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

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his lords court For the steward as he inrolleth and maketh remembrances of all other things done in the lords court so he doth also of such tenents as be admitted in the court to any parcell of land or tenement belonging to the maner and the transcript of this is called the court rowle the copie whereof the tenent taketh from him and keepeth as his onely euidence Coke li. 4. fo 25. b. This tenure is called a base tenure because it houldeth at the wil of the lord Kitchin fo 80. chap copihoulds Fitzh nat br fo 12. B. C. who there saieth that it was wont to be called tenure in villenage and that this copihould is but a new name Yet is it not simply at the will of the lord but according to the custome of the maner So that if a copiehoulder breake not the custome of the maner and thereby forfeit his tenure he seemeth not so much to stand at the lords courtesie for his right that he may be displaced hand ouer head at his pleasure These customes of maner be infinit varying in one point or other almost in euery seuerall maner First some copiehould is fineable and some certaine that which is fineable the lord rateth at what fine or incom he pleaseth when the tenent is admmitted vnto it that which is certaine is a kinde of inheritance and called in many places custumary because the tenent dying and the hould being void the next of the blood paying the custumarie fine as two shillngs for an acre or such like may not be denied his admission Secondly some copihoulders haue by custome the wood growing vpon their owne land which by law they could not haue Kitchin vbisupra Thirdly copi-holders some be such as hold by the verge in ancient demesn although they hold by copy yet are they in accompt a kind of Free-holders For if such a one commit felonie the king hath annum diem vastum as in case of Freehold Some other hold by common tenure called meere copy hold and they committing felonie their land escheateth to the Lord of the maner foorthwith Kitchin fol. 81. chap. Tenents per verge in auncient demesn What auncient demesn is see in the right place See Tenent by copie of court rolle This is the land that in the Saxons time was called Folk land Lamberd explicat of Saxon words verbo Terra ex scripto West parte prim symbol lib. 2. Sect. 646. defineth a copi-holder thus Tenent by copie of court rolle is he which is admitted tenent of any lands or tenements within a maner that time out of the memory of man by vse and custome of the said maner haue bene dimisable and dimised to such as will take the same in fee in fee-taile for life yeares or at will according to the custome of the said maner by copie of courtrolle of the same maner where you may read more of these things Coraage coraagium is a kinde of imposition extraordinarie growing vpon some vnusuall occasion and it seemeth to be of certaine measures of corne For corus tritici is a certaine measure of corne Bracton libro 2. ca. 16. nu 6. who in the same chapter nu 8. hath of this mater these words Sunt etiam quaedam communes praestationes quae seruitia non dicuntur nec de consuetudine veniunt nisi cùm necessitas interuenerit vel cùm rex venerit sicut sunt hidagia coraagia caruagia alia plura de necessitate ex consensu communitotius regni introducta quae ad dominum feudi non pertinent de quibus nullus tenetur tenentē suū acquietare nisi se adhoc specialiter obligauerit in charta sua c. Cordiner commeth of the French cordoüannier i. sutor calcearius a shoomaker and is so vsed in diuers statutes as anno 3. H. 8. ca. 10 anno 5. eiusdem ca. 7. and others Cornage cornagium commeth of the French cor i. cornu and in our common law signifieth a kinde of grand sergeantie the seruice of which tenure is to blow a horne when any invasion of the northern enemie is perceiued And by this many men hold their land northward about the wall commonly called the Picts walle Camd. Britan p. 609. hence commeth the word cornuare to blow a horn pupil oculi parte 5. ca. 22. in charta de Foresta This seruice seemeth to haue proceeded from the Romanes For I finde cornicularios mentioned in the ciuile lawe viz. li. 1. Cod. de officio diuerso Iud. 48. lege 3. lib. 12. titulo de apparitoribus praefectorum praetorio 53. lege 1. 3. where Lucas de Penna defineth them eos qui cornu faciunt excubias militares And Brissonius libro 3. de verbo significat saith thus of them hi militum quoddam genus fuere qui corniculo merebant vnde nomen habent Where it appeareth by him out of Suetonius Plinie and Livie that the horne was an honour reward giuen for seruice in war Corner tile See Gutter tile Corodye corodium commeth of the Latine verb corrodo and signifieth in our common lawe a summe of mony or allowance of meate and drinke due to the king from an abbey or other house of religion whereof he is the founder toward the reasonable sustenāce of such a one of his seruants being put to his pension as he thinketh good to bestowe it on And the difference betweene a corodie and a pension seemeth to be that a corodie is allowed toward the maintenance of any the kings seruants that liueth in the abbey a pension is giuen to one of the kings chaplaines for his better maintenance in the kings seruice vntill he may be prouided of a benefice Of both these read Fitzh nat br fo 230. 231. 233. who there setteth downe all the corodies and pensions certaine that any abbey when they stoode was bound to performe vnto the king There is mention also of a corodie in Stawnf praerogatiue fo 44. And this seemeth to be awncient lawe For in Westm 2. ca. 25. it is ordeined that an assise shall lie for a corodie It is also apparent by the statute anno 34. 35. H. 8. ca. 16. that corodies belonged some time to Bishops from monasteries by the new termes of lawe that a corodie may be due to a common person by graunt from one to another or of common right to him that is founder of a religious house not holden in frank almoyn For that tenure was a discharge of all corodies in it selfe By which booke it appeareth also that a corodie is either certaine or vncertaine and that it may be for life yeares in taile or in fee. Corodio habendo is a writ whereby to exact a corodie of any abbey or religious house See Corodie See the Register originall fo 264. Coronatore eligendo is a writte which after the death or discharge of any coroner is directed to the shyreeue out of the Chācery to call togither the free
enabled to hould certaine plees of land within their owne precincts This word Gildes or Guildes is so vsed anno 37. Ed. 3. ca. 51. anno 15. R. 2. cap. 5. And Gildhalda Teutonicorum is vsed for the fraternity of easterling merchaunts in London called the stilyard anno 22. H. 8. cap. octauo Ginger Zinziber is a spice well knowne being the roote of a plant that groweth in hot countries as Spaine Barbary c. The true forme whereof you haue expressed in Gerards herball li. 1. ca. 38. This is a spice whose roote is to be garbled anno 1. Iaco. ca. 19. Ginny peper piper de Ginnea is otherwise called Indian peper of the place whence it commeth The nature and farder description whereof you haue in Gerards herball lib. 2. ca. 66. This you haue mentioned among drugs and spices to be garbled in the statute i. Iaco. ca. 19. Gisarms anno 13. Ed. 1. stat 3. cap. 6. is a kinde of weapon Flet a writeth it Sisarmes lib. 1. ca. 24 § item quod quilibet Glaunce Ore Plowden casu Mines fo 320. b. Glanuill was a learned lawyer that was Chiefe Iustice in Henry the seconds dayes and writte a booke of the common lawes of England which is the auncientest of any extant touching that subiect Stawnf praerog cap. prim fol. 5. He was then called in Latine Ranulphus de Glanvilla He died in Richard the first his daies at the citie of Acres in the coast of Iury being with him in his voyage to the holy land Plowden casu Stowel fol. 368. b. Goe is vsed sometime in a speciall signification in our cōmon lawe as to go to God is to be dismissed the court Broke titulo Fayler de records num 1. Goe forward seemeth also to be a signe giuen by a Iudge to the Sergeant or Counceler pleading the cause of his client that his cause is not good For when he standeth vpon a point of lawe and heareth those words of the Iudges mouth he taketh vnderstanding that he looseth the action Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. 2. cap. 13. To go without day is as much as to be dismissed the court Kitchin fol. 193. Good behauiour See Good abearing Good abearing Bonus gestus is by an especiall signification an exact cariage or behauiour of a subiect toward the king and his liege people whereunto men vpon their euill course of life or loose demeanure are sometimes bound For as M. Lamberd in his Eirenarcha lib. 2. cap. 2. saith he that is bound to this is more strictly bound then to the peace because where the peace is not broken without an affray or batterie or such like this suretie de bono gestu may be forfeited by the number of a mans company or by his or their weapons or harnesse Where of see more in that learned Writer in the same chapter as also in M. Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 119. b. 120. 121. 122. 123. 124. 125. 126. 127. Good country Bona patria is an Assise or Iury of country men or good neighbours Skene de verbo signif verbo Bona patria Graffer grafarius signifieth as much as a notarie or scriuener It commeth of the French greffier i. scriba actuarius This word is vsed in the statute anno 5. H. 8. c. 1. Graines grana paradisi aliâs Cardamomum is a spice medicinable and wholesome whereof you may see diuers kindes in Gerards herball l. 3. ca. 148. These are cōprised among merchādise that be to be garbled an● I. c. 19. Grand assise See Assise and Magna assisa Grand Cape see Cape and Attachment Grand Sergeanty See Chyvalrie Seargeantye Grand distresse Magna destrictio is a distresse taken of all the lands and goods that a man hath within the county or bayliwicke whence he is to be distrained Fleta li. 2. ca. 69. § penult See Distresse This word is vsed anno 51. H. 3. ca. 9. This falleth out when the defendant hath been attached and yet appeareth not vpō his attachment or whē he appeareth afterward makes default For then the Shyreeue is commanded to distreine the Defendant by all his goods and chatels and to answer the king the issues of his lands Grange grangia is a house or building not onely where corne is laide vp as barns be but also where there be stables for horses stalles for oxen and other catell sties for hogs and other things necessary for husbandry Lindwood ca. item omnes de iudiciis verbo Graungus in glossa Graunt Concessio grantum Glanvile signifieth specially in our common law a gift in writing of such a thing as cannot aptly be passed or conueyed by word only as rent reversions seruices advowsens in grosse common in grosse villein in grosse tythes c. or made by such persons as cannot giue but by deede as the king and all bodies politique which differences be often in speech neglected and then is it taken generally for euerry gift whatsoeuer made of any thing by any person and he that graunteth it is named the grauntour and he to whome it is made the Grauntee West parte i. symbol lib. 2. sect 334. A thing is said to lie in graunte which cannot be assigned with out deede Coke l. 3. Lincolnes Coll. case f. 63. a. Greate men are sometimes vnderstood of the laity of the higher house of parlament as anno 43. Ed. 3. ca. 2. anno 8. R. 2. in prooem and sometime of the knights c. of the lower house as anno 2. R. 2. stat 2. in princip Gree commeth of the French Grè i. sententia beneplaecitum It signifieth in our common law contentment or good liking as to make gree to the parties is to satisfie them for an offence done anno 1. Rich. 2. cap. 15. Greachbreach is breaking of the peace Saxon in the descriptiion of England ca. 11. v. Rastal titulo exposition of words The new expounder of lawe termes writeth it Grichbreach and giueth it the same signification See Greve Greene hewe is all one with vert Manwood parte 2. of his forest lawes cap. 6. nu 5. See Vert. Greene waxe seemeth to be vsed for estretes deliuered to Shyreeues out of the exchequer vnder the seale of that court to be levied in the county anno 42. Ed. 3. ca. 9. anno 7. H. 4. cap. 3. See Forein apposer Greue praepositus is a word of power and authoritie signifiing as much as Dominus or praefectus Lamberd in his exposi of Saxon words verbo Praefectus Where he seemeth to make it all one with Reve as I thinke vndoubtedly it is The Saxon word is Gerefa whereof we haue diuers words compounded as Shyreeue Portgreave c. which were wont of the Saxons to be written Scyrgerefa Portgerefa See Shyreeue and Portgreve See Roger Hoveden parte poster suorum annal fo 346. b. where he saith thus Greue dicitur ideo quod iure debeat grithe i. pacem ex illis facere qui patriae inferunt Vae i. miseriam vel malum Grithbreach
assignatos suos eorum haeredes omnes alios secundum quod supradictum est si fortè tenementum datum petatur ab antiquo in Dominico Per hoc autem quòd dicit acquiet abimus obligat se haeredes suos ad acquietandum si quis plus petierit seruitis vel aliud seruitium quam in charta donationis continetur per hoc autem quòd dicit Defendemus obligat se haeredes suos ad Defendendum si quis velit seruitutem ponere rei datae contra formam suae donationis c. But the new expounder of law terms saith that this warranty beginneth two waies one by deede of law as if one and his auncesters haue held land of another and his auncesters time out of minde byhomage which is called Homage auncestrell for in this case the homage cōtinually performed by the tenent is sufficient to bind the Lord to warrant his estate The other is by deede of the party which by deede or fine tyeth himselfe to warrant the land or tenement to the tenent And Sir Ed Cooke in the fourth booke of his reports mentioneth the same distinction Nokes case fo 81. a. calling the one a warranty in law the other an expresse warranty Ciuilians would call these species tacitam expressam Warranty as the said author of the terms of law saith is in two maners warranty lineall and warranty collaterall But Litleton saith vbi supra it is threefold warranty lineall warranty collaterall and warranty that beginneth by disseisin Warranty by disseisin what it is is partly declared in Sir Ed. Cookes reports li. 3. Fermors case fol. 78. a. Whether of them deuideth more aptly let the learned iudge For my part I thinke that lineall and collaterall be no essentiall disserences of warranty as it is originally considered in the first warranter For he bindeth himselfe and his heires in generall And such be bound be they lineall or collaterall vnto him Therefore this diuision riseth rather from the euent of the originall warranty videlicet because it so falleth out that the tenent to whom the warranty was made or his heires when he or they be called into question for the land warranted formerly by the first feoffour is driuen by the meanes of the first warranters death to cal or vouch him to waranty that is his heire and now presently liuing be he descending or collaterall as it falleth out For example A. infeoffeth B. in twenty acres land with clause of warranty against all men So long as A. himselfe liueth he is liable to this couenant and none els after his discease his heire is subiect vnto it be he his sonne brother vncle or what els And whether of these or neither of these it will be none knoweth vntill he be dead Wherefore I conclude that this distinction of lineall or collaterall hath no vse originally in this contract For as the author of the terms of law saith the burden of this warranty after the death of the first warranter falleth vpon him vpon whom the land should haue descended if the warranty had not bene made And that is the next of blood to the warranter be he in the defcending or collaterall line And therefore I resolue that this distinction groweth from an euent after the death of him that couenanteth to warrant But to make this plaine I finde warranty to be vsed equiuocally signifiing in one sort the contract or couenant of warranty first made as appeareth by Bracton in the place formerly noted and in another sort the very effect and performance of this contract either by the warranter or his heires when he or they be by the tenent thereunto vouched or called As also I shew out of Bracton lib. 5. tract 4. ca. pri nu 2. in these words Imprimis videndum est quid sit warrantizatio Et sciendum quod warrantizare nihil aliud est quàm defendere acquietare tenentem qui warrantum vocabit in seisina sua c. With whom agreeth Fleta saying that warrantiz are nihil aliud est quam possidentem defendere li. 5. ca. 15. § 1. lib. 6. ca. 23. quod lege per totum And the former diuision of lineall and collaterall warranty rather belongeth to warranty in this second signification then the former And that this way it is imperfect or at the least obscure I thinke it not hard to declare First to shew this I note out of Bracton who may be called to warrantie And he lib. 5. tractat 4. cap. pri num 5. saith thus Videndum est quis vocari possit ad warrantum sciendum quod tam masculus quam foemina tam minor quàm maior dum tamen si minor vocetur remane at placitum de warantia in suspenso vsque ad aetatem nisi causa fuerit ita fauorabilis quòd aetas expectari non debeat sicut ex causa Dotis Item non solum vocandus est ad warantum ille qui dedit vel venddit verùm etiam vocandi sunt eorum haeredes descendentes in infinitum propter verba in Chartis contenta Ego haeredes mei warantizabimus tali haeredibus suis c. Et in quo casu tenentur haeredes warantizare sive sint propinqui sive remoti remotiores vel remotissimi Et quod de haeredibus dicitur idem dici poterit de assignatis de illis qui sunt loco illorum haeredū sicut sunt capitales Domini qui tenentibus suis quasi succedunt vel propter aliquem defectum vel propter aliquod delictum sicut de eschaetis Dominorum By which words we perceiue that the burden of this warrantie is not tyed to heires only be they in the descending or collaterall line but that vnder this word Haeredes are comprised all such as the first warranters lands afterward come vnto either by discent or otherwise ex causa lucratiua So that if a man haue 20 children yet if he will and may giue his land to a straūger leauing his childrē no land that straunger in this case is his assigne is conteined vnder this word heire So if he commit felonie after such warrantie covenanted and forfeit his lands to his Lord by escheate the Lord is quasi haeres in this case and lyable to the warrantie formerly passed And in these two later cases warranty in the secōd signification seemeth to be neither lineall nor collaterall at the least as Litleton and the other author haue defined or by examples expressed them But yet let vs define these two species as they be wherefore lineall warranty is that which he is called vnto by the tenent vpon whome the land warranted had descended if the warranty had not beene couenanted For example A selleth to B. 20. acres land with clause of warranty and afterward dieth leauing issue C. soone after B. is impleaded for this land by D. and voucheth C. This is called a lineall warranty because but for it the land had descended
the French word I am driuen to thinke that our auncient Lawyers would signifie hereby a kind of hope or longing expectance because that those things that be in abeyance though for the present they be in no man yet they are in hope and expectation belonging to him that is next to enioy them For I find also in the French that vn bayard is avidus spectator a greedy beholder I cannot in mine owne opinion better compare this then to that which the Civilians call haereditatem iacentem For as Bracton saith lib. 1. cap. 12. nu 10. Haereditas iacens nullius est in bonis ante aditionem Sed fallit in hoc quia sustinet vicem personae defuncti vel quia speratur futura haereditas eius qui adibit So that as the Civilians say goods and lands do iacere whilest they want a possessor and yet not simply because they had lately one and may shortly haue another so the common Lawyers do say that things in like estate are in abeyance Reade farther of this in the new tearmes of lawe and in Plowdens reports casu VValsingham fol. 554. a. Abet Abettare may without absurditie be said to proceed frō the French bouter i. ponere apponere impellere propellere It signifieth in our common law as much as to encourage or set on The substantiue abetment abettum is vsed for an encouraging or setting on Stawnf pl. cor fol. 105. And also abettour for him that encourageth or setteth on Old nat br fol. 21. But both verbe and noune is alway vsed in the euill part Abishersing according to Rastall in his Abridgement titulo Exposition of law words is to be quit of amerciaments before whom soeuer of transgression The author of the new tearmes calleth it otherwise Mishersing and saith it is to be quit of amerciaments before whom soeuer of transgression proued I am of opinion that the word originally signifieth a forfeiture or an amerciament and that it is much transformed in the writing by misprision and ignorance of Clerkes thinking it very probable that it proceedeth from the Germane verbe Beschetzen which is as much as fisco addicere vel confiscare It seemeth by the former authors to be tearmed a freedome or libertie because he that hath this word in any charter or grant hath not onely the forfeitures and amerciaments of all others within his fee for transgressions but also is himself free from all such controule of any within that compasse Abiuration Abiuratio signifieth in our common law asworne banishment or an oath taken to forsake the realme for euer For as Stawnford pl. cord li. 2. cap. 40. saith out of Polydore Virgils eleuenth booke of Chronicles the deuotion toward the Church first in S. Edward a Saxon king and so consequently in al the rest vntil anno 22. H. 8. was so earnest that if a man hauing committed felonie could recouer a church or church yard before he were apprehended he might not be thence drawne to the vsuall trial of lawe but confessing his fault to the Iustices at their comming or to the Coroner before them or him giue his oath finally to forsake the realme Of this you may reade a touch anno 7. Hen. 7. cap. 7. But the forme and effect of this you may haue in the old abridgement of Statutes titulo Abiuration nu 3. taken out of the auncient Tractate intituled De officiis coronatorum as also in Cromptons Tractate of the office of the Coroner fol. 206. b. and in the new booke of entries verbo Abiuration and in Andrew Horus myrror of Iustices lib. 1. cap. del office del coroner This part of our lawe was in some sort practised by the Saxons as appeareth by the lawes of king Edward set out by M. Lamberd nu 10. but more directly by the Normans as is euident by the grand customarie cap. 24. where you haue these words in effect He that flyeth to a Church or holy place may stay there for eight dayes And at the ninth day he must be demaunded whether he will yeeld himselfe to secular iustice or hold him to the Church For if he will he may yeeld himselfe to the lay Court if he will cleaue to the Church he shall forsweare the countrie before the Knights and other people of credit which may witnesse the act if need require The forme of the oath is likewise there set downe with the rest of the proceeding in this matter very agreable with ours This mercie as well of the Saxōs as Normans deriued vnto vs something resembleth that of the Romaine Emperors toward such as fled to the Church lib. 1. Co. titulo 12. or to the images of themselues eodem titulo 25. And also that of Moses touching the cities of refuge Exod. cap. 21. vers 13. Numb cap. 35. vers 6. 11 12. Deut. 19. vers 2. Ios 20. vers 2. But as it was in our auncestors dayes larger by great oddes in this realme so had it lesse reason as it may appeare to all that will compare them Of all circumstances belonging to this abiuration you may farther reade the new tearmes of lawe Stawnford vbi supra and such others But this grew at the last vpon good reason to be but a perpetual confining of the offender to some Sanctuarie wherein vpon abiuration of his liberty and free habitations he would chuse to spend his life as appeareth anno 22. Hen. 8. cap. 14. And this benefite also by other statutes is at the last wholly taken away So that abiuration at this day hath place but in few cases and if it be inflicted vpon any it is not a confining to a Sanctuarie for there be no Sanctuaries remaining amongst vs but a sworne banishment out of the Kings dominions This the Civilians call exilium or deportationem lib. 28. Digest titulo 22. de interdictis relegatis deportatis Abridge Abbreniare cōmeth of the French abreger and in one generall language signifieth as much as to make shorter in words holding still the whole substance But in the common lawe it seemeth at the least for the most part to be more particularly vsed for making a declaration or count shorter by subtracting or seuering some of the substance therein comprised As for example a man is said to abridge his plaint in an Assise or a woman her demaund in an action of dower that hath put into the plee or demand any land not in the tenure of the tenant or defendant and finding that by his answer razeth those parcels out of the plee praying answer to the rest So that here abridger is not contrahere but rather subtrahere Termes of the lawe Broke titulo Abridgement and anno 21. Hen. 8. cap. 3. Of this the Civilians haue no vse by reason of certaine cautelous clauses they ordinarily haue at the end of euery position or article of their libell or declaration to this effect Et ponit coniunctim divisim de quolibet de tali tanta quantitate vel summa qualis
quanta per confessionem partis adversae vel per probationes legitimas in fine litis apparebit And againe in the conclusion of all Non astringens se ad singula probanda sed potens vtquatenus probauerit in praemissis aut eorum aliquo eatenus obtineat By vertue of which clauses the plaintiffe faileth not in the end by any ouer or vnder demand neither is driuen to begin his action againe but obtaineth for so much as he proueth to be due though not to the heithe of his demaund Abridgement abbreuiamentum see Abridge A C ACcedas ad Curiam is a Writ that lieth for him who hath receyued false iudgement in a court Baron being directed to the Sheriffe as appeareth by Dyer fol. 169. nu 20. Like as the writ De falso iudicio lyeth for him that hath receiued false iudgement in the county Court the forme whereof you may see in Fitzh nat br fol. 18. d. and in the Register fol. 9. b. where it is said that this writ lyeth for iustice delayed as well as falsly giuen It is a species of the writ called Recordare Register originall fol. 5. b. and Fitzh vbi supra Accedas ad Vicecomitem is a writ directed to the Coroner cōmanding him to deliuer a writ to the Sheriffe that hauing a pone deliuered vnto him doth suppresse it Regist origin fol. 83. Accessory Accessorius vel Accessorium is vsed in our common lawe otherwise then among the Ciuilians For whereas with them it is generally takē for any thing depending vpon another here though it be so likewise yet most commonly and notoriously it signifieth a man that is guiltie of a fellonious offence not principally but by participation as by commandement aduice or concealement And a man may be accessorie to the offence of another after two sorts by the common lawe or by statute and by the common lawe two waies also that is before or after the fact Before the fact as when one commaundeth or aduiseth another to commita felony and is not present at the execution thereof For his presence maketh him also a principall wherfore there cannot be an accessorie before the fact in manslaughter because man-slaughter is sodaine and not prepensed Cooke lib. 4. fol. 44. a. Accessorie after the fact is when one receiueth him whom he knoweth to haue committed felonie Accessorie by statute is he that abetteth councelleth or hideth any man committing or hauing committed an offence made felony by statute For though the statute make no mention of abettours c. yet they are by interpretation included Of all these consult with Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 45. 46. 47. 48. There is also an accessorie of an accessorie as he that wittingly receiueth an accessorie to felonie lib. Assis 26. pl. 51. Coron Fitzh 196. Stawnf pl. cor li. 1. cap. 48. And the lawe of England is that so long as the principall is not attainted the accessorie may not be dealt with Stawnf vbi supra The reason whereofyou may see Cooke lib. 4. fol. 43. b. And this is also true by the ciuill lawe Claudius de Battandier in pract crim regula 101. at the least vntill the principall be certainely knowne Of this subiect reade M. Cromptons Iustice fol. 37. b. 38. 39. Acceptance is a receiuing of a rent whereby the receiuer bindeth himselfe for euer to allow a former fact done by another whether it be in it selfe good or not new tearmes of law Accompte computus is in the cōmon lawe taken for a writte or action brought against a man that by meanes of office or businesse vndertaken is to render an account vnto another as a bailife toward his Master a guardian in socage toward his ward such others as you shall find particularly named by Fitzh in his nat br fo 116. where you may also haue the forme and further vse of this writte See ex parte talis Accroche See enchrochement This word accroche is vsed ann 25. Ed. 3. Stat. 3. ca. 8. Achat commeth of the french achet 1. emptio nundinatio and is vsed for a contract or bargain Broke tit contract Acquitall signifieth in our cōmon law most ordinarily a deliuerance setting free from the suspicion or guiltines of an offence and is twofold acquitall in law or acquital in fact Acquitall in law is when two be appealed or endicted of felony one as principall the other as accessorie the principall being discharged the accessorie by consequent is also freed And in this case as the accessorie is acquitted by law so is the principall in fact Stawnf pl. cor fo 168. Acquittance Acquietantia cōmeth from the french quicter or quitter i. acceptò ferre or quictance i. acceptitatio apocha and signifieth a release or discharge from a dept formerly due But the verbe acquite the participle acquited the nowne acquital signifie also a discharge or cleering from an offence obiected as acquited by proclamation Smith de rep Anglo pa. 76. Stawnf pl. cor fo 168. Broke tit Acquitall See the new tearmes of lawe verbo acquitall acquittance Acquietandis plegiis is a Writ lying for a suretie against the creditour that refuseth to acquite him after the debt is paid by the debtour Register ori fol. 158. where it appeareth that this is a Iusticies Acre acre is a certaine quātitie of land containing in length 40. perches and foure in breadth or to that quantitie be the length more or lesse And if a man erect any new cotage he must lay 4. acres of land to it after this measure anno 31. Eliza. cap. 7. and with this measure agreeth M. Crompton in his iurisdiction of Courts fol. 222. though he say also that according to the diuers customes of diuers countries the perche differeth being in some places and most ordinarily but 16. foot dimid But in the Counties of Stafford 24. foote as was adiudged in the case betweene Sir Ed. Aston and S. Iohn B. in the Exchequer In the Statute made of sowing of Flaxe ann 24 H. 8. cap. 4. eight score perches make an acre which is 40. multiplied by 4. See also the ordinance of measuring land made anno 34. Ed. 1. Stat. 1. which agreeth with this accompt The word acre seemeth to come from the Germane word acker which is all one with the Latine ager Action actio is defined by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 1. as it is by Iustinian li. 4. Instit titulo de actionibus viz. Actio nihil aliud est quàm ius persequēds in iudicio quod alicui debetur Action is principally diuided by Iustinian in personalem realem by Bracton into personall reall and mixt action personall is that which belongeth to a man against another by reason of any contract offence or cause of like force to a contract or offence made or done by him or some other for whose fact he is by law to answer Bract. lib. 3. cap. 3. nu 2. Action reall is defined to be that which is giuen to any
his assistants in causes of iustice betweene the king and his subiects touching causes appertaining to the Exchequer The Lord chiefe Baron at this day is the chiefe Iudge of the court and in matter of lawe information and plea answereth the barre and giueth order for iudgment thereuppon He alone in the terme time doth sit vpon Nisi prius that come out of the Kings Remembrancers office or out of the office of the clerke of of the please which cannot be dispatched in the mornings for want of time He taketh recognisances for the Kings debts for appearances and obseruing of orders He taketh the presentation of all the officers in court vnder himselfe and of the Mayor of London and seeth the Kings Remembrancer to giue them their oathes He taketh the declaration of certaine receiuers accompts of the lands of the late augmentation made before him by the Auditors of the shires He giueth the two parcel makers places by vertue of his office The second Baron in the absence of the Lord chiefe baron answereth the barre in matters aforesaid he also taketh recognisances for the kings debts apparences and obseruing of orders He giueth yearely the oath to the late Maior and escheatour of London for the true accompt of the profits of his office He taketh a declaration of certaine receyuers accompts He also examineth the letters and summes of such Shyreeues foraine accompts as also the accompts of Escheatours and Collectours of Subsidies and Fifteens as are brought vnto him by the auditors of the Court. The third Baron in the absēce of the other two answereth the barre in matters aforesaide he also taketh recognisances as aforesaide He giueth yerely the oath of the late Mayor and gawger of London for his true accōpting He also taketh a declaration of certaine receiuers accompts and examineth the leters and sūmes of such of the former accountants as are brought vnto him The fourth barons is alwaies a coursetour of the court and hath bene chosen of some one of the clerks in the remembrancers offices or of the clerke of the pipes office He at the daies of prefixion taketh oth of al high shyreeus and their vndershyreeues and of all escheatours baylifs and other accountāts for their true accounting He taketh the oath of al collectours controllers surueyours and serchers of the custome houses that they haue made true entrances in their bookes He apposeth all shyreeues vyon their sūmons of the pipe in open court He informeth the rest of the Barons of the course of the court in any mater that concerneth the kings prerogatiue He likewise as the other Barons taketh the declaration of certaine receiuers accompts and examineth the leters and summes of such of the former accountants as are brought vnto him These barons of the exchequer areauncient officers for I finde them named westm 2. ca. 11. anno 13. Ed. 1. and they be called barons because barons of the realme were wont to be employed in that office Fleta li. 2. ca. 24. S. Thomas Smith saith of them that their office is to looke to the accompts of the Prince and to that end they haue auditors vnder them as also to descide all causes appertaining to the Kings profits comming into the exchequer by any meanes This is in part also proued by the statut anno 20. Ed. 3. ca. 2. anno 27. eiusdem stat 2. ca. 18. anno 5. R. 2. stat 1. ca. 9. 12. anno 14. eiusd ca. 1● And hereupon they be of late men learned in the common lawe of the realme wheras in auncient times they were others viz. maiores discretiores in regno siue de clero essent siue de curea Ockam in his lucubrations de fisci regij ratione Horn in his mirrour of Iustices saieth that barons were wont to be two and they Knights ca. De la place del Eschequer Then be there in this signification Barons of the Cinque portes anno 31. Ed. 3. stat 2. ca. 2. et anno 33. H 8. ca. 10. which are two of euery of the seuen towns Hastings Winchelsey Ry Rumney Hithe Douer Sandwiche that haue places in the lower house of Parlament Cromptons iurisd fo 28. Baron in the the third signification is vsed for the husband in relation to his wife which is so ordinary in all our lawe writers that wright in french as it were superfluous to confirme it by any one Baronet I reade this word anno 13. R. 2. stat 2. ca. 1. but I hould it falsely printed for Baneret or els to signifie all one with it Baronye baronia baronagium is the fee of a baron In which accompt are not only the fees of temporall Barons but of Bishops also who haue two respects one as they are spirituall men without possessions as was the tribe of Levy among the Israelites being susteined by the only first frutes and tenthes of the other tribes Iosue ca. 13. versue 14. The other respect they haue groweth from the bountie of our english Kings whereby they haue baronies at the least are thereby Barons or Lords of the Parlament This baronie as Bracton saith li. 2. ca. 34. is a right indiuisible and therefore if an inheritance be to be divided among coparceners though some capitall messuages may be divided yet si capitale messuagium sit caput Comitatus vel caput Baroniae he saith they may not be parcelled The reason is ne sic caput per plures particul as diuidatur plura iura comitatuum baroniarum deveniant ad nihilum per quod deficiat Regnum quod ex Comitatibus Baronys dicitur esse constitutum Barre barra commeth of the French barre or barriere i. repagalum obex vectis It is vsed in our common law for a peremptory exception against a demaūd or plaint and is by the author of the Termes of law defined to be a plee brought by the defendant in an action that destroieth the action of the plaintiffe for euer It is divided into a barre to common intent and a barre speciall Abarte to a common intendment is an ordinarie or generall barre that ordinarily disableth the declaration or plee of the plaintiffe a barre speciall is that which is more then ordinarie falleth out in the case in hand or question vpon some speciall circumstance of the fact Plowden casu Colthirst fo 26. a. b. For exāple an executor being sued for his testators debt pleadeth that he had no goods left in his hands at the day when the writ was purchased or taken out against him This is a good barre to common intendment or prima sacie But yet the case may so fall out that more goods might come to his hands sithence that time which if the plaintiffe can shew by way of replication then excep the haue a more especiall plee or barre to alleadge he is to be condemned in the action See also Plowden in the case aofre named fo 28. a. b. and Brooke titulo Barre nu
the king as of the person of the king and yet houldeth not in caepite but as he held before So that by this booke tenuere houlding of the person of the king and tenure in capite are two diuers tenures To take away this difficulty I thinke M. Kitchin is in that place to be taken as if he saide not in capite by Knights seruice but by socage folowing the vsuall speech because most commonly where we talke of tenure in capite we meane tenure by Knights seruice Carno Cromptons iurisd fol. 191. is an imunity Carke seemeth to be a quantititie of wolle whereof thirtie make a Sarpler anno 27. H. 6. ca. 2. See Sarpler Carrack aliàs Carrick seemeth to be a shippe of burden so called of this Italian carrico or carco a burden or charge or of the spanish cargo you haue this word anno 2. R. 2. ca. 4. anno 1. Iaco. ca. 33. Carroway seedes aliàs Carruway seedes semen cari vel carei is a seed springing of the herbe so called of whose operation you may read in Gerards herball li. 2. ca. 396. It is reckoned among the merchandize that ought to be garbled anno i. Iaco. ca. 19. Carue of land carucata terrae commeth of the French charue i. aratrum and with vs is a certaine quantitie of land by the which the subiects haue some time bene taxed wherevpon the tribute soe leuied is called Carvage Caruagium Bracton li. 2. ca. 16. nu 8. It is all one with that which the same author lib. 2. ca. 17. calleth carucatam terrae For Litleton ca Tenure in socage saith that haec soca socae idem est quod caruca sc one sok or one plow land Yet one place I finde in Stowes annals that maketh me doubt pag. 271. where he hath these words The same time king Henry tooke carvage that is to say two merks of siluer of euery knights fee toward the mariage of his sister Izabell to the Emperor where caryage cannot be taken for a plow land except there were some other farder division whereby to raise of euery plowe land so much and so consequently of euery Knights fee that is of euery 680. acres two merkes of siluer Rastall in his Exposition of words saith that caruage is to be quite if the lord the King shall taxe all the land by carues that is a priuiledge whereby a man is exempted frō carvage Skene de verb. signif ver Carucata terrae deriueth it from the French charon i. a plough and saith that it containes as great a portion of land as may be tilled and laboured in a yere and day with one plough which also is called hilda or hida terrae a word vsed in the old Britaine lawes M. Lamberd among his precedents in the end of his Eirenarcha translateth carucatū terrae a plough land Caruage caruagium see Carue Cassia Fistula is a tree that beareth certaine blacke round and long cods wherein is contained a pulpe soft pleasantly sweet seruing for many vses in Phisick This tree with her vertues you may find described in Gerards Herball lib. 3. cap. 77. The fruite is mentioned in the statute anno 1. Iacob cap. 19. among drugges and spices that be to be garbled Cassia lignea is a sweet wood not vnlike to Cynamom and sometime vsed in steede of Cynamom Whereof you may read in Gerards Herball lib 1. ca. 141. This is called Cassia lignum in the Statute anno 1. Iacob cap. 19 and is comprised among merchandize that are to be garbled Castellain castellanus is a keeper or a Captaine sometime called a Constable of a castell Bracton lib. 5. tractat 2. cap. 16. lib. 2. cap. 32. num 2. īn like maner is it vsed anno 3. Ed. 1. cap. 7. In the bookes de feudis you shall find guastaldus to be almost of the same signification but something more large because it is also extended to those that haue the custodie of the Kings mansion houses called of the Lumbards curtes in England Courts though they be not places of defence or strength M. Manwood part 1. of his Forest lawes pag. 113. saith that there is an officer of the Forest called Castellanus Castelward castelgardum vel wardum castri is an imposition laide vpon such of the kings subiects as dwell within a certaine compasse of any castell toward the maintenance of such as doe watch and ward the castell Magna charta cap. 20. anno 32. H. 8. cap. 48. It is vsed sometime for the very circuit it selfe which is inhabited by such as are subiect to this seruice as in Stowes annals pag. 632. Casu consimili is a writ of entrie graunted where the tenent by courtesie or tenent for terme of life or for the life of another doth alien in fee or in tayle or for tearme of anothers life And it hath the name of this for that the Clerkes of the Chauncerie did by their common consent frame it to the likenesse of the writ called In casu prouiso according to their authoritie giuen them by the Statute Westm 2. cap. 24. which as often as there chanceth any new case in Chancerie something like to a former case and yet not especially fitted by any writ licenceth them to lay their heads together and to frame a new forme aunswerable to the new case and as like some former case as they may And this writ is graunted to him in the reuersion against the party to whom the said tenent so alienateth to his preiudice and in the life time of the said tenent The forme and effect whereof reade more at large in Fitz. nat br fol. 206. Casu proviso is a writ of entry giuen by the Statute of Glocecester cap. 7. in case where a tenent in dower alieneth in fee or for tearme of life or in taile and lyeth for him in reuersion against the alienee Whereof reade F 〈…〉 cat br more at large fol. 205. Catals catalla aliâs chatels cōmeth of the Normans For in the 87. chapter of the grand Custumarie you shal find that al moueable goods with them are called chatels the contrary whereof is fief ibid. which we do call fee. But as it is vsed in our common law it comprehendeth all goods moueable and immoueable but such as are in the nature of free hould or parcell thereof as may be gathered out of Sawnf praero ca. 16. and anno Eliza. 1. ca. 2. How be it Kitchin in the chapter catalla fo 32. saith that ready mony is not accompted any goods or catels nor haukes nor houndes The reason why hawks and hounds be not he giueth because they be ferae naturae why money is not though he set not downe the cause yet it may be gathered to be for that money of it selfe is not of worth but as by cōsent of men for their easier traficke or permutation of things necessary for common life it is reckoned a thing rather consisting in imagination then in deede Catals be either personall
called the foote of the fine The Chirographer also or his debuty doth proclaime all the fines in the court euery tearme according to the Statute and then repayring to the office of the custos breuium there indorseth the proclamations vpō the backside of the foot thereof and alwaie keepeth the writ of couenant as also the note of the fine Chivage See Chevage Chivalrie servitium militare commeth of the French chevalier i. eques and signifieth in our common lawe a tenure of land by knights seruice For the better vnderstanding whereof it is to be knowne that there is noe land but is holden mediatly or immediatly of the Crowne by some seruice or other and therfore are all our free-houlds that are to vs and our heires called feuda feese as proceeding frō the benefit of the King for some small yearely rent and the performance of such seruices as originally were laid vpon the land at the donation thereof For as the king gaue to the great Nobles his immediat tenents large possessions for euer to hold of him for this or that rent and seruice so they againe in time parcelled out to such as they liked their lands so receiued of the kings bountie for rents and seruices as they thought good And these seruices are all by Litleton diuided into two sorts chivalry and socage The one is martiall and military the other clownish and rusticall Chivalrie therefore is a tenure or seruice whereby the tenent is bound to performe some noble or military office vnto his Lord and is of two sorts either regall that is such as may hold onely of the king or such as may also hold of a common person as well as of the king That which may hold onely of the King is properly called servitium or sergeantia and is againe diuided into grand or petit i. great or small Great commonly called grand sergeantie is that where one holdeth lands of the King by seruice which hee ought to doe in his own person vnto him as to beare the kings baner or his speare or to leade his hoast or to be his Marshall or to blow a horne when he seeth his enemies inuade the land or to find a man at armes to fight within the foure Sease or else to do it himselfe or to beare the kings sword before him at his coronation or at that day to be his sewer caruer butler or chamberlaine Litleton tit Sergeantie Petit Sergeantie is where a man holdeth land of the king to yeeld him yearely some small thing toward his warres as a sword dagger bowe knife speare paire of gloues of maile a paire of spurs or such like Litleton titulo petit Sergeanty Chivalry that may hould of a common person as well as of the king is called scutagium escuage that is seruice of the shield And this is either vncertaine or certaine Escuage vncertaine is likewise two-fold first where the tenent by his tenure is bounde to follow his lord going in person to the kings wars against his enemies either him selfe or to send a sufficient man in his place there to be maintained at his cost so many daies as were agreed vpon betweene the lord and his first tenent at the graunting of the see And the daies of such seruice seeme to haue bene rated by the quantity of the land so houlden as if it extend to a whole knights fee then the tenent was bounde thus to follow his lord fourty dayes And a knights fee was so much land as in those dayes was accoumpted a sufficient liuing for a knight and that was 680 acres as some opinion is or 800 as others thinke or 15 pounds per annum Camdens Brittan pa. 110. in meo S. Thomas Smyth sayeth that census equestris is 40. poundes reuenew in free lands If the law extend but to halfe a knights fee then the tenent is bounde to follow his lord as aboue is said but twenty dayes If to a fourth part then ten daies Fitzh nat br fo 83. C. 84. C. E. The other kinde of this escuage vncertaine is called castelward where the tenent by his land is bound either by him selfe or by some other to defend a castell as often as it shall come to his course Escuage certaine is where the tenent is set at a certaine summe of money to be paide in lieu of such vncertaine seruice as that a man shall yerely pay for a Knights Fee 20. shillings Stow annal pag. 238. for halfe a Knights Fee tenne shillings or some like rate And this seruice because it is drawne to a certaine rent groweth to be of a mixt nature not meerely socage for that it smelleth not of the plough and yet so cage in effect being now neither personall seruice nor vncertaine Litleton titulo Secage This tenure called chiualry hath other conditions annexed vnto it as homage fealty wardship reliefe and mariage Bracton li. 2. ca. 35. which what they signifie looke in their places Chilualry is either generall or especiall Dier fo 161. nu 47. Generall seemeth to be where only it is said in the feofment that the tenent houldeth per seruitium militare without any specification of sergeanty escuage c. Speciall that which is declared particularly what kinde of knights seruice he houldeth by Chorall choralis seemeth to be any that by vertue of any of the orders of Clergie was in auncient time admitted to sit and serue God in the Quier which in Latine is tearmed Chorus Chose res is the French word as generall as thing is with vs. It is in the common lawe vsed with diuers epithites worthie the interpretation as chose locall is such a thing as is annexed to a place For example a mill is chose locall Kitchin fol. 18. Chose transitorie in the same place seemeth to bee that thing which is moueable and may be taken away or caried from place to place Chose in action is a thing incorporeall and onely a right as an annuitie an obligation of debt a couenant or vowcher by warrantie Broke titulo Chose in action And it seemeth that chose in action may be also called chose in suspence because it hath no reall existence or being neither can be properly sayde to bee in our possession Broke ibid. Churchwardens Ecclesiarum gardiani be Officers yearely chosen by the consent of the Minister and parishioners according to the custome of euery seuerall place to looke to the church church-yard and such things as belong to both and to obserue the behauiours of their parishioners for such faults as appertaine to the iurisdiction or censure of the court ecclesiasticall These be a kind of corporation inabled by lawe to sue for any thing belonging to their church or poore of their parish See Lamberd in his pamphlet of the duty of Church-wardens Churchesset is a word that I find in Fleta lib. 1. cap. 47 in fine whereof he thus writeth Certam mensuram bladi tritici significat quam quilibet olim sanctae Ecclesiae die
i. hospitio excipere It signifieth with vs an officer of the princes court that allotteth the noble men and those of the household their lodgings It signifieth also in Kitchin an Inkeeper fol. 176. Hereditaments hereditamenta seeme to signifie all such things immoueable be they corporeall or incorporeall as a man may haue to himselfe and his heires by way of inheritance v. anno 32. H. 8. ca. 2. or not being otherwise bequeathed doe naturally and of course descend to him which is our next heire of blood and fall not within the compas of an executour or administratour as chatels doe Heriot See Hariot Hide of land Hida terrae Saxonicè Hidelandes is a certaine measure or quantitie of land by some mens opinion that may be plowed with one plowe in a yeare as the author of the newe Termes saith verbo Hidage by other men it is an hundred acres By Beda who calleth it familiā it is as much as will maintaine a familie Crompton in his Iurisdict fol. 220. saith that it consisteth of an hundred acres euery acre in length 40. perches and in breadth 4. perches everie perch 16. foote and a halfe and againe fol. 222. A hide of land conteineth an hundred acres 8. hides or 800. acres conteine a knights fee. Of this reade more in M. Lamberds Explica of Saxon wordes verbo Hyda terrae See Carue Hide and gaine old nat br fol. 71. Coke lib. 4. Tirringhams case signifieth carable land See Gainage Hidage Hidagium is an extraordinarie taxe to be paide for euery hide of land Bracton li. 2. c. 6. writeth thus of it Sunt etiam quaedam communes praestationes quae seruitia non dicuntur nec de consuetudine veniunt nisi cum necessitas intervenerit vel cum Rex venerit sicut sunt Hidagia Coragia Carvagia alia plura de necessitate ex consensu communi totius Regni introducta quae ad Dominum feudi non pertinent c. of this reade the new expounder of lawe termes who saith that hidage is to be quit if the king shall taxe all the lands by hides and yet also graunteth it to be the taxe it selfe saying that it was wont to be an vsuall kind of taxing as well for prouision of armour as payments of money Hinefare See Heinfare Hidel i. H. 7. ca. 6. seeemeth to signifie a place of protection as a Sanctuarie Hierlome See Heirlome Hine seemeth to be vsed for a Seruant at husbandrie and the master hine a seruant that ouerseeth the rest anno 12. R. 2. ca. quarto Hoblers Hobellarii are certaine men that by their tenure are tyed to maintaine a little light nagge for the certifiing of any inuasion made by enemies or such like perill toward the Sea side as Porchmouth c. of these you shall reade anno 18. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 7. anno 25. eiusdem stat 5. ca. 8. Hoghenhine is he that commeth guestwise to a house and lieth there the third night After which time he is accounted of his familie in whose house he lieth and if he offend the kings peace his host must be answerable for him Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 10. In the lawes of King Edward set forth by M. Lamberd he is called agenhine wheare you may reade more of this mater Hithe Hitha is a petit hauen to land wares out of vessels or boates new booke of Entrise fol. 3. colum 3. Hoggeshead is a measure of wine or oyle containing the fourth parte of a tunne that is 63. gallons anno i. R. 3. ca. 13. Hoistings See Hustings Homage Homagium is a french word signifiing fidem clientularem for in the originall grants of land and tenements by way of fee the lord did not onely tie his tenents or feed men to certaine seruices but also tooke a submission with promis and oathe to be true and loyall to him as there lord benefactour This submission was and is called homage the forme wherof you haue in the second statute anni 17. Ed 2. in these words when a free man shall doe homage to his Lord of whome he holdeth in chiefe he shall hold his hands together betweene the hands of his lord and shall say thus I become your man from this day forthe for life for member for wordly honour and shall owe you my faith for the land I hold of you sauing the faith that I doe owe vnto our Soueraigne Lord the king and to mine other Lords And in this maner the Lord of the fee for which homage is due taketh homage of euery tenent as he commeth to the land or fee. Glanvile lib. 9. ca. 1. except they be women who performe not homage but by their husbands yet see Fitzherbert that saith the contrary in his natura br fol. 157. F. Reade Glanuile more at large in the said first chapter with the second third fourth The reason of this M. Skene giueth de verbo significatione verbo Homagium viz. because Homage especially concerneth seruice in warre He saith also that consecrated Bishops doe no homage but onely fidelitie the reason may be all one And yet I find in the Register orig fol. 296. a. that a woman taking liuerie of lands holden by knights seruice must doe homage but not being ioyntly infeoffed for then shee doth only fealtie And see Glanuile in the ende of the first chapter of his nineth booke touching Bishops consecrated whome he denieth to performe homage to the king for their Baronie but onely fealty Fulbeck reconeileth this fol. 20. a. in these words By our lawe a religious man may doe homage but may not say to his Lord. Egodevenio homo vester because he hath professed himselfe to be onely Gods man but he may say I doe vnto you homage and to you shall be faithfull loyall See of this Britton cap. 68. Homage is either new with the fee or auncestrell that is wheare a man and his auncesters time out of minde haue held their lands by homage to their Lord whereby the Lord is tied to warrant the land vnto his tenent newe Termes of the lawe This homage is vsed in other countries as well as ours was wont to be called Hominium See Hotom de verbis feudalibus verbo Homo Skene diuideth it into liegium non liegium de verb. signifi verbo Homage for the which see Leige and Hotoman disputatione de feudis tertia Homage is sometime vsed for the Iurie in the Courte Baron Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. 2. cap. 27. The reason is because it consisteth most commonly of such as owe homage vnto the Lord of the fee. And these of the Feudists are called pares curiae sive ourtis siue domus sic dicuntur enim conuassalli siue compares qui ab eodem patrono feudum receperunt vel qui in eodom territorio feudum habent Hotoman Of this homage you may read in the 29. c. of the Grand Custumarie of Normandie where you shall vnderstand of other
space of 200. yeares was farre spred in Christendome and namely here in England But at the last the cheife of them at Hierusalem being as some men say found to fall away to the Sazarens from Christianity and to abound in many vices the whole Order was suppressed by Clemens quintus which was about King Ed. the 1. daies and their substance giuen partly to the Knights of the Rhodes and partly to other Religious Cassan de gloria mnndi parte 9. Consid 5. and See anno prim Ed. 1. cap. 42. Others wright that in truth their destruction grewe from leaning to the Emperour against the Pope of Rome what soeuer was pretended Ioach. Stephanus De iurisdictione lib. 4. cap. 10. nu 18. See Templers Knights of the Shire Milites Comitatus otherwise be called Knights of the Parlament and be two Knights or other gentlemen of worth that are chosen in pleno Comitatu by the free holders of euery Countie that can dispend 40. shillings per annum and be Resient in the shire anno 10. H 6. cap. 2. anno 1. H. 5. cap. 1. vpon the Kings writ to be sent to the Parlament and there by their counsell to assist the common proceedings of the whole Realme These when euery man that had a Knights fee were custumarily constreined to be a Knight were of necessity to be milites gladio cincti for so runneth the tenour of the writ at this day Cromptons Iurisdict fol. pri But nowe there being but fewe Knights in comparison of former times many men of great liuing in euery county Custome beareth that Esquiers may be chosen to this office anno 23. H. 6. ca. 6. so that they be resient within the countie anno H. 6. cap. 7. anno 1. H. 5. cap. prim For the obseruations in choice of these knights see the statutes anno 7. H. 4. cap. 15. anno 11. eiusdem cap. 1. anno 6. H. 6. cap. 4. anno 23. H. 6. cap. 15. and the new booke of Entries verbo Parlament nu 1. Their expences during the Parlament are borne by the County anno 35. H. 8. cap. 11. Knight Marshiall Marescallus hospitii Regii is an officer in the kings house hauing iurisdiction and cognisance of any transgression within the kings house and verge as also of contracts made within the same house whereunto one of the house is a partie Register orig fo 185. a. b. fo 191. b. whereof you may there reade more at large Knights fee Feudum militare is so much inheritaunce as is sufficient yearely to maintaine a knight with conuenient reuenew which in Henry the. 3. daies was fifteene pounds Camdeni Britan. pag. ●11 or 680. acres of land or 800. acres eodem But S. Thomas Smith in his Repub. Angl. lib. pri cap. 18. rateth it at fourtie pound And I finde in the statute for knights anno pri Ed. 2. cap pri that such as had 20. pound in fee or for terme of life per annum might be compelled to be knights M. Stowe in his annals pag. 285. saith that there were found in England at the time of the Conqueror 60211. Knights fees others say 60215. whereof the religious houses before their suppression were possessed of 28015. Knights fee is sometime vsed for the rent that a knight payeth for his fee to his Lord of whom he houldeth And this is an vncertaine summe some houlding by fortie shillings the sheild some by twenty shillings as appeareth by Bracton lib. 5. tract pri cap. 2. Knighten Gylde was a Gylde in London consisting of 19. knights which king Edgar founded giuing vnto them a portion of void ground lying without the walls of the city now called Portesoken ward Stow. in his Annals pag. 151. L LAborariis is a writ that lieth against such as hauing not whereof to liue doe refuse to serue or for him that refuseth to serue in summer where he serued in winter orig Register fol. 189. b. Laches commeth of the French lascher i. laxare or lusche i. frigidus ignavus flaccidus it signifieth in our common law negligence as no laches shal be adiudged in the heire within age Litleton fol. 136. and old nat br fol. 110. where a man ought to make a thing and makes it not I of his laches cannot haue an Assise but I must take mine action vpon the case Lagon See Flotzon Laised listes anno i. R. 3. cap. 8. Land tenent anno 14. Ed. 〈◊〉 stat 1. cap. 3. anno 23. eiusdem cap. 1. 26. eiusdem stat 5. cap. 2. See Terre-tenent anno 12. R. 2. cap. 4. anno 4. H. 4. cap. 8. it is ioyned with this word Possessor as Synonymon v. anno 1. H. 6. cap. 5. See Terretenent Lanis de crescentia Walliae traducendis abque custuma c. is a writ that lyeth to the customer of a porte for the permitting one to passe ouer wolles without custome because he hath paid custome in Wales before Register fol. 279. Lapse Lapsus is a slippe or departure of a right of presēting to avoide benefice from the originall patron neglecting to present within six monethes vnto the Ordinary For we say that benefice is in lapse or lapsed wherevnto he that ought to present hath omitted or slipped his oportunitie anno 13. Eliz. cap. 12. This lapse groweth as well the Patron being ignorant of the auoydance as priuie except onely vpon the resignation of the former Incumbent or the depriuation vpon any cause comprehended in the statute anno 13. Eliz. cap. 12. Panor in cap. quia diuersitatem nu 7. de concess praebend Rebuffus de devolut in praxi beneficiorum Lancelotus de collation lib. 1. Institut canon § Tempus autem In which cases the Bishop ought to giue notice to the Patron Larceny Laricinium commeth of the French Larcen i. furtum detractio alicui It is defined by West parte 2. Symbol titulo Inditements to be theft of personall goods or chatels in the owners absence and in respect of the things stollen it is either great or small Great Larceny is wherin the things stolne though seuerally exceede the value of 12. pence and petit Larceny is when the goods stolne exceede not the value of 12. pence hitherto M. West But he differeth from Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. c. 32. n. 1. Of this see more in Stawnf pl. cor l. 1. cap. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. Laghslite is compounded of lah. i. lex and slite i. ruptum and signifieth mulctam ruptae vel violatae legis Lamb explicat of Saxon words verbo Mulcta Last is a Saxon word signifiing a burden in generall as also particularly a certaine weight for as we say a last of hering so they say Ein last corns last wines c. thence commeth lastage which see in Lestage A last of hering conteineth 10. thousand an 31. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 2. a last of pitch and tarre or of ashes conteineth 14. barrels anno 32. H. 8. cap. 14. a last of hides
cap. 11. Lastage anno 21. R. 2. cap. 18. seemeth to be the Ballance of a shippe Fleta tearmeth it Lesting saying quòd significat acquietantiā Lestagii lib. 1. cap. 47. § Lesting Leters of exchaunge literae Cambitoriae vel litera Cambii Regist orig fol. 194. a. Leters patents literae patentes be writings sealed with the broad Seale of England whereby a man is authorized to do or enioy any thing that otherwise of himselfe he could not anno 19. H. 7. cap. 7. And they be so tearmed of their forme because they be open with the Seale hanging readie to be shewed for the confirmation of the authoritie giuen by them If any will say that leters patents may bee graunted by common persons I will not greatly contend For I find that to be true in Fitzh nat br fol. 35. E. Howbeit they bee called rather patents in our cōmon speech then Leters patents Leters patents to make Denizens anno 32. H. 6. cap. 16. yet for difference sake the kings leters patents be called leters patents royall anno 2. H. 6. cap. 10. There is likewise a writ patent Fitzh nat br fol. 1. seqq Leuari facias is a writ directed to the Shyreeue for the leuying of a Summe of money vpon lands and tenements of him that hath forfeited a recognizance c. Regist origin fol. 298. b. 300. b. Leuari facias damna de disseisitoribus is a writ directed to the Shyreeue for the leauying of dammages wherein the disseisour hath formerly beene condemned to the disseisee Regist fol. 214. b. Leuari facias residuum debiti is a writ directed to the Shyreeue for the leuying of a Remanent of a debt vpon lands and tenements or chatels of the debtor that hath in part satisfied before Regist orig fol. 299. Leuari facias quando vicecomes returnavit quòd non habuit emptores is a writ commaunding the Shyreeue to sell the goods of the debtor which he hath alreadie taken returned that he could not sell them and as much more of the debtours goods as will satisfie the whole debt Regist orig fol. 300. a. Leter of Atturney litera Atturnatus is a writing authorizing an Atturney that is a man appointed to do a lawfull act in our steedes West parte prim symbol lib. 2. sect 559. It is called in the ciuile lawe mandatum or procuratorium There seemeth to be some difference betweene a leter of Atturney and a warrant of Atturney For whereas a leter of Atturney is sufficient if it be sealed and deliuered before sufficient witnesse a warrant of Atturney must be acknowledged and certified before such persons as fines bee acknowledged in the country or at the least before some Iustice or Sergeant West parte 2. symbol titulo Recoveries sect 1. F. See the statute anno 7. R. 2. cap. 14. Leters of Marque See Marque and lawe of Marque See Reprisals see a. 14. Hen. 6. cap. 7. Leters patents of summons for debt anno 9. H. 3. cap. 18. Leuy Leuare commeth of the French Leuer i. alleuare attoller● It is vsed in our common law for to set vp any thing as to leuy a mill Kitchin fol. 180. or to cast vp as to leuy a ditch Old nat br fol. 110. or to gather and exact as to leuy mony See Leu●ri facias Libell Libellus literally signifieth a litle booke but by vse it is the originall declaration of any action in the ciuill lawe anno 2. H. 5. cap. 3. anno 2. Ed. 6. cap. 13. it signifieth also a criminous report of any man cast abroad or otherwise vnlawfully published in writing but then for difference sake it is called an in famous libel famosus libellus Libello habendo See Copia libelli de liberanda Libera Chasea habenda is a writ Iudiciall graunted to a man for a free chace belonging to his maner after he hath by a Iury prooued it to belong vnto him Register Iudiciall fol. 36. 37. Liberate is a warrant issuing out of the Chaūcery to the Treasurer Chamberlaines and Barons of the Exchequer or clerk of the Hamper c. for the payments of any annuall pension or other summes graunted vnder the broad seale v. Brooke titulo Taile d'Exchequer nu 4. orig Reg. fol. 193. a. b. or sometime to the shyreeue c. n. br f. 132. for the deliuery of any lands or goods taken vpon forfeits of a Recognisaunce Fitzh nat br fol. 131. 132. v. Coke li. 4. Fulwods case so 64. 66. 67. It is also to a Gaoler from the Iustices for the deliuery of a prisoner that hath put in baile for his appearaunce Lamb. Eirenarch lib. 3. cap. 2. Libertate probanda is a writ that lyeth for such as be chalendged for slaues and offer to proue themselues free to the Shyreeue that he take security of them for the prouing of their freedome before the Iustices of Assise and prouide that in the meane time they be quiet from their vexations that chalenge them for slaues Fitz. nat br fol. 77. See Natiuo habendo Libertatibus allocandis is a writ that lyeth for a citizen or Burges of any citie that contrarily to the liberties of the city or towne whereof he is is impleaded before the kings Iustices or Iustices errants or Iustice of the Forest c. that refuseth or deferreth to allow his priuiledge Orig. Regist fol. 262. Fitz. nat br fol. 229. Libertatibus exigendis in itinere is a writ whereby the king willeth the Iustices in eyre to admit of an Atturney for the defence of another mans libertie c. before them Regist origin fol. 19. b. Libertas libertas is a priuiledge held by graunt or prescription whereby men enioy some benefite or fauour beyond the ordinarie subiect Liberties royal what they be see in Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. Broke hoc titulo See Franchise Librata terrae containeth foure oxegangs and euery oxegange 13. acres Skene de verb. signif verbo Bovata terrae See Farding deale of land Licence to go to election Licentia eligendi Regist fol. 294. See Conge d'eslire Licence to arise licentia surgendi is a libertie giuen by the Court to a tenent that is essoyned de malo lecti in a reall action For the lawe is that in this case he may not arise out of his bed or at least goe out of his chamber vntill he haue bene viewed by Knights thereunto appointed and so vpon view of his sicknesse haue a day assigned him to appeare or else lye vntill he be licenced by the court to arise And the reason of this is as I take it because it may appeare whether he caused himselfe to be essoyned deceitfully yea or not And therefore if the demaundant can prooue that he be seene out of his chamber walking vp and downe his grounds or els going abroad vnto any other place before he be viewed or haue licence of the court he shal be adiudged to be deceitfully essoyned and to haue made default Of this see Bracton lib. 5.
praecepturum pro viribus opem impensurum vt ecclesiae dei omni populo Christiano vera pax omni suo tempore observetur Secundò vt rapacitates omnes iniquitates omnibus gradibus interdicat 3. vt in omnibus iudieiis aequitatem praecipiat misericordiam vt indulgeat et suā misericordiā clemens misericors Deus vt per Iustitiā suam firma gaudeant pace vniuersi And in the old abridgement of statutes set out in H. 8. daies I finde it thus described This is the oath that the King shall sweare at his coronation That he shall keepe and maintaine the right and the liberties of the holy church of old time graunted by the righteous Christian Kings of England and that he shall keepe all the lands honours and dignities righteous and free of the Crowne of England in all maner whole without any maner of minishment and the rights of the Crowne hurt decayed or lost to his power shall call againe into the auncient estate and that he shall keepe the peace of the holy church and of the clergy and of the people with good accord and that he shall doe in all his iudgements equitie and right iustice with discretion and mercie and that he shall graunt to hold the lawes customes of the realme and to his power keepe them and affirme them which the folke and people haue made and chosen and the euill lawes and customes wholly to put out and stedfast and stable peace to the people of this realme keepe and cause to be kept to his power and that he shall graunt no charter but where he may doe it by his oath All this I finde in the foresaide Booke titulo Sacramentum Regis and Charter of pardon quinto Oth of the Kings Iustices is that they well and truly shall serue the king and that they shall not assent to things that may turne to his dammage or disinheritance Nor that they shall take no fee nor liuerie of none but the king Nor that they shall take gift nor reward of none that hath adoe before them except it be meate and drinke of smal value as long as the plee is hanging before them nor after for the cause Nor that they shall giue councell to none in mater that may touch the King vpon paine to be at the kings will body and goods And that they shall doe right to euery person notwithstanding the Kings leters c. anno 18. Ed. 3. statut 4. which the old abridgement maketh to be anno 20. eiusdem statuto per se Otho was a Deacon Cardinall of S. Nichens in carcere Tulliam and Legate for the Pope heere in England anno 22. H. 3. whose constitutions we haue at this day Stowes An. pa. 303. see the first constitution of the said Legat. Othobonus was a Deacon Cardinall of S. Adrian and the Popes legate heere in England anno 15. H. 3. as appeareth by the award made betweene the said King and his commons at Kenelworth his constitutions we haue at this day in vse Ouch anno 24. H. 8. ca. 13. Ouster le main Amouere manum word for word signifieth to take off the hand though in true French it should be Oster la main It signifieth in the common law a Iudgement giuen for him that tendeth a trauers or sieweth a Monstrance de droit or petition For when it appeareth vpon the mater discussed that the King hath noe right nor title to the thing he seised then Iudgement shal be giuen in the Chauncery that the kings hands be amoued and thereupon Amoueas manum shal be awarded to the Escheatour which is as much as if the iudgement were giuen that he should haue againe his land v. Stawn praerog ca. 24. See anno 28. Ed. 1. stat 3. ca. 19. It is also taken for the writ graunted vpon this petition Fitzh nat br fol. 256. C. It is written oter le maine anno 25. Hen. 8. ca. 22. Ouster le mer vltra mare commeth of the French oultre i. vltra and le mer. i. mare and it is a cause of excuse or Essoine if a man appeare not in Court vpon Summons See Essoin Outfangthef aliâs vtfangthef is thus defined by Bracton li. 3. tra 2. ca. 34. vtfangthef dicitur latro extraneus veniens aliunde de terra aliena qui captus fuit in terra ipsius quitales habet libertates but see Britton otherwise fol. 91 b It is compounded of three Saxon words out i. extra fang i. capio vel captus and Thef i. fur It is vsed in the common law for a liberty or priuiledge whereby a Lord is inhabled to call any man dwelling within his owne fee and taken for felony in any other place and to iudge him in his owne court Rastals expos of words Owelty of seruices is an equality when the tenent parauaile oweth as much to the mesn as the mesn doth to the Lord paramont Fitzh nat br fol. 136 A. B. Outlawry vtlagaria is the losse or depriuation of the benefit belonging to a subiect that is of the Kings protection and the Realme Bracton li. 3. tract 2. ca. 11. num pri nu 3. Forisfacit vtlagatus omnia quae pacis sunt Quia a tempore quo vtlagatus est caput gerit lupinum ita quòd ab omnibus interfici possit impunè maxime si se defenderit vel fugerit ita quòd difficilis sit eius captio nu 4. Si autem non fugerit nec se defenderit cùm captus fuerit extunc erit in manu domini Regis mors vita qui taliter captum interfecerit respondebit pro co sicut pro alio v. c. Outeparters anno 9. H. 5. ca. 8. seemeth to be a kind of theeues in Ridesdall that ride abroad at their best advantage to fetch in such catell or other things as they could light on without that liberty some are of opinion that those which in the forenamed statute are termed out-patters are at this day called out-putters and are such as set matches for the robbing of any man or house as by discouering which way he rideth or goeth or where the house is weakest fittest to be entred See Intakers Owtryders seeme to be none other but bayliffe errants employed by the Shyreeues or their fermers to ride to the fardest places of their counties or hundreds with the more speede to summon to their county or hundred courts such as they thought good to worke vpon anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. ca. 9. Oxgang of Land Bouata terrae Sixe oxgangs of land seeme to be so much as sixe oxen will plough Crompton iurisd fol. 220. but an oxegang seemeth properly to be spoken of such land as lyeth in gainour old nat br fol. 117. M. Skene de verbor significat verbo Bovata terrae saith that an oxen-gate of land should alway conteine 13. acres and that 4. oxen-gates extendeth to a pound land of old extent See
brought in the masse to his Exchange for coyne Seignorie Dominium is borowed of the French seigneury i. ditio dominatus imperium principatus potentatus It signifieth peculiarly with vs a Maner or Lordship Seignorie de soke mans Kitchin fol. 80. Seignorie in grosse seemeth to be the title of him that is not Lord by meanes of any maner but immediatly in his owne person as Tenure in capite whereby one holdeth of the King as of his Crowne is seignorie in grosse because it is held of the king for the time being and not of the King as of any honour maner c. Kitchin fol. 206. See Seignior Seisin seisina is borowed of the French seisine i. possessio and so it signifieth in our common lawe and to seise is to take possession Primier seisin prima seisina is the first possession See Primier seisin of the French word seisir is made a Latine seisire vsed by the Canonists cap. Clericis § Nos igitur non semel de immunitate Ecclesiae num 6. as also the Ciuilians Guido Pap. singula 865. Seisire est etiam possessionem tradere Tiraquellus in Tractatu Le mort saisit le vif pag. 53. num 3. Seisin with our common Lawyers is two fold seisin in fact and seisin in lawe Perkins Dower 369. 370. Seisin in fact is when a corporall possession is taken seisin in lawe is when something is done which the lawe accompteth a seisin as an Inrolment Seisin in lawe is as much as a right to lands and tenements though the owner be by wrong disseised of them Perkins Tenent per le courtesie 457. 478. And it seemeth by Ingham that he who hath had an houres possession quietly taken hath seisin de droit de claime whereof no man may disscise him by his owne force or subtiltie but must bee driuen to his action § Bref denovel disseisin Sir Edward Cooke lib. 4. calleth it seisin in lawe or seisin actuall fol. 9. a. The Ciuilians call the one ciuilem possessionem the other naturalem Seisiua habenda quia Rex habuit annum diem vastum is a writ that lyeth for the deliuery of seisin to the Lord of his land or tenements that formerly was conuicted of felony after the King in the right of his prerogatiue hath had the yeare day and wast Rog. orig fol. 165. a. Selion selio is borowed of the French sellon i. terra elata inter duos sulcos in Latine Porca in english a Ridge or land It signifieth euen so with vs also and is of no certaine quantity but some time conteineth an acre sometime halfe an acre sometime more and sometime lesse West parte 2. symbol titulo Recouery sect 3. Therefore Crompton in his Iurisdictions fol 221. saith that a selion of land cannot be in demaund because it is a thing vncertaine Seneshall senescallus is a French word but borowed from Germany being as Tilius saith compounded of Schal i. servus aut officialis and Gesnid 1. familia we english it a Steward As the high Seneshall or Steward of England pl. cor fol. 152. High Seneshall or Steward and South seneshall or vndersteward Kitchin fol. 83 is vnderstood for a steward or vndersteward of Courts Seneshal de l'hostel de Roy Steward of the Kings houshold Cromptons Iurisdictions fol. 102. Senescallo Mareshallo quod non teneant placita de libero tenemento c. is a writ directed to the Steward or Marshall of England inhibiting them to take cognisance of any action in their court that concerneth either Freehold dept or couenant Register orig fol. 185. a. 191. b. Senie aliâs Sene sena is a leafe of a medicinable herbe that bringeth foorth stalkes of a cubite high purging phlegmaticke cholericke and also melancholicke humors without great violence The farder vse whereof you may reade in Gerrards Herbal lib. 3. cap. 8. This is mentioned among other drugs and spices to be garbled anno 1. Iacob cap. 19. Septuagesima is a sunday certaine and alwayes the third sabbath before Shrouesunday from the which vntill the Octaues after Easter the solemnizing of mariage is by the Canon lawes forbidden The reason whereof is giuen for that all this time vntill Easter is a time of mourning for the fall of Adam and for the miserie of man thereof insuing And Easter with the Octaues thereof is a time of Christs glorification and so of ours also in him for his and by him our conquest ouer death and sinne And that therefore all carnall affection ought during that space to be wholy mortified in vs See Quinquagesima see Aduent see Rogation weeke Sequatur sub suo periculo is a writ that lyeth where a summons ad warrantizandum is awarded and the Shyreeue returneth that he hath nothing whereby he may be summoned For then goeth out an Aliâs and Pluries And if he come not at the Pluries then shall go out this writ old nat br fol. 163. Sequestration sequestratio is a separating of a thing in controuersie from the possession of both those that contend for it And it is double voluntarie or necessarie Voluntarie is that which is vsed by the consent of each partie Necessarie is that which the Iudge of his authoritie doth whether the parties will or not It is vsed also for the act of the ordinarie disposing of office the goods and chatels of one deceased whose estate no man will meddle with Dyer fol. 232. num 5. fol. 256. num 8. fol. 160. nu 42. fol. 271. num 26. As also in the gathering of the fruites of a Benefice voide to the vse of the next incumbēt anno 28. H. 8. cap. 11. Fortescue cap. 50. and in diuers other cases Sequestro habendo is a writ iudiciall for the dissoluing of a sequestration made by the Bishop at the Kings commaundement of the fruites of a benefice thereby to compell the Parson to appeare at the suite of another for the Parson vpon his apparence may haue this writ for the release of the sequestration egist Iudicial fol. 36. a. Sergeant seruiens commeth of the French sergeant i. satelles accensus a man of the Guard a kind of souldier so called because he was saepè aecitus ad res necessarias in exercitu peragendas Calepin M. Skene de ver sign verb. Seriant hath these words Sergeant commeth from Sergent quae est vox composita de Serrer quod est includere gent quod pro gente populo vel plebe vsurpatur Itaque Seriandus dicitur qui iussu magistratus quemlibet de populo reum crimin is in carcerem coniicit seu includit This word Sergeant is diuersly vsed in our law and applyed to sundrie offices and callings First a Sergeant at lawe or of the coyfe is the highest degree taken in that profession as a Doctor is in the ciuill lawe And to these as men best learned and best experienced of all others is there one court seuered to plead in by themselues and that is the Court
about the Kings court that boundeth the iurisdiction of the Lord Steward of the Kings houshold and of the the Coroner of the Kings house and that seemeth to haue bene 12. miles compasse anno 13. R. 2. Stat. prim cap. 3. Fitz. nat br fol. 241. B. and Britton fol. 68 b. 69. a. and Fleta lib. 2. cap. 2. and Sir Edward Cookes Reports li. 4. fol. 47. a. For this see the Statute anno 33. H. 8. cap. 12. toward the end But Fleta saith that this compasse about the Court is called virgata a virga quam Marishallus portat vt signū suae potestatis lib. 2. cap. 4. § prim Verge hath also another signification and is vsed for a sticke or rodde whereby one is admitted tenent and holding it in his hand sweareth fealtie vnto the Lord of a maner who for that cause is called Tenent by the verge old nat br fol. 17. Vergers virgatores be such as cary white wands before the Iustices of either banke c. Fleta lib. 2. cap. 38. otherwise called Porters of the verge Very Lord and very Tenent verus Dominus verus Tenens are they that be immediate Lord Tenent one to the other Brooke titulo Hariot fol. 23. In the old nat br and in the writ Replegiare de averits fol. 42. I find these words And know ye that in taking of leases six things are necessarie that is to say very Lord and very tenent Seruice behind the day of the taking seisin of the seruices and within his Fee And know ye that a man is not very tenent vntill he haue atturned to the Lord by some seruices So that by Brooke the very Lord and the very Tenent must be immediate and by this booke there must be an acknowledgement See an 19. H. 7. cap. 15. See Tenent Vert viride is made of the French verd i. viridis and signifieth with vs in the lawes of the Forest euery thing that doth growe and beare greene leafe within the Forest that may couer and hide a Deere Manwood in the second part of his Forest lawes fol. 6. a. and fol. 33. b. with whom also Crompton agreeth fol. 170. of his Iurisd And vert as the same author saith eodem fol. 34. is diuided into Ouer vert and Neather vert Ouer vert is that which the Lawyers call Hault bois and Neather vert is that which they cal South bois And of this you may reade him in his second part of Forest lawes cap. 6. per totum Where you shall find that he diuideth vert into generall and speciall Generall is as it is aboue defined vert speciall is euery tree and bush within the Forest to feed the Deere withall as Peare trees Crabtrees Hauthornes Blackbush and such like And the reason of this name is because the offence of destroying of such vert is more highly punished then of any other according to the quantity thereof eod ca. 6. nu 2. fol. 35. a. Vervise otherwise called Plonkets anno 1. R. 3. cap. 8. a kind of clothe Vesses anno 1. R. 3. cap. 8. anno 14. 15. H. 8. cap. 11. otherwise called Set clothes Vesture vestitura is a French word signifying a garment but in the vse of our common lawe turned metaphorically to betoken a possession or an admittance to a possession So it is taken Westm 2. c. 25. anno 13. Ed. prim And in this signification is it borowed from the Feudists with whom Investitura signifieth a deliuerie of possession by a speare or staffe and vestitura possession it selfe Hotoman in verbis feudal verbo Investitura Vesture of an acre of land an 4. Ed. prim stat prim is the profit of it anno 13. Edvard 1. cap. 25. Vice-treasurer of the Exchequer 1. Iacob 26. See Vnder-treasurer of England See Treasurer of the Exchequer View of frank pledge visus Franci plegii is the office which the Shyrecue in his Countie court or the Bayliffe in his Hundred performeth in looking to the Kings peace and seeing that euery free man be in some pledge This is called of Bracton li. 2. ca. 5. nu 7. in fine Res quasi sacra quia solam personam Regis respicit quòd introductus sit pro pace communi vtilitate codem ca. 16. nu 8. in fine See frank pledge and Leete and Decennier See the new booke of Entries verb view of frank pledge Veiours visores commeth of the French Veoyr i. cernere intueri despicere prospicere videre and signifieth in our common lawe those that are sent by the court to take view of any place in question for the beter descision of the right old nat br fol. 112. So doth Bracton vse it lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 8. per totum It signifieth also those that are sent to view such as essoine themselues de malo lecti whether they be in truth so sicke as they cannot appeare or whether they counterfeit Bracton lib. 5. tracta 2. cap. 10. cap. 14. per totum Lastly it is vsed for those that are sent or appointed to view an offence as a man murdered or a Virgin rauished See View Vicario deliberando occasione cuinsdam Recognitionis c. is a writ that lyeth for a spirituall person imprisoned vpon forfeiture of a Recognisance without the Kings writ Reg. orig fol. 147. See statuto mercatorio contra personam ecclesiasticam Vicis venellis mundandis is a writ that lyeth for a Maior and Bayliffes of a towne c. For the cleane keeping of their streets Register orig fol. 267. b. View visus commeth of the French veue i. visus aspectus conspectus prospectus and signifieth with vs the act of viewers For as the author of the Termes of lawe saith when any action reall is brought and the Tenent knoweth not well what land it is that the Demandant asketh then he may pray the view that is to say that he may see the land which is claimed of this Britton speaketh cap. 45. This point of proceeding we haue receiued from the Normans as it appeareth by the Grand custumarie cap. 66. where you shall reade to this effect It is to be knowne that there bee diuers sorts of viewes one of a fee another of a man in sicknes another of an offence as of a man slaine or of a Virgin deflowred all which he describeth in that place and againe cap. 80. 96. which are worth the reading this view at this day is vsed in an Assise of rent seruice rent charge or rent seck Fitzh nat br fol. 178. D. and in a writ de Curiā claudenda Idem fol. 128. B. In a writ of Nusance Idem fol. 183. L. N. O. In a writ Quoiure Idem fol. 128. L. In the writ de rationalibus diuisis Idem fol. 129. D. And in the writ de secta ad moliendinum Idēf 123. B. See the new booke of Entries verbo View and see Fleta how this view is made lib. 4. ca. 6. See Veiours Vicechamberlaine called
and sould by weight into a kinde of bundle after it is clensed in such maner as it ought to be by statute And to auoide such deceit as the owners were wont to vse by thrusting locks of refuse wooll and such other drosse to gaine weight they are sworne to performe that office truly betweene the owner and the merchant See the statute anno 8. H. 6. cap. 22. anno 23. H. 8. ca. 17. anno 18. Eliza. ca. 25. Would See Weald Wranglands seeme to be misgrowne trees that will neuer prooue timber Kitchin fol. 169. b. Wormseede semen santonicum is medicinal seede browght forth of that plant which in Latine is called Sementina in English holy wormwood whereof you may read in Gerards Herball li. 2. ca. 435. This is a drugge to be garbled anno 1. Iacob cap. 19. Wreck wreccum vel wrectum maris is the losse of a shippe and the goods therein conteined by tempest or other mischaunce at the sea The Ciuilians call it Naufragium This wreck being made the goods that were in the shippe being brought to land by the waues belong to the king by his prerogatiue And therevpon in many bookes of our common lawe the very goods so brought to land are called wreck And wreck is defined to be those goods which are so brought to land Sir Ed. Coke vol. 6. relatio f. 106. a. the statute anno 17. Ed. 2. ca. 11. in these words Item Rex habebit wreccum maris per totum Regnum ballenas sturgiones captas in mari vel alibi infra Regnum exceptis quibusdam locis privilegiatis per Regem Whereby it appeareth that the King hath them or such as haue by graunt this libertie or priuiledge of him And that this statute doth but affirme the auncient lawe of the land it appeareth by Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. num 7. hiis verbis Suntetiam alia res quae pertinent ad coronā propter privilegium Regis it a communem non recipiunt libertatem quin dari possint ad alium transferi Quia si transferantur translatio nulli erit damnosa nisi ipsi Regi fiue principi Et si huiusmods res alicui concessae fuerint sicut wreccum maris c. The reason of this he toucheth shortly in his first booke cap. 12. num 10. where he reckoneth these goods iure naturali to be in bonis nullius quia non apparet Dominus eorum sed iure Gentium fieri principis And see him also lib. 2. cap. 24. num 1. 2. It is worth the asking to know what is a wreck and what not in this stricter signification And the author of the termes of lawe saith that if any person of the shippe come to land it is not a wreck or the wreck is not such that the king ought to haue the goods with whome agreeth S. Ed. Coke vol. 6. f. 107. a. No if either Dogge or Catte escape aliue to the land the goods are the owners still so he come within a yeare and day to claime them And for this the statute is plaine Westm pri ca. 4. anno 3. Edw. pri which doctrine Fitzh in his nat br fol. 112. 〈◊〉 extendeth thus farre that if any of the goods be cast vpon the drie land by any in the shippe it is no wreck subiect to the prerogatiue for by this some of the shippe are presumed to come to land and still to haue a custodie of the goods Cooke vbi supra This in the Grand Custumarie of Normandie cap. 17. is called varech and latined veriseum where it appeareth that the like lawe to ours was in Normandie almost in all points But some sorts of their pretious Merchandise doe by their lawe appertaine to the Duke by his prerogatiue though a iust challenge of the goods be made within the yeare and day The Emperours of Rome made no advantage of this pitifull event as appeareth titulo De Naufragiis 11. Cod. And it appeareth that Richard the first had some remorse of poore sea mens miseries in this case For he quietum clamavit wreck suis subditis Rog. Hoveden parte poster suorum annal fol. 386. Of this M. Skene de verb. signif speaketh to this effect wreck signifieth a power liberty and prerogatiue appertaining to the King or to any person to whome the same is graunted by him by feofment or any other disposition to take vp and gaine such goods as are ship broken or fall to him by escheate of the sea Writ breue is that with our common lawyers in Sir Tho. Smiths iudgement lib. 2. de Repub Anglorum cap. 9. which the Civilians call Actionem siue formulam But I am rather of his iudgement that hath added the marginall note vnto him saying that Actio is the parties whole suite and that Breue is the kings precept whereby any thing is comaunded to be done touching the suite or action as the defendant or tenent to be summoned a distresse to be taken a disseisin to be redressed c. And these writs are diuersly diuided in diuers respects Some in respect of their order or maner of graunting are termed originall and some Iudiciall Originall writs be those that are sent out for the summoning of the Defendant in a personall or Tenent in a reall action or other like purpose before the suite beginneth or to begin the suite thereby Those be iudiciall that be sent out by order of the court where the cause dependeth vpon occasion growing after suite begunne old nat br fol. 51. And Iudiciall is thus by one signe knowne from the Originall because the Teste beareth the name of the chiefe Iustice of that Court whence it commeth where the Orig. beareth in the Teste the name of the Prince Then according to the nature of the action they be personall or reall and reall be either touching the possession called writs of Entrie or the property called writs of right Fitzh nat br sparsim per totum Some writs be at the suite of a party some of office old nat br fol. 147. Some ordinary some of priuiledge A writ of priuiledge is that which a priuiledged person bringeth to the court for his exemption by reason of some priuiledge See Pro cedendo See the new booke of Entrise verbo priviledge See Briefe Writ of rebellion See Commission of rebellion Writer of the talies Scriptor talliarum is an officer in the Exchequer being clerk to the auditour of the receipt who writeth vpon the talies the whole letters of the tellers billes Y YArd land Virgataterrae is a quantitie of land called by this name of the Saxon Gyrdlander but not so certaine a quantity as that it is all one in all places For in some country it conteineth 20. acres in some 24. in some 30. as M. Lamb. saith in his explication of Saxon words verbo virgata terrae This yard land Bracton calleth virgatam terrae lib. 2. cap. 20. 27. but he expresseth no certainty what it conteineth
from A. to C. Warranty collaterall is that wherevnto he is called by the tenent vpon the couenant of him from whome the land could not descend to the party called For example B. the sonne pourchaseth tenements in fee whereof A. his father disseiseth him and selleth them to C. with a clause of warranty A being deade C. is impleaded for the tenements and calleth B. to warranty This warranty wherevnto B. is caled is collaterall by cause the tenements if the warrnty had not beene couenanted by A. could not haue descended from him to his father A. for they were his owne by Pourchase Many other exāples there be of this in Litleton And this very case he maketh his example of warranty by disseisin as also of warranty collaterall which plainly argueth that warranty by disseisin and warranty collaterall are not distinct members of warranty but may be confounded though one warranty may cary both names in diuers respects For there is some warranty collaterall that beginneth not by disseisin For example A. tenent in taile alienateth to B. in fee and dieth leauing issue C. Afterward D. brother to A. and vncle to C. releaseth to B. with warranty and dying leaueth C. his heire being next of blood vnto him This warranty is collaterall because it descendeth vpon C. from his vncle D. and yet it beginneth not by desseisin of his said vncle Warranty hath a double effect one to debarre him vpō whome it discendeth from the first warranter as his next of blood from claiming the land warranted and another to make it good to the tenent if by him he be vouched thereunto or els to giue him as much other land by exchange But as the former of these effects taketh place with all heires except those to whome the land warranted was intailed and that reape no equiualent benefit by the first warranter anno 6. Ed. pri ca. 3. soe the latter preiudiceth none that receiueth not sufficient land from the first warranter to make it good Bracton lib. 5. tractat 4. ca. 8. nu pri cap. 13. nu 2. In the custumaric of Norm ca. 5. you haue vouchement degarant which the Interpreter translateth Vocamentum Garanti a voucher or calling of the wartanter into the court to make good his sale or gift Warantiadiei is a writ lying in case where a man hauing a day assigned personally to appeare in court to any action wherein he is siewed is in the meane time by commaundement imployed in the Kings seruice so that he cannot come at the day assigned This writ is directed to the Iustices to this end that they neither take nor record him in defaulte for that day Register originall fol. 18. Of this you may read more in Fitzh nat br fol. 17. and see Glanuile lib. pri ca. 8. Warantia chartae is a writ that lieth properly for him who is infeoffed in land or tenements with clause of warranty and is impleaded in an Assise or writ of Entrie wherein he cannot vouche or call to warranty for in this case his remedy is to take out this writ against the seoffour or his heire Register orig fol. 157. Fitzh nat br fol. 134 Of this you may likewise reade Fleta lib. 6. ca. 35. and West parte 2. simb titulo Fines sect 156. Warrantia custodia is a writ Iudiciall that lyeth for him that is challenged to be ward vnto another in respect of land said to be houlden in Knights seruice which when it was bought by the auncesters of the ward was warranted to be free from such thraldome And it lieth against the warranter and his heires Register Iudiciall fol. 36. Warrant of Atturney See Leter of Atturney and Waranty Wardwite significat quietantiam misericordia in casu quo non invenerit quis hominem ad wardam faciendam in castra vel alibi Flet a lib. 1. cap. 47. Warren Warrenna aliâs varrenna commeth of the French Garrenne 1. vivarium vel locus in quo vel aves vel pisces vel ferae continentur quae ad victum di●ntaxat pertinent Calapine out of Aulus Gellius lib. 2. Noct. Attica cap. 20. A warren as we vse it is a prescription or graunte from the king to a man of hauing fesants partridges connies and hares within certaine of his lands Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 148. where he saith that none can haue warren but onely the King no more then Forest or chase Because it is a speciall priuiledge belonging to the King alone And a little after he hath words to this effect The king may graunt warren to me in mine owne lands for fesants and partridges onely And by this graunt no man may there chase them without my licence And so of Hares but not of Connies For their property is to destroy the 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 as to eate corne and pille the barke of apple trees M. Manwood in his first part of Forest lawes saith thus of it A warren is a fraunchise or priuiledged place of pleasure onely for those beasts and foules that are beasts and foules of warren tantùm campestres non syluestres viz. For such beasts and foules as are altogether belonging to the feilds and not vnto the woods and for none other beasts or foules There are but two beasts of warren that is to say Hares and Connies and there are also but two foules of warren viz. Fesants and partridges And none other wild beasts or birds haue any firme peace priuiledge or protection within the warren If any person be found to be an offender in any such free warren he is to be punished for the same by the course of the common law and by the statute auno 21. Ed. 3. called the statute de male factoribus in parcis chaceis c. For the most parte there are not officers in a warren but the master of the game or the keeper A free warren is some time in closed and also the same some time doth lie open for there is no necessity of inclosing the same as there is of a park for if a park be suffered to lie open it ought to be seised into the kings 〈…〉 Manwood Warscot is the contribution that was wont to be made towards armour in the Saxons time In Canutus his charter of the Forest set out by M. Manwood in the first part of his Forest lawes num 9. you haue these wordes Sint omnes tam primarii quàm mediocres minuti immunes liberi quietiab omnibus prouincialibus summonitionibus popularibus placitis quae Hundred laghe Angli dicunt ab omnibus armorum oncribus quod Warscot Angli dicunt forinsecis querelis VVarwit aliâs VVardwit is to be quite of giuing money for keeping of watches New exposition of lawe termes VVaste vastum commeth of the French gaster i. populari It signifieth diuersly in our common lawe first a spoile made either in houses woods gardens orchards c. by the tenent for terme of life or for terme of anothers life