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A58086 Les termes de la ley; or, Certain difficult and obscure words and terms of the common laws and statutes of this realm now in use, expounded and explained Now corrected and enlarged. With very great additions throughout the whole book, never printed in any other impression.; Expositiones terminorum Legum Anglorum. English and French. Rastell, John, d. 1536. 1685 (1685) Wing R292; ESTC R201044 504,073 1,347

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a Park in this that it is not inclosed and hath not only a larger compasse and more store of Game but of Keepers also and Overseers See Forest Chatels CHatels See Catals Chauntry CHauntry is a Church or Chappel indued with lands or other yearly revenues for the maintenance of one or more Priests to sing Mass daily for the Souls of the Donors and such others as they appoint And of these you may read in the Statutes made 37 H. 8. c. 4. 1 E. 6. cap. 14. Chevage CHevage is a summe of money paid by Villains to their Lords in acknowledgement of their Slavery which Bracton lib. 1. cap. 10. thus defines Chevagium dicitur recognitio in signum subjectionis dominil de capre suo It seems also to be used for a sum of money given by one man to another of power and might for his avowment maintenance and protection as to their head and Leader Lambert writes it Chivage or rather Chiefage Chievisance CHevisance comes from the French word Chevir that is to come to the end or Head of a business And because the perfecting of a Bargaine is the drawing of the matter to the head this word Chevisance is used for Bargaining in the Statutes of 37 H. 8. cap. 9. 13 Eliz cap. 7 8. Childwit CHildwit that is that you may take a Fine of your Bondwoman defiled and gotten with Child without your licence Chimin CHimin is the High-way where every man goes which is called Via Regia and yet the King hath no other thing there but the passage for him and his people for the Free-hold is in the Lord of the Soile and the Profits growing there as Trees and other things And it is divided into two sorts the King's way of which is spoken before and a private Way or private Passage and this is the Way by which one man or more have liberty to pass either by prescription or by writing through the land of another And this is divided into a way in gross and a Way appendant Kitch fol. 177. Chimin in gross is that Way which a man holds principally and solely in it self Chimin appendant is that which a man hath adjoyned to some other thing as appertaining thereunto for example if a man hires a Close or Pasture and hath a Covenant for ingress and egress to and from the said Close through the ground of some other through which otherwise he might not pass Or a Way in gross may he that which the Civilians call Personal as when one covenants for a Way through the ground of another man for himself and his heirs A way appendant on the other side may be that which they call Real as when a man purchases a Way through the ground of another man for such as do or shall dwe ● in this or that house or that are the owners of such a Manor for ever Chiminage CHiminage is a Toll paid for a mans passage through a Forest to the disquiet of the wild beasts of the Forest Chirographer CHirographer is he that in the Common-Bench-Office ingrosses Fines acknowledged in that Court into a perpetual Record after they are acknowledged and fully passed by those Officers by whom they are first examined and that writes and delivers the Indentures one for the Buyer and another for him that sells and makes another indented piece containing also the effect of the Fine which he delivers over to the Custos Brevium which is called the Foot of the Fine The Chirographer also or his Deputy proclaims all the Fines in the Court every Term according to the Statutes and then repairing to the Office of the Custos Brevium there endorses the Proclamations upon the backside of the Foot thereof and always keeps the Writ of Covenant as also the Note of the Fine Chivage CHivage See Chevage Chivalrie CHivalrie is a Tenure of land by Knights service for the better understanding whereof it is to be known that there is no land but is held mediately or immediately of the Crown by some Service or other and therefore all our Free-holds that are to us and our heirs are called Fees as proceeding from the bounty of the King for some small yearly Rent and the performance of such services as originally were imposed upon the Land at the githing thereof For as the King gave to his Nobles his immediate Tenants great possessions for ever to hold of him for such or such Rent and Service so they again in time parcelled out to such as pleased them their Lands so received of the Kings bounty for such Rents and Services as to them seemed good And the Services are all by Littleton divided into two sorts Chivalry and Socage the one material and military the other clownish and rustical Chivalry therefore is a Tenure whereby the Tenant is bound to perform some Noble or Military Office to his Lord and is of two kinds either Regal that is such as may be held onely of the King or such as may also be held of a common person as well as of the King That which may be held onely of the King is properly called S ● rvitium or Sergeantia and is also again divided into Grand and Petit Serjeanty Grand Serjeanty is that where a man holds lands of the King by service which he ought to do in his own person as to carry the Kings Banner or his Spear to lead his Army to be his Marshal to blow a Horn when he sees his enemies invade the Land or to find an armed man to fight within the four Seas or to do it himself or to carry the Kings Sword before him at his Coronation or at that day to be his Sewer Carver Butler or Chamverlain Petit Serjeanty is where a man holds land of the King to pay him yearly a Bow a Sword a Dagger a Knife a Spear a pair of Gloves of maile a pair of Spurs of Gold or to give such other small things concerning the War Chivalrie that may hold of a common person as well as of the King is called Escuage Service of the shield and this is either uncertain or certain Escurage uncertain is also of two kinds first where the Tenant by his Tenure is bound to follow his Lord going in person to the Kings wars against his enemies either himself or to send a sufficient man in his place there to be maintained at his costs so many dayes as were agreed upon between the Lord and his Tenant at the granting of the Fee And the dayes of such service seem to have been rated by the quantity of the land so held as if it extends to a whole Knight's Fee then the Tenant was bound so to attend his Lord 40 days and a Knight's fee was so much land as in those days was accounted a sufficient living for a Knight and this was 680 acres by the opinion of some or eight hundred as others think or fifteen pounds by the year Cambden's Brit. fol. 110. If
Registry of Proceedings are not properly called Records But Courts of Law held by the Kings Grant are Courts of Record Recovery REcovery is commonly intended a common recovery by assent of parties to dock an Intail and is founded upon a Writ of Entry Also every Iudgment is a Recovery by the words Ideo consideratum est quod recuperet Recusants REcusants are all those who separate from the Church and Congregation by the Laws and Statutes established in this Realm of what opinion or Sect they are of As all the Iudges have expounded the Statute 35 Eliz. cap. 1. and divers other Stat. Redisseisin REdisseisin Look of that before in the Title Assise Reextent REextent is a second Extent made upon Lands or Tenements open complaint made that the Former Extent was partially performed Broke tit Extent fol. 313. Regarder REgarder comes of the French Regardeur id est Spectator and signifies an Officer of the Kings Forest sworn to take care of the Verr and Venison and to view and inquire of all the Offences committed within the Forrest and of all the concealments of them and if all the Officers of the Forrest do well execute their Offices or no. See Manwood's Forrest Laws cap. 21. fol. 191. b. Regrator REgrator is he that hath Corn Victuals or other things sufficient for his own necessary use or spending and doth nevertheless ingross and buy up into his hands more Corn Victuals or other such things to the intent to sell the same again at a higher and dearer price in Fairs Markets or other such like places whereof see the Statute 5 E. 6. cap. 14. He shall be punished as a Forestaller Rejoynder REjoynder is when the Desendant makes answer to the Replication of the Plaintiff And every Rejoynder ought to have these two properties specially that is it ought to be a sufficient Answer to the Replication and to follow and enforce the matter of the Barre Relation RElation is where in consideration of Law two times or other things are considered so as if they were all one and by this the thing subsequent is said to take his effect by relation at the time preceding As if one deliver a writing to another to be delivered to a third person as the Deed of him who delivered it when the other to whom it should be delivered hath paid a summ of mony now when the money is paid and the Writing delivered this shall be taken as the Deed of him who delivered it at the time when it was first delivered So Petitions of Parliament to which the King assents on the last day of Parliament shall relate and be of force from the first day of the beginning of the Parliament And so it is of divers other like things Release RElease is the Giving or Discharging of the Right or Action which any hath or claims against another or his Land And a Release of Right is commonly made when one makes a Deed to another by these or the like words Remised released and utterly for me and my Heirs quite claimed to A. B. all my right that I had have or by any means may have hereafter in one Messuage c. But these words whatsoever I may have hereafter are void For if the Father be disseised and the Son release by his Deed without Warranty all his right by those words whatsoever I may have hereafter c. and the Father dies the Son may lawfully enter in the possession of the Disseisor Also in a Release of Right it is needful that he to whom the Release is made have a Freehold or a Possession in the Lands in Deed or in a Law or a reverston at the time of the release made for if he have nothing in the Land at the time of the release made the Release shall not be to him available See more hereof in Littl. lib. 3. cap. 8. Relicta verificatione RElicta Verificatione is when a Defendant hath pleaded and the issue is entred of Record And after that the Defendant relicta verificatione que est son Plea acknowledges the Action and thereupon Iudgment is entred for the Plaintiff Relief RElief is sometimes a certain summ of mony that the Heir shall pay to the Lord of whom his Lands are holden which after the decease of his Ancestor are to him descended as next Heir Sometimes it is the Payment of another thing and not mony And therefore Relief is not certain and alike for all Tenures but every several Tenure hath for the most part his special Relief certain in it self Neither is it to be paid always at a certain age but varies according to the Tenure As if the Tenant have Lands holden by Knights Service except grand Serjeanty and dies his Heir being at full age and holding his Lands by the Service of a whole Knights Fee the Lord of whom these Lands are so holden shall have of the Heir an hundred shillings in the name of the Relief and if he held by less than a Knights Fee he shall pay less and if more then more having respect always to the rate for every Knights Fee Cs. And if he held by grand Serjeanty which is always of the King and is also Knights Service then the Relief shall be the value of the Land by the year besides all charges issuing out of the same And if the Land be holden in Petit Serjeantie or in Socage then for the Relief the Heir shall pay at one time as much as he ought to pay yearly for his Service which is commonly called the Doubling of the Rent And if a man hold of the King in chief and of other Lords the King shall have the Ward of all the Lands and the Heir shall pay Relief to all the Lords at his full age but the Lords shall sue to the King by petition and shall have the Rent for the time that the Infant was in Ward But see now that by the Statute of 2 E. 6. cap. 8. the mesne Lords are not put unto their Petition but shall have all the Rents paid them by the Kings Officers upon request yearly during the Kings possession And note that always when the Relief is due it must be paid at one whole payment and not by parts although the Rent be to be paid at several Feasts See the Statute 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Remainder REmainder of Land is the Land that shall remain after the particular Estate determined As if one grant Land for term of years or for life the Reinainder to J. S. that is to say when the Lease for years is determined or the Lessee for life is dead then the Land shall remain or abide with to or in J. S. See Reversion Remembrancer del Eschequer REmembrancer del Eschequer there are three Officers or Clerks there called by that name one is called the Remembrancer of the King the other of the Lord Treasurer and the third of the First fruits The Kings Remembrancer enters in his Office all Recognisances for
by Service to pay to his Lord yearly at such a Feast an Horse an Hawk a Rose a Cherry or such like there if the Lord purchase parcel of the land this Service is gone absolutely because an Horse an Hawk a Rose a Cherry and such other cannot be divided or apportioned without damage to the whole In some cases Rent-charge shall be apportioned as if a man hath a Rent-charge issuing out of Land and his Father purchases parcel of the Lands charged in fee and dies and this parcel descends to his son who hath the Rent-charge there this charge shall be apportioned according to the value of the land because such portion of the Land purchased by the Father comes not to the son by his own act but by descent and course of Law Common appendant is of a common right and severable and although the Commoner in such case purchase parcel of the Land wherein the Common is appendant yet the Common shall be apportioned but in this case Common appurtenant and not appendant by such purchase is extinct Coke lib. 8. fol. 79. Appropriations APpropriations were when those Houses of Religion and those religious persons as Abbots Priors and such like had the Advowson of any Parsonage to them and their Successors and obtained licence of the Pope Ordinary and King that they themselves and their Successors from thenceforth should be Parsons there and that it should be from thanceforth a Vicarage and the Vicar should serve the Cure And so at the beginning Appropriations were made only to those persons Spiritual that could administer the Sacraments and say divine Service as Abbots Priors Deans and such like After by little and little they were enlarged and made to others as namely to a Dean and Chapter which is a Body corporate consssting of many which Body together could not say divine Service and which was more to Nuns that were Prioresses of some Nunnery which was a wicked thing in regard that they could neither administer Sacraments nor preach nor say divine Service to the Parishioners And all this was upon pretence of Hospitality and maintenance thereof And to supply these defects a Vicar was devised who should be Deputy to the Priors or to the Dean and Chapter and also at the last to the said Abbots and others to say divine Service and should have for his labour but a little portion and they to whom the Appropriations were made should retain the greater revenues and they did nothing for it by means whereof Hospitality decayed in the place where it ought to have been chiefly maintained namely in the Parish where the Benefice was and where the profits grew and so it continues to this day if not worse since not only Friers and Nuns but Lay-men and seculer women are possessed of them to the great hinderance of Learning impoverishment of the Ministry and infamy of the Gospel and professors thereof The Vicar shall have a certain portion of the Benefice and the Abbot and the Covent shall be Parsons and shall have the other profits This is called Appropriation and then the Abbot and Covent shall be Parsons emparsonees but such Appropriation may not be made to begin in the life of the Parson without his assent And after the Church was appropriated then was it an incident inseparable to the House of Religion to which it was so appropriated And therefore where the Lands of the Templars in England were given by the general words of an Act of Parliament of 17 E. 2. to the Hospitallers it was adjudged That the Hospitaliers by the said Act should not have the Appropriation for it was inseparably annexed to the Corporation of the Templars which thing consisting in an inseparable privity by the general words of an Act of Parliament shall not be transferred to others Coke lib. 7. fol. 13. a. But if such Advowsons of the Parsonage be recovered by ancient Title then the Appropriation is adnulled And it is called Appropriation for that they hold the profits to their own proper use Approvement APprovement is where a man hath Common in the Lords waste ground and the Lord incloses part of the Waste for himself leaving nevertheless sufficient Common with egress and regress for the Comm●ners This inclosing is called Approvement See Reg. Jud. fol. 8 9. Approver APprover or Appellor is he who hath committed some Felony which he confesses and now appeals or approves that is accuses others who were Coadjuters or Helpers with him in doing the same or other Felonies which thing he will approve And this proof is to be either by Battel or by the Countrey at his election that appealed This accusation is often done defore the Coroner who either is assigned to the Felon by the Court to take and record that which he saith or is called by the Felon himself and required for the good of the Prince and Common wealth to record that which he shall say The Oath of the Approver when he begins the combate as also the Proclamation by the Heraulds appear in Crompt pag. ult If a man of good fame be appealed by an Approver by which he is taken and kept in prison yet he may have a Writ to be directed to the Sheriff commanding him to suffer the party appealed to be bailed by good Sureties But if a man appealed by an Approver be kept in prison and afterwards the Approver dies there he may sue a Writ directed to the Sheriff to suffer him to be bailed upon good Surety if he be not a notorious Felon although he be not of good fame Fitz. N. B. 250. d. The Kings Approvers THE Kings Approvers are those that have the letting of the Kings Demeans in small Mannors for the Kings greater advantage And for such Approvers you may read in the Stat. 2 E. 3. c. 12. that they were men s ● nt into divers Countries to increase the Farms of Hundreds and Wapentakes And you may see in the Statute made in 1 E. 3. c. 8. that the Sheriffs call themselves the Kings Approvers Arbitrement ARbitrement is an award Determination or Iudgement which one or more makes at the request of two parties at the least for and upon some Debt Trespass or other Controversie had between them And this is called in Latin Arbitratus and Arbitrium and they tha ● make the Award or Arbitrement are called Arbitri in English Arbitrators To every Arbitrement five things are incident sc Matter of Controversie Submission Parties to the Submission Arbitrors and giving up of the Arbitrement Dyer 217. pl. 62. If the Arbitrement be made that the one party shall go quit of all Actions which the other hath against him and nothing is said of the Actions which he hath against the other this Arbitrement is void because it was made of the one part and not of the other 7 H. 6. ca. 40. When a Submission to an Arbitrement is general of all Actions c. and the Arbitrator makes an Award only of one
the land extends but to the moiety of a Knight's fee then the Tenant is bound to follow his Lord but 20 days if a fourth part then 10 days Fitzh Nat. Brev fol. 83. c. 84. c e. The other kind of Escuage uncertain is called Castleward where the Tenant by his land is bound either by himself or some other to defend a Castle as often as it shall come to his turn Escuage certain is where the Tenant is assessed to a certain summe of money to be paid instead of such uncertain service as that a man shall pay yearly for a Knights Fee 20 shillings for the half 10 shillings or any such rate And this Service because it is drawn to a certain Rent comes to be of a mixt nature not meerly Socage for it smells not of the Plow and yet Socage in effect being now neither personal service nor incertain Chivalry hath other conditions annexed thereunto as Homage Fealty Wardship Relief and Marriage Bract. l. 2. c. 35. and what they signifie see in their several places Chivalry is either general or special Dyer fol. 161. plac 47. General seems to be where it is only said in the Feoffment that the Tenant holds by Knights Service without any specification of Sergeanty Escuage c. Special is that which is declared particularly what kind of Knights service he holds by See the Statute 12 Car. 2. c. 24 Thing in Action THing in Action is when a man hath cause or may bring an Action for some duty due to him as an Action of Debt upon an Obligation Annuity or Rent Action of Covenant or Ward Trespasse of goods taken away Beating or such like and because they are things whereof a man is not possessed but for recovery of them is driven to his Action they are called Things in Action And those Things in Action that are certain the King may grant and the Grantee may have an Action for them in his own name only But a common person cannot grant his Thing in Action nor the King himself his Thing in Action which is uncertain as Trespass and such like But of late times it is used in London that Merchants and others there who have Bills without Seals for payment of Money assign them to others who bring actions in their own names Churchesset CHurchesset is a word whereof Flet. l. 1. c. 47. in the end thus writes It signifies a certain Measure of Wheat which in times past every man on St. Martins day gave to Holy Church as well in the time of the Britains as of the English Yet many great persons after the coming of the Romans gave that Contribution according to the ancient Law of Moses in the name of the First-fruits as in the Work of King Kanutus sent unto the Pope is contained in which they call the Contribution Chirchsed as one would say Church-seed Church-wardens CHurch-wardens are Officers yearly chosen by the consent of the Minister and the Parishioners according to the custom of every several place to see to the Church Church-yard and such things as belong to both and to observe the behaviour of the Parishioners for such crimes as appertain to the jurisdiction or censure of the Ecclesiastical Court These are a kind of Corporation and are enabled by Law to sue for any thing belonging to their Church or the Poor of the Parish See Lambert's Duty of Church-wardens Cinque Port. CInque Port are five Haven-towns that is Hastings Romney Hythe Dover and Sandwich to which have been granted long time since many Liverties which other Port-towns haue not and that first in the time of King Edward the Confessor which have been increased since and that chiefly in the days of the three Edwards the first the second and third as appears in Dooms-day book and other old Monuments too long to recite Circuity of Action CIrcuity of Action is when an Action is rightfully brought for a Duty but yet about the bush as it were for that it might as well have been otherwise answered and determined and the Suit saved and because the same Action was more then needful it is called Circuity of Action As if a man grant a Rent-charge of x. li out of his Mannor of Dale and after the Grantee disseises the Grantor of the same Manor and he brings an Assise and recovers the land and xxli damages which xx.li. being paid the Grantee of the Rent sues his Action for x. li of his Rent due during the time of the Disseisin which if no Disseisin had been he must have had This is called Circuity of Action because it might have been more shortly answered for whereas the Grantor shall receive xx.li. damages and pay x. li Rent he may haue received but the x. li only for the damages and the Grantee might have cut off and kept back the other x. li in his hands by way of deteiner for his Rent and so thereby might have saved his Action Circumstantibus CIrcumstantibus is a word of Art signifying the Supply and making up the number of Iurors if any impannelled do not appear or are challenged by either party by adding to them as many others of those that are present and standers by See 35 H. 8. c. 6. 5 El. c. 25. City CIty is such a Town corporate as hath a Bishop and a Cathedral Church whereof such words are found The same place is called Urbs Civitas and Oppidum It is called Civitas in regard it is governed in justice and order of Magistracy Oppidum for that there are therein great plenty of Inhabitants and Urbs because it is in due form begirt about with Walls But that place is commonly called Civitas which hath a Bishop Yet Crompton in his Jurisdictions reckons up all the Cities and leaves out Ely although it hath a Bishop and a Cathedral Church and puts in Westminster notwithstanding it now hath no Bishop And 35 El. 6. Westminster is called a City and Anno 27 ejusd c. 5 of Statutes not printed Westminster is alternative called a City or Borough It appears by the Stat. 35 H. 8. c. 10. that then there was a Bishop of Westm Cassanaeus writes that France hath within its Territories 104 Cities and gives this reason because there are so many Sees of Archbishops and Bishops Clack CLack as to clack force and bard wool 8 H 6. cap. 22. whereof the first viz. to Clack wool is to cut off the mark of the Sheep which makes it to weigh lesse and so to pay the less Custome to the King To Force wool is to clip the upper and most hairy part of it To Bard or beard wool is to cut the head and neck from the other part of the Fleece Claim CLaim is a Challenge by any man of the property or ownership of a thing which he hath not in possession but is withholden from him wrongfully and the party that so makes this Claim shall have thereby a great advantage for by it in some cases he may
their Land of their Lord by Homage And if such Lord hath received Homage he is bound to acquit the Tenant against all other Lords above him of every manner Service And if the Tenant hath done Homage to his Lord and is impleaded and vouches the Lord to Warranty the Lord is bound to warrant him and if the Tenant lose he shall recover in value against the Lord so much of the Lands as he had at the time of the Voucher or at any time after Also if a man that holds his Land by Homage auncestrel alien the Land in fee then the Alienee shall do Homage to his Lord but he shall not hold by Homage auncestrel for that the continuance of the Tenancy in the Blood of the first Tenant is discontinued Homagio respectuando HOmagio respectuando is a Writ directed to the Escheatour commanding him to deliver Seisin to the Heir of his Lands at his full age although he hath not made his Homage Of which see Fitz. N. B. f. 269. A. Homesoken HOmesoken or Hamesoken is to be quit of Amerciaments for Entring into Houses violently and without licence and contrary to the Peace of the King And that you hold Plea of such Trespass done in your Court and in your Land Homicide or Man-slaughter HOmicide or Man-slaughter is the Killing of a Man felonioussy without malice fore-thought It is also defined thus Homicide is the killing of a man by a man But if it be done by a Dog Ox or other thing it is not properly called Homicide It is called Homicidium ab homine cado quasi Hominis caedium Homine capto in Withernamium HOmine capto in Withernamium is a Writ to take him that hath taken any Bond-man or Woman and led him or her out of the County so that he or she cannot be replevied according to Law Reg. Orig. fol. 79. a. Homine replegiando HOmine replegiando is a Writ to deliver men out of Prison upon Bail In what cases it lies and in what not see in Fitz. N. B. f. 66. E. and see here in the Title of Replevin in the end See Replevin Honour HOnour besides the general signification is used specially for the most noble sort of Lordships whereof other inferiour Lordships or Mannors depend by performance of Customes and Services some or other to those that are Lords of them And it seems there are no Honours but those which originally appertained to the King yet they may afterward be given in Fee to Noblemen The manner of Creating these Honors may in part be collected out of the Statutes of Anno 31 Hen. 8. chapter 5. where Hampton Court is made an Honour and Anno 33 ejusd cap. 37 38. whereby Amptil and Grafton are likewise made Honours and Anno 37 ejusd cap. 18. whereby the King hath power given him by his Letters Patents to erect four several Honours Westminster Kingston upon Hull S. Osithes in Essex and Dodington in Barkshire Hornegeld HOrnegeld is to the quit of certain Custome exacted by Tillage through all the Land of whatsoever horn'd Beast Hors de son Fee HOrs de son Fee is an Exception to avoid an Action for Rent issuing out of certain Land by him who pretends to be the Lord or for some Customes or Services for if he can justifie that the Land is without the compass of his Fee the Action falls Broke hoc Tit. 7 8. and 1 Institut 1. b. Hospitallers HOspitallers Hospitularii an Order of Knights first founded at Jerusalem and called the Joannites or Knights of St. John of Jerusalem and they were called Hospitallers for that they built an Hospital at Jerusalem for the entertainment of all such as from any part of the world came to visit the Holy places and did guard and protect such Pilgrims in their Iourneys the Institution of their Order was first allowed by Pope Gelasius the second about the year 1118. And they had many Priviledges granted them as Immunities from payment of Tithes c. And for these they are often mentioned in our Books You shall find their Priviledges reserved to them in Magna Charta cap 37. And you shall see the Right of the Kings Subjects vindicated from the Vsurpation of their Iurisdiction by the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 34. Their chief abode is now in the Island of Melita commonly called Malta given them by the Emperor Charles the Fifth And for that they are now called Knights of Malta All the Lands and Goods of these Knights here in England were put in the disposition of the King by the Stat. of 32 H. 8. cap. 24. Hosteler HOsteler is an Inholder Coke Entr. 347. Hotchpot HOtchpot is a blending or mixing together and a partition of Lands given in Frank-marriage with other Lands in Fee-simple discended For example A man seised of thirty Acres of Land in Fee hath issue two Daughters and gives with one of his Daughters to a man that marries her ten Acres of the same Land in Frank-marriage and dies seised of the other twenty Acres Now if she that is thus married will have any part of the twenty Acres whereof her Father died seised she must put her lands given in Frank-marriage in Hotchpot that is she must refuse to take the sole Profits of the Land given in Frank-marriage and suffer the Land to be commixt and mingled together with the other Land whereof her father died seised so that an equal Division may be made of the whole between her and her Sister And thus for her x Acres she shall have xv else her Sister will have the xx Acres of which their Father died seised Housebote HOusebote is necessary Timber that the Lessee for years or for life of common right may take upon the Ground to repair the Houses upon the same Ground to him leased although it be not exprest in the Lease and though it be a Lease by Word without Deed. But if he take more then is needful he may be punisht by an Action of Waste Hue and Cry HUe and Cry is a pursuit of one having committed Felony by the High-way for if the party robbed or any in the company of one that was murthered or robbed comes to the Constable of the next Town and wills him to raise Hue and Cry or to make Pursuit after the Offendor describing the party and shewing as near as he can which way he is gone the Constable ought forthwith to call upon the Parish for aid in seeking the Felon and if he be not found there then to give warning to the next Constable and he to the next to him until the Offendor be apprehended or at least until he be so pursued to the Sea-side Of this see Bract. lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 5. Smith de Repub Angl. lib. 2. cap. 20. and the Statute of Winchester made Anno 13 E. 1. and the Statute of 28 E. 3. cap. 11. and An. 27 El. cap. 13. Huers HUers See Conders Hundred HUndreds were divided by King
keeps an Ale-house to the intent that he may have the Custom of the Inhabitants within the Forrest to come and spend their mony with him and for that he shall wink at their Offences committed within the Forrest Second deliverance SEcond deliverance is a Writ made by the Filacer to deliver Cattle Distreined after the Plaintiff is Non-suit in Replevin Plow Com. 274. Dyer 41. Se defendendo SE defendendo is a Plea for him that is charged with the death of another saying that he was driven unto that which he did in his own defence Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 1. cap. 7. Seigniory in Gross SEigniory in Gross See Lord in Gross Selion SElion comes of the French Sellon that is the Ground rising between two Furrows in Latine Parca a Ridge and it is not of any certain quantity but sometimes more and sometimes less And therefore Crompton in his Jurisdiction of Courts fol. 221. saith that a Selion cannot be demanded because it is uncertain Seneshal SEneshal Steward is a French word borrowed of the Germans and signifies one that hath the dispensing of Iustice in some particular Cases as Stamf. Pl. of the Cor. fol. 152. B. the High Steward of England or of the affairs of a Family as Cromptons Jurisdiction fol. 102. Steward of the Kings Houshold and 25 E. 3. Stat. 5. cap. 21. and others He is also a learned man appointed by the Lord of a Mannor to hold Courts Leet or Baron Co. 1 Inst 58. 61. Sequestration SEquestration is the Setting aside of a thing in controversie from the possessson of both those that courend for it It is used also for the act of an Ordinary when no man will meddle with the goods and chattels of one deceased as 4 5 M. Dyer fol. 160. b. 7 Eliz. Dyer 232. a. And so it is used also for the Gathering of fruits and profits of a Benefice void for the use of the next Incumbent by the Statute of 28 H. 8. cap. 11. Knights Service TO hold by Knights Service is to hold by Homage Fealty and Escuage and it draws to it Ward Marriage and Relief And note that Knights Service is Service of Lands or Tenements to bear arms in War in defence of this Realm and it owes Ward and Marriage by reason that none is able nor of power nor may have knowledge to bear arms before he be of the age of xxi years And to the end that the Lord shall not lose that which of right he ought to have and that the power of the Realm be nothing weakned the Law wills because of his tender age that the Lord have him and his Lands in his Ward till full age that is to say xxi years But see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. whereby all Tenures are turned into free and common Soccage Sessions SEssions is a Sitting of Iustices in Court upon their Commission as the Sessions of Oyer and Terminer Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 67. Quarter Sessions otherwise called General Sessions or open Sessions 5 El. c. 4. opposite whereunto are Privy or especial Sessions which are procured upon some especial occasion for the speedy expedition of Iustice Cromp. Justice of P. fol. 110. What things are enquirable in General Sessions see Cromp. as above and fol. 109. Petit Sessions or Statute Sessions are held by the high Constables of every Hundred for the placing of Servants An. 5. El. cap. 4. in the end Severance SEverance is the Singling of two or more that are joyned in a Writ As if two are joyned in a Writ De liberate probanda and the one afterward is non-suited in this case Seveance is permitted so that notwithstanding the Nonsuit of the one the other may alone proceed F. N. B. fol. 78. See of this Brook tit Severance Summons fol. 238. For it is harder to know in what cases Severance is permitted then what it is There is also Severance in Assise Old Book of Entries fol. 81. col 4. And Severance in Attaint fol. 95. col 2. And Severance in Debt fol. 200. col 1. And Severance in Quare impedit Coke l ● b. 5. fol. 97. Sewers SEwers seems to be a word compounded of two French words Seoir to sit and Eau Water for that the Sewers are Commissioners that sit by virtue of their Commission and Authority grounded upon divers Statutes to enquire of all Nusances and Offences committed by the stopping of Rivers erecting of Mills not repairing of Banks and Bridges c. and to tax and rate all whom it may concern for the amending of all defaults which tend to the hindrance of the free passage of the Water through her old and ancient Courses See the Statute of 6 H. 6. cap. 5. 23 H. 8. cap. 5. for the form of their Commission Shack. SHack is a peculiar name of Common used in the County of Norfolk and Cattel go to Shack is as much to say as to go at liberty or to go at large And this Common called Shack which in the beginning was but in nature of a Feeding because of vicinage for avoiding of Suits in some places within this County is by Custom altered into the nature of Common appendant or appurtenant and in some places it retains its Original Nature Coke lib. 7. fol. 5. Shewing SHewing is to be quit with Attachment in any Court and before whomsoever in Plaints shewed and not allowed Soc. SOC is Suit of Men in your Court according to the custom of the Realm Soccage TO holo in Soccage is to hold of any Lord Lands or Tenements yeelding him a certain Rent by the year for all manner of Services To hold by Soccage is not to hold by Knights Service nor doth Ward Marriage or Relief belong to it but they shall double once their Rent after the death of their Ancestor according to that that they be wont to pay to their Lord. And they shall not be above measure grieved as it appears in the Treatise of Wards and Relief And note well that Soccage is in 3 manners that is to say Soccage in free Tenure Soccage in ancient Tenure and Soccage in base Tenure Soccage in free Tenure is when one holds of another by Fealty and certain Rent for all manner of Services as is before said And of all Lands holden in Soccage the next of kin shall have the Ward to whom the Heritage may not discend till the age of xiv years that is to say if the Heritage come by the part of the Father they of the part of the Mother shall have the Ward and contrariwise If the Gardian in Soccage make waste he shall not be impeached of waste but he shall yield accompt to the Heir when he shall come to his full age of 21 years for which see the Statutes of Marlebr ca. 17. Soccage of ancient Tenure is that where the people held in Ancient Demesne who were wont to have no other Writ than the Writ of Right close which was determined According to the ●
See Yard-land Viscount VIscount is either the name of a degree or State of Honour under an Earl and above a Baron or else the name of a Magistrate and an Officer of great Authority whom we commonly call Sheriff or to speak more truly Shire reve and was at the first called Shire gereve that is the Keeper of the Shire or the Reeve or Ruler of the Shire for Gereve is derived of the Saxon word Gerefa i. a Ruler And hereof comes Portreve or Portgreve a name in old time given to the head Officer of a Town and signifies the Ruler of the Town for that Port coming of the Latine word Portus signifies a Port-town and Greve being derived as aforesaid signifies a Ruler so that Portgreve or as we now shorter speak a Portreve is the Ruler of the Town And thus was the Head Officer or Governor of the City of London long since before they had the name of Mijor or Bayliffs called as it doth appear in divers old Menuments but chiefly in the Saxon Charter of William the Conquerour which begins thus William the King greeteh William the Bishop and Godfrey the Portreve and also the Citizens that in London be c. So also they of Germany from whom we and our Language first came call one Governor Burgreeve another Margreeve and another Lansgreeve with such like c. Thus much is said only to shew the right Etymon and Antiquity of the word Sheriff to which Officer our Common Law hath always given so great Trust and Authority as to be a special Preserver of the Peace And therefore all Obligations that he takes to that end are Recognisances in Law He is a Iudge of Record when he holds the Leets or Turns which are Courts of Record Also he hath the Execution and Return of Writs and impannelling of Iuries and such like c. Uncore prist UNcore prist is a Plea for the Defendant in Debt upon an Obligation who being sued because he did not pay the Debt at the day pleads to save the Forfeiture that he rendred the money at the day and place and that no Body was there to receive it and says over That he is yet ready to pay it And where a man ought to plead over that he is yet ready and where not see in Perkins sect 783 784. Coke 9 book fol. 79. a b in Peyto's Case Volunt VOlunt is when the Tenant holds at the Will of the Lessor or Lord and that is in two manners One is when I make a Lease to a man of Lands to hold at my Will then I may put him out at my pleasure but if he sow the Ground and I put him out then he shall have his Corn with egress and regress till it be ripe to cut and carry it out of the ground Such Tenant at Will is not bound to sustain and repair the House as Tenant for years is But if he make wilful waste the Lessor shall have against him an Action of Trespass Also there is another Tenant at Will of the Lord by Copy of Court-Roll according to the Custome of the Mannor and such a Tenant may surrender the Land into the hands of the Lord according to the Custom to the use of another for Life in fee or in tail and then he shall take the Land of the Lord or his Steward by Copy and shall make Fine to the Lord. But if the Lord put out such a Tenant he hath no remedy but to sue by Petition And if such a Tenant will implead another of the Lands c. he ought to enter a Plaint in the Court and shall declare in the nature of what Writ he will as the case lies Voucher VOucher is when a Praecipe quod reddat of Land is brought against a man and another ought to warrant the Land to the Tenant then the Tenant shall vouch him to Warranty and thereupon he shall have a Writ called Summoneas ad Warrantizandum And if the Sheriff return that he hath nothing by which he may be summoned then there shall go forth a Writ called Sequatur sub suo periculo And when he comes he shall plead with the Demandant And if he come not or if he come and cannot bar the Demandant then the Demandant shall recover the Land against the Tenant and the Tenant shall recover as much Land in value against the Vouchee and thereupon shall have a Writ called Capias ad Valentiam against the Vouchee See more of Voucher before in the Title of Garranty Uses USes of Land had beginning after the Custom of Property began amongst men as where one being seised of Lands in Fee-simple made a Feoffment to another without any Consideration but only meaning that the other should be seised to his Use and that he himself would take the Profits of the Lands and that the feoffee should have the Possession and Franktenement thereof to the same use c. Now after this upon good Considerations and to avoid divers Mischiefs and Inconveniences was the Statute of An. 27 H. 8. c. 10. provided which unites the Use and possession together so that he who hath the Use of the Land hath the Possession thereof according to the Vse he hath therein by virtue of that Statute Usurpation USurpation is most commonly used when any one presents a Rector or Vicar to a Church without a good Title Stat. Westm 2. cap. 5. Co. 6. Rep. 51. 11 Rep. 33. Usury USury is a Gain of any thing above the Principal or that which was lent exacted only in Consideration of the Loan be it as well Corn Meat Apparel Wares or such like as Money And here much might be said and many Cases put concerning Vsury which of purpose I omit only I wish they who account themselves Religious and good Christians would not deceive themselves by colour of the Statute of Usury because the Statute saith that it shall not be lawful for any to take above xi pound in the C. l. for a year c. whereby they gather though falsly that they may therefore take six pounds for the Loan of an Hundred pounds with a good Conscience because the Statute doth after a sort dispense with it because it doth not punish such taking For God will have his Decrees to be kept inviolable who saith Lend looking for nothing thereby c. by which words is excluded either the taking of vi l. v. l. yea or one peny above the Principal But rather let such think that Statute was moved upon like cause that moved Moses to give a Bill of Divorce to the Israelites as namely to avoid a greater mischief and for the hardness of their hearts And the Statute of 21 Jac. cap. 17. hath expresly Ordained That no word in that Law shall be Construed and Expounded to allow the practice of Vsury in point of Religion or Conscience By the Statute of 13 Eliz. c. 8. the Loan of Money was at 10 l. per Cent. by
mayne An jour wast AN jour wast is a Forfeiture when a man hath committed petit Treason or Felony and hath Lands holders of some common person which shall be seised for the King and remain in his hands by the space of one year and a day next after the Attainder and then the Trees shall be pulled up the Houses razed and pulled down and the Pastures and Meadows eyred and plowed up unless he to whom the Lands should come by escheat or forfeiture redeem it of the King A thing the more to grieve the offendors and terrifie others to fall into the like in shewing how the Law doth detest the offence so farr forth as that it doth execute judgment and punishment even upon their dumb and dead things Aniente ANiente comes from the French Aneantir that is annihiliare for Aniente in our Law-language signifies as much as frustrated or made void and is used by Littleton in his 741. Section Annates ANates is a word used in the Statute of 25 Hen. 8. cap. 20. and seems to all one with First-fruits for so Pol. Virgil. de Inventione rerum lib. 8. cap. 2. says That Annatarum usus multo antiquior est quam recentiores quidam scriptores suspicantur Annatas more suo appellant primos fructus unius anni Sacerdotii vacantis aut dimidiam eorum partem Annua pensione ANnua pensione is a Writ by which the King having due unto him an annual Pension from any Abbot or Prior for any of his Chaplains which he will name who is not provided of a competent Living demands it of the said Abbot or Prior for one that is named in the same Writ until c. and also commands him for the better certainty of his Chaplain to give his Letters Patents to him for the same See Fitzherb Nat. Brē fol 231. where you may also see the names of all the Abbies and Priories which were bound to this in respect of their foundation or creation and also for the form of the Letters Patents usually granted upon such a Writ Annuity ANnuity is a certain Sum of money granted to another in Fee-simple Fee-tail for term of Life or for term of years to receive of the Grantor or of his Heirs so that no Free-hold is charged therewith whereof a man shall never have Assise nor other Action but a Writ of Annuity and it is no Assets to the Heir of the Grantee to whom it shall descend There are many differences between Annuities and Rents For every Rent is issuing out of Land but an Annuity is not but charges the person that is the Grantor or his Heirs which have Assets by descent if some special proviso be not to the contrary as Littl. Sect. 220. Also for an Annuity no Action lies but only a Writ of Annuity against the Grantor his Heirs or Successors and this Writ of Annuity never lies against the taker of the profits but only against the Grantor or his Heirs Whereas for a Rent the same Actions he against the Tenant of the Land and sometimes against him that is taker of the Rent that is against him that takes the Rent wrongfully Also au Annuity is not to be taken for Assets because it is not any Free-hold in Law And it shall not be put in Execution upon a Statute-Merchant or Statute-Staple or Elegit as a Rent may Doct. Stud. cap. 30. See Dyer fol 345. pla 2. Also an Annuity cannot be fevered Co. l. 8. fol. 52. b. according to the Verse there Let no Judge himself endeavour Annuities or Debts to sever Anoysance ANoysance is a word used in the Statute of 22 Hen. 8. cap. 5 and signifies no more than Nusance and therefore see Title Nusance Apostata capiendo APostata capiendo is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the taking of the body of one who having entred into and professed some order of Religion leaves his said order and departs from his house and wanders in the country vpon a Certificate of this matter made by the Soveraign of the House in the Chancery and the praying of the said Writ he shall have it directed to the Sheriff for the apprehending of him and redelivery of him to the said Sovereign of the House or his lawful Attorney See the form of it in Fitz. Nat. Br. 233. c. Appeal APpeal is where one hath done a Murther Robbery or Maihem then the wife of him that is slain shall have an Action of Appeal against the Murtherer but if he have no wife then his next Heir-male shall have the Appeal at any time within a year and a day after the deed Also he that is so robbed or maimed shall have his Appeal and if the Defendant be acquitted he shall recover damages against the Appealer and the Abettors and they shall have the imprisonment of a year and shall make fine to the King An Appeal of Mathem is in manner but a Trespass for he shail only recover damages Appeals are commenced two ways either by Writ or by Bill By Writ when a Writ is purchased out of the Chancery by one man against another commanding him that he shall appeal a third man of some Felony or other offence by him committed and to find pledges that he shall do this with effect and this Writ is to be delivered to the Sheriff to be recorded Appeal by Bill is when a man of himself gives his accusation of another man in writing to the Sheriff or Coroner and takes upon himself the burthen of appealing him that is named in the said writing Appellant is the Plaintiff in the Appeal Appendant Appurtenant APpendant Appurtenant are things that by time of prescription have belonged appertained and are joyned to another principal thing by which they pass and go as accessary to the same special thing by virtue of these words Pertinentiis as Lands Advowsons Commons Piscaries Ways Courts and divers such like to a Mannor House Office or such others Apportionment APportionment is a dividing into parts a Rent which is dividable and not entire or whole and forasmuch as the thing out of which it was to be paid is separated and divided the Rent also shall be divided having respect to the parts As if a man have a Rent-Service issuing out of Land and he purchases parcel of the Land the Rent shall be apportioned according to the value of the Land So if a man hold his Land of another by Homage Fealty Escuage and certain Rent if the Lord of whom the Land is holden purchase parcel of the Land the Rent shall be apportioned And if a man let Lands for years reserving Rent and after a stranger recover part of the Land then the Rent shall be apportioned that is divided and the Lessee shall pay having respect to that which is recovered to that which yet remains in his hands according to the value But a Rent-charge cannot be apportioned nor things that are entire As if one hold Land
yet this may well stand with the generality of the words that there was but one Cause depending between them for A generality implies no certainty And if the Arbitrement should be for this avoided then many Arbitrements might be avoided for the one might conceal a Trespass done or other cause of Action given him and so avoid the Arbitrement Also no party to any Arbitrement shall be by it bound unless the Award be delivered unto him as it is in Co. lib. 5. f. 103. See Co. l. 8. fol. 98. Arches ARches or the Court of the Arches is the chief and most ancient Consistory belonging unto the Archbishop of Canterb. and it is called from the Arches of the Church where the Court is kept namely Bow-Church in London And of this Cour ● mention is made in Stat. 24 H. 8. cap. 12. touching Appeals Arms. ARms in the understanding of the Law is extended to any thing that a man in his anger or fury takes into his hand to cast at or strike another Cromp. Justice of Peace fol. 65. a. Array ARray is the taking or ordering a Iury or Enquest of men that are impannelled upon any cause 18 H. 6. cap. 14. from whence comes the Verb to array a pannel Old N. B. f. 157. that is to set forth one by another the men that are impannelled The Array shall be quashed ibid. By Statute every Array in Assise ought to be made four dayes before Brook tit Pannel num 10. To challenge the Array Kitch 92. Arrain ARrain is to put a thing in order or in his place As one is said to arrain an Assise of Novel Disseisin in the County in which it ought to be brought for trial before the Iustices of that Circuit Old N. B. fol. 109. And in such sense Litt. hath used the same word The Lessee attains an Assese of Novel Disseisin Also a prisoner is said to be arraigned when he is indicted and put to his trial Arrerages ARrerages are Duties behind unpaid after the days and times in which they were due and ought to have been paid whether they be Rents of a Manor or any other thing reserved Arrest ARrest is when one is taken and restrained for his liberty None shall be arrested for Debt Trespass Detinue or other cause of Action but by virtue of a precept or commandment out of some Court But for Treason Felony or breaking of the Peace every man hath authority to arrest without warrant or Precept And where one shall be arrested for Felony it behoves that some Felony be done and that he be suspected of the same Felony or otherwise he may have against him that did so arrest him a Writ of False imprisonment And when any man shall be arrested for Felony he shall be brought to the Goal there to abide till the next Sessions to be indicted or delivered by Proclamation Arretted ARretted is he that is convented before any Iudge and charged with a crime Sometimes it is used for imputed or laid unto As no folly can be arretted to him that is within age Lit. cap. Remit This word may come of the Latiu word Rectus for Bacton hath this Phrase Ad rectum habere malefactorem so that he may be charged and put to his trial And in another place he saith Rectarus de morte hominis Assach ASsach seems to be a Brittish word and to signifie a strange kind of Excuse or Purgation by the Oaths of 300. men Anno 1 H. 5. cap. 5. Assart ASsart is an offence committed in the Forest by pulling up by the Roots the Woods which are thickets or coverts of the Forest and by making them as plain as the arable Land This Assart of the Forest is the greatest offence or trespass that can be done in the Forest to Vert or Venison containing in it Waste or more For where Waste of the Forest is nothing but the felling and cutting down of the Covert wood which may in time grow again an Assart is a pulling up by the root by which they can never grow again Man part 2. c. 9. num 1. A writ of Ad quod damnum may be awarded where a man will sue licence to assart his Land within the Forest and make it several for Tillage so that it is no offence if it be done by licence Regist orig fol. 257. Assault ASsault from the French Assaillir signifies a violent kind of injury offered to a mans person of a more large extent than Battery for it may be committed by offering a blow or by a terrifying speech Lamb. Eiren. lib. 1. cap. 3. Assayer ASsayer is an Officer of the Mint appointed by the Stat. of 2 H. 6. c. 12. to be present at the taking in of the Bullion as a party indifferent between the Master of the Mint and the Merchant to set the true value of the Bullion according to the Law Assets ASsets is in two sorts the one called Assets per discent the other Assets enter maines Assets ● discent is where a man is bound in an Obligation and dies secised of Lands in Fee-simple which descend to his Heir then his land shall be called Assets that is enough or sufficient to pay the same debt and by that means the Heir shall be charged as far as the Land so to him descended will stretch But if he have aliened before the Obligation be put in Suit he is discharged Also when a man seised of lands in tail or in the right of his wife aliens the same with warranty and hath in value as much Lands in Fee-simple which descends to his Heir who is also Heir in Tail or Heir to the woman now if the Heir after the decease of his Ancestor bring a Writ of Formedon or Sur cui in vita for the land so aliened then he shall be barred by reason of the Warranty and the land so descended which is as much in value as that which was sold and so thereby he hath received no prejudice Therefore this Land is called Assets per discent Assets enter maines is when a man indebted as before is said makes Executors and leaves them sufficient to pay or some commodity or profit is come unto them in right of their Testator this is called Assets in their hands Assignee ASsignee is he to whom a thing is appointed or assigned to be used paid or done and is always such a person who occupres or hath the thing so assigned in his own right and for himself And of Assignees there are two sorts namely Assignee in Deed and Assignee in Law Assignee in Deed is when a Lease is granted to a man and his Assignees or without that word Assignees and the Grantee gives grants or sells the same Lease to another he is his Assignee in Deed. Assignee in Law is every Executor named by the Testator in his Testament As if a Lease be made to a man and his Assignees as is aforesaid and he makes his Executors and dies without assignment of the
be it by Knights Service or Soccage and not of any Honor Castle or Mannor and for this it is also called a Tenure which holds meerly of the King For as the Crown is a Corporation a Seignory in gross so the King who possesses the Crown is in the eye of the Law perpetually King never in his Minority and dies no more than Populus doth whose authority he bears See Fitz N. Brē fol. 5. Yet note That a man may hold of the King and yet not in Capite that is not immediately of the Crown in gross but by means of some Honor Castle or Manor belonging to the Crown whereof he holds his Land Of this Kitchin saith well That a man may hold of the King by Knight's service and yet not in Capite because it may be he holds of some honour by Knights service that is in the Kings hands by descent from his Ancestors and not immediately of the King as of his Crown fol. 129. With which agrees Fitzh Nat. Brē fol. 5. k. whose words are to this effect It plainly appears that Lands which are held of the King as of an Honor Castle or Manor are not held in Capite of the King because a Writ of right iu this case shall be directed to the Bailiff of the Honor Castle or Manor c. But when the lands are held of the King as of his Crown then they are not held of an Honor Castle or Manor but meerly of the King as King as of his Crown as of a Seignory of it self in gross and the chief of all other Seigniories And this Tenure in Capite is otherwise called Tenure holding of the person of the King Dyer fol. 44. Brook titulo Tenures num 65 99. And yet Ki ● chen fol. 208. saith That a man may hold of the person of the King and yet not in Capite His Case is this If the King purchase a Manor that J. S. holds the Tenant shall hold as he did before and he shall not render Livery nor primer Seisin nor hold in Capite And if the King grants his Manor to W. N. in fee excepting the services of J. S. then J. S. holds as of the person of the King and yet holds not in Capite but as he held before By which it seems that Tenure holding of the person of the King and Tenure in Capite are two divers Tenures To take away which difference it may be said That this place of Kitchen is to be taken as if he had said Not in Capite by Knights service but by Socage following the usual speech because most commonly where we speak of Tenure in Capite we intend Tenure by Knight's service See the Stat. 12 Car. 2. c. 24. by which all Tenures are now turned into free and common Socage Cark CArk seems to be a quantity of Wooll whereof 30 make a Sarplar 27 H. 6. cap. 2. See Sarplar Carno CArno is an Immunity as appears in Cromp. Jurisd f. 191. where it is said That the Prior of Malton made claim for him and his men to be quit of all Amerciaments within the Forest and also to be quit of Escapes and of all manner of Gelds and of Foot-gelds Buckstall Trites Carno and Summage c. Carrack or Carrick CArrack alias Carrick is a Ship of burthen and is so called of the Italian word Carico or Carco which signifies a Burthen This word is mentioned in the Statute 1 Jac. c. 33. Carue of Land CArue or Carucate of land is a certain quantity of land by which the Subjects have been heretofore taxed whereupon the Tribute so levied is called Caruage Bract. l. 2. c. 16. num 8. Lit. Sect. 119. saith that Soca is the same with Caruca sc a Soke or Plow Stow in his Annals p. 251. hath these words The same time H. the King took Caruage that is to say two Marks of Silver for every Knight's Fee to the marriage of his sister Isabel to the Empereur By which it seems there was raised of every plow-Plow-land so much and so consequently of every Knight's free two Marks of Silver Rastal in his Exposition of words saith that Caruage is to be quit if the King shall tax all the Land by Plows that is a Priviledge by which a man is freed from Caruage Skene saith that it contains as great a portion of land as may be eyred or tilled in a year and a day with one Plow which also is called a Hild or Hide of land Castellain CAstellain is a Keeper or Captain sometimes called a Constable of a Castle Bracton l. 5. c. 2. cap. 16. In the same manner it is used an̄ 3 E. 1. c. 7. In the book of Feudis you shall find Guastaldus to be of like signification but more large because it is also extended to those that have the custody of the King's Mansion-houses called Courts notwithstanding they are not places of defence or force Manwood part 1. of the Laws of the Forest p. 113. saith That there is an Officer of the Forest called Castellanus Castle-guard CAstle-guard is an Imposition laid upon such of the Kings subjects as dwell within a certain compass of any Castle to the maintenance of such as watch and ward it Mag. Chart. cap. 2. an 32 H. 8. ca. 48. It is sometimes used for the Circuit it self which is inhabited by such as arc subject to this Service See Chivalry Casu consimili CAsu consimili is Writ of Entry granted where the Tenant by courtesie or Tenant for term of life or for the life of another aliens in Fee or in tail or for the life of another And it hath this name because the Clerks of the Chaucery have framed it by their common consent like the Writ called in casu ꝓviso according to the authority given them by the Stat. of West 2. cap. 24. which wills That as often as it shall happen in Chancery that in one case a Writ is found and in the like case a remedy is wanting the Clerks of the Chancery should agree to make a Writ c. And this Writ is granted to him in reversion against the party to whom the said Tenant so aliened to his prejudice and in the life of the Tenant See more of this F. N. B. fol. 206. Casu proviso CAsu proviso is given by the Stat of Gloucester cap. 7. This Writ lies where Tenant in Dower aliens in Fee or for life or in tail the Land which she holds in Dower there he that hath the Reversion Fee or in Tail or for term of life shall presently have this Writ against the Alienee or him that is Tenant of the Free-hold of the Land and that during the life of the Tenant in Dower F. N. B. 205. n. Catals CAtals or Chatels comprehend all Goods movable and immovable except such as are in nature of Free-hold or parcel of it as may be collected out of Stamf. Praer cap. 16. and anno 1 Eliz. cap. 2. Yet Kitch fol. 32. saith that
to shew a difference between them and base Courts as Customary Courts Court-Barons County Courts Pipowders and such like as when a Plea of land is removed out of ancient Demesne because the land is Frank-fee and pleadable at the Common Law that is to say in the Kings Court and not in ancient Demesne or in any other base Court Thirdly and most usually by Common Law is understood such Laws as were generally taken and holden for Law before any Statute was made to alter the same as for example Tenant for life nor for years were not to be punished for doing Waste at the common Law till the Statute of Gloucester cap. 5. which gives an Action of Waste against them But Tenant by the courtesie and Tenant in dower were punishable for Waste at the Common Law that is by the usual and common received Laws of the Realm before the said Statute was made Common Pleas. COmmon Pleas is the Kings Court now held in Westminster-Hall but in ancient time moveable as appears by Magna Charta cap. 11. But Gwyn in the Preface to his Reading saith That untill the time that Henry the third granted the Great Charter there were but two Courts only called the Kings Courts the Exchequer and Kings Bench which was called Aula Regia because it followed the Court and that upon the grant of that Charter the Court of Common Pleas was erected and setled in a place certain viz. at Westminster and therefore all the Writs were made with this Return Quid sit coram Justiciariis meis apud Westmonasteriū where before the partie was commanded by them to appear coram Me vel Justiciariis meis without any addition of any place certain All Civil causes as well Real as Personal are or were in ancient time tried in this Court according to the strict Law of the Kingdom And by Fortescue cap. 50. it seems to have been the only Court for Real Causes The thief Iudge thereof is called The Lord chief Justice of the Common pleas accompanied with three or four Assistants or Associates who are created by the Kings Letters Patents and as it were installed or placed upon the Bench by the Lord Chancellor and Lord Chief Iustice of the Court as appears by Fortescue cap. 51. who expresses all the circumstances of this Admission The rest of the Officers appertaining to this Court are these The Custos Brevium three Prothenataries Chirographer fourteen Philasers four Exigenters Clerk of the Warrants Clerk of the Iuries Clerk of the Treasurie Clerk of the Kings Silver Clerk of the Essoines Clerk of the Outlawries Common day in plea of land COmmon day in plea of land Anno 13 R. 2. Stat. 1. cap. 17. signifies an ordinary day in the Court as Octabis Michaelis Quindena Paschae c. as you may see in the Statute ● 1 Hen. 3. concerning general days in the Bench. Commotes COmmotes seems to be a compound word of the Preposition Con and Motio that is Dictio Verbum and signifies in Wales part of a County or Hundred An. 28 H. 8. cap. 3. It is written Commoithes Anno 4 H. 4. cap. 17. and is used for a Gathering made upon the people of this or that Hundred by Welsh Minstrels Communi Custodia COmmuni Custodia is a Writ which didlie for that Lord whose Tenant holding by Knights service dies his eldest son within age against a stranger who entred the land and obtained the Ward of the body It seems to take name from the common Custome or right in this case which is That the Lord shall have the wardship of his Tenant untill his full age or because that it is common for the recovery both of the Land and Tenant as appears by the form thereof Old N. B. 89. Regist Orig. 161. Compromise COmpromise is a mutual Promise of two or more parties that are at controversie to submit themselves and all differences between them unto the Award Arbitrement or Iudgment of one or more Arbitrators indifferently chosen between them to determine and adjudge upon all matters referred and upon which the parties differ Computation COmputation is used in the Common Law for the true and indifferent Construction of time so that neither the one party shall do wrong to the other nor the determination of times referred at large be taken one way or other but computed according to the just censure of the Law As if Indentures of Demise are ingrossed bearing date the eleventh day of May 1665. to have and to hold the land in S. for three years from henceforth and the Indentures are delivered the fourth day of June in the year aforesaid In this case from henceforth shall be accounted from the day of the Delivery of the Indentures and not by any computation from the Date And if the said Indenture be delivered at four of the clock in the afternoon of the said fourth day this Lease shall end the third day of June in the third year for the Law in this Computation rejects all fractions or divisions of the day for the incertainty which alwayes is the Mother of contention So where the Statute of Inrollments made Anno 27 Henr. 8. cap. 16. is That the Writings shall be inrolled within six moneths after the Date of the same Writings indented if such Writings have Date the six months shall be accounted from the Date and not from the Delivery but if they want Date then it shall be accounted from the Delivery Co. li. 5. fol. 1. If any Deed be shewed to a Court at Westminster the Deed by Iudgment of the Law shall remain in Court all the Term in which it is shewed for all the Term in Law is but one day Co. lib. 5. fol. 74. If a Church be void and the true Patron doth not present within six months then the Bishop of the Diocess may collate his Chaplain but these six months shall not be computed according to 28 days to the month but according to the Kalendar And there is great diversity in our common speech in the singular number as a Twelve-moneth which includes all the Year according to the Kalendar and twelve-months which shall be computed according to 28 days to every month See Coke lib. 6. f. 61. b. Computo COmputo is a Writ so called of the effect because it compells a Bayliff Chamberlain or Receiver to yield his Account Old Nat. Brev. fol. 53. It is founded upon the Statute of Westm 2. cap 2. which you may for your better understanding read And it also lies for Executors of Executors 15 Ed. 3. Star de Provis Victual cap. 5. Thirdly against the Gardian in Secage for Waste made in the Minority of the Heir Malbr cap. 17. And see farther in what other cases it lies Reg. Orig. fol. 135. Old N. B. fol. 58. F. N. B. fol. 116. Concealers COncealers are such as find out lands concealed that is such lands as are secretly detained from the King by common persons having nothing to shew
for them Anno 39 Eliz. cap. 22. They are so called a concelando as Mons a Movendo by Antiphrasis Conclusion COnclusion is when a man by his own act upon record hath charged himself with a Duty or other thing As if a Free-man confesse himself to be the Villain of A ●● upon record and afterward A. takes his goods he shall be concluded to say in any Action or Plea afterwards that he is free by reason of his own confession So if the Sheriff upon a Capias to him directed returns that he hath taken the body and yet hath not the body in Court at the day of the Return he shall be amerced and if it were upon a Capias ad satisfac ' the Plaintiff may have his Action against the Sherif for the Escape for by such Return the Sherif hath concluded himself And this word Conclusion is taken in another sense as for the End or later part of any De●● aration Barre Replication c. As where to the Barre there ought to be a Replication the Conclusion of his Plea shall be And this he is ready to affirm If in Dower the Tenant pleads that he was never seised so as to tender Dower the Conclusion shall be and upon this he puts himself upon the Country And in what manner the Conclusion shall be according to the nature of several Actions See Kitch f. 219 220 c. Concord COncord is defined to be the very Agreement between parties that intend the levying a Fine of Lands one to another how and in what manner the Lands shall be passed for in the form thereof many things are to be considered See West part 2. tit Fines Concords sect 30. Concord is also an Agreement made upon any Trespasse committed between two or more and is divided into a Concord Executory and Executed See Plowd in Reniger and Fogasie's Case fol. 5 6. where it appears by the opinion of some That the one doth not bind as being imperfect the other being absolute binds the parties And yet by the opinion of others in the same case it is affirmed That Concords Executory are perfect and do no less bind then Concords Executed fol. 8. b. It is lately held that in as much as Actions on assumpsits are now in use which were rarely before the reign of King H. 8. that now an accord with an Assumpsit upon which an Action lyes is a good plea in all those Actions to which it was formerly a good plea if executed Concubinage COncubinage is an Exception against her that brings an Action for her Dower whereby it is alledged That she was not lawfully married to the party in whose lands she seeks to be endowed but his Concubine Brit. cap. 107. Bract. lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 8. Conders COnders are those that stand upon high places near the Sea-coast at the time of Herring-fishing to make signs with boughs c. in their hands to the Fishers which way the shole of Herrings passes for they who stand upon some high Cliffe may see it better then those that are in their Ships These are otherwise called Huers and Balkers as appears by the Statute of 1 Jac. cap. 23. Condition COndition is a Restraint or Bridle annexed to a thing so that by the not performance or not doing of it the party to the Condition shall receive prejudice and loss and by the performance and doing of it commodity and advantage All Conditions are either Conditions actual and expressed which are called Concitions in Deed or else implied or covert and not expressed which are Conditions in Law Also all Conditions are either Conditions precedent and going before the Estate and are executed or else subsequent and following after the Estate and executory Condition precedent doth get and gain the thing or Estate made upon Condition by the performance of it Condition subsequent keeps and continues the thing or Estate made upon Condition by the performance of it Actual and expresse Condition which is called a Condition in Deed is a Condition annexed by express words to the Feoffment Lease or Grant either in writing or without writing As if I infeoff a man in lands reserving a Rent to be paid at such a Feast upon Condition that if the Feoffee fail of payment at the day then it shall be lawfull for me to re-enter Condition implied or covert is when a man grants to another the Office to be Keeper of a Park Steward Bedle Bayliff or such like for term of life and though there be no Condition at all expressed in the Grant yet the Law speaks covertly of a Condition which is That if the Grantee doth not execute all points appertaining to his Office by himself or his sufficient Deputy then it shall be lawfull for the Grantor to enter and discharge him of his Office Condition precedent is when a Lease is made to one for life upon Condition That if the Lessee will pay to the Lessor xx li. at such a day then he shall have Fee-simple here the Condition preceeds the Estate in Fee-simple and upon the performance of the Condition doth gain the Fee-simple Condition subsequent and coming after is when one grants to J. S. his Manor of Dale in Fee-simple upon Condition That the Grantee shall pay to him at such a day xx li. or else that his Estate shall cease here the Condition is subsequent and following the Estate in Fee and upon the performance thereof doth continue the Estate See more of this in Cok. lib. 3. fol. 64. and in Lit. li. 3. cap. 5. and Perkins in the last Title of Conditions Confederacy COnfederacy is when two or more confederate themselves to do any hurt or damages to another or to do any unlawfull thing And though a Writ of Conspiracy doth not lie if the party be not indicted and in lawfull manner acquitted for so are the words of the Writ yet false Confederacy between divers persons shall he punished though nothing be put in ure and this appears by the Book of 27 Assis placit 44. where there is a note That two were indicted of Confederacy each of them to maintain other whether their matter were true or false and though nothing was supposed to be put in use the parties were put to answer because this thing is forbidden in the Law So in the next Article in the same Book Enquiry shall be made of Conspirators and Confederators which bind themselves together c. falsly to endite or acquit c. the manner of their binding and between whom which proves also that Confederacy to indite or acquit although nothing be done is punishable by the Law And it is to be observed that this Confederacy punishable by Law before it be executed ought to have four incidents First to be declared by some matter of prosecution as by making of Bonds or Promises the one to the other secondly to be malicious or for unjust Revenge thirdly to be false against on innocent and
Winchester 13 Edw. 1. which appoints for the conservation of the Peace and view of Armour two Constables in every Hundred and Liberty and these are at this day called High Constables because the increase of people and offences hath again under these made others in every Town called Pe ● ie Constables who are of the like nature but of inferiour authority to the other Besides these there are Officers of particular places called by this name as Constable of the Tower Stan. 152. 1 H. 4. 13. Constable of the Exchequer 15 H. 3. Stat. 5. Constable of Dover Castle Camb. Brit. pag. 239. F. N. B. otherwise called Castellain Manw. part 1. cap. 13. of his Forest Law makes mention of a Constable of the Forest Customes and Services See Prescription CUstomes and Services is a Writ and lies where I or my ancestors after the limitation of Assise for which see the Title of Limitation in the Collection of Statutes were not seised of the Customes or Services of the Tenant before then I shall have this Writ to recover those Services Also the Tenant may have this Writ against his Lord but after the Tenant hath declared the Lord shall defend the words of the Declaration and replying shall say that he distrained not for the Customes whereof the Declaration is and then he shall declare all the Declaration of the Customes and Services and then the Tenant who was Plaintiff shall become Defendant and shall defend by Battel or great Assise Consultation COnsultation is a Writ whereby a Cause being formerly removed by Prohibition out of the Ecclesiastical Court or Court Christian to the Kings Court is returned thither again For if the Iudges of the Kings Court comparing the Libell with the Suggestion of the party find the Suggestion false or not proved and therefore the Cause to be wrongfully called from the Court Christian then upon this Consultation or Deliberation they decree it to be returned again whereupon the Writ in this case obtained is called a Consultation Of this you may read the Regist Orig. fol. 44. untill fol. 58. Old Nat. Brev. fol. 32. Fitzh Nat. Brev. fol. 50. Contenement COntenement seems to be the Freehold-land that lies to the Tenement or Dwelling-house that is in his own occupation for in Magna Charta cap. 14. there are these words A Free-man shall not be amerced for a small fault but according to the quantity of the fault and for a great fault according to the manner thereof saving unto him his Conteuement or Free-hold And a Merchant shall also be amerced saving to him his Merchandizes and a Villain saving to him his Wainage Continual Claime COntinual claim is where a man hath right to e ● ter into certain lands whereof another is seised in Fee or Fee-tail and dares not enter for fear of death or beating but approaches as nigh as he dares and makes Claim thereto within the year and day before the death of him that hath the Lands if that he who hath the Land die seised and his Heir is in by discent yet he that makes such Claim may enter upon the Heir notwithstanding such discent because he hath made such Continual claim But such Claim must always be made within the year and the day before the death of the Tenant for if such Tenant do not die seised within a year and a day after such Claim made and yet he that hath right dares not enter then it behoves him that hath such right to make another Claim within the year and day after the first Claim and after such second Claim to make the third Claim within the year and day if he will be sure to save his Entry But if the Disseisor die seised within the year and day after the Disseisin and no Claim made then the entrie of the Disseisee is taken away for the year and day shall not be taken from the time of the title of the Entry to him grown but only from the time of the last Claim by him made as is aforesaid See more hereof in Littl. li. 3. c. 7. and see the Stat. 32 H. 8. cap. 33. Continuance COntinuance in the Common Law is of the same signification with Prorogatio in the Civil as Continuance until the next Assise Fitzh Nat. Brev. 154. f and 244. d. in both which places it is said That if a Record in the Treasury be alledged by the one party and denyed by the other a Certiorari shall be sued to the Treasurer and the Chamherlain of the Exchequer and if they do not certifie in the Chancery that such Record is there or that it is like to be in the Tower the King shall send to the Iustices repeating the said Certificate and commanding them to continue the Assise In this signification it is also used by Kitchen 202. and 119. also Anno 11 H. 6. cap. 4. Contract COntract is a Bargain or Covenant between two parties where one thing is given for another which is called Quid pro quo as if I sell my Horse for money or if I covenant to make you a Lease of my Mannor of Dale in consideration of twenty pound that you shall give me these are good Contracts because there is one thing for another But if a man make promise to me that I shall have xx s. and that he will be debtor to me thereof and after I ask the xx s. and he will not deliver it yet I shall never have any Action to recover this xx s. because this Promise was no Contract but a bare Promise and Ex nudo Pacto non oritur Actio But if any thing were given for the twenty shillings though it were but to the value of a peny then it had been a good Contract Contra forma Collationis COntra formam Collationis is a Writ that lies where a man hath given Lands in perpetual Almes to any of the late Houses of Religion as to an Abbot and Convent or other Soveraign or to the Warden or Master of any Hospital and his Covent to find certain poor men and to do other Divine Service if they alien the Lands then the Donor or his heirs shall have the said Writ to recover the Land But this Writ shall be alway brought against the Abbot or his successor and not against the Alienee although he be Tenant but in all other Actions where a man demands Free-hold the Writ shall be brought against the Tenant of the Land See the Stat. West 2. cap. 41. Contra formam Feoffamenti COntra formā Feoffamenti is a Writ that lies where a man before the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum made 18 Edw. 1. infeoffed another by Deed to do certain Service if the Feoffor or his heirs distrain him to do other Service then is comprised in the Deed then the Tenant shall have this Writ commanding him not to distrain him to do other Service then is comprised in the Deed. But this Writ lies not for the Plaintiff who
dishonour of the King and his Crown and discredit of the Law that any person by birth and oath obliged to the obedience of the King and his Laws should presume of his own authority by Force and strong hand to resist them both by violent Intrusion into the Possession of another before the Law hath decided his Tttle therein therefore divers Statutes have been made for the restraint and reformation of these Abuses as among others the Stat. of 5 R. 2. ca. 7. where the King defends any Entry into Lands or Tenements but in case where Entry is given by the Law and then not with strong hand or with a multitude of people but onely in a peaceable manner See more of this in Po ● lt de pace Reg. f. 34. 35 c. Degrading DEgrading See Disgrading Delegates ARE Commissioners appointed by Letters Patents to determine Appeals upon things testamentary or matrimonial in which sentence was given Demaines DEmaines or Demesnes generally speaking are all the parts of any Mannor which are not in the hands of Freeholders though they be held by Copy-holders Lessees for years or for life as well as Tenants at will And the reason why Copyhold is accounted Demesnes is because they who are Tenants to it are adjudged in Law to have no other Estate but at the will of the Lord so that it is still reputed to be in a manner in the Lords hands yet in common speech that is ordinarily called Demesnes which is neither free nor copy And this word Demesne is sometimes used in a more special signification and is opposite to Frank-fee as those Lands which were in the possession of Edward the Confessor are called Ancient demesne and all others are called Franck-fee Kitch fol. 98. and the Tenants which hold any of those Lands are called Tenants in Ancient demesn the other Tenants in Frank-fee And no common person hath any Demesnes in the simple acceptation of the word because there is no Land but depends mediately or immediately of the Crown that is of some Honor or other belonging to the Crown and not granted in fee to any inferiour person and therefore when a man in pleading will signifie his Land to be his own he saith That he is or was seised thereof in his Demesne as of Fee Littleton f. 3. whereby it appears that though his Land be to him and his Heirs for ever yet it is not true Demesne but depending upon a superiour Lord and holding by Service or Rent in lieu of Service or by Service and Rent together Demaines according to the common speech are only understood the Lords chief Mannor-place which he and his Ancestors have time out of mind kept in their own hands with all buildings and houses meadows pastures woods arable lands and such like therewith occupied Demand DEmand is a word of art and if one release to another all Demands this is as Littleton fol. 117. a. saith the best Release to him to whom the Release is made that he can have and shall most enure to his advantage for by it not onely all Demands but also all causes of Demands are released And there are two manner of Demands that is in Deed and in Law In Deed as in every Praecipe there is expresse Demand and therefore in real Actions he is called Demandant in personal Plaintiff In Law as every Entry in Land Distresse for Rent Taking or seisure of Goods and such like acts in the Countrey which may be done without any words or demands in Law As a Release of Suits is more large then a Release of Quarrels or of Actions so a Release of Demands is more large and beneficial than either of them for by it is released all that which by the others is released and more By Release of all Demands all Freeholds and Inheritances executory are released By Release of all Demands to the Dissetsor the right of the Entry in the land and all that is contained therein is released By Release of all Demands all Executions are released and he that releases all Demands excludes himself from all Actions Entries and Seisures Littleton fol. 170. holds That if Tenant in tail enfeoffs his Vncle who enfeoffs another in fee with Warranty if after the Feoffee by his Deed releases to the Vncle all manner of Demands by such Release the Warranty which is a Covenant real and executory is extinct and the reason is because that by Release of Demands all the means and remedies and their causes which any hath to Lands Tenements Goods Chattels c. are extinct and by consequence the right and interest it self unto the thing Yet a Release of all Demands doth not extend to such Writs by which nothing is demanded neither in Deed nor in Law but lie only to relieve the Plaintiff by way of Discharge and not by way of Demand as a Release of all Demands is no Bar in a Writ of Error to reverse an Outlawry and so of such like See 18 Edw. 3. 59. Coke lib. 8. fol. 153 154. Demandant DEmandant is he that sues or complains in an Action real for Title of land and he is called Plaintiff in an Assise and in an Action personal for Debt Trespass Deceit Detinue and such like Demurrage IS called the time when a Shi ● lies idle in a Port or Harbour or on the Sea in a Calm Demurrer DEmurrer is when any Action is brought and the Defendant pleads a Plea to which the Plaintiff says that he will not answer for that it is not a sufficient Plea in the Law and the Defendant avers the contrary that it is a sufficient Plea and thereupon both parties submit the Cause to the Iudgement of the Court which is called a Demurrer for that they go not forward in pleading but rest upon Iudgement in that point and is called in Latine Records Moratur in Lege For in every Action the difference consists either in Deed or in Law If in Fact it is tried by the Iury if in Law then the matter is either plain or difficult and rare if it be plain then Iudgment is presently given but when it is hard and doubtfull then is stay made and time taken either to consider farther thereupon by the Iudges to agree if they can or otherwise for all the Iustices to meet together in the Exchequer-Chamber and upon hearing of that which the Serjeants shall say unto both parts to advise and determine what is Law and that which is there concluded on by them shall stand firm without further remedy There is also a Demurrer to Evidence given to a Iury upon Tryal of an Issue Plo. Com. 2. 3 Rast Entr. 607. Half bloud HAlf bloud is when a man marries a wife and hath issue by her a son or daughter and the wife dies and then he takes another woman and hath by her also a son or daughter Now these two sons are after a sort Brothers or as they are termed Half-brothers or Brothers of the half
the shadow of the Officer and doth all things in the name of the Officer himself and nothing in his own name and for which his Grantor shall answer and where an Officer hath power to make Assigns he may implicitely make Deputies for He that may do more it ought not to be held unlawful for him to do less and therefore when an Office is granted to one and to his heirs by this he may make Assigns and by consequence he may make Deputies The King by his Letters Pattents commits to the Sheriff the Custody of the County without express words of making Deputy and yet he may make an Vnder Sheriff viz. his Deputy So where before the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum the King or other Lord had given Lands to a Knight to hold of him by Knights Service that is to go with his Lord when the King makes a Voyage Royal to subdue his enemies for 40 days well and conveniently arrayed for the War yet he may find another able person howbeit in the one case it concerns the publick Administration and execution of Iustice in time of Peace and in the other the publick defence of the Realm in time of War See Cok. l. 9. Le Countee de Salops Case Dereine DEreine is taken in divers senses and seems to come from the French Disarrayer that is to confound or put out of order or else the Norman word Desrene which is the denial of a mans own act and Lex Deraisnia was the Proof of a thing which one denies to be done by himself and his adversary affirms it defeating and confounding the assertion of his adversary and shewing it to be without and against reason or probability And in our Law it is diversly used First generally to prove as Dirationabit jus suum haeres propinquior Glanvile l. 2. c. 6. and he l. 4 c. 6. saith Habeo probos homines qui viderunt audiverunt parati sunt hoc dirationare In the same manner Bracton uses it Habeo sufficientem Disratiocinationem probationem By the Statute of 31 H. 8. cap. 1. Ioyntenants and Tenants in common shall have Aid to the intent to deraigne the Garranty paramount So Plo. in Manxels Case fol. 7. b. hath this Case If a man hath an Estate in fee with Warranty and enfeoffs a stranger with Warranty and dies and the Feoffee vouches his Heir the Heir shall deraigne the first Warranty Also this word is used when Religious men forsake their Orders and Professions as in Kitch fol. 152. b. if a man makes a Lease for life upon condition that if the Lessor dies without issue then the Lessee shall have Fee the Lessee enters in Religion and then the Lessor dies without issue and after the Lessee is deraigned he shall not have Fee insomuch as at the time of the Condition the Fee cannot vast in him De son tort demesne DE son tort demesne seem to be certain words of form in an Action of Trespasse used by way of Reply to the Plea of the Defendant As if A sues B in an Action of Trespasse and B answers for himself that he did this which A calls Trespass by the commandment of C his Master A saith again that B did this of his own wrong without that that C commanded him in such manner and form c. Debt DEbt is a Writ that lies where any summ of money is due to a man by reason of Account Bargain Contract Obligation or other Especialty to be paid at a certain day which is not paid then he shall have this Writ But if any money be due to any Lord by his Tenant for any Rent-service the Lord shall never have Action of Debt for that but he must distrain for it Also for Rent-charge or Rent-seek which any man hath for life in tail or in see he shall not have any Action of Debt as long as the Rent continues but his Executors may have an Action of Debt for the Arrearages due in the life of their Testator by the Statute 32 H. 8. c. 37. For Arrearages of Rent reserved upon a Lease for term of years the Lessor is at his election to have an Action of Debt or to distrain but if the Lease be determined then he shall not distrain after for that Rent but he must have an Action of Debt for the Arrerages And note That by the Law of the Realm Debt is only taken to arise upon some Contract or Penalty imposed upon some Statute or pain and not by other Offences as in the Civil Law Debitum ex delicto If a man enter into a Tavern to drink and when he hath drank goes away and will not pay the Vintner the Vintner shall not have an Action of Trespass against him for his Entry but shall have an Action of Debt for the Wine If I deliver Cloth to a Tailor to make a Gown if the price be not agreed on in certain before how much I shall pay for the making he shall not have against me a general Action of Debt but a special one and shall declare specially and it shall be put to the Iury how much he deserves But if a Tailor make a Bill and himself rates the making and the necessaries thereunto he shall not have an Action of Debt for his own values unless it was so specially agreed but in such case he may detain the Garment until he be paid as an Hostler may his Guests Horse for his meat Cok. l 8. 147. Also Debt lyeth for Fines of Copyholds and for amerciaments in Court Leet and Court Baron and upon Awards and upon recoveries in base Courts or Courts of Record Detinue DEtinue is a Writ that lies against him who having goods and chattels delivered to him to keep refuses to re-deliver them See hereof F. N. B. 138. Devastaverunt bona Testatoris DEvastaverunt bona Testatoris is when the Executors will deliver Legacies or make restitution for wrongs done by their Testator or pay his Debts due upon Contracts or Specialties whose days of payment are not yet come c. and keep not sufficient in their hands to discharge those Debts upon Records or Specialties which they are compellable by the Law to satisfie in the first place then they shall be constrained to pay these out of their own goods according to the value of what they voluntarily delivered or paid for such irregular and illegal Payments are accounted in the Law a Wasting of the goods of the Testator as much as if they had given them away without cause or sold them and converted them to their own use And therefore if A be bound in a Recognisance or in a Statute Merchant or Staple and after Recovery is had against him in an Action of Debt and he makes his Executors and dies his Executors are bound by the Law to pay the Debt due upon the Recovery although it be later in time before the Debt due by Recognisance or Statute because though
shall have the Land but for term of life for those words will carry no greater Estate If one will that his son J. shall have his Land after the death of his wife here the wife of the Devisor shall have the Land first for term of life So likewise if a man devise his goods to his wife and that after the decease of his wife his son and heir shall have the House where the goods are there the son shall not have the House during the life of the wife For it doth appear that his intent was that his wife should have the House also for her life notwithstanding it were not devised to her by express words If a Devise be to J. N. and to the Heirs females of his body begotten after the Devisee hath issue a son and daughter and dies here the daughter shall have the Land and not the son and yet he is the most worthy person and Heir to his father but because the Will of the dead is that the daughter should have it Law and Conscience will so also And herein the very Heathens were precise as appears by those Verses of Octavius Augustus which Donatus reports he made after Virgil at his death gave commandment that his Books should be burnt because they were imperfect and yet some perswaded that they should be saved as indeed they happily were to whom he answered thus Let Faith and Law be kept and what last Will Commandeth to be done we must fulfill Devoire DEvoire is as much as to say a Duty It is used in the Statute of 2 R. 2. ca. 3. where it is provided That all the Western Merchants being of the Kings amity shall pay all manner Customs and Subsidies and other Devoires of Caleis See the Stat. 5 Ejusdē Regis cap. 2. Devorce DEvorce or Divorce Divortium dictum est Diversitate mentium quia in diversas partes eunt qui distrahunt Matrimonium or else from the verb Diverto which signifies to return back because after the Devorce between the husband and wife he returns her again to her father or other friends or to the place from whence he had her And though Devorce was never approved of by the Divine Law but contrariwise prohibited as appears by this precept Let no man separate that which God hath joyned together yet in all ages and well-governed Common-wealths it hath been used and permitted As at this day with us there are divers causes for which the husband and wife may be devorced as first causa Praecontractus Therefore if a man marry with a woman precontracted and hath issue by her this issue in Law and in truth bears the surname of his father but if after the husband and wife be devorced for the Precontract there the issue hath lost his surname and is become a Bastard and nullius filius Cok. lib. 6. fol. 66. Devorce may be causa Frigiditatis and therefore if a man be married to a woman and after they are devorced causa Frigiditatis and then the man takes another wife and hath issue by her yet this issue is lawfull because that a man may be habilis inhabilis diversis temporibus and by the Devorce causa Frigiditatis the Marriage was dissolved a vinculo Matrimonii and by consequence either of them might marry again Cok. lib. 5. fol. 98. b. Also a man may be devorced causa Impubertatis or Minoris aetatis and in this case if two are married infra annos nubiles and after full age Devorce is had between them this dissolves the Marriage and the woman may arraign an Assise against the Husband for the Lands or Tenements given with her in Frank-marriage 19 lib. Assise Pla. 2. So Devorce may be had causa Professionis causa consanguinitatis causa Fornicationis and for many other causes too long to be now recited It is requisite that in the sentence of Devorce the Cause thereof be shewed because some Devorce dissolves the Matrimony that is to say a vinculo Matrimonii bastards the issue and barrs the wife of Dower and some a mensa thoro the which dissolves not the Matrimony nor barrs the Woman of Dower nor bastards the issue Devorce is a Iudgement spiritual and therefore if there be cause ought to be reversed in the Spiritual Court See Cok. lib. 7. Kenns Case If a Woman Copiholder of certain Land durante viduitate sua according to the Custome of the Mannor sows the Land and before the severance of the Corn takes a husband the Lord shall have the Emblements and not the husband But if a Lease be made to the husband and wife during the Coverture and the husband sows the Land and afterward they are devorced causa Praecontractus the husband shall have the Emblements and not the Lessor Dicker DIcker is a word used in the Statute of 1 Jacobi cap. 22. and it signifies the quantity of Ten Hides of Leather And it seems to come from the Greek word Decas which signifies Ten. Diem clausit extremum DIem clausit extremum is a Writ that lies where the Kings Tenant that hold in Chief dies then this Writ shall be directed to the Escheator to enquire of what Estate he was seised who is next Heir and his age and of the certainty and value of the Land and of whom it is holden and the Inquisition shall be returned into the Chancery which is commonly called The Office after the death of that persō And there is another Writ of Diem clausit extremum awarded out of the Exchequer after the death of an Accountant or Debtor of his Majestie to levy the Debt of his Heir Executor Administrators lands or goods Dietus datus DIes datus is a Respite given to the Tenant or Defendant before the Court Brook Tit. Continuance Dieta rationabilis DIeta rationabilis is sometimes used for a Reasonable Days journey as Bract. l. 3. patt 2. cap. 16. It hath in the Civil Law other significations which need not be here mentioned See Vocabul utriusque Juris Dieu son act DIeu son act these are words oftentimes used in our Law and it is a Maxime That the Act of God shall prejudice no man And therefore if a House fall down by Tempest or other Act of God the lessee for life or years shall not only be quit in an Action of Waste brought against him but hath by the Law a special interest to take timber to build the House again if he will for his habitation Cok. lib. 4. 63. lib. 11. 82. a. In like manner when the Condition of an Obligation consists of two parts in the disjunctive and both are possible at the time of the Obligation made and afterwards one of them becomes impossible by the Act of God the Obligor is not bound to perform the other part for the Condition shall be taken beneficially for him Coke lib. 5. 22. Dignitie Ecclesiastical DIgnitie Ecclesiastical is a phrase of speech used in the Statute of 26 Hen. 8.
cap. 3. and by the Canonists is defined to be Administration conjoyned with power and Jurisdiction Diminution IS when the Plaintiff or Defendant in a Writ of Error alledges to the Court that part of the Record remains in the Inferiour Court not certifyed and prays that it be certifyed by Certiorari Co. Ent. 232. 242. 1 Cr. John versus Thomas 2 Cro. 479. 131. Rolls Abridg. 765. 20. Diocesse Diocesse is the Circuit of the Iurisdiction of every Bishop for this Realm hath two kinds of Divisions the one in Shires or Counties in respect of the Temporal politie the other in Diocesses in respect of the Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction Disability DIsabilitie is when a man by any act or thing by himself or his ancestor done or committed or for or by any other cause is disabled or made incapable to do inherit or take benefit or advantage of a thing which otherwise he might have had or done There are many things by which a man may be disabled and those are ordinarily either by the act of the party or his Ancestor or by the act of the Law or of God Disability by the Act of the Ancestor as if a man be attainted of Treason or Felony by this Attainder his blood is corrupt and thereby himself and his children disabled to inherit Disability by the Act of the party himself as if a man makes a Feoffment to another man that then is sole upon condition that he shall infeoff a third man before M. and before M. or the Feoffment made the Feoffee takes a wife he hath by that disabled himself to perform the Condition according to the trust in him reposed and therefore the Feoffor may enter and out him as it is Littl. sect 357. So if the Feoffee charges the Land or enters into a Statute-Staple or Statute-Merchant by these acts he hath disabled himself and therefore the Feoffor may enter as in the former case So if I bind my self that upon Surrender of a Lease I will grant a new Estate to the Lessee and afterwards I grant over my Reversion in this case though I afterwards repurchase and get the whole Reversion to me again yet I have forfeited my Obligation because I was once disabled to perform it Co. l. 5 f. 21. Also if a man be excommunicated he cannot during that time sue any Action but shall be thereby disabled Coke l. 8. f. 69. and so in many other cases Disability by act of Law is most properly when a man by the sole act of the Law without any former thing by him done is disabled and so is Alien born And therefore if a man born out of the ligeance of our Lord the King will sue any Action the Tenant or Defendant may say that he was born in such a Country forth of the Kings liegeance and demand judgment if he shall be answered for the Law is our Birth-right to which an Alien is collateral and a stranger and therefore disabled to take any benefit thereby By the act of God as not to be of whole memory is a Disability in some cases and in others not for which it seems this difference may be taken that in all cases where a man of no whole memory gives or passes any thing or Estate out of him this after his death may be disanulled and avoided but where a man Non sanae memoriae doth a thing whereby nothing passes out of him there he may in some special cases be bound as if he be Lessee for years rendring Rent and the Lessor grants the Reversion there the Lessee non sanae memoriae cannot make Attornment for he that is amens or without mind cannot make Attornment which is Agreement and yet in such case if the Lessor ejects him and makes a Feoffment and afterwards the Lessee non sanae memoriae re-enters this act of Re-entry doth subject him to the Distress and Action of Waste And it is a Maxim in Law That a man of full age shall never be received to disable his own person And this incapacity to disable himself as to some persons is personal and extends only to the party himself and as to others it is not personal but shall bind them also There are four manner of Privities scil Privies in Bloud as Heir Privies in Representation as Executors or Administrators Privies in Estate as Donee in tail the Reversion or Remainder in fee c. and Privies in Tenure as the Lord and Tenant and two of these may disable the person of the dead which was non sanae memoriae or c. and shall avoid his Grants or Feoffments and two of them not For Privies in Bloud may shew the Disability of the Ancestor and Privies in Representation the Infirmity of their Testator or Intestate but neither Privy in Estate nor Privy in Tenure can so do Co. l. 4. f. 123 124. See Lit. sect 405. Co. l. 8. fol. 43. Disalt DIsalt signifies as much as to Disable Litleton cap. Discontinuance Disceit DIsceit is a Writ sometime Original and sometime Iudicial When it is Original it lies where any Disceit is done to a man by another by not performance of a Bargain or Promise then he that is in such manner deceived shall have this Writ When it is Judicial it lies where a Scire facias is sued out of any Record against a man and the Sheriff returns that he is warned where he was not or where a Praecipe quod reddat of a Plea or Lands or a Quare Impedit of the Presenting to a Church is sued against one and the Sheriff returns that the Defendant is summoned where he was not by which Disceit and false Return the Demandant or Plaintiff recovers then the party grieved shall have this Writ against him that recovered and against the Summoners and against the Sheriff and the Writ shall be directed to the Coroners of the same County if he continue Sheriff that made the Return So if a man makes an Attorney in an Action real brought against him and afterwards it is agreed by Disceit between the Demandant and the said Attorney that the said Attorney shall make Default who doth so accordingly whereby the Tenant loses his Land then the same Tenant that loses the Land may have a Writ of Disceit against the Attorney Also if a man brings an action of Trespasse against two others and the Plaintiff and an Attorney by Disceit cause two Strangers not parties to the Writ to come into Court and say that they are the same two Defendants named in the Writ and that they appoint the same man to be their Attorney in that Suit whereupon the same Attorney as Attorney to the Defendants named in the Writ pleads to the Issue and after suffers the Enquest to pass by his Default by which means the Plaintiff recovers In this case those that are indeed Defendants may have a Writ of Desceit against the same Attorney and shall recover their dammages Fitzh Nat. Brev. 96. And as the Law
Finite is that which is limited by Law how often it shall be made to bring the party to trial of the Action as once or twice Old Nat. Brev. f. 43. Distresse infinite is without limitation untill the party comes as against a Iury that refuses to appear upon Certificate of Assise the Process is a Venire facias Habeas corpora and distresse infinite Old nar Brev. f. 113. Then it is divided into the grand Distresse as Anno 52 H. 3. c. 7. which Fitzh calls in Latine Magnam Districtionem Nat. Brev. 126. a. and an ordinary distresse A grand Distresse is that which is made of all the goods and chattels which the party had within the County Brit. c. 6. f. 52. But see whether it be not sometimes all one with Distresse infinite idem fol. 80. with whom also the Statute of Marlbridge seems to agree Anno 52 H. 3. c. 7. 9 12. See the Old Nat. Brev. 71. b. Distringas DIstringas is a Writ directed to the Sheriff or any other Officer commanding him to distrain for a Debt to the King c. or for his appearing at a day See the great diversity of this Writ in the Table of the Reg. judic verbo Distringas Also there is a Writ to distrein Iurors to try an issue in a Suit at Common Law And also another Writ to distrein the adjacent Villages to make good Hedges and fences thrown down in the night by unknown men Of which see 1 Cro. Rep. 204. in t ' Reg. Inhabit ' de Epworth Dividend DIvidend is a word used in the Statute of Rutland Anno 10 E. 1. where it seems to signifie one part of an Indenture See Anno 28 ejusdem Stat. 3. c. 2. Divorce DIvorce See Devorce Docket DOcket is a Little piece of Payer or Parchment written that contains in it the effect of a Greater Writing See the Statute 2 3 P. M. c. 6. M. West part 2. tit Fines sect 106. calls it Dogget Dog-draw DOg-draw is an apparent Deprehension of an offendor against Venison in the Forrest There are four kinds of them observed by Manwood part 2. c. 18. num 9. of his Forest Laws that is Dog-draw Stable stand Back-bear and Bloudy-hand Dog-draw is when one is found drawing after a Deer by the sent of a Hound led in his hand Dogger DOgger is a kind of Ship Anno 31 E. 3. Stat. 3. c. 1. Dogger-fish ib. c. 2 seems to be Fish brought in those Ships to Blackney Haven c. Doggermen Anno 2 H. 8. c. 4. Dole-fish DOlefish seems to be those Fishes which the Fishermen yearly imployed in the North seas do of custome receive for their allowance See the Statute Anno 35 H. 8. c. 7. Dominus litis IS the Advocate in the Civil Law who after the death of his Client prosecutes a Suit to sentence for the Executors use Domo reparan ●● DOmo reparanda is a Vr. that lies for one against his neighbour by the fall of whose House he fears some hurt will come to his own Reg. orig fol. 123. Doom DOom from the Saxon Dom signifies Iudgment a word much used in References to Arbitrators Dooms-day DOoms-day is a Book that was written in the time of S. Edward the Confessor as the Author of Old Nat. Brev. saith fol. 15. and before in the title of Ancient demesne containing in it not only all the Lands through England but also all the names of those in whose hands they were at that time when the Book was made Lambert proves that this Book was made in the time of William the Conquerour with whom Cambden in his Britan. pag. 94. agrees proving it out of Ingulphus that flourished the same time who touching the contents thereof hath these words It describes the whole Land neither was there one Hide in all England whose Value and Possessour was unknown nor any Pool or place not describ'd in the Kings Roll and the Rent profits Possession it self and Possessor not made known to the King according to the fidelity of the Taxers who described the same Country wherein they were elected That Roll is called Rotulus Wint. and by the English for its generality in that it contains all the Tenements contained throughout the Land it is surnamed Dooms-day And this Book is sometimes called Liber Judicatorius because in it is contained a diligent Description of the Kingdom and it expresses the value of all the ground thereof as well in the time of King Edward as in the time of King William under whom it was compiled Doomsman SEem to be Suitors in a Court of a Mannor in Auntient demesne who are Iudges there Donative DOnative is a Benefice meerly given and collated by the Patron to a man without either Presentation to or Institution by the Ordinary or Induction by his commandment F. N. B. 35. e. See the Statute of 8. R. 2. c. 4. Peter Gregory de Beneficiis c. 11. num 1. hath these words But if Chappels founded by Lay-men were not approved of the Diocesan and as they term it spiritualized they are not accounted Benefices neither can they be conferred by the Bishop but remain to the pious disposition of the Founders Wherefore the founders and their Heirs may give such Chappels if they will without the Bishop M. Gwyn in the Preface to his Readings saith That the King might of antient time found a free Chappel and exempt it from the Iurisdiction of the Diocesan So also he may by his Letters Patents give licence to a common person to found such a Chappel and to ordain that it shall be Donative and not presentable and that the Chaplain shall be deprivable by the Founder or his heir and not by the Bishop and this seems to be the original of Donatives in England Fitzherbert saith fol. 33. c. that there are some Chauntries which a man may give by his Letters Patents And all Bishopricks were of the Foundation of the Kings of England and therefore in the antient time they were Donative and given by the Kings yet now the Bishopricks are become by the Grants of the Kings eligible by their Chapter Coke l. 3. f. 76. Donor and Donee DOnor is he who gives Lands or Tenements to another in tail and he to whom the same is given is called Donee Dorture DOrture is a common Room place or Chamber where all the Religious of one Covent slept and lay all night Anno 25 H. 8. cap. 11. Double Plea DOuble Plea is where the Defendant or Tenant in any Action pleads a Plea in which two matters are comprehended and each one by it self is a sufficient Bar or Answer to the Action then such double Plea shall not be admitted for a Plea except one depend upon another and in such case if he may not have the last Plea without the first then such a double Plea shall be well received Double Quarel DOuble Quarel is a Complaint made by any Clerk or other to the Archbishop of
Fieri facias If a man recover by a Writ of Debt and sue a Fieri facias and the Sheriff return that the Defendant hath nothing whereof he may satisfie the Debt to the party then the Plaintiff shall have Elegit or Capias sicut alias and a Pluries And if the Sheriff return at the Caplas Mitto vobis corpus and he have nothing whereof he may make satisfaction to the party he shall be sent to the prison of the Fleet and there abide untill he have made Agreement with the party and if the Sheriff return Non est inventus then there shall go forth an Exigent against him Note well That in a Writ of Debt brought against a Parson who hath nothing of Lay-Fee and the Sheriff returns that he may not be summoned then shall the Plaintiff sue a Writ to the Bishop to cause his Clerk to come and the Bishop shall make him come by Sequestration of the Church And if a man bring a Writ of Debt and recover and make his Executors and die they shall not have Execution notwithstanding it be within the year be a Fieri facias There is another sort of Elegit upon adjudging execution against Terr-tenants which Elegits recite the lands against which Execution is adjudged and commands the Sheriff to deliver to the Creditor a moyty of those Lands and nothing is therein mentioned of any Goods or Chattels as in the other Elegits Elopement ELopement is when a married woman departs from her husband and dwells with an Adulterer for which without voluntary reconcilement to her husband she shall lose her Dower by the Statute of West 2. cap. 34. Whereupon is this old Verse The woman that her husband leaves And with Adult'ry is defil'd Her Dower she shall want unless She first to him be reconcil'd Embleaments EMbleaments are the Profits of the Land which have been sowed and in some cases he who sowed them shall have them and in some not as if Tenant for life sow the Land and afterwards die the Executors of the Tenant for life shall have the Embleaments and not he in Reversion But if Tenant for years sow the Land and before that he hath reap'd his term expires there the Lessor or he in Reversion shall have the Embleaments If one desseises me and cuts the Embleaments growing upon the Land and afterwards I re-enter I shall have an Action of Trespasse against him for the Embleaments but if my Disseisor makes a Feoffment in fee or leases the Land whereof he disseised me and the Feoffee or Lessee takes the Embleaments and after I re-enter I shall not have Trespass Vi armis against them who come in by Title but against my Disseisor Cok. lib. 11. f. 51. If a woman Copiholder during her Widowhood according to the Custome of the Mannor sows the Land and before severance of the Embleaments she takes a husband the Lord shall have the Embleaments So if a woman seised of Land during her Widowhood makes a Lease for years and the Lessee sows the Land and the woman takes a husband there the Lessee shall not have the Embleaments although his Estate be determined by the act of a stranger And although it is commonly held in our Books That if a man leases Lands at will and after the Lessee sows the Land and then the Will is determined that the Lessee shall have the Embleaments yet if the Lessee himself determines the Will before the severance of the Corn. he shall not have the Embleaments See Cok. lib. 5. fol. 116. Embrasour or Embraceour EMbrasour or Embraceour is he that when a matter is in trial between party and party comes to the Barrs with one of the parties having received some reward so to do and speaks in the case or privily labours the Iury or stands there to survey or overlook them thereby to put them in fear and doubt of the matter But persons learned in the Law may speak in the case for their clients Emparlance EMparlance is when a man being to answer to a Suit or Action desires some time of Respite to advise himself the better what he shall answer and it is nothing else but a Continuance of the Cause untill a fatther day And though the Plaintiff in the Kings Bench after the Barre pleaded hath time to reply two or three Terms after yet no mention shall be made in the Roll of any Emparlance or Continuance but the Entry shall be general and so intended to be the same Term. But it is otherwise with a Barre for it contains the Emparlance or Continuance and is in this manner And now at this day that is Friday c in the same Term untill which day the aforesaid A had licence to imparle c. But there is no such Entry upon any Replication or Rejoynder See Coke lib. 5. fol. 75. Brit. cap. 53. uses this word for the Conference of a Iury upon the business to them committed There is a special Imparlance also for a Defendant salvis sibi omnibus omnimodis exceptionibus ad breve narrationem or ad billam which is of use where the Defendant is to plead some matters which cannot be pleaded after a general imparlance Encheson ENcheson is a French word much used in our Law Books as in the Statute of 50 E. 3. cap. 3 and it signifies as much as the Occasion cause or reason for which any thing is done So it is used by Stamford lib. 1. cap. 12. in his description of a Deodand Encrochment ENcrochment comes from the French word Acrocher that is to Pull or draw to And it signifies an Vnlawfull gaining upon the right or possession of another And so a Rent is said to be encroched when the Lord by Distresse or otherwise compells the Tenant to pay more Rent then he ought or then he need See Bucknal's Case 9 Rep ' fol. 33. So when a man sees his Hedge or his Wall too far into the land or ground of his neighbour that lies next him he is said to incroach upon him Enditement or Indictment INdictment comes of the French Enditer that is to set a man out as he is And it is a Bill or Declaration in form of Law exhibited by way of Accusation against one for some offence either criminal or penal and preferred to Iurors and by their Verdict found and presented to be true before a Iudge or Officer that hath power to punish or certifie the Offence Endowment ENdowment Dotatio signifies properly the Giving or assuring of Dower to a woman But it is sometimes by a Metaphor used for the Setting out or severing of a sufficient part or portion to a Vicar for his perpetual maintenance when the Benefice is appropriated And so it is used in the Statutes of 15 R. 2. cap. 6. and 4 H. 4. cap. 12. Endowment de la pluis belle part ENdowment de la c. is when a man dies seeised of some Lands held in Knights-service and others in
ei dimisit qui inde eum injuste disseisivit c. But if the Disseisor alien and the Alienee dies seised or aliens over to another or if the Disseisor dies and his Heir enters and that Heir aliens or dies and his Heir enters then the Disseisee or his Heir shall have a Writ of Entre sur Disseisin in the Per and Cui and the Writ shall say In quod idem A non habet Ingressum nisi per B cui C illud ei dimisit qui inde injuste c. A Writ of Entry in the Per and Cui shall be maintainable against none but where the Tenant is in by Purchase or Discent For if the Alienation or Discent be put out of the Degrees upon which no Writ may be made in the Per or in the Per and Cui then it shall be made in the Post and the Writ shall say In quod A non habet Ingressum nisi Post Disseis ● nam quam B inde injuste sine judicio fecit praef t. N. vel M. proavo N. cujus haeres ipse est Also there are five things which put the Wri ● of Entrie out of the Degrees viz. Intrus●on Succession Disseisin upon Disseisin Iudgment and Escheat 1. Intrusion is when the Disseisor dies seised and a stranger abates 2. Diss ● isin upon Disseisin is when the Disseisor is disseised by another 3. Succession is when the Disseisor is a man of Religion and dies or is deposed and his Successor enters 4. Judgment is when one recovers against the Disseisor 5. Escheat is when the Disseisor dies without Heir or doth Felony whereby he is attaint by which the Lord enters as in his Escheat In all these cases the Disseisee or his Heir shall not have a Writ of Entrie within the degrees of the Per but in the Post because in those cases they are not in by Discent nor by Purchase Entrie ad Communem Legem ALso there is a Writ of Entrie ad Communem Legem which lies where Tenant for term of Life Tenant for term of anothers Life Tenant by the curtesie or Tenant in Dower aliens and dies he in the Revetsion shall have this Writ against whomsoever is in after in the Tenement Entrie in the Case provided A Writ of Entrie in Casu proviso lies if Tenant in Dower alien in fee or for term of life or for anothers life living the Tenant in Dower he in the Reversion shall have this Writ which is provided by the Stat. of Gloc. c. 7. Entrie in Casu consimili A Writ of Entrie in Casu consimili lies where Tenant for life or Tenant by the courtesie aliens in Fee he in Reversion shall have this Writ by the Statute of Westmin 2. cap. 24. Entrie ad Terminum qui praeteriit THe Writ of Entrie ad terminum qui praeteriit lies where a man leases Land to another for term of years and the Tenant holds over his term the Lessor shall have this Writ And if Lands be leased to a Man for term of anothers life and he for whose life the Lands are leased dies and the Lessee holds over then the Lessor shall have this Writ Entrie without Assent of the Chapter A Writ of Entrie sine Assensu Capituli lies where an Abbot Prior or such as hath Covent or common Seal aliens Lands or Tenements of the right of his Church without the Assent of the Covent or Chapter and dies then the Successor shall have this Writ Entrie for Marriage in Speech A Writ of Entrie causa Matrimonii praeloquuti lies where Lands or Tenements are given to a man upon Condition that he shall take the Donor to his wife within a certain time and he does not espouse her within the said term or espouses another woman or makes himself Priest or enters in Religion or disables himself so that he cannot take her according to the said Condition then the Donor and her Heirs shall have the said Writ against him or against whosoever is in the said Land But this Condition must be made by Indenture otherwise this Writ doth not lie And all these and other Writs of Entry may be made in the Per Cui and Post Entrusion ENtrusion is a Writ that lies where a Tenant for Life dies seised of certain Lands or tenements and a Stranger enters he in the Reversion shall have this writ against the Abator or whosoever is in after their Entrusion Also a writ of Entrusion shall be maintainable by the Successour of an Abbot against the Abator who shall enter in Lands or tenements in the time of Vacation that belong to the Church by the Statute of Marlebridge the last Chapter And it seems the difference between an Intrudor and an Abator is this that an Abator is he that enters into Lands void by the death of a Tenant in Fee and an Intrudor is he that enters into Lands void by the death of a Tenant for Life or Years See F. N. B. fol. 203. Entrusion de Gard. ENtrusion de Gard is a Writ which lies where the Heir within age enters in his Lands and holds out his Lord for in such case the Lord shall not have the Writ de Communi Custodia but this Writ of Entrusion of the Ward Old N. B. Enure ENure signifies to take place or effect to be available As a Release shall enure by way of Extinguishment Lit. Cha. Release Equity EQuity is in two sorts and those of contrary effects for the one doth abridge and take from the letter of the Law the other doth enlarge and add thereunto The first is thus defined Equity is the Correction of a Law generally made in that part wherein it fails which correction of the general words is much used in our Law As for example When an Act of Parliament is made that whosoever doth such a thing shall be a Feion and shall suffer death yet if a Mad-man or an Infant that hath no discretion do the same they shall be no Felons nor suffer death ther fore Also if a Statute were made That all persons that shall receive or giv ● me ● t and drink or other succor to any that shall do any such thing shall be accessary to his Offence and shall suffer death if they knew of the Fact yet one doth such an act and comes to his wife who knowing thereof doth receive him and gives him meat and drink she shall not be Accessary nor Felon for by the generality of the said words neither the M ● d-man Infant nor Wife were included in the intent of the Law And thus Equity doth correct the generality of the Law in those cases and the general words are by Equity abridged The other Equity is defined to be an Extension of the words of the Law to Cases unexpressed yet having the same reason So that when the words enact one thing they enact all other things that are of like degree As the Statute which ordains That in an Action of Debt against
And the Escheator is an Officer of Record and may ordain an under-Escheator as the Sheriff may an under-Sheriff yet the Escheator cannot return any Office by vertue of his Office but he shall be punished See F. N. B. 100. Office Escaetriae is the Escheatorship Reg. orig fol. 259. Exchequer EXchequer Scaccarium comes of the French word Eschequier id est Abacus which in one signification is taken for a Counting-Table or for the art or skill of Counting And from thence as some think the place or Court of the Receits and Accounts of the Revenues of the Crown is called the Exchequer Others have otherwise derived the name But the Exchequer is defined by Crompton in his Jurisd of Courts fol. 105. to be a Court of Record wherein all Causes touching the Revenues of the Crown are handled Escrow AN Escrow is a Deed delivered to a third person to be the Deed of the party upon a future condition And is called in Latine Schedula Rast Ent. 181. Escuage EScuage in Latine Scutagium that is Service of the Shield and he that held by Escuage held by Knight-service and to that did belong Ward Marriage and Relief c. But see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. c. 24. for taking away the Court of Wards and Liveries and turning all Tenures into free and common Soccage Escuage was a certain Sum of mony levied by the Lord of his Tenant after the quantity of his Tenure when Escuage ran through all England and was Ordained by all the Council of England how much every Tenant should give his Lord and that was properly to maintain the wars against Scotland or Wales and not against other Lands for that those Lands did of right belong to the Realm of England See Lit. lib. 2. cap. 3. Eslisors ARe persons nominated by a Court of Law to whom a Venire facias is directed by challenge to the Sheriff and Coroners who return the Writ in their own names with a panel of the Iurors names 15 E. 4. 24. pl. 4. Esnecy ESnecy is a Priviledge given the eldest Coparcener to choose first after the Inheritance is divided Flet. lib. 5. cap. 10. Esplees ESplees is the Profit or Commodity that is to be taken of a thing As of a Common the taking of the Grass by the mouths of the Beasts that common there of an Advowson the taking of gross Tithes by the Parson of Wood the ● elling of Wood of an Orchard the selling of Apples and other Fruit growing there of a Mill the taking of Toll are the Esplees and of such like And note that in a Writ of Right of Land Advowson or such like the Demandant ought to alledge in his Count that he or his Ancestors took the Esplees of the thing in demand otherwise the Pleading is not good Essendi quietum de Tolonio ESendi quietum de Tolonio is a Writ to be quit of Toll and lies in case where the Citizens or Burgesses of any City or Borough have been acquitted of Toll by the Grant of the Kings Progenitors throughout the whole Realm or by Prescription then if any man of the said Cities or Boroughs come with his Merchandises to any Town Fair or Market and there put them to sale or buy any Merchandises if the Officers of the said Town will demand any Toll of him against the Kings Charter or against the Vsage and Custom he may sue and have such a writ Fitz. N. B. fol. 226. Regist original fol. 258. Essoine Essoine Where an Action is brought and the Plaintiff or Defendant may not well appear at the day in Court for one of the five causes under specified he shall be Essomed to save his default There are five manner of Essoins viz. Essoine De ouster le mere by which the Defendant shall have a day by forty days The second is De terra sancta and upon this the Defendant shall have a day by a year and a day and these two shall be laid in the beginning of the Plea The third Essoin is De male vener and that shall be adjourned to a common day as the Action requires and this is called the Common Essoine and when and how this Essoine shall be see the Statutes and the Abridgment of Statutes where it is well declared The fourth is De malo lecti and that is only in a Writ of Right and thereupon there shall a Writ go out of the Chancery directed to the Sheriff that he shall send four Knights to see the tenant and if he be sick to give a day after a year and a day The fifth Essoine is De service del Roy and it lies in all Actions except i ● Assise De Novel Disseisin Writ of Dower Darreine presentment and in Appeal of Murther but in this Essoine it behoves at the day to shew his warrant or else it shall turn to a Default if it be in a Plea real or else he shall lose xx s. for the journey or more by the discretion of the Iustice if it be in a Plea personal as it appears by the Statute of Gloucest cap. 8. Essoino de malo lecti ESsoino de malo lecti is a writ directed to the Sheriff to send four lawful Knights to view one that hath essoined himself De malo lecti Reg. Orig. fol. 8. b. Establishment de Dower EStablishment de Dower seems to be the Assurance of Dower made by the husband or his friends before or at the time of the Marriage And Assignment of Dower is the Setting it out by the Heir afterward according to the Establishment Brit. cap. 102 103. Estandard EStandard or Standard signifies an Ensign in war but is also used for the principal or Standing Measure of the King to the proportion whereof all the Measures through the Land are and ought to be framed by the Clerk of the Market Aulneger or other Officer according to their Function For it was established by Magna Charta ann 9 H. 3. c. 25. that there should be but one scantling of Weights and Measures through all the Realm which is since confirmed by An. 14 Ed. 3. cap. 12. and many other Statutes as also that all should be ● itted to the Standard sealed with the Kings Seal And there is good reason that it should be called a Standard because it stands constant and immoveable and hath all other Measures coming towards it for their conformity as Souldiers in the Field have their Standard or Colours for their direction in their March or Skirmish Of these Standards and Measures read Britton cap. 30. See the Statute 17 Car. 1. cap. 19. Estate EState is that Title or Interest that a man hath in Lands and Tenements as Estate simple otherwise called Fee-simple and Estate conditional or upon Condition which is either upon Condition in Deed or upon Condition in Law See Littleton lib. 3. cap. 5. Estoppel EStoppel is when one is concluded and forbidden in Law to speak against his own act or deed yea though it be
Forestall FOrestall is to be quit of Amerciaments and Cattels arrested within your Land and the Amerciaments thereof coming Founder FOunder is he that uses the Art of Melting or Dissolving Metals and making any thing thereof by casting in Molds He seems to have his name from the Latine word Fundere and is mentioned in the Statute of 17 R. 2. cap. 1. Fourcher FOurcher is a device used to delay the Plaintiff or Demandant in a Suit against two who thereto are not to answer till they both appear and the Appearance or Essoin of one will excuse the others Default at that day and they agree that the one shall be essoined or appear one day and for lack of the Appearance of the other have day over to appear and the other party shall have the same day and at that day the other will appear or be essoined and he that appeared or was essoined before will not then appear because he hoped to have another day by the Adjournment of the party who then appeared or was essoined This is called Fourcher and in some cases the mischief thereby is remedied by the Statute of Gloucest cap. 10. and Westm̄ 1. cap. 42. Franchise FRanchise is a French word and signifies in our Law an Immunity or Exemption from ordinary Iurisdiction as for a Corporation to hold Pleas within themselves to such a value and the like See of this in the Old Nat. Brev. fol. 4. a b. Franchise Royal. FRanchise Royal is where the King grants to one and his Heirs that they shall be quit of Toll or such like Free Almes FRee Almes is where in ancient times Lands were given to an Abbot and his Covent or to a Dean and his Chapter and to their Successors in pure and perpetual Almes without expressing any Service certain this is Frank-almoigne and such are bound before God to make Oraisons and Prayers for the Donor and his Heirs and therefore they do no Fealty and if such as have Lands in Frank-almoigne perform no Prayers nor Divine Service for the Souls of the Donors they shall not be compelled by the Donors to do it but the Donors may complain to the Ordinary praying him that such negligence be no more and the Ordinary of right ought to redress it But if an Abbot c. holds Lands of his Lord for certain Divine Service to be done as to sing every Friday a Mass or do some other thing if such Divine Service be not done the Lord may distrain and in such case the Abbot ought to do Fealty to the Lord and therefore it is not said Tenure in Frank-almoign but Tenure by Divine-Service for none can hold by Frank-almoign if any certain Service be expressed Frank Bank FRank Bank or Free Bench are Copihold-Lands which the Wife being married a Virgin hath after the decease of her husband for her Dower Kitch f. 102. Bract lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 13. num 2. hath these words There is a custom in those parts that the Wives their Husbands being dead should have Frank Bank of Lands of Sockmans and hold it in name of Dower Fitzh calls this a Custome by which in some Cities the Wife shall have all the Lands of her Husband for Dower N. B. fol. 150. See Plow fol. 411. Frank Chase FRank Chase is a Liberty by which all men having Land within this compass are prohibited to cut down the Wood or discover c. without the view of the Forrester although it be his own Crom. Jur. f. 187. Frank Fee TO hold in Frank Fee is to hold in Fee-simple Lands pleadable at the Common Law and not in ancient Demesne Frank Law FRank Law See Crom. Just of Peace f. 151. where you may find what this is by the contrary for he that for an Offence as Conspiracy loses his Frank Law is said to fall into these Mischiefs First that he shall never be Impanelled upon any Iury or Assize or otherwise used in saying any Truth Also if he have any thing to do in the Kings Court he shall not approach thither in person but must appoint his Attourney 3 His Lands Goods and Chattels are to be seised into the Kings hands and his Lands must be estrepped his Trees rooted up and his Body committed to prison Free Marriage FRee Marriage is when a man seised of Land in Fee-simple gives it to another man and his wife who is the daughter sister or otherwise of kin to the Donor in Free Marriage by virtue of which wards they have an Estate in special tail and shall hold the Land of the Donor quit of all manner of Services until the fourth degree be past accounting themselves in the first degree except Fealty which they shall do because it is incident to all Tenures saving Free alms And such Gift may be made as well after Marriage solemnized as before And a man may give Lands to his Soir in Free Marriage as well as to his Daughter by the opinion of Fitzh in his Writ of Champertie H. But it appears otherwise in Littleton and in Broke tit Frank-marriage pla 10. And so it was holden clear in Grays-Inne in Lent an 1576. 18 Eliz. by M. Rhodes then Reader there Frank-plege FRank-plege signifies a Pledge or Surety for Free-men according to the ancient Custom of England for preservation of the publick Peace See the Statute for View of Frank-pledge Anno 18 Ed. 2. and see View of Frank-pledge Free-hold FRee-hold is an Estate that a man hath in Lands or Tenements or Profit to be taken in Fee-simple Tail for term of his own or anothers life in Dower or by the Courtesse of England and under that there is no Free-hold for he that hath Estate for years or holds at will hath no Free-hōld but they are called Chatels And of Free-holds there are two sorts viz. Free-hold in Deed and Free-hold in Law Free-hold in Deed is when a man hath entred into Lands or Tenements and is seised thereof really and actually As if the Father seised of Lands or Teuements in Fee-simple dies and his son enters into the same as heir to his Father then he hath a Free-hold in Deed by his Entry Free-hold in Law is when Lands or Tenements are discended to a man and he may enter into them when he will but hath not yet made his Entry in Deed As in the case aforesaid if the Father being seised of Lands in Fee die seised and they discend to his Son but the Son hath not entred into them in Deed now befo rt his Entry he hath a Free-hold in Law French-man FRench-man was wont to be used for every Outlandish-man Bracton Lib. 3. Tract 2. cap. 15. See Engleshery Frendless man FRendless man was the old Saxon word for him we call an Outlaw nam forisfecit Amcos suos Bracton Lib. 3. Tract 2. cap. 12. Fresh Force FResh Force Frisca Forcia is a force committed in any City or Borough as by Disseisin Abatement Intrusion or Deforcement of any Lands or
Tenements within the said City or Borough For the redressing of which wrong he that hath right may by the Vsage of the said City or Borough have his remedy without Writ by an Assise or Bill of Fresh Force brought within 40 days after the Force committed or Title to him accrued In which Action he may make his protestation to sue in the nature of what Writ he will And see for this matter Fitzh Nat. Bre. f. 7. C. and Old N. B. f. 4. a. Fresh Suit FResh Suit is when a man is robbed and the party so robbed follows the Felon immediately and takes him with the manner or therwise and then brings an Appeal against him and doth convict him of the Felony by Verdict which thing being enquired of for the King and found the party robbed shall have restitution of his goods again Also it may be said that the party made Fresh Suit although he take not the Thief presently but that it be half a year or a year after the Robbery done before he be taken if so be the party robbed do what lies in him by diligent enquiry and search to take him yea although he be taken by some other body yet this shall be said Fresh Suit Fresh Suit is also when the Lord comes to distrain for Rent or Service and the Owner of the Beasts makes rescous and drives them into anothers Ground not holden of the Lord and the Lord follows presently and takes them And so in other like cases Friperer FRiperer is a word used in the Statute of 1 Jac. c. 21. for a kind of Broker And it seems to be a word taken from the French word Fripier to trick up old things and therefore a Friperer is one that uses to dress old Clothes to sell again Frumgyld FRumgyld is an old Saxon word which signifies the first payment made to the Kindred of a slain person in recompence of his Murder L. L. Edmundi c. ult Fugitives goods FUgitives Goods are the proper goods of him that flies upon felony which after the flight lawfully found do belong to the King Coke vol. 6. f. 109. b. G. Gable GAble Gablum in ancient Records is an old word that signifies a Rent Duty Custom or Service yielded or done to the King or any other Lord See the Comment upon Littl. fol. 142. a. Gager de deliverance GAger de deliverance is where one sues a Repleven of goods taken but he hath not the goods delivered and the other avows and the Plaintiff shews that the Defendant is yet possessed of the goods c. and prays that the Defendant may gage the Deliverance then he shall put in Surety or Pledges for the Redeliverance and a Writ shall go forth to the Sheriff to redeliver the goods c But if a man claim property he shall not gage Deliverance And if he say that the Beasts are dead in the Pound he shall not gage c. Also a man shall never gage the Deliverance before they are at Issue or Demurter in the Law as it is said Gainage GAinage Wainagium seems to come from the French word Gaignage id est Gain or Profit but in our Law it signifies the Profit most properly that comes by the Tillage of Land And therefore in the Statute of Mag. Chart. c. 14. it is Enacted that a Villain shall be amerced saving his Gainage and in West 1. c. 6. saving his Gainure and in c. 17. it is Enacted That he that deforces any of the deliverances of his Beasts by Replevin shall render unto the Plaintiff his double Dammages which he hath sustained in his Beasts or in his Gainage disturbed c. And by the Statute of Distress of the Exchequer made in 51 H. 3. it is Enacted That no man of Religion or other shall be distrained by the Beasts that gain his Land Galli-halpens GAlli-halpens were a certain Coin prohibited by the Stat. An. 3. H. 5. c. 1. Gaole GAole or Gayle comes of the French word Geole which signifies a Cage for Birds but metaphorically is used for a Prison And from thence the Keeper of the Prison is called a Gaoler or Gayler Garbe GArbe comes of the French Garbe vel Gerbe which signifies a Bundle or Sheaf This word is used in the old Stat. called Charta de Foresta cap. 7. where Herbas in the Latine is translated Garbe in English Garble GArble is is to sort and chuse the good from the bad as the Garbling of Bow-staves Anno 1 R. 3. c. 11. and the Garbling of Spice is nothing else but to purifie it from the Dross with which it is mixed See of this at large in the Statute of 1 Jac. c. 19. Gard. GArd or Ward is when an Infant whose Ancestor held by Knights Service is in the Ward or Keeping of the Lord of whom those Lands were holden And if the Tenant hold of divers Lords divers Lands the Lord of whom the Land is holden by Priority that is by the more elder Tenure shall hade the Wardship But if one Tenure be as old as the other then he that first gets the Ward of the Body shall keep it But every Lord shall have the Ward of the Land that is holden of him And if the Tenant hold any Land of the King in chief he by his Prerogative shall have the Ward of the Body and of all the Land that is holden of him and of every other Lord. Also there are divers Writs of Ward One is a Writ of Right of Ward and that lies where the Tenant dies his Heir within age and a Stranger enters into the Land and happens to have the Ward of the Body of the Infant A Writ of Ejectment of Ward lies where a man is put out of the Ward of the Land without the Body of the Infant A Writ of Ravishment of Ward lies where the Body is taken from him only and not the Land But see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. c. 24. for Abolishing the Court of Wards c. Gardian GArdian or Wardein most properly is he that hath the Wardship or Keeping of an Heir and of his Land holden by Knights Service or of one of them to his own use during the Nonage of the Heir and within that time hath the bestowing of the Body of the Heir in Marriage at his pleasure without disparagement And of Wa ●● ens there are two sorts namely Gardian in Right and Gardian in Deed. Gardian in Right is he that by reason of his Seigniory is seised of the Wardship or keeping of the Land and Heir during his Nonage Gardian in Deed is where the Lord after his Seifin as aforesaid grants by Deed or without Deed the Wardship of the Land or Heir or both to another by force of which Grant the Grantee is in possession The Grantee is called Gardian in Deed. And this Gardian in Deed may grant the Heir to another also but that other is not properly called Gardian in Deed but Grantee of the Gardian in Right
commonly of One hundred pounds more or less according to the Vsage of sundry Nations Mr. Plowden in the Case of Reniger and Fogassa makes mention of this word Knights Service KNights Service was a Tenure by which several Lands in this Nation were held of the King But it is abolished by Statute 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. L. Laches LAches or Lasches is an old French word signifying Slacknesse or Negligence as it appears in Lit. sect 403. 726. where Laches of Entry is nothing else but a Neglect in the Infant to enter So that I think it may be an old English word And when we say There is Laches of Entry it is as much as to say There L ● ok is of Entry or there is Lack of Entry Yet I find that Lascher in French is to Loyter and Lasche signifies one that is idle or lazy and therefore it may also come from the French For Etymoligies are divers and many times ad placitum Lagan LAgan is such a parcel of Goods as the Mariners in a danger of Shipwreck cast out of the Ship and because they know they are heavy and will sink they fasten to them a Boigh or Cork that so they may find them and have them again If the ship be drowned or otherwise perish these Goods are called Lagan or Ligan a ligando and so long as they continue upon the Sea they belong to the Admiral but if they are cast upon the Land they are then called a Wreck and belong to him that hath the Wreck as it appears in Coke l. 5. f. 106. Lageman LAgeman est Homo Legalis seu legitimus such as we call Good men of the Jury The word is found in Dooms-day-Book Land-cheap LAnd-cheap is a payment of 10 d. in the Purchase-mony for every Mark thereof for all the Lands within the Borough of Maldon in Essex by prescription which see H. 25 26. Car. 2. Roll 706. in B. R. Lapse LApse Lapsus is the Omission of a Patron to present to a Church of his Patronage within six months after an Avoidance by death or taking of another Benefice without qualification or notice to him given of the Resignation or Deprivation of the present Incumbent by which neglect Title is given to the Ordinary to collate to the said Church Larcenie LArceny is a wrongful taking away another mans Goods but not from his person with a mind to steal them And Theft is in two sorts the one so called simply and the other Petit or Little Theft The first is where the thing stolen exceeds the value of 12 d. and this is Felony The other called Little or Petit Theft is where the thing stolen doth not exceed the value of 12 d. and that is not Felony Last LAst signifies a certain Wright or Burthen as a Last of Herring is ten thousand Anno 31 E. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 2. a Last of Hides is twelve dozen Anno 1 Jae c. 33. Lastage LAstage is to be quit of a certain Custom exacted in Fairs and Markets for carrying of things where a Man will Latitat LAtitat is a Writ by which all Men in Personal Actions are originally called in the Kings Bench to answer And it is called Latitat because it is supposed by the Writ that the Defendant cannot be found in the County of Middlesex as it appears by the Return of the Sheriff of that County but that he lurks in another County and therefore to the Sheriff of that County is this Writ directed to apprehend him Law LAw See Ley. Law-day LAw-day signifies a Leet or Sheriffs Tourn as it appears by the Statute of 1 E. 4. c. 2. where the Sheriffs Tourn is so called and 9 H. 7. f. 21. b. and many other Books where a Leet is so called See Smiths Commonwealth l. 2. c. 21. Lawing of Dogs LAwing of Dogs See Expeditate Lawless man LAwless man is the who is extra Legem an Outlaw Bract. l. 3. tract 2. c. 11. num 1. Leases LEases are Grants or Demises by one that hath any Estate in any Hereditaments of those Hereditaments to another for the lesser time And they are in divers manners viz. for term of Life for Years for anothers Life and at Will Also a Lease of Land is as good without Deed as with Deed. But in a Lease for term of Life it behoves to give Livery and Seisin upon the Land or else nothing shall pass by the Grant because they are called Free-holds Also a Lease of a Common or Rent may not be good without Deed. But of a Parsonage that hath Glebe it is good without Deed for that the Glebe of the Church which is the principal may well enough pass without Deed and so the Dismes and Offerings which are as accessary to the Church But Dismes and Offerings by themselves may not be let without Deed as it is said Leet LEet is a Court derived out of the Sheriffs Tourne and inquires of all Offences under the degree of High Treason that are committed against the Crown and Dignity of the King But those Offences which are to be punished with loss of life or member are only inquirable there and to be certified over to the Iustices of Assise See Stat. 1. E. 3. c. 16. Legacy LEgacy Legatum is a term of the Civil Law and it is that which we in our Law call a Devise viz. Lands or Goods given unto any man by the Will or Testament of another See more Tit. Devise before Lessor and Lessee LEssor is he that leases Lands or Tenements to another for term of life years or at will And he to whom the Lease is made is called Lessee Levant and Couchant LEvant and Couchant is said when the Beasts or Cattel of a Stranger are come into another mans Ground and there have remained a certain good space of time Levari facias LEvari facias is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the Levying of a sum of mony upon the Lands Tenements and Chattels of him that hath forfeited a Recognizance See F. N. B. fol. 265. D. Law LAw is when an Action of Debt is brought against one upon some secret agreement or Contract had between the parties without especialty shewed or other matter of Records as in an Action of Detinue for some Goods or Chattels lent or left with the Defendant then the Defendant may wage his Law if he will that is swear upon a Book and certain persons with him that he detains not the Goods or ows nothing to the Plaintiff in manner and form as he hath declared And it is allowed only in cases of Secrecy where the Plaintiff cannot prove the surmise of his Suit by any Deed or Open act for the Defendant might discharge it privily between them without any Acquittance or Publick act And therefore in an Action of Debt upon a Lease for years or upon Arrearages of accompt before Auditors assigned a man shall not wage his Law But when one shall wage his Law he
shall bring with him vj viij or xij of his Neighbors as the Court shall assign him to swear with him much like the Oath which they make who are used in the Civil Law to purge others of any crime laid against them who are called Compurgators Note that the Offer to make the Oath is called Wager of Law and when it is accomplished then it is called the Doing of your Law And if the Sheriff in any Action return that he hath summoned the Defendant to appear in Court at any day to answer the Plaintiff at which day he makes Default Process shall be awarded against him to come and save or excuse his Default which is as much to say as to excuse the Delay or otherwise to lose the thing demanded And the Defendant comes and swears he was not summoned which is called waging of Law then he ought to do it at the day assigned with xij others And in doing of his Law he ought upon his Oath to affirm directly the contrary of that which is imputed to him But the others shall onely say They think he saith the truth Libel LIbel Libellus is a term of the Civil Law signifying the Original Declaration in any Action and so it is used in the Statutes of 2 H. 3. cap. 3. and 2 E. 6. cap. 13. And an infamous Libel signifies properly in our Law a Scandalous report of any man unlawfully published in writing of which see Cok. lib. 5. fol. 125. a. Liberate LIberate is a Warrant issuing out of the Chancery to the Treasurer Chamberlains and Barons of the Exchequer or Clerk of the Hamper c. for the payment of any yearly Pension or other Sum granted under the Great Seal Regist orig 193. Sometimes to the Sheriffs c. Fitzh N. B. fol. 132. for the delivery of Lands or Goods taken upon Forfeiture of a Recognizance F. N. B. 131 132. Cok. lib. 4. Fulwoods Case fol. 64 66 67. Also to a Gaoler from the Justices for the delivery of a Prisoner that hath put in Bail for his Appearance There is also another Writ made out of the Petry-bag Office in Chancery upon a Statute Staple after an Extent thereupon retorned by which the Sheriff retorns he has delivered the Land extended to the Cognizee which being filed he may then not before bring his Action of Ejectment to recover possession of the Lands extended Libertate probanda LIbertate probanda Look for that in the Title Nativo habendo Librata Terrae LIbrata Terrae contains four Ox-gangs and every Oxgang 13 Acres of Land Skene de verb. signif verbo bovata Terrae Lien LIen is a word of two significations Personal lien and come being Covenant or Contract And real lien as Judgment Statute Recognizance or an Original against an Heir which oblige and affect the Land Ligeance LIgeance is a true and faithful Obedience of the Subject due to his Soveraign and this Ligeance which is an incident inseparable to every Subject is in four manners the first is natural the second acquired the third local and the fourth legal Of all which you may read much excellent Learning in Cok. lib. 7. Calvins Case Limitation LImitation is an Assignment of a space or time within which he that will sue for any Lands or Hereditaments ought to prove that he or his Ancestor was seised of the thing demanded or otherwise he shall not maintain his Suit or Action which Assignments are made by divers Statutes As the Statute of Merton cap. 8. Westm 1. cap. 38. 32 Hen. 8. cap. 2. c. Livery of Seisin LIvery of Seisin is a Ceremony used in Conveyance of Lands and Tenements where an Estate in Fee-simple Fee-tail or a Free-hold shall pass And it is a Testimonial of the willing departing of him who makes the Livery from the thing whereof Livery is made And the receiving of the Livery is a willing Acceptance by the other party of all that whereof the other hath devested himself And it was invented as an open and notorious thing by means whereof the common People might have knowledge of the Passing or Alteration of Estates from man to man that thereby they might be the better able to try in whom the right and possession of Lands and Tenements were if they should be impanelled in Juries or otherwise have to do concerning the same The common manner of Delivery of Seisin is thus If it be in the open Field where is no Building or House then one that can read takes the Writing in his hand if the Estate pass by Deed and declares to the standers by the cause of their meeting there together c. and then openly reads the Deed or declares the effect thereof and after that is sealed the party who is to depart from the Ground takes the Deed in his hands with a Clod of the earth and a Twig or Bough if any be there which he delivers to the other party in the name of Possession or Seisin according to the form and effect of the Deed there read or declared But if there be a Dwelling-house or Building upon the Land then this is done at the Door of the same none being left at that time within the House and the party delivers all aforesaid with the Ring of the Door in the name of Seisin or Possession and he that receives the Livery enters in first alone and shuts the door and presently opens it again and lets them in c. If it be a House whereto is no Land or Ground the Livery is made and Possession taken by the delivery of the Ring of the Door and Deed only And where it is without Deed either of Lands or Tenements there the party declares by word of mouth before witness the Estate that he means to depart with and then delivers Seisin or Possession in manner aforesaid And so the Land or Tenement doth pass as well as by Deed and that by force of the Livery of Seisin It was agreed in Gray's Inne by Master Snagge at his Reading there in Summer Anno 1574. That if a Feoffor deliver the Deed in view of the Land in name of Seisin that is good because he hath a Possession in himself But otherwise it is of an Attorney for he must go to the Land and take Possession himself before he can give Possession to another according to the words of his Warrant c. And where Livery of Seisin is by View if the Feoffee do not enter after c. nothi ● g passes for he ought to enter in Deed. Lollards LOllards were Dogmatists in Religion in the times of E. 3. and H. 5. and in those times were reputed Hereticks as appears by the Statutes in 5. R. 2. cap. 5. and 2 H. 5. cap. 7. Which Statutes you shall find repealed in 1 E. 6. cap. 12. and 1 El. cap. 1. They had their name as some think from one Gualter Lolhard a German who lived about the year 1315. and was the first Author
happen in their Circuit which without this Commission they could not do See Fitzh N. B. fol. 110. b. P. Paine fort dure PAine fort dure is an especial Punishment for such as being arraigned for Felony refuse to put themselves upon the common Trial of God and the Country and thereby are Mute or as Mute in Law See this at large in Stamford Pl. Cor. fol. 150. Palace Court PAlace-Court is a Court of Record erect by King James by his Letters Patents and held at Southwark and is a Court of Common Law See Marshalsea Pannage PAnnage See Paunage Pannel PAnnel comes of the French word Panne that is a Skin signifies in our Common Law a Schedule or Roll containing the names of the Iurors which the Sheriff hath returned to pass upon any Trial. And therefore the Empannelling of the Iury is nothing but the entring of their Names into the Sheriffs Roll. Pape or Pope PApe Papa is a name that signifies Father and anciently was applyed to other Clergy-men in the Greek Church but by usage is particularly appropriated in the Latine Church to the Bishop of Rome a name very frequent in our ancient Year-Books especially in the times of those Kings who too much abandoning their Imperial Authority and abasing themselves beneath their estate suffered an Alien an Outhlandish Bishop that dwelt 1000 miles off to take from them the disposition of many Spiritual preferments sometimes by Lapse sometimes by Provision or otherwise For redress whereof divers Statutes were made while the Kingdom was of the Roman Communion but his whole Poer was not taken away till towards the latter end of Henry the Eighths Reign Paramount PAramount is compounded of two French words par and monter and it signifies in our Law the Highest Lord of the Fee For the better understanding of this see F. N. B. f. 135. M. in his Writ of Mesne Paraphernalia PAraphernalia in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 praeter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dos They are Goods which a Wife challengeth above her Dower 1 Cro. Lord Hastings against Douglas Paravaile PAravaile is also compounded of two French words par and availer and signifies in our Law the lowest Tenant of the Fee who is Tenant to one that helds over of another See for the use of this word F. N. B. in his Writ of Mesne f. 135. M. Parceners PArceners are according to the course of the Common Law and according to Custom Parceners according to the Common Law are where one seised of an Estate of Inheritance of Tenements hath no Issue but Daughters and dies and the Tenements descend to the Daughters then they are called Parceners and are but as one Heir The same Law is if he have not any Issue and that his Sisters should be his Heirs But if a Man hath but one Daughter she is not called Parcener but the Daughter and Heir And if there are no Daughters nor Sisters the Land shall discend to the Aunts and they are called Parceners When Lands discend to divers Parceners they may make Partition between themselves by Agreement but if any of them will not make Partition then the others shall have a Writ de Partitione facienda directed to the Sheriff who shall make Partition between them by the Oath of xij lawful men of the Bailywick Also Partition by Agreement may be made by the Law as well by Word without Deed as by Deed. And if they are of full age the Partition shall remain for ever and shall never be defeated But if the Lands be to them in tail though they are concluded during their lives yet the Issue of him who hath the lesser part in value may disagree from the Partition and enter and occupy in common with the other part And if the Husbands of the Parceners make Partition when the Husband dies the Wife may disagree from the Partition Also if the Parcener who is within Age makes Partition when she comes to full age she may disagree But she must take good heed when she comes to her full Age that she take not all the Profits to her own use of the Lands which were to her allotted for then she agrees to the Partition and the age shall alway be intended the age of one and twenty years If there be divers Parceners that have made Partition between them and one of their parts is recovered by lawful Title then she shall compel the other to make a new Partition Parceners according to Custom are where a man is seised of Lands in Gavelkind as in Kent and other places franchised and hath issue divers Sons and dies then the Sons are Parceners by Custom Parco fracto PArco fracto is a Writ that lies against him that breaks any Pound and takes out the Beasts which are there lawfully impounded See of this F. N. B. 100. E. Park PArk is a place in which by Prescription or by the Kings Grant a Subject preservs his Game of Beasts ferae naturae See Stat. W. 1. 3 E. 1. cap. 20. Parliament PArliament See the Lord Cook 's 4th Institutes and Mr. Cowels Interpreter Title Parliament Parson imparsonee PArson imparsonee is he that is in possession of a Church appropriate or presentative for so it is used in both cases in Dyer f. 40. b. and f. 221. b. Parties PArties to a Fine or Deed are those which are named in a Deed or Fine as Parties to it as those that levy the Fine and they to whom the Fine is levied And they that make a Deed of Feoffment and they to whom it is made are called Parties to the Deed and so in many other like cases Note that if an Iudenture be made between two as Parties thereto in the beginning and in the Deed one of them grants or lets a thing to another who is not named in the beginning he is not Party to the Deed nor shall take any thing thereby Partition PArtition is a Dividing of Lands descended by the Common Law or by Custome among Co-heirs or Parceners where there are two at least whether they be Sons Daughters Sisters Aunts or otherwise of kin to the Ancestor from whom the Land descended to them And this Partition is made four ways for the most part whereof three are at pleasure and by Agreement among them the fourth is by Compulsion One Partition by Agreement is when they themselves divide the Land equally into so many parts as there are of them Coparceners and each to chuse one share or part the Eldest first and so the one after the other as they be of age except that the eldest by consent made the Partition then the choice belongs to the next and so the eldest last according as it is said Who makes the Partition the other must have the Choice Another Partition by Agreement is when they chuse certain of their Friends to make Division for them The third Partition by Agreement is by drawing Lots thus First to divide the Land into so many
the Kings Debts Apparances and for observing of Orders also he takes all Obligations for any of the Kings Debts for Apparances and observing of Orders and makes out Process upon them for the breaking of them The Lord Treasurers Remembrancer makes out Process against all Sheriffs Escheators receivers and Bailiffs for their Accounts he makes the Process of Fieri sacias and Exteut for any Debts due to the King either in the Pipe or with the Auditors and he makes Process for all such revenue as is due to the King by reason of his Tenures The Remembrancer of the First Fruits takes all Compositions for First fruits and Tenths and makes Process against such as pay not the same Of these Officers see more in Dalton's Book of the Office and Authority of Sheriffs f. 186. Remitter REmitter is when a man hath two Titles to any Land and he comes to the Land by the tast Title yet he shall be judged in by force of his elder Title and that shall be said to him a Remitter As if Tenant in tail discontinue the Tail and after disseises his discontinuee and dies thereof seised and the Lands discend to his issue or Cousin inheritable by force of the Tail in that case he is in his Remitter that is to say seised by force of the Tail and the Title of the Discontinuee is utterly adnulled and defeated And the reason and cause of such Remitter is for that such an Heir is Tenant of the Land and there is no person Tenant against whom he may sue his Writ of Formedon to recover the Estate tail for he may not have an Action against himself Also if Tenant in tail infeoff his Son or Heir apparent who is within age and after dies that is a Remitter to the Heir but if he were full of age at the time of such Feoffment it is no Remitter because it was his folly that he being of full age would take such a Feoffment If the Husband alien Lands that he hath in right of his wife and after take an Estate again to him and to his Wife for term of their lives that is a Remitter to the Woman because this Alienation is the act of the Husband and not of the Woman for no folly may be adjudged in the Woman during the life of her Husband But if such Alienation be by Fine in Court of Record such a taking again afterward to the Husband and Wife for term of their lives shall not make the Woman to be in her Remitter for that in such a Fine the Woman shall be examined by the Iudge and such Examination in Fines shall exclude such women for ever Also when the Entry of any man is lawful and he takes an Estate to him when he is of full age if it be not by Deed indented or matter of Record which shall estop him that shall be to him a good Remitter Rents REnts are of divers kinds that is Rent-service Rent-charge and Rent-secke Rent-service is where the Tenant in Fee-simple holds his Land of his Lord by Fealty and certain Rent or by other service and rent and theu if the rent be behind the Lord may distrain but shall not have an Action of Debt for it Also if I give Land in tail to a man paying to me certain Rent that is Rent-service But in such case it behoves that the reversion be in the Donor For if a man make a Feoffment in fee or a Gift in tail the remainder over in Fee without Deed reserving to him a certain rent such reservation is void and that is by the Statute Quia emprores terrarum and then he shall hold of the Lord of whom his Donour held But if a man by Deed indented at this day make such Gift in tail the remainder over in fee or lease for term of life the remainder over or a Feoffment and by the same Indenture reserve to him rent and that if the rent be behind it shall be lawful for him to distrain that is Rent-chage But in such case if there be no clause of Distress in the Deed then such a rent is called Rent-seck for which he shall never distrain but if he were once seised he shall have Assise and if he were not seised he is without remedy And if one grant a rent going out of his Land with clause of Distress that is a Rēt-charge and if the rent be behind the Grantee may chuse to distrain or sue a Writ of Annuity but he cannot have both for if he bring a Writ of Annuity then the Land is discharged And if he destrain and avow the taking in Court of Record then the Land is charged and the person of the Grantor discharged Also if one grant a Rent charge and the Grantee-purchases half or any other part or parcel of the Land all the Rent is extinct But in Rent service if the Lord purchase parcel of the Land the Rent shall be apportioned If one hath a Rent charge and his Father purchase parcel of the Land and that parcel discends to the Son who hath the Rent charge then the Rent shall be apportioned according to the value of the Land as it is said of Rent-service because the Son comes to that not by his own act but by discent Also if I make a Lease for term of years reserving to me a certain Rent that is called a Rent service for which it is at my liberty to distrain or to have an Action of Debt but if the Lease be determined and the Rent behind I cannot distrain but shall be put to my Action of Debt And note well that if the Lord be seised of the Service and Rent aforesaid and they be behind and he distrain and the Tenant rescues the Distress he may have Assise or a Writ of Rescous but it is not more necessary for him to have Assise then a Writ of Rescous for that by Assise he shall recover his Rent and his Dammages but by a Writ of Rescous he shall recover only Dammages and the thing distrained shall be reprised If the Lord be not seised of the Rent and Service and they be behind and he distrain for them and the Tenant take again the Distress he shall not have Assise but a Writ of Rescous and the Lord shall not need to shew his right If the Lord cannot find a Distress in two years he shall have against the Tenant a Writ of Cessavit per biennium as it appears by the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 21. And if the Tenant die in the mean time and his Issue enter the Lord shall have against the Issue a Writ of Entry upon Cessavit or if the Tenant alien the Lord shall have against the Alienee the foresaid Writ But if the Lord have Issue and die and the Tenant be in arrearages of the said Rent and Service in the time of the Father and not in the time of the Issue he may not distrain for the Arrearages in the time of
ustome of the Mannor and the Monstraverunt to discharge them when their Lord distrains them to do other Services than they ought This Writ of Monstraverunt ought to be brought against their Lord and these Tenants hold all by one certain Service and are free Tenants of Ancient Demesne Soccage in base Tenure is where a man holds in Ancient Demesne that may not have the Monstraverunt and for that it is called the base Tenure Sockmans SOckmans are the Tenants in Ancient Demesne that held their Lands by Soccage that is by Service with the Plow and therefore they are called Sockmans which is as much to say as Tenants or men that hold by Service of the Plow or Plow-men For Sok signifies a Plow And these Sockmans or Tenants in Ancient Demesne have many and divers Liberties given and granted them by the Law as well those Tenants that hold of a common person as those that hold of the King in Ancient Demesne as namely to be free from paying Toll in every Market Fair Town and City throughout the whole Realm as well for their Goods and Chartels that they sell to others as for those things that they buy for their Provision And thereupon every of them may sue to have Letters Patents under the Kings Seal directed to his Officers and to the Mayors Bayitffs and other Officers in the Realm to suffer them to be Toll-free to be exempt from Leets and Sheriffs Turns also to be quit of Pontage Murage and Passage as also of Taxes and Tallages granted by Parliament except that the King tax ancient Demesne as he may at his pleasure for some great cause to be free from payments toward the expences of the Knights of the Shire that come to the Parliament And if the Sheriff will distrain them or any of them to be contributary for their Lands in Ancient Demesne then one of them or all as the case requires may sue a Writ directed to the Sheriff commanding him that he do not compel them to be contributary to the expences of the Knights And the same Writ doth command him also that if he have already distrained them therefore that he redeliver the same Distress Also that they ought not to be impannelled nor put in Iuries and Enquests in the Country out of their Mannor or Lordship of Ancient Demesne for the Lands that they held there except that they have other Lands at the Common Law for which they ought to be charged And if the Sheriff do return in Pannels then they may have a Writ directed to him De non ponendis in Assisis Juratis And if he do the contrary there lies an Attachment against him And so it is also if the Bailiffs of Franchises that have return of Writs will return any of the Tenants which hold in Ancient Demesue in Assises or Iuries Sodomy SOdomy in the Indictment for this offence it is said Rem veneream habuit peccatum illud Sodomiticum inter Christianos non nominandum felonice commisit Spoliation SPoliation is a Suit for the Fruits of a Church or for the Church it self it is to be sued in the Spiritual Court and not in the Temporal And this Suit lies for one Incumbent against another where they both claim by one Patron and where the right of the Patronage doth not come in question or debate As if a Parson be created a Bishop and hath dispensation to keep his Benefice and afterward the Patron presents another Incumbent which is instituted and inducted now the Bishop may have against that Incumbent a Spoliation in the Spiritual Court because they claim both by one Patron and the right of the Patronage doth not come in debate and because the other Incumbent came to the possession of the Benefice by the course of the Spiritual Law that is to say by Institution and Induction so that he hath c ● lour to have it and to be Parson by the Spiritual Law for otherwise if he be not instituted and inducted c. Spoliation lies not against him but rather a Writ of Trespass or an Assise of Novel disseisin c. So it is also where a Parson who hath a Plurality doth accept another Benefice by reason whereof the Patron presents another Clerk who is instituted and inducted now the one of them may have Spoliation against the other and then shall come in debate whether he has a sufficiene Plurality or not And so it is of Deprivation c. The same law is where one saith to the Patron that his Clerk is dead whereupon he presents another there the first Incumbent who was supposed to be dead may have a Spoliation against the other And so it is in divers other like cases whereof see Fitz. Natura Br. f. 36. G. c. Stablestand STablestand is a term of the Forrest Laws when one is sound standing in the Forrest with his Bow bent ready to shoot at any Deer or with his Grey-hounds in a Lease ready to slip See Manw. Forest Laws cap. 18. fol. 133. b. Stallage STallage signifies money paid for pitching Stalls in Fairs or Markets or the right of doing it Standard STandard See Estandard Stannary STannary are Courts by ancient custom held in Cornwal for suits concerning the Trade of Tin Statute-Merchant TO hold by Statute-Merchant is where a man acknowledges to pay mony to another at a certain day before the Mayor Bailif or other Warden of any Town that hath power to make execution of the same Statute and if the Obligor pay not the Debt at the day and nothing of his Goods Lands or Tenements may be found within the Ward of the Mayor or Warden aforesaid but in other places without then the Recognisee shall sue the Recognisance and Obligation with a Certification to the Chancery under the Kings Seal and he shall have out of the Chancery a Capias to the Sheriff of the County where he is to take him and to put him in prison if he be not a Clerk till he have made satisfaction for the Debt And one quarter of a year after he is taken he shall have his Land delivered to himself to make gree to the party for the Debt and he may sell his Land while he is in prison and his sale shall be good And if he do not make satisfaction within a quarter of a year or if it be returned that he is not found and if he be not a Clerk then the Recognisee may have a Writ out of the Chancery called Extendi facias directed to any Sheriff to extend his Lands and Goods and to deliver the Goods to him and to scise him in his Lands to hold them to him his Heirs and Assigns till the Debt be levied or payed and for that tune he is Tenant by Statute-Merchant Note that in a Statute-Merchant the Recognisee shall have Execution of all the Lands which the Recognisor had the day of the Recognisance made and any time after by force of the
woman at such a place within such a Diocess and that she is dead and that he hath married another woman within the same Diocess or within some other Diocess and so is Bigamus Or if he have been but once married then to say that she whom he hath married is or was a Widow that is the Relict of such a one c. which shall be tried by the Bishop of the Diocess where the Marriages are alledged And being so certified by the Bishop the prisoner shall lose the Benefit of the Clergy But at this day by force of the Act made 1 E. 6. ca. 12. this is no Plea but he may have his Clergy notwithstanding So is Brook titulo Clergie Placito 20. to the same purpose By-laws BY-laws are Orders made in Court-Leets or Court-Barons by a common consent for the good of them that are the makers of them And they are called By-laws quasi Birlaws or Bawrlaws of the Dutch word Bawr that is a Countrey-man and so Bawrlaws or By-laws is as much as the Laws of Country-men Bilinguis BIlinguis in general is a man with a double tongue but is commonly used for that Iury which passes between an English man and an Alien whereof part ought to be Englishmen and part Strangers And for this cause it is enacted by the Statute of 28 E. 3. cap. 13. That if any variance chance to be about the packing of Wooll before the Mayor of the Staple between the Merchants or Ministers of the same thereupon to try the truth thereof Enquest shall be taken and if the one party and the other be Denizons it shall be tried by Denizons or if the one party be Denison and the other Alien the half of the Enquest or of the proof shall be Denizons and the other half Aliens Bill BILL is all one with an Obligation saving that when it is in English it is commonly called a Bill in Latin an Obligation Also a Declaration in writing that expresses either the grievance and wrong which the Complainant has suffered by the party complained of or else some fault by him committed against some Law or Statute of the Realm By a Bill we now ordinarily understand a single Bond without a Condition by an Obligation a Bond with a Penalty and Condition West part 2. Symbol tit Supplications sect 52. Billa vera BIlla vera is the Indorsement of the grand Inquest upon any Presentment or Indictment which they find to be probably true Blackmail BLackmail is a word used in the Statute of 43 Eliz. c. 13. and signifies a certainty of Money Corn Cattel or other consideration given by the poor people in the North of England to men of great name and alliance in those parts to be by them protected from such as usually rob and steal there Black rod. BLack Rod is the Huissier belonging to the most Noble Order of the Garter so called of the Black rod he carries in his hand He is also Huissier of the Lords house in Parliament Bloodwit BLoodwit is to be quit of Amerciaments for Blood-shedding and what Pleas are holden in your Court you shall have the Amerciaments thereof coming because Wit in English is Misericordia in Latin Bloody hand BLoody hand is the apprehension of a Trespasser in the Forest against Venison with his hands or other part bloody though he be not found chasing or hunting Of which see Manwood part 2. c. 18. Bockland BOckland in the Saxons time was that we at this day cail Free-hold Land or Land held by Charter and it was by that name distinguished from Folkland which was Copy-hold Land Bona notabilia BOna notabilia is where a man dies having goods to the value of five pound in divers Diocesses then the Archbishop ought to grant Administration and if any inferior Bishop do grant it it is void 37 H. 6. 27. 28 10 H. 7. 18. Dyer 305. Bordlands BOrdlands signifie the Demesns which Lords keep in their own hand ● for he maintenance of their Bord or Table Bracton l. 4. Tract 3. c. 9. num 5. Borow BOrow which with us signifies an ancient Town as appears by Littleton sect 164. is a word derived either of the French Burg id est Pagus or of the Saxon Borhoe id est ● ignus for that anciently the Neighbours of a Town became Pledges one for another and from thence comes Headborow for the chief Pledge or Borhoe-Aldere with us now called the Borow-holder or Bursholder Borow English BOrow English is a customary Descent of Lands or Tenements in some places whereby they come to the youngest son or if the owner have no issue to his youngest brother as in Edmunton Kitchin fol. 102. Borowhead BOrohead See Head-borow Bote. BOte is an old word signifying Help Succor Aid or Advantage and is commonly joyned with another word whose signification is doth augment as these Bridgebote Burgbote Firebote Hedgebote Plowbote divers other for whose significations look in their proper Titles Bottomry vulgo Bomry IS when a Master of a Ship in case of necessity doth engage his Ship for money for use of the Ship Bribor BRibor Fr. Bribeur i. Mendicus seems to signifie one that pilfers other mans goods Anno 28 E. 2. Stat. 1. Brief BRief Breve signifies most properly in our Law the Process that issues out of the Chancery or other Court commanding the Sheriff to summon or attach A. to answer to the Suit of B. c. But more largely it is taken for any Precept of the King in writing under Seal issuing out of any Court whereby he commands any thing to be done for the furtherance of Iustice and good order And they are therefore called Briefs because they briessy comprehend the cause of the action And some of them are Original and some judicial as you may see at large in the Register of Writs Broadhalpeny BRoadhalpeny in some Copies Broadhalfpeny that is to be quit of a certain custome exacted for setting up of Tables or Boards in Fairs or Markets and those that were freed by the Kings Charter of this Custome had this word put in their Letters Patents by reason whereof at this day the Freedom it self for brevity of speech is called Broadhalfpeny Broker BRoker seems to come of the French word Broieur id est Tritor he that grinds or breaks a thing into small pieces And the true trade of a Broker as it appears in the Statute made 1 Jac. c. 21. is to beat contrive make and conclude Bargains between Merchants and Tradesmen But the word is now also appropriated to those that buy and sell old and broken apparel and Houshold-stuff Brugbote BRugbote and in some copies Bridgebote is to be quit of giving aid to the repair of Bridges Bull. BULL is an Instrument so called granted by the Bishop of Rome and sealed with a Seal of Lead containing in it his Decrees Commandments or other Acts according to the nature of the thing for which it is granted And these
Instruments have been heretofore used and of force in this Land but by the Statute of 28 H. 8. c. 16. it was e ● acted That all Bulls Breves Faculties and Dispensations of whatsoever name or nature that it was had or obtained from the B. of Rome should be altogether void and of no effect See Rastal 328. C. D. Bullion BUllion comes from the French word Billon which is the place where Gold is tryed And so Bullion is taken in the Statutes made in 27. E. 3. Stat 2. c. 14. and in 4 H 4. Stat. 1. c. 10. for the place whither Gold or Silver is brought to be tryed or exchanged But Bullion is also taken in the Stat. 9 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 2. for Gold or Silver in the Mass or Billet Burbreach BUrbreach is to be quit of Trespasses done in City or Borough against the Peace Burgage TO hold in Burgage is to hold as the Burgagers hold of the King or of another Lord lands or tenements yielding him a certain Rent yearly or else where another man then Burgers holds of any Lord Lands or Tenements in Burgage yielding him a certain Rent Burghbote BUrghbote is to be quit of giving aid to make a Burrough Castle City or Walls thrown down Burgh English BUrgh English or Borough English is a Custome in some ancient Borough that if a man hath issue divers sons and dies yet the youngest son only shall inherit and have all the Lands and Tenements that were his fathers whereof he died seised within the same Borough by descent as Heir to his Father by force of the Custome of the same Borough This Tenure is also of Copyhold Estates by Custome of divers Mannors Burglary BUrglary is when one breaks and enters into the House of another in the night with felonious intent to rob or kill or to do some other Felony in which cases although he carry away nothing yet it is Felony for which he shall suffer death Otherwise it is if it be in the day-time or that he break the House in the night and enter no therein at that time But if a Servant conspire with other men to rob his Master and to that intent opens his Masters doors and windows in the night for them and they come into the house by that way this is Burglary in the Strangers and the Servant is a Thief but no Burglar And this was the opinion of Sir Roger Manwood Knight Lord chief Baron of the Cxchequer at the quarter Sessions holden at Canterbury in Jannary 1579. 21 Eliz. Buttlerage IS an old Duty to the Kings of this Realm for Wine imported by Aliens Moor Rep. 833. C Cablish CAblish among the Writers of the Forest Laws signifies Brushwood Manwood pag. 84. Cromp. Jur. fol. 165. Cantred CAntred is as much in Wales as an Hundred in England for Cantre in the British tongue signifies Centum The word is used An. 28. H. 8. c. 3. Capacity CApacity is when a man or Body politick or corporate is able to give or take Lands or other things or sue Actions As an Alien born hath sufficient Capacity to sue in any personal Action but in a real Action it is a good Plea to say he is an Alien born and pray if he shall be answered Dyer f. 3. pla 8. If a man enfeoff an Alien and another man to the use of themselves or c. it seems that the King shall have the moiety of the Land for ever by reason of the Incapacity of the Alien Dyer f. 283. pla 31. By the Common Law no man hath Capacity to take Tythes but Spiritual persons and the King who is a person mixt but a Lay-man who is not capable of taking Tithes was yet capable of discharge of Tithes in the Common Law in his own land as well as a Spiritual man See Coke l. 2. f. 44. Cape CApe is a Writ judicial touching Plea of Lands or Tenements so called as the most part of Writs are of that word which in it self carries the especiallest intention or end thereof And this Writ is divided into Grand Cape and Petit Cape both which take hold of things immovable and seem to differ in these Points First because Grand Cape lies before Apparance and Petit Cape after Secondly by the Grand Cape the Tenant is summoned to answer to the default and over to the Demandant Petit Cape summons the Tenant to answer to the default only and therefore it is called Petit Cape in the Old N. B. 161 162. Yet Ingham saith that it is not called Petit Cape because it is of small force but because it is a little Writ in words This Writ seems to contain in it a Process with the Civilians called Missio in possessionem ex primo secundo Decreto For as the first Decree seises the thing and the second gives it from him that made the second default in his Appearance so this Capias seises the Land and also assigns over to the party a day of Appearance at which if he comes not in the Land is forfeited Yet there is difference between these two courses of the Common and Civil Law for this Missio in possessionem extends to touch as well Goods movable as immovable where a Cape extends only to the immovable Secondly in this That the party being satisfied of his demand the residue is restored to him that defaulted but by the Cape all is seised without restitution Thirdly That is to the use of the party agent the Cape is to the use of the King See Bract. l. 5. tract 3. c. 1. num 4 5 6 Regist Judic fol. 2. a. Cape ad Valentiam CApe ad Valentiam is a Writ or Execution and is thus defined in the Old Nat. Brev. fo 161. 162. This writ lies where the Tenant is impleaded of certain Lands and he vouches to Warranty another against whom the Summons ad warrantizan ● hath been awarded and the Vouchee comes not in at the day given then if the Demandant recover against the Tenant he shall have this Writ against the Vouchee and shall recover so much in value of the Vouchees land if he have so much and if he hath not so much then the Tenant shall have Execution by this Writ of such Lands and Tenements as descend to him in Fee-simple or if he purchase afterwards the Tenant shall have against him a Resummons and if he can say nothing he shall recover the value And know that this Writ lies before Apparance Of these and their divers uses see the Table of the Reg. jud the word Cape Capias CApias is of two sorts The one before Iudgment called Capias ad respondendum in an action personal if the Sheriff return upon the first Writ Nihil habet in Balliva nostra And the other is a Writ of Execution after Iudgment which also is of divers natures which see in the Title Process Capite CApite is a Tenure that holds immediately of the King as of his Crown