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A87798 Jurisdictions or, The lawful authority of courts leet, courts baron, court of marshallseys, court of pypowder, and ancient demesne : together with the most necessary learning of tenures, and all their incidents, of essoynes, imparlance, view; of all manner of pleadings, of contracts, of the nature of all sorts of actions, of maintenance; of diverse other things, very profitable for all students of innes of court and chancery : and a most perfect directory for all stewards of any the sayd courts. / Heretofore writ in French by the methodically learned, John Kitchin of Grays-Inne, Esq; and now most exactly rendred to more ample advantage in the English tongue; with a demonstrative table, pointing out all matter of consequence, throughout the whole work. Whereunto is added the authentick formes of all manner of writs, with their severall returnes in English, very usefull for all men in this Common-wealth, as they be now used.; Court leete et court baron. English Kitchin, John. 1651 (1651) Wing K656; Thomason E1225_1; ESTC R211060 481,896 637

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Writ to me directed I have extended and apprized all the Lands and Tenements Goods and Chattels of the aforesaid A. in my said Bailiwick which truly Extent is to this Writ annexed and also all the Lands and Tenements aforesaid in the same Extent specified together with his reasonable Damages and Costs I have levied according to the form of the Statute thereof inacted and provided and according to the form of this Writ By vertue c. To give Seisin I have taken the Goods and Chattels of J. M. within mentioned to the value of all the Money within written and have set them to sale and because I have not yet found Buyers therefore the Money within c. I cannot have at the Day and Place within contained as c. By vertue c I certifie the Justices within written To deliver Seisin that such a Day and Year within written I have caused A. B. to have full Possession of one House with the Appurtenances in S. within written in all as this Writ c. By vertue c. such a Day and Year within specified Otherwise I caused the within named A. B. to have and to be assigned full Seisin of a Mannour and Tenement within specified in a convenient place that is to say of the Mannour of F. twenty Acres of Land a hundred Acres of Meadow c. with the Appurtenances in F. c. in the County within written according to the forme and effect c. By vertue View c. I have made R. G. to have the view of one House with the Appurtenances in C. and I have told R. S. and J. D. T. M. and H. R. four Knights of those which were present at the view that they should be before the Justices within written at the Day and Place therein contained to testifie that view as that Writ in it commandeth and requireth By vertue c. I certifie the Justices within written that none of the part of R. S. came to shew me the view of a House and Meadows with their Appurtenances within written therefore touching the Execution of that Writ nothing is done by me for this present By vertue To have the view c. I certifie the iustices within written at the Day and place within contained that such a Day and year I caused the within written J.F. and M. his VVife to have the view of the House c. within specified with the appurtenances and I told A.B.C.D.E.F.G.H. four Knights of my County which were present at the view that they should be before the Iustices aforesaid at the Day and Place therein contained to testifie that view as within I am commanded By vertue Otherwise c. of our Lady the Queens to this scedule annexed I have caused I.G. in the said VVrit nominated to have the view of sixty Acres of Pasture with the appurtenances in G. which H.F. in the Courrt of our Lady the Queen before her Iustices at Westminster claims as his Right and inheritance against the aforesaid I G. by a writ of the Queens in Form of Gift in Discender and I said to four Knights which were present at the view that they should be before the Iustices of oursaid Lady the Queen at Westminster at the Day in the said VVrit specified to testifie that view as in the said VVrit I am commanded None came to me of the part of the within named R. F. Otherwise to shew me the view of a Pasture within specified for which cause I could not make the view of that Pasture within written to R.F. to have The execution of this writ doth appear in a certain inquisition to this writ annexed Inquisition indented Inquisition taken at G. which is a place wasted in the County of D. such a day and year before W. L. the Sheriffe aforesaid by vertue of a Writ of our Lady the Queens to the same Sheriffe thence directed by the Oath of twelve men sworn which say upon their Oath that R.M. in the said Writ nominated made Wast and destruction in a Wood in which in the Writ aforesaid there is mention and in the Wood aforesaid cut twenty Oaks price every one twenty pence part whereof he sold and part carried away to the disinheriting of VV.F. within written and against the Form of provision in the said VVrit specified and say upon their Oath that the aforesaid R. hath made no more VVast in the VVood aforesaid as to them any way can appear in witnesse of which thing c. By vertue c. I came to a place wasted Otherwise in the VVrit contained as within I am commanded and the residue of the execution of this VVrit doth appear in a certain inquisition to this VVrit annexed An inquisition indented Inquisition taken at F. in the County of VV. such a day and year before VV. K. Esquire Sheriffe of the aforesaid by vertue of a certain VVrit of our Lady the Queens to him directed and to this inqusition annexed by the Oath of A. B c. to the number of twelve which say upon their Oath that I.B. in the aforesaid VVrit nominated made waste sale and destruction in Tenements Lands and woods in the aforesaid VVrit specified that is to say in suffering a Hall c. in the writ specified to be uncovered by which the great timber of the same House by tempests of Rain falling upon them became rotten c. By vertue of this writ to me directed I have made to come before the Justices within written at the day and place therein contained all writs Ass of Iurors and Certificates in the County of VV. within written together with the Pannells Attachments Re-attachments Re-summons and all other Adminicles Ass of Iurors and certifie those whom they concern I have made also made come before the said Iustices at the Goale Delivery of our Lady the Queen of F. of the Prisoners therein being to be delivered assigned at F. aforesaid at the aforesaid Day all the Prisoners in the Goale aforesaid being them any way concerned and to the view of every Town and place where the Felonies of which the said person indicted apppealed or arrested were were committed as well within the Liberties as without twenty four good and lawfull men to whom the truth of the thing may be best known and inquired and who are not any way of kindred to the said Prisoners together with four men and Governors of their Town or place to do that which then and there to them on the behalf of the said Lady our Queen they are now injoyned and also I have made it to be publickly proclaimed throughout my whole Bailiwick that all they which would follow against those Prisoners that then they should be there against them as it was iust to prosecute and I did give understanding also to all the Iustices of the Peace Coroners Stewards Bailiffes of Liberties and Hundreds of the County aforesaid that then hey
his life in safety And for that that the Law is so necessary Now let us see when and how these Courts Leets and Court Barons began Fineux The beginning of these Courts Leets ordained 12. H. 7. fol. 18. saith That at the beginning all the administration of Justice was in the Crowne and where the King was there was the Law administred Then afterward for the multiplicity of the people was the Court Leet for punishment of offences and annoyances to the Common-wealth within the Precinct of that and the Articles and paines are ordained to that end and it is called The view of franke pledge for that the King there may be certified by the view of the Steward how many people are within every Leet and also to have account and view by the Steward of their good government and manners in every Leet And also the Leet was ordained to have every person of the age of twelve years which had remained there by a yeare and a day to be sworne to be faithfull and loyall to the King and also for that that the people there might be kept in peace and obedience these Courts Leets were ordained And Court-Barons were ordained to determine Injuries Court-barons ordained Trespasses Debts and other actions as afterwards it appeareth where the debt or the dammages are under forty shillings And also for that that the Lords of the Mannors and Court-Barons have given their Tenants their Lands and Tenements before the Statute of Westm the third to hold of them for that also Homagers of Court ought to inquire in this Court that their Lords shall not loose their Services Customes nor duties And also it was ordained to make their Suites there and so to shew them obedient to their Lords and that nothing be made within the Mannor to be an annoyance or hurtfull to the Inheritances of the Lords of the Mannors which should not there be inquired of and presented for the Lords of the Mannors as afterward by the Articles more plainely appeares And so now you see here breifly that the Realm cannot be governed without a King and that the King for that cause is appointed of God and that the King governe by the Law Roy Ley. and cannot governe his people without Law and also you have heard how ancient and how necessary these two Courts are for governance of the People And now for that these Courts are held within Mannors and that a Court-Baron is incident to a Mannor It is fit to know how Mannors did begin and within what Mannors Court-Barons are held and in what not Parkins fol. 127. saith That the beginning of Mannors was when the King gave a thousand Acres of Land or a greater or lesser parcel to one and his heires to hold of him and his heirs and before the St. of Quia emptores terrarum because buyers of Land one seised of Lands did infeoffe one of ten Acres another of twelve Acres and the third of twenty Acres every one of them to make service unto him and so by continuance of time out of minde c. he had a Mannor Also in the 33. yeare of H. 8. Comprize c. 31. Plow fol. 169. a. A man cannot make a Mannor at this day for notwithstanding that a gift in taile be made to diverse to hold of the giver by Services and Suit of Court though by that there be a tenure yet it cannot make a Court for that cannot be but by Prescription And if a Mannor be and all the Freeholders but one Escheate Mannors cannot be without Court Baron or if the Lord purchase them it is no Mannor and there cannot be a Court-Baron without Sutors and not with one Suitor onely 35. H. 8. Tenures 102. 23. H. 8. Court-Baron 22. Suit 17. Fitzherbert 3. C. If one hold of another as of a Signiory Ingrosse which is not a Mannor he hath no Court Baron Fitzherbert 8. b. Where a man giveth all his Land in Taile there is a Signiorie Ingrosse and he shall have no Court but if he were seised of a Mannor and give parcell of the Demesnes in taile it is otherwise 22. H. 6. Title 2. Services is parcell of a Mannor but not the Land of the Mannor unlesse it be Copihold for if a man hath a Mannor in the County of Westmerland and one holdeth Land of that Mannor which Land is in the County of DARBY hee shall demand that Mannor in the Counties of WESTMERLAND and DARBY 18. of the Booke of Assises 3. If a man seised of a Mannor doe alien foure Acres in fee this is separated and no part of the Mannor but if the Husband seised of a Mannor in right of his Wife alien foure Acres for life and afterwards grant the Reversion of that in fee to P. and afterwards P. purchase the whole Mannor to which the Husband and Wife levie a Fine Sur connusance de Droit upon acknowledgment of Right as that which he had of their gift The Fine extendeth to the foure Acres which were severed for they were parcell in reversion as of the Mannor And in the 36. H. 8.4 Two Coparceners make partition of a Mannor so that each of these have a parcell in Demesnes and a parcell in Services Now each of these hath a Mannor and each of these have two Suitors but otherwise it is if one have but one Suitor he cannot hold a Court-Baron But 12. H. 4.25 Partition is made of a Mannor that one Coparcener shall have the Demesnes and the other the Services the Suit to the Court is suspended and during that there shall be no Court-Baron held And 8. H. 3.4 and 34. H. 6.53 It is held that a Court-Baron is belonging to a Mannor of common right so that within every Mannor shall be a Court-Baron unlesse there be no Suitors there or that by partition the Suit is suspended as it is before said But note that diverse are called Mannors within which are not any that hold of these Mannors but only Copiholders at the will of the Lord according to the Custome of the Mannor and there are no Freeholders which hold by Charter and yet these Lordships are called Mannors and in these are Court-Barons 19. H. 8.17 Court-Baron is belonging to a Mannor And now though the honourable Judges of both Benches and the Honourable Lord cheife Baron and the other Judges there of Record at this day are altogether given to administer Justice to all without respect of any Persons R. 2. Maint 2. according to the Statute of the 1. of Edw. 3. Chap. 14. which is that right be made as well to poore as rich and that none send Letters in disturbance of the Common Law so that praise be to God their whole inclination to the administration of Justice may be a sufficient example to all Stewards to administer Justice and not to have regard to Letters Yet in some Court-Barons I have seen such subverting of Justice by Stewards some by
pleads Release Anno 6. without that he was guilty after the Release the Plaintiffe may say it is not his Deed without maintaining the day 10 Ed 4. fol. 2. and 21 Ed 4. fol 79. the same of Release pleaded without that he was guilty afterwards Trespas where one pleads a Release or Arbitrement atano ther day he ought to traverse all the time after the Release or after the Arbitrement for all time before is extinct But if he plead such a day it is Free-hold there he ought to traverse all time before And in Trespas of Corn taken the 6th day of July the Defendant justifies as Parson the 10th of August for that they were severed from the 9th without that that he is guilty at another time but after the Tythes severed and till they were dry and it is good without traversing before and after for it is yeerly and not certain what day of the yeer The same Law where one justifies for Common after corne sowed till cut But otherwise it is for having Common from Lammas till Candlemas there he ought to traverse all the time before Lammas and after Candlemas 12 Ed 4. fol 6. Trespas of a Close broken first day of May Anno 8. the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiffe enfeoffed him the 4th of May the yeer aforesaid without that that he was guilty before the said 4th day And the Plaintiffe saith that he did not enfeoffe him and it is good without maintaining the day which was traversed before 15 Ed 4. f 23. If the Defendant justifie by Licence at another day he ought to say without that that he is guilty before or after 31 E 4. fol 9. Trespas of Batterie the Defendant justifies at another day before yet he ought to traverse without that that he is guilty before or after 30 H 6. fol 4. Trespas of beating 1. day of July the Defendant justifies in defending himself the 2. day of July he ought to say without that that he is guilty before or after 2 R 3. fol 16.34 H 6. fol 14. the same and 19 H 6. fol 47. Where one shall traverse the Town and where the County and where not TRespas why he broke his Close and took his Reeds in B. it is no plea that the place is in D. in the same County and not in B. but he ought to justifie in D. the taking as by prescription for repairing his house or any matter of justification without that that he took in B. 9 H 5. fol 9. and 4 H 7. fol 5 by Hussey Trespas of goods in D. in the County of Middlesex Defendant justifies at S. in the County of D. by commandment of J. S. in whom the property is without that that he is guilty in the County of Middlesex 22 Ed 4.38 Trespas of goods in one County the Defendant may justifie in another and traverse the County 7 H. 6. f 37. Trespas of a Close broken in D. the Defendant justifies for common appendant in S. in the same County he ought to traverse without that that he is guilty in D. 4 H 6. fol 13. Trespas why he broke his Close in D. in the County of Darby the Defendant cannot justifie in S. in the County of N. in manner and form and traverse the County but plead not guilty for upon not guilty the Jury cannot finde him guilty in another Town in another County but in another Town in the same County they may and for that he ought to traverse But in trespas of goods taken or of Battery in D. the Defendant may justifie in S. in the same County without travers 9 H 6. fol 62. Trespas of Fish taken in a Close in little Henberry the Defendant justifies in great Henberry in the same County without that that he was guilty in little Henberry and it is good 19 H 6.8 and 20 H 6.29 Trespas of Assault Batterie and Imprisonment in D. the defendant ●ustifies in S. in the same County for helping a woman which the Plaintiffe would have robb'd at S. and it is good without traverse that is without saying without that that he is guilty in D. for it is a justification in every place of the said County 9 Ed 4 fol 26. Trespas upon the Statute of Rich the fifth yeer for entring in 20. Acres of land in D. the defendant saith that J. S. was seised of 20 Acres in S. in the same County and of them enfeoffed him and justifies without that that he entred into the Lands in D. and it is good If he give colour in S. to have the Town par●ell of the Issue for inveigling the Jury 11 Ed 4.9 Trespas in D. of Beasts taken the Defendant justifies in S. in the same County doing dammage without traverse The same Law of Battery Yet see the Book 18 Ed 4.11 Detinue of a delivery to the Defendant in D. in the County of D. to re-deliver to the Plaintiffe the Defendant saith that the same day and yeer at S. in the County of N. the Plaintiffe bought the goods of the Defendant for 10 li. upon condition that if he payed the 10 li. such a day that the Sale should be void and that he did not pay at the day without that that the Plaintiffe delivered them in the County of D. for to re-deliver and admitted a good Plea 8 H. 6. fol 10. Detinue of a delivery in one County where it was delivered in another the Defendant may say that the delivery was in another County without that it was delivered where the Plaintiffe counts otherwise he shall be twice charged 33 H. 6. fol 28. By Nedham in Debt upon a bargain the Defendant saith it was made upon condition at another place in the same County The Plaintiffe may say that it was made simply without any condition ready without traversing of the place for that that it is in the same County But if the Condition were made in another County there he ought to traverse that it was made simply where the Plaintiffe counted 34 H 6. fol 32. And the same Law in detinue of chattels and see a bargain traversable which is in effect the same conveyance where he might have waged his Law 33 H. 6. fol 25. Account of Receit in London by the hands of R. the Defendant saith that he received them by the hands of R. in C. to deliver to the Plaintiffe himself which he hath done without that that he ever received them in London and good 9 Ed 4.48 and 22 H. 6.55 Account of Recest of 10 Marks in London the Defendant saith he received them in Cornwall to deliver them to J.S. which he hath done without that that he was his Receiver in London and it seems a good plea. 9 Ed. 4. f. 48. Trespas in the Parish of W. in D. in the County of E. the Defendant saith that the place is called W. in D. in the County of K. and justifies without that that W. is in the County of E. and not guilty
the said C Count. and A the tenements aforesaid with the appurtenances as his right and Inheritance saying that one W H was seised of the tenements aforesaid with the appurtenances in his demesne as of Fee at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the manner aforesaid And so being seised according to the custome of this Mannor time out of mind used and allowed at the Court of the Mannor held at J within the precinct of the Mannor the aforesaid Tuesday next after the feast of P the year of the Reign of our Soveraign Lady Queen Eliz 22. by J.A. and T P deputy Bayliffes of the Mannor aforesaid in the presence of T C T S R L J M Y R. and J B are tenants of the Lord of the Mannor aforesaid surrendred into the hands of the Lord the tenements aforesaid with the appurtenances to the use and behoof of one M then the wife of the aforesaid W H to be held for tearm of her life and after the decease of the said M the aforesaid Tenements with their appurtenances should wholly remain to one J H. son of N H brother of the aforesaid W H and to the heirs of his body lawfully begotten and for defect of such Issue of the said J the aforesaid tenements with the appurtenances should wholly remain to one E H daughter of the aforesaid W to be held to her and her heirs of her Body lawfully begotten and for defect of such Issue of the said E. the aforesaid tenements with the appurtenances should wholly remain to the right heirs of the aforesaid W H and his heirs for ever By vertue of which surrender the aforesaid M was seised of the tenements with the appurtenances in his deinesne as of freehold at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid in the time of peace time of the aforesaid Queen Elisabeth taken then the profits to the value c. And from the said M. remained right by the form of the surrender aforesaid according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid J H by which the said J was seised of the tenements aforesaid with the appurtenances in his demesne as of fee tayl at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid by forme of the surrender aforesaid in the time of peace in time of our Lord Edward late King of England the second taking then the profits to the value c. and from the said J after the death of the aforesaid Elizab for that both of them the aforesaid J. and E dyed without heirs of their body lawfully begotten the right remainder by the forme of the surrender aforesaid according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid to the said R H which now demands that is to say as the son and heir of W F brother and heir of the aforesaid W H and therefore produceth this Suite Plaints of Mortdancester R. C Complains against W L and E his Wife of a Plea of Land that is to say of one house 30 Acres of Meddow and a 100 Acres of Pasture with the appurtenances in J within the Jurisdiction of this Court and made protestation to prosecute his complaint in forme and nature of a Writ of the Queens Assise of the death of his Ancestor at the Common-law c. And desired processe for that to be made according to the custome of this Mannor in form and nature of this Writ aforesaid to be directed to the Bayliffes and Officers of this Court. And that the said Bayliffe and Officers by the command and precept of the Lord of this Mannor Where all are Copiholders and according to the custome of the said Mannor should summon by good summons twelve honest and lawfull men of the homage of this Mannor at the next Court to be kept within the Mannor ready to know by their Oath if R C Father of the aforesaid R was seised in his demesne as of fee at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor the day that he dyed of and in one house 30 Acres of Medow and a 100 Acres of Pasture of customary Lands of this Mannor with the appurtenances called C. within the jurisdiction of this Court the day that he dyed And if the said R. the father dyed within 50 years now last past and if the aforesaid R the son be the next heir of the aforesaid R the father and in the mean time they should view the Lands and Tenements aforesaid And that they should summon by good summoners the aforesaid W and E which hold the said lands and tenements that they should be here to hear the Recognitors and should find sureties to prosecute their Suite aforesaid J. D R R. And late here at this Court came the aforesaid W J in his own person Bar. and saith that the aforesaid R father of the said complainant was not seised in his demesn as of fee at the will of the Lord according to the custome of this Mannor day that he dyed of the aforesaid house and 30 Acres of Meddow and a 100 Acres of Pasture with the appurtenances in manner and forme as by the aforesaid complainant is first supposed and this he desires might be inquired by the Assise and the said Complainant likewise Entry in the by and to whom TO this Court came J N in his proper person complaineth against T M of a Plea of Land that is to say of one house one garden and one Orchard with the appurtenances and found sureties to prosecute his suit aforesaid that is J D. and R R. and doth protest to prosecute his suite aforesaid of the aforesaid house garden and orchard with the appurtenances in J in nature and forme of a writ of entrance of our Lady the Queen in the by and to which Saying that the said house and garden with the appurtenances are his right and Inheritance according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid and into which the aforesaid T M hath no entry but by El late the wife of W M and the daughter of R P to which aforesaid R P. and M his wife they demised which since unjustly and without judgement disseised R N by rem of the said J N within 50 years last expired c. And desires processe thereof to be made to him against the aforesaid T M according to the custome of the Mannor therefore according to the custome of the Mannor it was commanded J B under Bayliffe of the said Mannor and Officer of the Court aforesaid that according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid he should summon by good summoners the aforesaid T M that he should be here at the next Court that is the fourth day of M. next comming here to be held to answer to the aforesaid J N of the Plea aforesaid c. The same day is given to J. N here c. To this Court came A B Citizen and Mercer of L.
his Steward granted seisin thereof by the Rod at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid and payd to the Lord for a fine for such an entrance for him to have 53s 4d and made to the Lord fealty and then was admitted tenant And after that is to say to the same Court came R. M. and W. M. and complained against the aforesaid M. M. of a plea of land that is of the aforesaid 8 acres of meddow and made protestatiou to follow the complaint in forme and nature of a Writ of the Queens of entring upon disseisin in the post and upon this the aforesaid R. and W.M. in their proper persons demand against the aforesaid Michall M. the aforesaid 8 acres of meddow with the appurtenances in J. within the jurisdiction of this Court as their right and inheritance and into which the said M. M. had no entrance but after disseisin which H. H. thereof and without judgment made to the aforesaid R. and W. within 30 years last past c. And whereof they say that they were seised of the aforesaid 8 acres of meddow with the appurtenances in their demesne as of fee and right at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid taking the profits thereof to the value c. and in which c. and so bring their suit c. And the aforesaid M.M. in his proper person comes and defends his right when c. and called into warranty the aforesaid W.T. which is present here in Court in his proper person and willingly the aforesaid eight Acres of Meadow with the appurrenances did warrant unto him c. and upon this the aforesaid R. and W.M. do desire against the said W.T. Tenant by his warranty the aforesaid eight Acres of Meadow with the appurtenances in his Demesne as of Fee and Right at the Will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid in the time of Peace in the time of the Queen that now is taking the profits thereof to the value c. and in which and c. and thereof bring their Suit c. And the aforesaid W.T. Tenant by the warranty defendeth his Right when c. and further then calls to warranty C.D. which likewise is present in Court in proper person and gratis the aforesaid eight Acres of Meadow with the appurtenances to him doth warrant c. and upon this the said R. and W.M. do desire against the said Christopher Tenant to the warranty the aforesaid eight Acres with the appurtenances whereof they say that he himself was seised of the said eight Acres of Meadow with the appurtenances in his Demesne as of Fee and Right at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the said Mannour at the said time in the time of Peace in the time of our Lady the Queen now taking the profits thereof to the value c. and in which c. and therefore bring their Suit c And the said R. and W.M. desire Licence of talking tother and had it c. and after the said R. and W.M. returned here into the Court to the same Court in their proper persons and the aforesaid T. though he were solemnly summoned returned not but in contempt of the Court departed and made default therefore it is granted that the aforesaid R. and W.M. should recover their Seisin against the said M. M. of the aforesaid eight Acres of Meadow with the appurtenances c. and that the said M.M. should have of the Land of the aforesaid W.T. to the value c. and that the said W.T. further should have of the Land of the aforesaid C.D. to the value c. and the same C. in the mercy c. and upon this the aforesaid R. and W.M. do desire a Precept to give to them full Seisin of the aforesaid eight Acres of Meadow with the appurtenances to be directed to an Officer of the aforesaid Court and it was granted to them retrunable here immediately c. and afterwards tha is to say the first of Aprill came here into the Court the aforesaid R. and W. M. in their proper persons and the Office of the Court that is to say R.W. and certified the Court aforesaid that by vertue of the Precept aforesaid to him so directed the said first day of April he made to have to the aforesaid R. and W.M. full seisin of the aforesaid eight Acres of Meadow with the appurtenances as by the Precept aforesaid he was commanded c. And after that is to say at the very same Court the aforesaid R. and W. M. and the aforesaid W. T. then beeing present came and surrendred into the hands of the Lord in the same Court the aforesaid eight Acres of Meadow with the appurtenances to the use and behoof of the aforesaid M. M. his Heires and Assignes to whom the Lord by his Steward aforesaid granted then Seisin by the Rod to have and hold to him and his Heirs at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannour aforesaid c. and further the aforesaid R. and W. M. and W.T. remiswed released and altogether for them and their Heirs for ever quite claimed to the aforesaid M M. his Heirs and Assigns in his full and peaceable possession and Seisin appearing in the full Court all the Right Title State Claim Interest or demands whatsoever which they ever had have or any way hereafter may have of or in the aforesaid eight Acres with the appurtenances or in any parcell thereof so that that neither the aforesaid R. and W.M. and W.T. nor their Heirs or any of them any Right Title State Claim Interest or demand of or in the aforesaid eight Acres of Meadow with the Appurtenances or in any parcell thereof c. nor ought hereafter but from all Action of the Law Title claims Uses Interest and demands from thence to be demandded are excluded and every of them is excluded for ever by these presents and further the aforesaid W.T. grants for him an his Heirs that they will warrant the aforesaid eight Acres of Meadow with the appurtenances to the aforesaid M.M. and his Heirs against all men for ever c. 4. H. 8. Tit. Recovery in value 27 in Fine and 23 H. 8. Tit. Recovery in value 27. Recovery against the Husband and wife where the wife is Tenant in Tail and they vouch over and the Demandant recovers against the Husband and wife and they over in value this seems shall bind the Tail and the Heire of the wife 23 H. 8. Title Tail 32. Double voucher in Entrie in the Post barrs the Tail because of the recompence but single voucher shall not barr but the Estate Tail which he had time of the Recovery in possession but if he were in of another Estate time of that Recovery it is no Barr. 23 H. 8. Tit. Recovery in value 27. Entrie in the Post against Tenant
Otherwise it is if the Villaine alien them before the entry of the Lord the same Law is of Goods Litt. fol. 33. ●but the Lord cannot seise the Goods which a Villain hath as Executor Litt. fol. 35. If a Villain be made a Chaplaine Secular the Lord may seise him as his Villaine and his Goods but otherwise it is if he enters in Religion Or if a Free man espouse a Villaine Woman without the license of the Lord or by that this is inquirable If a Villain dwell in ancient Demesne of the King which is in the Kings hands and hath dwelt there by a yeare and a day the Lord cannot seise him nor shall have a Writ of Nativo habendo so long as he dwelleth there But if the Lord claime him within the yeare that hee cometh into ancient Demesne and so makes his claime within every yeare and 〈◊〉 day then the Villain shall not take advantage by his being there and if the Villaine dwell in another Mannor of ancient Demesne which is in possession of another then the King the Lord may seise him Fitzh fol. 79. a. and from thence-going that the Lord may make his claime if he goe in ancient Demesne is inquirable Also if any of the Tenants of the Lord be dead without Heire generall or speciall Escheat then the Lord shall have his Lands by Escheat or if any Tenant seised in Fee be attaint of Felony by Outlawry Verdict or otherwise the King shall have yeare day and waste and after the Lord by Escheat and is inquirable Or if a Bastard purchase Land and dye without issue of his body the Lord shall have his Land by Escheat And note That none shall have Lands of Fee-simple as heire to any man unlesse he be heire of the whole blood Littleton fol. 2. And if the Tenant be disseised and dyes without heire the Lord shall have the Escheat 14. Common Also if any which hath no Common without number charge the Common with more Beasts then he ought to doc according to the quantity of his Land or if he which hath Common appendant not Common appurtenant put into the Common Beasts which are not commonable as Hogs Goats and Geese or if any digg in the Common unlesse it be for Gravell for the high waies and fill it againe or maketh other trespasse in the Common or use the Common in any other manner without the license of the Lord but to take his Common with the mouth of his Beasts or if any digg Turffs or make other trespasse upon the waste or build any house or make inclosure of any part of it it is inquirable 15. Also if any Tenant within this Mannour Rechasing which hath two Farmes one of them within this Mannour the other within another Mannor and at the time when the Feilds and Meadows within this Mannour are layd open he brings his Beasts within this Mannor which he hath kept upon the Farme of another Mannor and by this surchargeth the Tenants within this Mannor this chasing and rechasing is inquirable 16. Mortmaine Also if any Tenant of this Mannor hath aliened any of his Lands in Mortmaine that is to a Religious house or to a Bishop Parson Vicar and to their Successors or to any other Corporation where that shall go in succession that is to say To them and their Successors without the license of the King and the Lord of the Mannor it is inquirable That the Lord may make his claime within a yeare according to the Statute Note That by the Statute of Religiosis the Lord may enter within one yeare after the alienation and if the cheife Lord immediate be negligent and doe not enter upon this Fee within a yeare then it is lawfull to the next Lord of that Fee within the halfe yeare following to enter and at the last the King And if any make a Feoffment to one to the use of a House of Religion or to the use of a Company or Brother-hood this is Mortmaine The same Law is where one exchanges with a Corporation that is Mortmaine also if any religious person hold of any man by Rent-service and the Lord releases to him this is Mortmaine 17. Who is Tenant Also if any Tenant by Charter alien his Land and hath not given notice of that to the Lord and the Alienee hath not made fealty to the Lord nor Suit of Court that the Lord may have knowledge who is his Tenant it is presentable for that he may know upon whom to make his avowry and of whom to have his Services and Escheats 18. Waste Also if any Termor for years or for life of any parcell of the Demesnes of the Mannor hath made waste in any House Lands Woods or Gardens you shall present that or if any holds two Tenements and hath wasted one as if he remove Trees from one to the other that is waste 19. Trespasse Also if any Trespasse be made in any Demesnes of the Lord that is to say In the Corn Grasse Meadowes Pastures Wood Hedges Waters or if any Fish within his Rivers or Waters or if any Hauk or Hunt within the Demesnes of the Lord without his license or within his Warren these are presentable 20. Trespasse Also if any take any Hony or swarms of Bees within the Demesnes of the Lord or take any Haukes or Aeiry of Haukes these are inquirable 21. Also if any Bailiff or Officer make any arrest for Rent Rescous Custome or Service due to the Lord and Rescous to him is made you ought to present the name of him which made the Rescous and where and when it was 22. Pound breach Also if any distresse be put in the pound of the Lord and be taken out without authority of Law this is a Pound-breach and is inquirable 23. Removeing meer-stones Also if any remove or take away any meerstones or stakes between this Lordship and another or between Tenant and Tenant you ought to present that 24. Encroch Also if any hath incroached any of the Lands of the Lord scilicet Land Meadow Pasture Wood Furse Moore or any other vacant Land without the Lords license by burning his Hedges Pale or otherwise that is inquirable Note that all the void Land and Waste within the Mannor is to the Lord of the Mannor 25. Also if any within this Mannor Husbandry suffer any House of Husbandry with which was occupied twenty Acres of Land to decay and to take from it any Land the Lord of whom this is held Rast Husb. 1. and 6. shal have the halfe of the profits of this to his owne proper use till that be maintained again for Husbandry 4 H. 7. chap. 19. and 5 Eliz. chap. 2. and that for the benefit of the Lord is inquirable 26. Also if any Tenant hath inclosed any Land Common and keeps that in severalty which was wont to lye open without the license of the Lord and
Writ is awarded good he may afterwards plead in barr 6 Book of Ass 1. Infant in Assise pleads Ontlawry of Felony in Barr and at another day was suffered to plead Release of the Plaintiffe in Barr 14 Ass 15. Assise the Tenant pleads in Barr and the Plaintiffe joynes Issue and the Court doe not take the Assise the same day and the next day the Tenant cannot change his Plea 11 H. 4. fol. 2. b. Where the Tenant pleads to the Assise by a Bailiffe if his Master have a Release or a Writing of which the Jury cannot have notice then if the Assise passe against the Bailiffe yet the Master shall have Certificate upon this Writing the same Law is if the Verdict be not well examined by the Justices and see more there Fitzherbart fol. 181. b. The Tenant pleads in Barr a Deed of the Ancester of the Plaintiffe with warranty and the Plaintiffe makes Title and afterwards he cannot plead in abatement that the Lands were in another Towne for that that the Assise was awarded 10 Edw. 3. tit 157. and 1 Ass 17. The Tenant pleads in Barr and the next day pleads by a Bailiff to the Assise and may for that the Assise was not awarded Abridg. As f. 47. Where the Assise was awarded upon the Plea of the Bailiff at another day after the Tenant comes and pleads Release and hath it for that he may have Certificate Abridgment As fol. 138. The Tenant may relinquish his Barr and plead the generall Issue otherwise it is in Cosenage Grand-Father and great Grand-Father but he cannot plead a new Barr 40 Ed. 3. fol. 49. Ass Assise the Tenant pleads in Barr the Deed of the Ancester of the Plaintiff with warranty and the Plaintiff makes Title and after the Tenant waives the Barr and pleads in abatement that the Lands are in another Town and cannot 1 Book of Assises 17. Assise If a Plea be pleaded and the Justices dye all shall be pleaded a new but if they are at Issue they shall stand 4 H. 7. fol. 7. Where in 〈◊〉 Assise a man shall have diverse Pleas to the writ and conclude over no wrong no Disseisin and where not NOte that the party himself or his Bailiff may have diverse Pleas where one is not contrary to the other concluding over no wrong as if he plead mis-naming of the Plaintiff if it be not found no Tenant of the Free-hold named in the Writ and if it be found no such Town and such like and notwithstanding and if it be not found no wrong for one is not contrary to the other but if he will say that the Tenements are in another Town and if it be not found no Tenant of the Free-hold named in the Writ and if it be not found no wrong these Pleas he shall not have for he shall not plead no Tenant of the Freehold named in the Writ c. And after say the Tenements are in another Town Note though the book at large be if it be found leaving out this word Ne yet the book of Entryes is if it be not found and so it seems in reason that it shall be as above if it be not found c. 36 H. 6. fol. 1. Where one pleads to a Writ and also in Barr what Barr is that which doth not go to the point of Assise scilicet no wrong but it is a Barr out of the point of Assise in such a case he shall not have both the Pleas for by such Barr the Plea to the Writ is waived as in an Assise of Rent the Tenant pleads wrong naming of himself and if it be not found out of his Foe he shall not have these two Pleas 3 Ed. 3.15 Tit. 172. Tit. 223. It seems if the Tenant plead in abatement of the Writ he shall not plead over to the Assise if his Plea to the Writ be not triable by the Assise 22 Book of Assises 14. In an Assise of Rent the Bailiff pleads mis-naming of the Town and if found not so c. That another is Tenant of the Rent not named for this is not contrary and it seems that in an Assise of Rent the Tenant of the Land may say that the Land whereout c. is in another Town and if found it be not that he hath a taker of the Rent not named contrary it is in an Assise of Land 15 Ed. 3. Tit. 55. In Assise by a Master and his Brethren of the fraternity of nine orders of Angells in he County Middlesex Defendant plead no such corporation by this name in this County and if it be not found not wrong he shall not have them both for the first Plea is in Barr and shall not have Barr and generall Issue 22 Ed. 4 fol. 34. Assise of Lands in Woxbridge the Tenant pleads that they are in Collam and not in Woxbridge and if it be not found no wrong and he hath 11 H. 4. fol. 2. b. It is said that in an Assise the Tenant or his Bailiff may plead tewnty severall matters in abatement or to an Assise and conclude if it be not found c. and is good 1 Ed. 4. fol. 4. and 8 H. 6. fol. 9. Where the Assise shall be awarded at large that is to say in point of Assise that is to say to inquire of Seisin and Disseisin and where in Right of Dammages and where not ASsise the Tenant pleads in abatement that the Plaintiff hath received the Land of him hanging the Assise and that he hath let to him for yeares again and the Plaintiff saith that he hath continued his Estate which he had by Disseisin without that that any Estate present of him he take and the Assise was charged upon the point and over upon the Seisin and Disseisin 10 book of Assises 24. If the Tenant plead in Barr and the Plaintiff makes title and the Tenant doth not traverse that the Assise shall be awarded at large 45 Ed. 3. fol. 24. Where there is a good Barr pleaded and an outing is confessed and the Barr is traversed or if the Plaintiff make Title and that is found for the Plaintiff or if there be an ill Barr pleaded that the Plaintiff need not answer but say come the Assise upon the Title and it is found for the Plaintif in all these cases the Plaintif shall have judgment without inquiring of Seisin and Disseisin 6 H. 7. fol. 2. Where the Plaintiff makes Title at large without answering to the Barr and the Tenant do not traverse this Title he shall not answer to that as that confessed and avoided or without saying let the Assise come upon the Title but let the Assise run without any thing saying to the Title there the Assise shall be taken at large and not upon the Title as in the Assise the Plaintif makes Title at large and in the end saith and this he is ready to aver by Assise and the foresaid tenant likewise the Assise shall be taken at large the reason
tenant praies the Assise upon the title and upon that the Assise is awarded the Assise cannot finde other title for the Plaintiff but he may finde matter which may stand with the same title to inforce it but if the title be traversed he cannot finde another title but only the point put in the Assise 28 book of Assises 17. An Act of Parliament Fine or Recovery are of such a force that if one be bound by them the Plaintif cannot make title to this Land unlesse by reason of a title to him grown of later times As if one recovers against me or my Ancestor and hath execution and after Lenten and dye seised my Heire shall not make him title by his discent against the Recovery without shewing he hath title after the recovery the same Law of a Fine see 10 H. 7. fol. 5.32 H. 6.5 and 33 book of Assises fol. 19. Pleas in Barr and in Abatement IT seems a feoffment of the Plaintif is no Plea in Barr for that amounts to no wrong nor Desseisin 2 H. 4. fol. 20. the same 15 Ed. 4. fol. 11. 18 Ed. 4. fol. 11. A Lease for yeares or for life the reversion to the Plaintif or a feoffment of the Plaintif with warranty and rely upon the warranty is a good Bar● Abridgment of Ass fol. 31. The tenant may plead that partition was made between the Plaintif and J. S. whose Estate he hath and it is a good Barr. 30 H. 6. fol. 1. Assise the tenant saith that the Lands put in view and in plaint are in another Town and if it be found no tenant of the Free-hold named in the VVrit c. By the Court he shall not have the second Plea for none may say that the Land is in another town but the tenant and so hath accepted the tenancy by his Plea 30 H. 6. fol. 7. Assise the tenant saith that T. B. was seised and disseised by W. W. to whom T. B. made release and against his own Deed disseised W.W. and infeoffed five persons which infeoffed the Plaintif upon which W. W. re-entred whose Estate the tenant seised hath it is good see Pleas in Barr Tit. Abridg. Ass fol. 30. Abridgement Assise fol. 41. If the Plaintiffe choose one to be his tenant of all where he is not the Writ shall abate Abridgement of Assise fol. 42. A man cannot plead in Assise that there is another hanging to which he hath appeared unless that he take the tenancy upon him and for that it is no Plea for the Disseisor Bridgement Ass 44. Death of one of the tenants shall not abate the Assise but for the portion if he be a Disse●sor and tenant of another parcell 27 Ass 45.40 Ass 15. Abridgement Ass fol. 43. Assise of tenements in D. and S. the tenant sayes that all is in S. if that be so the Writ shall abate for he cannot abridge a whole Towne but see now by the Statute of 21 H. 8. chap. 3. where he may abridge Abridgement of Ass fol. 45. Assise of Lands in D. is no Plea if there be two Dales for that the Plaintiff shall recover by the view of the Jury 29 Ass 59. Abridgement of Ass 106. Assise tenant pleads in Barr and after the Jury hath the view he leaves his Barr and pleads to the Assise Plaint in Assise PLaint of profits of an Office though it hath no form it shall not abate as first it ought to suppose disseisin and after shall make title and though it were not so it shall not abate 12 H. 6. fol. 22. Plaint of a Croft is good but Precipe of a Croft is not good Abridgment of Assise fol 130. b. and 8 Hen. 6. fol. 3. Time of Ed. 6. Brook tit False Latine and forme 66. Wood was put before Pasture in a Plaint of Assise and exception thereof taken yet good though it were contrary to the Register by the Commentaries fol. 169. Plaint of a Croft and was amended 14 Ass 13. and 25 Ed. 3. tit 25. the same Brook demand 17.34 Plaint of a peice of Land containing in length twenty feet and in breadth ten and is good 14 Ass 13. and 9 H. 4. fol. 3. the same Plaint by the Governour of an Hospitall it shall be of a House and not of an Hospitall 8 Ass 29 and Assise 137. Plaint of two parts of Salt Coot is good ninth Book Ass 12. Plaint of a Garment or thirty shillings though it be uncertaine for that it is according to the Deed it is good 11 Book of Ass 8. Plaint in Assise of a Garden lyeth but not a Precipe 22 Ed. 3. tit 22. 5 Ed. 2. Brook demand 39. and Fitzh breife 797. Plaint was of a Mill and doth not say a water-Mill nor VVinde-Mill yet good 21 Assise 23. Plaint of a Garment and the specialty is of a Garment with furr and the plaint good for the Garment conteines all 22 Ass 10. Where the Plaintiff may abridge in Assise and in what other Actions he may abridge and how IN a VVrit of ward the VVrit is of the custody of the Land and Heire and is not certain and for that he may abridge as he may in assise and VVrit of Dower 39 Ed. 3. Tit. Breif 10. and 32. In trespasse the VVrit is of Goods and Chattells and hee counts of Corne and ten pounds and for that that Money is not Goods and Chattells he abridged it see 8. Tit. abridgment 11. which saith that he ought to expresse the Money in the VVrit and for that he did not he abridged 39 Ed. 3. Tit. Breife 11. In all cases where the VVrit is of a Free-hold and uncertain he may abridge by June as in assise of Dower and a VVrit of ward 14 H. 6. fol. 4. In ward for that the Demand is not certain but of the custody of the Land and Heire therefore the Plaintif counts of the Mannour of D. and twenty acres and the Defendant saith that the twenty acres are parcell of the Mannor the Plaintif may abridge the twenty acres 39 E. 3 f. 10. Brooks abridgment 10. Assise of Land in great Dunmowe and little D. you cannot abridge all in one Town 8. H. 6. fol. 56. Assise and in Dower he may abridge but he cannot abridge a whole Town 14 H. 6. fol. 4. Assise where a plaint is of a Mannor he cannot abridge for that it is entire 19 H. 6. fol. 13.33 H. 6. Tit. abridgment 2. Assise plaint of Rent and Land after that the Tenant hath pleaded in Barr the Plaintif shall abridge in right of the Land 14 Ass 9. Plaint abridge in attaint Rast Assi 17. 35 H. 6. fol. 13. Assise of Common in forty acres the Plaintif cannot abridge for that that the Common is Intire but at this day it is contrary by the Statute of 31 H. 8. chap. 3.29 Ass 10. Plaintiff in every Assise at his pleasure may abridge and for that also by the Statute may abridge where the plaint is of a Mannor 21 H.
action shall be sued in a Court Baron by plaint and what not WHere one sues several plaints for five marks the other shall have a prohibition And Detinue of writings shall not be sued there and if he doth the other shall have a prohibition 5. Ed. 4. fol. 128. Where 20 l. is parted in severall plaints under 40 s. Prohibition lies Note there it is said Supersedeas lies and the Defendant there with safe conscience may wage his Law But see 48 Ed. 3. Fitzherbart fol. 46. A. The Lord himself shall have debt in his Court Baron for that that the suitors are Judges time of Ed. 1. Tit. debt in Fitzh 177. 6 Ed. 4. fol. 3. Suitors are Judges there Debt or trespalle may be sued in Court Baron by plaint but that is where the debt or dammage is under forty shillings that the Defendant in Trespasse plead his Freehold or that the Plaintif is his Villaine the Court shall cease otherwise a VVrit of false Judgement lieth and also it is good exception to the Jurisdiction of a Court Baron to say that the contract was made out of the Mannor in another Town 34 H. 6. fol. 53. A man shall not have account in Court-Baron nor in County 43 Ed. 3. fol. 19. Plea ought not to be removed in debt or trespasse from this Court but where a Debt or Dammages amount above forty shillings or in replegiare but I intend there shal not be a plaint in Replegiare in every Mannor but in this Mannor where the Lord hath ancient authority by Charter to make Replegiare yet diverse seem the contrary see Fitzh Na. Bre. 14 H. 8. fol. 17. Trespasse Damages found eight pence in the common Bench and the Plaintif recovers but he cannot there count under forty shillings and in Court-Baron he can-count above forty shillings but under that 19 H. 6. fol. 8. That Debt and Trespasse shall be sued in Court-Baron Britton fol. 61. Detinue of Goods may be sued in a Court-Baron 6 ● 2. Every stranger which comes within the Mannour may be sued there in Debt or Trespasse under forty shillings so that Debt Detinue of Goods and such actions personalls except account where the Debt or Dammages is under forty shillings it is determinable in a Court-Baron by plaint there 34 H. 6. fol. 53. Trespasse by force of Armes doth not lye in a Court Baron note that the contrary is used 7 Ed. 4. fol. 23. Sherif in the County may hold Plea by Justicies of the great Summons but Justicies shall not be in a Court-Baron for Justicies shall not be directed to the Steward but to the Sherif and the Sherif is Judge in a Justicies and Officer to the Court but so is not the Steward 21 Ed. 4. fol. 79. Fitzh fol. 139. F. Note that Court-Baron hath no authority to hold Plea of Free-hold and of that to give Judgment for execution thereof that is a Dissesin to the Tenant 22 Ass 64. Glanvile 94. saith No man is tied to answer in the Court of his Lord of a Free-hold without the command of the Lord the King Right patent may be directed to the Lord to be tried in a Court-Baron but it cannot be tried there by great Assise but it seems it may be tried by Battell and if the Tenant ioyne Battell the Lord may give day to try it but Fitzh fol. 4. E. saith if the Lord will proceed or Issue is ioyned upon the great Assise prohibition lies and if Bastardy or any forrain Plea be pleaded then they have no Jurisdiction in Court Baron and if they proceed Prohibition lies Time of Ed. 1. Tit. Droit 45. 1 H. 6. fol. 7. If plaint of Debt or Trespasse be sued there and forrain matter is pleaded it shall not be tried in Court-Baron 1 H. 5. fol. 12. If in a VVrit of Right patent in Court-Baron for Charter Land the Lord will not proceed to do right the Demandant may go to the Sherif and have a Tolt which is a command to his Bailif that he take out the complaint and remove the Plea into the County and after that also by a Pone in the common Bench but the Tenant shall not have a Tolt but he shall have a Recordare with the cause and the Demandant may have a Pone without cause Fitzh fol. 3. F. Note that a VVrit of Right patent ought to be sued in the Lords Court and not otherwhere without the license of the Lord Testimony of the King by Letter or otherwise that he hath given license and then he shall have his Writ because the Lord hath remitted his Court in the Common Bench Nat. Brevium fol. 15. None may distraine Free Tenants to answer of a Freehold nor of any thing belonging to the Free-hold without the Kings Writ Marleb chap. 22. Coppy-holders shall not be impleaded by the Kings Writ but shall be impleaded in the Court of their Lord by plaint in nature of what Writ they will Lit. fol. 16. Debt upon a Bill obligatory under forty shillings lieth in a Court-Baron Fitzh 2. E. If a Right parent be sued there in Court-Baron and forrain matter be pleaded there or Issue joyned to be triod by great Assise there shall go a Prohibition Fitzh 39.6 The Tenant may have prohibition directed to the Sherif to prohibit Bailiffs of the Court where the Mise is joyned in a Writ of Right upon the Grand Assise unlesse Battaile were there offered Marleb chap. 20. None except the Lord the King shal hold Pleas in his Court of false Judgement given in the Court of his Tenants because these Pleas especially belong to the Crown Fitzh 4. E. If a Plea be held there which ought not a Prohibition lieth Fitzh 47. b. Detaining of writings shall not be sued in a Court-Baron Fitzh 139. D. If a man hold plea in County of Trespasse by force of Armes the Defendant may sue a Supersedeas out of the Chancery The same Law seems in a Court-Baron 8 Ed. 4. Tit. Jurisdiction B. 215. See Fitzh 85. G. That trespasse shall be brought in Court-Baron and there see the forme of the Writ but it is not by force of armes there Britton fol. 61. That Debt and Trespasse shall be sued in a Court-Baron Fitzh 85. G. Trespasse Viscountile there shall not be by force of armes in the Writ 8 Ed. 4. Tit. 115. Trespasse doth not lie in a Court-Baron by force of armes for a Fine shal not be set but in a Court of Record and for that it shall not be there by force of armes see Glocester chap. 8. 22 Ass 64. If one implead more in a Court-Baron without a Writ and recover dammages where I plead to the Jurisdiction and the Court ought to be outed yet if the Bailif make execution of these dammages by command of the Steward he shall not be punished in trespasse for he doth that which he ought to do till it be defeated by false Judgment but if it were before not a Judge it is void and otherwise
9 H. 7. fol. 12. Recovery in the common Bench of Lands in the Countries of Lancaster Durham or Chester is there before not a Judge otherwise it is there of recovery of Lands in the five Ports 22 Ed. 3. fol. 30. Formedon in the Kings Bench and an Appeale in the common Bench recovery there in these are void see 7 H. 4. fol. 3. and 8 Booke of Ass 32. Glocester chap. 8. It is provided that the Sheriffs shall plead in Counties the Pleas of trespasse also as they were wont to be pleaded c. 13 H. 7. fol. 20. Waste to plead in that is not good for that that Land shall be recovered and so in an Eiectione firme and so it is in a Collegendum they shall not be sued here and by Fitzh 220. H. Plaintiff shall recover his tearm and dammages Littleton fol. 60. If there be two Tenants in common for years and one put the other out of possession he shall have an Eiectione firme of his half for that it is to recover a real Chattel So it seems that shal not be sued here nor an ejectment of Ward which is in the realty Fitzh 220. H. Processe of outlawrie lies in an Eiectione firme and yet he shall recover his Land again unlesse it be expired and also his dammages Littleton 93. A Writ of wast is a mixt action so is an Assise of novel disseisin and a Quare Impedit and for that they shall not sue here Action upon the Statute of 8 H. 6. nor upon the Statute of R. 2. shall not be sued here for that that they are given by Statute but an action upon the case may be sued here if the dammages are under 40. s. Plaint in Precipe TRespasse in one tenement with a Toft adjoyning containing four Acres of land agreed that this word Tenement is uncertain 3. E. 4. tit 28. 11. H. 7. fol. 25. tenement is no tearm to demand a house or shop 45. Ed. 3. fol. 6. Precipe of land in D. it is a good Plea that there is no such town 41 Ed. 3. fol. 22. Precipe in D. and S. for that that D. is a hamlet of S. and he demands a thing twice the Writ shall abate 8 E. 4. f. 6. Precipe doth not lie in a hamlet but in a town or a place known out of a town but all Actions personall may be brought in hamlet or town or place known Dower Assise and Scire facias to have execution of a fine it may be brought in a hamlet 16. E. 3. Precipe of a peice of land without certainty is not good but of a peice of land containing so much is good see before 11. H. 4. fol. 38. 13. H. 4. Tit. 33. Dower of a Mill though after the witnesse of the Writ it was made a Toft it is good otherwise if it were made a tost before the witnesse of the Writ 14. H. 4. tit demand 5. the same 13. H. 6. fol. 8. Upon two Verges of the Land are built houses and they are meadow and pasture they are now to be demanded as they are not as before when they were verges Fitzh 192. 6. Ed. 2. tit 41. Precipe of passage over a water c. good 27. H. 8. fol. 14. Precipe is not good of a Common but of pasture for two beasts is good 4. Ed. 4. fol. 2. the same 22. Ed. 4. fol. 13. by Jenney A man shall have a Precipe quod reddat of a house and garden but he shall not have a Precipe of a garden alone For that That Plaints shall be made for Copi-hold in nature of Precipe let us see of what and how plaint of Precipe shall be made PRecipe may be of a chamber and yet foundation may perish for that it is not in perpetuity 5. H. 7. fol. 9. contrary H. 6. 11 H. 7. fol. 24. Trespasse may be brought of trespasse in a hamlet and Precipe shall be brought of land in a town and not in hamlet 16 H. 7. fol. 7. Assise doth not lie of a Rectory Seek if an Ejectione firme lyeth of that 9. H. 7. fol. 21. Precipe of lands in D. by Bryan over D. and nether D. is good in abatement 7. H. 4. fol. 9. Wast in D. it is a good plea in abatement that D. is neither town nor hamlet 11. H. 4. fol. 38. Precipe that he should restore a certain portion of land is good by Hank and Hill 6. Ed. 3. tit Demand 41. precipe of 8 foot of land in length and 6 in bredth and good 13. Ed. 3. tit 32. 33. Precipe of an Oxgange of land is good Contrary of an Oxgange of marsh for that cannot be gained tit demand 33. 36. 40 Assis 9. Precipe shall be brought in a town and not in a hamlet 34. H. 9. fol. 1. the same 34. H. 6. fol. 20. Precipe shall be in a town or of a Mannor which is a place known out of a town and not in a Hamlet But an Assise in a Hamlet is good and also in Dower Who hath most Right and Right ought to be sued there LIttleton fol. 91. If a man be disseised by an Infant the which alieneth in fee and the Alienee dies seised and his heir enter the Infant within age he may have a Dum fuit infra aetatem or a Writ of Right or Entry at his election for he hath more right then the heir of the Alienee But if the Disseisee release to the heir of the Alienee if now he bring a Writ of Right the issue shall be upon the meer right and shall be fonnd for the heir for now he hath more right by the release of the disseisee Littleton fol. 93. If a disseisor die seised and his heir in by discent if the disseisee enter and the heir of the disseisor brings an assise he ought to recover But if he brings a Writ of Right the issue shall be upon the meer right and there the heir shall be barred for the disseisee hath more right Right Patent is to be directed to the Lord of whom the land is held unlesse it be held of the King or Queen and it is as a Commission to the Lord that he shall do Right And it may be removed by a Recordare by the Tenant with cause and by a Pone by the demandant without cause and after that it be removed in County it may be removed by the demandant by a Tolt Fitzh fol. B. and Britton fol. 275. where the Tenant puts him upon the grand Assise it shall be removed Fitzh fol. 1. F. Where Judgement final shall be and where not IN a Writ of Right Judgement final shall be given but after the mise joyned and upon every recovery upon departure in despight of the Court Judgement final shall be As in Right against a Prior which voucheth common Cryer which en●reth into the Warranty and the demandant Imparles and at the day the Vouchee departs in despight of the Court and upon this Judgement final given
the Husband may alien all or part without the Wife and then shee cannot claime Dower Custome in some Mannor is Heire among Copy-holders that the youngest Son shall inherite as in Borrough English and if he have no Sonne his younger Brother as at Edmonton Custome of some Mannor is Heire that all the Sons and all the Brothers shall inherite together as in Gavel-kind at Islington Custome of some Mannor is Heire That if the Tenant dyes seised of five Acres or lesse then the youngest Son ought to inherite but if it be above then all the Sons as in Gavell-kinde ought to inherite Custome of some Mannor is Clivenor If a Copy-holder surrender his Land to the use of a stranger that before the stranger be admitted Proclamation shall be made in the Court thereof and if the next of the blood will come in or Clivenor Land mark those next adjoyning to the bargaine from the East of the Son and will pay so much for the Land surrendred as hee which made the bargaine ought together with all his costs which had the Land so surrendred and then the Bargainee shall make Oath in Court what he payd and that shall be payd him forthwith in Court and then the next of blood or Clivenor which pay that shall be admitted and shall have the Land Custome in some Mannor is Where surrender is of Copy-hold made to him and his that is an Estate of Inheritance in Fee by the custome though it be not to him and his heires And in some Mannor it is to him and his in Villainage and yet it is a good Estate of Inheritance by the custome Custome of some Mannor is That surrender may be made into the hands of the Bailiffe in the presence of two Tenants witnessing that and in some Mannor in the hands of two Tenants to the use of him to whom c. And in some Mannor in the hands of one Tenant to the use of him which should have it and all these are good customes and allowed Custome of some Mannor is Dower that the Wife shall have no Dower nor the Husband shall not be tenant by the curtesie And the custome in some Mannor that she shall have the third part of the Rent and not any Land for her Dower as at Bush Custome in some Mannor is Surrender that surrender may be made into the hands of a tenant in the presence of other persons to the uses c. and is good Tenant at will by the common Law Waste may cut Trees to repaire his Houses and also may take House-boot Hedge-boot and Plough-boot and all this Tenant by Copy may doe And by the custome in diverse Mannors copy-holder may cut his Trees and Wood and sell it at his pleasure and also to suffer the Houses to decay and yet it is not forfeiture as it is at Islington Custome of some Mannor is Lease that copy-holder may let that by Indenture for three yeares without license of the Lord and in some for nine yeares and in some Mannor for more and in some Mannor hee may let from three yeares to three yeares to the terme of one and twenty yeares and is no forfeiture Custome of some Mannor is Harriot that where the copy-holder is Inheritable that the heire shall choose the best Beast and the Bailiffe of the Lord shall seise two of the next best Beasts and for a Cottage two shillings in Silver for Harriot shall be payd and no Beast Custome of some Mannor is Fine to pay six shillings eight pence for a Harriot and no Beast Custome of some Mannor is Ward that a copy-holder pay but one penny for a Fine though there be a hundred Acres or more and in some Mannor six shillings eight pence for every dwelling House and also for every Acre six shillings eight pence and for every Cottage six shillings eight pence and also six shillings eight pence for every Hampsell that is an ancient House or Cottage decayed six shillings eight pence And in every Mannor the Fine is uncertaine but yet the Lord there shall not take more for his Fine then hath heretofore been taken for a Fine and if he doe otherwise the remedy for the copy-holder is in the Chancery against his Lord. Custome of some Mannor is that if copy-holder dyes his heire within age the custome in most Mannors is that the custody shall be committed by the Lord to the next of blood to whom the Land cannot descend And in some Mannors the Bailiffe of the Lord shall have the custody and render the heire an account at fourteene years of the profits and by the custome in some Mannor at fourteene yeares the heire may choose to him a Guardian Custome in some Mannor is Workmen to have certaine dayes of labour in harvest for a day or two dayes and in some Mannor he shall pay foure pence for every day labour of that Custome of some Mannor is Releife that he shall pay for Releife upon a discent but halfe that which is due by common Law as if he hold by six pence he shall pay but three pence for Releife but yet he ought to pay that releife by the custome Also if he come in by Purchase he ought to pay in the like manner halfe his Rent as afore is sayd that is to say three pence where his Rent was six pence Custome of some Mannor is to pay but one penny for releife and not more nor lesse though his Rent be ten shillings Custome in some Mannor is Dower that if a man marry a Mayd and dye seised of copy-hold this Wife shall have all the Land during her life for her Dower but if hee marry a Widdow and dye seised shee shall have no Dower Custome of some Mannor is that if one were no copy-holder of that Mannor before and purchase Lands at first the Fine is arbitrable and granted at the will of the Lord but he nor his heires after shall pay no Fine but shall be admitted free without paying Fine for all the Lands which he after purchaseth within the Mannor If a man let to three for life to have successively yet this is a Joynt Estate and successively is void but by custome of copy-hold successive holds place and one shall have it after the other 30 H. 8. tit Leases 54. And note that you doe not say as many use to say that there is such a custome when they see the Law to be contrary to their intent as diverse Stewards doe when for favour that they beare to one party will ayde him by customes when there is no such custome to helpe him And I have heard a Steward say By the custome of a Mannor a Wife is dowable and by the custome that shall be assigned by the Homagers without plaint in nature of Dower against the Tenant of the Land and without answer of the Tenant and without any processe made against him contrary
Escheat 7 H. 4. fol. 18. the same 6 H. 4. fol. 5. Lord and Tenant within age the Tenant is disseised and dyes without heire the Lord may enter by Escheat The same Law is if he being an Infant tenant alien and dyes without heire the Lord shall have by Escheat Fitzh fol. 144. A. If Tenant in taile dye without heire he in reversion shall not have a Writ of Escheat But if Tenant in taile the remainder to his right heires and dyes without heire then the Lord of whom the Tenant in taile holds shall have a Writ of Escheat Fitzh 144. E. Where the Tenant is a Bastard and dyes without Issue this Land shall Escheat Tit. Escheat 34. B. Where there is a Bastard eldest and a legittimate younger and the Bastard enters and dyes seised without Issue the Land shall not Escheat Natura brevium fol. 103. If the Tenant be disseised and is attaint of Felony the Lord may enter by Escheate Abridgement of Assise fol. 88. Lord and Tenant the tenant being within age aliens and dyes without heire the Lord may enter by Escheat 6 E. 3. Statham If my Tenant within age alien in Fee and dyes without heire I may enter by Escheat the same Law is if my tenant within age be disseised and dyes without heire I may enter by Escheat Stamf. 42. If any free tenant of any Bishop be attaint for Felony during the time of the vacation the King shall have Escheat of his Lands By Prerogative ch 14. Fitzh 144. O. If the Lord have title to have a Writ of Escheat if he accept Homage of his tenant he shall not have a Writ of Escheat against him afterwards 7 H. 4. fol. 18. Lord and Tenant the Tenant is disseised and dyes without heire the Lord may enter for right of entry may Escheat against a Disseisor but if the Disseisor dye or alien the Lord cannot enter by Escheat upon the heire of the Disseisor nor upon the Alience 22 Book of Assises 49. The King shall have the Lands by Escheat of one attainted of high Treason of whomsoever hee hold notwithstanding of petty Treason the Lord shall have them 29 Book of Assise 61. Note that Lands in taile shall not Escheat for the Felony or attainder of his Father but by the Statute of 5 6 Ed. 6. chap. 11. for high treason the King shall have his Lands 6 H. 7. fol. 9. by Keble Right of entry may Escheat as where the Disseisee dyes without heire or is attaint of Felony the Lord may enter 7 Ed. 6. tit 18. It was held If there he Lord and Tenant by Fealty and Rent the Tenant is disseised the Disseisee dyes without heire the Lord accepts the Rent by the hands of the Disseisor yet he may enter for Escheat or have a Writ of Escheat and the receit of the Rent no Barr contrary if he had avowed for that in Court of Record or if he had taken corporall service as Homage c. Contrary of acceptance of Rent by the hands of the heire of the Disseisor or of his Feoffee 48 Ed. 3. fol. 2. by Belk Where a man commits Felony and after purchase Land or Land discends to him after this is forfeited and Escheated as well as the Land which he had time of the Felony made 22 H. 6. fol. 37. by Newton A man seised of Land in fee goes beyond the Sea to B. out of the Kings Allegiance without the Kings license and there marries a Wife and there hath Issue and dwells there all his life and dyes without other Issue his Land shall Escheat and none other of the blood shall inherite 1 R. 3. fol. 4. by Hussey He which is borne beyond Sea and his Father and Mother English and faithfull to our King that their Issue shall inherite by the Common Law but the Statute makes that cleer and his Lands shall not Escheat 9 H. 7. fol. 2. If Tenant of the King dyes without heire and none enters the Freehold is in the King without Office by Escheate But if Tenant of the King alien in Mortmaine it is not in the King without Office 27 H. 8. tit Office 90. Br Where one is attaint by Parliament his Lands are not in the King by Escheat to grant over without Office 29 H. 8. tit 52. Charter of pardon Br. The King may be intituled to goods without Office by Outlawry but not to Lands 38 H. 8. title Thing in action 211. Br By the Statute of 31 H. 8. gives to the King possession of Lands of Monastries without Office for the words are that the King shall be in possession of them yet if an Abbat were disseised of foure Acres of land the King cannot grant that over before entry made by him into it Time of H. 8. tit 119. Pre. Br It seemes that the King shall not have a Precipe quod reddat as a Writ of Escheat but his title shall be found by Office Time of Ed. 6. tit Denizen 17. Where an Alien born purchaseth the King shall have it but the purchase ought to be found by Office 33 H. 8. tit Fines levied 115. Title Office before Escheator 60 Br King shall have Chattels without Office but not Ward 2 H. 7. fol. 8. The King may re-enter without demand where there is a clause of re-entry in his Lease but then that shall be found by Office Tit. Escheat 23. Br Alien borne hath Issue a Son and after is made Denizen and after hath Issue another Sonne and purchase Land and dyes the youngest Sonne shall have the Land and not the eldest nor the Lord by Escheat Tit. Escheat 29. B. VVhere a man is attaint of Heresie and delivered to Lay men to be burnt yet he shall not forfeit his Land unlesse he be put in execution and there by the execution the Lord shall have Escheat unlesse the Land be held of the Ordinary then the King shall have it Enquest FOR that that you try your Copy-holders and other Issues by consent by Jury let us see how many shall be sworn of a Jury The Statute of Westm 2. chap. 13. is that the Sheriff shall inquire by twelve and not by lesse and the same Law shall be in Leet and for that that this Statute doth not extend to Court-Baron Presentment of Articles there by lesse then twelve may be for one may hold Court-Baron though there be but two Suitors and then they may inquire by two of Articles for the Lord but hard it is when every one is inheritable to the Lawes of the Realme and the triall of the Law is by twelve of Issue joyned between party and party that by your not power that is to say that there should not be twelve Tenants of every Jury to take from me my Triall which the Law gives to me and if you will try Issue by lesse then twelve you may impannell three or foure of the Freinds to the parties and to have no number certain under twelve but to have such a
six English men otherwise the Jury shall not be taken and so shall be Tales of that 4 Mar. b. Tit. Jurors 8. Jury tooke a Writing of the Plaintiff which was not delivered to them in Court and passed for the Plaintiff and for that that this matter appeared to the Court by examination therefore the Plaintiff shall have no Judgment 35 H. 8. B. Tit. Replead 54. It was in use in the Kings bench though that the Jury was ready to passe there if there be a Jeofaile apparent in the Record the Jury shall be discharged 26 H. 8. f. 6. Jurors after they are in the House return to heare evidence again upon matter which they were in doubt of and may 14 H. 7. f. 1. The Jury eate and drink before the Evidence finished or after they are agreed depart and drink before Verdict they shall be Fined and the Verdict is good but if he eat and drink after evidence given and before they agree the Verdict is void And it seems that this matter shall be shewed when the Jury comes in to give their Verdict and shall be examined and not after And it seems that the Jurors may depart asunder by cause of great tempest of a House falling or fire where they are Execution For that that execution is used in many Court-Barons by Levari facias let us see what Goods upon that may be taken in Execution and what not and the order of execution GOods pawned shall not be taken in execution for the Debt of him which pawned them during the time they are pawned 34 H. 8 Pledge 28. and 4 Ed. 6. Distresse 75. Where A. lets Oxen for time and after A. is condemned these Oxen during the tearme shall not be taken in execution 22 Ed. 4. f. 10. Debt in Court-Baron the Plaintiff recovers by Judgment and shall have execution and the Beasts of the Defendant were taken and delivered to him in Execution 33 Ed. 3. Tit. Execution 133. In Debt where three are bonnd joyntly and severally and hath of those three severall Judgments and if Execution be against one the other shall have a supersedeas but in trespasse against three Execution against one doth not suffice and the same Law is in a ioynt Debt 4 Ed. 4. fol. 39. By Fieri facias or Levari facias the Officer cannot break the Doore nor Chest to take Goods in Execution for if he do trespasse lies against him for the breaking only 18 Ed. 4. f. 4. 13 Ed. 4. fol. 9. by Choke notwitstanding 8 Ed. 2. Tit. Executors 152. contrary If one recovers in Court-Baron he shall not have execution by Eierifacias nor otherwise but may distrain the Defendant after Judgement and detaine the distresse in their hands in safegard till the Defendant hath satisfied the Plaintiff of the condemnation 22 Ass 72 Statham 11 Ed. fol. 93. Nat. Bre. fol. 165 and 4 H. 6. fol. 17 action Bailiff in Court Baron cannot sell the Goods in execution but shall restraine them as distresse notwithstanding where it is used to make Levari facias it is a good custome and note that it is used in many Mannors that the goods are praised and execution made of them by Levari facias 22 Book of Ass 72. A Writ of Execution Judicii lieth where Judgement is given in a Court-Baron upon a Writ of right patent or in debt or trespasse and the Bailiff will not make execution this Writ lieth as well as it lieth where Judgement is given in a Court of Record and the Sheriff will not make execution and if he will not levy the execution upon the Goods it was in vaine to award this Writ Fitzh f. 20. A. Capias doth not lye in Court-Baron and for that the Capias to satisfie doth not lye to have execution and Elegit doth not lye there c. for this is given by the Statute of Westm 2. chap. 18. 29 H. 8. Tit. Execution B. 132. Two are bound in an obligation joyntly and severally if he sue one and takes his Body by a Capias to satisfie yet he may take the other but if one satisfie him the other may plead that 37 H. 8. Tit. condition B. 16. One taken by a Capias to satisfie is in execution though that be not returned 13. H. 4. Tit. Avowris 237. One avowes for that that J. S. was seised of a place where c. And let that to the Plaintiff for life rendring Rent and after J.S. grants the reversion to B. who was bound in a recognsance to the Avowant and that the Avowant hath that Rent delivered in execution and good 15 Ed. 3. Tit. Execution 93. Rent was delivered in execution upon a Recognisance time of Ed. 1. Title Audita querela 402. If the Father be bound in a Recognisance and dies and his Issue within age the Execution shall not be against him for if it be he shall have an Assise Time of Ed. 1 Tit. 417. If a man takes a Wife and after be bound and dyes the VVife is indowed if she be outed by extent she shall have Assise 29 H. 8. Tit. Stat. Merchant 40. If one sue Execution upon a Statute and he accept part of the Land in name of all he shall not have extent of the residue but it seems upon a Nihil returned upon the Testatum he may have processe into another County 2 R. 3. f. 8. Statute Staple was certified by the Maior of the Staple and the Conisee upon that sues a VVrit to take the Body and to extend his Land in Suff. and Middlesex only and this VVrit was not returned and by Certiorare he caused the Maior to certifie the Statute again and upon that he hath a VVrit of extent in ten Counties but not in Suff. and Middlesex and this VVrit is not returned and he hath the third Certificate and the third VVrit of Extent into six Counties but not in Suff. and Middle and now hath his Extent and hath Land that the Cognifor hath in right of his VVife which died and for threats durst not take the profits of the residue and by all the Justices the Cognisee shall have a Capias into the County where he took his first Writ and not otherwise that is into the County of Suff. and Middlesex only upon the fourth Certificate and upon that the Conisor found suerties to the King and party according to the Statute 11 H. 6. chap. 10. He shall have a Scire facias against the Conisee to prove the matter in his VVrit and to be at the Judgment in the Court and if he faile of any he shall forfeit his Recognisance 2 R. 3. fol. 9. If the Conisee of a Statute dies his Executors or Administrators if he dye Intestate shall have execution upon it without suing Scire facias or that the Conisor cannot have any Plea although he have a deed of Release but if he have a Release he shall have an Audita querela or a Scire facias and so it is where one
which is no Executor sues an Execution the Conisor shall have this VVrit but upon recovery by the Statute of West 2. One may have a fieri facias within the yeare to have Execution and after the yeare may have Scire facias and if a man be bound in two Statutes one after the other and he which hath the last Statute hath first Execution the other shall have a Scire facias and have execution and if the Sheriff upon a VVrit to have execution returns the Conisor dead the Conisee shall have a Scire facias against the Heire of the Coniser and the Land Tenants 25 H. 7. fol. 17. VVhere the Conisee to whom a Statute is made dyes his Executors shall have Execution without suing Scire facias for that it is given by the Statute but where one hath a Judgment and dies it is otherwise West 2. chap. 45. gives Scire facias upon Judgment and upon Fine 15 H. 7. fol. 14. Husband is bound in a Statute and Lands of his VVife were extended and after the VVife dies and the Heire of the VVife enters now may the Conisee have a Capias for the Body of the Conisor though he had not that at the first for that that the Statute gives the Lands Goods and Body and if execution be defeated by lawfull entry he shall not have a Re-extent but if the Conisor himselfe take the profits of the Conisee or that the profit be destroyed by wild-fire or water the Conisee may hold over his Tearm and the Conisor cannot enter during the Tearme of extent but shall have a Scire facias and shall not have that before the Tearme ended without aquittance or that he leave Money in the Court and where the Conisee is satisfied within the tearm by casuall profit the Conisor shall have upon that a Venire facias and upon that a Scire facias And if it be extended too low the Conisor may lay the Money in Court and recover his Land and if it be found too high the Conisee may pray that the Extenders may take the Land c. 11 H. 6. fol. 8. If the Land extended be drowned by water within the Tearm the Conisee may hold over the Tearm and the same Law where he is outed by a Guardian in Knights service 15 Ed. 4. f. 5. 22 H. 8. chap. 5. VVhere Lands delivered by reasonable extent in Execution have been recovered or lawfully diversted from the Conisee of the Satute Merchants Statute Staple or Recognisances before they have been fully satisfied and paid there Debts without fraud or covin remedy given by Scire facias against the Recognisors to levy the residue VVhere a VVoman recovers dammages in Dower in the Bench she cannot have execution there of those dammages recovered by capias ad satisfaciendum for that that the Capias doth not lye in the Originall 11 H. 7. f. 15. 2 H. 4. f. 7. The Statute of Westm 2 chap. 18. gives Elegit that is to say That the Sheriffe shall deliver all the Chattells of the Debtor except the Oxen and Beasts of the Plow and the half of his Land that doth not extend to a Court-Baron but to Courts where Process is directed to the Sherift and the Statute is also when a Debt is recovered in a Court of the Kings and Court-Baron cannot award the halfe of the Land in Execution for it is no Court of the Kings but of the Lords and he cannot meddle with Lands without the Kings Command but in other Courts Execution shall be of Lands which hath a day of Judgement given and of Goods in this Court and Beasts which the party hath day of the Execution awarded and see also execution of Recognisances and of Statutes for your Learning Execution shall be of Land which hath day of recovery 7 Ed. 3. f. 93. and 21. Ass 2. A man shall have Execution of Lands which he had day of the Judgement and not before Abridgment Ass fol. 93. 19. Ed. 2. Fitzh Execution 249. Natura brevium fol. 168. A man shall have execution in Debt of no Land but of of that which the Defendant had day of the Judgement given and of Chattels which he had day of the Execution sued Natura brevium fol. 107. and 2 H. 4. fol. 15. It seems that all the halfe of the Lands which a Recognisor hath which enters into a Recognisance day of that or after are liable in execution by Elegit 24 Ed. 3. fol. 27. tit Execution 90. Fitzh 267. D. 2 H. 4. fol. 9. Note where one is bound in a Statute Execution shall be of all his Lands which he had day of the Statute acknowledged or after in whose hands they come by Feoffment or otherwise but it is not said so of Goods and Chattells And for that they shall not have them in whose hands they come but those only which he had in his hands day of the execution awarded But if the Cognisor after the Statute acknowledged lets his Land for yeares the Cognisee may out the Lessee for the words are in whose hands they come by Feoffment or in other manner Statute of Merchants fol 48. To have execution of a Statute Merchant first you shall have a Writ of Certificate in the Chancery and there upon Certificate shall goe a Capias returnable in the Common Bench or Kings Bench and then within one quarter of a yeare that it shall be taken shall goe an Extent of all his Goods and Lands See the Statute of Merchants 37 H. 6. fol. 6. Fitzh 130. G. Statute Staple shall be certified as the Statute Merchant is and upon that shall goe a Writ of execution to take him and to extend his Lands and this shall be returned in the Chancery and not into the Common Bench or Kings Bench as the VVrit of execution upon a statute Merchant shall be and upon this shall goe a Liberate Fitz. fol. 131. D. 15 H. 7. fol. 14. Upon a statute Staple he shall have the body lands and goods by a VVrit and upon a statute Merchant First a Capias by a quarter of a yeare c. and upon the returne of that Non est inventus shall have a VVrit to have execution of his Goods and Lands Upon a statute Staple after a Certificate shall goe out a VVrit to take his body and to extend his lands in what County he will and if that be returned he cannot have Extent in another County that is to say a Liberate 2 R. 3. fol. 7. Upon a statute Staple shall goe a Capias out of the Chancery returnable in the Chancery to take his body and to seife his lands into the Kings hands and at the day of returne of that Liberate 37 H. 6. fol. 6. Note that the Statute of Merchants fol. 79. is That an execution upon a Recognizance shall not be made as it is upon a Statute Merchant but as it was used by the Law before the making of this Statute and this was to
243. 26 Ed. 3. tit 246. Note as it is aforesaid that suit of Court is not incident to a Tenure but is due by Formam charte or by prescription as before the said Statutes Lords are to distraine every Tenant to make suit to their Courts and that suit is called suit service If a man seised of two Acres held by one Hauke makes a Feoffment of one the Feoffor shall hold by one Hauke and the Feoffee by another Littleton fol. so shall it be of suit of Court Brook Tenure 64. Tenant in Dower shall not make Suit if the Heire have sufficient land to be distrained Naturae Brevium fol. 159. B. Tenant in Fee It behooveth that the Steward shall have knowledge of all manner of Estates because of making surrenders of Copy-holders and also because of their Suits Wards Releifs and Services for if the Steward do not know the Estates of the Tenants how can he do Justice And for that somthing ought to be said of Estates and first of an Estate in Fee WHere lands are given to the Abbot of Battell and his Covent he hath Fee for that that they are a Corporation and Corporation i● intended to have continuance 11 H. 4. fol. 84. Br. Inquire and see in the next case Where land is given to Maior and Comonalty of London they have Fee without more saying that is without saying to have to them and their Successors 11 H. 7. f. 12. Notwithstanding it seems that Spirituall Corporation may die in some case If I have Common in the Land of an Abbot and I release to an Abbot and not to him and his Successors the Common is extinct but not for the life of the Abbot 26 H. 8. fol. 6. Where land is given to two to have and to hold to them and heires and Suis is left out they have but an Estate for life and not Fee 19 H. 6. f. 73. 20 H. 6. f. 35. the same Devise to one for ever be to him and his Assignes for ever he hath Fee 19 H. 6. f. 9 Where a Devise is to one without more that is is not said what Estate is for life only 22. Ed. 3. Where a Devise is to one and his Heires Males he hath taile and not Fee 27 H. 8. f. 32. If land be given to one to have and to hold to him and his Heires Males he hath Fee Littleton fol. 6. and 9 H. 6. fol. 25. A man devises his land to one to give and sell or to do with that at his will and preasure he hath Fee without more 19 H. 8. f. 9 and 7 Ed. 6. Tit. Devise 39. If a man devise his land to J.S. paying to J.D. a 100 l. J.S. hath Fee but if be devise to J.S. without more he hath but for life and in the first case if he do not pay that in his life time yet if his Heires or Executors pay it that sufficeth therefore it seemeth payment is not a condition there 29 H. 8. Tit. Testament 18. If lands are given to an Abbot or Prior to have to him and to his heires yet he hath not an Estate but for life for that that his heires cannot inherit otherwise it is where land is given to a Bishop or Parson and his Heires for they have Fee 94 H. 5. f. 9. If lands be given to B. for life the remainder to C. in taile the remainder to the right heires of B. the Fee is vested in B. if C. dye without Issue in the life of B. as well as if the remainder were given to him and to his right heirs and the right Heire of B. shall be in by discent if C. dye without Issue and not as a Purchasor 18 Ed. 2. Tit. 109. If Tenant in Fee bargaine and sell his land by Deed Indent and inroll within six Moneths to another though it be not to have to him and his heires he hath in Fee 27 H. 8. f. 6. and fol. 10.32 H. 8. Tit. conscience the twenty fifth the same If lands be given to J.S. to have to him in Fee simple yet he hath no Fee but for life 20 H. 6. fol. 36. But if land be given to one to have to him and his heires so long as such a Tree growes hath Fee determinable 27 H. 6.29 B If a man lets land to J.S. to have and to hold to him and his heires for tearme of the life of J.D. he hath Fee determinable for if J.S. dye living he for whose life the heire of the Lessee may enter and not a stranger as Ocupans Lit. fol. 136. 8 H. 4. fol. 14. You shall see the same 21 H. 8. Tit. Estates 50. and inquire If a man devises lands to J.S. paying ten pounds to his Executors and dies J.S. hath Fee by reason of the payment without words heires The same Law is if one sell his land to J.S. without words heires he hath Fee 4 Ed. 6. tit estates 78. Lease was made for eleven yeares and for security of that made a Writing that if he were disturbed he should have Fee and Livery was made and hath Fee upon disturbance 10 B. of Ass 15. 10 Ed. 3. Tit. Ass 161. the same Lease is made to one for twenty yeares and the Writing expresseth over that after the twenty yeares that the Lessee and his heires shall hold it for ever paying ten pounds and Livery is made he hath Fee forthwith for if the Lessor takes a VVife within the twenty years and dies shee shall recover Dower by award of the Court 31 Ed. 3. tit Feoffment 119. If a man lets for nine yeares upon condition that if the Lessee be disturbed within the tearme that the Lessee shall have Fee if the Farmor alien before disturbance this is disseisin to the Lessor for the see is not in the lessee before the condition broken 43 Book of Ass 41. If Lands be granted to one for five yeares upon condition that if he shall pay to the Grantor within the first two yeares forty Marks that then he shall have fee or otherwise but for five yeares and Livery and Seisin is made he hath fee forthwith upon condition Littleton 81. See 14 H. 8. fol. 25. Diversity where the condition is precedent and where subsequent The Lord Lovell let to W. for life and if the Lessor dyed without Issue of his body W. should have Fee the Fee is not forthwith in W. Plowden fol. 481. Land is given to the Husband and his Wife in speciall taile the remainder in Fee to the Husband which deviseth the Fee to his Wife and dyes without Issue the Wife is seised in Fee 27 Book of Ass 60. Lit. fol. 31. B. If a Woman be seised in Fee and deviseth that to her Husband and his heires and dyes he hath no Fee Natura brevium fol. 88. 3 Ed. 3. Journey to Northampton 33 Ass 3. the same 18 E. 4. fol. 11. B. 18 H. 8. tit Patentees 104. The King gives Land to J. S. and to his
the intaile is determined the Lease is determined and void 1 Ed. 6. tit acceptance 19. Lease for yeares and so from yeare to yeare as long as both parties pleased after he hath entred into every yeare it is a Lease for that yeare and a Lease for a thousand yeares is good 14 H. 8. f. 1. Lease for three hundred yeares is good and is but a Chattell notwithstanding the long time 32 Book of Assises 6. If a man lets for sixty yeares and so from sixty yeares to sixty yeares untill two hundred yeares be ended this is also one self same Lease and good 29 H. 8. tit Lease 49. and Plowdens Commentaries 273. the same The Husband and his Wife purchase to them and to the Heires of the Husband and after the Husband lets for yeares and dies the Wife may enter and avoid the Lease for her Life but if she dy before the residue of the Tearm it is good to the Lessee against the Heire of the Husband 33 H. 8. tit Lease 58. And note by all the Justices that the Guardian by Knight Service shall not out the Termor where he hath a Lease of his Tenant which dies his Heire within age contrary was the Law in times past as it appeares before in the title Ward VVhere it is agreed and granted to J.S. that he shall have twenty Acres in D. for twenty yeares this is a good Lease for this word Concessit is as strong as devised 37 H. 8. tit Lease 60. If one license one to enter and to occupie his Land for years it is a Lease for yeares in Law 10 Ed. 4. f. 4. 5 H. 7. f. 1. the same Tenant in taile lets for twenty two yeares rendring Rent and dies and the Lessee lets that over for ten yeares and the Issue accepts the Rent of the second Lessee this is no confirmation of the Lease for there is no privity betwixt the second Lessee and him 32 H. 8. Tit. Acceptance 13. A man lets for ten yeares and the next day lets the same Land to another for twenty yeares this is a good Lease for the last ten yeares of the twenty yeares which are ended after the first ten yeares 26 H. 8. Tit. Lease 48. See the time of H. 8. Tit. Lease 35. Weston saith If I let for so many yeares as J.S. shall name and after J.S. in my life time names certaine years the Lease is good for those yeares Plowdens Commentaries 273. A man lets a House with the Appurtenances no Land passes but if a man lets a House with all the Land to the same belonging there the Lands with that used passe and it is a good Lease of those Plowd Com. f. 273. 31 H. 8. tit Lease 55. See Plowd Com. 85. b. and f. 170.23 H. 8. tit Feoffments 53. If a man lets for life to J.S. and the next day lets to W. N. for yeares the second Lease is void if it be not granted of a Reversion 37 H. 8. tit Lease 48. A man lets for yeares to have after the Lease thereof made to J.N. ended and in truth J.N. hath no Lease this begins forthwith 3 Ed. 6. tit Lease 62. A man hath a Lease for yeares as Executor of J.S. and after purchaseth the Reversion the Lease is extinct and determined yet it may be assets 4 Ed. 6. Tit. Extinguishment 24. Leases made by a Bishop otherwise then for 21. yeares or three lives from the time that such Lease begins and where upon the old Rent is not reserved is void 1 Eliz. not in Print and for that a Lease made for thirty yeares by a Bishop and confirmed by the Dean and Chapters under their Seale shall not binde their Successor but if the Bishop Dean and Chapter joyne in a Lease for thirty yeares this is a good Lease notwithstanding this Statute And see Pulton tit Ecclesiasticall persons What Lease by Spirituall persons is good and what not And see 13 Eliz. chap. 10. That a Lease by Bishop Dean and Chapter for longer time then twenty one yeares or three lives is not good and by 14 Eliz. chap. 11. They may make a Lease of Houses in Cities and Borroughs for forty years and by 18 Eliz. chap. 11. They cannot let where there is an old Lease which hath continuance for three yeares or more A man possessed of a Tearm for forty yeares grants so many of them to J.S. which shall be behinde at the time of his death and it seems it is void for the Incertainty otherwise it is if it were by devise But if a man lets his Land to have after his death for forty yeares this is good for this is certaine 7 Ed. 6. tit Lease 66. See 8 H. 7. fol. 4. Grant of Rent but if a man let for life and foure yeares over is good Tenant which holds in cheife dies his heire before Livery sued makes a Lease for yeares this is good if no Intrusion be found by Office and if after the Lease the dying seised be found by Office and no intrusion it hath no relation to the death of the Ancestor unlesse for the profits and not to defeat the Lease 5 Ed. 6. Tit. Lease 57. Tenant at will What acts Tenant at will may do and what to him and what by him are good and what not IF Tenant at will lets for yeares in his own name He is a Disseisor 12 Ed. 4. f. 12. Release made to the Tenant at will by the Lessor is good Lit. f. 108. If one alien his Mannor there need not that Tenant at will attoin Lit. f. 125. Tenant at will cannot grant over his Estate to any for he hath no Interest certaine 27 H. 6. f. 3. B. If a man lets to one at will the Lessor dies the will is determined 21 H. 6. f. 42. If Tenant at will be outed this is Disseisin to the Lessor and yet the Tenant at will may enter without commandement of his Lessor for the will continues 38 H. 6. fol. 28. If Tenant at will make wast action upon the case lies against him and not wast 48 Ed. 3. f. 25. 11 H. 6. f. 38. the same See Lit. f. 15. 12 Ed. 4. f. 8. the same 22 Ed. 4. f. 5. Trespasse lies 14 H. 8 f. 12. By Brown If Tenant at will makes wast action upon the case lies and by Roo if my Father lets at will and dies the will is determined Littleton fol. 14. If Tenant at will makes voluntary wast he saith that the Lessor shall have an action of trespasse but it seems he intended trespasse upon the case 48 Ed. 3. f. 2. Action upon the case lies against Tenant at will which makes wast in burning of Houses willingly and not action of wast 2 Ed. 4. fol. 5. By Littleton If I deliver to you my Gown and you burn it action upon the case lies and not trespasse By force of Armes 43 Ed. 3. f. 30. If one hath Goods by delivery trespasse doth not lye against him but
such a Ship The Defendant at London assumed for ten pounds that if the Ship and Goods did not come safe to London and are there landed that then he would satisfie a hundred pounds to the Plaintiff and that afterwards the Ship was robbed upon Trade on the Sea and for not satisfaction he brought his Action the Plaintiff doth not shew where he was possessed and yet good and the truth was that the Bargain was beyond Sea and not in London But where the place is not local it is not material and though he were robbed upon the main Sea the Action lies in London upon the Assumpsit See after fol. 1. 19 H. 6. f. 49. Action upon the Case that the Defendant at London took upon him to cure his Horse and that carelesly he gave him a Medicine that the Horse died the Defendant saith that at Oxford in the County of Oxford he took to cure his Horse which saith without that that he undertook at London and held a good Plea 3 H. 4. f. 4. Deceit in Land of that that the Defendant there did undertake that the Lord should cause him to have certain Copy-hold of the Mannour of D. in the County of Middlesex and he assured that to others and saith that he might be sued where the Assumpsit was or where the Land is Inquire 11 H. 4. fol. 4. Trespasse by Executors in Middlesex of Money taken in the life of the Testator the Defendant saith that the Testator was indebted unto him and delivered that to him in London in the name of Payment c. and it is no Answer to the Trespasse in Middlesex but he should say without that that you took it in Middlesex as the Plaintiff suppose and is good 7 H. 6. f. 37. 22 Ed. 4. f. 38. the same 4 H. 6. fol. 12. Trespasse of a Close broken in D. Defendant justifies in S. for Common appendant and ought to traverse without that that he is culpable in D. 22 H. 6. fol. 40. 9 H. 6. f. 62. Trespasse of digging a Turbary in D. in the County of Middlesex he cannot justifie in the County of Essex without that that he is guilty in the County of Middlesex for he may plead not guilty if it be in another County but in Trespasse local in D. the Defendant may justifie in S. in the same County without that that he is guilty in D. but in Trespasse transitory in D. Defendant cannot justifie in S. in the same County without that that he is culpable in D. yet in Trespasse of Battery or Trespasse of Goods taken in D. in the County of Middlesex and Defendant justifies in S. in the County of Essex without that that he is culpable in D. in the County of Middlesex 5 H. 4. f. 2. 10 H. 7. f. 27. 11 H. 6. f. 20. 5 H. 4. f. 3. Trespasse of Sheep taken at D. in the County of Hartford the Defendant justifies the taking in Smithfield in London doing Damage he ought to say without that that he took them at D. in the County of Hartford 6 R. 2. chap. 2. That Writs of Debt and Account and all such whatsoever hereafter shall be taken in their Counties and it is ordained that if hereafter it be declared the Contract thereof to be made in another County that then incontinently that Writ shall be quasht 9 Ed. 4. fol. 48. By Needham a man cannot plead in Abatement of a Writ and say the Contract was made in another County for the Statute is not intended but where it appears by the Writ that the Contract was made in another County but before this time they have used to make Examination where the Contract was made and upon that abate the Writ if it were in another County but this not used now See 3 H. 6. Tit. 30. Examination fol. 36. 18 Ed. 4. fol. 1. Nusance that a Mill was erected in D. in the County of Kent the Defendant saith that he and all his Ancestors have been seised of a Mill in the County of Essex and the Mill fell by Tempest and he built it without that that he is guilty of any Annoyance in D. in the County of Kent and doth not traverse all the County and yet good by the whole Court for that that the thing is local and annexed to Free-hold and contrary of beating or Goods carried away which may be continued and is transitory 21 H. 6. f. 11. 2 M. Tit. 283. Traverse by without that of Trespasse of Battery or Goods carried out it is transitory and is not local as of Trees cut and Grasse mowed and therefore in Trespasse transitory the place shall not make Issue and is not traversable no more then in Trespasse upon the Case upon an Assumption and these may be continued contrary of Trespasse local See after Title Vill. 34 M. Tit. 268. Traverse by without that Action for making false Cloth in Bartholomew Fair London against the Statute Defendant saith that he made them well and truly in D. in the County of E. without that that he made them in Bartholomew Fair London as c. and it is good 22 Ed. 4. f. 38. the same verbatim Bargains and Contracts For that your Actions of Debt are in Court Barons of Bargains and Contracts it is convenient to speak something of Bargains and Contracts and where the Cause or Duty is traversable and where otherwise adiudged what is a good Plea and what Pleas he shall not have for that he may wage his Law DEbt of that that he let one Chamber and Board for his Wife and Son for every Week six shillings it is a good Plea to say that he did not let the Chamber for he destroys the Contract in part and it is intire 9 Ed. 4. fol. 1. 21 Ed. 4. f. 26. If the Plaintiff sell two Horses for forty shillings and counts in Debt that the Defendant bought a Horse for forty shillings the Defendant may say that he owes him nothing in manner and form or vary from the Contract and the Jury upon pain of Attaint ought to finde for the Defendant the same Law is if he sell one Horse and counts that he bought two Horses for forty shillings or if he sell a Horfe for forty shillings and count that he bought an Oxe for forty shillings upon pleading that he oweth him nothing in manner and forme this is material to aid the Defendant 3 H. 6. fol. 51. Debt and counts for Tallow bought for forty shillings the Defendant saith that he bought the Tallow for three shillings and four pence which he is ready to pay and to the remnant wages his Law and had it 14 H. 8. fol. 17. If I sell Goods for so much as J. S. shall say it is no Bargain forthwith and yet if he sell them to another before J.S. saith what he shall pay Action upon the Case it seems lies 14 H. 8. fol. 20. If Lessee for years grant his Interest to one upon Condition that he
obtain the good will of the first Lessor and pay so much as he shall arbitrate and he obtain his favour this is a good Contract but there agreed that is but a Communication without Quid pro quo forthwith or at the Day agreed as here If you say that you will give to me ten pounds for my Horse and you do not pay forthwith it is no Bargain but if you be telling out your Money he cannot sell that to another in the mean time for there was no fault in you but if Agreement be that you shall give ten pounds for my Horse and I give a Penny in earnest that seems a perfect Bargain and you shall have the Horse and I shall have the Money by Action of Debt 15 H. 7. f. 6. 10 Ed. 4. f. 21. If a Preist be hired to sing for ten pounds per annum he is not compellable to serve as a common Laborer is but if he depart within the terme his Wages is intire and shall have nothing and there it seems if one sels his Horse to me for twenty shillings he may keep him till I have paid him 17 Ed. 4. f. 1. Trespasse of Corn taken Defendant saith the Bargain was that the Defendant should go to J. S. and see the Corn and if they liked upon the view and gave forty pence for every Acre that he should have it and saith that he liked them upon the view and took them and it is no good Plea for notwithstanding the Bargain was that he should have upon his good liking upon view yet it is upon giving sorty pence for every Acre also and he cannot take them before he pay for that is parcell of the Contract And so if one agree upon the price for Wares he cannot take them before he pay unlesse he have Day of Payment given unto him 18 Ed. 4. f. 6. The Husband sels Trees growing upon the Land of his Wife for twenty pound and the Buyer takes part of the Trees and paid ten pound and after the Wife died without Issue so that the Husband shall not be Tenant by the Curtesie The Husband shall have Debt for the ten pound for that that the contract was intire and yet the Buyer shall not have the residue of the Trees And where one sells another mans Horse which he hath by wrong for ten pound out of an open Market and the owner take the Horse as he may yet debt lieth for the ten pound for that that the Contract was once executed and by Brian if one sells a Horse for ten pound he may keep him if he will till he be paid 20 H. 6. f. 22. A man seised in fee of land sels the trees and after makes a Feoffment in fee to another before the cutting the buyer shall have the Trees 21 H. 7. f. 6. by Fineux If one ask the price of a Cloth of a Merchant in London and he saith twenty shillings and the party saith he will give it and he takes the Cloth the Merchant may have action of Debt for the twenty shillings or keep it till he be paid and if the other take it against his will he shall have trespasse at his choise 14 H. 8. f. 17. If I sell my Horse for so much as J.S. shall say it is said it is no bargaine forthwith but if he sell that to another before J.S. have said what he shall have I shall have an action upon the case 23 H. 6. f. 50. Debt the Plaintif counts that he sold twenty Acres of land to the Defendant for twenty pound which he demanded and by Newton though the Plaintif do not infeof the Defendant yet he shall have Debt and the Defendant shall have an action upon the case against the Plaintif See 3 H. 7. f. 14. 2 H. 7. f. 12. Action upon the case lies for that that the Defendant hath bargained and sold to him lands and that he hath infeoffed another of them and the Defendant traverses the Feoffment to another and that proves that this is the cause of his action and not the bargaine 18 Ed. 4. f. 16. If the bargaine were that the Plaintif should give ten pound for so much wood if he liked it or it pleased him upon the sight thereof this is a bargain at the buyers pleasure Now if first upon the sight they disagree then it is a void bargaine though he after agree to it and if he agree upon the sight it is a perfect bargaine though after he disagree 5. H. 7. f. 41. One sells Goods or Wares and after the Sale he warrants them this warranty made at another time then at the Sale is void 9 H. 7. f. 22. If the Seller warrant the thing sold the Buyer may have deceit though he hath not paid the Money for the Seller may have Debt 10 H. 7. f. 7. Agreed by the Court If I sell certaine Goods to another for a certaine sum although he do not pay the Money if a day of payment be appointed that is a good bargaine and the property altered by this sale And by Hussey and Bria● A Victualler shall be compelled to sel his victuall if the Buyer tender him ready payment and otherwise not 39 H. 6. f. 18. contrary by Prisot 21 H. 7. f. 6. By Fineux If one demand the price of a Cloth of a Merchant in London and he saith twenty shillings and the party saith he will give it and takes the cloth it is in election to make that a bargaine and to have an action of debt or to keep it till he be paid and if the other take the Cloth by reason of this bargaine against his will he may have action of trespasse Plow Com. f. 309. Where one undertakes by word to make a House without consideration that he shall have no action Plow Com. fol. 11. There saith That bargaines or agreements conditionall shall be said good after that the condition is performed but before they are but words 44 Ed. 3. fol. 21. Where one becomes suerty for J. S. and in consideration will give him longer day of payment if J. S. do not pay he will action upon the case lies 27 H. 8. f. 33. If I sell to you twelve barrells of Ale you shall not have the barrells but the ale but if it were twelve barrells of Wine it is otherwise for this is the usage and intent 1 H. 7. f. 13. Debt upon buying Oyle for a hundred Markes paid and so though of simple contract it seemes the Defendant may say that he bought with condition that he should pay when he had uttered them without that that the Plaintiff sold in manner and forme though he might have waged his Law 21 Ed. 4. f. 49. Debt of buying a Horse at I. in the County of Middlesex Defendant may say that he bought him in London upon condition without that that he bought him in I. in the County of Middlesex but he cannot say that he bought him in another
do not lay the Essoin the fourth day then the next day ensuing the Party may enter exception that is ne recipiatur and after shall be no Essoin laid 4 H. 6. fol. 6. Visus in Curia If one cast an Essoin and appear in the Court before it be adjudged the Essoin shall be defeated and this by the Statute of questioning Essoins 12. H. 4. fol 24. the same 7. H. 4. fol. 40. Quare impedit by the King against R. Felbridge the Attorney of the Defendant was Essoined at the day of the Venire facias Returned and after that the Essoin was adjudged and before the adjournment the Attorney which was Essoined comes into the Court and was seen of the Court and it seems after the Essoin adjudged that he may be seen in the Court very well though that it be not adjourned and the Essoin very good 11 H. 4. fol. 80. Precipe 11. H. 6. fol. 53. Essoin was cast for the husband and wife and the Essoin was outed for the Husband because he was seen in the Court and allowed for the VVife 45. Ed. 3. fol. 24. Mortdancester against I. which voucheth B. which was Enoined at the Summons to warrant and at the day by Enoin he was Essoined of the Kings Service and at the day that he hath to bring in his VVarrant the Tenant was Essoined and the Essoin was adjudged and adjourned 12. H. 4. fol. 14. by Hull Essoin doth not lie after Essoin nor Essoin of the Kings Service after Essoin of the Kings Service but contrary by mean Processe 9. H. 5. fol. 5. By Strange common Essoin doth not lie after common Essoin without mean degree but after common Essoin Essoin of the Kings Service lyeth 21. Ed. 3. fol. 13. the same 21. Book of Assises 11 Assise The Sheriffe Returns that the Plaintiffe hath not found Pledges to prosecute and the Plaintiffe was Essoined and the Essoin adiudged for otherwise the Plaintiffe shall be non-suited 2 Ed. 4. fol. 16. At the great Cape returned against the Husband and the Wife the Husband casts the Essoin of the Kings Service where he had an Attorney in Court and held that the Essoin lies well notwithstanding that he hath an Attorney in Court contrary of a common Essoin for that cannot be where he hath an Attorney in Court 4. H. 6. fol. 10. Dower At the grand Cape the Tenant wages his Law of non-Summons and at the day Essoin is cast for him and saith that he hath an Attorney in Court and notwithstanding this the Essoin lies for here the Attorney is out of the Court. 7. H. 4. fol. 6. Precipe at the great Cape Returned one renders his Law by Attorney and at the day of the Law the Attorney laid an Essoin and had no day for it was said to him to let his Master come 19 H. 6. fol. 30. Debt at the day that he hath to make his Law his Attorney was Essoined and he ought not to be Essoined for he is out of the Court. 18 H. 6. fol. 20. Precipe The Tenant hath two Attorneys and the one is Essoined and not the other and good for their Warrant is ioynt and severall and excuses the master 11 H. 4. fol. 53. the same 19 H. 6. fol. 57. The Attorney of one Party cannot be Essoined of the Kings Service 21 Book of Assises 7. Where the Defendant appears and answers by Attorney he shall not be after Essoined unlesse his Attorney be also Essoined 14 H. 4. fol. 13. Quare impedit The Plaintiffe was Essoined and the Defendant saith that the Plaintiffe hath an Attorney that is not Essoined and by Hank that Challenge was entered and at the day that the Plaintiffe had by Essoin that shall be shewed and if it be found then the Defendant shall have a Writ to the Bishop and in the mean time the Essoin was adiourned 45. Ed. 3. fol. 10. Debt at the Exigent the Defendant came by Supersedeas upon Bail and at the day of the Exigent returned the Plaintiffe was Essoined and therefore the defendant shall have the same day without Bail and there agreed if the Party be Essoined and not his Attorney that this is a discontinuance of Process for the Attorney onely shall be Essoined and every Challenge of Essoin shall be entered but it shall not be tryed before the day of Adiournment of the Essoin unlesse it be challenged for that he was seen in the Court which shall be tryed forthwith 11 H. 8. Tit. 41. Formedon Conusance of Plea was granted and the Demandant sues a Resummons for failing of Right in the Franchise and the Attorney of the Tenant cast Essoin where another Attorney was Essoined upon the Originall and by the Court this matter of Challenge cannot be now tryed the Essoin was adiourned but not adiudged and it shall be tryed at the Adiournment and if it be found shall turn him in default 12 H. 4. fol. 25. A man hath two Attorneys and after the view the one was Essoined and the other not and by Hull By this Challenge the Essoin shall be adiourned but not adiudged and by Hank in some Case Essoin shall be adiudged and not adiourned as the Demandant in Precipe is Essoined and at the same day Protection is shewed out for the Tenant in this Case the Essoin shall be adiudged so that the Demandant shall not be nonsuited but it shall not be adiourned 12 H. 7. fol. 8. Formedon The Tenant makes two Attorneys and at the day upon the view granted the Tenant and one Attorney makes default and the other Attorney was Essoined and it was held clearly that the Essoin of one Attorney excuseth the default of the Tenant and the other Attorney for they were Attorneys Joint and severall 2 H. 5. fol. 2. Formedon After the view the Tenant was Essoined and notwithstanding that he had an Attorney not Essoined the Essoin was allowed sub Calumnia for the Attorney peradventure is removed and agreed if he have no Attorney in Court he himself may be essoined 11 H. 7. fol. 42. Essoin was amended in Precipe of Rent where the Essoin was entered in a Plea of a yearly Rent where it should have been in a Plea of Land 18 Ed. 4. fol. 4. The Writ was J.S. and the Essoin was J.S. of Dale in the County of Kent and for this variance it was quasht and shall not be amended for the Clerk had no fight of the VVrit for the Essoyne was before the VVrit returned 30 H. 6. f. 1. At the Pone in a Quare impedit the Incumbent was Essoined and was varying from the name in the Writ for the Essoin is Mich. and the Writ Michaell and adiudge that it should not be amended for that the Essoin was put in before the Writ came in 10. H. 7. f. 6. Precipe The Tenant hath view where it was not grantable and at the day of the Habere facias visum
plead in person afterwards that he is Prior of the Church of St. Peter and Paul for that is parcell of the name which cannot be pleaded after Imparlance for that doth notstand with c. 35 H. 6. fol 37. Trespasse against J.S. of D. after Imparlance he demands Judgment of the Writ for day of the Writ purchased he was dwelling at S. and not at D. and shall not have it for it is contrary to the name which the hath affirmed by the Imparlance 32 H. 6. fol 35. After Imparlance the Defendant cannot plead that he is dwelling in another place then is in the Count 19 H. 6. fol 1. 35 H. 6. fol 43. Debt against J. S. as Executor of J. D. and he imparles he shall not say after that he is Administrator and nor Executor 32 H. 6. fol 32. The same 36 H. 6. fol 17. 37 H. 6. fol 32. If the Defendant in personall action imparle and at the day makes default Judgment shall be given and in a reall action shall be awarded a Pettie Cape 7 H 6. fol 30. The same 11 H 7 fol 5.38 H. 6. fol 36.39 H. 6. fol 17. 4 H. 7. fol 12. If a man in debt upon an Obligation imparle before he demands hearing of the Obligation and Condition and hath that entred he cannot plead the Condition afterward for he shall not have hearing of that if he do not alledge variance 13 H. 7. fol 17. Precipe of Lands in D. the Tenant imparles and at the day he may say no such Town 9 Ed 4. fol 33. the same 7 Ed 4. fol 1. Trespas 16 H. 7. fol 17. Debt by Prior the Defendant imparles and at the day saith that the Plaintiffe is deposed for that goes in Bar. 7 Ed. 4. fol 1. Trespas against J.S. de D. in the County of Middlesex after Imparlance the Defendant cannot say no such Town D. within the said County but he may say there is over D. and nether D and none without addition 22 Ed 4. fol 1. the same 9 Ed. 4. fol 38. Precipe after Imparlance one may plead Non-tenure and Joyntenancie But in Precipe of Lands in D. and S. the Tenant Imparles and at the day saith That D. is an Hamlet of S. without that that there is any Town or place known out of the Town named D. in the same County Judgment of the Writ and hath the Plea by the whole Court 9 Ed. 4. fol. 42. Debt against Executors after Imparlance he cannot say that the Testator dyes intestate and that the Administration was committed to him Judgment of the Writ for he is estopped by the Imparlance but he may plead never Executor nor ever administred as an Executor for that is with the c. 32 H. 6. fol. 32. the same 18 Ed. 4. fol. 19. Writ is abated by death and abateable by Joyntenancie and severall tenancie and where a man is made knight or a woman takes an husband and such like and saith where a Writ is abateable if he Imparle or take continuance he cannot plead in abatement But otherwise it is if it were abated See 7 H. 6. fol. 16. and 20 H. 6. fo 17. And note that it pleaded there that the Plaintiffe is a knight 44 Ed. 3. fol. 4. After Imparlance the Defendant may plead to the Action as to say that the Plaintiffe is a Channon professed c. But he cannot plead to the Writ unlesse he come after the Continuance unlesse it were for that that the Writ is abated as death c. 20 Ed. 4. fol. 9. Debt upon a Lease of a Corodie the Defendant imparles and after that shall not have hearing of the Deed. See 4 H. 7. fol 12. 4 H 7. fol. 17. Replegeare against three which imparle joyntly and one makes default the other cannot plead no such in being as one is which makes default 11 H. 7. fol. 5. Debt for Corn the Defendant imparles and at the day makes default there shall go a Writ to inquire of the value See 37 H. 6. fol. 32. 15 H. 7. fol. 14. Attorney for Corporation after Imparlance he cannot plead that they are corporate by another name 32 H. 6. fol 12. Where a Writ is abated he may plead that though there be a Continuance as to say that the Plaintiffe is dead or hath an Husband day of the Writ but if it be abateable it is otherwise he may say that after the last continuance is made knight Judgment of the Writ c. where it is abateable 34 H. 6. fol 49. Debt upon Obligation by three the Defendant pleads not his Deed yet he may plead that after the last continuance one Plaintiffe is dead 22 Ed 4. fol 36. Trespasse The Defendant after Imparlance may say that the Plaintiffe is his wife Judgment if Action or that the Plaintiffe is a Monk professed And in Mordancester that the Demandant is a Bastard And in Debt against Executors after Imparlance he may say he was never Executor nor ever administred as Executor for these are disabilities which go in Bar. 32 H. 6. fol 32. It seems a man may plead after a Continuance that the Plaintiffe is a stranger born or Monk professed Judgment if Action and not to the person 36 H. 6. fol 7. 7 H. 6. fol. 39. It seems that after Imparlance one cannot plead to the Jurisdiction unlesse it be after speciall Imparlance saving all advantages as well to the Jurisdiction of the Courts as to the Writ and Declaration 19 H. 6. fol. 7. Debt by Executor which shews the Will as it behoveth and after the Defendant imparles there he shall not have reading of the Will again 38 H. 6. fol. 2. But if he plead variance he shall have Reading and so in Debt upon Obligation 16 Ed. 4. fol. 4. Debt upon specialtie the Defendant may plead Out-lawrie in the Plaintiffe though he hath parled for that is a Bar and intitles the King 4 Ed. 4. fol. 15. Debt after Imparlance one space in the Count cannot be amended in another tearm 39 H. 6. fol. 22. Debt upon arrerages of annuitie after Imparlance the Defendant cannot have hearing of the Deed But if the Defendant plead that it was made in another County then where the Writ was brought and then he shall shew 39 H. 6. fol. 17. the same Pleas after day given IF the Defendant imparle and make default he shall be condemned and upon day given shall issue Processe 7 H. 6. fol. 42. 19 H. 8. fol. 6. Note by all the Prothonotaries that day given is ever before the Count and Imparlance is after the Count and therefore where three Capias and Exigent is awarded and the Defendant appear upon the Exigent and hath day given and after makes default Distringas shall go and upon that returned Nihil other 3 Capias and Exigent and upon default in pers●r all action he shall be condemned See 7 H. 6. fol 42. 20 H. 6. fol 17. Trespas the Defendant at the day which he hath by
Dover is a Tenure in cheif See Littleton 23. See 5 Ed. 4. f. 127. 19 R. 2. Tit. 185. Guard F. Keeper of a Castle in England is Knights Service for it countervailes Escuage and is of the same nature 8 H. 7. fol. 12. If I hold of the King and he grants the same Service to me yet I shall hold of the King for all is held of the King mediately or immediately Magna Charta chap. 20. See there for keeping of a Castle 38 H. 8. Tit. 60. B. Livery where the Heir was in Ward to the King and come to full age there he shall sue Livery out of the Kings hands and the first Seisin is where the Heir is of full age at time of the Death of his Ancestor and where his Tenant holds in Socage in cheif and dies 10 H. 7. f. 23. If one hold of the King to inclose a Park he may by his Grant after reserve for that six Marks and the King is not bound by the Statute of Westminster the third It is held 21 Ed. 3. fol. 41. The King gives the honour of Barkhamsted to the Prince and his Heirs Kings of England and so it seems that Lands held of that Honour seems to be held in cheif yet Magna Charta is that Honour is not properly in cheif 26 H. 8. fol. 10. By Fitzh Lands in the County Palatine of Lancaster held of the Dutchy the King there hath kingly Rights and there Livery shall be sued 17 H. 8. fol. 31. Tenant of the King in cheif makes a Gift in Tail without licence the King may choose the Donee or Donor for his Tenant And if Tenant of the King before the Statute of We m. 3. make a Feoffment the King may choose the Feoffee or Feoffor for his Tenant 4 H. 6. f. 19. 33 H. 8 Tit. 94. B. in the Exchequer 3 Ed. 3. Rot. 2. It was found that a man held of the King in cheif as of his Honour of Raleigh and it was taken no Tenure in cheif but a Tenure of an Honour otherwise it is if the Honour be annexed to the Crown for then the Honour is in cheif And in the year 11 H. 7. The Honour of Raleigh was annexed to the Crown and so it is in cheif But where the King gives Lands to be held of him by Fealty and two pence for all Services that is Socage in cheif for it is of the Kings person and contrary if it were to be held of the Mannour of B. 24 Ed. 3. Tit. 19. He which holds of the King by Service to finde a Man to serve in the War by forty Dayes at his own Charge this is great Serjeanty Tit. 69. Br. That a Tenure to finde one Horse and such like is but small Serjeanty for it is not corporal Service 44 Ed. 3. f. 45. The King gives the Fee-farm of a Town that is such a Rent to be held for term of life and after confirmes to him and to his Heirs to be held by the Services due and this is held Knights Service of the King for the most high and better shall be taken for the King and by Fitzh 263. B. it appears that Rent may be held of the King by Knights Service in cheif as well as Land c. 10 H. 6. f. 12. Rent lies in Tenure of the King 14 H. 6. f. 12. If the King grant Land to me in Fee to be held as freely as the King is in his Crown yet I shall hold of the King and if I alien without licence I shall make Fine for this is vested in the King by his Prerogative and shall not pass out of his Person by general words by Paston in the end of the Case 45 Ed. 3. fol. 6. By Finchden if my Tenant infeoff the King and takes back of the King to hold of the King yet he is my Tenant in right and shall hold of the King also But inquire of the Tenure of me for the Tenure was once extinct by the Kings Possession 29 H. 8. Tit. 61. B. If the King purchase a Mannour which J. S. holds the Tenant shall hold as he held before and he shall not render Livery nor first Seisin and he shall not hold in cheif and it is said if the King grant the Mannour to W. N. in Fee except the Services of J.S. Now J.S. holds of the King as of the Person of the King and yet he doth not hold in cheif but as he held before for the act of the King shall not prejudice the Tenant 31 H. 8. Tit. 70. B. Lord and Tenant the Tenant is attaint of Treason by Act of Parliament and so forfeits all his Lands and after is pardoned and restored by another Act of Parliament to have to him and his Heirs as if no such Attainder or former Act had been now he shall hold of a common person as before and yet once the Tenure was extinct 3 H. 3. Tit. 94. B. Where the King gives Lands to be held of him by Fealty and twelve pence for all Services this is Socage in cheif for it is of the Kings person 23 H. 3. Tit. 148. Guard F. If a man holds of the King to go with him in the Army against Scotland in the Vanguard and in his Return in the Rereward and so if he hold to give to the King Hornegild which is said Cornage it is great Serjeanty 38 H. 8. Tit. Livery 60. The Heir of him which holds of the King in cheif in Socage shall not pay first Seisin to the King for all his Lands but onely for those Lands held in Socage in cheif contrary of him which holds in Knights Service in cheif and where he holds in Socage in cheif the other Lord shall have Ouster le main with Issues 2 Ed. 4. fol. 6. Land is given in Tail to be held of the cheif Lords these words to be held c. are void and he shall hold of the Giver Where there is Lord and Tenant if the Tenant be disseised and the Disseisor dieth seised and his Heir is in by Discent the Lord ought to advow upon him but if there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant infcoffs another which doth not give notice to the Lord now the Lord during the life of the Feoffor may take him for his Tenant or the Feoffee at his pleasure 4 H. 6. f. 19. 3. Book of Assise 8. Lands is given in Tail without saying of whom to hold the Donee shall hold of the Giver and if a man before the Statute of Quia Emptores give in Fee without saying of whom to hold the Feoffee shall hold of the Feoffor Littleton f. 5. 16 Ed. 3. Statham fol. 23. If Lands be given in Tail to be held of the Lord this to be held is void and the Lord ought to avow upon the Feoffor 5 H. 7. fol. 35. Mesnalty lies in Tenure by a Mesne contrary of an Advowson appendant 1 H. 4. f. 1. the same 33 H. 6. f. 34.
Was the opinion that Advowson may lie in Tenure as where a Mannour and Advowson are held the Advowson is made in grosse and the Advowson is held for it self 21 Ed. 3. f. 3. It seems that an Advowson lieth in Tenure 24 Ed. 3. Tit. 18. 14 H. 7. fol. 26. 15 H. 7. fol. 8. the same 32 Ed. 3. Tit. 75. Br. A fishing doth not lie in Tenure for the Soil may be to one and the fishing to another 11 H. 4. fol. 80. It seems by Hill that Rent cannot be held of a common person 10 H. 6. f. 12. Rent lieth in Tenure of the King 10. Book of Assise 24. 1 H. 6. f. 21. Fitzh 263. B. 13 H. 6. f. 12. 40 Ed. 3. fol. 44. Fishing lies in Tenure and yet it is a profit in anothers Soil 8. Book of Assise 7. Office may be held in cheif 42 Ed. 3. fol. 7. Advowson may hold 43 Ed. 3. fol. 15. the same 14 H. 4. fol. 3. Where a Deed is to hold by Homage Fealty Escuage and Rent for all Services the Lord shall not have Suit of Court 20 H. 7. fol. 10. He might before the Statute infeoff one to hold of him and after the Statute if he infeoff him of part he shall hold for that part 10 H. 7. fol. 10. the same 5 H. 7. f. 11. By Fairefax Termor for yeares shall make Fealty to his Lessor Littleton 25. 9 H. 6. f. 43. the same 10. Book of Ass 29. Lord Mesne and Tenant the Tenant holds of the Mesne by three pence and the Mesne over of the Lord by four pence the Mesne dies without Heir the Lord shall have the three pence for the Signiory is extinct in the Mesnalty so that he shall onely have the Services which the Mesne should have had and also the Services which the Mesne paid to the Lord but it is said otherwise upon forejudging for there the ancient Signiory remaines for this wills the Statute Littleton 41. Lord Mesne and Tenant and the Tenant holds of the Mesne by the Service of five shillings and the Mesne holds over by the Service of twelve pence the Lord Paramount purchases the Tenancy in Fee then the Services of the Mesnalty are extinct but for that that when the Lord Paramount hath the tenancy he holds of his Lord next Paramount and for that the Signiory of the Mesnalty is extinct but for that that the tenant holds by 5. shillings of the Mesne and the Mesne holds but by twelve pence the Lord shall have the foure shillings of the Mesne as Rent ●e●k 2 E. 2. fol. tit Exting 6. F. 26 Book of Assises 66. A man may hold by homage and yet not Knights Service but in Socage Littleton 22. VVhere a man holds by homage and fealfor all manner of Services it is Socage for homage by it self doth not make Knights Service 26 Book of Assises 66. The King Lord Mesne and Tenant the Tenant holds of the Mesne by Socage and the mesne over by Knights Service the Tenant gives in Frank-marriage rendring 12 d. by yeare for all services saving Service abroad and it seems that by this word saving the Service abroad the giver shall have only such Services by which he himself is charged over 31 Book of Assises 30. When a man gives Lands in fee before the Statute to be held by two pence saving the service abroad yet he shall hold by Knight service by Thorpe See 31 Book of Assises 15. Fitzh 8. A. If the Husband infeoff J. S. and dye and after the Wife is indowed she shall hold this Dower of the Feoffee by Fealty 33 Ed. 3. Statham fol. 75. Where the woman is indowed by the Guardian shee shall be Attendant to the Guardian and at full age to the heire 3 E. 3. tit 84. B. A woman tenant in Dower shal hold of the Heir for parcel and he shal make Avowry for that portion 34 Book of Ass 15. Where Tenant in taile dyes without Issue and his wife is indowed and the Donor enters shee shall hold by the third part of the services for this is the act of God and the Law The same Law is where there is Lord and Tenant and the Tenant dyes without Heire and the Lord enters for Escheat and the wife of the Tenant recovers Dower and hath Execution shee shal hold by the 3d part of the services contrary where the Lord purchaseth the tenancy in fee and she is indowed she shall render nothing to the Lord for this is his own act 24 H. 8. tit 53. If a man before the Statute of Quia emptores terrarū had made a gift of land to one in fee for repairing a Bridg or for keeping sucha Castle or for marrying yearly a poore Virgin of S. this is a Tenure and the Donor may distraine and make avowrie and not condition but if a woman give lands to a man to marry her this is a condition in effect and no Tenure 9 H. 3. fol. 72. Lands in Gavelkinde are held in Socage and not in Knights Service Fitzh 13. D. Lands which are held in ancient Demesne are Socage 13 R. 2. tit 76. A man gives land to hold by ten shillings for all Services Exactions Customes and Demands And yet the Tenant was constrained to pay releife for that is incident as well to Socage as to Knights Service 29 H. 8. tit 64. A man makes a Feostment of the halfe of his Land the Feoffee shall hold of his Lord by the whole Services that the whole land was held before for the Statute to hold for that particular doth not hold place here for moiety is not a particular as of one Acre or two Acres in certaine but count of the third part which goes throughout and every where And if a man holds two Acres by a hauk and makes a Feoffment in Fee of one Acre the Feoffee shall hold that by a hauke and the Feoffor shall hold the other Acre by another hauke Westm 3. fol. 85. It is lawfull for any man to sell so that the Feoffee hold of the cheife Lord for that part according to the quantity of the land that is the value of the land so sold c. Littleton 41. If one holds his land of the Lord by the Service to render to his Lord yearly at such a feast a Horse or a Ring of Gold or a clove if in such case the Lord purchase parcell of the land such service is gone for such service cannot be severed nor aportioned but if the tenant hold by homage Fealty and Rent and the Lord purchase parcel of the land the Rent shal be apportioned but the Homage and Fealty shal continue intire to the Lord. 8 H. 7. fol. 14. It is impossible that any Land should be and not held of the King either mediately or immediately and for that the King cannot release to his Tenant all his Services 10 H. 7. fol. 10. If the Tenant which holds two Acres by twenty pence makes a Feoffment
not good without concluding and so not Parson 7 E. 4. fol. 16. Assise and Trespass Diversity between pleadings in Assise and Trespass for in Trespass need not make Title under Possession otherwise in Assise TRespasse the Defendant ought to convey to him an Estate immediate and for that to say that J. S. was seised till by J. D. disseised which infeoffed the Plaintiff upon whom J. S. entered whose Estate he hath it is not good but if the Defendant saith that he was seised till by the Plaintiff disseised upon whom he entered it is good but not in Assise 5 H. 7. f. 11. Trespasse the Defendant saith that he was seised till by the Plaintiff disseised and he entered and it is good and he need not to convey to him a Title and the Plaintiff saith that he was seised till by the Defendant disseised without that that he disseised the Defendant for if the Defendant had first Possession it is good in Trespasse 26 H. 8. f. 6. Trepasse the Defendant may plead Fine with Proclamation Judgement if Action but not relie upon Estoppell 17 H. 8. f. 27. Trespasse the Defendant pleads his Free-hold the Plaintiff saith that he was seised in Fee till disseised by the Defendant and he re-entered and the Trespasse in the mean time the Defendant maintains his Barr without that that he disseised the Plaintiff 1 Ed. 4. f. 3. Trespasse the Defendant pleads Gift in Tail to his Ancestor and conveys to him by divers Discents the Plaintiff saith that he was seised in Fee and traversed the Gift and it is good and need not make Title beyond his Possession otherwise of Assise 3 Ed. 4. f. 19. Trespasse to plead a Feoffment of the Plaintiff it seems to be good or he may say that he himself was seised but in Assise Feoffment of the Plaintiff is no Plea for that amounts to no wrong no Disseisin 15 Ed. 4. f. 31. 29. Book of Ass 24. Trespasse if the Defendant plead that he was infeoffed the Plaintiff may traverse the Feoffment without making to him Title otherwise it is in an Assise 18 Ed. 4. f. 10.10 Ed. 4. f. 3.27 H. 6. f. 1. 40 Ed. 3. f. 5. Trespasse the Defendant saith that H. his Tenant at will infeoffed the Plaintiff and he entered the Plaintiff saith that J. S. infeoffed H. and he died seised and his Issue infeoffed me the Defendant cannot traverse the Feoffment but the Discent otherwise it is in Assise 10 H. 4. f. 1. Assise by Littleton the Tenant may plead let to him for years or for life the Reversion to the Plaintiff and it is good and so is it of a Feoffment with Warranty of the Plaintiff and relie upon Warranty 18 Ed. 4. fol. 10. 8 Ed. 2. Tit. Ass 391. 18 Ed. 3 f. 13. the same Assise the Tenant pleads that the Plaintiff let to him for life and is good but a Feoffment of the Plaintiff is not good in Assise but in Trespasse it is good 6 H. 7. f. 14.27 Book of Ass 31. the same 29. Book of Ass 24. Trespasse at Compton over C. and neither C. it is no Plea in Trespasse but it is good in Assise 8 H. 6. f. 18. Trespasse at D. there are two Dd. within the County and none without addition it is no Plea for the Visne shall be of the Body of the County 3 Ed. 4. f. 26. and 9 H. 6. Tit. 5. the same Assise of Lands in Osgodby the Tenant saith there are two Osgodbyes within the County none without addition and it is no Plea for the Plaintiff shall recover by view of the Jurors 5 Book of Assises 9 and 27 Ed. 3. f. 2 Trespasse in Otterton and H. which H. is a Hamlet of Otterton it is a good Plea in Precipe and not in Trespasse where Damages onely are recovered 7 E. 4. f. 18 4 E. 4 Tit Breif 155 179. Trespasse may be in a Hamlet but not in a place onely known 11 H. 7 fol. 24 2 R. 3. fol. 1 43 E. 3. fol. 30 the same Precipe in D. is a good Plea in Abatement that D. is a Hamlet and not a Town but otherwise it is in Assise 8 E. 4. f. 6 Pleas in Barr. Barr is good at the first shew or by common reason and intent such intent is a Plea which hath not more vehement presumption then to intend contrary but if the intent be indifferent it is not good at the first shew by Intendment FOrmedon in Discender that he gave not is good and yet it may be that he did recover in value but the most pressing Intendment is to the contrary but if in Debt I plead Release bearing Date after the Obligation it is not good at the first face unlesse he saith that it was delivered after the Obligation Plowd Com. f 32 Forging of Deeds the Defendant saith that he himself was seised at the time of the Forgery and it might be by Disseisin but it shall not be intended and for that it is good at the first shew 8 H. 6. f. 34 Trespasse that he entered into a Warren the Defendant pleads his Free-hold and it is good and yet one may have the Warren and another the Free-hold 44 E. 3. f. 12 17 E. 4. f. 6 10 H. 7. f. 24 34 H. 6. f. 28 Trespasse in a severall fishing the Defendant pleads that the place is his Free-hold and is good as above at the first face 18 H. 6. f. 29 10 H. 7. f. 24 20 H. 6. f. 4 17 E. 4. f. 6 18 E. 4. f. 4 Assise of Mortdancester because his Mother took the habit of Religion the Defendant saith that your Mother had a Husband alive when she entered into Religion and it is not good for it is indifferent whether he be alive or not and for that he ought to aver that the Husband is yet alive 5 E. 4. f. 3 Trespasse of Goods c. the Defendant justifies that the property was to J. S. which gave them to him at D. and though he do not say where the property was in him it shall be intended at D. and good 1 E. 5. f. 3 It is said there though the Barr be good to common intent yet it shall not be good where parcell of the substance is left out but where such things are left out which by special intendment and not by general intendment are omitted the Law shall keep such a barr Plowd Com fol 27. Accounts the Defendant saith that he hath accounted before the Plaintiffe himself and it is good yet he doth not say that he was before Auditors before him c. 4 Ed. 4. fol. 6. Trespasse the Defendant pleads that he to whose use enfeoffed him and doth not say if he were out of Prison and of full age according to the Statute and yet being in Barre it was said that it shall be so intended 6. H. 7. fol. 6. Where Count is upon matter of Reords or of Specialty the Barre shall be
intent where such intent is not indifferent but is such intent which hath more stronger presumption then any other intent hath 3 Edw. 2. tit Escheat 8. And counts that his Tenant committed Felony by which hee was attaint and the Count was challenged for that that he doth not say for what Felony and yet good for it is not materiall for what Felony it was Generall Issue TRespasse upon the Statute of Richard the Defendant pleads his free-hold and it is not generall Issue in this but it is good in Trespasse Ravishment not guilty is the generall Issue and in maintenance not culpable 2 Ed. 4. fol. 6. Action upon the Statute of Liveries sayd that not guilty is no plea but that he gave not the Liveries is good and in Maintenance saith that not guilty is no Plea but that he did not maintaine yet inquire 8 H. 6. f. 36. b. Debt upon a matter of Record he oweth him nothing is no Plea but in Maintenance not guilty or he did not maintaine is good and in forging of Deeds not guilty is good 12 H. 7. fol. 14. Debt for Scavage held where the action is grounded upon a Statute and upon a matter in Deed he owes him nothing is a good Plea 21 H. 7.14 Forcible entry not guilty is good 14 H. 6. fol. 16. Eitzh 249. D. Trespasse of Goods taken the Defendant saith that the property of these was to J. S. which gave them to him without that that he tooke Goods of the Plaintiffe and this amounts to not guilty and by the Court adjudged that nothing shall be entred but not guilty and shall give that matter in evidence 9 H. 6. fol. 11. Assise the Tenant cannot plead Feoffment of the Plaintiff made to him for that amounts to a general Issue and the general Issue no wrong shall be entered 2 H. 4. f. 20 43 Book of Ass 41 Praemunire of that that the Defendant drawes him out of the Realm in Plea whereof Conusance to the King belongs the Defendant saith that he was Executor to J. S. and sued in Court of Audience to prove the Will and for that he could not have Right there he appealed to Rome and nothing shall be entered but the general Issue 2 R. 3. f. 18 Trespasse of Goods for the Defendant to say that the place is his Free-hold and he took them doing Damage it is no Plea but he ought to tell the certainty of the Land but of Trespasse in Land his Free-hold is good 5 H. 7. f. 28 B. See Brook Title General Issue Pleas uncertain Where it is uncertain in place and where not TRespasse for that that the Defendant holds Land of him in Reseleigh by reason of which he ought to scowre Ditches and for that he doth not shew where those Ditches are it is not good 46 Ed. 3. f. 8 Trespasse it is a good Plea to plead that there was an Arbitrement that he should pay ten pounds which he hath paid without saying where he hath paid it 8 H. 6. fol. 74 If Surrender or Attornement be pleaded which is matter in deed traversable it ought to be shewed where it was made 18 Ed. 4. f. 16. B. Where one avowes upon a Grant of a Rent-charge made to him and that one attorned he ought to shew in what place 2 R. 3. f. 13 Annuity the Defendant saith that he tendered that to him and for that he doth not shew where it is not good for it is matter in deed issuable which ought to be shewed certain 9 H. 6. f. 16 Held if one plead Arbitrement in Barr he ought to shew where the Submission was made 9 H 6. f. 50 Decies tantum for imbracing and for that he doth not shew where it is not good 37 H. 6 f 31 1 R. 3. f. 1 Presentment in the Sheriffs Turn that A. Abbot of D. had a Tann-house and had tanned Leather insufficiently and that he had sold and uttered the same Leather contrary to the Statute and for that he doth not shew in what place it was sold and uttered it is not good for there is no place upon which the View shall be and that is material 3 Ed. 4. fol. 30 Trespasse Defendant pleads Lease for years and ought to shew where it was made for it is traversable 5 H. 7. f. 3 Presentment that an Abbot and his Successors use to cleanse a Gutter by the high-way by reason of the Tenure of some of their Land and this is issuable for that it ought to be alleadged where the Land is Where one avowes for Rent-charge granted to him by Deed he ought to shew in what County and where it was granted 5 E. 4. f. 11 If one plead a Lease made to him for years he ought to shew where it was made 5 H. 7. f. 24 3 E. 4. fo 27. B. 18 E. 4. f. the same False Imprisonment if the Defendant justifie the Arrest by Precept he ought to shew where the Precept was made 14 H. 8. f. 18 21 H. 7. f. 73 the same Where the Defendant pleads that J. S. hath Goods in divers Dioces and the Administration belong to the Metropolitan if he do not shew in what Town the Goods are it is not good 10 H. 7. f. 16. Debt upon Arrerages of Annuity granted to him till he were promoted to a Benefice to plead that he took a Wife is not good if he do not shew where for it is traversable 35 H. 6. f. 50 Where the thing is issuable it ought to be shewed in what place it was INformation of Liveries the Plaintiff ought to count where the Cloth was given that is at D. 5 H. 7. f. 18 12 E. 4. f. 11 Trespasse Defendant saith that the place where c. is the Free-hold of J. S. and that he by his commandement entered he ought to shew where the commandement was given but if he iustifie as a Servant and by his commandement he need not shew where the commandement was 35 H. 6. fol. 59 Debt upon Arrerages of Annuity Defendant saith it was granted to the Plaintiff till he was promoted to a Benefice and saith that he was promoted to a Benefice and ought to shew where for it is issuable Uncertain for Year or Day TRespasse the Defendant iustifies that be entered as Lord for that that the Tenant aliened in Mortmain and for that he doth not shew what Day and Year it is not good 7 H. 7. f. 5 Qnare impedit the Defendant saith that the next Avoidance was granted to J.S. which died intestate and the Ordinary sequestred and for that that it is not what year he granted it is not good 9 H. 7. f. 23. Trespasse of Goods to plead that in London is a Market every day but Sunday and that he bought them on Friday this is good without shewing what year for the year is not material by Choke 12 Ed. 4. f. 1. Assise if the Tenant plead that one Plaintiff died after the last continuance
of a Jury and say that you ought not to take this Inquest notwithstanding this Statute Conspiracy against two one in the year 42 Edw. 3. hath pleaded to the Jury and the other 43 Edw. 3. pleads in Abatement and now in 48 Ed. 3. the first takes Nisiprius and cannot have it before the Court be advised if the Writ be good for though that the other hath accepted the Writ good yet if the Writ doth not lye in the case the Writ shall abate against one and the other by 43 Ed. 3. f. 10. The same Law notwithstanding the Statute of 32 H. 8. aforesaid Debt against two Fxecutors one comes at the Pluries and pleads fully administred and after comes the other by Exigent and pleads to the Writ that 3. others are Executors which have administred not named Judgment of the Writ and for that that the Plaintif hath replyed that the two alone are Executors the Defendant for that may plead this matter in arrest of taking of the first inquest upon the first Issue for by the replication to the second Plea he hath waived the advantage of the first plea where it was sufficient for all by reason of the Statute which wil that he that first shall come by distresse shall answer 7 H. 4. f. 12. Brook Executors 46. and this is good at this day notwithstanding the Statute aforesaid of Jeofailes Severall Tenancy SCire facias of a Fine of Rent Service against many Tenants one saith that The came to a House parcell of the Tenements whereout the Rent in Demand is supposed to be Issuing by it self without that that the other have any thing Judgment of the Writ and that another holds four Acres parcell of the Land whereout the Rent in demand is supposed to be issuing by it self and it is good 5 H. 5. f. 4. otherwise it is of a Rent-charge Scire facias against J. S. J. D. and three others J. S. saith that he and one of the three held parcell joyntly and that the Ancestor was dead day of the writ purchased Judgement of the VVrit and J. D. saith he held another parcell in Fealty Judgement of the VVrit and the VVrit brought against them in common was abated 38 Ed. 3. f. 20. And note also severall Tenancy of parcell shall abate all the VVrit 19 Ed. 3. tit 18. 27 H. 8. f. the last 20 Ed. 4. f. 8. Precipe against two of sixteen Acres of Land one takes the Tenancy of twelve Acres without that that the other hath c. and vouches and the other takes the Tenancy of the residue without that that the Plaintiff ought to maintain his VVrit 41 Ed. 3. f. 20 the other severall Tenancy shall abate the Writ 28 Book of Ass 25. That he which pleads several Tenancy may vouch or plead over in Barr and not conclude to the Writ See Br. title Breife 141 and 13 H 6. f. 26. Assise severall Tenancy is no plea and the same Law in other actions where no land is demanded in cercaine 24 H. 8. tit 18. But see 21 H. 6. f. 57. and 30 B. of Ass 24. Dower severall Tenancy shall abate the Writ ●9 Ed. 3. Brook 30. otherwise it is in Assise 15 Ed. 2. tit 1. 14 Ed. 3. tit Breif 276. It seems that non-Tenure and severall Tenancy in Nuper obiit against 3 is no Plea 7 H. 6.8 See 13 Ed. 1. tit 3. Fitzh fol. 197. D. F. Quid Juris clamat against three which plead severall Tenancy and it was said that it behooveth that the Plaintif should maintain his writ so he he did 12 Ed. 3. tit 9. Mortdancester against 3. which say that they are Tenants in severalty Judgment of the VVrit And for that that the Assise found that one of them was Tenant in severalty the Writ abated 8 Ed. 2. tit 2. In Per quae servitia Severall Tenancy is no plea 12 Ed. 3. tit 15. 32 Ed. 3. tit 7. Scire facias against two one makes default and the other pleads severall Tenancy in abatement and cannot for that Seisin is to be awarded of half 42 Ed. 3. fol. 8. See ● Book of Assises the 16. Precipe against two one takes the Tenancy upon him without that that the other hath anything and the other saith nothing the Plaintiff need not to maintain his Writ 37 H. 6. f. 16. 18. Entry in the quibus against two one pleads severall Tenancy and also over in Barr and the other pleads in the same manner and the Plaintiff need not to answer to the Barr be it good or not but he ought to maintain his Writ for one ought not to recover upon an ill Writ 12 H. 6. f. 4. He which pleads severall Tenancy without that that the other named with him hath any thing he need not conclude to the VVrit but vouch or plead in Barr but the Demandant shall not answer to the Barr nor to the Voucher but ought to maintain his VVrit that they are Tenants as the VVrit supposes 19 H. 6. f. 14. Traverse Where he ought not to traverse and where he ought then what thing in the Plea shall be traversed BY Hussey in Precipe if the Tenant plead that the Land is ancient Demesne and pleadable by a small VVrit of Right close and he need not take Traverse that it is not frank fee for that that the VVrit is but a Supposall 5 H. 7. fol. 13. And in Mortdancester Tenant pleads Joynt-tenancy with the Father of the Demandant and it is good without Traverse that he is sole Tenant for that that this is but a Supposall and by Tremail fol. 14. of his Horse taken the Defendant saith that J. S. sold the Horse to him in an open Market or that the Horse was waived or VVreck or such like there he need not traverse for that that this is matter in Law and if he takes Traverse he waives that matter in Law 5 H 7. f. 6. accordingly 2 Ed. 4. f. 9. Plowd 23. A. By Hussey Fairfax where a matter indeed is alleadged by way of Bar or in Covenant then this ought to be traversed in every Case unless it be for the mischeif of Trial as special Bastardy is alleadged without Traverse it is goood for mischief of Triall 6 H. 7. f. 5. otherwise it is of matter of Supposall and in Assise the Tenant pleads a Feoffment of J. S. the Plaintiff saith that this was upon Condition and that J. S. entered for the Condition broken and infeoffed him and so he confesseth and avoids and for that he ought not to traverse and in Precipe quod reddat against J. S. he shall say that he held ioyntly with J. D. not named in the VVrit and take no Traverse for that that it is but a Supposall and in Trespasse of Goods taken the Defendant saith they were the Goods of J. S. which made him and the Plaintif his Executors the Plaintif saith that the Testator devised that after his Debts and Legacies
perform the covenants of an Indenture the Defendant alledges them performed specially and one Covenant was that J S should pay to the Plaintiffe 10 l. and he said that he offered it to him and the Plaintiffe refused by Fitzh and Shelley he need not say yet ready 27 H. 8. fol. 1. Debt upon an obligation The Defendant saith that it is endorced upon condition that if the Prior of W. made an obligation to the Plaintiffe before such a day that then c. And saith that the Prior tendered that to the Plaintiffe and he refused it and shall nor say yet ready for it is a thing out of his power and to be made by a stranger 10 H 6. fol 17. If a man be bound in 20 l. and the condition is to pay 10 l. if the Defendant plead in debt upon the obligation that he tendred the 10 l. at the day and the Plaintiffe refused it yet he shall say yet ready But if the condition were that J. S should pay at the day to the Plaintiffe and the Plaintiffe refuse he shall not say yet ready 14 H. 6. fol 24. Debt upon an obligation of 10 l. the Defendant pleads that after by Indenture of defesance the Plaintiffe granted that if the Defendant paied unto him 20 s. such a day that then the obligation should be void and saith that he tendred to him the 20 s. at the day and he refused it and by Prisot he shall not say yet ready 33 H. 6. fol 2. Debt upon an obligation the condition to pay a lesse sum this lesse sum is parcell of the sum in the obligation and for that the Defendant shall say yet ready but otherwise it is where the condition is to stand to the award or other collatteral matter there the Defendant shall not say yet ready 20 Ed 4. fol 2. The Court Roll. THe Court Baron of W. T. Prebend of Islington Gentleman Farmer of R. F. Clark Prebend of the preben dary aforesaid there to be held the Tuesday that is the 6 day of May the year of the Reign of our Soveraign Lady Elizabeth by the grace of God Queen of England France and Ireland defender of the faith the ●oth L. H. by W. I. essoyned of Common Essoyne Homagers Jury J. H J. P T. G R. M R. H R. E T. L R. W R. B W. R T. W. First they say upon their Oath Default of the Freeholders W. A 4d J. H 4d and R. B 4d are Freeholders of this Mannour and owe suit to the Court and at this day have made default Therefore every of them in the mercy as it appears upon their heads Also they say upon this Oath Des Tenants by Copie of the Rol● that W. J. 2d and J. R. 2d are Tenants by the Copy of the Rolls of this Court and owe Suit to the Court and at this day made default therefore either of them in the mercy as it appears above upon their heads Also they present that W. J. which held of the Lord freely one house Death and 30 acres of Meddow and Pasture with the appurtenances within this Lordship by fealty suite of Court and by the yearly Rent of 6 d. dyed of such an estate so seized and that R. J. is son and next heir of the aforesaid W. J. and is of the Age of 10 years and came to Court the aforesaid W. J. and payeth to the Lord for releif ●●d and made his fealty Also they say upon their Oath Alienation that G. B. which of the Lord held freely one Cottage one Orchard and 6 acres of m●ddow with the appurtenances by his deed indented bearing date the 6th day of January the year of the reign of the said Queen gave granted bargained and sold all and sing ●lar the premises aforesaid with their appurtenances to R. K. of c. to have and to hold all and singular the premises aforesaid with their appurtenances aforesaid to the said R. K. his heirs and Assignes of the chief Lords of the fee by the Rents Services and customes there first due and of right accustomed and the premises doth hold of the Lord of this Mannor by fealty Suite of Court by the yearly Rent of 12 d. And at this Conrt the said R. K. made to the Lord his fealty Also they say upon their Oath Legacie that W. A. which held of the Lord freely one house or tenement ● and 20 Acres of Land called H. by fealty suite of Court and by the yearly rent of 6 d. dyed thereof seised And by his last Will made in Writing bearing date the 28th of September the year of the Reign of the aforesaid Queen the 19th bequeathed the house or Tenement and the aforesaid 20 Acres of land to certain R. A. and T. A. his sons by the name of all his Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Scituate Lying and being in J. aforesaid to have and to hold the aforesaid messuage or tenement c. And the aforesaid 20 Acres of Land to the said R. A. and T. A. their Heirs and Assignes for ever to the poper use and behoof of R. and T. their Heirs and Assignes for ever Therefore it is commanded to the Bayliffe that he should distrain the aforesaid R. A. and T. A. according to the form of the Statute in that case provided to pay his Releif and likewise let them be distrained to make their fealty Surrender Also they say upon their Oath that R. R. customary tenant of this Mannor out of the Court surrendered into the hands of the Lord by the hands of W. T. and R. M. two customary tenants of this Mannor according to the custome of this Mannor All that messuage and 30 acres of meddow feeding and Pasture with the appurtenances late in the tenure or occupation of R. B. to the use and behoof of R. R. for tearm of his naturall life after the decease of the said R. R. then to the use and behoof of T. B. and the heirs of the body of the said T. lawfully begotten and for defect of such issue of the body of the said T. B. lawfully begotten the remainder thereof to J. J. the son of R. J. of J aforesaid Gentleman his heirs and assignes for ever and they say that the aforesaid R. dyed and now at this Court aforesaid T. B. came and requested to be admitted to all and singular the premises aforesaid and at this Court the Lord by J. K. his steward granted him seisin thereof by the rod to have and to hold to the said T. B. and the heirs of his body lawfully begotten and for defect of such issue the remainder to the use and behoof of the said J. J. and his heirs for ever and the aforesaid T. B. gave to the Lord a fine 4 pound and made to the Lord his fealty and is admitted tenant thereof To this Court it is witnessed by W. T. steward Surrender taken by the
Steward that W. N. lying very sick 10 day of A. the year of the Reign of the aforesaid Lady the Queen 19. surrendred into the hands of the Lord by the hands of the said steward the Court being absent in the presence of R. C. R. P. and C. H. one tenement called Miles in which lately dwelt W. G. with all his lands and tenements within the prebend of J to the use and behoof of M. his wife for tearm of her life and aster the desease of the said M. the remainder to W. T. son of the foresaid W. the father and E daughter of the said W the father and sister of the aforesaid W. their sons and heirs upon this condition notwithstanding following that if it happen any of the aforesaid W. the son and E the daughter to dye without heirs of their body issuing that then he or she which did survive shall have enjoy the tenement aforesaid to them and their heirs for ever And upon this came into this Court the aforesaid M. did desire to be admitted into the Tenement aforesaid with the appurtenances to whom the Lord by J. K. his steward granted thereof seism by the rod to have to him in form aforesaid at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor and gave to the Lord for his fine for his entrance there had as it appears c. and made his fealty and is admitted thereof Tenant Item The death of a Coheir at this Court it was found by the Homagers that one W. W. one of the sons and Coheirs of R. W. dead which surely W.W. held of the Lord to him his heirs according to the custom of this Mannor the half of two messuages or tenements and one garden with the appurtenances in J and long before this Court dyed thereof seised within the age of 10 years and in the keeping of one R. M. according to the custome of the Mannor and that S. W is brother and sole heir of the aforesaid W. W. and of full age who being here present in the Court desired to be admitted Tenant to all the lands and tenements customary of which the said W W dyed thereof seised that is to the half of two messuages or tenements a Toft and garden with the appurtenances within the Mannor to which the Lord by his steward J. K. granted to him seisin thereof to have and to hold to him and his heirs of the Lord by the rod at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid by the rent custome and services there first due and accustomed and gives to the Lord for his fine for his entrance as it appearsin the head and made to his Lord fealty and is admitted tenant thereof Also to this Court came J T Surrender in Court and surrendred into the hands of the Lord 10 acres of land either more or lesse with the appurtenances called S. 4 acres of pasture either more or lesse called B. and 4 acres of meddow be it more or lesse called K. customary to the use and behoof of R. B. Gentleman his heirs and assigns for ever by the rod at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid to which R.B. the Lord by his Steward granted to him thereof seisin to have to him and his heirs of the Lord by the rent of 10 s. yearly and other services then first due and he gives the Lord for a Fine for having this entry therein 4 l. and made to the Lord fealty and is hereof admitted Tenant Also the Homagers say upon their Oath that on R S Death which held of the Lord as a Parcener by the custome of the Mannor nine Acres of customary Land with a grange together with T S his brother to him and to his Heirs dyed since the last Court so seised and that one J S his son and next heir of the said R. to the half aforesaid of the Land and Grange aforesaid and is of the Age of 8 years And upon this as wel the custody of the aforesaid F as the Land and grange aforesaid were committed to one S I as his next freind c. And found surety to the Court E N to restore to the aforesaid J. of the profits thereof when he should come to the age of 14 years Also they say upon their Oath that R W Encre● ment encroached upon the wast of the Lord at C in length 20 rods and in bredth one rod therefore he in mercy c. And it is ordained that he shall lay out the same before the feast of St. John Baptist next under the pain of forfeiting to the Lord for every Rod c. Also they say upon their Oath that G B Re●●ous Bayliffe of the Lord such a day and year c. within the Lordship distrained H S for the Lords rent then by that foresaid H behind and not paid and that the aforesaid H then and there made Rescous upon the said G B therfore he in the mercy c. Pleas in Court Baron R. H. complaineth against C E and A his wife Formedon in Remainder of a Plea of Land that is to say of one house two Cottages 20 Acres of Meddow and 20 Acres of Pastor with the appurtenances in J within the Jurisdiction of this Court and made protestation to prosecute the Suit in forme and nature 〈◊〉 a Writ of the Queens of the forme of a gift in remainder at the common-Law and found sureties to prosecute that Suit in forme and nature aforesaid that is J.H. and R M and desires forthwith processe to be made for him according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid against the aforesaid C and A his wife c. Therefore according to the custome of this Mannor used time out of minde It is commanded to the under Ba●liffe of thi● Mannor aforesaid and the Officer of the foresaid Court that he should summon by good summoners the aforesaid C A that they should be before the suitors of the Court aforesaid the next Court of the Mannor aforesaid the Tuesday such a day held at the Mannor aforesaid to answer to the aforesaid R H of the aforesaid Plea c. The same day is given to the aforesaid R here c. To which truly next Court came aswell the aforesaid R H as the aforesaid C and A by J R their Attorney And the aforesaid Officer of the Court aforesaid returned here in the Court that that he by vertue of the command aforesaid to him directed had sunimoned the aforesaid C and A by good summoners that is by J D and R R to be here at this Court to answer the aforesaid R H of the aforesaid Plea of the aforesaid one house ● Cottages 20 Acres of Land 20 Acre of Meddow and 20 Acres of Pasture with the appurtenances as it was commanded him c. And upon this the said R H demandeth against
Common Recovery in a Right Patent in proper person and complained against W W of a Plea of land that is of one house one garden and one Acre of land with the appurtenances in J held of this Mannor by copy of Court Roll of this Mannor and made protestation to prosecute his complaint aforesaid in the Court aforesaid in forme and nature of a Writ of one Lady the Queen of right Patent at the Common-law according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid And found pledges to prosecute his complaint aforesaid here in the said Court that is J D and R F and desired processe thereof to be made to him against the aforesaid W W according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid therefore according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid it was commanded J S Bayliffe of the Mannor aforesaid and Officer of this Court that he should summon the aforesaid W W so that he should be here at the next Court of this Mannor aforesaid here that is the Saturday the fourth day of J to be held to answer the aforesaid A B of the Plea aforesaid and that he then have there the names of the summoners and this precept And the same day is given to the demandant here c. And late that is to say to this Court came the aforesaid W W in his proper person and in the full Court here gratis offered to answer to the aforesaid A B of the plea aforesaid by good summonitors that is J D and R. R according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid and upon this lately to this Court the aforesaid A B that is in proper person came and demanded against the said W W the house aforesaid the garden and acre of land aforesaid with appurtenances in J aforesaid held of this Mannor by Copy of Court Roll as his right and inheritance and whereof he saith that he himself was seised of the tenement aforesaid with the appurtenances in his demesne as of see and right according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid in time of peace in the time of our Lady the now Queen taking the profits to the value c. And that so is his right he offereth c. And the foresaid W W came and defendeth his right when c. and this seisin of which seisin c. As of fee and right c. and especially of the tenements aforesaid with the appurtenances and all c. And puts himself upon the homagers aforesaid of our Queen of this Court aforesaid according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid and desires an acknowledgment to be made whether he hath more right to hold the tenements aforesaid with the appurtenances as he holds or the aforesaid A. B. to have the aforesaid tenements with the appurtenances as he above demandeth c. And the aforesaid A B demandeth license to consider thereof till the 11th houre before noon of the same day and had it c. And the same houre was given to the aforesaid W here c. And after the said A B returned here into the Court the self same day at the aforesaid houre in proper person and the aforesaid W W though he were solemnly warned came not but in contempt of the Court departed made default therefore according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid It is considered by the Court that the aforesaid A B should recover his seisin against the said W W of the tenements aforesaid with their appurtenances according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid to hold to the said A B and his heirs according to the custome of the said Mannor quiet from the said W W and his heirs for ever and the said W W in the mercy c. And now to this Court the Lord in execution of judgment and recovering aforesaid by his Steward granted to the aforesaid A B of the Tenements aforesaid with the appurtenances seisin to hold to him and his heirs and assignes by the Rod at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the mannor and made to the Lord then fine and fealty and then was admitted Tenant And after that is to say at the same Court the aforesaid A B then present came and the aforesaid W W surrendred into the hands of the Lord the tenement aforesaid with the appurtenances to the use and behoofe of the foresaid A B his heirs and assignes for ever and further the aforesaid W W remised and released and altogether for him and his heirs for ever quite claimed to A B his heirs and assignes in their full and peceable possession and seisin day at the making of these presents according to the custome of the said Mannor of and in the tenements aforesaid with their appurtenances the whole right title state claim interest or demands whatsoever which he ever had hath or any way hereafter may have of or in the tenements aforesaid with their appurtenances or in any parcell thereof so that neither the aforesaid W.W. nor his heirs or any other of them any right title state claim interest or demand of or in the Tenements aforesaid with their appurtenances nor in any parcel of them from hence may challenge claim or pretend unto nor shal do hereafter but from all action of the Law title claim use interest and demand thereof be for ever excluded and every of them excluded for ever by these presents And further the said W W. granteth for him and his heirs that he will warrant the tenements aforesaid with the appurtenances to the aforesaid A B and his heirs against all men for ever To this Court c. came W. T son and heir of W T Common recovery in entry in the Post dead and is admitted tenant by the rod of one Feild called C containing by estimation 8 Acres of medow with the appurtenances in J aforesaid whether more or lesse with the appurtenances to have to him and his heirs at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid and paid to the Lord for his entrance so had c. and made his fealty c. And after to the same Court came the said W T and surrendred into the hands of the Lord in the same Court aforesaid the feild called C containing by estimation 8 acres of meddow either more or lesse lying in J aforesaid with the appurtenances whose western part abouts upon a certain way called K and the northern head thence abutting upon a close late S W to the use and behoof of M M and his heirs for ever and upon this came the aforesaid M M and desired of the Lord in the same Court to be admitted tenant to the aforesaid 8 acre of meddow with their appurtenances to have and to hold to him and his heirs for ever at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid making and rendring thereof rent services and customes before due and accustomed to whom the Lord by
the said Queen now the fourth by force and armes the Close of the said J. R. at D. broke and his Grasse to the value c. there late growing walking with his Feet there trod down and consumed and other Injuries c. to the great losse c. and against the Peace c. whereof he saith he is made worse and damnified to the value c. And the said T. in his proper person came and defended the force and Injury when c. and saith that he in nothing is guilty of the Trespasse aforesaid as the aforesaid J. above complaines against him and of this puts himself upon the Countrey the aforesaid Plaintiff likewise c. Entry of the great Cape A. VVhich was the VVise of C. J. by A B. her Attorney offered her self to this Court against T. J. of a Plea of the third part of a House and twenty Acres of Land with the Appurtenances in J. which the same A. in this Court claimes as her Dowry of the Gift of the aforesaid I. C. in times past her Husband for that the Tenements aforesaid are within this Lordship and the VVomen which after the Death of their Husbands of Tenements in J. aforesaid being dowable according to the Custome of the said Mannour time out of minde used of the third part thereof ought to be endowed c. and they came not and summoned c. therefore by the Judgement the third part of the aforesaid with the Appurtenances should be taken into the Lords hands c. and day c. they should be summoned that they be here at the next Court c. Precept of the great Cape J.K. Steward to the Bailiff thereof health take into the Lords hands by the view of good and lawfull men of this Mannour the third part of one House and twenty Acres of Land with the Appurtenances in I. which A. I. this Court c. doth claim against T. I. late of I. as the Dower of the said A. of the Gift of the aforesaid C. I. in time past her Husband by a VVrit of Dower whereof she hath nothing by the default of 〈◊〉 said T. and the same taking certifie me of and summon by good Summoners the aforesaid T. that he be here at the next Court there to answer and to shew why he was not here at the last Court as he was summoned and have here the names of those by whom c. you made the Summons witnesse c Entry of a small Cape T.Q. Esquire and I. his VVife by their Attorney offered themselves the fourth day against A. B. of I. and A. his VVife of a plea of the third part of eight Messuages and eighty Virges of Land with the Appurtenances in I. which the aforesaid T. and I. in this Court claim as the Dower of the said I. of the Gift of G. S. in time past her Husband against them and they did not come and had from thence day untill this day that is to say the tenth day c. after other they appeared here in Court therefore by the Judgement the third part with the Appurtenances should be taken into the hands of the Lord and they summoned c. that they be here in the day c. to hear their Judgement c. Precipe of Summons upon a right Patent c. J.K. Steward to the Bailiff of the Mannour aforesaid health c. I. S. complaines against I. D. in a plea of Land and makes Protestation to follow the Suit in the nature of a VVrit of our Lord the Kings of a right Patent and therefore I command you that according to the Custome of this Mannour you shall summon by good Summonitors the aforesaid I. D. to be here at the next Court here to be held such a day to answer in the Plea aforesaid and have there this Precept and how c. dated c. Precept upon Assise of Mortdancester J.K. Steward to the Bailiff of the Mannour aforesaid health because I. S. complaines as above therefore I command you that y●● summon by good Summons 12. free and lawfull men Tenants of the foresaid Mannour that they before me the aforesaid Steward at the next Court there to be held that is to say the Tuesday 19. day of September next coming at the hour of eight before noon of the same day ready by their Oath to know if T. S. Father of the said J.S. was seised in his Demesne as of Fee of two Houses and with the Appurtenances in D. within the Jurisdiction of this Court the Day that he died and if he died within forty years now last past and if the said J.S. be his next Heir and in the mean time let them view the said two Houses and make their names to be entered and summon by good Summoners the aforesaid J. and D. which now hold the aforesaid Houses and Lands that then they be there to hear that Return and have here the Summons and this Precept Dated c. under my Seal c. To make to have Possession J.K. Steward to the Bailiff thereof health know that A. B. in the Court held such a Day by the consideration of the said Court recovered his Seisin against B. of eight Acres of Land with the Appurtenances in J. by Default of the aforesaid B. and therefore I command you that to the said A.B. you shall give a full Seisin of the Tenements aforesaid with the Appurtenances without delay and have there this Precept and how c. Dated c. the Day c. Small Cape J.K. Steward to the Bailiff thereof health we command you that you take into the hands of the Lord by the view of good and lawfull men of this Mannour one House with the Appurtenances which A.B. in this Court claimes as his right against B. R. by Complaint of a Formedon in Remainder for Default of the said B. and make known the Day of the taking to me at the next Court and summon the said B. R. that he be before c. such a Day there to answer and to shew why he was not in this Court before c. such a Day last past as he was summoned and have there this Precept and how c. Dated c. The Returne of Writs newly corrected With divers other good Returns and many Cases of the Common Law to that added very necessary and profitable as well to young Students of the Law as to Sheriffs Coroners and others which are to make Returns of Writs for the better understanding of the Law in the said Returns Proces in the Court Hundred Court Baron c. Pleg de prosequendo J.D.R.F. THe within named H. E. is attached by Sureties N. F. R. D. J.D. Knight Sheriff The within named J. H. hath nothing in my Bailiwick by which he may be attached Note that every Pone is but a Summons By vertue of this VVrit to me directed Pone upon a Repleg I have put before the Justices of the
appears upon their heads and each of them is manucapted by himself that is by four Manucaptors by name A.B. c. And there are no more Executors of the will of the said B. nor heires of him or of Lands or Tenements which were his in the County of W. as by any means for the present can appeare unto me Pledges to prosecute J.D.R.R. A.B. within named hath nothing in my bailiwick but the Issue first by me forfeited Favor of the Sheref upon the 2. or 3. Distring Against a Clark by which nor where he may be distrained as to me by any means can appeare for this present W.D. Arch Deacon of R. hath nothing in my bailiwick of lay fee by which nor where he can be Distrained Warned or Attached by any means at present as to me can appeare That I should distrain the within written A.B. to be before the Justices within named Upon a Tarde at the Day and place therein contained This writ so late was delivered unto me that for the shortnesse of the time I could make no Execution thereof To the Distraining of R.L. and all other the Jurors within written to be before the Iustices within named at the day and place therein contained Other-Wise upon a Jur. This writ came unto me so late that for the shortnesse of the time could make no execution thereof but to ad Decem tales the execution thereof doth appeare in a certain Pannell fastned to this writ Otherwise for Homage The Manucaptors within named J.S.W.P.I.D. His Issue half a Mark. The summoners of the within named R. and E. his wife W.F.R.P. And so of all other actions reall if the Defendants be sufficient The Execution of this writ doth appeare in a certain inquisition to this writ annexed By vertue of a writ of our Lady the queen to me directed Partition and to this partition indented annexed I J.D. Knight Sheriff of the County aforesaid twentieth day of A. year 20. c. taking with me J.S. c. twelve free and lawful men of my County and of the view within written in the presence of H.F. in the writ aforesaid nominated in my proper person I came to the Tenements in the said writ nominated and there by their Oath respect being had to the true value of the said Tenements with the appurtenances the said Tenements in partition into three parts equally to be parted and one part of the said three parts that is twelve foot in length and eight foot in bredth of the House in the foresaid writ specified extending to the Land of F.G. called G. towards the west and thirty four foot in bredth and twelve rods in length and one Garden in the aforesaid writ specified lying to the said house abutting towards the west to the Land of the aforesaid F.G. called B. and the Glebe Land of the Rectory of S. and also c. And I the aforesaid Sheriff twentieth day of A. the year c. have made them to be assigned and delivered to H.F. nominated in the said writ to hold to him severally according to the form and effect of the writ aforesaid And as the said writ in that commandeth and requireth Which truly whole third part of the aforesaid Tenements in the aforesaid Writ specified Otherwise to the aforesaid H. in form aforesaid is delivered and assigned and for the other two parts remaining of the aforesaid Tenements in the aforesaid Writ specified J.F. likewise in the same Writ nominated to the partition aforesaid to be assigned and Delivered to the Justices of our Lady the Queen in the Writ aforesaid specified I certifie that none of the part of the said J. came to receive of me the aforesaid Sheriff those two parts so that those two parts I could not deliver an Assigne as the writ aforesayd in that doth command and require In witnesse whereof as well the Seale of me the aforesayd Sherif as the Seales of the other twelve Jurors to this partition Indented are put Dated the yeare and Day abovesayd Pledges to prosecute I. D. R. R. The within I. S. and R. B. are attached and each of them is attached by Pledges I. D. R. R. The residue of the execution of this VVrit doth appear in a Pannell fastned to this writ Assise of Novel disseisin Assise of novell disseisin between such a one Plaintif or Demandant and such a one Defendant or tenent in the Plea c. A. B. C. D. c. to the number of twenty four Pannell The names of the Recognitors I. P. and T. W. Summonitors J. D. T. B. Manucaptors summoners aforesayd and every of them J. S. J. D. Pledges to prosecute Otherwise G. C. R. R. R. H. within named is attached by one _____ of Latin price eight pence by Pl. W.D. and T. D. The residue of the execution of this writ doth appeare in a certaine Pannell annexed to this writ A Recognition of an Assise of Novell disseisin Pannell between J. D. Plaintif and R. T. Deforceant of his Free-hold in B. J.D. c. to the number of twenty foure Summoners of the Jurors aforesaid and of every one of them J.S.J.D. Manucaptors summoners aforesaid and of every one of them J.B.T.C.A.B. and W.H. The execution of this writ appeareth in a certain Pannell to this writ annexed Otherwise The names of the Recognitors in an Assise of novell Disseisin between A.B. Plaintiff and J.M. Defendant A. B. c. to the number of twenty four Every one of the Recognitors aforesaid by himself is severally attached by pledges J.D.RR. The Issues of every one of them five shillings The names of the Recognitors of new added according to the form of the Statute A. B. c. to the number of ten Every one of the Recognitors aforesaid of new added is attached severall by Plaintiff J.D.R.F. By vertue of this Writ Great Cape tenth day of M. the year aforesaid by the view of R.H. and T.H. good and lawfull men of my County I have taken into the hands of our Lady the Queen the Lands within written as within I am commanded summoners J.D. R. F And if the Writ be sent to the Sheriff and the place where he ought to execute it be within Franchises which hath full return of all VVri tsthen so The Execution of this VVrit c. as before I J.S. Sheriff of E. have commanded J.W. Bailiff of the Liberty of B. in the County aforesaid which hath full return of all VVrits and execution of them within the Liberty aforesaid in the County aforesaid and to whom the executing of this writ doth wholy belong to be don for that that the said execution thereof otherwhere in my Bailiwick cannot be done out of that Liberty which answers me so c. By vertue Otherwise c. I have taken into the hands of our Lady the Queen by view c. as before of the Lands and Tenements of J.M. within
in the Bailiwick to A.B.C.D.E.F. and H.P. which undertook and each of them undertook by himself for the aforesaid A. B. upon the pain of ten pounds that he should do no dammage or ill to H. P. in the said Writ of Supplicavit specified within the space of such a day next coming nor by any Means should procure it which 10. l. the Manucaptors aforesaid granted and each of them for himself granted of their Lands and Tenements and of each of them to the use of our said Lady the Queen should be levyed if any dammage or ill came to the said A.B. or by his procurement in the mean time any should come by any means c. and this is the Surety of the Peace which the aforesaid A.B. before me hath found Under which truly Bail Or so the aforesaid C. was suffered to go at large out of the Prison aforesaid and afterwards returned not to my custody therefore the body of the said C. before our Lady the Queen at the day and place within contained I cannot have I. c. certifie our Lady the Queen in her Chancery Or so that R.P. within named hath found to me no security of the Peace of which within there is mention but remains in prison of our Lady the Queens under my custody at present For certain Or so truly complains of the threats the aforesaid J. B. before the coming of this Writ was delivered in Bail to A.B.C.D.E.F. and G.H. which undertook and each of them did undertake upon the pain of twenty pounds for the aforesaid J. B that he should do no dammage or any ill to the aforesaid H.P. and T. D. or either of them untill the Day after the Feast of Saints next coming nor should procure to be done which truly twenty pounds the aforesaid Manucaptors granted and each of them to be levied to the use of our Lady the Queen if any Dammage or ill to the said R. P. and T. D. or either of them by the aforesaid J.B. or by his procurement to any of them should come in the mean time under which baile truly c. at large c. Before the coming of this VVrit Ne exeat Regnum and before any execution thereof A.B. C. D.E.F. c Came before J.D. Sherif of W. and undertook before me the aforesaid Sheriff for L. M. that is to say Every one of the Manucaptors aforesaid under the pain of ten pounds that the said L. before the day after All Soules next coming should not convey himself to any parts beyond Seas to prosecute or attempt any thing there to the prejudice of the said Lady the Queen or any of the People of the said Queen or the losse of our State of England should prevaile nor from hence to send any body for that cause which truly summ of ten pounds the said Manucaptors granted and each of them for himself granted of their Lands and Chattells to the use of the said Lady Queen to be levied if the said L. any thing against the form of this Mauncaption aforesaid shall do or cause to be done or by any means attempt And here is the Tenor of the security whereof within there is mention made which to the said Lady Queen into her Chancery c. at the day and place c. I send By vertue of this VVrit to me directed Proclamation out of the Chancery I have made a publick Proclamation within my bailiwick that the within named H.B. upon the pain of his allegiance before our Lady the Queen in her Chancery aforesaid at the day within written shall appear as within I am commanded and likewise I certifie the said Lady Queen that the within named H.B. is not to be found in my Bailiwick By vertue of this VVrit Premunire such a day and year by J.S.T. W.R.T. and E.F. good and lawfull men of my bailiwick Premunire feci W.R. Clarke within nominated that he should be before our Lady the Queen at the day within contained whersoever c. to do and to receive as that Writ in it commandeth and requireth and J. B. and the rest of the Defendants within named have nothing within my bailiwick by which I can Premunire facere for present neither are they to be found in the same I certifie our Lady the Queen that the within named I. H. before the coming of this Writ to me directed was dead Of choosing a Verdecer in the Forrest And that I after the receit of this Writ to me directed in my full County Court held at Wilton in my County the 29th day of May the year within written by assent of the said County in the place aforesaid I made to be elected one N.S. Esq a Verdecer of the Forrest of B. within written to do as the said Writ in that commandeth and requireth At my County Court held such a day and year Election of a Coroner in the full County aforesaid by vertue of this Writ and by the consent of the said County in the place of P.H. within named which died I chose a Coroner that is to say I.W. who as the manner is took his corporall Oath that he should do those things and observe what to the Office of a Coroner in the County aforesaid appertained to be done as within c. By vertue of this VVrit I summon Arch-Bishops Justices of Forrest Summon Bishops Abbots Earls Barons and all other free Tenants which have Lands and Tenements within the bounds of the Forrest of the said our Lady the Queen within written in my County and four men and the cheif of every town within the bounds of this Forrest and also twelve good and lawfull men of every town within the bounds of the said Forrest dwelling which ought to come and were wont that they be before our Instices within written at the day and place within contained as within I am commanded Publickly also I have made to be proclaimed through all my Bailiwick as well in Burroughs as in other Townes and in Faires Markets and other publick places that all those which by Charters of our Lady the Queen now or of her Predecessors or her Progenitors or any way any liberties or Franchises claim to hold and by what warrant that they be before our said Justices at the day and place aforesaid I also made to be proclaimed that all attached for Vert or Venison or hunting in the Forrest aforesaid after the last Plea of the Forrest aforesaid held and their Pledges and Manucaptors aforesaid to be and before the aforesaid Justices to stand to their right and to do those things which according to the Law of the Forrest they ought to do The residue of the Execution of this Writ doth appear in certain Pannells to this Writ annexed By vertue Capias ut legatum c. I have taken the body of H.S. within named whose body before the Iustices within written I have ready at the day
written I took into the hands of our Lady the Queen one House or Tenement with the Appurtenances in B. in the County of W. within written of the yearly value of ten pounds as the Lands and Tenements of the within named A.B. And also six cowes one Bull and one Gelding price in all eight pounds of the Goods and Chattells of the said A.B. in name of Distresse as I am commanded All which truly goods and chattells with me remaine unsold for defect of Buyers and the said A.B. no other or more goods and chattells Lands or Tenements hath within my bailiwick which into the hands of our Lady the Queen for present by any means I can take or seise I certifie the Barons aforesaid Otherwise that by vertue of this VVrit to me directed the eighth day of J. c. within written I have taken into the hands of our Lady the Queen the Mannor of S. with the Appurtenances within written as c. The residue of the execution of this VVrit doth appeare in a certain scedule to this VVrit annexed Scedule An Inquisition indented taken at S. in the County aforesaid the eighth day of January the year c. Before me J.H. Knight Sheriffe of the County aforesaid by Writ of a Right close of the said Lady Queens to me directed which is annexed to this Inquisition by the Oath of J.D.R.R. c. good and lawful men of the County aforesaid which do say upon their Oath that the Mannor of S. with the appurtenances is of the yearly value of five pounds besides all charges and reprisalls in witnesse whereof c. The Mannor of S. within named lieth in the County of G. and not in the County of W. Therefore I cannot distrain the Tenants there as within I am commanded By vertue of this VVrit to me directed I. certifie the Barons within written that the twentieth day of March Take into the hands the 8th year of our Lady the Q. within written I took into the the hands of the said Lady Queen the Mannor within written with the Appurtenances as within I am commanded If it be with inquirie for the yearly value The residue of the execution of this VVrit appears in a certain inquisition taken to this writ annexed The within named VV.B. and M. his Wife Who is Tenant are Tenants of the third part of the Mannor aforesaid in three parts divided and C.A.M.E. and J. B. the Daughters of C.D. dead are the Tenants of the second part of the Mannor within written in three parts divided and the other third part of the Mannor within written remains in the hand of our Lady the queen by reason of the nonage of T. B. Son and Heir of the aforesaid C.D. The Manucaptors of the forenamed W. B. and M. his Wife J.D.R.R. The within named A.B. hath nothing in my Bailiwick Venire facias Crown office or Exchequer by which he may be attached or where I may take him The within named A. B. is attached by Pledges that is J.D.R.R. If he be an Earl or a Countesse The Issue of them half a Mark. And further if these words are repeated in the VVrit and also to shew twenty shillings The within named R. A. hath nothing in the Land Distr of the Tenement and Hereditament within written by which I can distrain him No such Mannor Otherwise nor any Lands or Tenements known by the name of E. lying in the County of VV. whereof I can distrain the Tenants as within I am commanded The within named J.K. and R.K. have nothing nor either of them hath any thing within my Bailiwick and further I certifie the Barons within written that none are Executors or Administrators of the goods and chattells which were the within nameds M. K. whereby them or any of them I can distrain The Manucaptors of I S. Gent. Tenant of the Lands and Tenements within specified which were the within named M. K.I.D.RR The Issues thirteen shillings four pence By vertue c. I have taken Execution of the Goods and Chattels of J.H. within named a certain Demise and Grant to the said J. H. by one to T. G. of one part and the aforesaid J. H. of the other part for terme of one and thirty years to begin from the first day of Ianuary the year of the Reign of our Lady Elizabeth within written as by that Indenture bearing date the same day and year fully appears of and in a House or Farme with the Appurtenances scituate and lying and being in L. in the Parish of f. within my Bailiwick called or known by the name of B. together with all and singular Lands Meadows Feedings Pastures Woods Under-woods VVaters and Pastures with all their Appurtenances scituate lying and being within the Town Parish and Feilds of F. aforesaid and likewise in my Bailiwick and the aforesaid Lease and all the whole Right state Title terme of years Possession and Demand which the aforesaid J. H. now hath of and in the foresaid Premises by vertue or force of the said Demise and Grant or otherwise I have set to sale and sold to one R.G. Gentleman for the summ of threescore and sixteen pounds thirteen shillings and four pence and also I have taken in Execution other Goods and Chattels of the aforesaid J. H to the value of threescore and five pounds six shillings eight pence which truly summs of Money so in forme aforesaid by me levied in the whole do amount unto 132. pounds and twelve pence and the same summs before our Lady the Queen at the day and place aforesaid I have ready and to be given to the within written E.P. and J. his VVife in part of satissaction of the Damages within written as by that VVrit I am within commanded And that I. H. hath no other Goods or Chattels in my Bailiwick that the residue of the aforesaid one hundred threescore and five pounds six shillings two pence can be had or levied according to the command of this VVrit By vertue I have taken into the Qu. hand c. tenth Day of S. the year of the Reign of our Lady the Queen within written twentieth I J.S. Knight Sherif of W. within written have taken resumed and seised into the hands of our Lady the Queen all those Tenements Shops Gardens and all the other the Appurtenances by vertue of the Writ aforesaid to be resumed which do appear in the Inquisition to this Writ annexed By vertue of this Writ to me directed Of setting to sale from day to day I have set to sale those Goods and Chattels to the value of a hundred shillings residue of the eight pounds which were of the Goods and Chattels Lands and Tenements T. F. within named and there I sold to the value of forty shillings which truly forty shillings I have ready at the day and place within contained as within I am commanded then there to be paid and the residue of the
H. 6. f. 76. Attaint was returned by the Sherif Nihil Summons in the Land demanded and the Return is not good and so Sicut alias and shall be summoned in the Land demanded 42 Ed. 3. f. 19. Mortdancester by two and one makes default by which issueth a Summons to prosecute together the Sherif upon this returnes Nihil and award that they shall be summoned in the Land demanded 44 Ed. 3. f. 27. Scire facias out of a Fine to execute that and two make default and in a Summons to prosecute together the sherif upon that returnes Nihil and shall be amerced for they shall be summoned in the Land in Demand 10 H. 6. f. 12. The same Law is where one hath aid of him in Reversion and in a summons to aid he shall be summoned in the Land demanded A Writ of Covenant to levy a Fine the Sheriff returns Nihil and for that shall be amerced for he ought to have Summoned him in the Lands Demanded 10 H. 6.13 Where aid was granted and the Sherif returns that the Prayee hath nothing whereby he may be summoned by which Sicut alias was awarded in the Land in demand 23 Ed. 3.37 Debt against John Burton Parson of D. The Sherif returns at the Pluries distringas that he hath resigned and it is a good return 2 H. 7.10 Scire facias against an Abbot and the Sherif returns he is deposed and good return But in Scire facias against a Husband and his Wife Spirituall the Sherif cannot return that they are divorced for that is spirituall whereof he hath no notice 1 H. 6.2 2 H. 6.5 the same Scire facias against the Parson of D. to have Execution of arrerages of annuity though the Sherif return that he hath resigned and take notice of that it is a good return 2 Ed. 4.1 The Sherif returns upon a Capias Tarde and was amerced 2 H. 4.8 Right of ward at the Distringas with proclamation the Sherif returns Exitus and that he cannot proclaim that for that it came too late and there shall go an Alias to proclaim that only and shall not return Issues 3 H. 4.6 In Capias of appeale of Death Tarde the Sherif returns that that writ came so late that c. and the return awarded good 8 H. 4.22 In Assise when the Writ is returned Tarde the Clarks do not make Sicut alias but enter the Writ and send that again to the Sherif to be served 9 Ed. 4.20 Forging of Deeds Distringas with Decem tales of that was awarded against the Jury and the principle Jury was returned Tarde upon the distringas and the Tales served and the return was awarded good for where the Issues are to be returned the Sherif ought to have time to know their Land but upon a Capias returned Tarde it is said to be ill But inquire because it is used 21 H. 6.51 The Sherif returns VVrit delivered by Bill according to the Statute of Westm 2. chap. 39. Tarde and for that that the Sherif refuseth to put his seale others put their seals according to the statute and the Plaintif hath a writ to the Justices of assise to inquire of Dammages 29 Ass 58. Capias to have Execution against an Abbot or against a Bishop if it be returned that they have nothing in that County there shall go out Elegit upon the Testatum in another County 26 H. 8 8. and 26 H. 8.17 VVhere one hath recovered in a Quare impedit and hath a VVrit to the Bishop which refuseth his Clark So that he hath a Quare non admisit Testatum and process continue to the distresse against the Bishop and the sherif returns that he hath nothing there goes Distringas to the sherif of London upon the Testatum that he hath no Land there 3 H. 4.6 Trespasse against a Prior the sherif returns that he hath nothing and how he hath no Land there he shall have process into another County upon a Testatum for a Prior was a name of Dignity and for that shall have process in another County upon Testatum 7. H. 4.1 VVhere the sherif returns Nihil Capias doth not lie against a Lady Peer of the Realme Earl or Baron But there shall go a Testatum in another County but where they do wrong as if they essoigne Distress and returns that by the Sherif the Capias lies for the wrong 11 H. 415. If the Sheriffe arrest any and Rescue is made by Baron Earl or Duke if the Sheriffe return the Rescue Capias lyes 1 H. 5 fol. the last Wast was made in Reddale and upon a Writ to inquire of Waste the Sheriffe returns that I have taken an Inqusition at Reddale and for that it is not at the place wasted it is no good return 40 Ed. 3.20 and 27 H. 8.16 the same Waste in A.B.C. and D. it is said that a Writ to inquire of Waste shall be returned that I have come to the Tenements aforesaid and the Inquisition taken at one Town shall serve for all 34 H. 6.49 A. returns upon a Redisseisin or upon a Writ to inquire of Waste that I came to the Town is not good but to the place 11 H. 4.6 Upon a Writ to inquire of waste for that that the Sheriff returns I have commanded the Bailiffe of the Liberty which hath given me no answer he was amerced for he ought to go to the place wasted 11 H. 4.80 Appeal Visne the Sheriffe returns a Jury of the Visne of D● and the new Sheriffe returns no such Visne and may 3 H. 6. fol. last Venire facias Venire facias was returned by the Sherif and afterwards the Sherif was discharged and a new Sherif made and at the Distringas he returned Nihil upon a Juror and adjudged that he shall be amerced but he may return that the Lands are recovered against the Juror or that the Juror was Tenant for life of J. S. which is dead or other speciall matter and so Nihil 19. H. 6.38 Where the Parties admit one such Visne where there is no such the Sherif cannot return that there is no such Visne but shall make the Pannell of the body of the County 37 H. 6.12 A Venire facias with the Pannell was returned and none found upon the Roll but sicut alias awarded and returned and upon that Habeas corpora and Distringas and the Iury found for the Plaintiffe and it is shewed in arrest of Iudgement that there was another Venire facias with a Pannell and adiudged that it shall not be intended to be there lawfully but shall be taken off the File for that that in the Roll the Entry was ad quem diem Vicecomes non misit breve and upon that it was awarded the sicut alias 20 H. 6.17 Though the Venire facias is Venire facias twelve free and lawfull men yet if the Sherif return twelve onely if he do not amend
shall have no action against him yet a Judge of Record as a Justice of Peace hath been punished in the Star Chamber for misdemeanour and so may the Steward of a Leet and so such a Judge of Record for not regarding his Oath as Maiors Bailiffs c. 21 H. 7. fol. 22. If a Capias issue our of a Court of Record to the Sheriff where is no Originall yet this excuseth the Sheriff but if the Servant of the Sheriff arrest one by processe made out of a Capias and returne his processe and the Sheriff do not return his Capias false Imprisonment lies against the Servant Fitzh 21. B. one cannot assigne Errour that the Jurors gave verdict for the Defendant and Judges enter that for the Plantiff Presentment in Leet Now let us 〈◊〉 what presentment in Leet is traversable and what not and it seemeth where that toucheth a Free-hold is traversable and otherwise not PResentment in Leet by 4 and not by 12. That one hath dwelt within the Leet not sworn c. it was Traversed but it seems if it were by 12. it shall not be traversed but shall have recovery by Writ of false presentment 5 Ed. 3.26 A thing presented in Leet is as Evangelist if it passe the day in which it is presented but the same day you may have an action of false presentment against the Jurors and after without recovery 21 Ed. 3. Tit. Barr. 271. Presentment in Leet which toucheth Free-hold is traversable and other presentments not 19 H. 8 fol. 11. and 41 Ed. 3 fol. 27. the same Presentment in Leet which toucheth a Free-hold may be removed and traversed and every Presentment before Justices of Peace is traversable 5 H. 7. fol. 3. and 6 H 7 fol. 2. the same Presentment of blood spilt is not traversable for that doth not touch free-hold 2 R. 3.12 If the presentment be not in a Leet of things there presentable afterwards they shall be presented as it followeth IF Presentment be not in Leet of things presentable there then they shall be inquired and presented in Turne and if not there then in the Kings Bench 41 Ed. 3. fol. 27. If things Presentable are not presented in Leet they shall be presented in Turne and if not there before the Justices in Eyre and if not there in the Kings Bench 10 H. 4. fol. 4. Then let us see what remedy the Lord shall have for Amerciaments in Leet and what recovery for a Fine and what upon paine or by-Law and it seems that for Amerciaments he may distraine and for Fine Assesse and by-Law broken shall have a Debt or Distresse Amerciaments FOR a Fine reall he cannot distraine but Amerce and by prescription distraine and this is now in use in every Mannor and for Suite-Service distraine without doubt 12 H. 7.15 One may prescribe to distraine for Amerciament in Law-day for it is incident 9 H. 7.22 He may in Leet Amerce and distraine for that 8 H. 4. Tit. 15. A man may in Leet Amerce for annoyance and distrain for it 19 Ed. 3. fol. 36. One was Amerced in Leet for stopping in the High way and his Horse in anothers keeping was destrained for it 47. Ed. 3.12 The Lord may sell the Distresse taken for an Amerciament in Leet as the King may sell the Distresse for that it is the Kings Court 3 H. 7. fol. 4. If Amerciament in Leet be agreed the Lord may distraine without notice by Finch and by Wich it is good Plea that the Tenant would have paid if he had had notice 45 Ed. 3. fol. 9. The Lord cannot distraine for Amerciament in Leet in a place seised into the Kings hands for debt to the King for this is priviledged during the time 47 Ed. 3. fol. 12. Of common right the Lord may distraine for Amerciament in Leet and for that need not to prescribe 10 H. 7. fol. 15. The Lord may distraine for Amerciament for annoyance in the high way or for making Hedges cross the street and avow for that 4 Ed. 3.10 Avowrie 161. The Lord may not distraine the Horse of another in the Inne of him Amerced nor the garment of another in a Taylors shop where the Taylor is Amerced 10 H. 7. fol. 21. If one refuse to be sworn or make any other contempt in Court the Steward may assess a Fine upon him and the Lord may distraine for that 13 H. 6. Leet 11. For a Fine assessed by the Steward for a contempt in the Court the Lord may have debt 10 H. 6. fol. 7. and 7. H. 6. fol. 13. If a paine of ten pound presented in the Leet to be broken the paine shall not be otherwise acertained and the Lord for that shall have an action of Debt but he cannot distraine and make avowrie but by prescription but it is now used in every Mannor to distraine as I think 32 H. 8. Tit. 37. The Lord may have Debt for Amerciament assest in Court-Baron 12 R. 2. Statham fol. 62. It seems the Lord shall have Debt for releife and cleerly the Executors shall have Debt for releife 32 H. 8.20.19 H. 6. Tit. 11. Moderata miserecordia doth not lye where a Fine is alsessed by the Steward for contempt in Court nor where Amerciament is assessed but where Amerciament is not confirmed that lieth if it be too high Fitzher fol. 72. C. If one be amerced in the Sheriffs Turne the Sheriff may distraine throughout all the County and if it be in a Leet thoughout all the precinct of the Leet 8 R. 2. Avowrie 194. The Lord may distraine in the high street for Amerciaments in a Leet 34 Ed. 2 and 19 Ed. 2. Avowrie 221. Debt lieth for the Lord for a Fine assest in Leet by the Steward for not returning the Pannall or for other contempt and it is good without confirming 7 H. 6. fol. 13. tit 233. For Amerciament in Leet it seems one may take goods of another in the keeping of him which is amerced yet see how Issue was taken that it was not the Horse of Prior Tindall which was Amerced which was taken 47 Ed. 3. fol. 12. For not ch●ansing of a Ditch by the Predecessor of a Parson Successor shall not be punished for that Offence the same Law of Father and Son 5. H. 7. fol. 3. Distresse Where one may distraine and what thing ONE lifted a Mill-stone off the stock to be picked on the floore it is not so severed but that it is parcell of the Mill and cannot be distrained and so it is of Windowes and doores 14 H. 8. fol. 29. 10 H. 7. fol. 21. You cannot distraine the garment of another man in a Taylors shop 21 Ed. 4. fol. 49. the same 9. H. 6. fol. 9. The Lord cannot distraine for his Rent but in Lands held of him but the King may 8 R. 2. tit Avowrie 192. If one be Amerced in Leet the Lord may distrain in any place within the Precinct of that and in the Turne of the Sheriff in
any place within the County 34 H. 8. tit 253. During the possession of the King the Signiory of another is suspended touching the Distress 5 H. 7. fol. 15. If one be Amerced in a Leet and another takes his leather from him and makes of that Boots and Shooes yet these Bootes and Shooes may be distrained for this Amerciament within the Precinct of the Leet 21 H. 7. fol. 13. The Lessor cannot distraine Fat 's fixt by his Lessee for a dying Pan and though the Lessee may remove them during his Tearme 21 H. 7. fol. 26. Glass fixt by the Termor the lessor cannot distraine for his Rent as it seemeth and the Lord cannot distraine Tables dormant in the House of his Tenant nor a thing which cannot be attached in an Assesse 21 H. 7. fol. 41. The Lord cannot distraine Shocks of Corne for his Rent but doing dammage he may 27 Assises 66. One cannot distraine in a Sanctuary if it be not for Issues for the King 6 H. 4. fol. 11. One may arrest the Vicar in the Church by a Capias notwithstanding the Statute 1 R. 2. For that is intended he shall not arrest him saying Divine Service 13 H. 4. fol. 42. If one proffer sufficient amends for wrongs which they have done one cannot distraine and avow that Marlebridge chap. 2. That no Lord may distraine out of the fee. Marlebridge chap. 1. None shall make Distresses at his own will without the consideration of the Kings Court. Marlebridge chap. 15. It is not lawfull for any to make Distresses out of their Fee nor in the Kings way or in the common street but for our Lord the King and for his Ministers having speciall authority from him In what place a Leet shall be kept and at what time A Leet by the Statute shall be held but twice in a year that is in the Moneth of Michaelmas and in the Month of Easter by the intent of the Statute of Magna Charta c. 35. Presentment in Leet held foure daies after the Moneth is voide 6 H. 7. fol. 1. and 38 H. 7. the same One may prescribe to hold a Leet at a day certaine though it be not within the Moneth and good for it seems that Magna charta is but Common Law otherwise he cannot prescribe against a Statute unlesse he have another Statute for the same and if he hold that any other day it is voide which makes in a Leet 33 H. 6. fol. 7. By Brian Leet shall be held in any place within the Precinct of the Lord-ship where it pleaseth the Lord for it is the Court of the King as the Kings Bench wheresoever it is c. 8 H. 7.4 Twelve shall be of the Jury in a Leet otherwise the Presentment there are all traversable THere shall be at least twelve in a Turne Rastall Indict 1. and Turn and Leet are all one Westminster 2. chap. 13. Every Indictment and Presentment in Leet shall be by twelve men at least 6 H. 4. fol. 1. Presentment that one had dwelt within view of Frank-Pledge by a year and a day not sworn c. if it be not by twelve it is traversable and if it be by twelve it is not traversable 45 Ed. 3. fol 26. If there be not twelve to be sworne the Lord may cause strangers to be of the Enquest 3 H. 7. fol. 4. By-Lawes For that that By-lawes are made many times in Leets somthing shall be said of By-lawes and I intend that By-lawes which are for the Common-wealth shall binde all and other By-lawes shall binde but those that assent WHere a By-law is for a Common-wealth it is good to binde all though all do not agree as to make a Causey Way or Bridge but By-law to repaire a Church is a Charge for that it shall not binde but those that assent 44 Ed. 3. fol. 19. It is said that Tenants in a Leet may make By-lawes for that it is the Kings Court which shall binde them by their assents and a Town may make By-lawes by prescription and that shall binde them but not a stranger as By-law that every one which puts in his beasts into the Common before c. shall pay ten shillings this shall binde them which assent but not a stranger 13 H. 8. Leet 37.11 H. 7.14 21. H. 7.40 the same If a Town be amerced and neighbours assess a Summe of every Inhabitant and agree to have I. S. to distrain for it the distress is lawfull Doctor Student fol. 74. Where the greatest part of a Town agree to a By-law which was charged that then it is good against them all 8 Ed. 1. Assise 413. By-law that every one which holds land shall pay to the reparations of the Church one penny and for not paying shall forfeit to the Lord twenty pence it is not good for the Lord hath no damage but the Church-Wardens and for that it shall be forfeit to the Wardens c. but where a By-law is for a Common-wealth I intend for not doing shall be a forfeiture to the Lord and this is good 21 H. 7. fol. 20. One cannot prescribe to make Lawes to alter inheritances 49. Assise 8. Inmates Though it be not specified in our Law who are Inmates and who not nor any remedy provided against them but onely which have been used to avoid them by By-lawes made in Leets yet it is not impertinent to see who hath been taken in Law an Inmate and who not IF one let part of his house in which he dwells to a Gentleman which keeps not his table there but goeth to victualling-houses for his victualls but yet hath certain rooms in the house that is no Inmate Also if one keep his daughter married and her husband by Covenant or otherwise and suffer them to have certain rooms in his house these were not accounted Inmates and these shall not have Common But if a man have a house and let certain rooms of that to another to dwell with him he hath been accounted an Inmate unless he be of ability to live and shall not have Common in the Lords Waste or Feilds But if one take one to table or to sojourn with him in his house and let him certain rooms he is not accounted an Inmate and he shall not have Common Also if the Inheritor of a house let a certain parcell of his house in which he dwells and severeth that from the other part and make severall doors to the high street it is now as two houses and is not accounted as an Inmate but he shall have no common otherwise it is if they have but one door to the high street for then it is accounted an Inmate unless he be a sufficient person to live of his Lands of himself or by his Art or Trade so that he be not a poore Labourer but at this day some take Inmates more strictly and in times past none were punished in Leets by paines ordained in Leet but idle and bribing