vpon criminall as vpon ciuile causes those that passe vpon offences of life and death doe bring in their verdict either guiltie or not guiltie wherevpon the prisoner if he be found guiltie is said to be conuicted and so afterward receaueth his iudgment and condemnation or otherwise is acquited and sett Free of this reade Fortes cap 27. those that passe vpon ciuile causes reail are all or so many as can conueniently be had of the same hundred where the land or tenement in question doth lie and 4. at the least And they vpon due examination bring in their verdict either for the demaundant or Tenent of this see Fortesc cap. 25. 26. according vnto which iudgement passeth afterward in the court where the cause first began and the reason hereof is because these Iustices of Assise are in this case for the ease of the cuntry onely to take the verdict of the Iurie by the vertue of the writ called nisi prius and so returne it to the court where the cause is depending See Nisi prius Ioyne with this the chapter formerly cited out of the custumary of Normandie and that of King Etheldreds lawes mentioned by Maister Lamberd verbo Centuria in his explication of Saxon words and by these two words you shall perceiue that as well among these Normans as the Saxons the men of this Iuty were associats and Assistants to the Iudges of the court in a kind of equality where as now a daies they attend them in great humility and are as it were at their commaund for the seruice of the court the words set downe by M. Lamberd are these In singulis centuriis comitia sunto atque liberae condicionis viri duodeniaetate superiores vnà cum praeposito sacra tenentes iuranto se adeo virum aliquem innocentem haud condemnaturos sontemve absoluturos to this ioyne also the 69. chapter of the saide custumarie See Enquest See 12. men See Lamberds Eurenarch lib. 4. cap. 3. p. 384. Iuris vtrùm is a writ that lyeth for the incumbent whose predecessour hath alienated his lands or tenements the diuers vses of which writ see in Fitzh nat br fol. 48. Iurisdiction Iurisdictio is a dignity which a man hath by a power to doe Iustice in causes of complaint made before him And there be two kinds of Iurisdictions the one that a man hath by reason of his fee and by vertue thereof doth right in all plaints concerning his see The other is a Iurisdiction giuen by the prince to a baylife this diuision I haue in the Custumary of Normandy cap. 2. which is not vnapt for the practise of our common welth for by him whom they call a baylife we may vnderstand all that haue commission from the prince to giue iudgement in any cause The ciuilians diuide iurisdictionem generally vnderstand in imperium iurisdictionem and imperium in merum mixtum Of which you may reade many especiall tractats writen of them as a mater of great difficulty and importance Iustes commeth of the French Ioustes i. decursus and signifieth with vs contentions betweene Martiall men by speares on horsbacke anno 24. H. 8. cap. 13. Iustice Iusticiarius is a French word and signifieth him that is deputed by the king to do right by way of iudgement the reason why he is called Iustice and not Iudex is because in auncient time the
time exhorting them ne merces tam viles tanti emerent Parke parcus commeth of the French parquer i. vallo vel fossa circundare It signifieth with vs a peece of grounde inclosed and stored with wild beastes of chase Which a man may haue by prescription or the kings graunt Cromptons Iurisd fol. 148. M. Manwood parte pri of his Forest lawes pag. 148. defineth it thus A parke is a place of priuiledge for wilde beastes of venerie and also for other wild beasts that are beasts of the Forest and of the chase tam syluestres quam campestres And all those wild beastes are to haue a firme peace and protectiō there So that no man may hurt or chase them within the park without licence of the owner of the same Who also fol. 149. saith thus A parke is of another nature then either a chase or a warren is For a parke must bee inclosed and may not lye ope for if it doe that is a good cause of seisure of the same into the hands of the king as a thing forfeited as a free chase is if it be enclosed And moreouer the owner cannot haue action against such as hunt in his park if it lye open See Forest See Chase See Warren This word Parke Baldwinus deriueth a paradiso eumque locum esse dicit in quo varia animalia ad vsum voluptatis aut venationis includuntur possidentur adempta naturali libertate Ad tit de rerum divis in Institutionib Parco fracto is a writ which lyeth against him that violently breaketh a pound and taketh out beasts thence which for some trespas done vpon another mans ground are lawfully impounded Register originall fol. 166. Fitzh nat br fol. 100. Parish parochia commeth of the greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Accolarum conuentus accolatus sacra vicinia it is vsed in the Cannon law some time for a Bishoprick But in our common law it signifieth the particular charge of a secular priest For euery church is either Cathedrall Couentuall or Parochiall Cathedrall is that where there is a Bishop seated so called a Cathedra Conuentuall consisteth of Regular clerks professing some order of religion or of Deane and chapter or other colledge of spirituall men Parochiall is that which is instituted for the saying of diuine seruice and ministring the holy Sacraments to the people dwelling within a certaine compas of ground neare vnto it Our Realme was first diuided into parishes by Honorius Archb of Canterbury in the yeare of our Lord. 636. Camden Britan. pag. 104. Of these parish churches I finde there were in England in the daies of H. 8. the number of 45000. Hotoman in his disputations de feudis ca. 2. maketh mention of this word parochia out of Pomponius Laetus in these words Nam sic quoque Pomponius Laetus veterem consuetudinem fuisse scribit eamque ab Imperat 〈…〉 Constantino repetitam vt Duc 〈…〉 praefectis Tribunis qui pro augend● Imperio consenuerant darentur agri villaeque vt necessaria suppet 〈…〉 quoad viuerent quas paroehias cabant And a litle after ver 〈…〉 inter feuda parochias hoc 〈…〉 est quod hae plerumque senibus 〈…〉 veteranis plerisque emeritae 〈…〉 dabantur qui cum de Rep. bene meriti essent publico beneficio reliquum vitae sustentabant aut si quod bellum nasceretur euocati non tam milites quàm magistri militū viderentur Feuda vero plurimum I●●enibus robustis primo flore aetatis qui militiae munus sustinere poterāt imo verò vt possēt vt vellēt c. Parlament parlamentum is a French word signifiing originally as much as Collocutio or colloquium but by vse it is also taken for those high courts of Iustice throughout the kingdome of Fraunce where mens causes and differences are publikely determined without farder appeale Whereof there be seuen in number as Paris Tolouse Gresnoble in Daulphene Aix in Prouence Bordeaux Diion in Bourgogine and Roan in Normandy Vincentius Lupanus de Magistrat Franc. lib. 2. cap. Parlamentum num 28. whereunto Gerard de Haillon addeth the eighth viz. Rhenes in Brettagne In England we vse it for the assembly of the king and the three estates of the Realme videlicet the Lords Spirituall the Lords Temporall and commons for the debating of maters touching the common wealth and especially the making and correcting of lawes which assembly or court is of all other the highest and of greatest authoritie as you may reade in Sir Thomas Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. 2. cap. 1. 2. Camd. Britan. pag. 112. and Cromptons Iurisd fol. pri seqq The institution of this court Polydor Virgil lib. 11. of his Chronicles referreth after a sort to Henry the first yet confessing that it was vsed before though verie seldome I find in the former prologue of the Grande Custumarie of Normandie that the Normans vsed the same meanes in making their lawes And I haue seene a monument of Antiquite shewing the maner of houlding this parlament in the time of King Edward the sonne of King Etheldred which as my note saith was deliuered by the discreeter sorte of the Realme vnto William the Conquerour at his commaundement allowed by him This writing beginneth thus Rex est caput principium finis parlamenti ita non habet parem in suo gradu Et sic ex Rege solo primus gradus est Secundus gradus est ex Archiepiscopis Episcopis Abbatibus Prioribus per Baroniā tenentibus Tertius gradus est de procuratoribus cleri Quartus gradus est de Comitibus Baronibus aliis Magnatibus Quintus gradus est de militibus Comitatuum Sextus gradus est de civibus Burgensibus ita est parlamentum ex sex gradibus sed sciendum licet aliquis dictorum quinque graduum post Regem absens fuerit dum tamen omnes praemoniti fuerint per rationabiles summonitiones parlamentum nibilo minus censetur esse plenum Touching the great authoritie of this court I finde in Stowes Annalls pag. 660. that Henry the sixth directing his priuie seale to Richard Earle of Warwicke thereby to discharge him of the Captainship of Cales the Earle refused to obey the priuie seale and continued forth the said office because he receiued it by Parlament But one example cannot make good a doctrine And of these two one must needes be true that either the king is aboue the Parlament that is the positiue lawes of his kingdome or els that he is not an absolute king Aristotle lib. 3. Politico cap. 16. And therefore though it be a mercifull policie and also a politique mercie not alterable without great perill to make lawes by the consent of the whole Realme because so no one part shall haue cause to complaine of a partialitie yet simply to binde the prince to or by these lawes weare repugnant to the nature and constitution of an absolute monarchy See Bracton lib. 5.
benefice conferreth it vpon his Clerke whilest two others be contending in law for the right of presenting Exposition of the terms of law old nat br fol. 30. and Fitzh nat br fol. 48. Register originall fol. 32. Quare intrusit matrimonio non satisfacto is a writ that lyeth for the Lord against his tenent being his ward that after couenable mariage offered him marieth another and entreth neuer the lesse vpon his land without agreement first made with his Lord and Gardian Terms of the law Quare non permittit is a writ that lyeth for one that hath right to present for a turne against the proprietary Fleta lib. 5. cap. 16. Quarentine quarentina is a benefit allowed by the lawe of England to the widow of a landed man deceased whereby shee may challenge to continue in his capitall messuage or cheife mansion house by the space of 40. daies after his decease Of this see Bracton lib. 2. cap. 40. And if the heire or any other attempt to eiect her shee may haue the writ De Quarentina habenda Fitzh nat br fol. 161. see anno 9. H. 3. cap. 7. anno 20. cap. pri and Britton cap. 103. M. Skene de verborum significatione verbo Quarentina viduarum deriueth this word from the French Quaresme Who also haue this custome called lo quaresme des vefues granted to widows after the decease of their husbands as he proueth out of Papon in his Arrests libro 15. titulo des dots cap. 7. lib. 10. tit Substitutiones cap. 30. Of this read Fleta also lib. 5. cap. 23. Quarentena habenda is a writ that lyeth for a widow to inioy her Quarentine Register originall fol. 175. Quare non admisit is a writ that lyeth against the Bishop refusing to admit his Clerk that hath recouered in a plee of Aduowsen The furder vse whereof see in Fitzh nat br fol. 47. Register originall fol. 32. See the new booke of Entries verbo quare non admisit Quare obstruxit is a writ that lyeth for him who hauing a seruitude to passe through his neighbours ground cannot inioy his right for that the owner hath so strengthened it Fleta li. 4. cap. 26. § Item si minus Quarter Sessions is a court held by the Iustices of peace in euery Countie once euery quarter The iurisdiction whereof how farre it extendeth is to be learned out of M. Lamberds Eirenarcha Sir Thomas Smith de Republ. Anglor lib. 2. ca. 19. But to these you must adde the late statutes of the Realme for their power daily increaseth Originally it seemeth to haue bene erected onely for maters touching the peace But in these daies it extendeth much farder That these Sessions shold be held quarterly was first of all ordeined so farre as I can learne by the statute anno 25. Ed. 3. stat pri cap. 8. of these read Lamberds Eirenarcha the fourth booke throughout where he setteth them out both learnedly and at large Quashe quassare commeth of the French quasser i. quassare conquassare it signifieth in our common law to ouerthrowe Bracton lib. 5. tracta 2. cap. 3. nu 4. Quekbord anno 17. Ed. 4. ca. 2. Que est mesme signifieth verbatim Which is the selfe same thing It is vsed in our common law as a word of art in an action of trespas or of like nature for a direct iustification of the very act complained of by the plaintffe as a wrong for example in an action of the case the plaintiffe saith that the Lord threatned his Tenents at will in such sort as he draue them to giue vp their tenures The Lord for his defence pleadeth that he said vnto them that if they would not depart he would siew them as the law would This being the same thretning that he vsed or to speake artificially que est le mesme the defence is good Of this see Kitchin in the chapter Que est le mesme fol. 236. where you may haue many like examples Que estate word for word signifieth Quem statum It signifieth in our common law a plee whereby a man intitling another to lands c saith that the same estate that he had himselfe hath from him for example in a Quare impedit the Plaintife alleadgeth that such foure persons were seised of lands whereunto the Advowsen in question was appendant in fee and did present to the Church and afterward the Church was voide Que estat del c. that is which estate of the foure persons he faith also that he hath nowe during the vacation by vertue whereof he presently c. Brooke titulo Que estate fol. 175. 176. But it is harder to knowe when this Que estate is to be pleaded then to vnderstand what it is as by him may appeare See the new booke of Entries verbo Que estate Queene Regina is either shee that houldeth the Crowne of this Realme by right of blood or els shee that is maried to the King In the former signification shee is in all construction the same that the King is and hath the same power in all respects In the other signification shee is inferiour and a person exempt from the King For shee may siew and be siewed in her owne name Yet that shee hath is the Kings and looke what shee looseth so much departeth from the King Stawnf praerog cap. 2. fol. 10. in fine See Kitchin fol. 1. b. See Cooke lib. 4. Copy-hould cases fo 23. b. Augusta was the like among Romaines how be it not euisdem iuris in all things Queenes siluer See Kings siluer Quem reditum reddat is a writ Iudiciall that lyeth for him to whom a rent seck or rent charge is graunted by fine leuied in the Kings Court against the Tenent of the land that refuseth to atturne vnto him thereby to cause him to atturne See old nat br fol. 156. and West parte 2. Simbol titulo Fines sect 125. See the new booke of Entries Verbo Quem reditum reddit Querela friscae fortiae is a writ See Fresh force Querela coram Rege consilio discutienda terminanda is a writ whereby one is called to iustifie a complaint of a trespasse made to the king and himselfe before the King his counsell Register originall fol. 124. b. Questus est nobis c. is the sorme of a writ of Nusance which by the statute anno 13. Ed. pri cap. 24. lieth against him to whome the house or other thing that breedeth the Nusance is alienated wheras before that statute this actiō lay onely against him that first leuied the thing to the hurt of his neighbour See the Statute Quia improvide seemeth to be a supersedeas graunted in the behalfe of a clerke of the Chawncerie siewed against the priuiledge of that court in the common plees persiewed to the exigēd See Dyer f. 33. n. 18. Quid iuris clamat is a writ Iudiciall issuing out of the Record of the Fine which remaineth with
a great summ of money to be paid for the pardoning of some heinous crime anno pri H. 4. cap. 7. Note that when one is to make fine and Ransome the Ransome shal be treble to the Fine Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 142. a. and Lamb. Eirenarch lib. 4. ca. 16. pa. 556. Horne in his mirrour of Iustices maketh this difference betweene amerciament and ransome because ransome is the redemption of a corporall punishment due by law to any offence lib. 3. cap. de amerciament taxable Rape rapus vel rapa is a part of a county signifiing as much as a Hundred As Southsex is diuided into sixe parts which by a peculiar name are called rapes viz the Rape of Chichester of Arundell of Brember of Lewis of Peuersey of Hastings Camden Britan. pag. 225. whom also see pag. 229. These parts are in other places called Tithings Lathes or Wapentakes Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. 2. ca. 16. Rape raptus is a felony committed by a man in the violent deflowring of a woman be shee ould or young Britton cap. 1. whereof West parte 2. Simbol titulo Inditements secto 54. hath these words Copulation violent is termed a rape or rauishment of the bodie of a woman against her will which is carnall knowledge had of a woman who neuer consented thereunto before the fact nor after And this in Scotland ought to be complained of the same day or night that the crime is committed Skene de verborum significa verbo Raptus his reason quia lapsu diei hoc crimen prescribitur This offence is with vs Felony in the principall and his ayders anno 11. H. 4. cap. 13. anno pri Ed. 4. cap. pri Westm 2. cap. 13. But Fleta saith that the complaint must be made within fourty daies or els the woman may not be heard lib. 3. cap. 5. § Praeterea And carnall knowledge of a woman vnder tenne yeares ould is felony anno 8. Elizab. cap 6. Thus far M. West of the diuersity of Rapes see Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 43. b. 44. See Rauishment The ciuile lawe vseth raptus in the same signification And rapere virginem vel mulierem est ei vim inferre violere Co. li. 9. de raptu virgines Raptu haeredis is a writ lying for the taking away of an heire houlding in Soccage and of this there be 2. sorts one when the heire is maried the other when he is not of both these see the Register originall fol. 163. b. Rastall was a Lawyer of reuerend accoumpt that liued in Queene Maries daies and was a Iustice of the common plees He gathered the statutes of the land into an Abridgement which carieth his name at this day He is also the author of the new booke of Entries Ratification ratificatio is vsed for the confirmation of a Clerk in a pre bend c. formerly giuen him by the Bishop c. where the right of patronage is doubted to be in the King Of this see the Register originall fol. 304. Rationabili parte bonorum is a writ that lyeth for the wife against the Executours of her husband denying her the third part of her husbands goods after debts and funerall charges defrayed Fitzh nat br fol. 222. Who there citeth the 18. chap. of magna charta and Glanuile to proue that according to the common law of England the goods of the deceased his debts first paid should be diuided into three parts whereof his wife to haue one his children the second and the Executours the third Fitzherbert saith also that this writ lyeth as well for the children as for the wife And the same appeareth by the Register originall fol 142. b. I haue heard some learned men say that it hath no vse but where the custome of the country serueth for it See the new booke of Entries verbo Rationabili parte et Rationabili parte bonorum Rationabilibus diuisis is a writ which lyeth in case where two Lords in diuers townes haue their seigneuries ioyning together for him that findeth his waste by litle and litle to haue bene encroched vpon within memory of man against the other that hath encroched thereby to rectifie the bounds of their seigneuries In which respect Fitzherbert calleth it in his owne nature a writ of right The old natura breuium saith also that this is a Iusticies and may be remoued by a pone out of the county to the common Bank See farder the forme and vse of this writ in Fitzh nat br fol. 128. and in the Register fol. 157. b. and the new booke of Entries verbo Rationabilibus diuisis The ciuilians call this Iudicium finium regundorum Rauishment raptus commeth of the French rauissement i. direptio ereptio raptio raptus raptura and signifieth in our law an vnlawfull taking away either of a woman or of an heire in ward Sometime it is vsed also in one signification with rape viz. the violent deflowring of a woman See Rape And thereupon is the writ called Rauishment de gard otherwise called de haerede abducto lying for the Lord whose tenent by reason of his tenure in Knights seruice being his ward is taken and conueied from him See Fitzh natu br in the writ De recto de custodia fol. 140. F. See also the old nat br fol. 92. 93. 94. See the new booke of Entries verbo Rape Rauishment de gard Rawe anno 4. Ed. 4. cap. 1. Rawnge commeth of the French Ranger i. astituere ordinare or else the Substantiue Rang. i. ordo series It is vsed in our common lawe both as a verbe as to Raunge and also as a substantiue as to make Rawnge charta de Foresta cap. 6. The word is appropriated to the Forest signifiing the office of the Rawnger The Rawnger is a sworne officer of the Forest of which sort there seeme to be twelue charta de Foresta cap. 7. whose authoritie is partly declared in his oath set downe by M. Manwood parte pri of his Forest lawes pag. 50. in these words You shall truly execute the office of a Rawnger in the Purlieuse of B. vpon the borders of the kings Forest of W. you shall rechase and with your hound driue backe again the wild beasts of the Forest as often as they shall raunge out of the same Forest into your Purlieuse You shall truly present all vnlawfull hunting and hunters of wild beasts of venerie as well within the purlieuse as within the Forest And these and all other offences you shall present at the Kings next court of Attachements or Swainmote which shall first happen so helpe you God But the same author setteth downe his office more particularly in his second part c. 20. n. 15. 16. 17. The summ wherof is this A Raunger is an officer of the Forest or to the Forest but not within the forest hauing no charge of vert but only of venison that commeth out of the forest into his charge or part of the pourallee to
sale conduct them back againe And therfore in those forests that haue no pouralleeses there be no Rawngers but Foristers serue the turne This Raunger is made and appointed by the King his leters patents vnder the great seale and for his beter incouragement in his dutie he hath a yearely fee of 20. pound or 30. pound paid out of the Exchequer and certaine fee Deere both redde and falow His office consisteth cheifely in these three points ad perambulandum quotidie per terras deafforestatas ad videndum audiendum inquirendum tam de malefactis quàm de malefactoribus in Balliua sua ad refugandum feras Forestae tam veneris quàm chaseae de terris deafforestatis in terras afforestatas and ad praesentandū omnes transgressiones Forestae in terris deafforestatis factas ad proximas curias illius Forestae tentas Rawnsom See Ransom Ray seemeth to be a word attributed to cloth neuer coloured or died v. anno 11. H. 4. cap. 6. Realtie See Royaltie Reasonable ayde Rationabile auxilium is a duty that the Lord of the fee claimeth holding by Knights seruice or in soccage to marie his daughter or to make his sonne Knight Westm 1. cap. 39. See Ayde See Brooke titulo Reasonable aide Reattachement Reattachiamentum is a second attachement of him that was formerly attached and dismissed the court without day as by the not cōming of the Iustices or some such like casualtie Brooke tit Reattachment where he maketh a Reattachment generall and a Reattachment speciall Reattachment general seemeth to be where a man is reattached for his appearance vpon all writs of Assise lying against him Brooke eodem nu 14. Then speciall must be for one or more certaine Register Iudiciall fol. 35. See the newe booke of Entrise verbo Reattachment Rebellion Rebellio is a French word signifiing the taking vp of armes against the King or present estate This French commeth from the Latine Rebellio which signifieth a second resistance of such as being formerly ouercome in battaile by the Romanes yeelded themselues to their subiection The French men and we vse it generally for the traiterous taking vp of armes against the estate be it by naturall subiects or by others formerly subdued Reade more of this lib. 3. feudorum cap. 61. and Hotoman vpon the same chapter See the writ of Rebellion Rebell is sometime attributed to him that wilfully breaketh a lawe anno 25. Ed. 3. cap. 6. anno 31. eiusdem stat 3. c. 2. sometime to a villein disobeying his Lord a. 1. R. 2. c. 6. Rebellious Assembly is a gathering together of 12. persons or more intending or going about practising or putting in vre vnlawfully of their owne authoritie to chaunge any lawes or statutes of this Realme or to destroy the inclosure of any park or ground inclosed or bankes of any fisheponds pale or conduict to the intent the same shall remaine voide or to the intent vnlawfully to haue common or way in any of the said grounds or to destroy the Deere in any Park or any warrē of conies or deuehouses or fish in any pondes or any house barnes mils or bayes or to burne stacks of corne or to abate rents or prices of victuals an pri Mar. c. 12. an 1. Eliza. cap. 17. See West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditem 〈…〉 s. Sectio 65. And Cromptons Iustice of peace f. 41. b. Rebutter commeth of the French Bouter i. pellere impellere propellere intrudere and signifieth in our common lawe the same thing For example a man giueth land to him and the issue of his body to antoher in fee with warranty And the Donnee leaseth out this land to a third for yeares The heire of the Donour impleadeth the tenent alleadging that the land was intailed to him The Donee commeth in and by vertue of the warrantie made by the Donour repelleth the heire because though the land were intailed to him ye● he is heire to the warranty likewise and this is called a Rebutter See Brooke titulo Barre nu 13. And againe if I graunt to my tenent to hould sine impetitione vasti and afterward I implede him for waste made he may debarre me of this action by shewing my graunt and this is likewise a Rebutter Idem eodem nu 25. See the newe booke of Entries verbo Rebutter Renant anno 32. H. 8. ca. 2. Recaption Recaptio signifieth a second distresse of one formerly distreined for the selfe same cause and also during the plee grounded vpon the former distresse It likewise signifieth a writ lying for the party thus destreined the forme and farder vse whereof you may see in Fitzh nat br fol. 71. and the Register orig fol. 86. and the Register Iudiciall fol. 69. and the new booke of Entries verbo Recaption Receyver Receptor or Receptator generally and indefinitely vsed is as with the Ciuilians so also with vs vsed commonly in the euill part for such as receiue stollen goods from theeues and conceale them l. 1. Π. de receptatoribus but annexed to other words as the receiuer of rents c. it signifieth many times an officer of great accoumpte belonging to the king or other great personage Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 18. There is also an officer called the Reiceiuer of Fynes who receiueth the mony of all such as compound with the King in the office of the finances for the buying of any lands or tenements houlden in Capite West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 106. Receiuer of all offices accounptable anno 1. Ed. 4. ca. 1. Receiuer generall of the Duchy of Lancaster is an officer belonging to the Duchy court that gathereth in all the reuenewes and fines of the lands of the said Duchy and of all forfeitures and assesments or what else is thence to be receiued Receiuer generall of the court of Wards and liueries is an officer belonging to that court that is to receiue all rents revenewes and fines of the lands belonging to his maiesties wards as also the fines for licences to the Kings widowes to mary of ouster le main sued out and for idiots and lunatikes land and finally all other profits whatsoeuer in mony arising to his maiestie out of or by reason of the court of wards and lyveries Receiuer generall of the Muster rolles anno 35. El. ca. 4. Receiuer generall of the Duchie of Lancaster of the wards and liveries anno 39. Elizab. cap. 7. Receyt See Resceit Recluse Reclusus is he that by reason of his order in religion may not stirre out of his house or cloyster Litleton fol. 92. Recognisance Recognitio commeth of the French Recognoisance i. agnitio recognitio and in our common lawe is thus defined A Recognisance is a bond of record testifing the recognizour to owe vnto the recognizee a certaine summe of money and is knowledged in some court of record or before some Iudge or other officer of such court hauing authoritie to take the same as the Masters of the Chancerie the Iudges of
Kings house anno 25. Ed. 3. statute 5. ca. 21. Stillyard Guilda Theutonicorum anno 22. H. 8. ca. 8. anno 32. eiusdem ca. 14. is a place in London where the fraternity of the Easterling Merchants otherwise the Merchants of Hawnse and Almaine anno pri Ed. 6. cap. 13. Are wont to haue their aboade see Geld. It is so called of a broad place or courte wherein steele was much sould vpon the which that house is now founded Nathan Chitraens See Hawnse Stone of woll Petra lanae see weights See Sarpler It ought to weigh fourteene pounds yet in some places by custome it is more See Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 83. b. Straife alias Stray See Estrae Straites anno 18. H. 6. ca. 16. Streme workes is a kinde of worke in the Stannaries for saith M. Camden titulo Cornwall pag. 119. Horum Stannariorum siue metallicorum operum duo sunt genera Alterum Lode-works alterum streme-works vocant Hoc in locis inferioribus est cùm Fossis agendis stanni venas sectantur fluuiorum alueos subinde deflectunt illud in locis aeditioribus cùm in montibus puteos quos Shafts vocant in magnam altitudinem defodiunt cuniculos agunt These you may read mentioned anno 27. H. 8. ca. 23. Stirks Strip See Estreapement Stuard alias steward senescallus seemeth to be compounded of Steede and ward and is a word of many applications yet alway signifieth an officer of cheife accoumpte 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 haue read is next to the kings and of that heighth that it might in some sort match the Ephori amongst the Lacedemonians The custome of our commonwealth hath vppon great consideration and policie brought it to passe that this high Officer is not appointed for any long time but onely for the dispatch of some especiall businesse at the arraignment of some Noble man in the case of treason or such like which once ended his commission expireth Of the high Steward of Englands Court you may reade Cromptons Iurisdiction fol. 82. I haue reade in an auncient manuscript of what credit I know not that this officer was of so great power in auncient times that if any one had sought iustice in the Kings court and not found it he might vpon complaint thereof made vnto him take those petitions and reseruing them to the next Parlament cause them there to bee propounded and not onely so but also in the presence of the King openly to rebuke the Chaunceler or any other Iudge or officer whom he found defectiue in yeelding iustice And if in case the Iudge or officer so reprehended did alledge that his defect grew from the difficultie of the case insomuch as he durst not aduenture vpon it then the case being shewed and so found the Lord steward together with the Constable of England there in the presence of the King and Parlament might elect 25. persons or more or fewer according to their discretion and the case or cases in question some Earles some Barons some Knights some Citizens and Burgesses which vpon deliberation should set downe what they thought iust and equal and their decree being read and allowed by Parlament did stand as a law for euer fardermore if the Chaunceler or other Iudge or officer could not well approue that the delay of iustice complained of grew from iust difficultie by reason that the case in question was formerly determined by lawe or statute then might the steward on the Kings behalfe admonish him of his negligence and will him to be more carefull and studious Or if there appeared malice or corruption then the King and Parlament was wont to remoue him and assigne another of better hope to the place Lastly if the king had about him any such euill Counceller as aduised him to things vniust or vnanswerable to his Maiestie as tending either to the disherifon of the Crowne publike hurt or destruction of the subiect The office of the Steward was taking to him the Constable and other great men with some of the Commons and giuing notice to the King of their intention to send to that Counseler and will him to desist from misleading the king yea if need so required to charge him to stay no longer about him but to depart from the Court which if he neglected to performe then they might send to the King and will him to remoue him and if the king refused then they might take him as a publike enemie to the King and Realme seise on his goods and possessions and commit his body to safe custody vntill the next Parlament there to be Iudged by the whole kingdome examples are brought of Godwin Earle of Kent in the time of King Edward next before the Conquerour of Hubert Burgh Earle of the same County in the reigne of Henry the third and of Peter Gaueston in Edward the seconds daies But experience as I said hath found this officer more daungerous then profitable and therefore hath time taught though not wholly to suppresse him yet to limite him to particular occasion and to restraine his power Then is there the Steward of the Kings most honourable houshould anno 24. H. 8. cap. 13. whose name is changed to the name of great Master anno 32. eiusdem cap. 39 But this statute was repealed by anno prim Mar. 2. Parlam cap. 4 and the office of the Lord Steward of the Kings houshold reuiued where you may at large reade diuers things touching his office As also in Fitzh nat br fol. 241. B. Of this Officers auncient power reade Fleta lib. 2. cap. 3. There is also a Steward of the Marshalsea pl. cor fol. 52. anno 33. H. 8. cap. 12. To be short this word is of so great diuersitie that there is not a corporation of any accompt or house of any honour almost through the realme but it hath an officer toward it of this name A steward of a maner or of a houshold what he is or ought to be Fleta fully describeth lib. 2. cap. 71. 72. Straunger commeth of the French estranger i. alienare It signifieth in our Language generally a man borne out of the land or vnknowne but in the lawe it hath an especiall signification for him that is not priuie or a party to an act as a Straunger to a iudgement oldna br fol. 128. is he to whome a iudgement doth not belong And in this signification it is directly contrarie to partie or priuie See Priuie Submarshall submarescallus is an officer in the Marshal sea that is deputie to the chiefe Marshall of the Kings house commonly called the Knight Marshall and hath the custody of the prisoners there Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 104. He is otherwise called Vnder-marshall Subpoena is a writ that lyeth to call a man into the Chauncerie vpon such case onely as the common lawe faileth in and hath not prouided
forfeitures as are laid vpon those that pay not their duties or rent for Castle ward at their daies a. 32. H. 8. ca. 48. Bract. hathit in a generall signification lib. 5. tract 3. ca. 1. nu 8. and Fleta lib. 6. ca. 3. in prin Surueiour superuisor is compounded of two French words sur 1. super and veoir 1. ce●ert intueri despioere prospicere videre It signifieth in qur common law one that hath the ouerseeing or care of some great personages lands or works As the Surueiour generall of the Kings maners Cromptons Iurisd fo 106. And in this signification it is taken anno 33. H. 8. cap. 39. where there is a court of Surueiours erected And the Surueiour of the Wards and Liueries West parte 2. simbologr titulo Chauncery sect 136. which officer is erected anno 33. H. 8. ca. 22. who is the second officer by his place in the court of wards and Liueries assigned and appointed by the king His office seemeth especially to consist in the true examination of the lands belonging to the Kings wards that the King be not deceiued At the entrance into his office he taketh an oath ministred vnto him by the Maister of that Court which see an 33. H. 8. cap. 39. Surueiour of the Kings exchange anno 9. H. 5. stat 2. ca. 4. was an officer whose name seemeth in these daies to be changed into some other For I cannot learne that there is any such now Suruiuour is compounded of two French words Sur. 1. super and viure 1. aetatem agere viuere whence also commeth the compound Suruiure i. superesse It signifieth in our common law the longer liuer of two ioynt tenents See Brooke titulo Ioynt tenents fol. 33. or of any two ioyned in the right of any thing Suspension Suspensio is vsed for a temporall stop of a mans right and differeth from extinguishment in this that a Right of Estate suspended reuiueth againe but extinguished it dyeth for euer Brooke titulo Extinguishment and Suspension fol. 314. Suspension is also vsed in our common lawe sometimes as it is vsed in the Canon lawe pro minori excommunicatione As anno 24. H. 8. cap. 12. See Excommunication Suspirall seemeth to be a spring of water passing vnder the ground toward a conduit or cesterne anno 35. H. 8. ca. 10. and to be deriued from the Latine suspirare or the French souspirer i. ducere suspiria And indeed the word it self is French for souspiral in that tongue signifieth spiramentum cauernae the mouth of a caue or den or the tunnell of a chimney Swainmot alias Swanimote Swainmotum signifieth a Court touching maters of the Forest kept by the Charter of the Forest thrice in the yeare anno 3 Henr. octau cap. 18. it is called a Swannie-mote what things be inquirable in the fame you may reade in Cromptons Iurisd fol. 180. who saith that this court of Swainemote is as incident to a Forest as the court of Piepowder is to a faire with whome agreeth M. Manwood parte pri of his Forest lawes pag. 144. The word seemeth to be compounded of Swain and mot or Gemot For swaine as M. Manwood saith vbi supra pag. 111 in the Saxons tongue signifieth a Bockland man which at this day is taken for a Charterer or freeholder and Gemot as M. Lamberd saith in his explication of Saxon words verbo Conventus is Conventus wherevpon it is to be noted as he saith in the same place that the Swainemote is a court of free-holders within the Forest Of the which you may reade him at large pag. 110. c. vsque 122. T TAbling of fines is the making of a table for euery countie where his Maiesties writ runneth conteining the contents of euery fine that shall passe in any one terme as the name of the Countie townes and places wherein the lands or tenements mentioned in any fine do lye the name of the plaintiffe and Deforceant and of euery maner named in the fine This is to be done properly by the Chirographer of fines of the common plees who the first day of the next terme after the engressing of any such fine shall fixe euery of the said tables in some open place of the court of Common plees and so euery day of the said terme during the sitting of the said court And the said Chirographer shall de●iuer to the Shyreeue of euery Countie his Vndershyreeue or Deputie faire writen in parchment a perfect content of the table so to be made for that shire in the terme that shall be next before the Assises to be holden in the same countie or else in the meane time betweene the terme and the said assises to be set vp the first day and euery day of the next assises in some open place of the Court where the Iustices of Assises then shall sit to continue there so long as they shall sit in the said court If either the Chirographer or Shyreeue faile herein he forfeiteth fiue pounds And the Chirographers fee for euery such table is foure pence anno 23. Elizab. cap. 3. This saith West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 130. Taile Tallium commeth of the French taile i. Sectura or the verb tailler i. scindere signifiing in our common law two seuerall things both grounded vpon one reason Plowden casu Willi●n fol. 251. a. b. First it is vsed for the fee which is opposite to fee simple by reason that it is so as it were minced or pared that it is not in his free power to be disposed of him which owneth it but is by the first giuer cut or diuided from all other and tyed to the issue of the Donee Cooke lib. 4. in prooemio And this limitation or taile is either generall or speciall Taile generall is that whereby lands or tenements are limited to a man and to the heires of his body begotten And the reason of this terme is because how many soeuer women the tenent houlding by this title shall take to his wiues one after another in lawfull matrimony his issue by them all haue a possibility to inherit one after the other Taile speciall is that whereby lands or tenements be limited vnto a man and his wife and the heires of their two bodies begotten because if the man bury his wife before issue and take another the issue by this second wife cannot inherit the land c. Also if land should be giuen to a man and his wife and to their sonne and heire Iohn for euer this is taile especiall See more of this in see and Litleton lib. pri ca. 2. and the new booke of Entries verbo Taile Taile in the other signification is that which we vulgarly call a Tallie For it is vne taille de bois a clouen peece of wood to nick vp an accoumpt vpon for in the statute anno 10. Ed. pri cap. 11. and anno 27. eiusdem stat pri ca. 2. it is termed a Taile and anno 38. Ed 3. cap. 5. And
and sould by weight into a kinde of bundle after it is clensed in such maner as it ought to be by statute And to auoide such deceit as the owners were wont to vse by thrusting locks of refuse wooll and such other drosse to gaine weight they are sworne to performe that office truly betweene the owner and the merchant See the statute anno 8. H. 6. cap. 22. anno 23. H. 8. ca. 17. anno 18. Eliza. ca. 25. Would See Weald Wranglands seeme to be misgrowne trees that will neuer prooue timber Kitchin fol. 169. b. Wormseede semen santonicum is medicinal seede browght forth of that plant which in Latine is called Sementina in English holy wormwood whereof you may read in Gerards Herball li. 2. ca. 435. This is a drugge to be garbled anno 1. Iacob cap. 19. Wreck wreccum vel wrectum maris is the losse of a shippe and the goods therein conteined by tempest or other mischaunce at the sea The Ciuilians call it Naufragium This wreck being made the goods that were in the shippe being brought to land by the waues belong to the king by his prerogatiue And therevpon in many bookes of our common lawe the very goods so brought to land are called wreck And wreck is defined to be those goods which are so brought to land Sir Ed. Coke vol. 6. relatio f. 106. a. the statute anno 17. Ed. 2. ca. 11. in these words Item Rex habebit wreccum maris per totum Regnum ballenas sturgiones captas in mari vel alibi infra Regnum exceptis quibusdam locis privilegiatis per Regem Whereby it appeareth that the King hath them or such as haue by graunt this libertie or priuiledge of him And that this statute doth but affirme the auncient lawe of the land it appeareth by Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. num 7. hiis verbis Suntetiam alia res quae pertinent ad coronā propter privilegium Regis it a communem non recipiunt libertatem quin dari possint ad alium transferi Quia si transferantur translatio nulli erit damnosa nisi ipsi Regi fiue principi Et si huiusmods res alicui concessae fuerint sicut wreccum maris c. The reason of this he toucheth shortly in his first booke cap. 12. num 10. where he reckoneth these goods iure naturali to be in bonis nullius quia non apparet Dominus eorum sed iure Gentium fieri principis And see him also lib. 2. cap. 24. num 1. 2. It is worth the asking to know what is a wreck and what not in this stricter signification And the author of the termes of lawe saith that if any person of the shippe come to land it is not a wreck or the wreck is not such that the king ought to haue the goods with whome agreeth S. Ed. Coke vol. 6. f. 107. a. No if either Dogge or Catte escape aliue to the land the goods are the owners still so he come within a yeare and day to claime them And for this the statute is plaine Westm pri ca. 4. anno 3. Edw. pri which doctrine Fitzh in his nat br fol. 112. 〈◊〉 extendeth thus farre that if any of the goods be cast vpon the drie land by any in the shippe it is no wreck subiect to the prerogatiue for by this some of the shippe are presumed to come to land and still to haue a custodie of the goods Cooke vbi supra This in the Grand Custumarie of Normandie cap. 17. is called varech and latined veriseum where it appeareth that the like lawe to ours was in Normandie almost in all points But some sorts of their pretious Merchandise doe by their lawe appertaine to the Duke by his prerogatiue though a iust challenge of the goods be made within the yeare and day The Emperours of Rome made no advantage of this pitifull event as appeareth titulo De Naufragiis 11. Cod. And it appeareth that Richard the first had some remorse of poore sea mens miseries in this case For he quietum clamavit wreck suis subditis Rog. Hoveden parte poster suorum annal fol. 386. Of this M. Skene de verb. signif speaketh to this effect wreck signifieth a power liberty and prerogatiue appertaining to the King or to any person to whome the same is graunted by him by feofment or any other disposition to take vp and gaine such goods as are ship broken or fall to him by escheate of the sea Writ breue is that with our common lawyers in Sir Tho. Smiths iudgement lib. 2. de Repub Anglorum cap. 9. which the Civilians call Actionem siue formulam But I am rather of his iudgement that hath added the marginall note vnto him saying that Actio is the parties whole suite and that Breue is the kings precept whereby any thing is comaunded to be done touching the suite or action as the defendant or tenent to be summoned a distresse to be taken a disseisin to be redressed c. And these writs are diuersly diuided in diuers respects Some in respect of their order or maner of graunting are termed originall and some Iudiciall Originall writs be those that are sent out for the summoning of the Defendant in a personall or Tenent in a reall action or other like purpose before the suite beginneth or to begin the suite thereby Those be iudiciall that be sent out by order of the court where the cause dependeth vpon occasion growing after suite begunne old nat br fol. 51. And Iudiciall is thus by one signe knowne from the Originall because the Teste beareth the name of the chiefe Iustice of that Court whence it commeth where the Orig. beareth in the Teste the name of the Prince Then according to the nature of the action they be personall or reall and reall be either touching the possession called writs of Entrie or the property called writs of right Fitzh nat br sparsim per totum Some writs be at the suite of a party some of office old nat br fol. 147. Some ordinary some of priuiledge A writ of priuiledge is that which a priuiledged person bringeth to the court for his exemption by reason of some priuiledge See Pro cedendo See the new booke of Entrise verbo priviledge See Briefe Writ of rebellion See Commission of rebellion Writer of the talies Scriptor talliarum is an officer in the Exchequer being clerk to the auditour of the receipt who writeth vpon the talies the whole letters of the tellers billes Y YArd land Virgataterrae is a quantitie of land called by this name of the Saxon Gyrdlander but not so certaine a quantity as that it is all one in all places For in some country it conteineth 20. acres in some 24. in some 30. as M. Lamb. saith in his explication of Saxon words verbo virgata terrae This yard land Bracton calleth virgatam terrae lib. 2. cap. 20. 27. but he expresseth no certainty what it conteineth