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A33627 Certain select cases in law reported by Sir Edward Coke, Knight, late Lord Chief Justice of England ... ; translated out of a manuscript written with his own hand, never before published ; with two exact tables, the one of the cases, and the other of the principal matters therein contained.; Reports. Part 13. English Coke, Edward, Sir, 1552-1634. 1659 (1659) Wing C4909; ESTC R1290 92,700 80

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all the mean profits from the time of the erroneous Iudgment given until the Iudgment in the Writ of Error so as the Reversal hath a Retrospect to the first Iudgment as if no Iudgment had been given And therefore the Case in 4 H. 7. 10. b. the case is A. seised of Land in Fee was attainted of High Treason and the King granted the Land to B. and afterwards A. committed Trespass upon the Land and afterwards by Parliament A. was restored and the Attainder made voyd as if no Act had been and shall be as available and ample to A. as if no Attainder had been and afterwards B. bringeth Trespass for the Trespass Mesue and it was adjudged in 10 H. 7. fo 22. b. That the Action of Trespass was not maintainable because that the Attainder was disaffirmed and annulled ab initio And in 4 H. 7. 10. it is holden That after a Iudgment reversed in a Writ of Error he who recovered the Land by Erroneous Iudgment shall not have an Action of Trespass for a Trespass Mean which was said was all one with the principal case in 4 H. 7. 10. and divers other Cases were put upon the same ground It was secondly objected That the Wife could not have a Petition because there was not any Office by which her title of Dower was found scil her marriage the seisin of her Husband and death for it was said that although she was marryed yet if her Husband was not seised after the age that she is Dowable she shall not have Dower as if a man seised of Land in Fee taketh to Wife a woman of eight years and afterwards before her age of nine years the Husband alieneth the Lands in Fee and afterwards the woman attaineth to the age of nine years and the Husband dyeth it was said that the woman shall not be endowed And that the title of him who sueth by Petition ought to be found by Office appeareth by the Books in 11 H. 4. 52. 29 Ass 31. 30 Ass 28. 46 E. 3. bre 618. 9 H. 7. 24. c. As to the first Objection it was resolved That the Wife should be endowed and that the Fine with proclamations was not a bar unto her and yet it was resolved that the Act of 4 H. 7. cap. 24. shall bar a woman of her Dower by a Fine levyed by her Husband with proclamations if the woman doth not bring her Writ of Dower within five years after the death of her Husband as it was adjudged Hill 4 H. 8. Rot. 344. in the Common Pleas and 5 Eliz. Dyer 224. For by the Act the right and title of a Feme Covert is saved so that she take her action within 5. years after she become uncovert c. but it was resolved That the wife was not to be ayded by that saving for in respect of the said Attainder of her Husband of Treason she had not any right of Dower at the time of the death of her Husband nor can she after the death of her Husband bring an Action or prosecute an Action to recover her Dower according to the direction and saving of the said Act But it was resolved That the Wife was to be ayded by another former Saving in the same Act viz. And saving to all other persons scil who were not parties to the Fine such action right title claym and interest in or to the said Lands c. as shall first grow remain descend or come to them after the said Fine ingrossed and proclamations made by force of any Gift in Tail or by any other cause or matter had and made before the said Fine levied so that they take their Actions and pursue their right and Title according to the Law within five years next after such Action Right Claim Title or Interest to them accrued descended fallen or come c. And in this case the Action and right of Dower accrued to the wife after the reversall of the Attainder by reason of a Title of Record before the Fine by reason of the seisin in Fee had and the Marriage made before the Fine levied according to the ●●●ention and meaning of the said Act. And as to the said po●●t of Relation It was resolved That sometimes by construction of Law a thing shall relate ab initio to some intent and to some intent not For Relatio est fictio Juris to do a thing which was and had essence to be adnulled ab initio betwixt the same parties to advance a Right or Ut res magis valeat quam pereat But the Law will never make such a construction to advance a wrong which the Law abhorreth Or to defeat Collaterall Acts which are lawfull and principally if they do concern Strangers And this appeareth in this Case scil when an erroneous Iudgment is reversed by a Writ of Error For true it is as it hath been said That as unto the mean Profits the same shall have relation by construction of Law untill the time of the first Iudgment given and that is to favour Iustice and to advance the right of him who hath wrong by the erroneous Iudgment But if any stranger hath done a Trespasse upon the Land in the mean time he who recovereth after the Reversall shall have an Action of Trespasse against the Trespassors and if the Defendant pleadeth that there is no such Record the Plaintiff shall shew the speciall matter and shall maintain his Action so as unto the Trespassors who are wrong Doers the Law shall not make any construction by way of relation ab initio to excuse them for then the Law by a fiction and construction should do wrong to him who recovereth by the first Iudgment And for the better apprehending of the Law on this point it is to know That when any man recovers any possession or seisin of Land in any Action by erroneous Iudgment and afterwards the Iudgment is reversed as is said before and upon that the Plaintiff in the Writ of Error shall have a Writ of Restitution and that Writ recites the first recovery and the reversall of it in the Writ of Error is that the Plaintiff in the Writ of Error shall be restored to his possession and seisin Una cum exitibus thereof from the time of the Iudgment c. Tibi praecipimus quod eadem A. ad plenariam seisinam tenementorum praedict cum pertinentiis sine dilatione restitui facias per sacramentum proborum legalium hominum de Com. suo diligenter inquires ad quantum exitus proficua tenementorum illorum cum pertinentiis a tempore falsi Judicii praedict reddit usque ad Oct. Sanct. Mich. anno c. quo die judcium illud per praefat Justiciar nostros revocat fuit se attingunt juxta verum valorem eorundem eadem exitus proficua de terris catallis praedict B. in baliva tua fieri facias denarios inde praefato A. pro exitibus et proficuis
suam c. succidit for Custom hath fixed it to his Estate against the Lord and the Copyholder in this case hath as great an interest in the Timber Trees as he hath in his Messuage which he holdeth by Copy and if the Lord breaketh or destroyeth the House without question the Copyholder shall have an Action of Trespass against his Lord Quare Domum fregit and by the same Reason for the Timber Trees which are annexed to the Land and which he may take for the Reparation of his Copyhold Messuage and without which the Messuage cannot stand Trinit 40 Eliz. Rot. 37. in the Kings-Bench between Stebbing and Grosener The custom of the Mannor of Netherhall in the County of Suffolk was that every Copyholder might lop the Pollengers upon his Copyhold pro ligno combustibili c. And the Lord of the Mannor cut down the Pollingers being upon the Plaintiffs Copy-hold upon which he brought his Action upon the case because that the lops of the Trees in such case did belong to the Copyholder and they were taken by the Lord. See Taylors case in the fourth part of my Reports 30 and 31. and see 5 H. 4 2. Guardian in Knight-service who hath Custodiam terrae shall have an Action of Trespass for cuting down the Trees against the Heir who hath the inheritance Vide 2 H. 4. 12. A Copyholder brought an Action of Trespass Quare clausum fregit arbores succidit and see 2 E. 4. 15. A Servant who is commanded to carry goods to such a place shall have an Action of Trespass or Appeal 1 H. 6. 4. 7 H. 4. 15. 19 H. 6. 34. 11 H. 4. 28. It after taking the goods the owner hath his goods again yet he shall have a general Action of Trespass and upon the evidence the damages shall be mitigated so is the better Opinion in 11 H. 4. 23. That he who hath a special property of the goods at a certain time shall have a general Action of Trespass against him who hath the general property and upon the evidence damages shall be mitigated but clearly the Baylee or he who hath a special property shall have a general Action of Trespass against stranger and shall recover all in damages because that he is chargeable over See 21 H. 7. 14. b. acc And it is holden in 4 H. 7. 3. That Tenant at sufferance shall have an Action of Trespass in respect of the possession and if the Defendant plead Not-guilty but he cannot make title 30 H. 6. Trespass 10. 15 H. 7. 2. The King who hath profits of the Land by Out-lawry shall have an Action of Trespass or take goods damage-feasants 35 H. 6. 24. 30 H. 6. Tresp 10. c. Tenant at will shall have an Action of Trespass 21 H. 7. 15. and 11 H. 4. 23. If a man Bayl goods which are taken out of his possession if the Baylee recover in Trespass the same shall be a good Bar to the Baylee 5 H. 4. 2. In a Writ of Waste brought against Tenant for life and assigned the Waste in cutting down of Trees the Defendant pleaded in Bar that the Plaintiff himself cut them and Culpeper the Serjeant of the Plaintiff objected against it that it should be no Plea because the Defendant had not any thing in the Freehold no more then a meer stranger and if a stranger had cut down the same Trees he should be chargeable in Waste Also in this case we should be at a mischief if we should not recover against him for if at another time he bringeth an Action of Trespass against us he shall recover damages against us for the cutting id est for the value of the Trees and yet it was holden by the Court that the same was a good Bar And it was said by the Court that the Plaintiff was not at any mischief in this case for in as much as the Defendant shall have advantage now to discharge himself of Waste against the Plaintiff upon this matter he shall be barred for ever of his Action of Trespass scil to recover the value of the Trees which was the mischief objected by Culpeper But without question he shall have an Action of Trespass Quare clausum fregit for the Entry of the Lessor and for the cutting of the Trees but he shall not recover the value of the Trees because he is not chargeable over but for the special loss which he hath scil for the loss of the Pawnage and of the shadow of the Trees c. See Fitz. Trespass ultimo in the Abridgment And afterwards the same Term Iudgment was given on the principal case for the Plaintiff XXXIV Easter Term 8 Jacobi In the Common-Pleas THe Parishioners of St. Alphage in Canterbury by custom ought to choose the Parish-Clark whom they chose accordingly The Parson of the Parish by coulor of a new Canon made at the Convocation in the _____ year of the King that now is which is not of force to take away any Custom drew the Clark before Doctor Newman Official of the Archbishop of Canterbury to deprive him upon the point of the right of Election and for other causes and upon that it was moved at the Bar to have a Prohibition And upon the hearing of Doctor Newman and himself and his Councel a Prohibition was granted by the whole Court because the party chosen is a meer temporal man and the means of choosing of him scil the custom is also meer temporal so as the Official cannot deprive him but upon occasion the Parishoners might displace him And this Office is like to the Office of a Churchwarden who although they be chosen for two years yet for cause they may displace them as it is holden in 26 H. 8. 5. And although that the execution of the Office concerneth Divine Service yet the Office it self is meer temporal See 3 E. 3. Annuity 30. He who is Clark of a Parish is removable by the Parishioners See 18 E. 3. 27 A gift in tayl was made of the Serjanty or Clarkship of the Church of Lincoln and there adjudged that the Office is temporal and shall not be tryed in the Ecclesiastical Court but in the Kings Court And it is to be known that the deprivation of a man of a temporal Office or place is a temporal thing upon which no Appeal lyeth by the Statute of 25 H. 8. but an Assise as in 4 Eliz. Dyer 209. The President of Magdalen Colledg in Oxford was deprived of the Bishop of Winchester their Visitor He shall not have an Appeal to the Delegates for the Deprivation is temporal and not spiritual but he may have an Assise and therewith agreeth the Book of 8 Ass Siracses Case But if a Dean of a Cathedral Church of the Patronage of the King be deprived before the Commissioners of the King he may appeal to the Delegates within the said Act of 25 H. 8. For a Deanry is a spiritual promotion and not temporal and before
CERTAIN SELECT CASES IN LAVV REPORTED BY Sir EDVVARD COKE Knight LATE Lord CHIEF JUSTICE OF ENGLAND And one of His Majesties Council of STATE Translated out of a Manuscript written with his own hand Never before Published With two Exact Tables the one of the Cases and the other of the Principal Matters therein contained LONDON Printed by Tho. Roycroft for J. Sherley H. Twyford and Tho. Dring and are to be sold at their Shops at the Pelican in Little-Brittain in Vine-Court Middle Temple and at the George in Fleetstreet 1659. TO THE READER READER IT may seem altogether an unnecessary work to say any thing in the praise and vindication of that Person and his Labours which have had no less then the generall approbation of a whole Nation convened in Parliament For if King THEODORICK in Cassiodore could affirme Neque enim dignus est a quopiam redargui qui nostro judicio meretur absolvi That no man ought to be reproved whom his Prince commends How much rather then should men forbear to censure those and their Works which have had the greatest allowance and attestation a Senate could give and to acquiesce and rest satisfied in that judgement Such respect and allowance hath been given to the learned Works of the late Honourable and Venerable Chiefe Justice Sir EDWARD COKE whose Person in his life time was reverenced as an Oracle and his Works since his decease cyted as Authentick Authorities even by the Reverend Judges themselves The acceptance his Books already extant have found with all knowing Persons hath given me the confidence to commend to the publick view some Remains of his under his owne hand-writing which have not yet appeared to the World yet like true and genuine Eaglets are well able to behold and bear the light They are of the same Piece and Woofe with his former Works and in respect of their owne native worth and the reference they bear to their Author cannot be too highly valued Though in respect of their quantity and number the Reports are but few yet as the skilfull Jeweller will not lose so much as the very filings of rich and precious mettals and the very fragments were commanded to be kept where a Miracle had been wrought Propter miraculi claritatem evidentiam So these small parcels being part of those vast and immense labours of their Author great almost to a Miracle if I may be allowed the comparison were there no other use to be made of them as there is very much for they manifest and declare to the Reader many secret and abstruse points in Law not ordinarily to be met with in other Books so fully and amply related deserve a publication and to be preserved in the respects and memories of Learned men and especially the Professors of the Law and to that end they are now brought to light and published If any should doubt of the truth of these Reports of Sir EDWARD COKE they may see the originall Manuscript in French written with his own hand at Henry Twyfords Shop in Vine-Court Middle Temple Farewell J. G. MICH. AN. 6 JACOBI REGIS In the Common Pleas. Willowes Case IN Trespasse brought by Richard Stallon one of the Attorneys of the Court against Thomas Bradye which began in Easter Copyhold Fine reasonable Term An. 6 Jacobi Rot. 1845. for breaking of his House and Close at Fenditton in the County of Cambridge And the new Assignment was in an Acre of Pasture The Defendant pleads that the place where c. was the Land and Freehold of Thomas Willowes and Richard Willowes and that he as Servant c. And the Plaintiff for Replication saith that the place where was parcell of the Mannor of Fenditton and demisable c. by Copy of Court-roll in Fee-simple And that the Lords of the Mannor granted the Tenements in which c. to John Stallon and his heirs who surrendred them unto the said Willowes and VVillowes Lords of the said Mannor to the use of the Plaintiff and his heirs who was admitted accordingly c. The Defendant doth rejoyn and saith That well and true it is that the Tenements in which c. were parcell of the Mannor and demisable c. And the surrender and admittance such pro ut c. But the said Thomas Bradye further saith that the Tenements in which c. at the time of the Admission of the said Richard Stallon were and yet are of the clear yearly value of fifty three shillings and four pence And that within the said Mannor there is such a Custome Quod rationabilis denariorum summa legalis monetae Angliae super quamlibet admissionem cujuslibet personae sive quarumcunque personarum tenent vel tenent per Dom. vel Dominos Manerii praedict sive per Seneschallum c. ad aliquas terras sive Tenementa Customaria Manerii praedict secundum Consuetudinem Manerii illius debetur a tempore quo c. debitum fuit Dom. c. tempore ejusdem admissionis pro sine pro admissione illa quod idem Dominus vel idem Dom. praedict vel Seneschallus suus Curiae ejusdem Manerii pro tempore existen usus fuit vel usi fuerunt per totum Tempus supradict in plena Curia Manerii illius pro Admissione ejusdem personae seu earundum personarum sic facta assidere appunctuare Anglice to Assesse and appoint eandem rationabilem denariorum summam pro fine pro eadem Admissione sic praefertur facta nec non superinde eandem denariorum summam sic assessam appunctuatam praefatae personae sive personis sic admissae sive admissis solveret solverent c. eidem Domino c. praedictam rationabilem denariorum summam pro fine pro Admissione sua praedict sic assessam appunctuat And further saith That the Steward of the said Mannor at a Court holden 1. Octob. in the fourth year of the Reigne of the King that now is admitted the Plaintiff to the Tenements in which c. and assessed and set a reasonable summ of money that is to say five pounds six shillings eight pence that is to say Valorem corundem tenementorum per duos annos non ultra pro fine pro praedict Admissione praedict Richard Stallon to the said Lords of the Mannor to be paid And also the said Steward at the same Court did give notice and signifie to the Plaintiff the said summ was to be paid to the said Lords of the Mannor c. And further saith that the said VVillowes and VVillowes afterwards that is to say the second day of November in the fourth year aforesaid at Fenditton aforesaid requested the said Richard Stallon to pay to them five pounds six shillings eight pence there for the Fine for his admittance c. which the said Rich. Stallon then and there utterly denied and refused and as yet doth refuse By which the said Richard Stallon forfeited to the aforesaid Thomas and Richard
the Feoffee and another is not any new thing but the pernancy of the old profits of the Land which well may be limited to the Feoffee and another joyntly But if the use had been onely limited to the Feoffee and his Heirs there because there is not any limitation to another person nec in praesenti nec in futuro he shall be in by force of the Feoffment And it was resolved That Ioynt-tenants might be seised to an use although that they come to it at several times as if a man maketh a Feoffment in Fee to the use of himself and to such a woman which he shall after marry for term of their lives or in tayl or in fee in this case if after he marryeth a Wife she shall take joyntly with him although that they take the use at several times for they derive the use out of the same fountain and Freehold scil the Feoffment See 17 Eliz. Dyer 340. So if a Disseisin be had to the use of two and one of them agreeth at one time and the other at another time they shall be Ioynt-tenants but otherwise it is of Estates which pass by the common Law and therefore if a Grant be made by deed to one man for term of life the Remainder to the right Heirs of A. and B. in Fee and A. hath issue and dyeth and afterwards B. hath issue and dyeth and then the Tenant for life dyeth in that case the Heirs of A. and B. are not Ioynt-tenants nor shall joyn in a Scire facias to execute the Fine 24 E. 3. Joynder in Action 10. because that although the remainder be limited by one Fine and by joynt words yet because that by the death of A. the Remainder as unto the moyety vested in his Heir and by the death of B. the other moyety vested in his Heir at several times they cannot be Ioynt tenants But in the case of a use the Husband taketh all the use in the mean time and when he marryeth the Wife takes it by force of the Feoffment and the limitation of the use joyntly with him for there is not any fraction and several vesting by parcels as in the other case and such is the difference See 18 E. 3. 28. And upon the whole matter it was resolved That because in the principal case the Father and Son were Ioynt-tenants by the original purchase that the Son having the Land by Survivor should not be in Ward and accordingly it was so decreed XXIV Pasc 39 Eliz. Rot. 233. In the Kings-Bench Collins and Hardings Case THe Case between Collins and Harding was A man seised of Lands in Fee and also of Lands by Copy of Court Roll in Fee according to the Custom of the Mannor made one entire Demise of the Lands in Fee and of the Lands holden by Copy according to the Custom to Harding for years rendering one entire Rent and afterwards the Lessor surrendered the Copyhold Land to the use of Collins and his Heirs and at another time granted by Deed the Reversion of the Freehold Lands to Collins in Fee and Harding attorned and afterwards for the Rent behinde Collins brought an Action of Debt for the whole Rent And it was objected That the reservation of the Rent was an entire contract and by the Act of the Lessee the same cannot be apportioned and therefore if one demiseth three Acres rendering 3 s. Rent and afterwards bargaineth and selleth by Deed indented and inrolled the Reversion of one Acre the whole Rent is gone because that the Contract is entire and cannot be severed by the Act of the Lessor Also the Lessee by that shall be subject to two Fealties where he was subject but to one before As to these points it was answered and resolved That the Contract was not entire but that the same by the Act of the Lessor and the assent of the Lessee might be divided and severed for the Rent is incident to the Reversion and the Reversion is severable and by consequence the Rent also for accessorium sequitur naturam sui principalis and that cannot be severed or divided by the assent of the Lessee or express attornment or implyed by force of an Act of Parliament to which every one is a party as by force of the Statute of Inrolments or of Vses c. And as to the two Fealties to that the Lessee shall be subject although that the Rent shall be extinct for Fealty is by necessity of Law incident to the Reversion and to every part of it but the Rent shall be divided pro rata portionis and so it was adjudged And it was also adjudged That although Collins cometh to the Reversion by several Conveyances and at several times yet he might bring an Action of Debt for the whole Rent Hill 43 Eliz. Rot. 243. West and Lassels Case A man made a Lease for years of certain Lands and afterwards deviseth the Reversion of two parts to one he shall have two parts of the Rent and he may have an Action of Debt for the same and have Iudgment to recover Hill 42 Eliz. Rot. 108. in the Common-Pleas Ewer and Moyls Case The Devisee of the Reversion of part shall avow for part of the Rent and such Avowry shall be good and maintainable Note well these Cases and Iudgments for they are given upon great reason and consideration for otherwise great inconvenience would ensue if by severance of part of the Reversion the entire Rent should be lost and the opinion reported by Serjeant Bendloes in Hill 6 and 7 E. 6. to the contrary nihil valet scil That the Rent in such case shall be lost because that no contract can be apportioned which is not Law For 1. A Rent reserved upon a Lease for years is more then a Contract for it is a Rent-service 2. It is incident to the Reversion which is severable 3. Vpon recovery of part in Waste or upon entry in part for a forfeiture or upon surrender of part the Rent is apportionable 25. Note It was adjudged 19 Eliz. in the Kings-Bench That where one obtained a Prohibition upon Prescription de Modo Decimandi by payment of a certain sum of mony at a certain day upon which Issue was taken and the Iury found the Modus Decimandi by payment of the said sum but that it had been payd at another day and the Case was well debated and at the last it was resolved That no Consultation should be granted for although that the day of payment be mistaken yet it appeareth to the Court that no Tythes in kinde were due for which the suit was in the spiritual Court and the Tryal of the Custom de Modo Decimandi belongeth to the Common Law and a Consultation shall not be granted where the Spiritual Court hath not Iurisdiction of the Cause Tanfield chief Baron hath the Report of this Case XXV Mich. 7 Jacobi Regis IN an Ejectione Firmae the Writ and Declaration were of two parts of
same but they estreat the same into the Exchequer which hath power by the Law to writ forth Proces to the Sheriff to levy the same But if a man be convicted in the Star-Chamber for Forgery upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. that in that case for the double costs and damages that an English Writ shall be made directed to the Sheriff c. reciting the conviction and the Statute for the levying of the said costs and damages of the goods and chattels and profits of the Lands of the Defendant and to bring in the mony into the Court of Star-Chamber and the Writ shall be sealed with the great Seal and the Test of the King For the Statute of 5 Eliz. hath given Iurisdiction to the Court of Star-Chamber and power to give Iudgment amongst other things of the costs and damages which being given by force of the said Act of Parliament by consequence the Court by the Act hath power to grant Execution Quia quando aliquid conceditur ei omnia concedi videntur per quod devenitur ad illud And it was resolved That the giving of the damages to the Plaintiff was begun but of late times and although that one or two Presidents were shewed against this Resolution they being against the Law the Iudges had not any regard to them The like Resolution was in the Case of Langdale in that Court XXXI Hillary Term 7 Jacobi Regis In the Common-Pleas Morse and Webbs Case IN a Replevin brought by John Morse against Robert Webb of the taking of two Oxen the last day of November in the third year of the Reign of the King that now is in a place called the Downfield in Luddington in the County of Worcester The Defendant as Bayliff to William Sherington Gent. made Conusance because that the place where is an Acre of Land which is the Freehold of the said William Sherington and for damage-feasants c. In Bar of which Avowry the Plaintiff said That the said Acre of Land in parcel of Downfield and that he himself at the time and before the taking c. was and yet is seised of two yard Land with the appurtenances in Luddington aforesaid And that he and all those whose Estate he hath in the said two yards of Land time out of minde c. have used to have Common of pasture per totam contentam of the said place called the Downfield whereof c. for four Beasts called Rother Beasts and two Beasts called Horse-beasts and for sixty Sheep at certain times and seasons of the year as to the said two yards Lands with the appurtenances appertaining and that he put in the said two Oxen to use his Common c. And the Defendant did maintain his Avowry and traversed the Prescription upon which the parties were at issue and the Iury gave a special Verdict That before the taking one Richard Morse Father of the said John Morse and now Plaintiff whose Heir he is was seised of the said two yards Lands and that the said Richard Morse c. had the Common of Pasture for the said Cattel per totum contentum of the said Downfield in manner and form as before is alledged and so seised The said Richard Morse in the twentieth year of Queen Elizabeth demised to William Thomas and John Fisher divers parcels of the said two yards Lands to which c. viz. the four Buts of arable with the Common and intercommon to the same belonging for the term of four hundred years by force of which the said William Thomas and John Fisher entered and were possessed and the said Richard so seised dyed thereof seised by which the said two yards Lands in possession and Reversion descended to the said John Morse the now Plaintiff And if upon the whole matter the said John Morse now hath and at the time of the taking c. had Common of Pasture c. for four Beasts called Rother Beasts and two Beasts called Horse-beasts and for sixty Sheep c. as to the said two Acres of Land with the appurtenances belonging in Law or not the Iury prayed the advice of the Court. Note that this Plea began Trin. 5 Jacobi Rot. 1405. And upon Argument at the Bar and at the Bench it was resolved by the whole Court that it ought to be found against the Defendant who had traversed the Prescription For although that all the two years Lands had been demised for years yet the Prescription made by the Plaintiff is true for he is seised in his Demesn as of Fee of the Freehold of the two yards of Land to which c. And without question the Inheritance and Freehold of the Common after the years determined is appendant to the said two yard Lands and therefore clearly the issue is to be found against the Defendant But if he would take advantage of the matter in Law he ought confessing the Common to have pleaded the said Lease but when he traverseth the Prescription he cannot give the same in evidence 2. It was resolved That if the said Lease had been pleaded that the Common during the Lease for years is not suspended or discharged for each of them shall have Common Rateable and in such manner that the Land in which c. shall not be surcharged and if so small a parcel be demised which will not keep one Ox nor a Sheep then the whole Common shall remain with the Lessor so always as the Land in which be not surcharged 3. It was resolved That Common appendant unto Land is as much as to say Common for Cattel levant and couchant upon the Land in which c. So that by the severance of part of the Land to which c. so prejudice can come to the Ter-tenant in which c. 4. See the Case of in the fourth part of my Reports fo was affirmed for good Law and there is no difference when the Prescription is for Cattel levant and couchant and for a certain number of Cattel levant and couchant But when the Prescription is for Common appurtenant to Land without alledging that it is for Cattel levant and couchant there a certain number of the Cattel ought to be expressed which are intended by the Law to be levant and couchant XXXII Hill 7 Jacobi Regis In the Common-Pleas Hughes and Crowthers Case IN a Replevin between Robert Hughs Plaintiff and Richard Crowther Defendant which began Trin. 6 Jacobi Rot. 2220 The Case was that Charls Fox was seised of six acres of Meadow in Bedston in the County of Salop in Fee and 10 Octob. 9 Eliz. leased the same to Charls Hibbens and Arthur Hibbens for 60 years if the aforesaid Charls Hibbens and Arthur Hibbens should so long live and afterward Charls died and if the Lease determine by his death was the Question and it was adjudged That by his death the Lease was determined for the life of a man is meer collaterall unto the Estate for years otherwise it is if a