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A64839 The reports of Sir Peyton Ventris Kt., late one of the justices of the Common-pleas in two parts : the first part containing select cases adjudged in the Kings-Bench, in the reign of K. Charles II, with three learned arguments, one in the Kings-Bench, by Sir Francis North, when Attorney General, and two in the Exchequer by Sir Matthew Hale, when Lord Chief Baron : with two tables, one of the cases, and the other of the principal matters : the second part containing choice cases adjudged in the Common-pleas, in the reigns of K. Charles II and K. James II and in the three first years of the reign of His now Majesty K. William and the late Q. Mary, while he was a judge in the said court, with the pleadings to the same : also several cases and pleadings thereupon in the Exchequer-Chamber upon writs of error from the Kings-Bench : together with many remarkable and curious cases in the Court of Chancery : whereto are added three exact tables, one of the cases, the other of the principal matters, and the third of the pleadings : with the allowance and approbation of the Lord Keeper an all the judges. Ventris, Peyton, Sir, 1645-1691.; Guilford, Francis North, Baron, 1637-1685.; Hale, Matthew, Sir, 1609-1676.; England and Wales. Court of King's Bench.; England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas. 1696 (1696) Wing V235; ESTC R7440 737,128 910

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redd ' unius anni mediet ' redd ' unius anni per quem talia terrae vel tenementa sic alienat ' tent ' fuer ' in Manerio praed ' nomine finis pro alienatione and lays a Custom to distrain for the said Alienation Fine and then sets forth an alienation of the said Messuage and Premisses by the said Sir John Sabin to one Walter Tyndall in fee and shews that the said Walter Tyndall made another alienation in fee to one Christopher Yates and so sets forth that there were two Fines due upon the said alienations after the rate aforesaid amounting to 18 l 7 s and 7 d ob and that he as Bayliff of the said Dean and Chapter captionem praed ' bene cognoscit in praed ' loco in quo ut in parcell ' tenement ' praed ' To this the Plaintiff demurred and it was spoken to at the Bar the last Term and likewise this Term The main thing was that the Custom as it was laid was not good for the Alienation Fine is set forth to be due upon the Alienation of any parcel of Lands or Tenements held of the said Mannor to have a year and halfs Rent by which the Lands or Tenements so aliened were held so that if the 20th part of an Acre be aliened a Fine is to be paid and that of the whole Rent for every parcel is held at the time of the alienation by the whole Rent and no apportioning thereof can be but subsequent to the Alienation and this the whole Court held an unreasonable Custom and it is set forth it could not be otherwise understood than that a Fine should be due viz. a year and halfs Rent upon the Alienation of any part of the Lands held by such Rent The Court doubted also whether the Custom was good as to the claiming an Alienation Fine upon an Alienation for Life because by that the tenure of the Lands aliened is not altered for the Reversion is still held as before by the same Tenant Judicium pro Quer ' Colley versus Helyar IN an Action of Debt for 34 l the Plaintiff declared against the Defendant an Attorney of this Court praesente hic in Cur. in propria persona sua upon a Bond of 34 l The Defendant pleads in Bar quoad quinque libras sex solid tres denar of the aforesaid 34 l that the Plaintiff post confectionem Scripti Obligat ' praedict ' scilicet vicesimo c. anno c. ꝑ quoddam Scriptum suum acquietantiae cognovisset se accepisse habuisse de praed Defendente 5 l 6 s and 3 d in part solutionis majoris summae and pleaded a frivolous Plea as to the rest of the Mony to which the Plaintiff demurred And it was argued that the Acquittance under the Plaintiffs Hand and Seal for 5 l 6 s and 3 d part of the Mony due might have been pleaded in bar of the whole and that if the Defendant here had relied upon it it would have barred the Plaintiff of the whole Vide for that matter Hollingwoth and Whetston Sty 212. Allen 65. Beaton and Forrest Note there the payment was since the Action brought and pleaded in abatement where it was said that it could not be so pleaded without an Acquittance Vide Kelw. 20. 162. 3 H. 7. 3 B. receipt of parcel pending the Writ 7 Ed. 4. 15. a. But it seems clear by the Book of Edw. 4. 207. Mo. 886. Speak versus Richards That if part be received and an Acquittance given before the Action it is a Bar only of so much but it seems the Action must be brought for the whole Dickman versus Allen. Cantabr ' ss Case brought against the Defendant for not folding his Sheep upon the Plaintiffs Land according to Custom The Colledge of St. Mary and St. Nicholas seized in Fee j●re Collegii ABRAHAMUS ALLEN nuꝑ de Grancester in Com' praedicto Yeom ' attach ' fuit ad respondend ' Roberto Dickman Gen ' de placito transgr ' suꝑ Casum c. Et unde idem Robertus per Robertum Drake Attorn ' suum queritur quare cum Praepositus Scholares Collegii Regalis Beatae Mariae Sancti Nicholai in Cantabr ' in Com' praed ' seisit ' fuissent de uno Capitali Messuagio cum pertinen ' in Grancester in Com' praedicto ac de centum sexaginta acris terrae arrabil ' jacen ' in Communibus Campis de Grancester praedicta cum pertinen ' in dominico suo ut de feodo in jure Collegii sui praedicti iidemque Praepositus Scholares omnes ill quorum statum ipsi habuer ' de in tenementis praed ' cum pertinen ' a tempore cujus contrarii memoria hominum non existit habuer ' habere consuever ' ꝓ se Firmariis Tenentibus suis eorundem A Custom for all the Tenants to sold their Landlords Land Tenementorum cum pertinen ' libertatem Faldagii Anglicê Foldage omnium Ovium Ovibus suis ꝓpriis Ovibus tenen ' occupatorum ꝓ tempore existen ' quorundam Messuagiorum Terrarum in Villa de Coton in Com' praed ' qui a tempore cujus contrarii memoria hominum non existit respective usi fuer ' Common of Vicinage interc̄oiare causa vicinagii in quibusdam Communibus Campis de Grancester praed ' cum Ovibus suis in super praed ' Messuagiis terris suis in Coton praed ' Levant and Couchant levan ' cuban ' except ' suor ' depascen ' infra Communes Campos territoria de Grancester praedicta a vicesimo quinto die Martii usque primum diem Novembris quolibet anno suꝑ praedictas centum sexaginta acras terras arabil percipiend ' From such a day to such a day faldand ' tanquam ad tenementa praedicta cum pertinenciis pertinen ' praedictisque Praeposito Scholaribus Collegii praed ' de Tenementis praedictis cum pertinen ' The Principal and Scholars demise to the Plaintiff by Indenture in forma praedicta seisit ' existen ' Praepositus Scholares postea scilicet decimo nono die Octobris Anno Domini millesimo sexcentesimo octogesimo primo apud Grancester praedictam quodam Johanne Coppleston Sacrae Theologiae Professor ' adtunc Praeposito Collegii praedicti existen ' ꝑ quandam Indenturam inter ipsos Praepositum Scholares ex una parte quendam Johannem Wittewronge Mil Barronet ' ex altera parte factam cujus alteram partem Sigillo c̄oi ipsorum Praepositi Scholarium signat ' idem Robertus Dickman hic in Cur ' profert cujus dat' est eisdem die anno dimiser ' ad firmam tradider ' eidem Johanni Wittewronge Tenementa praedicta cum pertinen ' Habendum habend ' occupand ' praefat ' Johanni Assign ' suis a tempore confectionis Indenturae illius usque plenum finem terminum viginti
ann ' For 21 years extunc ꝓx ' sequen ' plenar ' complend ' finiend ' Virtute cujus dimissionis praedictus Johan ' in Ten̄ta praed ' cum pertinen ' Lessee enters intravit fuit inde possessionat ' Et sic inde possessionat ' existen ' idem Johannes postea scilicet decimo die Augusti Anno Domini millesimo sexcentesimo octogesimo secundo apud Grancester praedictam dimisit ad firmam tradidit eidem Roberto Dickman Tenementa praedicta cum pertinen ' habend ' occupand ' And Demised to the Plaintiff eidem Roberto Assign ' suis a Festo Sancti Michaelis Arc̄hi tunc ꝓx ' sequen ' usque plenum finem terminum sex annorum extunc ꝓpx ' sequen ' plenar ' For six years complend ' finiend ' virtute cujus dimissionis idem Robertus in crastino dicti Festi Sancti Michaelis Arch ' Anno Domini milesimo sexcentesimo octogesimo secundo supradicto in Tenementa praedicta cum pertinen ' intravit fuit inde possessionat ' The Lessee Enters usque finem expirationem ejusdem termini praedictus tamen Abrahamus praemissorum non ignarus sed machinans fraudulenter intendens ipsum Robertum minus rite praegravare ac eum de faldagio praedicto ut praefertur habend ' impedire ac de prosicuo commoditate inde totaliter deprivare diu ante finem termini praedicti ult ' mentionat ' scilicet primo die Maii Anno Regni Domini Jacobi secundi nuper Regis Angliae tertio Oves videlicet ducent ' Oves ipsius Abrahami in Communes Campos de Grancester praed ' ibidem depasturand ' The Cause of Action posuit Oves ibidem eun ' depascend ' extunc usque decimum diem Septembris tunc ꝓx ' sequen ' existen ' ante finem termini praedicti ult ' mentionat ' custodivit continuavit sed Oves ill ' in aut super praedictas centum sexaginta acras terrae arrabilis ipsius Roberti vel in aut super aliquam inde parcellam minime faldavit sicut ipse debuisset nec permisit ipsum Robertum habere beneficium faldagii earun-praedicto Abrahamo duran ' eodem termino non existen ' tenen ' For not Folding his Sheep according to Custom sive occupatore aliquorum messuag ' sive terrarum in Villa de Coton praed ' de quibus tenen ' sive occupator ' inde ꝓ tempore existen ' a tempore cujus contrarii memoria hominum non existit usi fuer ' intercoic̄are Causa vicinagii in praedictis Communibus Campis de Grancester praedict ' cum Ovibus suis praedict ' ut praefertur per quod idem Robertus ꝓficuum advantagium faldagii Ovium praedictorum super praedictas centum sexaginta acras terrae arabil ' quibus ipse gaudere debuisset ꝑ tempus illud omnino ꝑdidit amisit ad dampnum ipsius Roberti quadraginta librarum inde ꝓduc ' Sectam c. Per quod the Plaintiff lost the benefit of Foldage Et praedictus Abrahamus per Richardum Pyke Attorn ' suum ven ' defend ' vim injur ' quando c. Not Guilty pleaded Et dic ' qd ' ipse in nullo est culpabilis de p̄missis praedictis suꝑius ei imposit ' ꝓut praedictus Robertus su ꝑius versus eum queritur Et de hic pon ' se suꝑ Patriam Et praedictus Robertus similiter Ideo praecept ' est Vic' qd ' venire fac ' hic a die Sanct ' Trin ' in tres septimanas duodecim c. ꝑ quos c. Et qui nec c. ad recogn ' c. quia tam c. Dickman versus Allen. IN an Action upon the Case the Defendant declared That the Provost and Scholars of Kings College in Cambridge were seised in Fee in jure Collegii of a Messuage in Grancester in Cambridge and 160 Acres of Arable Land lying in the Common Fields of Grancester aforesaid and the said Provost c. and all those whose Estate they have in the Tenements aforesaid have time whereof c. for themselves their Farmers and Tenants of the said Tenements libertatem Foldagii Anglicè Foldage omnium Ovium except c. euntium depascentium infra Communes Campos Territoria de Grancester praed ' super praed ' centum sexaginta Acras Terrae ꝑcipiend ' foldand ' tanquam ad praed ' Tenement ' ꝑertinent ' and then sets forth a Lease made by the Provost and Scholars to Sir John Witwrong of the said Messuage and 160 Acres for 20 years which said Sir John let them to the Plaintiff for six years by virtue whereof the Plaintiff entred and was possessed and the said Defendant Praemissorum non ignarus did put 200 Sheep into the Common Fields of Grancester aforesaid and there kept and depastured them for a certain time sed Oves illas in aut super praed ' centum sexaginta Acras Terrae Arab ' ipsius Quer ' vel in aut super aliquam inde parcell ' minime foldavit sicut ipse debuisset nec permisit ipsum Querentem habere beneficium faldagii earundem and shews how the Defendant was not within exception by which the Plaintiff lost the profit of the Foldage c. and laid it to his damage of 40 l The Defendant pleaded not guilty and a Verdict was for the Plaintiff And it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Plaintiff had not in his Declaration set forth a sufficient Cause of Action for he saith that the Defendant had not folded his Sheep upon the 160 Acres as he ought and it is not set forth that the Custom was for the Owner of the Sheep to bring his Sheep to fold them upon the said Lands But it was objected on the Plaintiffs part that the word Foldagium did imply as much and it was the usage in Norfolk and Suffolk for the Owner of the Sheep to put his Sheep into the Lords Land and fold them there for which the Lord provided Hurdles and prepared the Fold to receive them and of this Faldagium a Fine was levied of inter al' as is reported in 1 Ed. 3. fo 2. and the usage in Norfolk and Suffolk is there mentioned And it was said in a Possessory Action 't is enough to say sicut debuit without setting forth any particular Custom or Prescription And Dent and Olivers Case was cited 2 Cro. 122. where an Action was brought for disturbing of him in taking of Toll ad Feriam ipsius le Plaintiff spectan ' and it was moved after Verdict that he made no Title by Prescription or Custom to the Toll and it was held by the Court to be sufficient in a possessory Action to say ad Feriam suam spectant ' So also in an Action for stopping of a way belonging to his House without setting forth any Prescription between St. John and Moody a
illam modo forma praed ' fact ' necesse non habet nec per legem terrae tenentur respondere Et hoc parat ' sunt verificare Unde pro defectu sufficien ' Narration ' ipsius Francisci in hac parte ijdem Edwardus Walterus pet ' Judicium qd ' praed ' Franciscus ab actione sua praedicta versus eos habend ' praecludatur c. Et praedictus Franciscus dic ' qd ' Joynder in Demurrer narratio praedicta materiaque in eadem content ' bon ' sufficien ' in lege existunt ad ipsum Franciscum actionem suam praedictam inde versus praed ' Edwardum Walterum habend ' manutenend ' Quam quidem materiam idem Franciscus parat ' est verficare Unde ex quo praedict ' Edwardus Walterus ad narrationem praed ' non responder ' nec materiam in ead ' content ' aliqualit ' dedixer ' idem Franciscus pet ' judicium dampna sua occasione fractionis conventionis praed ' sibi adjudicari c. Et quia Justic ' c. Morly versus Polhill IN an Action of Covenant the Plaintiff declared as Executor to George Morly late Bishop of Winchester and sets forth that Brian the Predecessor of the said Bishop had demised a Rectory and certain Lands to J. S. for 21 years who had assigned it to the Testator of the Defendant and that the Lessee covenanted with Brian and his Successors to repair the Chappel of the Church and the Barns c. and assigned a breach in the not xepairing by the Testator of the Defendant in the life of George Morly and that the Lease afterwarns expired To this the Defendant demurred for that it was pretended that the Executor of the Bishop could not bring this Action for the Covenant was with the Predecessor Bishop and his Successors and cited the Cases of Real Covenants 1 Inst 384 385. A Parcener after partition Covenants to acquit the other Parcener of a Suit and the Covenantee assigns the Assignee shall not bring Covenant But the whole Court gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff and that the Executor is here well entituled to the Action for the Breach in the Testators time Wright versus Wyvell IN an Ejectment the Plaintiff declared upon a Demise of Dorothy Hewly and upon a Special Verdict the Case appeared to be thus That Christopher Hewly was seised of the Premisses in Fee and made his Will in this manner I make my last Will in manner following As concerning my Personal Estate First I give and bequeath unto Ann Hewly my Wife the sum of Six Hundred Pounds to be paid unto William Weddall of Eastwick Esq and it 's for the full payment of the Lands lately purchased of the said Mr. Weddall by the said Christopher Hewly and is already estated in part of a Joynture to Ann my said Wife during her natural Life being of the value of Sixty Seven Pounds per annum That of Wiskow York and Malton the Lands and Tenements there amounting to the yearly value of Sixty Three Pounds in all One Hundred and Thirty Pounds which being also estated upon my said Wife it is in full of her Joynture And after this he gives several Legacies and the rest of his Personal Estate he gave to his Wife and made her Executrix Then they find that he had made no settlement of the Premisses or of any part of them upon his Wife and that the Lessor of the Plaintiff was Heir at Law to Christopher Hewly and that Ann the Wife is still living So that the sole Question was whether the Lands should pass to the Wife upon these words in the Will and divers Cases were put upon implicit Devises as that his Feoffees should stand seised to the use of J. S. has been held a good Devise to J. S. tho' there were no Feoffees 3 Leon. 167 162. Devise to his eldest Son after the death of his Wife there the Wife takes tho' nothing expresly devised to her After Arguments heard on both sides by the Opinion of Pollexfen Chief Justice Rokeby and Ventris Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff against the Opinion of Powell Here it appears indeed that the Testator took it that she had the Land but it appears he did not intend to devise any thing by the Will for he mentions that she was estated in it before and in the Cases of Implicit Devises there is no reference to any Act that should have conveyed the Land to the Devisee before but the Will there passes the Land by Construction and Implication Again This Devise is introduced with this Clause as to the disposing of my Personal Estate and throughout the Will he giveth only Personal Things Again This recital comes in as part of another Clause of an express Devise of the Six-Hundred Pounds But Powell relied upon the Case in Mo. 31. A man made a Will in this manner I have made a Lease to J. S. paying but 10 s Rent this was held a good Lease by the Will To which it was answered That the Case there was of little authority for it did not appear how that matter came in question or in what Court or in what Action and said only fuit tenus 3 Eliz. And Iudgment here was given for the Plaintiff Bowyer versus Milner IN a Formedon against several Tenants one appeared and was Essoigned and then another appeared and it was moved whether he could be Essoigned by reason of the Statute of W. 1. c. 43. which seems to be that Parceners or Ioyntenants should have but one Essoign and that they should not fourch Cut ' Contra. The Statute is to be understood of Essoigns after appearance and so is the Book of 28 Ed. 3. 18. it is said to have been the Law of the Times for Tenants to fourch before appearance and so is Co. 2. Inst 250. Hob. 8 46. The Case of Essoigns if the Tenant voucheth two one Essoign may be cast for each of them singly Vid. Stat. of Glouc. c. 6. Anonymus IN an Action of Trespass de Uxore abducta cum bonis viri to his damage of 10000 l Upon Not Guilty pleaded and a Trial at the Bar the Return of the Jury was Octab ' Trin. and the Appearance Day was die Mercurij at which day the Jury appeared but it being appointed for the keeping of a solemn Fast by the King's Proclamation the Jury was adjourned to the Day following and then the Jury and Parties being at the Bar a Plea was offered by the Defendants Counsel puis darrein continuance that the Plaintiff was Excommunicated and produced it under the Seal of the Court and begun their Plea thus Ad hunc diem viz. die Jovis prox ' post Octab ' Trin ' c. So that the Plea came too late for it should have been pleaded die Mercurij for tho' the Jury was adjourned to Thursday yet all Matters were entred as upon Wednesday So this Plea did appear upon the
Fowle late Sheriffs of Middlesex and which was recovered by the said late King in the Court of Exchequer against the said Davis c. by virtue of which Writ they seized all the Goods of the said Davis in their Bailywick which were apprized at 27 l which they Returned into the Exchequer as the Writ required and the said Davis had no other Goods or Chattels Lands or Tenements within their Bailywick at the time of the Outlawry or ever after c. To this the Plaintiff Demurred and the Court held the Plea insufficient for they set forth that the Predecessor Sheriffs had seised and taken the Debt into the Kings hands so that Execution seemeth to be had before the Defendants were Sheriffs But Judgment was given against the Plaintiff for the Court held that the Action would not lye for the party who has an Outlawry that because the Sheriff upon the Cap ' utlagatum neglects to extend or seize the Goods and Lands of the Outlawed person for that is the Kings loss And tho' it was pretended that the Sheriff extending an seizing would be a means to enforce the Defendant to appear to the Plaintiffs Action the Court said that it was so remote as not to be considered as a ground to support an Action but if it had been shewn that the Sheriffs might have taken his Body and had neglected to do it there might have been more reason to support this Action So Judgment was given quod Querens nil capiat per breve Sir Thomas Gower's Case HE had upon a Commission made an Attorney in order to suffer a Recovery this Term which was done the last Assizes at York And the Court was now moved in behalf of the Heir in Tail to stop the passing of the Common Recovery and several Affidavits were produced to satisfie the Court that Sir Thomas Gower since the said Assizes died in Ireland and the Court being satisfied of the truth thereof did stay the passing of the Recovery and they said if it should pass it would be Erroneous Bealy versus Sampson Lincoln ' ss Trespass for Impounding of his Cattel quousque finem fecit of 10 l JOHANNES Sampson ' nuper de Mawvis Enderby in Com' praedict ' Yeoman attach ' fuit ad respondend ' Willielmo Bealy de placito quare ipse simulcum Georgio Francis nuper de Stamton ' in Com' praedict ' Labourer Vi armis averia ipsius Willielmi pretii quadraginta librarum apud Halton cum Beckeringe nuper invent ' cepit imparcavit ea ibidem sic imparcat ' quousque idem Willielmus finem undecim librarum pro deliberatione eorundem inde habend ' cum praedict ' Johanne Georgio fecisset detinuit alia Enormia ei intulit ad grave dampnum ipsius Willielmi Et contra pacem domini Regis nunc c. Et unde idem Willielmus per Johannem Fancourt Attorn ' suum queritur quod praedict ' Johannes simulcum c. primo die Februar ' anno regni domini Regis nunc c. tertio vi armis c. averia viz. quatuor boves quatuor vaccas ipsius Willielmi pretii c. apud Halton cum Beckeringe praedict ' nuper invent ' cepit imparcavit ea ibidem sic imparcat ' quousque idem Willielmus finem undecim librar ' pro deliberatione eorundem inde habend ' cum praed ' Johanne Georgio fecisset detinuit Et alia Enormia c. ad grave dampnum c. Et contra pacem c. Unde dic ' quod deteriorat ' est dampnum habet ad valenc ' quadraginta librar ' inde produc ' sectam c. Et praedict ' Johannes Sampson per Stephan ' Malton Attorn ' suum ven ' defend ' vim injur ' quando The Defendant pleads a seizure by the Sheriff by virtue of a Fieri facias Non culp ' to part c. Et quoad Venire vi armis seu quicquid quod est contra pacem dicti dn̄i Regis nunc dic ' quod ipse non est inde culpabilis prout praedict ' Willielmus superius versus eum queritur Et de hoc pon ' se super patriam Et praedict ' Williel ' similit ' Et quoad resid ' Transgr ' praedict ' superius fieri supposit ' idem Johannes dic ' quod praedict ' Willielmus actionem suam praedict ' inde versus eum habere non debet quia dic ' quod ante praedict ' tempus quo Transgr ' praed ' Fieri facias issued out of the Court of Common Pleas. superius fieri supponitur scilicet quintodecimo die Junii anno regni dicti domini Regis nunc tertio emanavit extra Cur ' dicti domini Regis de Banco hic scilicet apud Westm ' quoddam breve dicti domini Regis nunc de Fieri fac ' versus praedict ' Willielm ' ad sectam ipsius Johannis tunc Vic' Com' Lincoln ' direct ' per quod quidem breve dictus dom ' Rex nunc praefat ' tunc Vic' Com' Lincoln ' praecepit quod de terris catallis praedict ' Willielmi in balliva ejusdem Vic' Fieri fac ' tam quoddam debitum decem librar ' quod praedict ' Johannes Sampson in Cur ' dicti domini Regis coram Justic ' ejusdem domini Regis apud Westm ' recuperasset versus eum quam quadragint ' solid ' qui eidem Johanni Sampson in eadem Cur ' dicti domini Regis adjudicat ' fuer ' pro dampnis suis quae habuisset occasione detent ' debiti illius qd ' denar ' ill ' haberet coram Justic ' dicti domini Regis apud Westm ' a die Sancti Martini in quindecim dies ad reddend ' praefat ' Johanni de debito dampnis praedict ' unde convict ' fuit quod quidem breve postea ante rētorn ' ejusdem brevis necnon ante praedict ' tempus quo Delivered to the Sheriff c. scilicet secundo die Augusti anno tertio supradicto apud Halton in Com' praedict ' cuidam Antonio Eyre Ar ' tunc Vic' Com' Lincoln ' existen ' deliberat ' fuit in forma juris exequend ' Virtute cujus quidem brevis praedict ' Vic' praedict ' Com' Lincoln ' postea ante retorn ' ejusdem brevis necnon ante praedict ' tempus quo The Sheriff made his Warrant c. scilicet eodem secundo die Augusti Anno tertio supradicto apud Halton praedict ' pro executione brevis praedict ' habend ' fecit quoddam Warrant ' suum in scriptis sigillo Officii sui Vic' sigillat ' ballivo Wapentag ' de Wraggoe necnon praedict ' Georgio Francis Balliv ' ejusdem Vic' ea vice tantum direct ' per quod quidem Warrant ' praedict ' Vic' praedict ' Com' Lincoln ' eis cuilibet eorum conjunctim divisim mandavit quod de terris catallis praedicti Willielmi
loco in quo c. pro eisdem quadraginta octo libr ' de reddit ' praed ' sic aretro existen ' juste c. ut in terris distriction ' praedict ' Nich. As in Lands charged with the Distress Marsh modo defend ' in forma praedict ' onerat ' obligat ' c. Demurrer Et praedictus Philippus Lade dic ' qd ' per aliqua per praed ' Thomam Baker Nicholaum Marsh superius in advocatione praed ' alleg ' iidem Thomas Baker Nicholaus Marsh captionem averiorum praedictorum in praedicto loco in quo c. justam cognoscere non debent quia dicit qd ' placitum praed ' per eosdem Thomam Baker Nicholaum Marsh modo forma praed ' superius placitat ' materiaque in eodem content ' minus sufficien ' in lege exist ' ad captionem averiorum praedictorum in praedicto loco in quo c. justam cognoscend ' ad quod idem Philippus Lade necesse non habet nec per Legem Terrae tenetur aliquo modo respondere Et hoc parat ' est verificare Unde pro defectu sufficien ' placit ' in hac parte idem Philippus Lade pet ' judic ' dampna sua praed ' occatione captionis injuste detentionis averiorum praedictorum sibi adjudicari c. Joynder Et praedict Thomas Nicholaus ex quo ipsi sufficien ' materiam in Lege ad ipsum Nicholaum captionem averiorum praedictorum in praedicto loco in quo c. justam advocand ' Et ad ipsum Thomam ut Ballivum ipsius Nicholai eandem captionem in eodem loco justam cognoscend ' in advocare cognitione suis praedictis superius allegaver ' quam ipsi parat ' sunt verificare quam quidem materiam praedictus Philippus non dedic ' nec ad eam aliqualit ' respond ' pet ' judicium retorn ' averiorum praedictorum unacum dampnis c. sibi adjudicari c. Et quia Justic ' hic se advisare volunt de super praemissis priusquam Judicium inde reddant dies dat' est partibus praedictis hic usque à die Sancti Michaelis in tres septimanas de audiend ' inde Judicio suo eo qd ' iidem Justic ' hic inde nondum c. Lade versus Baker Marsh REplevin for taking his Cattle at Barrham in Kent in a place there called the Fourteen Acrees The Defendant Baker made Conusans and Bailiff of Nicholas Marsh and saith that diu ante praed ' tempus quo c. one Robert Lade was seised in fee of the said 14 Acres and by his Deed indented dated 1 Octob. 24 Car. 1. between him of the one part and Nicholas Marsh Grandfather of the said Nicholas Marsh of the other part and produceth the said Deed in Court in consideration of 100 l paid to him by the said Nicholas Marsh the Grandfather did grant to the said Nicholas Marsh and his Heirs an annual Rent of 8 l to be issuing out of all that Capital Messuage with the appurtenances in Barham aforesaid and out of all Lands and Hereditaments in Barham aforesaid to the said Messuage belonging and then in the occupation of the said Robert Lade unde praedict ' locus in quo est praed ' tempore quo c. fuit parcell ' to be paid at our Lady Day and Michaelmas by equal portions with power to distrain if the said Rent or any part thereof were behind And the Defendant further saith that by virtue of the said Grant the said Nicholas Marsh the Grandfather became seised in Fee of the said Rent and being so seised by his Will in Writing dated the 28th of November 1654 devised the said Rent to Richard Marsh and his Heirs and died by virtue whereof the said Richard Marsh became seised in Fee of the said Rent and being so seised diu ante praedict ' Tempus quo c. viz. 10 Aug. 32 Car. 2. nuper Regis by his Deed indented between him of the one part and the said Nicholas Marsh the Defendant Son of the said Richard of the other part cujus Scripti alteram partem Sigillo praedict ' Richard Marsh omitting sigillat ' idem Thomas Baker the Defendant hic in Cur ' profert for and in consideration of Natural Love and affection which he bore to the said Nicholas now Defendant his Son and the sum of 5 l yearly by him the said Nicholas to the said Richard Marsh during the Life of the said Richard secured to be paid and for divers other good causes and considerations concessit assignavit transposuit to the said Defendant Nich. Marsh and his Heirs the said Annuity or yearly Rent of 8 l to the use of the said Nicholas Marsh the Defendant and his Heirs prout per idem Scriptum Indentat plenius apparet Virtute cujus quidem concessionis assignationis ulterius mentionat vigore Statuti Anno Regni Hen. 8. nuper Regis Angliae vicesimo septimo de usibus in possessionem transferend praedict Nich. Defend ' fuit adhuc est seisit de praedict annual reddit c. and for 48 l for six years arrear at Michaelmas next-before the taking of the Cattle to the said Nicholas the Defendant bene cognoscit ut Ballivus ipsius Nicholai c. To this the Defendant demurs First It is not sufficiently shewn that the Place where c. was charged with the Rent for the Rent is granted out of a Messuage with the appurtenances in Barham and out of all the Lands in Barham aforesaid to the said Massuage belonging and then in the occupation of the said Robert Lade unde praedict locus in quo est tempore quo c. fuit parcell and tho' it were parcel at the time of the Distress taking it might not be belonging to the said House or in the tenure of Lade at the time of the Rent granted which should have been shewn and of that Opinion were the Court. Secondly In the Deed by which the Defendant Nicholas Marsh claims it is said sigillo praedict Rich. Marsh omitting sigillat Sed non allocatur for it is said before that per Scriptum indentat factum inter c. he granted and that is enough Thirdly Here is a grant of the Rent from Richard Marsh pleaded without any Attornment or Enrollment To which it was answered by the Counsel for the Defendant that it appeareth that the Grant was made in Consideration of Natural Affection as well as Mony and so it shall enure as a Covenant to stand seised and for this the Case of Crossing and Scudamore was cited Pas 23 Car. 2. Rot. 871. where in Ejectment it was found by Special Verdict that Nicholas Hele was seised of Lands in Fee and that he made a Deed to Jane Hele enrolled within six Months by which he did for and in consideration of Natural Love Augmentation of her Portion
these Defendants were entitled to these Costs and he that did not appear might release them to the Plaintiff but they said that if there should appear to the Covin between the Lessor of the Plaintiff and the Defendant who did not appear to release the Costs the Court supposed that they might correct such Practice when it should be made appear Bright versus Addy AN Action of Trespass Quare clausum fregit was brought by Baron and Feme Pollexfen Chief Justice was of Opinion that the Feme could not be joyned tho' it was her Land Ventris contra For this Action will survive and they have election either to joyn or to bring it alone 1 Brown l. 21. 1 Ro. Abr. 348. Hob. 189. 1 Cro. 96. 3 Cro. Tregniel and Reeve Mo. 5. In an Action of Forcible Entry upon the Wives Land after the Coverture she was joyned with the Husband Adjornatur Anonymus IN an Assumpsit against the Administratrix the Defendant pleaded quod ipsa non assumpsit instead of the Intestate After Verdict a Repleader was awarded and no Costs to either party upon a Repleader Marks versus Nottingham THe Defendant pleaded in Abatement that the Plaintiff was dead at such a place before the Action brought The Court doubted whether such Plea could be received but upon view of Rastall's Entries 161. pl. 6. where the like Plea was Powell and Ventris conceived it to be a good Plea Pollexfen Ch. Justice and Rokeby said that that in Rastall differed because there were two Plaintiffs so that Issue might be joyned with the other Plaintiff Sed vide librum where the Replication to that Plea is that W.H. praedict ' R.B. Attornat ' praed ' J. which J. was pleaded to be dead nomine pro ipso J. Magistro suo dicit quod breve praed ' ratione praeallegat ' cassari non debet quia dicit quod praed ' J. superstes in plena vita existit viz. apud L. in Com. N. non mortuus prout praed ' W. superius allegavit hoc petit quod inquiratur per Patriam praed ' W. similiter c. Adjornatur Haselwood versus Mansfield IN Debt for 150 l the Plaintiff declared upon a Charter-party which contained divers mutual Agreements and in performatione conventionum praed ' ex parte dicti Magistri ipse obligasser se dicto Mercatori in penali summa 150 l ad performationem convention ' praed ' ex parte dicti Mercator ' obligasset se dicto Magistro c. in simili penali summa 150 l c. And this Action was brought by the Master of the Ship against the Merchant The Defendant pleaded an Insufficient Plea to which there was a Demurrer But it was moved that the Declaration was Insufficient for when it comes to the Penalty on the Merchants part it is only obligasset se omitting ipse or ipse praed ' Mercator obligasset se so 't is not expresly declared that the Defendant was bound And of that Opinion were Pollexfen Chief Justice Powell and Rokeby Ventris contra For it is obligasset se dicto Magistro so none but the Merchant can be understood to be bound and if it were ipse obligasset it had been good and that is understood But Judgment was given for the Defendant Snode versus Ward IN an Indebitat ' assumpsit for Goods sold The Defendant pleaded quod ipse infra sex annos proxime ante diem impetrationis Brevis Originalis ipsius Quer ' non assumpsit To which the Plaintiff demurred 1. Because the late Statute of 1 Willielmi Mariae for reviving of Process doth Enact That the Time from the 11th of December 1688 to the 13th of February then next following should not be accounted as any part of the Time upon the Statute of Limitations And therefore the Defendant should have pleaded that he did not assume within six years and so many days as were between the 11th of December and the 13th of February And it was said so had the Pleading been ever since the said Statute But the Court Resolved that the Pleading might be still in such manner as before the Statute For the Statute is that those Days shall be no part of the time and therefore pleading non assumpsit infra sex annos is to be understood of Six years exclusive of those Days between the 11th of December and the 13th of February 2. Another Exception was taken to the Plea for that it is ante impetrationem Brevis Original ' ipsius Quer ' and doth not say praed ' brevis and so it may be referred to some other Writ the Plaintiff might have Pollexfen Chief Justice inclined that it was naught for this Cause Adjornatur Vid. 8 Co. 57. The Earl of Rutland's Case He pleads that he was seised of the Park of Clipsham and granted officium Parci sui and not said praed ' Parci and held it good Vid. 2. Cro. 288. Burton and Eyre Humphreys versus Bethily IN an Action of Debt upon a Penal Bill where the Defendant was to pay 10 s upon the 11th of June and 10 s more upon the 10th of July next following and so 10 s every three Weeks after till a certain Sum were satisfied by such several payments And for the true payment thereof the Defendant obliged himself in the Penal Sum of 7 l The Plaintiff in facto dicit pleaded that the Defendant did not pay the said Sum or any part thereof upon the several days aforesaid unde actio accrevit for the 7 l The Defendant pleaded that he paid 10 s upon the 11th of June hoc paratus estve rificare c. The Plaintiff Replyed that he did not pay it hoc petit quod inquiratur per Patriam To which the Defendant demurred The Plea was held altogether Insufficient But then Pollexfen Chief Justice observed that the Declaration was naught for he should have declared that the Defendant failed in payment of one of the Sums which would have been enough to have entitled him to the Penalty but he says The said several Sums of Money or any of them and this is double and he inclined that it was not aided by Answering over or by the General Demurrer Adjornatur Vide Saunders and Crowley 1 Ro. 112. Thompson versus Leach IN an Ejectment by Thomas Thompson against Sir Simon Leach and divers other Defendants upon the Demise of Charles Leach of the Mannor of Bulkworthy and divers Messuages Lands and Tenements Vpon Not Guilty pleaded a Special Verdict was found to this effect Viz. That Nicholas Leach was seised in Fee of the said Mannors Lands and Tenements in the Declaration and by his last Will in Writing bearing date the 9th day of December in the 19th year of the Reign of the late King Charles the Second devised the Premisses to his Brother Simon Leach for Life remainder to the first Son of the Body of the said Simon and the Heirs Males of the
void if Livery had been made It was Resolved not to enure as a Covenant to stand seised because the Deed was void in the frame of it The Lords affirmed the last Judgment given by the Lords Commissioners c. and held that no Vse would arise With the concurrent Opinion of Baron Nevil Justice Eyre and Justice Ventris THE ARGUMENT OF Mr. Iustice Ventris IN THE EXCHEQUER-CHAMBER UPON A Writ of ERROR out of the Kings-Bench Christopher Dighton Gent Plaintiff versus Bernard Greenvil Esq Defendant THE Plaintiff brought a Writ of Error upon a Judgment in an Action of Trespass and Ejectment in the Kings-Bench given for the Defendant where the Plaintiff declared upon the Demise of Theophilus Earl of Huntington of a Moeity of the Mannor of Marre and of divers Messuages Lands and Tenements lying in Marre Bentley in Baln in the County of York and also of the Demise of Robert Earl of Scarsdale of the other Moiety of the said Mannor and of the Demise of Elizabeth Lewis of the entire Mannor of Marre and that by Vertue of these several Demises he entred and was possessed until ejected by the Defendant Vpon Not Guilty pleaded the Jury found the Defendant Not Guilty of the Trespass and Ejectment upon the Demise of Elizabeth Lewis and as to the Demises of the several Moieties by the said Earls they found a Special Verdict to this effect Viz. That Thomas Lewis the 9 of April 20 Jac. 1. before the Mayor of Lincoln acknowledged a Statute Merchant to William Knight for 1200 l to be paid at the Feast of St. Philip and Jacob then next following and that the said Money was not paid at the day and that William Knight the 16 of November 1629. made his last Will and one Isaack Knight his Executor and died that Isack proved the said Will and in Trinity Term 20 Car. 1. sued a Cap. si laicus out of the Common Pleas against the said Thomas Lewis directed to the Sheriff of Lincoln returnable in Tres Trin. who returned quod laicus fuit sed not fuit inventus in balliva sua upon which issued a Writ hearing Teste the 7 of July 23 Car. 1. Vic Eborum to estate the Goods and Chattels and all the Lands and Tenements of the said Thomas Lewis tempore Recognitionis debiti praed ' returnable Mense Michael upon which the said Sheriff returns an Inquisition taken the 11 of October then next following whereby Thomas Lewis was found seised of divers Lands and Tenements parcel of the Lands in the Declaration mentioned to be demised by the said Earls which he the same day caused to be delivered to the said Isack to hold by Extent as his Free-hold until he should be satisfied of his said Debt with his Damages and Costs They further find That the said Thomas Lewis and one John Levet and Thomas Lever the 20 of Novemb. 13 Car. 1. acknowledged a Recognizance in nature of a Statute Staple before the Lord chief Justice Brampston to Richard Gerrard for 1000 l payable at Christmass then next following which Money was not paid at the day and that upon a Certificate of the said Recognizance in the Chancery by John Gerrard surviving Executor of Richard Gerrard the 22 of June 24 Car. 1. there issued a Cap. si laicus and an Extent against the said Thomas Lewis to the Sheriff of the County of York retainable in Craft animar ' prox ' at which day the Sheriff returned all Inquisition by him taken whereby it appeared that the said VVilliam Lewis tempore Recogn ' debiti praed ' was sessed in Fee of the Mannor of Marre and of divers Messuages Lands and Tenements being the same Lands in the Declaration mentioned to be devised by the said Earls and the 29 of Novemb. 24. Car. 1. a Liberate was sued out returnable in quinden ' Hillar ' to the said Sheriff who returned that the 29 of Novemb. 24. Car. 1. he had caused to be delivered the said Mannor Messuages Lands and Tenements to the said John Gerrard to hold as his Free hold until he should be satisfied his said Debt will his Damages and Costs They further find That Thomas Lewis and Thomas Lever the 27 of May 15 Car. 1. acknowleged a Recognizance in nature the of a Statute Staple before the Lord Chief Justice Brampston to Sir Gervase Elwaies and William Burroughs for 5000 l payable at the Feast of St. John the Baptist next following which Money was not paid at the day and that upon a Certificate of the said Recognizance in Chancery by the said Sir Gervase Elwaies and William Burroughs the 10 of Decemb. 15 Car. 1. there issued out a Cap. si laicus and an Extent against the said Thomas Lewis directed to the Sheriff of the County of York returnable in Quinden ' Hill prox at which day the Sheriff returned on Inquisition by him taken whereby it appeared that the said William Lewis tempore Recogn ' debiti praed ' was seised in Fee of a Capital Messuage in Marre and of divers Messuages Lands and Tenements being the same Lands mentioned in the Declaration to be demised by the said Earls and that the 10 of Febr. 15 Car. 1. a Liberate ' was sued out returnable in Quidden ' Pasch to the said Sheriff who returned that he had caused to be delivered the said Lands and Tenements to the said Sir Gervase Elwaies and William Burroughs to hold as their Free hold until they should be satisfied the said Debt with their Damages and Costs They find that Thomas Lewis was seised of all the Lands mentioned in the said several Inquisitions at the respective times of his acknowledgment of the said Statute and Recognizance They find that the 15 of July 1651. Isaack Knight and John Gerrard by their respective Deeds granted their said several extended interests to one Edward Lewis by vertue whereof the said Edward Lewis became possessed of the Mannor and the Tenements praed Edwardo sic possessionat existente praedictoque Thoma Lewis de Manerio omnib ' premissis seisit ' existen ' in actual reali possessione inde the said Thomas Lewis by his Indenture of Lease and Release dated the 25 and 26 of May 1657. for 4000 l conveyed the said Mannor and Premisses to John Lewis and his Heirs in which there is a Covenant to Levy a Fine before the end of Trinity Term then next ensuing and that accordingly in Trinity Term 1657. The said Thomas Lewis did Levy a Fine come ceo with Proclamations of the said Mannor and Premises to the said John Lewis to the uses in the said Indenture mentioned by vertue whereof the said John Lewis was seised in Fee of the said Mannor and Premises And that John Lewis being thereof so seised the 21 day of July 1670 made his last Will and Testament in Writing and thereby devised the said Mannor and Tenements to Edward Lewis and the Heirs Males of his Body and for want of such Issue to his
TRin. 20 Car. 2. Rot. 719. A Custom that Lands should descend always to the Heirs Males viz To the Males in the Collateral Line excluding Females in the Lineal was held good Which it was said was allowed anciently in the Marches of Scotland in order to the Defence of the Realm which was there most to be looked to tho' it is said in Davis's Reports That the Custom of Gavelkind which was pretended in Ireland and Wales to divide only between Males was naught But the former Custom was adjudged good in this Court Hill 18 Car. 2. Rot. 718. Foot versus Berkly BErkly had Iudgment in an Ejectment in Communi Banco and Execution of his Damages and Costs Foot brings Error and the Judgment is affirmed Whereupon Berkly prays his Costs for his delay and charges but could not have them For no Costs were in such case at the Common Law and the Statute of 3 H. 7. cap. 10. gives them only where Error is brought in delay of Execution so 19 H. 7. cap. 20. And here tho' he had not Execution of the Term yet he had it of his Costs If one hath Iudgment in a Formedon in Remainder and before Execution the Tenant brings Error the Judgment is affirmed yet he shall pay no Costs because none were recoverable at first 1 Cro. Ante. Weyman versus Smith A Prohibition was prayed to the Mayor and Court of Bristol Suggesting that a Plaint was Entred there for 66 l and that the Cause of Action arose in London and not in Bristol and so out of their Iurisdiction Note An Affidavit was also made thereof and this is upon Westm cap. 35. and so is F.N.B. 45. Vnless the party pleading in Bar or Imparling admits the Iurisdiction of the Court 2 Inst Tarlour and Rous versus Parner AN Account brought by the Plaintiffs as Churchwardens against the Defendant the former Churchwarden for a Bell c. The Defendant pleads That it lacked mending and that by the Assent of the Parishioners it was delivered to a Bell Founder who kept it until he should be paid To which the Plaintiff Demurred For this Plea is no bar of the Account but a good Discharge before Auditors But it was said on the other side That the Matter pleaded shewed that the Defendant was never Accountable therefore it might be in Bar. The contrary whereof is Adjudged in the same Case in terminis 1 Rolls 121. between Methold and Wyn and so was the Opinion of the Court here But then it was alledged that the Declaration was not good for there were two Plaintiffs and yet it is quod reddat ei compotum and it is de bonis Ecclesiae whereas it should have been bonis Parochianorum For the first the Court said that it should be amended for it was the default of the Clerk But the other was doubtful For the Presidents were affirmed to be both ways but they rather inclined that the Declaration was not good for that cause Anonymus AN Indictment of Forcible Entry in unum Messuagium vel domum Mansional ' quaere if not uncertain and other Lands and Tenements tent ' ad voluntat ' Dom ' secundum consuetudinem Manerii and doth not express what Estate For which the Court held it ought to be quashed for the Statutes 8 H. 6. and R. 2. extend only to Freeholds and the Statute in King James's time to Leases for years and Copyholds And here tho' he saith at the Will of the Lord according to the Custom of the Mannor yet 't is not sufficient because he saith not by Copy of Court Roll. And it was Adjudged in 1653 in this Court that none of the Statutes extended to Tenants at Will Martyn versus Delboe IN an Assumpsit the Plaintiff Declared That he was a Merchant and the Defendant being also a Merchant was Indebted to him in 1300 l And a Communication being had between them of this Debt the Defenant promised him in Consideration thereof That he should have Share to the Value of his said Debt in a Ship of the Defendants which was then bound for the Barbadoes and that upon the Return of the Ship he would give him a true Account and pay him his proportion And sets forth That the Ship did go the said Voyage and returned to London and that after the Defendant with some other Owners had made an account of the Merchandize returned in the said Ship which amounted to 9000 l and that the Plaintiffs Share thereof came to 1700 l which he had demanded of the Defendant and he refused to pay it c. To this the Defendant pleads the Statue of Limitations and the Plaintiff Demurred Alledging that this Action was grounded upon Merchants Accounts which were excepted out of the Statute Tho' if an Action be brought for a Debt upon an Account stated between Merchants the Statute is pleadable as was Adjudged in this Court last Hillary Term between Webber and Perit yet here there being no Account ever stated between the Plaintiff and Defendant it is directly within the Statute And of that Opinion were Keeling and Rainsford But Twisden inclined otherwise because the Plaintiff declares upon an Account stated and tho' between Strangers yet he bringing his Action upon it admits it Et Adjornatur Nota Every Parish of Common Right ought to Repair the High-ways and no Agreement with any person whatever can take off this Charge which the Law lays upon them Crispe and Jackson versus The Mayor and Commonalty of Berwick IN Covenant after Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that there was a Mis-Trial the Venire being awarded to an adjoyning County Which the Court after Hearing of Arguments in it Ruled it to be well enough but one of the Plaintiffs died before the Court had delivered their Opinions It is prayed notwithstanding that Judgment might be Entred there be no default in the Plaintiffs but a delay which came by the act of the Court and that it was within the Statute of this King That the death of the Party between Verdict and Judgment should not abate the Action and that it was in the discretion of the Court whether they would take notice of the Death in this case for the Defendant hath no Day in Court to plead there being no Continuances entred after the Return of the Postea 1 Leon. 187. Isley's Case Latches Rep. 92. And the Court were of Opinion that Judgment ought to be Entred and there being no Continuances it may be as if immediately upon the Return of the Postea Ante. Lion versus Carew THe Case was A Lease was made to two for 99 years if three Lives should so long live and this to commence after the end of a Lease for Life Reddend ' a certain yearly Rent and two Work-days in Harvest post principium inde reddend ' inde 3 l nom ' Harriotte post mortem of the Lessees or either of them and reddend ' two Capons at Christmass post
excused yet 't is merely void as to the Party Et Ad jornatur Norton versus Harvey THe Case was an Executor being possessed of a Term let part of it reserving a Rent and died And the Question was whether his Executor should have the Rent or the Administrator de bonis non It was argued for the Executor that this Rent is meerly due by the Contract and not incident to the Reversion and the Administrator is in Paramount it being now as if the Testator had died Intestate and therefore before the Statute of this King such Administrators could not have had a Scire facias upon a Judgment obtained by the Executor tho' in the Case of Cleve and Vere 3 Cro. 450 457. 't is held that he may have a Liberate where the Executor had proceeded in the Execution of a Statute so far as an Extent for there the thing is executed and not meerly Executory as a Judgment If a Man that hath a Term in the right of his Wife le ts part of it reserving a Rent the Wife surviving shall not not have the Rent On the other side it was said that this case differed from that because the Reservation here is by him that had the whole Right executed in him Another objection against the Action was that here in the Declaration being in Covenant for Non payment of Rent there is not any demand alledged But that was answered because the Covenant was to pay such a Sum for the Rent expresly but if the Condition of a Bond be for performance of Covenants expressed in such a Lease one of which is for payment of Rent in that case the Bond will not be forfeit without a demand and of that Opinion were the Court and that the Executor should have the Rent but when recovered Hale said it should be Assets in his Hands And accordingly Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 26 Car. II. In Banco Regis Silly versus Silly DOwer of 300 Acres of Land 200 Acres of Pasture 100 Acres Meadow The Tenant pleaded Non Tenure The Jury found him Tenant as to 320 Acres of Land and as to the rest that he was not Tenant And the Iudgment was that the Demandant should recover the 320 Acres Error was assigned in this Court that the Verdict and Judgment were for more Acres of Land than were demanded But on the other side it was said Land was a general word and might include Meadow and Pasture Curia In a Grant Land will extend to Meadow Pasture c. but in Pleading it signifies Arable only and here in regard they are distinguished in the Count the Verdict and Judgment must be reversed for the whole Tho' Hale said antiently such Iudgment would have been reversed but for the surplusage Vid Post Batmore Vxor versus Graves TRover for a 100 Loads of Wood upon a Special Verdict the Case was this Copyhold Land was surrendred to the use of J. S. for years Remainder to the Brother of the Plaintiff's Wife who died before the Term expired and so was not admitted any otherwise than by the admission of the Tenant for years And it was resolved First That the admittance of him that had the Estate for years was an admittance for him in the Remainder 4 Co. 23. a. 3 Cro. 504. Fine sur Grant and render to A. for Life Remainder to B. Execution sued by A. serves for B. So an Attornment to Tenant for Life serves for him in Remainder and this brings no prejuduce to the Lord for a Fine is not due until after admittance and the Lord may Assess one Fine for the particular Estate and another Fine for the Remainder But Wild said he need not pay it until his Estate comes in Possession after a Surrender the Estate remains in the Surrender before admittance of the Cestuy que use yet where Borough English Land was Surrendred to the use of J. S. and his Heirs and he died before admittance It was held that the younger Son should have it Secondly It was resolved that the Possession of the Tenant for years was so the Possession of him in Remainder as to make a Possessio Fratris But then it was moved that the Conversion was laid after the Marriage and so the Feme ought not to have joyned with her Husband in the Action But the Court held that in regard the Trover was laid to be before the Marriage which was the inception of the cause of Action the Wife might be joyned as if one has the Custody of a Womans Goods and afterward Marries her she may joyn in Detinue with her Husband for in case of Bailment the Proprietor is to some purposes in Possession and to some out of Possession Hale said in this case the Husband might bring the Action alone or joyntly with his Wife And so Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Anonymus IN Debt upon a Bond the Condition was to save the Obligee harmless from another Bond. The Defendant pleaded Non damnificatus The Plaintiff replies that the Money was not paid at the day and he devenit onerabilis and could not attend his business for fear of an Arrest The Defendant rejoyns that he tendred the Money at the day absque hoc that the Plaintiff devenit onerabilis to which it was Demurred and the Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff for the Money not being paid at the day the Counter Bond is forfeited Vid. 1 Cro. 672. 5 Co. and the Traverse in this case is naught The Mayor and Commonalty of London versus Dupester IN Debt for a Duty accruing to the City for Timber imported called Scavage The Declaration was that they were and had been a Corporation time out of mind and their Customs were confirmed by Act of Parliament Temps R. 2. c. The Defendant tendred his Law and Co. Entries 118. was cited where in Debt for an Amerciament in a Court Baron tho' the imposing of it was grounded upon a Prescription yet Wager of Law was admitted But notwithstanding in this case the Court overruled the Wager of Law for here the Duty it self is by Prescription and that confirmed by Act of Parlimant Debt for a Duty growing by a By-Law if the By-Law be Authorised by Letters Patents no Wager of Law lies So in Debt for Toll granted by Letters Patents 20 H. 7. Termino Sancti Michaelis Anno 26 Car. II. In Banco Regis Silly versus Silly THe Case was moved again And the Court said that the Demandant might have taken Judgment for the 300 Acres only habito nullo respectu to the rest and released all the Damages But this was not proper for an Amendment the Mistake being in the Verdict but if it could have been amended in the Common Bench the Court might here have made such Amendment Ante. Burfoot versus Peal A Scire facias was brought against the Bail who pleaded that the Principal paid the Debt ante diem impetrationis Brevis
have admitted Wager of Law and therefore lies not against the Executor It was difficultly brought in that Debt should lye against the Executor upon a Surmize of a Devastavit by himself But that Point is now setled but no Reason to extend it further And he cited a Case where Debt was brought against A. Executor of B. Executor of C. who pleaded that he had not of the Goods of C. in his hands To which the Plaintiff Replied That B. had Wasted the Goods of C. to the value of the Debt demanded Vpon which Issue was joyned and found for the Plaintiff and he had Judgment to recover de bonis B. in the hands of A. But that Judgment was Reversed Anonymus IF A. Engages that B. shall pay for certain Goods that B. buys of C. this is good to charge him upon a Collateral Promise but not upon an Indebitat ' Assumpsit for it doth not create a Debt Anonymus IN an Information for a Riot it was doubted by the Court whether it were Local being a Criminal Cause And it was observed that divers Statutes in Queen Elizabeth and King James's time provided that Prosecutions upon Penal Laws should be in their proper Counties Which was an Argument that at the Common Law they might have been elsewhere Taylor 's Case AN Information Exhibited against him in the Crown Office for uttering of divers Blasphemous Expressions horrible to hear viz. That Jesus Christ was a Bastard a Whoremaster Religion was a Cheat and that he neither feared God the Devil or Man Being upon this Trial he acknowledged the speaking of the Words except the word Bastard and for the rest he pretended to mean them in another Sense than they ordinarily hear viz. Whoremaster i. e. That Christ was Master of the Whore of Babylon and such kind of Evasions for the rest But all the Words being proved by several Witnesses he was found Guilty And Hale said That such kind of wicked Blasphemous words were not only an Offence to God and Religion but a Crime against the Laws State and Government and therefore punishable able in this Court. For to say Religion is a Cheat is to dissolve all those Obligations whereby Civil Societies are preserved and that Christianity is parcel of the Laws of England and therefore to reproach the Christian Religion is to speak in Subversion of the Law Wherefore they gave Judgment upon him viz. To stand in the Pillory in Three several places and to pay One thousand Marks Fine and to find Sureties for his Good Behaviour during Life Walker versus Wakeman THe Case was An Estate which consisted of Land a Rectory c. was conveyed to the use of one for Life c. with a Power to Lett the Premisses or any part of them so as 50 l Rent was reserved for every Acre of Land The Tenant for Life Demised the Rectory reserving a Rent which Rectory consisted of Tythes only and whether this was within the Power was the Question Serjeant Pemberton Argued That this Lease is not warranted by the Power for a Construction is to be made upon the whole Clause and the latter Words that appoint the Reservation of the Rent shall explain the former and restrain the general Word Premisses to Land only for if it shall be extended further the Settlement which was in Consideration of a Marriage Portion is of no effect for the Rectory As in case it should de Demised reserving no Rent which it might be if not restrained to the latter words and they applied only to the Land But it was Resolved by the Court that the Lease of the Rectory was good for the last Clause being Affirmative shall not restrain the Generality of the former And this Resolution was chiefly grounded upon Cumberford's Case in the 2 Rolls 263. where a Conveyance was made to Vses of divers Mannors and Lands with a Power to the Cestuy que use for Life to make Leases of the Premisses or any part of them so that such Rent or more were reserved upon every Lease which was reserved before within the space of Two years and a Lease was made of part of the Lands which had not been Demised within Two years before And Resolved it was a good Lease and that thereupon any Rent might be reserved because the Power was General To Lease all and the restrictive Clause should only be applied to such Lands as had been demised within Two years before Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 28 Car. II. In Banco Regis MEmorandum The last Term Sir Richard Rainsford was made Chief Justice Hale Chief Justice quitting it for infirmity of Body and Sir Thomas Jones was made one of the Justices of the Court of Kings Bench. Anonymus IN an Action upon the Case brought against the Defendant for that he did Ride an Horse into a place called Lincolns in Fields a place much frequented by the Kings Subjects and unapt for such purposes for the breaking and taming of him and that the Horse was so unruly that he broke from the Defendant and ran over the Plaintiff and grievously hurt him to his damage c. Vpon Not guilty pleaded and a Verdict for the Plaintiff It was moved by Sympson in Arrest of Judgment that here is no cause of Action for it appears by the Declaration that the mischief which happened was against the Defendants Will and so Damnum absque injuria and then not shewn what right the Kings Subjects had to walk there and if a man diggs a Pit in a Common into which one that has no right to come there falls in no Action lies in such Case Curia contra It was the Defendants fault to bring a Wild Horse into such a place where mischief might probably be done by reason of the Concourse of People Lately in this Court an Action was brought against a Butcher who had made an Ox run from his Stall and gored the Plaintiff and this was alledged in the Declaration to be in default of penning of him Wild said if a Man hath an unruly Horse in his Stable and leaves open the Stable Door whereby the Horse goes forth and does mischief an Action lies against the Master Twisden If one hath kept a tame Fox which getts loose and grows wild he that kept him before shall not answer for the damage the Fox doth after he hath lost him and he hath resumed his wild nature Vid. Hobarts Reports 134. The Case of Weaver and Ward Anonymus IN Trespass in an inferiour Court if the Defendant plead son frank Tenement to oust the Court of Jurisdiction It was said by Wild that they may enforce the Defendant to swear his Plea as in case of Foreign Plea negat Twisden and as in this Court where a Local justification in Trespass c. is pleaded the Defendant must swear it But the Court held no Indictment will lie for Perjury in such Oath no more than upon a Wager of Law Anonymus IN Trover the Hab. corpora
Ejectment the Case upon a Special Verdict was to this effect Sir John Danvers being seized of the Lands c. in Tail with the Fee expectant Anno 1646 and in 1647 levied a Fine to the same uses as he was before seized save that a power was reserved to make Leases for any number of years and without reserving any Rent Sir John Danvers did after become Guilty of Treason in Murdring of King Charles the first in 1648 and died in 1655. In 13 Car. 2. cap. 15. the Statute commonly called the Statute of Pains and Penalties Enacts That sundry of the Offenders in that execrable Treason of which Sir J. D. was one should amongst other Penalties there inflicted forfeit all their Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases for years Chattels real and interest of what nature or quality soever See the Act of 14 of this King The Lands were by Patent granted to the Duke of York who let them to the Defendant And John Danvers Heir of Sir John Danvers entred and made the Lease to the Plaintiff It had been several times argued at the Bar and this Term Iudgment was given by the Court for the Defendant And Rainsford Chief Justice delivered the Opinion of the Court and the Reasons for himself Twisden Wild and Jones as followeth The question being Whether an Estate Tail were forfeited by the words of the Act of 13 Car. 2. It was observed that all Estates were Fee simple at the Common Law and forfeitable W. the 2. de donis was the first Statute that protected Estates Tail from Alienations and from all Forfeitures of all kinds and so continued until the 12 E. 4. Taltarums Case from which time common Recoveries have been held not to be restrained by the Statute de donis and by the way it must be considered that Perpetuities were never favoured Then came the Statute of 4. H. 7. of Fines which with the explanation of the 32 H. 8. have been always resolved to bar the Issues in Tail so as to Alienations Estates Tail were set free but were not forfeitable no not for Treason until the 26 H. 8. by which they became subjected to Forfeitures in case of Treason and so by 5 E. 6. But 't is true these Statutes extend only to Attainders and 33 H. 8. Vests the Lands c. in the Kings possession without Office Thus having considered the History and Progress of Estates Tail the reasons why such an Estate should be construed to be forfeited upon this Act of 13 Car. 2. are these First The Crime mentioned is of the same nature and with the same aggravations as in 12 Car. 2. by which the Offenders are attainted of Treason c. for they are called Perpetrators of that execrable Treason with many Expressions to the like effect which was looked upon as an offence of that hainous nature that the same Parliament Enacted An Anniversary Humiliation throughout the whole Kingdom to be perpetually observed upon the account of it as if not only they that acted it but the whole Kingdom and their Posterity like to another Original sin were involved in the Guilt of it Nati natorum qui nascuntur ab illis And therefore the Punishment shall not be mitigated in any other manner than is expresly provided by that Act. Secondly It is proved by the generally and comprehensions of the words which are made use of viz. Possessions Rights Hereditaments of what nature soever Interests which does as well signifie the Estate in the ting as that wherein the Estate is which can have no effect if not extended to Estates Tail We must observe also that at the making of this Act entailed Lands were not protected from Forfeitures and tho' 26 H. 8. extends only to Cases where the Offender is attainted yet 't is of good direction to the Judges in Cases of like nature and 't is plain that by this Act of 13 Car. 2. the Offenders were looked upon in pari gradu with these attainted for when the Proviso comes to save the Estates of Strangers c. in trust for whom the Offenders were seized It is said notwithstanding any of the Convictions or Attainders aforesaid Thirdly It is to be observed that the Act takes notice that divers of the Offenders included in this Act were dead now in regard most Lands are known to be entailed if the Act had not intended such Estates to be forfeited it would signifie nothing indeed if the Offenders had been alive it might have been somewhat satisfied with the Forfeiture during their Lives But as the case was it should be of no effect at all after making a great noise of Forfeitures and Confiscations the Act would have been but a Gun charged only with Powder or as in the Fable Parturiunt Montes c. Fourthly It is manifest that the Parliament did not intend that the Children or Heirs of the Persons within the Penalties of the Act should have any benefit of their Estates for in the saving which is made for Purchasers upon valuable Considerations the Wives Children and Heirs of the Offenders are excepted then surely if they would bar them of the benefit of their Purchases à fortiori from inheriting to an Estate Tail especially of a voluntary Entail that seems to be made with a prospect of this Treason which was perpetrated a year after and such an Entail as scarce the like was ever seen before that a power should be reserved to make Leases for any number of years and without Reservation of any Rent By which it is manifest that Sir John Danvers that committed the Treason was fully Master of the Estate Again all Conveyances are avoided by the Act unless such as were upon valuable Consideration which this Fine was not The great case which has been insisted upon by way of objection is Trudgeons Case Co. Litt. 130. Estates Tail were not forfeited upon the Statute of Praemunire but during the Offenders Life For answer to that it must be observed that that Forfeiture is upon the Statute of 16 R. 2. at which times Estates Tail were under thè protection of the Statute de donis but since that time the Judges have not been so strict in expounding Statutes concerning Estates Tail as appears by Adams and Lamberts Case 4 Co. That an Estate Tail given for a superstitious use was within the Statute of 1 E. 6. cap. 4. where the words are generally and not so large as in our case nor so much to demonstrate the intent as is in our Act to extend to Estates Tail wherefore Iudgment was given for the Defendant Note They that argued for the Defendant endeavoured to maintain that if it should be admitted that Entails were not forfeited by the Act yet the Estate of Sir John Danvers in those Lands would be forfeited in regard he levied a Fine in 1647 and the Act of 13 Car. 2. extends to all Lands c. whereof the Persons therein mentioned were seized c. since 1646 and he being
cannot tender an Oath to the party sued nisi in causis Matrimonialibus Testamentariis But the Court after hearing divers Arguments denied the Prohibition for they said It was no more than the Chancery did to make Defendants answer upon Oath in such like Cases Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 31 Car. II. In Banco Regis How versus Whitfield ante in ult ' Term. IN Repl the Plaintiff declares of the taking of his Cattle in a Close containing five Acres The Defendant avows and sets forth a Fine to the use of A. in Tail which discended to him Virtute cujus he was seised in Dominico ut de feodo talliato c. The Plaintiff Replies that the Fine was first to the use of J. S. for Life the Remainder to his Executors Administrators and Assigns for 80 years with Power to him and his Assigns to lett the five Acres in Possession or Reversion for 21 years determinable upon three Lives reserving the ancient Rent and that J. S. Devised this Term to J. N. and died his Executors assented and after it came to the Executors of J. N. who assigned it and that the Assignee made a Lease of the said five Acres inter alia reserving proinde the Rent of 6 s per annum and avers that the ancient Rent was 6 s per annum The Avowant Rejoyns setting forth his former Title And the Plaintiff Demurrs It was Objected First That the Plaintiff ought to have traversed the Seisin in Tail alledged by the Avowant seeing in his Replication he sets forth and intitles himself under an Estate inconsistent with it To this it was Answered and the Court agreed that there ought to be no Traverse for the Avowant doth not say it was his Freehold or that he was Seised in Tail but only under a Virtute cujus c. And the Plaintiff in his Replication sets forth a Title consistent with all that the Avowant alledges and so confesses and avoids and all depends upon the execution of the Power And for that Secondly It was Objected That he which made this Lease was not Assignee of J. S. for Executors were not within the Power and consequently not their Assignee This is a Power collateral to the Estate and shall not run with the Land for then Assignees of Commissioners of Bankrupcy the Vendee of the Term by the Sheriff upon an Execution c. should execute this Power It is like Covenants annexed to Leases which the Assignee could not take advantage of till 32 H. 8. Again Here appears to be no good Reservation for the Lease is of the five Acres inter al' reserving proinde so that the Rent issues out of other Lands as well as the five Acres and therefore cannot be said to be the ancient Rent reserved upon that The Court were all of Opinion that the Assignee in this case might execute the Power and conceived that Assignees might include Assignees in Law Vid. Mo. 855. as well as Fact but however the Tenant for Life devising this Term the Devisee was an Assignee and the Power in the greatest strictness of acceptation was in him and consequently must go to his Executors and by the same Reason to their Assignee As to the Reserving the Rent proinde the Court said it might be intended that the inter al' might comprehend nothing but such things out of which a Rent could not be reserved and then the six Shillings was reserved only for the five Acres However the proinde might reasonably be referred only to the five Acres and not to the inter al and that a distinct Reservation of Six shillings might be for five Acres And so Judgment was given for the Plaintiff Ante. Steed versus Berrier ERror upon a Judgment given in the Court of Common Pleas upon a Special Verdict the Case was to this effect J.S. made his Will in Writing and devised Lands to his Son J.S. and his Heirs and in the same Will gave a Legacy of 100 l to his Grandson The Son died afterwards in his Life time after whose decease J. S. the Grandfather made a Codicil wherein he gave away part of the Lands devised as aforesaid to a Stranger and afterwards declared by Parol that his Intention was that his Grandson J. S. should have the Lands which his Son J. S. should have had The Question upon this Special Verdict was Whether this were sufficient to carry the Lands to the Grandson And Judgment was given in the Common Pleas by three Judges against one that it was Whereupon a Writ of Error was brought in this Court Finch Solicitor Argued that this Will was sufficient to carry it to the Grandson He agreed Brett and Ridgen's Case in Pl. Com. that a Devise to a man and his Heirs who dies in the Life of the Devisor a new Publication will not be enough to make the Heir take by the Will because named in the Will by way of Limitation of the Estate and not Designation of the Person that should take But in Fuller's Case in the 1 Cro. 423. and in Mo. 2. where the Devise was to his Son Richard and the Heirs of his Body which Richard afterwards died in his Life time and then the Devisor said My Will is That the Sons of Richard my Son deceased shall have the Land devised to their Father as they should have had if their Father had lived and died after me There Popham and Fenner held that this new Publication would carry the Land to Richard's Son Gawdy and Clench contra But our Case is much stronger for there Heirs of the Body were used only for Limitation but in the Will here where the words are I Devise to my Son J. with this new Publication the Grandson J. may take because a Grandson is a Son and when a Will is new Published it is all one as if it were wrote at the time of such Publication Beckford and Parncot's Case in the 1 Cro. 493. Mo. 404. Devise of all his Lands and after the Will the Devisor purchaseth other Lands and then publishes it again it will carry the new purchased Lands Dyer 149. Trevanian's Case Cestuy que use before the 27th of H. 8. Devised the Lands a new Publication will pass the Lands executed in him by the Statute The Opinion of the Court inclined to Reverse the Judgment they held it to be the same with Fuller's Case in the 1 Cro. that no Parol averment can carry Lands to one person when the words of the Will plainly intended them to another They agreed If a man having no Son but a Grandson deviseth his Lands to his Son the Grandson may take But here is an opposition contained in the new Publication viz. Those Lands which my Son J. should have had my meaning is my Grandson J. shall have And in the Will it self there is a Legacy devised to the Grandson by that Name so where they are so distinguished 't is impossible to take the Grandson to be
out of Repair Secondly The whole is Sequestred whereas it ought to have been but in proportion to the Charge of Repairing and should be certainly expressed what it required Thirdly The Sequestration is to remain by the Sentence until the Judge should take further Order Whereas it ought to have been but until the Repairs had been done These Exceptions the Court held fatal and therefore gave no Opinion as to the Matter in Law but did incline that there could be no Sequestration for being made Lay Fee the Impropriation was out of their Jurisdiction and it was now only against the Person as against a Layman for not Repairing the Church And they said in case of Dilapidations the whole ought not to be Sequestred but to leave a proportion to the Parson for his Livelyhood Anonymus IN an Ejectment upon a Special Verdict the sole Point was Whether a Lease for a year upon no other Consideration than reserving a Pepper Corn if it be demanded shall work as a Bargain and Sale and so to make the Lessee capable of a Release And it was Resolved that it should and that the Reservation made a sufficient Consideration to raise an Use as by Bargain and Sale Vid. 10 Co. in Sutton's Hospitals Case Rozer versus Rozer AN Indebitatus Assumpsit pro parcell ' Corii ad specialem instantiam requisitionem of the Defendant sold and delivered to J.S. Et sic inde Indebitat ' existens the Defendant promised to pay Vpon Non assumpsit pleaded and a Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that there is no Promise laid and no Reason to presume a Promise when 't is the very ground of the Action tho' after a Verdict And admitting there were a Promise yet it being Collateral it did not make a Debt but should have been brought as an Action upon the Case Mo. 702. and Dyer 230. And hereupon Judgment was stayed Tho' as I hear in the King Bench about two years since between Danbey and Kent they held such a Case well enough after a Verdict Quaere Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 33 Car. II. In Communi Banco Page versus Kirke IN an Action of Trespass upon Not Guilty at the Assizes in Suffolk a Verdict was found for the Plaintiff and 10 s Damages and 40 s Costs and Judgment entred accordingly And an Action of Debt was brought upon the Judgment and the Defendant pleaded Specially the Statute 22 23 of Car. II. ca. 9. against Recovering more Costs than Damages where the Damages are under 40 s in Trespass unless certified by the Judge that the Title was chiefly in question the Words of the Statute being If any more Costs in such Action shall be awarded the Judgment shall be void To which the Plaintiff Demurred and the Plea was held Insufficient because the Verdict was for 40 s Costs and not Costs increased by an Award of the Court. 2. If the Judgment were Erroneous yet it was hard to make it avoidable by Plea notwithstanding that the Words of the Statute are Shall be void Termino Sanctae Michaelis Anno 33 Car. II. In Communi Banco Onslowes Case HE brought an Action against a Bayliff being the chief Magistrate of a Corporation for that although he were chosen one of the Burgesses to serve in Parliament for the Corporation by the greater Number c. yet the Bayliff to disappoint him of sitting and to bring trouble c. upon him did return another Person in the Indentures together with him to his Damage c. Vpon Not Guilty pleaded and a Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Action would not lie And of that Opinion were the whole Court viz. North Chief Iustice Wyndham Charlton and Levins for they said they had no Iurisdiction of this Matter the principal part thereof being a Retorn in Parliament No Action before the Statute H. 6. c. did lie against a Sheriff or chief Officer of a Corporation for a False-retorn and the Courts at Westminster must not enlarge their Iurisdiction in these matters further than those Acts give them That there were no Presidents of any Actions at the Common Law save Nevils Case in the late times and Sir Samuel Bernardistons Case both which miscarried In the Long Parliament there were a great many double Retorns but no Actions had been brought which is a great Argument that no such Action lies as Littleton argues upon the Statute of Merton of disparaging an Heir Termino Paschae Anno 35 Car. II. In Communi Banco The Lord Conwallis's Case THE Case was Isaac Pennington a Copyholder of the Mannor whereof my Lord Conwallis is now feised committed Treason in the matter of the Murder of King Charles the First and then about Anno 1655. surrendred into the hands of the Lord of the Mannor his Copyhold Lands to the use of some of his Children who were admitted In 1659. the Mannor was aliened to the Lord Conwallis then came the Act of Attainder 12 Car. 2. whereby Tychburn with other Regicides were attainted and thereby it was Enacted That all their Mannors Messuages Lands Tenements Rents Reversions Remainders Possessions Rights Conditions Interests Offices Annuities and all other Hereditaments Leases for Years Chattels Real and other things of that nature whatsoever they be shall stand forfeited to the King c. Provided that no Conveyance Assurance Grant Bargain Sale Charge Lease Assignment of Lease Grants and Surrenders by Copy of Court Roll c. made to any Person or Persons other than the Wife or Wives Child or Children Heir or Heirs of such Person or Persons c. After which Attainder c. the Lord of the Mannor caused the Lands to be seised and brought an Ejectment The First Point Was whether in Case of Treason or Felony the Lord can seise before Conviction or Attainder And the Court seemed to be of Opinion that no Seisure could be till Attainder without Special Custom but they agreed the presentment of the Homage was not necessary to precede a Seisure or to entitle the Lord to take the advantage of a Forfeiture but in case of a Capital Crime it would be unreasonable and inconvenient to permit the same to be tried or controverted in a Civil Action before the Conviction appeared upon Record Secondly Whether this were such a Forfeiture as the Lord was bound to take notice thereof for if no notice then the acceptance of the Surrender c. would not preclude him from taking advantage of the Forfeiture And the Court inclined that the Lord should be presumed to take notice in this Case as he shall in the Case of Failer of Suit of Court Non-paiment of Rent c. Vide 2 Cro. Matthews and Whetton 233. Thirdly Whether the Mannor being conveyed away before the Attainder shall purge the Forfeiture Iustice Levins said That although no advantage of this Forfeiture can be taken till Attainder yet after Attainder it has relation and
nuper Vic' quoddam debitum quadragint ' librar ' fieri levari facerent quod capt ' seisit ' fuit in manus dicti nuper Regis per Thomam Rawlinson Mil ' Thomam Fowle Mil ' nuper Vic' Midd ' vicesimo secundo die Januarii anno regni dicti nuper Regis secundo Quodque per Judicium Baron ' dicti Scaccarii dict' nuper Regis apud Westm ' postea reddit ' recuperat ' fuit per dict' nuper Regem versus praefat ' Radulph ' Davis Ita quod denar ' ill ' cum sic levassent iidem nuper Vic' scilicet Johannes Parsons Basil ' Firebrace haberent coram tunc Baron ' de Scaccario apud Westm ' praedict ' à die Sancti Michaelis in tres Septiman ' anno regni dicti nuper Regis Quarto dict' Cur ' ejusdem nuper Regis tunc ibidem ad usum ipsius nuper Regis solvend ' Virtute cujus quidem brevis Praerogativi praed ' The Sheriffs thereupon seized the Goods iidem Vic' scilicet Johannes Parsons Basil ' Birebrace seisire fecerunt omnia bona catalla praedict ' Radulphi Davis in balliva ejusdem nuper Vic' prout breve Praerogativ ' in se exigebat requirebat Quae quidem bona catalla per appretiator ' per eosdem nuper Vic' scilicet Johannem Parsons Basil ' Firebrace nominat ' And Appraised them apprecr ' fue ' ad viginti septem libras quinque solidos novem denar ' quos quidem viginti septem libras quinque solidos novem denar ' iidem nuper Vic' scilicet Johannes Parsons Basil ' Firebrace habuer ' coram Baron ' de Scaccario dicti nupar Regis apud Westm ' praedict ' ad diem locum in brevi Praerogativo praedict ' content ' dict' Cur ' ejusdem nuper Regis tunc ibidem ad usum ipsius nuper Regis solvend ' prout per breve Praerogativ ' praedict ' eis praecept ' fuit Et praedict ' nuper Vic' scilicet Johannes Parsons Basil ' Nulla alia bona Firebrace ulterius dicunt quod praedict ' Radulphus null ' aliqua alia sive plura bona catalla terr' aut tenementa die Utlagar ' praedict ' seu unquam postea habuisset in balliva sua quae extendi appretiar ' seu in manus dicti nuper Regis cap ' potuer ' praeterquam bona catalla praedict ' ut praefertur seisit ' virtute brevis Praerogativi praed ' Et hoc parat ' sunt verificare Et pet ' Judicium si praed ' Johannes Dawson action ' suam praedictam inde versus eos habere debeat c. Demurrer Et praedict ' Johannes Dawson ' dicit quod praed ' placitum praedict ' Johannis Parsons Mil ' Basil ' Firebrace Mil ' superius in barram placitat ' ac mteria in eodem content ' minus sufficien ' in lege existunt ad ipsum Johannem Dawson ab actione sua praedict ' versus praefat ' Johannem Parsons Mil ' Basil ' Firebrace Mil ' habend ' praecludend ' quodque ipse ad placitum illud modo forma praedict ' placitat ' necesse non habet nec per legem terrae tenetur respondere Et hoc parat ' est verificare Unde pro defect ' sufficien ' Respons ' praedicti Johannis Parsons Basil ' Firebrace Mil ' in hac parte placitat ' Idem Johannes Dawson pet ' Judicium dampna sua occasione Transgr ' illius sibi adjudicari c. Joynder Et praedict ' Johannes Parsons Basil ' Firebrace ex quo ipsi sufficien ' materiam in placito suo praedicto ad praedict ' Johannem Dawson ab actione sua praedict ' versus eos habend ' praecludend ' superius allegaver ' quam ipsi parat ' sunt verificare quam quidem materiam praedict ' Johannes Dawson non dedicit nec ad eam aliqualiter respond ' sed verificationem illam admittere omnino recusat iidem Johannes Parsons Basil ' Firebrace pet ' Judic ' quod praed ' Johannes Dawson ab actione sua praedict ' versus eos habend ' praecludatur c. Et quia Justic ' hic se advisare volunt de super praemissis priusquam Judicium inde reddant dies dat' est partibus praedict ' hicusque à die Sancti Michaelis in tres Septimanas de audiend ' inde Judicio suo eo quod iidem Justic ' hic inde nondum c. Dawson versus The Sheriffs of London IN an Action upon the Case against Sir John Parsons and Sir Basil Firebrace Sheriffs of London The Plaintiff Declared That whereas one Ralph Davis was Indebted to him in 25 l and to recover it he brought an Original Writ Returnable in the Common Pleas and for that the said Davis did not appear he prosecuted him to an Outlawry in London And the said Davis was Outlawed and thereupon the Plaintiff took out a Capias Utlagatum in Trinity Term 4 Jacobi nuper Regis directed to the Defendants then Sheriffs of London by which Writ they were commanded to enquire what Goods and Chattels Lands and Tenements the said Davis had at the time of the Outlawry or at any time since and to Extend and Apprize the same and to Return such Extent in tres Septimanas sci ' Michael ' and that they should take the said Davis c. Which Writ was delivered to the Defendants then Sheriffs of London And altho' the said Davis had at the time of the Outlawry and after divers Goods and Chattels to the value of 40 l and more within the Bailywick of the said Sheriffs which they might have taken apprized and extended yet not regarding the Duty of their Office non solum ipsum Regem de eo quod ad ipsum pertinet occasione Utlagariae praedict ' defraudare verum etiam ipsum Johannem Dawson ab assecutione recuperatione debit ' praedict ' retardare they did not take seize or extend the said Goods but neglected and refused to do it and at the Day of the Return of the Writ falsly deceitfully and fraudulently Returned that the said Davis had no Goods and Chattels Lands or Tenements at the time of the Outlawry or ever after within their Bailywick in Dom Regis contemptum Curiae hic illusionem in Sectae ipsius Quer ' dilationem retardationem ad damnum Quadraginta● Librarum To this the Defendant pleaded That before they made any Enquiry of the Goods c. of the said Davis viz. the 23d of July Anno regni nuper Regis Jacobi Secundi quarto a Prerogative Writ was issued out of the Exchequer to them the said Sheriffs directed whereby they were commanded to levy a certain Debt of 40 l of the Goods and Chattels Lands and Tenements of the said Davis which was taken and seised into the hands of the said late King by Rawlinson and
Georgius Johannes non sum ' fuer ' nec in eodem brevi de Scire fac ' nominat ' nec in praedicto retorno ine retornat ' tenentes praedictorum duorum Messuagiorum cum pertin ' vel aliqnor ' tenementorum quae fuer ' praedicti Willielmi Wormell praedicto tempore redditionis Judicii praedicti idem Paris pet ' Judic ' de brevi illo Et quod idem breve cassetur c. Et praedictus Robertus dic ' quod praed ' placitum praed ' Demurrer to the Plea Paris superius in forma praedicta placitat ' ac materia in eodem content ' minus sufficien ' in lege existunt ad praedict ' breve de Scire fac ' praefat ' Vic' Norf. direct ' cassand ' vel ad ipsum Robertum ab executione sua versus praefat ' Paris de debito dampnis praedict ' levand ' de terris ten̄tis praed ' cum pertin ' unde idem Paris tenens ut praefertur retornat ' existit repellend ' seu retardand ' quodque ipse ad placit ' illud modo forma praed ' placitat ' necesse non habet nec per legem terrae tenetur respondere Et hoc parat ' est verificare Unde pro defectu sufficien ' placiti praedicti Paris in hac parre idem Robertus petit Judicium quod breve suum praedict ' bon ' adjudicetur necnon execution ' suam versus praefat ' Paris de debito dampnis praed ' de terris tenementis praed ' cum pertin ' unde dictus Paris tenens ut praefertur retornat ' existit levand ' fibi adjudicari c. Et praedictus Paris ex quo ipse sufficien ' Joynder in Demurrer materiam in lege in placito suo praedicto ad praedict ' breve de Scire fac ' praefat ' Vic' Norf. direct ' cassand ' ad praedict ' Robertum ab executione sua praedicta retardand ' superius allegavit quam ipse parat ' est verificare quam quidem materiam praedictus Robertus non dedic ' nec ad eam aliqualit ' respondit sed verification ' illam admittere omnino recusat Unde ut prius pet ' Judic ' de brevi praedict Et quod idem breve cassetur c. Et quia Justic ' hic se advisari volunt de super praemissis priusquam Judic ' inde reddant dies dat' est partibus praedict ' hic usque à die sancti Michaelis in tres Septimanas de audiendo inde Judicio suo eo quod Justic ' hic inde nondum c. Prynne versus Sloughter IN a Scire facias upon a Judgment recovered in Trinity Term Anno 19 Car. 2. nuper Regis in this Court against William Wormell Esq in 200 l Debt to warn the Tertenants of the said Wormell if they could shew any thing why Execution should not be c. which was directed to the Sheriffs of London who returned that there were no Tertenants in their Bailywick upon which a Testatum scire fac ' went to the Sheriff of Norfolk to warn the Tertenants there and the Sheriff returned the said Sloughter Tenant of a Messuage c. which the said Wormell was seised of at the time of the Judgment and that there was no other Tertenants in balliva sua Sloughter appeared and demanded Iudgment of the Writ of Scire fac ' quia dicit quod diu ante emanationem ejusdem brevis tempore emanationis inde quidam Geo. Underhill Jer. White were and still are seised of two Messuages c. in Thames Ditton in the County of Surry ultra praeter Tenementa praedict ' in retorno ejusdem brevis de Scire fac ' superius specificat ' of which the said Wormell was seised c. Unde ex quo praed ' Georgius Jeremias non summon ' fuer ' nec in eodem brevi de Scire fac ' nominat ' nec in praedict ' retorno inde retornat ' tenentes c. idem Sloughter petit Judicium de brevi illo quod idem breve cassetur To this Plea the Plaintiff demurred and Serjeant Pemberton Argued that it was no Plea in Scire fac ' to say that there were Tertenants in another County than where the Scire sacias was brought tho' it might be if the Tenants were in the same County Especially this Plea is not to be admitted since the Statute of 16 17 Car. 2. c. 5. which was made to prevent delay of Execution upon Judgments Statutes and Recognizances and Enacts that when any Judgment c. shall be extended the same shall not be delayed or avoided by occasion that any part of the Lands and Tenements extendible axe or shall be omitted out of such Exten● saving the Remedy for Contribution against such persons as shall have any of the Lands extendible Which Statute was at first temporary and made perpetual by 22 23 Car. 2. cap. 2. The Court were of Opinion that as to the Matter of the Plea that it might be pleaded And when one Tertenant is Returned summoned upon a Scire fac ' he may plead that there are other Tertenants tho' in another County and this will put the Plaintiff to take out a Scire facias against them Vid. for that the Lady Greshams Case Mo. 429. and Clarke and Hardwick's Case Mo. 524. Vid. Dy. 331. B. semble Cont. In a Scire fac ' for a Tertenant in the nature of an Audita Querela it was held that the Tertenant returned Could not plead there was another Tertenant not warned Vid. 1 Roll. Rep. 57. Holland and Lee it seems to be made a Doubt But the whole Court held that such Matter might be pleaded and the Statute of 22 23 Car. 2. does not extend to this Case for that is when an Extent is executed and the Tertenant brings an Audita querela he shall not drive the Plaintiff to extend anew but the Extent shall stand and he shall have Contribution against the rest But the Pleading in this Case was altogether ill and insufficient for it is pleaded in Abatement of the Writ which it ought not to be but he should have demanded Iudgment si ipse ad breve praed ' in forma praed ' retorn ' respondere compelli debeat and so is the Conclusion in Jefferson and Dawson's Case 2 Sand. 23. and in Clarke's Case in Mo. 524. And then he sheweth that the said George and Jeremy were not summoned nec in eodem brevi de Scire fac ' nominat ' nec in eodem retorno retornat ' which is naught for the Sheriff of Norfolk could not summon or return those Tenants being in another County But then it was shewn on the part of the Defendant that the Record of the Scire fac ' was wrong for it was tituled Alias prout patet Term ' Sancti Michaelis ultimo praeterito and then sets forth a
legalis monet ' Angl ' praed ' vicesimo octavo die Aprilis devenisset Decoctor Anglicè a Bankrupt infra Statut ' fact ' And became a Bankrupt contra Decoctores Anglice Bankrupts Et Jur ' praedict ' ulterius super Sacrum ' suum praed ' dicunt quod Termino Paschae anno regni dicti domini Regis nunc primo quoddam Judicium recuperac ' in Cur ' And a Judgment recover'd against him for 1000 l domini nostri Regis nunc coram ipso Rege apud Westm ' praed ' habit ' fuer ' pro mille libr ' de debito necnon septuagint ' tribus solid ' quatuor ' denar ' de dampn ' prout per record ' Judic ' praed ' in Cur ' dicti domini Regis coram ipso Rege apud Westm ' remanen ' plenius liquet apparet Et Jur ' praedict ' ulterius super Sacrum ' suum praed ' A Fieri fac ' issued out upon it dicunt quod quoddam breve de Fieri fac ' Jur ' praedict ' modo hic in evidenc ' osten ' super Judicium praed ' ꝑ praefat ' Aliciam Toplady emanat ' prosecut ' fuisset Vic' London ' direct ' per quod quidem breve mandat ' fuit Vic' London quod de bon ' catall ' praed Johannis Toplady in balliva sua Fieri fac ' tam praed ' mille libr ' de debito quam praedict ' septuagint ' tres solid ' quatuor denar ' qui eidem Aliciae in eadem Cur ' coram dicto domino Rege adjudicar ' fuer ' pro dampnis suis quae sustin ' tam occon ' detencon ' debiti illius qui pro misis custag ' suis per ipsum circa Sectam suam in hac parte apposit ' denar ' ill ' habeat ' coram dicto domino Rege apud West ' die lunae prox ' post Crin̄ Ascencon ' Domini ad reddend ' praefat ' Aliciae pro debito dampn ' praedict ' Quod quidem breve de Fieri fac ' postea scilicet vicesimo nono die Aprilis anno ult ' supradict ' deliberat ' fuit per praedict ' Aliciam p̄fat ' And delivered to the Sheriff Benjamino Thorowgood Thomae Kinsey tunc Vic' London existen ' in forma Jur ' exequend ' quodque praedict ' Benjaminus Thorowgood Thomas Kinsey praedict ' Georgius Benson tunc existen ' un ' Servien ' ad Clav ' eorundem Vic' per eor ' Warrant ' super praed ' breve de Fieri fac ' per ordin ' direccon ' praed ' Aliciae postea scilicet eodem vicesimo nono die Aprilir non antea bona catalla in Narr ' ipsor ' Nicholai Sabian ' menconat ' in custod ' ipsor ' A Serjeant at Mace by Order and direction of the Sheriffs seize the Goods in Execution That after seizure and before sale a Prerogative Process issued out against the Goods The Writ found inter verba Benjamini Thomae Kinsey receperunt asportaver ' seisiver ' Et Jur ' praedict ' ulterius super Sacram ' suum praed ' dixer ' quod duran ' tempore quo bon ' catall ' praedict ' sic fuer ' in custod ' praedict ' Vic' ac ante aliquam vendicon ' vel disposicon ' inde fact ' quidam Process vocat ' an Extent extra Cur ' dom ' Regis de Scaccario apud Westm versus praedict ' Johannem Toplady prosecut ' fuisset Tenor cujus quidem ꝓpcess Jur ' praedict ' modo hic in evidence ostens sequitur in haec verba ss Jacobus Secundus Dei gratiâ Angl ' Scot ' Franc ' Hiberniae Rex fidei defensor ' c. Vic' London salutem cum Richardus Holder Edwardus Cooke ambo Mercat ' de Roodlane Richardus Powney Winecooper de Marklane London per scriptum suum obligator ' sigillis suis sigillat ' geren ' dat' septimo die Novembr ' anno regni nostri primo deven'tent ' in nobis quadragint ' libr ' bonae legalis monet ' Angl ' solvend ' ad certum diem p̄terit ' eas nobis nondum solver ' Inquisition found nec solvi fecer ' ut dicitur Cumque per quandam Inquisicon ' indentat ' capt ' apud Guihald ' Civit ' Lond ' scituat ' in Paroch ' sancti Laurentii in veteri Judaismo in Warda de Cheape ejusdem Civitat ' primo die Maij anno regni nostri secundo coram vobis praefat ' Vic' Civit ' The Bankrupt indebted London virtute brevis nostri de extend ' sub sigillo Scaccarii nostri versus praefat ' Ric. Holder vobis direct compert exist per Sacrum Daniel Man al. probor legal hom Civitat praedict ' quod quidam Johannes Toplady de London Vintner praedict ' die caption p̄dict ' Inquisicon indebitat exist praefat ' Richardo Holder in summa Centum sexagint librar bonae legalis monet Angl. pro tant denar debit pro Vin. per eundem Ric. Holder praedict ' Johanni Toplady vendit deliberat Quam quidem summam Centum sexagint librar praedict ' vos praefat ' Vic. dicto die caption Inquisition praedict ' virtute brevis p̄dict ' in manus nostras cap. seisiri fecistis ꝓput per breve praed ' retorn ejusdem pred' Inquisicon eidem brevi annex in Scacc. nostrum certificat ibidem in custod Rememoratoris nostri remanen plenius apparet Nosque de dictis Centum sexagint libr. nobis jam debit omni celeritate qua poter ' satisfieri volen quod est Justum vob praecipimus quod non omitt propter aliquam libertat quin in ead ingred tam per Sacrum proborum legal-hominum de balliva vestra vel aliter per Sacrum testimonium aliquorum proborum legalium hominum de eadem balliva vestra per quos rei veritas melius scire poterit quam omnibus al. viis mediis modis quibus melius sciveritis aut poteritis diligenter Inquir quas terr quae ten cujus annui valoris praedict ' Ad Inquirend ' what Goods and Chattels Lands and Tenements Johannes Toplady habuit in dicta balliva vestra dicto primo die Maij anno regni nostri secundo quo die nobis primo debitor inde devenit seu unquam postea hucusque necnon quae cujusmodi bon catall cujus pretii Ac quae debit credit Specialit denar Sum. praedict ' Johannes Toplady modo habet in dicta balliva vestra eaque omnia singula praedict ' bon catall terr tenementa debit credit Specialit ' And to Extend them in quibuscunque manibus denar Sum. in quorumcunque man jam exist per Sactum praefat proborum legalium hominum diligent appretiari extendi ac in manus nostras capiatis
it could not appear upon the Record but that the Verdict was against the Plaintiff upon the mistake of the Action whereas here it appears upon the Matter at large set forth in the Special Verdict that Judgment was given against the Plaintiffs upon the Merits of of the Cause And the Court were of Opinion that the Plea in Bar was good in this Case but they took the Case of Putt and Royston to be a Case of the same nature For tho' the Issue were General yet in regard of the Averments which in every such Plea there must be it appears to the Court that the Matter was the same as well as here it doth upon the Special Verdict and if it were not the same so that the Plaintiff was barred to the former by mistaking the Nature of his Action the Averment might be traversed Therefore by reason of that Case Adjudged and the Importunity of the Plaintiffs Leave was given by the Court to speak further to the Case the next Term. The Earl of Mountague versus The Lord Preston IN an Action on the Case for the Profits of the Office of Master of the King's Wardrobe the Plaintiff Declared That King Charles the Second in the 23th year of his Reign granted him a Patent to hold the said Office for Life reciting a former Grant thereof to the Earl of Sandwich and the Surrender of that Grant And that the Defendant by colour of a Patent granted to him in the First year of the late King James had entred upon the Office and taken the Profits and had deprived the Plaintiff of the whole benefit and profit of the Office Vpon Not guilty pleaded it came to a Trial at the Bar this Term and it was insisted upon for the Defendant That the Plaintiffs Patent having recited a former Grant that they must prove that Grant to have been surrendred To which it was Answered That if they took advantage of the Recital they must admit all that was recited as well the Surrender as the Grant And of that Opinion was the Court. Then the Defendant produced the Earl of Sandwich's Patent and this the Court held would put the Plaintiff to prove a Surrender And a Surrender was shewn in Evidence accordingly Note It was said in an Action of this Nature that it is not necessary to shew every particular Sum received by the Defendant But it is a good Evidence for the Damage to shew the Profit of the Office communibus annis Anonymus AFter an Extent upon a Statute and a Liberate out of this Court the Writ was Habere fac ' terr' tenementa instead of Liberari facias and it was moved to amend the word Habere in the Writ and to make it Liberari And after divers Motions the Court Ordered the Amendment to be accordingly because it is a Judicial Writ 8 Co. 157. a. 1 Cro. 709. A Writ of Enquiry was awarded to the Sheriffs of London and it was quod Inquirat instead of Inquirant and it was amended Vid. the Case of Walker and Riches 3 Cro. 162. and the Case of Keer and Guyn Hob. 90. but in that Case the Roll was wrong in a very material thing for it was not said in the Elegit the Lands and Tenements of the Defendant Anonymus AN Action of Debt was brought in this Court for a Sum of Money recovered in the Hundred Court and the Defendant was admitted to wage his Law tho' at first the Court doubted Vid. Mo. 276. for a Wager of Law to an Action of Debt brought for an Amercement in a Court Baron Note When the Defendant hath his Hand upon the Book before he is sworn the Plaintiff is to be called and he may be Non-suited The Defendant is to bring his Compurgators but they may be less than Eleven and they are sworn de credulitate Anonymus AN Action was brought for speaking of these words of the Plaintiff He broke my House like a Thief And upon Not guilty pleaded a Verdict was found for the Plaintiff And the Court held the words not to be Actionable Anonymus IN an Action for Words spoken of the Plaintiff in saying He was a Clipper and Coiner After Verdict upon Not guilty pleaded it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that the Words did not charge him with Clipping and Coining of Money and Clipping and Coining might be apply'd to many other things But the Court held the Words to be Actionable in regard of the strong Intendment and such Words are understood by those that heard them to mean Clipping and Coining of Money Anonymus AN Attorney brought an Action for that the Defendant said of him He is a Cheating Knave and not fit to be an Attorney After Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that there was no Communication of his Profession and the Words did not necessarily relate to his Practice But the Court held the Action would lye for saying That he was not fit to be an Attorney shewed plainly that Cheating Knave had reference to that Anonymus UPon a Motion for a New Trial it appeared that the Solicitor for the Plaintiff who also was an Attorney had wrote two Letters to two of the Jury before the Trial importuning them to Appear and setting forth the Hardships that his Client had suffered in the Cause and how he had Verdicts for his Title The Court set aside the Trial for this Cause and Committed the Solicitor to the Fleet for this Misdemeanor being Embracing of a Jury and before his Discharge made him pay Ten pounds to the party towards the Charges of the Trial. Pretious versus Robinson THe Cause being at Issue in Hillary Term last a Venire was awarded and a Jury Retorned upon it and in Easter Term after another Venire was awarded and a Trial was by a Jury Returned upon the two Venire's Vpon this the Court set aside the Verdict for there was no Authority for the two Venire's so all the Proceedings thereupon are void and not aided by the Statute of 16 Car. 2. Cooke versus Romney AN Action of Covenant was brought against two and it was quod teneat conventionem instead of teneant and after a Writ of Error brought it was moved that it might be amended and made teneant It was Objected That False Latin in an Original could not be amended as hos breve for hoc breve so in Waste destrictionem for destructionem Blackamore's Case 8 Co. But the Court granted the Motion and ordered the Amendment And it was said of late days it had been done in case of a word Mistaken in an Original as in Ejectment divisit for dimisit Vid. in Blackamore's Case the like 159. b. Imaginavit for imaginatus est was amended Anonymus IN Trover and Conversion for a Mare Vpon Not guilty pleaded and a Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that the Mare was said ad valentiam and it should have been pretii Sed non
Pollexfen Chief Justice was of Opinion that it ought to have been shewn in the Declaration that the Racks were set up and fixed But the other Justices conceived that it should be intended that they were Racks fixed for use in the Stable and it would be very remote to give it any other Construction And so Judgment was given for the Plaintiff Anonymus IN an Ejectment it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that the Plaintiff had declared of two Demises viz. That J. S. demised 10 Acres of Land to him an that J. N. had demised 10 other Acres of Land to him habend ' for the Term of Five years c. and that he entred into the Premisses demised to him by J. S. and J. N. in forma praedict ' After Verdict upon Not guilty for the Plaintiff it was Objected That in one of the Demises there is no certain Term or Estate for the habend ' can be referred only to the Demise of J.S. for that begins a New sentence But the Court held that the Habend ' should be a good Limitation of both Demises for Five years and when 't is shewn that the Plaintiff entred into the Premisses demised to him in forma praedict ' that is an Averment that all was demised for Five years for that is the forma paed ' As Lands lett to A. for his life Remainder to B. in forma praed ' this is an Estate to B. for Life And so Judgment was given for the Plaintiff Anonymus IN an Action upon the Statute of Hue and Cry it was after Verdict moved in Arrest of Judgment that in the Recital of the Statute there were Variances from the Statute and Omissions First There was no mention of Burning of Houses in the Recital but that is in the Statute Non allocatur For 't is not necessary to set forth more in the Declaration than is pertinent to the Action Secondly The Statute is That the Country should answer for the Bodies of the Malefactors and the Recital is Quod patria respondeat ꝓ Malefactoribus the sense of which is That the Country should stand in their stead whereas the meaning of the Statute is That they should produce their Persons Sed non allocatur For as it is in the Recital of the Declaration it well answers the sense of the Statute Anonymus IN an Action of Trespass quare Clausum fregit and digging up and carrying away of his Trees It appeared upon the Evidence That the Defendant had entred into the Plaintiffs Close and digged up several Roots of his Trees and removed them to a place on the same Ground about two yards distance off And the Question was Whether this were such a Carrying away as that the Plaintiff should have full Costs or only Costs according to the late Statute where the Damages are under 40 s as was in this Case Pollexfen Chief Justice and Rokeby Powell absente were of Opinion that the Plaintiff was to have full Costs because the Roots were carried from the place where they were digged tho' not removed off from the Ground and they said that it had been adjudged Felony to take and removed things with an intent to steal them tho' laid at a small distance from the place and not carried out of the House or the like Ventris conceived That the taking of the Roots and laying them a little way off in the same man's Ground could not be taken as an asportavit and it differed from the Case of Stealing for taking Goods as a Thief is the Felony and it doth not lye in the carrying them off but in the Felonious intent in the taking But by the Opinion of the other two of the Plaintiff had his full Costs Anonymus IT was moved for a Prohibition to the Ecclesiastical Court to stay a Suit for Dilapidations by the Successor against the Executor of the former Incumbent upon the late General Act of Pardon for that all Suits for Offences of Incest Simony or Dilapidations are excepted in the Act unless commenced and depending before such a Day viz. the 20th day of March last and this Suit was commenced since The whole Court upon Hearing of Counsel at the Bar and Consideration of the Matter conceived that the Parliament never intended to take away the Successors Remedy for Dilapidations for that would be to ease the Executor of the last Incumbent who was the Wrong-doer and translate the Charge to the Successor But they would intend this Exception of such Suits as might be in the Ecclesiastical Court ex Officio against the Dilapidator himself to punish it as a Crime against the Ecclesiastical Law and to pardon it unless there were Prosecution before the Day aforesaid And so the Prohibition was denied Nota If a Sheriff of a County in a City be in Contempt the Attachment is to go to the Coroner and not to the Mayor or Chief Officer of the Corporation in such City or Town And if the Offender be out of his Office the Attachment shall be directed to the New Sheriff Gawden versus Draper IN an Action of Covenant the Plaintiff declared upon a Deed of Covenant by Indenture made between the Defendant and him whereby the Defendant Covenanted with the Plaintiff That Sarah Wife of the Defendant should be permitted to live separate from the Defendant until the Defendant and the said Sarah by Writing under their several Hands attested by two Witnesses should give notice to each other that they would again Cohabit And further Covenanted That he the Defendant during the Coverture and until such Notice should be given of their desires to Cohahit as aforesaid would pay to the Plaintiff for the Maintenance of the said Sarah 300 l per Annum at four Quarterly payments and sets forth That the said Sarah form the Date of the said Indenture to the time of the said Suit did live separate from the Defendant and no notice of Cohabitation as aforesaid had been given during that time of either side And for 75 l for one Quarters payment of the said 300 l which was to be paid at our Lady-day last the Action is brought The Defendant pleads in Bar That after the Indenture aforesaid and before the Action brought another Indenture was made between the Defendant and the said Sarah his Wife of the one part and the Plaintiff of the other part which the Defendant ꝓfert hic in Cur ' reciting the said first Indenture and further reciting That the Defendant and the said Sarah did then intend to Cohabit and did at that time Cohabit and expressing that it was the true intent and meaning of all the said parties to the said Indenture produced ut supra by the Defendant That so long as the Defendant and the said Sarah should agree to Cohabit the said Annual payment should cease And the Plaintiff did by the said last mentioned Indenture by the appointment of the said Sarah as appointed by her being party thereunto and her Signing Sealing and
ipse paratus est verificare Quam quidem materiam praedicta Priscilla non dedic ' nec ad eam aliqualit ' respondit set verificacon ' illam admittere omnino recusavit ut prius per ' Judic ' quod praed ' Priscilla ab accone sua praed ' versus eum habend ' praecludatur c. Et quia Justic ' hic se advisare volunt de super p̄missis praed ' priusquam Judic ' inde reddant dies dat' est partibus praed ' hic usque à die Sancti Michaelis in tres Septimanas de audiendo inde Judicio suo eo quod idem Justic ' hic nondum inde c. Priscilla Web Widow versus Moore THe Plaintiff Declared in an Action upon the Case upon Five several Promises one whereof was upon a Quantum meruit for finding Meat and Drink for the Defendant at his Request The Defendant pleaded in Bar an Outlawry of the Plaintiff in this manner viz. Quod quidam S.C. al' scilicet Termino Sanctae Trinitat ' anno regni nuper Regis Jacobi secundi tertio implacitavit p̄d ' Priscillam in Cur ' dicti nuper Regis de Banco hic de placito trangres praedict ' quae Priscilla pro eo quod non venit in praedict ' Cur ' de B. praed ' praefat ' S. C. inde responsur ' secundum legem consuetud ' hujus regni Angl ' in Exigendo posita fuit ad utlagand ' in Com' Wiltes ' ea ratione postea scilicet quinto decimo die Maij anno regni dicti nuper Regis quarto in Com' Wiltes ' praed ' debito juris modo ad Sectam praed ' S. C. waviata fuit adhuc waviata existit prout per recordum processum inde eadem Cur ' dicti nuper de Banco praed retornat ' modo residens plen ' liquet Quae quidem Utlagaria adhuc in suis robore effectu remanet minime reversat ' seu annihilat ' hoc parat ' est verificare per Recordum illud unde pet ' Judicium si action ' c. And to this Plea the Plaintiff Demurred 1. For the Outlawry could not be pleaded in Bar to an Assumpsit upon a Quantum meruit for there is no certainty of Debt appearing till the thing comes to be valued and so cannot be forfeited It was doubted Whether Debt upon a Simple Contract was forfeited till 4 Co. Slade's Case But it was Resolved by the Court in this Case that the Outlawry was a good Plea in Bar for the Consideration created a Debt tho' that Debt was not reduced to a certain Sum. Markham and Pitt in 3 Leon. 205. Outlawry pleaded in Bar to Trover where it lies all in Damages But this Action arose upon a property of Goods which would have been forfeited 3 Leon. 197. where the King had granted all Forfeitures that accrued to him by the Outlawry of J. S. and the Grantee brought an Action But an Exception was taken to the pleading of the Outlawry for it ought to have been set forth that the Plaintiff did not appear upon the Exigent and upon that waviata fuit debito juris modo is too general Fitzherb Account 91. Traverse 31. Stamford 148. And of this the Court doubted and appointed to search Presidents of the Pleading Et Adjornatur Kempe versus Cory al' Quod vide ante ultimo Termino THe Case was now moved again and as to the Matter in Law it was held clear that where A. is seised of a Third part in Common and B. of the other two parts in Common with A. and A. let his Third part reserving Rent and B. puts in his Cattle or a Stranger by his License that such Cattle are not Distrainable for the Rent But the Doubt was because the Avowry was in loco in quo ut in super praedict ' tertiam partem c. Whether the Plaintiff should not have traversed the Taking in tertia parte tantum Vide the Case of Newman and Moor in Hob. 80. 103. And note there that the Traverse was held unnecessary And the Court held clearly that it would have been impertinent to make a Traverse in this Case for the Matter in the Avowry was confessed and avoided CASES Adjudged upon Writs of ERROR IN THE Exchequer Chamber Termino Sancti Michaelis Anno 1 W. M. BY Pollexfen Chief Justice Powell Justices Rokeby Justices Ventris Justices Atkyns Chief Baron Nevill Barons Lechmore Barons Turton Barons Willows versus Lydcot VPon a Writ of Error upon a Iudgment in Ejectment in B.R. which was brought for a Messuage in St. Martins in the Fields Vpon the General Issue pleaded and a Special Verdict found the Point was to this effect William Shelton was seised in Fee of the said Messuage and of dvers other Messuages situate in the said Parish of St. Martin and other Parishes and made his Will in Writing and thereby Devised his Houses in the other Parishes to divers Charitable Vses and then devised to one Edward Harris and Mary his Wife the Messuage in question for their Lives and then in the following Clause the better to enable his Wsfe to pay his Legacies he devised all his Messuages Lands Tenements and Hereditaments whatsoever within the Kingdom of England not above disposed of to have and to hold to her and her Assigns for ever and made her Executrix And the Verdict was found That Edward Harris and Mary his Wife were dead and that the Testator left sufficient to his Wife to pay his Legacies without the Reversion of the said Messuages devised to Harris and his Wife That the Lessor of the Plaintiff was Heir at Law to the Testator and that the Defendants claimed from Anne Wife of the Testator c. si super totam materiam c. And Judgment was given in the Kings Bench for the Plaintiff And upon a Writ of Error brought in the Exchequer-Chamber it was this Term Argued before the Justices and Barons and by the Opinion of them all the Judgment was Reversed For they held that there were words in the Devise to the Testators Wife that would carry the Reversion of this House as an Hereditament undis●o●d of Vide the Case of Wh●eler and Walroon in Allen's Rep. 28. one having a Mannor and other Lands in Somerset-shire Devised the Mannor to A. for Six years and part of the other Lands to B. in Fee and then comes this Clause and the rest of my Lands in Somersetshire or elsewhere I give to my Brother and it was adjudged by the word Rest the Reversion of the Mannor passed as well as the Lands not Devised before A Case about 20 years ago was cited by the Counsel for the Defendant in the Writ of Error between Bowyer and Milbanke in a Borough where a Nuncupative Will would pass Lands by the Custom a man upon his Death-Bed being asked about his Will said I Give All to my Mother and repeated the
praedict ' that upon the 24th of November aforesaid a Writ of Extendi facias was awarded to the Sheriffs of London against the said Calvert for the said Debt of 5000 l commanding him to Enquire per Sacramentum proborum legalium hominum c. what Goods Chattels Debts Specialties Sums of Money c. the said Calvert then had and to extend and seise them into the Kings hands in whole hands soever they then were that the King might be thereout satisfied of the said Debt juxta formam Statuti pro hujusmodi deb ' dicti domini Regis recuperand ' Which Writ was Returnable the 26th of the said November and upon the 24th was delivered to the then Sheriffs of London who upon the 25th day of the said November by virtue of the said Writ took an Inquisition per Sacramentum c. by which it was found that the said Defendant Cramlington upon the 24th of the said November was indebted to the said Calvert in 500 l for Money received by him to the use of the said Calvert and that the Defendant made a Bill of Exchange dated the 10th of the said November directed to the said Ryder to pay to the said Price to the use of the said Calvert the Sum of 500 l and that the same was due to the said Calvert at the time of the Inquisition taken and that the said Sheriffs did thereupon seise the Debt and Bill of Exchange into the Kings hands secundum exigentiam brevis praedict ' and Returned the said Writ and Inquisition c. into the Exchequer prout per Recordum c. plenius apparet by virtue of which the King became lawfully entituled to the said 500 l and Bill of Exchange aforesaid And the Defendant further saith That afterwards scilicet the 9th of December Anno primo c. a Writ of Extendi facias was awarded out of the said Court of Exchequer against the said Defendant Cramlington for the said 500 l and thereupon be paid the said 500 l upon the 15th day of January Anno primo supradictio to the use of the King in plena exoneratione satisfactione praedict ' ult ' mentionat ' brevis de extendi fac ' praedict ' Billae excambij summae quingent ' librarum per Inquisitionem praed ' sic ut praefertur compertum c. and concludes with Averments viz. That he the Defendant Cramlington is the same so named with him in the Extent and that the 500 l the Bill of Exchange c. in the Inquisition found are the same with them mentioned in the Declaration c. and so demands Iudgment of the Action To this Plea the Plaintiffs Demurred And after divers Arguments Judgment was given in the Kings-Bench for the Plaintiffs in Easter Term in the first year of King William and Queen Mary And now it came to be Argued upon a Writ of Error in the Exchequer Chamber First It was alledged for Error that the Custom is laid so general viz. not only to extend to Merchants but all others so that it must be at the Common Law if to be allowed at all Sed non allocatur For in the Case of Sarsfield and Witherly lately Adjudged it was Resolved That a person not being a Merchant drawing a Bill of Exchange was bound according to the Vsage of it amongst Merchants and in Declarations upon Bills of Exchange the whole Matter is to be set forth specially Secondly There was as appears by the Bill of Exchange 25 Day given for the payment of it after the Date of the Bill whereas here the Request and Refusal is upon the 25th day after the Date Sed non allocatur For as the Bill is set forth it is to pay the Money ad viginti quinque dies post datum and this can't be if not paid at the Five and twentieth day Thirdly The Matter chiefly insisted upon for Error was That the 500 l was appointed to be paid to Price for the use of the Calvert so the right and interest of the Money was in Calvert by whomsoever it should be received and then it might well be seised for the Debt which Calvert did owe to the King But the Court held that the Seisure for the King ought not to have been in this case 1. For that tho' it were to be paid for Calvert's use yet this was but a Trust and the Right of the Money was in Price As if Goods be given to A. to the use of B. the property of the Goods is in A. Otherwise if Money be delivered to A. to pay to B. there the Right of the Money is in B. and he may bring an Action of Debt 2. Here the Bill is Endorsed over to be paid to the Plaintiffs before any Seisure or the Writ of Extent was issued forth and the Custom is expresly laid that an Endorsment might be as in the Case here which Custom is confessed and that determines the Right and Interest in the Money of him that makes the Endorsment and puts it in the Plaintiffs Wherefore the Judgment was affirmed Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 2 W. M. In Scaccario Burchett versus Durdant IN a Writ of Error upon a Iudgment in an Ejectment in the Kings-Bench where the Plaintiff Mary Durdant declared upon the Demise of William Durdant of two Messuages 100 Acres of Land c. in Chobham in the County of Surrey Vpon Not guilty the Jury gave a Special Verdict That Henry Wicks was seised in Fee of the Premisses and by his Will in writing dated the 6th of June 1657. be Devised in the words following Viz. I give to my Cousin John Higden and his Heirs during the Life only of Robert Durdant my Kinsman all those my Messuages c. in Chobham in the County of Surrey upon this Trust and Confidence That he the said John Higden and his Heirs shall permit and suffer the said Robert Durdant during his Life to have and receive the Rents and Profits thereof which shall yearly grow due and payable he the said Robert committing no Waste And from and after the Decease of Robert Durdant then do I give the said Lands and Premisses in Chobham unto the Heirs Males of the Body of him the said Robert Durdant now living and to such other Heirs Male and Female as he shall hereafter happen to have of his Body and for want of such Heirs then to the use and behoof of my Cousin Gideon Durdant and the Heirs of his Body and for want of such Heirs the same to be and remain to the right Heirs of me the said Henry Wicks They find that Wicks died the 2d of December 14 Car. 2. seised as aforesaid and that John Higden entred and was seised prout lex postulat and by Deed bearing date the 1st of Jan. 14 Car. 2. reciting the said Will and that the said Robert Durdant and Gideon Durdant had Contracted with the said John Higden for the sale of the said
and that Isaack Knight his Executor took a Capias thereupon out of the Common-Pleas Now it being a Statute-Merchant it ought first to have been certified into the Chancery and from thence a Capias should be issued out Returnable in the Court of Common-Pleas And so the Statute of Acton Burnel 30 Ed. 3. Enacts and so is Fitz. N.B. 130. whereas here the Capias goes out of the Common Pleas and for ought appears was the first step towards the execution of this Statute for it doth not appear that it was ever certified or that the Court had any Record before them to award this Capias upon and so the Execution is quite in another manner than the Statute provides and in a new Case introduced by the Statute and therefore it seems to be void and if so then the Statute of Knight could not be assigned so as to pass the Interest of it to Edward Lewis and the Fines will have no effect upon it and indeed it puts it clean out-of the Case before us as if it had never been acknowledged and the Interest of that Statute must be still in the Executor of Knight But then admitting it to have been extended and consequently well assigned together with Gerrard's Statute to Edward Lewis if so I take it to be drowned in Gerrard's Extent As to that the Case is no more than this that after the Statute is extended there comes another Extent upon a puisne Statute for 't is found that Gerrard's Statute was extended after Knight's Statute whether the Estate by Extent upon the puisne Statute be in the nature of a Reversional Interest for if so then when the Interest of the first Extent and the latter comes into one person the first must be drowned for an Estate for years or other Chattel Interest will merge in a Chattel in Reversion that is immediately expectant And that is Hughes and Robotham's Case in the 1 Cro. 302. pl. 32. If a Lease for years be made and then the Reversion is granted for years with Attornment the Lessee may surrender to the Grantee and the Term will drown in the Reversion for years To which it is Objected That an Extent is rather in the nature of a Charge upon the Land than an Interest or Estate in the Land it self In the Case of Haydon and Vavasor versus Smith in Mo. 662. an Extent is thus described that it is onus reale inhaerens gremio liberi tenementi tout temps Executory as the words of that Book are If the Tenant by an Extent purchase the Inheritance of part of the Lands extended the whole falls So a release of the Debt will immediately determine the Extent and it has been compared to one that enters into Lands by virtue of a power to hold until the arrear of Rent is satisfied It is true an Extent is an Execution given by the Statute Law for the satisfaction of a Debt and therefore the release of the Debt must determine the Estate by Extent because the Foundation of it is removed and so if the Inheritance of part of the Land extended comes to the Conusee it destroys the whole Extent whereas if a Lessee for years purchaseth the Reversion of part the Lease holds for the rest But in case of an Extent if it should be so the Conusee would hold the residue of the Land longer because the Profits that should go in satisfaction of the Debt must be less and this would be to the wrong of him in the Reversion But in other respects an Extent makes an Estate in the Land and hath all the properties and Incidents of and to an Estate and doth in no sort resemble such an Interest as is only a Charge upon the Land An Interest by Extent is a new Species of an Estate introduced by Statute Law Our Books say that 't is an Estate treated in imitation of a Freehold and quasi a Freehold but no Book can be produced that says that 't is quasi an Estate The Statute of 27 Ed. 3. cap. 9. Enacts That he to whom the Debt is due shall have an Estate of Freehold in the Lands and the Statute of 13 Ed. 1. de Morcatoribus say That he shall have Seisin of all the Lands and Tenements When a Statute is extended it turns the Estate of the Conisor into a Reversion and so are the express words in Co. 1 Inst 250. b. and so the Objection That he does not hold by Fealty is answered and there are no Tenures that are to no purpose but he that enters by virtue of a power to hold till satisfied an Arrear of Rent he leaves the whole Estate in the Owner of the Land and not a Reversion only If a Lease for years be made reserving Rent and then the Lessor acknowledge a Statute which is extended the Conisee after the Extent shall have an Action of Debt for the Rent and distrain and avow for the Rent as in Bro. tit Stat. Merch. 44. and Noy fo 74. but he that enters by a Power to hold for an Arrear of Rent shall not He in Reversion may release to the Tenant by Extent which will drown the Interest and emerge his Estate according as it is limited in the Release Co. 1 Inst 270. b. 273. Tenant by Statute may forfeit by making a Feoffment Mo. 663. He is to Attorn to the grant of the Reversion 1 Roll. 293. and is liable to a Quid juris clamat 7 H. 4. 19. b. Tenant by Extent may surrender to him in Reversion 4 Co. 82. Corbet's Case therefore these Cases are to shew That an Extended Interest makes an Estate in the Lands as much as any Demise or Lease And I take it the consequence of that is That when an Estate by Extent is evicted by an Extent upon a prior Statute as Elwaies and Burroughs Extent was by the Extent of Knight's Statute or where the prior Statute is first extended and then a Statute of later date is extended as Gerrard's Statute is found to be extended after the Extent upon Knight's Statute In both these Cases the Extent upon the puisne Statute will be in the nature of a Reversional Interest A Reversion is every where thus described viz. An Estate to take effect in possession after another Estate determined 'T is not in nature of a future Interest as a Term for years limited to commence after the end of a former Term for such an one shall not have the Rent upon a former Lease as I have shewn before but he that extends upon a Lessee for years shall for the Liberate gives a present Interest to hold ut liberum tenementum but indeed cannot take effect in possession by reason of a prior Extent or by prior Title And this is the very case of a Reversion which is an actual present Interest tho' it be to take effect in possession after another Estate Now I conceive it will plainly follow from this That Knight's Statute is drowned in Gerrard's