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A66651 The body of the common law of England as it stood in force before it was altered by statute, or acts of Parliament, or state. Together with an exact collection of such statutes, as have altered, or do otherwise concern the same. Whereunto is also annexed certain tables containing a summary of the whole law, for the help and delight of such students as affect method. By Edm. Wingate of Grayes-Inne Esq; Wingate, Edmund, 1596-1656. 1655 (1655) Wing W3007; ESTC R220028 104,837 228

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the very time of the exchange XLI In partition amongst co-perceners from the death of the ancestor XLII The King shall not be vouched but prayed in aid off which in case hath the force of a Voucher XLIII So is it also of co-perceners XLIV In an Assize of novel disseisin and nusance voucher lieth not unlesse the vouchee be present in Court and will by and by enter into warrantie XLV He that is impleaded in any action wherein he may vouch and doth not shall never have the benefit of a Warrantia Cartae XLVI Advantages in certain personal actions are Garnishment and Enterpleader XLV●I Garnishment is upon a writ of detenue when it be alledged by the defendant to have been upon a bailment by the Plaintiff and another or for another upon condition that other shall be brought in to shew whether by reason of that bailment himself or the Plaintiffe ought to have the goods chattels c. XLVIII Enterpleader is when divers bringing several writs of detenue ward or Quare impedit against the same person in the same County and for the same thing the rest shall answer him that brought the first writ XLIX The King may appoint any place he thinketh good to be a safeguard for all offenders flying tbither tha● they shall not be molested or compelled to answer which priviledged places have in former times been called Sanctuaries L. Thus far of dilatory Pleas Pleas to rhe action are such as go to the body of the matter and are Pleas in Bar or Confessions LI. Pleas in bar are those which are to bar the Plaintiffe of his action LII In these the defendant must make defence as t● say Defendit vim injuriam quando c. LIII But no such defence shall be made in Dower Assize of novel disseisin per quae servitia or Attaint LIV. The tenant may plead a warrantie in bar o● him that should warrant if he b●ing the writ LV. And though the tenant of the land be a stranger to the warrantie yet he may plead that he hath a third persons estate and so rebut by a warrantie made unto that person LVI But in writs of Dower the ancestors warrantie is no bar LVII A warrantie made by the disseisor at the time of the disseisin barreth not the heir and this is called a warrantie that commenceth by disseisin LVIII In an Assize of novel disseisin and trespasse the defendant pleading a title in bar must give colour of titl● to the Plaintiffe LIX In the giving of this colour these three things must be observed 1. It must be to the Plaintiffe not to a stranger or to the defendant 2. It must be of such a possession whereby he may maintain his action 3. The Colour must be a matter doubtfull in law or otherwise difficult to the Lay people LX. In real actions for the meer right when it is in respect of a disseisin done the tenant cannot traverse the seisin but may tender half a mark to the King to have it inquired by the Jurie and being found that the demandant was not seized in the time whereof he counteth that shall bar him for ever LXI The tenant cannot tender half a Mark against the King LXII The heir or executors in an action brought against them where they are chargable pleading a matter in their own knowledge which goeth in perpetual bar shall be charged as in their proper duty if it passe against them LXIII In Assizes of novel disseisin nusance mortdancestor Juris utrum and in indictments and appeals of felony the defendant may plead in abatement and over in bar or take the general issue also LXIV In Assizes of novel disseisin and nusance he may plead a speciall matter that amounteth but to a general issue LXV Upon Indictments of felony and treason the defendant being put to answer is not allowed Council if he denie the fact LXVI A presentment in the Leet or Sheriffes turn after the day of presentment bindeth the party for ever and is not traversable but in cases that touch ones freehold LXVII Therefore the course is to remove such presentments into the Kings Bench by a Certiorari where they may be traversed LXVIII Confession is when the defendant confesseth the Plaintiffes action to be good LXVIX The defendant confessing an Indictment of felony may accuse others of the same offence LXX One that flying to a Church or Church-yard and confesseth before the Coroner when he cometh the certainty of any bare felonie where life and member is to be lost before he be thereof attainted may abjure LXXI Abjuration is his oath before the Coroner himself to depart the Realm for ever at the time and place set him going the direct way theither tarrying there but one floud and ebbe if he can have passage and till he can so passe going every day in the sea up to the knees to assay if he may passe over and if he cannot passe within 40 dayes then to put himself again into the Church as a felon c. CHAP. 41. Replication Rejoynder Sur-rejoynder c. the issue and demurrer I. THus far the Pleas of the defendant the mutual pleas of both are the debating before issue or the issue it self ij Debating before issue is the discussing of the material things to draw it to some one issue iij. Of the first sort are replication rejoynder sur-rejoynder c. iv In an Assize against many if each take the whole tenancy severally and plead severall matters in bar or one Nul-tort and the other in bar the Plaintiffe at his peril must choose his tenant And then after issue for the whole the Tenancy shall be first inquired of and being found for the Plaintiffe then the other issue shal be enquired but being found against him and no title made against the tenant indeed the writ shall abate v. In an action of trespasse meer transitory although the defendant justifie by any speciall matter yet the plaintiffe may take issue that it was done de son tort de mesne viz. wrongfully by the defendant without answering to that matter vi If it be a trespasse upon land the defendant justifying in some other land then the Plaintiffe meaneth the Plaintiffe may make a new assignment vii An issue is when both the parties joyn upon somewhat that they refer to tryal to make an end of the plea. viii This issue is of the fact or of the law ix Of the fact when the proper contradiction of that which one alledgeth is set down by the other x After which if any insufficient pleading appear in the Record whether the issue be joyned thereupon which is called a Jeosaile or no the Parties must begin a new where the first defect was xi But no re-pleader shall be in an Assize if the Plaintiffe have disclosed a sufficient title xii If the tender of this issue come on the plaintiffes part the form is Et hoc petit quod Inquiratur per recordum or Patriam
seller c. shall forfeit the value of the land and likewise the buyer knowing the same provided he that is in lawfull possession by taking the yearly profits may buy c. anothers pretenced right c. Rule 7. Stat. 6. R. 2. 2. Debt accompt and all such actions shall be brought in the County where the contract c. was made Rule 16. Stat. 1. E. 6. 7. The Acceptance of a new name of dignity shall not abate the writ CHAP. 24. Rule 6. MErton 8. 20. H. 3. Seisin of ones Ancestor in a writ of right shall be from the time of H 2. In a Mortdancester writ of Nief and of entry from the last return of King John out of Ireland In an Assize of novel disseisin from Henry 3. his first passage into Gasciogne West 1. 38. 3. E 1. Seisin of ones ancestor in a writ of right shall be from the time of Richard the first In an Assize of novel disseisin and Nuper obiit from H. 3. his first passage into Gascoigne In a Mortdancester Cosinage Aywel entry and writ of Niefe from H. 3. his Coronation Stat. 32. H. 8. 2. Seisin in a writ of right shall be within 60 yeares In a Mortdancester or any other possessory action upon the possession of his ancestor or predecessor shall be within 50 yeares A writ of the possession of the Plaintiff himselfe shall be within 30 years An avowry or cognizance for rent suit or services of the seisin of his Ancestor or of his own shall be within 40 years Formedons in reverter or remainder and Scire facias upon fines shall be sued within 50 years after the title or cause of action accrued Stat. 1 M. 1. Parl. 2. sess 5. The statute of 32 H. 8. 2. shall not extend to a writ of right of advowson Quare impedit Assize of Darrein presentment Jure patronasus writ of right of ward writ of ravishment of ward nor to the seiser of the wards body or Estate but the time of the seisin to be alleadged in such cases shall be as it was in the Common Law before the making of the sayd statute Stat. 21. Jac. 2. The time of prescription for lands concealed from the King is sixty years before the making of that statute Stat. 1. Jac 16. In writs of Formedon in descender remainder and reverter and right of entry the time is 20 years after accruer and imperfections removed Rule 6. Stat. 25 E. 3 stat 5. 16. Non-tenure shall not abate the writ but only for the quantity Stat. 37. E. 3. 17. No writ shall be abated by acknowledgment of villeinage if the demandant or Plaintiffe will averr that he that alleadgeth the exception was freed the day of the Writ purchased CHAP. 26. Rule 4. WEstm 2. 2 13 E. 1. A Gui in vita given to the wife after her husbands death upon his loosing of the land by default and the Tenant that recovered against the husband must maintain his own right CHAP. 27. Rule 4. WEstm 2 20. In a Writ of Cosinage Ayel and Besayel the point shall be inquired whether the demandant be next heir as well as in a Mortdancestor Rule 10. Westm 2. 1. 13. E. 1. A formedon in Descender is also given by this Statute to the heir in tail upon a descent from his Ancestor dying seised of the estate tail Rule 12. Merton 1 20 H. 3. A woman deforced of her dower or Quarentine shall in a writ of Dower recover damages viz. the value of her Dower from her husbands death to the day of the recovery of her Dower and the deforceor shall be amercied Westm 1. 48. 3. E. 1. A writ of Dower unde nihil habet shal not abate though she have received part of her Dower before the writ purchased unlesse it were of the same party against whom the writ was brought and in the same Town Westm 2. 4. 13. E. 1. In place of a writ of right a Quod ei deforceat is given to tenant in Dower for life by the coutresie in Frank-marriage and in tail upon losing by default CHAP. 28. Rule 2. Marlebr 7 52. H. 3. In a writ de communi Custodia if the deforceor come not at the grand distresse the writ shall be renewed as often as may be within half a year and every time read and claimed in the county-court and if he come not in to answer nor the Sheriffe finde him within that halfe yeare he shall lose the Ward saving his action another time if he have right Westm 2. 35. 13. E. 1. In a writ of ward of land or heir or both either of the parties dying before the plea determined a re-summons shall be And in the grand distresse day must be given that three County dayes may be held before the returne in every of which Proclamation shall be made whereupon if the defendant appear not judgement shall be given for the plaintiff saving the right of the defendant if afterwards he will claim it So shall it be done also in a writ of ejectment of ward Rule 6. Westm 2. 2. 13. E. 1. If the tenant disclaim in the County-Court or other Court not of Record the Lord may remove the plea before the Justices to cause it to be of Record so as he may have a writ of right sur dlsclaimer Glocester 4. 6. E. 1. Explanat 4 When land is given in Fee farme rendering or doing so much as amounteth to the fourth part of the value of the land if he whose land is charged let it lye fresh by two years so as no distresse can be found in it nor render or do that which is contained in the writing the other shall recover the land by a Cessavit but the tenant coming before judgment if he render the arrerages and damages and finde sufficient to do from thenceforth that which is contained in the writing shal retain his land Westm 2. 21. 13. E. 1. If a man detain from his Lord his service due by two years the Lord shall recover the land by a Cessavit This lyeth also for the Lords heir against the tenant his heirs and Alience Westm 2 41. If religious houses that have land given c. withdraw the Almes c. by two years the donor shall have the like action CHAP. 29. Rule 7. MArlbr 9. 52. H. 3. The processe in a Sella ad molendinum is attachment venire facias and the grand distresse see also there the order of proceeding in that action Rule 9. Stat. 25. E. 3 Stat. 3. 3 tht Kings Collation to a benefice being found before Judgment to be untrue shall be repealed Marlbr 12. 52. H. the processe in a Quare impedit shall be Summons Attachment and Grand distresse Westm 5. 13. E. 1. A Coparcener being disturbed after Partition shall have a Scire facias and shall not be put to a Quare impedit If tenant in Dower or by the courtesie have presented the reversioner being disturbed shall have a Quare impedit
as Assumpsits for an assumption or promise to be performed and the like XII This lieth not against Executors XIII Here and in all other actions of trespasse upon the case the writ must comprehend all the matter o● substance XIV The other that break the peace but not 〈◊〉 are called trespasses against the peace XV. And of this kinde are especially of the nature of such a trespasse an action of deceit and an action o● conspiracie XVI An action of deceit is upon any deceit committed XVII Here if it be upon a non-summons in a pl●● of land whereby he looseth the land by default or suc● like it must be brought during the life of the Summoners XVIII In a writ of deceit the Plaintiffe shall rec●ver all that he hath lost XIX Conspiracie in the nature of a trespasse upon conspiring by many to prejudice a man wron●fully XX. Such are trespasses without force is an Action 〈◊〉 trespasse coupled with force is an action of trespasse fo● a trespasse done XXI An Action of trespasse brought in a Court Baron must not suppose it to be done by force and armes XXII And therefore no Capias lieth there in such case XXIII Speciall actions of trespasse are these that follow XXIV De Parco fracto for taking distresse out of the Pound XXV Rescous for taking a distresse away before it be impounded XXVI Ejectione firmae when lessee for years of land is ousted where the term it self shall be recovered if it be not past CHAP. 33. Appeal I. THese are Common Pleas an Appeal that concerneth life is the parties private action prosecuting also for the Crown in respect of a felonie II. Appeals of the death of a man are given to the heir of the party slain CHAP. 34. A Writ of right Patent and justicies I. THus far of original writs Commissional are these which are not returnable but determinable before the parties to whom they are directed II These are Commissionary or meer Commissions III. Of the first sort are those that give authority to a Court Baron to hold plea. IV. Here the suitors are the Judges not the Sheriff or Steward V. These are a writ of right Patent or a Justicies VI. In both these the same course is holden as is those that went before VII A writ of right patent is a writ for the mee● right of Tenements holden of a common person to be brought in the Lords Court of that Mannor VIII If he hold noe Court or otherwise yield hi● Court to the King for that time then it may be in the Kings Court with this clause Quia B. capitalis Domin● nobis inde remisit curiam IX This writ must shew by what service the land i● holden X. The writ remaineth alwayes with the party hi●self XI If one privie in blood not past the third degree enter after the death of the ancestor that died not sei●ed in such case a writ of right patent is called a wr●● of right de rationabili parte terrae XII A woman that hath received part of h● Dower shall have a writ of right of Dower patent fo● the remnant whereof she is to be endowed XIII A Justicies is a writ that giveth the County Court power to hold plea. XIV And therefore it t s called a Viconte writ o● this sort are XV. An Assize of petty nusance where a mill o● such like is levied to ones nusance XVI All of them are comprehended in these Verse rica ca _____ gultum ges lendinum Fab fur porta domus vir gur mo murus ovil● Et pons traduntur haec vicecomitibus XVII Admeasurement of Dowerby the heir whe●● his Guardian or himself endowed the wife in his no●● age of more then she ought to have XVIII Admeasurement of pasture by a Commoner whom another Commoner wrongeth by putting i● more Beasts into the Common then he should XIX Here all the Commoners shall be admeasured XX. A nativo habendo for the Lord that hath an Inheritance in any Villein when his Villein departeth away from him XXI Here if the Villein plead that he is frank the Sheriff cannot proceed XXII Rationalibus divisis for that Lord whose land or waste hath by little and little been incroached upon within time of memorie until now by a Lord whose Seigniory adjoyneth in another ville against the Lord so incroaching XXIII A homine replegiando for one imprisoned or in prison deteined where he should not XXIV A Replevin for goods or chattels distreined XXV This may be both by writ and plaint in any Court Baron as well as in the County Court XXVI This being by plaint it shall not proceed if any thing touching the freehold come in question XXVII Upon the pluris not served by the Sheriff his power is determined and the parties shall plead in Bank XXVIII Many of the actions that went before both for real things to be done as Consuetudinibus servitiis secta ad molendinum Quod permittat Mesne Dower unde nihil habet And also personal actions as annuity debt detinue accompt covenant trespasse to what summe soever may as well be brought in the County by Justicies as to be returnable in the Common Place XXIX Meer Commissions are these that follow being all of them to be directed to choice persons such as it shall please the King XXX Oyer and Terminer to heare and determine upon some heinous offence committed XXXI In these and such like commissions lie properly a writ of Association and Si non omnes XXXII Association is a writ for other to be associate into their company XXXIII Si non omnes is a writ for the rest to proceed although the other come not XXXIV Ad quod damnum to enquire what hurt it may be to the King Country or any other for the King to grant such or such a thing XXXV Perambulatione facienda to enquire of the bounds of 2. Seigniories or ●ownes where an incroachment by little and little is supposed to have been made XXXVI This must be by the mutual assent of both Lords CHAP. 35. Plaints and Bills I. SO far of writs it followeth to speak of Plaints and Bills both being in such Courts as hold ple● without original writ II. A plaint is in matters that concern Common pleas III. A Plaint of trespasse in a Court Baron shall not proceed if the freehold come in question IV. A Bill is in pleas of the Crown as an appeal of felonie mayhem rape c. may be by Bill before one Coroner of the County finding first sureties to the Sheriffe V. One whose attendance is necessary in any Court shall sue and be sued there in form of Plaint which is called a Bill of Priviledge CHAP 36. A Quo Warranto Office Indictment I. THe King hath a speciall means of suit for trying of the right of Franchises usurped upon him called a Quo Warranto and is to be brought before the Justices in Eyre II An Enquiry for the King is when
matter for the King is found by a Jurie called an Enqest of Office III. This may be before the Officers as Sheriffs Escheators Coroners c. Virtute officii Brevis or Commissionis to them directed IV. Here the number of twelve is not of necessity requisite V. An Enquiry is an office or presentment VI. An Office which findeth matter to intitle the King to some possession VII Upon as high a matter of Record to avoid the Office as the Office it self a man may traverse it VIII If the office be for personal goods the party may alwayes have a traverse or plead any matter unto it unlesse the Escheator have accounted for them and that although the office finde the Kings title to be by matter of Record IX The King upon office finding for him if his entry be lawfull and the possessions to be had at the time is presently in possession X. Also he shall be answered all the mean profits from the time of his title XI Upon an office found virtute Officii whereby the King is intitled to ones wardship the heir shall never have livery viz. the land delivered out of the Kings hands XII But upon a perfect office Virtute Brevis or Commissionis if it be a speciall writ or Commission not a general one to inquire of all wards he may XIII Therefore here the heir is allowed these Commissions following or writs in the nature of such Commissions viz 1. For finding of an office for the King 2. For the having of the land out of the Kings hand XIV Those for the finding of an office are Diem clausic extremum Mandamus and Devenerunc to inquire what lands holden of the King and what of others the ancestors was seized off the day of his death who is his next heir and of what age XV. The Diem clausit extremum is to be sued within the year after his death XVI The Mandamus is after the year and here it must further be inquired who took the profits XVII The Devenerunt is when the ancestor dieth in ward to the King XVIII Upon defect in Offices found by vertue of such writs or commissions these writs following shall issue out to make them perfect viz. XIX A Quae plura upon leaving of any land out i● these offices XX A Melius inquirendum upon any other defect i● the Office XXI A Datum est nobis intelligi upon an Office finding lands to be holden of any other person when there is a Record to prove that they are holden of the King XXII The writs for having the lands out of the Kings hands are an Aetate probanda and a writ i● Livery XXIII An Aetate probanda is to inquire whethe● he b● of full age or not XXIV A writ of Livery is after a perfect Office finding a tenure in cheif to have all the lands delivere● to him at once by the King XXV Two being found heirs by one and the sa●● title The King shall not make Livery until by enter-pleader the truth be discussed at his full age that wa● found heir first XXVI Amongst Co-parceners the King upon Livery shall make partition XXVII He that holdeth of the King by Knight service but not in Chief shall not sue Livery Be when he cometh to his full age shall have an Ouster● main XXVIII A presentment is an enquiry finding some offence against the King which is also called an Indictment XXIX Every strong suspition of such offence appearing of Record hath the force of an Indictment XXX Without an Indictment the King can have no suit upon a wrong done principally to another but done to himsef he may XXXI For the preventing of divers offences viz. trespasses to the body and felonies and committing them that offend to prison untill they may be indicted and so duely punished every Hundred hath his High Constable and every several tithing within the Hundred hath his petty Constables or Headboroughs XXXII Any man suspecting another of a felonie committed or but intended may arrest him XXXIII With indictments of trespasse informations upon penal Statutes such as inflict a pecuniarie mulct or other penalty upon offenders have a neer affinity XXIV Indictments of the death of a man are to be taken before the Coroners CHAP. 37. Proper Original Processe I. HItherto of the first matter of the suit it followeth to speak of original processe II. Original processe is that processe which is untill the defendant do appear III. Original processe is proper or improper IV. Proper which is to bring some matter into Plea or solemn action and it is single or mixt V. Single which is by the possessions onely lands or goods or onely by the person VI. That by the land is of two so●ts first summons and Grand Cape in a real Praecipe quod reddat VII The summons is the warning of the tenant in his land by certain summoners VIII The summons upon an action brought against one as heir must be in the land that did descend IX If it be to recover the freehold of land it self it must be in the same land X. A Grand Cape is to take the Land into the Kings hands by the view of lawfull men with a summons of the tenant to answer as well to his default as to the demandants action XI If the tenant be returned summoned where i● deed he was not the writ shall abate XII Secondly it is summons and re-summons in a Mordancestor Juris utrum and an Assize of Darren presentment and upon default the enquest awarded XIII Original processe by the goods as in Assize of novel disseisin and nusance where the original proces is Pone per vadios c. salvos plegios XIV A Pone pervadios salvos plegios is a proces● to attach the defendant by certain of his proper goods being meer personal chattels which he shall forfeit i● he appear not and upon such default the Inquest summoned by the writ is presently to be awarded to recognize the Assize XV. The original processe by the person is a Capias which is a processe to imprison him then an exigent o● solemn demand at five severall County Courts immediately following one another and for not appearing Outlawry XVI This Judgment of Outlawry is given by the Coroner in the fift County and is onely in mayhem felonie and treason XVII If the Exigent be returned not fully serve without any folly in the Plaintiffe he bringing an Exigent de novo before any other County holden sha●● have the benefit of the former Counties XVIII Outlawry disableth him from suing an● actlon XIX By Outlawry all his chattels are forfeit to the King even such as he hath but a right unto XX. In Mayhem there must be three Capias viz. Capias alias pluries t●o in Felonie viz. Stealth Robbery and Burglary and onely one in the death of a man and high Treason XXI In felonie and Treason they that tarry the Exigent forfeit their chattels XXII A mixt
if after the fathers death he enter before his younger brother born of the same father and mother within Espousals and continue the possession all his life without interruption VI. If the next be women in equal distance as daughters Sisters Aunts c. they shall inherit alike and are but as one heir VII Where the generall Entry of one is of the rest if they list VIII The inheritance that descendeth shal be charged with the deed of the Ancestor binding himself and his heirs IX The Dying seized of the inheritance and Freehold together whereby the land descends unto his heir taketh away the Entry of every one that may have an Action X. But claim upon the land within a year before the death or if they dare not upon the land for fear of some bodily hurt then as neer the land as they dare saveth their entry XI A Fee-simple is a Fee-simple conditionall or absolute XII Conditionall is a fee simple to one and the heirs of his body XIII This estate before issue cannot be alienated after issue had becometh an absolvte fee simple XIV But so as if the issue fail before the alienation the donor shall have it XV. Hither belong hereditaments given in Frank-marriage with ones kinswoman XVI Absolute is a fee-simple to one and his heirs whatsoever XVII This estate descending to Females if one of them have lands of the same Ancestor by Frank-marriage she shall have no more unlesse she be content that the value thereof be allowed to the other XVIII To this place are to be referred Lands given to a Corporation which go in perpetuall succession XIX Here two speciall estates for life Dower and Tenancie by the courtesie of England do arise after ones death that hath an Inheritāce joyned with the freehold XX. Howbeit these estates must be of a fee-simple or such an estate taile as may go to the issue had between the Donees XXI Dower is an estate whereby the woman hath the thirds in severalty XXII She must be nine years of age at the time of her husbands death otherwise she shal not be endowed XXIII Detaining of deeds concerning Inheritance descended to the heir is a barr of her Dower XXIV If the husband at the Church door ad ostium ecclesiae or being heir apparant by his fathers or mothers consent ex ass●nsu patris or matris presently upon affiance endow her of any certainty as of the whole moity or lesse part c. this will barr her of her thirds if she agree to it XXV Tenancie by the curtesie of England is an estate whereby of an actuall possession the husband that hath issue by her born alive shall have the whole CHAP. VI. Tenement Advowson I HEreditaments are tenements or bare hereditaments II. A Tenement is a possession holden the Fee-simple whereof when he that hath it dieth without heir cometh to the Lord III. Of this sort are Lands and Advowsons IV. Land is a Tenement in Mannuall occupation V. Under the name of Land are comprehended not only Gardens Meadowes Pastures Woods Rivers c but also Messuages Mils Yards Tofts Castles the like VI. Churches and Church-Yards belong to the Incumbent VII Prescription here hath no force VIII All Land is holden of the King immediatly or by means himselfe not having any higher upon earth of whom to hold IX Escheats of all Cities appertain to the King X All Mines of Gold and Silver or wherein the gold or silver is of the greater value are the Kings XI Amongst Coperceners the eldest upon partition shall have the cheif house XII Seisin delivered of land alwaies passeth a freehold XIII Otherwise a Freehold of land cannot passe save by release and confirmation where they are by way of enlarging an estate XIV They may also somtimes passe by Exchanges Endowments or Surrenders XV. An estate made within view of land is a good Liverie of seisin if the other enter in the Feoffors life time XVI An Advowson is an interest of presenting to a Church CHAP. 7. Distres Seigniories Fealty Rent-service Homage Suit of Court Tenures Releife and Rent charge I. RAre Hereditaments are those which are not holden and concern the Land or the person II. Those that concern the Land are extinguished or gone for ever when he that hath them hath high and continuing an estate as he hath the hereditaments III. Otherwise they are but suspended or gone for a time IV. These are leviable by distresse or such as cannot be distr●ined for V. Distresse is a taking of Chattels found upon the same Land for satisfaction of Arrearages VI. The King may distrain in any other land of the same mans for his Service or Rent charge VII The distresse being put in some place where the owner may lawfully come by them as if they be things that have life to give them meat c. he that distraineth shall not be charged what hurt soever they receive VIII Bare hereditaments that may be distrained for are a Seigniorie or rent charge IX Seigniories are services whereby Lands are holden X. Services are common to all certain estates or proper to inheritances XI Common as Fealty and Rent service whereof Fealty is incident to every such estate XII And therefore the Seigniory or Tenancy being altered it must be done anew XIII All other both common and proper grow by Reservation XIV Fealty is an Oath to be faithfull to the Lord for the Tenements XV. Rent service is a Rent to be paid to the Lord at certain set times XVI And to this place we may refer all services that lie in Fesance XVII Of which kind two amongst the rest are specially to be considered viz. Frank-Almoign and Divine Service XVIII Frank-Almoigne is when a man of the Church holdeth freely in Alms for which he is bound to say Prayers XIX But because the Prayers are not limited in certain he neither shal do Fealty nor is subject to distres XX. The lord must warrant such a Tenant against himselfe and his heirs and save him harmlesse of all manner of all services against the Lords above XXI Divine service is a spirituall kinde of service limited in certain XXII These are the services whereby every certain estate may be holden XXIII There follow those proper to Inheritances the Grantee whereof shall hold of the Grantor by such services as he holdeth over if other services be not reserved XXIV Or the Grantor may appoint him ●o hold of the next Lord. XXV A Mesn must acquit the Tenant of all manner of services against the Lords Paramont XXVI But Donors in Frankmarriage cannot hold but by Fealty and that of the Donor untill the Fourth degree be past who must also acquit them of all manner of services XXVII One that holdeth of the King as of his person alienating the Free hold without licence forfeiteth the Land XXVIII Services proper to Estates of Inheritance are Homage and Suit or Court XXIX Homage is an Oath of fidelity acknowledging himselfe to
land XI This may be also of a rent or other profit out of land by disturbing him in the means of comming to it as XII In every rent Encloser and Forestaller XIII Encloser is when the tenant incloseth the land so as he cannot come to distrain or demand it XIV Forestaller is when the tenant besetteth the way with force and armes upon his comming XV. Of this nature is the menacing of him when for doubt of some bodily hurt he dare not come XVI In a rent service and rent charge Rescous and Replevin XVII Rescous when either the party having distrained the distresse is rescued or being upon the land to distrain cannot be suffered to do it XVIII Replevin is when an action of Replevin is brought upon a distresse taken XIX In a rent charge and rent seck Denier XX. Denier is when the rent being demanded upon the land is not paid XXV Usurpation is when the Church becommeth full by the presentment of a wrong Pa●ron and the Institution of the pattie presented by the Ordinary XXII But against the King Induction onely doth it XXIII Of the second sort are Intrusion and Ab●tement being of a free-hold in Law XXIV Intrusion which is after the death of the tenant for life XXV Abatment which is after the death of one that hath the Inheritance CHAP. 14. Trespass Menaces Assault false Imprisonment Battery Mayhem Rape I. SUch is the nature of an Offence without force II. An Offence with force is a Trespasse or an Offence against the Crown III. Trespasse is a criminall Offence punishable by a Fine to the King IV. For this the party must be imprisoned untill he do compound V. Trespasses touch Possessions or the person VI. Possessions when the wrong is done in them namely in Goods or Lands VII Trespasse in Goods is the wrongfull taking of them with pretence of Title VIII And therefore such a Trespas altereth the property of the Goods IX Trespasse in Land is when the Trespass is done upon the actuall possession thereof X. Beasts and other Chattels may be distrained by him that hath damage by them XI Hither belongeth Ejectment when a Termer for years of Land is ousted XII Here the King having possession none can put him out XIII Trespasses to the person are with pretence of violence or violence in deed XIV Pretence of violence as Menaces and Assaults XV. Menaces are threatning words of beating one or such like through fear whereof ones businesse is foreslowed XVI Assault is an unlawfull setting upon ones person XVII Hither belong lying in wait besetting his Mansion-house and not suffering his Servants to go in and out c. XVIII Violence in deed is false-imprisonment or bodily hurt XIX False-imprisonment is an unlawfull restraint of liberty XX. Bodily hurts are either outward violencies only or Rape XXI Outward violencies onely are Battery and Mayhem XXII Battery is the wrongfull beating of one XXIII Mayhem is the wrongfull spoyling of a member defensive in fight XXIV Rape is the carnall abusing of a woman against her will CHAP. 15. Offences against the Peace I. BEsides these Offences being for the most part twixt party and party there are other Offences to the damage of the publike in the nature of ●respasses and are tearmed Contempts II. These Offences are punished not only by fine but sometimes by corporall pain and sometimes by losse of member III. As the Common-wealth is a body politick which consists of the King as the Head and of his Subjects as the Members thereof so are these Offences to be distributed IV Publike Offences against the King are to disobey the Kings Command by his Writ or Proclamation to disobey any thing ordained by Statute c. V. And therefore the Sherif that serves not the first Writ makes a contempt VI. Publike Offences to the body of the Common-wealth are first those which trench against the domesticall safety thereof as against the heart of the Common-wealth VII which safty consists in this that there be pa●domi and threfore here the offences are Rebellions Insurrections Riots Routs unlawfull assemblies breach of the Peace and good behaviour false newes Barratrie Eves-dropping c. Also all trespasses with force which may be prosecuted by Indictment as well as by the suit of the party grieved VIII An unlawfull assembly is when above the number of two assemble together with purpose to do some unlawfull act IX Rout when they set forwards to do it X. Riot when they do it in deed XI In the second place come the offences that are against the strength of the Realme and the defence thereof against forraign enemies as against the hands and armes of the Common-wealth XII Of this sort are these to send victual or armour beyond sea in comfort and aid of the Kings enemies To go beyond sea without the Kings license whereby the King and the Realme may be enfeebled c. CHAP. 16. Against Justice I. THe third sort are offences against the justice of the Realm as against the thighes and legs thereof as II. Judges which delay or pervert Justice III. Officers Negligent or corrupt who do not execute their offices as they ought to do IV. Goalers who by fear of punishment cause their prisoners to become provers to accuse others or teach the Lay-people in their custodie to read for the salvation of their lives V. Enditors who give warning to Enditees whereby the Council of the King and the Justices is discovered VI. He that by negligence or voluntarily suffers one under arrest to go at large VII· And here if the arrest be for felonie such voluntary escape is felonie VIII Hither also all manner of extortion in Officers is to be referred IX A Juror that appears and is challenged and afterwards when he is found indifferent and is called to be sworn makes default He shall be fined to the value of his land by the year X. All force against the Justice of the Realm XI The breaking of Prison and here if it be by the party himself it is felonie XII Rescous when a stranger or the party himself disturbes the arresting of a felon or other XIII Affrayes in disturbance of Justice as XIV Such as come forcibly into the Kings Court in affray of the peace so as the Jurors dare not give their Verdict XV. Such as are evil people to beat the people of the Court Jurors of Enquest or any other XVI To go armed in the Kings palace XVII He that strikes a man in Westminster-hall shall lose his right hand XVIII He that strikes a Juror in the presence of the Justice shall have the same punishment and besides shall suffer perpetuall imprisonment XIX Conventicles which comprehend conspirators and confederators XX. Such as receive people to their avowment to maintain them right or wrong XXI Maintenance when a man maintains a suit in law XXII Champarty when he maintains it to have part of the thing sued for XXIII Offences in savour of malefactors as
of the estate either by reason of a particular estate ended or a condition broken XV. Of a particular estate ended is an ad terminum qui praeteriit or Entry ad communem legem XVI Ad terminum qui praeteriit is upon a deforcement by the lessee or a stranger after the Lease for years or life expired XVII Entry ad communem legem is when a tenant for life doth alien and die XVIII Of a condition broken as Causa matrimonii praelocuti XIX Causa matrimonii praelocuti is for a woman that giveth land to a man to marry her and he will not XX· Those grounded upon the disability of the person are a Dum fuit infra aetatem and a Dum non suit compos mentis XXI Dum fuit infra aetatem is by the infant when he cometh to his full age upon an alienation by himself or his ancestor being within age XXII But the clause that he is of full age viz. qui plenae est aetatis shall not be inserted in the Writ if either it be brought in the degrees per cui or post or upon the ancestors alienation XXIII Dum non fuit compos mentis is upon the alienation of himself or his ancestor or being of non san● memoriae CHA Cui in vita sua Cui in vita sine assensu Capituli A writ of Intrusion a writ of Entry in the quibus I. THose upon a wrong at the first are upon a discontinuance or an Ouster II. Upon a discontinuance as a Cui in vita or a sine assensu Capituli III. A Cui in vita for the wife after the husbands death upon his alienation of her fee simple fee tail or free-hold or of such a Joynt estate in them IV. and in this writ claiming a fee-simple she shall say Quod clamat esse jus hereditatem suam V. If it be an estate of fee-simple and she bring not in her life time a cui in vita the heir shall have a sur cui in vita VI. And of this nature is a Cui ante divortium when it is brought by the wife after divorcement upon such an alienation as before VII A sine assensu Capituli is for the successor of a Bishop Abbot Prior Dean Prebendary Master of an Hospital c. after the discontinuance of the Predecessor VIII Upon an Ouster is either an Intrusion or a disseisin IX That upon an Intrusion is called a writ of Intrusion and is for him in the reversion or remainder in fee-simple or for life after the death of tenant for life in Dower or by the curtesie X. Upon a disseisin is when the disseisin is done to him or his ancestor as a Writ of Entry in the Quibus or which is all one in the nature of an Assize CHAP. 27. A Writ of Ayel Besaiell Cosinage Formedon Escheat Dower a Precipe in Capite I. WRits that shew the demandants title are meer possessory or in the right II. Meer possessorie are those which are brought by the next heir upon an abatement after the death of any ancestor other then his Father Mother Brother Sister Uncle Aunt Nephew Neece seized in demesne as of the fee-simple the day of his death Of this sort are III· A writ of Ayell after the death of his Grandfather or Grandmother IV. A writ of Besayell after the death of his great Grandfather or great Grandmother V. A Writ of Cosinage after the death of his great great Grandfather or Grandmother or any other Collateral Cousin save those above-mentioned in the second Rule of this Chapter VI. In the right is that which is to disprove the right of the tenant and is a writ of right in his nature or a praecipe in Capite VII A writ of Right in his nature which sheweth how the demandants right is grown and is a Formedon or a writ of Escheat and Dower unde nihil habet VIII A Formedon is a praecipe quod reddat entitling the partie by the form of the gift and is a Formedon in remainder or a Formedon in reverter IX A Formedon in remaninder is for him in the remainder for life or in fee upon a lease for life expired X. A Formedon in Reverter is for the Donor after the estate in tail determined XI A writ of Escheat is for the Lord upon an Escheat XII Dower unde nihil habet is a writ for ones Dower who hath received no part at all thereof XIII A writ of Dower lieth against Gardein by Knights service XIV A praecipe in capite is a praecipe quod reddat for the meer right of lands holden in chief CHAP. 28. A writ of right of ward and sur disclaimer I. OTher real praecipe quod reddats are those which are in respect of a Seigniorie as a writ of right of ward and a writ of right sur-disclaimer II. A writ of right or ward is to recover the wardship III. If it be for the recoverie of the wardship of the body it lieth as well for Gardein in Socage as for Gardein by Knight-service IV. But if it be for the recovery of the wardship of the land it lieth onely for Gardien by Knight-service V. A writ of right sur-disclaimer is for the Lord to prove the lands to be holden of him when in Action where the services should be recovered the tenant in Court of Record disclaimeth to hold of him VI. If in this writ the Lord can prove the Land to be holden of him he shall recover the Land it self CHAP. 29 A writ de consuetudinibus et se●●ic●js secta ad molendinum Quare impedit Quod permittat Curia Clau●enda Mesne and Warrantia cartae I. A Real Praecipe quod faciat is either to recover hereditaments or some real things that concern them II. Those that are to recover some hereditament demanding of ones own seisin are in the debet and solet III. But demanding of the ancestors seisin they are in the debet onely and then are in all respects as writs for the meer right IV. These are either in respect of a Seigniory or to recover some other hereditament V. In respect of a Seigniorie as a writ de consuetudinibus servitiis and a secta ad molendinum VI. A writ De consuetudinibus serviciis lieth for the Lord that hath an estate for life or a greater estate in the Seigniory and is deforced of his services VII Secta ad molendinum lieth for the Lord when the tenants that hold of him by grinding their corn at his Mill withdraw their suit and grinde elswhere VIII Those that are to recover some other hereditament are a Quare impedit and a Quod permittat IX A Quare impedit lieth upon a disturbance where he or his ancestors or those from whom he claimeth having at any time before presented to a Church himself is now disturbed X. A Quod permittat lieth for one that hath common of pasture for his beasts being disturbed by a stranger so as he
of Court when one that hath agreed in the Kings Court to levie a fine is so feeble that he cannot travel XXXV The Cheif Justice of the Common Place may take the acknowledgment of a fine without any dedimus potestatem XXXVI Dedimus Potestatem de Atturnato faciendo for the Judges to admit an Atturney for one in a suit CHAP. 39. Improper Original Processe Prohibitorie I. PRohibitorie improper original writs are these that follow II. A Protection cum clausula nolumus to free ones possessions that nothing be taken against his will for the Kings businesse III. Parsons or other spirituall persons not to be charged to the payment of fifteens for goods in their possessions annexed to their Churches IV. Quod Clerici non elegantur in Officium Balivi for a Clerk not to be chosen an Officer for his lands V. A prohibition to forbid tenant in Dower or by courtesie of England or Guardian by Knight service o● in soccage to commit waste to the destruction of the Inheritance VI. A Quo minus for grantee of Estovers to restrain the grantor from committing waste so as he cannot haue estovers VII De exoneratione sectae for tenants by suit o● Court or other services that they be not distreined t● do the same for such time as they ought to hold the land discharged VIII De exonerando pro rata to discharge the tena●● of parcel of the Land according to the rate of hi● land when he is lawfully distreined for all the rent and services IX De essendo quieto de Tholonio to Officers not t● grieve spiritual persons and others that ought to be quit of paying of Toll Murage Pannage Pontage c X. De non ponendo in Juratis to discharge Peers o● the Realm and other persons priviledged from being of Juries unlesse their presence be for any speciall cause necessary XI Ne exeas regnum to the party himself to inhibit him from going into forreign parts without the Kings license CHAP. 40. The Count and Pleading I. THus far the beginning of a suit the Proceeding followes which hath two parts The Count and the Pleading II. A condition annexed to an estate of freehold cannot be alleadged in Count or pleading unless it be by Deed. III. The Count is a larger declaration of the substance of the original writ and therefore is usually termed Declaration IV. In reall actions which are in the right the demandant must alledge the taking of the-profits called Esplees in the declaration V. In stead of the Count a plaint shall be made in Assizes of novel disseisin and in writs of Dower a demand VI. Pleading is the parties debating of the suit VII Every plea must be offered to be proved true by saying in the plea Et hoc paratus esse verificare and this is termed an averment VIII An advantage of a matter which cannot be pleaded shall be saved by protesting not acknowledging it to be true although the matter pleaded passe against him IX Pleas are either of the defendant when he is first brought in to answer or the mutual pleas of both X. In a joynt action against two or more one of them appearing shall not answer till the other come in to answer or the suit be finished against him as by death outlawry c. XI An action by or against an Infant as heir shall not proceed till his full age unlesse it be apparant that by proceeding he cannot be prejudiced XII But in a writ of Dower an Infant heir shall not have his age XIII The defendants first pleas are dilatory or to the Action XIV Dilatory which are before any plea in Bar. XV. When an action is brought against many they must joyn in the plea if they inrend to plead these dilatories XVI Dilatory Pleas are exceptions or forein advantages XVII Exceptions are dilatories grounded upon the matter it self of the suit and are in disability or abatement XVIII Those in disability are to the jurisdiction or perso● both which must be before the Count. XIX To the jurisdiction when it is alledged that the Court ought not to hold plea of it XX. To the person when it is alledged that the Plaintiffe ought not to be answered as if he be outlawed excommunicated c. XXI But in case of excommunication the suit shall be put without day onely till he be absolved XXII Those in abatement are for any fault in the first matter of the suit XXIII For this cause the defendant may have Oy●● of any thing tendred by the Plaintiffe and not being parcel of the Record as of the writ condition c. XXIV Pleas in abatement are to the Count first and then to the writ XXV Amongst Pleas to the writ exceptions tha● arise upon the view of the writ are to be pleaded before those that are forein as non-tenure several tenancy c. XXVI Pleas to the Count are for insufficiencie variance from the writ c. XXVII Pleas to the writ are for default of for● false Latine c. XXVIII By waging of law for non-summons in a praecipe quod reddar the writ shall abate XXIX In Assize of novel disseisin and nusance and in appeals of felonie and Juris utrum the defendant may have many pleas in abatement xxx The writ abating for some cause that can not be imputed to the Plaintiffes folly himself bringing another with speed in the same Court against the same party shall have all advantages of the former an● this is called a writ purchased by Journeys accompt xxxi Forain advantages are delayes without excepion to any thing as in all actions Oyer of the writ c. In real actions view aid prayer and voucher XXXII View is in real actions of the thing demanded or of the land whence it cometh when it is so necessary as without view the defendant cannot wel answer XXXIII Ayde prayer is for the tenant for life to request him that hath the inheritance to help him to plead so must the Incumbent pray in aid of the patron and Ordinary XXXIV Voucher is the calling in of one that should warrant to answer the action XXXV Here the voucher loosing the tenant shall recover in value against him any hereditaments that he had at the time ●f voucher XXXVI Therefore voucher is in liew of another action where the original processe is Summons ad Warrantizandum and then a Grand Cape ad valentiam XXXVII If one be vouched within age it is a summons ad habendum visum first and being awarded of full age a summons ad warrantizandum and Grand Cape as before XXXVIII But if he be awarded within age the parol shall demurre until his full age XXXIX If the summons ad warrantizandum or habendum visum be not served then a sequatur sub suo periculo is to go forth and if the tenant cannot get that served he looseth his warranty for it is sub periculo of the tenant XL. But in exchanges the hereditaments are liable from
c. xiii If on the defendants part then it is Et de hoc ponit se super recordum illud or super Patriam XIV Issue in a writ of Right cannot be joyned upon the meer right but by the party himself and this is called the joyning of the Mise XV. Where the Plaintiff in his his replication maketh title at large the Tenant may joyn issue upon the title by saying Veigne Assize sur le title and this is called a Pleading to the action at large XVI But in a personall action when the title of the Land cometh in question it lyeth not till issue ioyned and yet in that case it never lyeth for Tenant for life but only for tenant for years Bailiff c. XVII Aid in these actions shall be of the King before issue joyned onely XVIII This being a matter In fait viz. done in the country is tryable by the oath of twelve free and lawfull men of the same County indifferently chosen XIX Four of the Jury must be of the same Hundred XX. If the thing in issue lye in the notice of two severall counties and not of one only the Jury shall be made equall out of both XXI But upon an Indictment of an offence against the Crown the tryall shall never be by Joynder of Counties XXII But if the Defendant plead in any Action that the Plaintiff is a villeine regardant to a Mannor of his in in another County yet the same shall be tried in the County where the writ is brought XXIII Where a Peer of the Realm is party to the Action a Knight must be returned upon the Jury XXIV In a Court of Pipowders the tryall is by the Merchants XXV The Jury in a writ of Right is called the grand Assize being four Knights or others in default of Knights choosing of twelve unto them XXVI This Iury is called the Grand Assize because it alwaies consisteth of more then 12. viz. of 16. XXVII Upon tryall by Jury challenges are allowed for the parties if they will both to the Array to the Pols and are to be tryed by some of the jurors XXVIII If it be before any Iurors sworn the Court shall choose Triers but when any of the Iurors are sworn they must try it XXIX Challeng to the Array is when the Jury is not sufficiently impanelled XXX Upon iust cause of exception to the Sheriff afterwards to the Coroner the Court shall choose certain persons to return the jury who are called Esliors XXXI And then the parties shall never afterwards make any challenge to the array XXXII Challenge to the Poll is when any of the jurors are not fit to passe upon the triall XXIII This Challenge must be taken before the panell be perused and shall be tryed by two of the jurors chosen by the Court. XXXIV But Challenges that sound not in reproach of the juror shall be examined upon his Oath which is called examination upon Voire Dire XXXV He that challengeth the array if it passe against him or that he release it shall never challenge the polls without shewing cause presently which shall be tryed out of hand XXXVI After Challenge to a juror for one cause which passeth against the Challenger hee shall not challenge him for another XXXVII In Indictments and appeals of felony the defendant may challenge thirty five jurors without shewing cause and this is called a peremptory challenge XXXVIII When there lacketh some to fill the jury others of the same sort shall be taken till it be full and they are called a Tales XXXIX The Tales must be an even number and lesse then the principal Pannel as Decem Tales Oct● Tales c. xl Every Tales must be of lesse number then the other as after an Octo Tales a sex Tales c. xli But in Indictments and appeals that touch life a Tales may be of a greater number then the principal pannel xlii The Jury being charged may neither eat no● drink but by leave of the Justices before their Verdict given xliii Doing so before they be agreed it maked their verdict void but after they are agreed it is onely finable XLIV The Jury upon arraignment acquitting on● that was found guilty of the death of a man upon an enquiry before the Coroners super visum corporis mus● finde who did the fact XLV The Jury in an Assize of novel disseisin shal● inquire of the plea in abatement XLVI And therefore in such an Assize no plea i● abatement is answerable XLVII An Infant bringing an Assize if a matte● done in the same County be pleaded against him th● Jury shall inquire of all the circumstances XLVIII The like inquiry of the circumstance● shall be if in an Assize brought against him he plea● to the Assize at large XLIV If the tenant in a mordancester travers● any point of the writ yet the jury shall inquire of al● the points and any one found against the Demandan● abateth the writ L. For the better direction of the Jury in their verdict greater liberty is permitted in pleading a matte● doubtful in law LI. For somtimes a traverse may be omitted LII Sometimes also the speciall matter may b● pleaded together with the general issue LIII Likewise the Court may be abridged before verdict so as the original remain true LIV. After acquittal upon an appeal or indictment of felonie or treason he shall never be drawn in question for the same offence again LV. In writs of right and in appeals that touch life trial may be by battail at the defendants choice LVI The battail in a writ of right may be by Champions who must be freemen LVII Here the demandants Champion must have seen him or his ancestors in possession and thereof take his oath LVIII The battail in an appeal must be in proper person and therefore here the defendant is restrained from the choise of Battail and must needs try it by Jury if there be any notorious presumption of the fact in him or imbecility in the Plaintiffe Also against a Peer of the Realm bringing an appeal the defendant shall not wage Battail LIX In a writ of Dower issue taken upon the death of her husband shall be tried by witnesses LX. In some cases also the trial shall be by the defendants oath as 1. Where the tenant in a Praecipe quod reddat alledgeth that he was lawfully summoned according to the law of the land 2. In meer personal contracts growing without deed or privitie of others the defendant may wage his law LXI Therefore in such kinde of actions executors are not chargable LXII No wager of Law shall be against the King LXIII But wager of law may be upon plaints in Court Barons for personal things under 40 Sh. LXIV An issue of Law returned a Demurrer is when admitting the matters alledged either of them resteth in the judgment of the Court. LXV The demurrer being joyned upon an exception to the original it self or Count for fault appearing in
the Inheritance though he be prayed in aid and make default VII For after the death of tenant for life he may falsifie it by action of ad terminum qui preteriit or writ of right which is called falsifying of a recovery VIII In a writ of Dower feme Guardian in soccage against Guardian by Knight service she shal at his prayer be adjudged to endow her self wholy of the land in soccage and this is called Dower de la plus beale IX A debt acknowledged in a Court of Record either to the King or a common person is in the nature of a judgment and called a Recognizance X. In appeals of mayhem and in Indictments or appeals of felony the accessory shall not be compelled to answer till attainder of all the principals XI He that is or by possibility may be within Orders namely a Deacon at the least may have the benefit of his Clergy if he be found culpable of any bare-felonie where life and member is to be lost XII This possibility there being no other impediment shall be tried by the judges by his ablenesse to read a verse XIII Clergy is the delivering of him to the Ordinary to be kept in prison XIV If it be before judgment in which case he is called a Clerk convict he shall be tried there by a jury of Clerks and therefore purging himself shall goe at large XV. Not purging himself but being found culpable by those Clerks he shall be only degraded XVI But upon an appeal no purgation shall be allowed XVII A Clerk convict shall answer to any offence committed before XVIII A Clerk convict forfeiteth his chattells XIX Notice must be given to the King of the time before the party make purgation XX. If the Clergy be after judgment in which case he is called a Clerk-attaint he shall remain in perpetuall prison XXI Outlawry is a judgment in it self XXII So is ab●uration XXIII The offender upon a presentment in a Leet or Sheriffs turn shall be amercied XXIV The Defendant in an appeal of felony being acquitted shall have iudgment also to recover damages against the Plaintiff XXV The Plaintiff recovering in a suit shall be allowed his costs XXVI These judgments have their judiciall Writs belonging to them both meer judiciall writs for the execution of them and new originalls in the nature of iudiciall writs to undo some matters concerning iudgments XXVII Meer judiciall Writs in reall or personall actions are either such as lie only within the year and day after the judgment rendred or a Scire facias XXVIII Those of the first sort are between the partie to the recovery and in the same Court where the recovery was XXIX Of this kind are upon recovery in reall and mixt actions XXX Habere facias seisinam to put him in possession upon a freehold recovered in an Assize Precipe quod reddat c. XXXI A writ to the Bishop to admit ones Clerk upon a presentation recovered in a Quare impedit or Assize of Darrein presentment XXXII Those upon a recovery in personal actions are of two sorts viz. to have execution of his possessions or against his body XXXIII .. Execution of his possessions is either of his lands or chattels or both XXXIV That of the land is either of the land it self or of profits out of the land XXXV Execution of the land it self is an Habere facias possessionem upon a term of years recovered in an Ejectione firmae c. XXXVI Executions of his chattels is a Fieri facias to levie execution of his goods and chattels onely XXXVII Execution of his lands and chattels is a Levari facias to levie execution of the profits of his lands and chattels XXXVIII Here execution shall be of any land which the party had the day of the judgment rendred but for chattels though it be a lease for years onely those which he had the day of the execution sued XXXIX But in Court Barons execution is onely by distresse and impounding till the party be satisfied XL. The King may have a distringas to levie an amerciament or such like by distresse and sale whether it be an amerciament in the Leet or Sheriffs turn or otherwise XLI Execution against the body is a Capias ad satisfaciendum to take the body in execution for satisfying of the partie XLII This is onely in a personal action where a Capias lay XLIII Here an Exigent shall be awarded upon the first Capias XLIV Of this nature are two speciall writs by the Kings Prerogatory Capias pro fine Regis and Capias utlagatum XLV Capias pro fine when the partie is adjudged to pay a fine to the King XLVI Capias utlagatum to take one that is outlawed XLVII These are the judicial writs within the year and day XLVIII A Scire facias is to warn the defendant upon recovery in real actions to shew cause why the plaintiffe should not have execution XLIX Here upon a Nihil returned execution shall be presently against the parties to the Judgement L. In case of life the Judge may command execution to be done without any writ LI. A woman quick with child shall for once an● no more be respited execution LII Here the trial shall be by a Jury of women and the writ for it is called A writ De Ventre inspi●endo CHAP. 47. A writ of Errour False Judgment Attaint Audita Querela I. THe new originals in the nature of judicial writs to undo some matters concerning Judgements are either writs grounded upon Errour or an Attaint and Audita querela II. Writs grounded upon Errour are a writ of Errour and false Judgment III. Both these lie upon any errour in the proceeding IV. But errour in processe may the same term be reformed in the same Court V. The processe here is a Scire facias VI. The party bringing a writ to reverse errour in the Judgment may have a super-sedeas to stay execution till the errour be discussed VII A Writ of Errour is upon an errour in a Court of Record VIII This may be sued in the Kings Bench or Parliament IX In the Kings Bench when the errour is in the Common place or other inferior Court of Record X In the parliament when the errour is in the Kings Bench and this is returnable before the King and the Lords onely XI A writ of false Judgement is upon errour in a base Court XII An Attaint is to enquire whether a Jurie of twelve men gave a false verdict XIII This must be brought in the life of him for whom it passeth and of some of them that gave it XIV It lieth onely in personal actions other then trespasses XV. The Jury here called the Grand-Jury are twenty four who are to be warned the first day XVI The processe against the party is summons re-summons as in Mortdancestor c. XVII The processe against the petty Jury is Venire facias and distresse XVIII The petty jury must be all present
c. hath an Interest This Act shall not be prejudicial to Lords and Commoners in any part of wasts not assigned to Drainers c. nor to any Port or Haven CHAP. 9. Rule 3 STat. 19 H. 7. 15. Upon a feoffment made to the use of a Villein the Lord may enter into the land it self Rule 7. Stat. 9. R 2 2. In a suit by a Villein against his Lord the Lord shall not be barred of their Villeins because of their answer in Law Rule 11. E. 61. 6. 16. No office or deputation thereof or of any part thereof which concerneth the administration or execution of Justice or the receit controlement or payment of the Kings money or revenue or any accompt Aulnage Auditorship or Surveying of the Kings Lands or Customes or Administration or Attendance in any Custome-house or keeping of any of the Kings Towns Castles or Fortress being places of strength or defence or any Clerkship in a Court of Record shall be bargained or sold or any reward or agreement of Reward taken for it upon pain that the seller c. shall forfeit all his Interest in such office or deputation c. and the buyer be a disabled person to enjoy the same And all bonds c. to be void as against him by whom they are made Howbeit all Acts executed by any such person offending before he be removed from his Office c. shall remain good This sttatute extendeth not to any Office of Inheritance or to any parkership or to any offices to be given by the Chief Justices of the Kings Bench or Common place or by any Iustices of Assize CHAP. 10 Rule 2. STat. 27. H. 8 24. No subject shall have authority to pardon any felony or any accessories to felony or any outlawry for such offences Nor to make any justices of Eyre Assize Peace or Gaole-delivery All originall Writs Indictments of treason felonie tre passe and processe upon the same shall be only in the Kings name and the Teste in his name that hath the Franchise Every Writ and Indictment whereby any thing is supposed to be done against the peace shall be supposed to be done against the Kings peace onely and not against the peace of any subject the King shall have all fines issues amerciaments and forfeitures lost by any Officers of Franchises for non-execution or insufficient returnes of processe or for any misdemeanour concerning their office with many provisoes in the same Statute CHAP. 11. Rule 4 WEstm 2. 23. 13. E. 1. Executors shall have a Writ of accompt and the action and processe in the same writ as their testator should if he had lived Stat. 4. E. 3. 7. 1. Executors shal have an action for a trespass done to their testator as of his goods and chattels carried away in his life and recover their damages in like manner as he whose executors they are might have done if he had lived Stat. 32. H. 8. 1. He that hath lands tenements 〈◊〉 hereditaments in soccage and none holden by knight-service or soccage in chief may devise all by his wa● in writing or give all by act executed in his life 〈◊〉 may he that hath land holden by soccage in cheif an● other land holden of a common person by soccage and none holden by Knight-service saving to the King● primer seisin relief suing of the same out of the King● hands fines for alienation c. and all other dutie● for the soccage in chief as before hath been accustomed He that hath lands c. holden by Knight service whether he have any other lands holden of the King or of any other person by Knight-service or orherwise or not may do the like for two parts in three to be divided in certainty for the advancement of his wife or children and payment of his debts saving unto the King the wardship or primer seisin of the third part without any charge dower c. and finds for alienation He that hath lands c. holden by knight-service whether of the king alone by knight-service not in cheif or of a common person or som holden of the king some of a common person and other land in soccage may devise by will or give by act executed in his life two parts of that holden by knight-service and all the soccage saving to the Lord of the land holden by knight-service the Wardship of a full third part thereof without any charge dower c. Provided that every one shall sue his liverie and pay his relief and heriot as if this Act had never been made Stat. 34. 35. H. 8 The former Statute shall be extended to enable devises and other Acts onely by Land in Fee-simple And if the partie that maketh the will or other Act be seized in Coparcenerie or in the common it shal be good for so much as in himselfe of right is The wardship relief primer seisin c. shall be of lands that descend immediatly after the death of him that maketh the will or other act as well in fee-tail as fee-simple And the devise of two parts residue shall be good though it be of all his fee-simples land Such a will shall be good for two parts in case only where two may be devised though it be made for the whole or more then two parts Such wils made by a feme-covert infant under the age of 21 yeares Ideot or one of non-sane memorie shall not be good See also some other things there for the explanation of the former Act of 32 H. 8. 1. Rule 10. Stat. 21. H 8. 4. that part of the executors which take upon them the charge of a will may sell the land devised by the Testator to be sold albeit the other part which refuse will not joyn with them Rule 11. Stat. 25. E. 3. Stat. 5 5. Executors of executors shall have actions of debt accompt and goods carried away of the first Testators and Execution of Statute-Merchants recognizances made unto him And shall also answer for Assets as the first executors should have done Rule 12. Westm 2. 19. 13. E. 1. the Ordinarie shall satisfie debts wherein the Intestate was bound as executors should Stat. 31. E. 3 11. the Ordinaries shall depute next friends of the Intestate to administer his goods who shall sue and be sued and be accountable to the Ordinaries as executors should Stat. 21 H. 8. 5. Administration shall be committed to the widdow of the Intestate or to the next of his blood or to both at the discretion of the Ordinary The O●dinary not doing his duty herein forfeiteth ten pound Stat. 43. El. 8. If any obtain goods of an Intestate fraud as by procuring administration to be granted a stranger of mean estate or not to be found and no● upon valuable consideration c. he shall be charge as executor in his own wrong as far as the goods debts extend Rule 20. Westm 1. 4. 3. E. 1. Where a man dog cat escape alive out of the Ship it
or Darrein presentment at his pleasure Rule 15. Westm 2. 9. The Mesne not coming in to acquit the tenant loseth the service and the tenant shal have like remedy against the lord for exaction as the Mesne might have had And there see the processe and proceeding to be used against the Mesne Rule 21. Stat. de finibus 18. E. 1. Stat. 4. After the writ original is delivered in the presence of the parties before the Justices the Pleader shall say Sir Justice Conge d'accorder then the Justice shall say what saith Sir R And when the Kings fine is agreed for and the peace cried the Pleader shall declare the substance of the fine the parties ought to be of full age of s●● memorie and out of prison A feme-covert must be examined before four Justices and without her consent the fine cannot be leived Stat. de finibus levatis It shall be no good exception that before and at the time of the fine leived the demandant or his ancestors were seised of the land contained in the fine or of some part thereof Fines shall be openly read at two certain dayes in the week by the discretion of the Justices and in the meane time all pleas shall cease Sta. 5. H. 4. 13 Every writ of Covenant All other whereupon Fines are levyed the dedimus potestatem and all knowledges of the same before they be drawn out of the Common Bench by the Chirographer shall be inrolled in a Roll to be of Record for ever out of which execution shall be had if the Notes and Fines be imbeziled Stat. 23 El. 3. Every writ of Covenant or other writ whereupon any fine is levyed the Return thereof the Concord Note and Foot of the Fine the Proclamations and the Queens silver also every writ of Entry in the post and other writ whereupon any common recovery is suffered writs of Summons ad Warrantizandum and the returne of all these writs and every warrant of Attorney may at any mans request be inrolled which Inrollment shall be of as great force to all purposes in law as the things themselves if they were extant No Fine Proclamation or common Recovery shall be reversed by writ of Errour by reason of false Latine Razure Interlining mis-entring of the warrant of Attorney or of any Proclamation or by reason of any other defect of form in words and not in matter of substance Rule 22. Stat. 34. E. 3. 16. The plea of non claim of Fines shall be no barr hereafter Stat. 4. H. 7. 24. Every fine after the ingrossing shall be proclaimed in the Court the same Term and the three next four severall dayes in every Term all pleas ceasing the whilest The Proclamations being so made The fine shall conclude all privies strangers except women Covert persons within 21 years of age in prison out of the Realm or of non-sane memory being no parties to the Fine so as they or their heirs take their action or lawfull entry within five yeares after those imperfections removed saving to all persons and their heirs other then parties the right claim and interest which they have at the time of the fine so as they pursue it by action or lawfull entry within five years next after the Proclamations And saving to all other persons such right title claim and interest as first shall grow remain or come to them after the Proclamations by force of any matter before the fine so as they take their right according to the Law within five years next after it so growes c. And those that be Covert-baron c. at the time when it groweth that they or their heirs take their action or lawfull enuy within five years after those imperfections removed saving also to all not parties or privies the exception that none of the parties or any to their use had any thing in the lands at the time of the fine Stat. 1. M. Parl. 1. 7. All Fines whereupon Proclamations be not or shall not be duly made by reason of the adjournment of any term by writ shall be as good as if any term had been holden from the beginning to the end and proclamations therein made according to the Statute Stat. 32. El. 2. Proclamations of Fines shall be only four times viz. once in the term wherein the Fine is ingrosed and once in every of the three termes next after CAAP. 30. Rule 2. MAg Cart. 12 9. H. 3. Assises of Mortdancester and novel-disseisin shall not be taken but in their proper County by the Justices of Assize and if they cannot be determined there they shall be determined by the same Justice in their Journey Also difficult matters shall be referred to the Justices of the bench to be there determined westm 1. 24 3. E. 1. An Assize given against an Escheator Sherif or other Bailiffe of the King that seiseth any lands by colour of his office without special-warrant and double damages to be recovered by the ●est●e partie greieved Westm 2. 25. 13. E. 1. An Assize of novel disseisin shall lie for estovers of wood profit to be taken in woods a Corody delivery of Corn and other victuals and necessaries to be received yearly in a certain place toll tronage passage Pontage Pawnage and the like to be taken in places certain the keeping of Parks Woods Forests Chases Warrens Gates and other Bayliwicks and Offices in fee And in all these cases the writ shall be de libero tenemento All an Assise is given for common of turbarie fishing and such like Commons appendant to a freehold or without a freehold by special deed at least for term of life If any holding for years or in ward alien in fee remedie shall be had by an Assize and both the feoffors and feoffees shal be had for disseisors so that during the life of any of them the said writ shall hold place but if they die the remedie shall be by writ of entry the giving of this writ in new cases shal not diminish the force thereof in those wherein it had force before and remedie also shall be had thereby in case where on feedeth in the sevrall of another In this suit if the defendant fail to make good the exception which he pleads he shall be adjudged a disseisor without taking the Assize and shall give to the Plaintiffe double damages both inquired and to be inquired and besides shall suffer a years Imprisonment If such an exception shall be alledged by a Bailiffe the taking of the Assize shall not thereby delayed nor yet the judgement upon the restitution of the land and damages Howbeit if the Master of such Bailiffe afterwards offer to prove to the Court by matter of Record that there was just exception whereby the Plaintif might have been barred he shall have a venire facias to produce such record And then if the Justices see cause the plaintif shall be warned to appeare at a certain day and the defendant shall then have again his
seisin and damages and the plaintif shall be punished by Imprisonment at the discretion of the Iustices In like manner also shall the Iustices proceed in case the defendants proof is by deeds and releases for if the plaintif purchased the Assize contrary to his own deed he shall be punisht as aforesaid Stat. 7. R. 1. 10. An Assize of novel disseisin for 〈◊〉 issuing out of Lands in divers Counties shall be take● in confinio comitatus as is used for Common of Pas●●● in one County appendant to tenements in another Stat. 1. H 4. 8. A speciall Assize is maintainable by the disseisee for such lands as are granted by the King patent without title first found by inquest for th● King without suit to be made to the King in that behalfe And if the pattentee pray in Aide of the King a procedendo shall also be granted without suit Here 〈◊〉 the Assize passe for the disseises he shall recover 〈◊〉 damages against the patentee Stat. H. 4. 8. If any make forcible entry into land by way of maintenance the Chancellor of England shall grant a special Assize without suing to the King and if the disseisor shall be attainted thereof he sha● suffer one whole yeares imprisonment and restor● double damages to the party grieved Stat. 21. H. 8. 3. The plaintif in Assize may abridg● his plaint of any part whereunto a bar is pleaded without prejudice to the residue Merton 3. 20. H. 3. A man disseised recovering his seisin by Assize of novel disseisin or confession of the party and having the same delivered him by the Sherif if he be again disseised of the same tenements by the same disseisor he shall have a writ of redisseisin to command the Sherif taking with him the Keeper of the pleas of the Crown and other Knights in proper person to go to the land c. and by the first Iurors or other lawfull men to make inquiry Howbeit this must not be without speciall commandment of the King The redisseisor shall be imprisoned Marlbr 8 52. H. 3 And not delivered without special command of the King and payment of a Fine Westm 2. 8. 13. E. 1. Writs of redisseisin must be inrolled in the Chancery and transcripts thereof shall be sent into the Exchequer Westm 2. 26. A writ of Redisseisin shall lie for them-that have recovered by default reddition or otherwise without recognition of assizes or Iuries The redisseisor shall answer double damages and not be reprevisable by common writ Rule 8. Westm 2. 24. 13. E. 1. Giveth an assize of nusance against him to whom the tenement is alienated after the nusance is made Stat. 6. R. 2. 3. The Plaintif if he will may have a writ of nusance in the nature of an Assise determinable before the Iustices or before the Iustices of Assize Rule 9. Magn. Cart. 12. Vide suprae Rule 2. Marlb 16. 52. H. 3. If the Lord will not render unto the heir the land when he comes to age without plea the heir shall recover his land by an Assize of Mortdancestor together with all his damages West 2. 4. 13 E. 1. If a woman haveing no right recover Dower against a Guardian the heir at full age shall have a Mortdancester aginst her Glocester 3. The heir shall have an Assize of Mortdancester if the tenant by eouttesie alien and leas● no Assets Glocester 6. All the heirs whereof one is Son o● Daughter Brother or Sister Nephew or Niece and the other in a further degree shall joyne in a Mortdancester Rule 10. Mag. Cart. 13. An Assize of Darrein presentment shall be alwayes taken before the Iustice of the Common place Rule 1● Westm 2 24 13. E. 1. A writ of Juris utr●● shall be granted to try whether free almes belong to one Church or another in case where they are transferred from one Church to another Rule 13. Stat. 31. H. 8 1. Iointenants and tenants in Common of an estate of Inheritance in their owne right or in the right of their wives in any Mannors Land c. may be compelled to make partition by writ de partitione facienda as Coparceners are compellable to do and afterwards shall have aid to deraigne the Warranty paramount and to recover pro rata as Coparceners after partition should Stat 32. H 8. 32. Iointenants and tenants in common that hold for life or years amongst themselves 〈◊〉 with others that have Inheritance or freehold in any Mannors lands c shall also be compelled to make partition by the said writ to be pursued upon their case Howbeit such partition shall not be prejudicial to any but the parties to such partition their executors and assignes CHAP. 31. Rule 3. STat. 9. E. 3. Stat. 1. 3. In a writ of debt brought against divers executors they shall have but one Essoine before appearance and another after appearance he or they that do first appeare in the Court at the grand distresse shall answer to the Plaintiffe and the plaintif if it passe for him shall have judgment and execution of the goods of the Testator against all named in the writ as well as if they had all pleaded Rule 7. Mag. Cart. 8. 9. H. 3. The pledges shall be free so long as the principal debtor is sufficient And they answering the debt shall have the lands and rents of the principall untill they be satisfied but note that this is meant of the Kings debtor Stat. 1 R. 2. 12. No Warden of the Fleet shall suffer any prisoner in execution to go out of prison by Mainprize Bail or Baston without making gree with the party unlesse by writ or other commandement of the King upon pain to lose his Office and the Creditor to have a writ of debt against him Stat. 23 H. 6. 10. Every Obligation taken by a Sheriff or his Ministers by colour of their office of any pe●son in their Ward by course of Law shall be by the name of their office and upon condition that the prisoner appeared at the day and place mentioned in his Writ Bill or Warrant an Obligation in any other forme taken is void Stat. 32. H. 8 37. The Executors and Administrators of him that hath any rent or fee-farm in fee-simple fee-tail or for life shall have an Action of debt for the arrerages in the Testators life time against the tenants that should then have paid it or may distreine and make avowrie upon their matter in the lands so long as they remaine in the possession of the said tenant or of any claiming onely from him A husband seised of any such estate in any rent or fee-farm in his wives right shall after her death himself also his executors or administrators have the same remedy for arrerages due in her life So likewise of him his executors or administrators that hath a rent or fee-farme during anothers life and Cesty qui vi● dye the same being unpaid Rule 9. Stat. 13. El. 4. The lands profits and hereditaments of
every Accomptant or him that receiveth money for the Queen or her successors to be imployed to the use of the Queen c. shall be extended in the nature of a Statute staple for the payment of the arrerages Or the Queen c. if he do not satisfy within six moneths after the arrerages found may sell his land and the party may have the surplussage to be delivered to him by him that received the money upon the sale without further warrant This sale to be of any land whereof it is found by Inquisition that the Accomptant taketh the profits with Inquisition if it be true after traverse of the office and that found for him he shall have his land againe without any petition livery or Ouster le main Here if any such buy land with the Queens treasure and pay not the arrerages as before the Queen shall seize and retain the land according to the rate that the party had it This Act extendeth not to such officers as have used to disburse money immediatly after their accounts past as the treasurers of War Garisons Navies c. unlesse the Queen c. command present pay Neither doth it extend to Accomptants whose whole Receit exceedeth not 300 l. not to Sheriffes Escheators or Bailiffes of Liberties The Queen c being satisfied by sale of land the sureties shall be discharged for so much and if any remain yet unpaid the sureties shall pay the residue ratably according to their abilites Stat. 2 7. El. 3. the Queen c. may make sale of the accomptants lands c. as wel after his death as in his life time and as well where the accompt was made and the debt known within eight years after his death as in his life time Provided that after the Accomptants death and before the lands be sold a fcire facias shall be awarded to garnish the heir to shew cause why the lands c. should not be sold c. whereupon if the heir upon such Garnishment or two nihils returned do not prove unto the Court that the executors or administrators of the accomptant have sufficient then ten moneths after such two nihils or garnishment returned the lands c. shall be sold and disposed according to the Stat. of 13. El. 4 Nevertheless the heirs sale bona fide and upon good consideration before the scire facias awarded shall be good to him that is not consenting to defraud the Queen c. This Act shall extend to all Officers of Receipts and Accompts to the Queen and to none other The heirs lands c. shall not be sold during his minority but at any time within eight years after his ful age they shall be liable as aforesaid If the Accomptant or debtor had a Quietus est in his life time that shall discharge the heir of debt Stat. 7. Ja. 15 No debt shall be assigned to the King c. by any debtor or accomptant other then such debts as did before grow due originally to the Kings debtor or Accomptant bona fide All Grants and Assignments of debts to the King c. contrary to the true intent of this Act shall be void Rule 15. Marlbr 23. 52. H. 3 Attachment given in an Action of Accompt against Bayliffs that withdraw themselves and have no lands or tenements to be distrained by Westm 2. 11. 13. E. 1. He to whom the accompt is to be made may assign Auditors to take it who may immediately commit to the next Gaole the Accomptant being found in arrerages till he fully satisfie wherupon the Accomptant finding himself grieved may bring the matter by a scire facias before the Barons of the Exchequer CHAP. 32. Rule 22. WEstm 1-20 3. E. 1. Trespassers in parts and Ponds attainted at the suit of the party besides making large amends according to the trespass and fine at the Kings pleasure shall have three years imprisonment and finde good surety not to commit the like trespasse And if he cannot finde surety he shall abjure the Realm Being a fugitive and having no lands or tenements whereby to be justified he shall be proclaimed from county to county and if he appear not outlawed Stat. 5. R. 2. 7. None shall enter into lands or tenements by force in pain of Imprisonment and ransome at the the Kings pleasure Stat. 15 R. 2. 2. When forcible entry is made into lands or Church-livings one or more Justices of peace taking sufficient power and going to the place so kept by force may commit the offender to the next Gaole there to remain convict by the Justices record till he hath made fine and ransome to the King and herein the Sheriff and all others shall be assistant in paine of Imprisonment and great fines making Stat. 8. H. 6. 9. The Statute of 15 R. 2. 2. shall be duely put in execution both against forcible entry and forcible detainer though the entry was peaceable When complaint of any such entry or detainer shall be made to any such Justice or Justices of peace he or they by precept shall command the Sheriffe to summon a sufficient Jury and having by them made inquiry of the force committed shall cause the tenements to be reseised and that as well in the absence as presence of the party offending And here the alienation of tenements so entred into or detained by force for maintenance shall be adjudged void Howbeit this Act shall endamage none where peaceable possession hath been enjoyed three years Stat. 31. El. 11. There shall be no restitution upon an Indictment of forcible entry or detainer where the defendant hath been three years next before in quiet possession and his estate therein ended Stat. 21. Ja. 15. Vpon force or detainer as aforesaid a Justice or Justices of peace have power to give restitution of possession as well unto tenants for years by Elegit Statute-Merchant or staple copiholders or Guardians by Knight service as unto such as claim freehold or Inheritance Merton 6 20. H. 3. A Lay-man ravishing or marrying a Ward within 14 years of age shall be imprisoned besides losse of the value of the marriage Westm 2. 35. 13. E. 1. A strict Law against one that taketh away a Ward CHAP. 33. Rule 2. MAgna Cart. 34. 9. H. 3. A woman shall have no appeal but only of the death of her husband Glocester 9. 6. E. 1. An appeal of the death of a man must be brought within the year Stat. 3. H. 7. 1. One acquitted upon an indictment of Murder or man-slaughter or as accessory shall not go at large without good bayl untill the year and day be past within which time an appeall may be brought if no Clergy be had before and all advantages therein saved as if the acquittall had not been CHAP. 34. Rule 17. 18. WEst 2. 7. A guardian may have writ of admeasurement of dower howbeit the heir at full age shal not be barred by that suit if the guardian did follow it faintly In
commeth how soo● soever it cometh after the livery Stat. 3● H. 8. 46. The erection of the Court of Ward And Stat. 33 H. 8. 22. the annexing thereunto the Liveries See the Statutes at large Rule 31. Also for the better preservation of the peac● divers wholesome Lawes bean to be framed from th● begining of the Reigne of E. 3. for the establishing 〈◊〉 justices of Peace in every County untill at last abo●● the 12 year of R. 2. they were fully setled and ha● power to keep their Quarter-Sessions which Government Sir Edward Cook hath observed to be the best i● the Christian world for the preservation of the Peace And therefore see those Statutes as you shal find the● ranked together in divers Books now extant Rule 33. Concerning Informations there are dire●● good Lawes made which are now sorted together under the titles of actions popular or Informations in d●vers Treatises which treat of the office of a justice o● Peace and therefore it is conceived needlesse here t● insert them Rule 34 See Officium Coronatoris 4. E. 1. Whic● setteth down the whole order how he is to proceed upo● inquiries See also Stat de Exonia 14. E. 1. and the a●ticles thereunto annexed Artic super Cart. 3. 28. E 1. The Coroner of the cou●tie shal joyn with the Kings Coroner in inquring of th● death of a man in a Kings house Stat. 33. H. 8. 12. The Coroner of the Kings house shall inquire alone without the Coroner of the County by a jury of the Yeoman officers of the Court. CHAP. 37. Rule 10. Stat. 31. El. 3. Upon a summons in a reall action fourteen dayes before the return a Proclamation of the Summons shal be made upon a Sunday after divine Service at the doore of the parish-Church where the Land lieth and shall also be returned with the names of the Summoners And till that done no Grand Cape shall go out but a Alias and Pluries as the case requireth Rule 15. Stat. 1. H. 55. In every original writ of actions personal appeals indictments in which the Exigent shall be awarded to the names of the defendants additions shall be made of their estate and degree or misterie and the Towns Hamlets Place and Counties in which they were or be conversant otherwise all Outlawries thereupon pronounced shall be nul And before these Outlawries be pronounced the said writs and indictments shal be abated by the exception of omitting the said additions Stat. 6. H. 6. 1. All Exigents and Outlawries upon indictments in the Kings Bench of Felony and Treason shall be void if before the Exigent awarded a Capias be not directed to the Sheriff of the County whereof they be named in the Indictment having six weeks space or larger at the discretion of the justices before the return Stat. 8. H. 6. 10. In every indictment or appeal of Treason Felonie or Trespasse after the first Capias returned forthwith before the Exigent another Capias shall be awarded to the shheriffe of the County where by the indictment the party is supposed to abide ret●●able before the same Justices c. containing the s●● of three moneths where the Counties be holden 〈◊〉 moneth to moneth and of four moneths where t● be holden from six weeks to six weeks by which Cap●● the Sheriffe shall be commanded to take his body if be found in his Baliwick If he be not found the● make proclamation for his appearance in two Co●●ties before the return of the writ Any Exigent or O●●lawrie otherwise pronounced shal be holden for no● Stat. 10. H. 6. 6 The like is to be observed when 〈◊〉 indictment or appeal taken before Justice of Pe●● or other having power shall be removed before 〈◊〉 King in his Bench or elswhere by Certiorari or oth●●wise Stat. 6 H. 8. 4. Upon every Exigent a writ to m●● three Proclamations returnable the day of the retu●● of the Exignt and the Proclamations to be made 〈◊〉 two in the full County Court the third at the gen●ral Sessions shall goe out to the Sheriffe of every oth●● County viz. then that where the action is brough● where the defendant is said to be or lately to have bee● if the Kings writ run there otherwise to the Cou●● next adjoyning to that where he is said to be Eve●● outlawry to the contrary shall be avoided by plea. Stat. 37. E 3. 2. A writ Identitate nominis give●● those whose lands goods or chattels be seized by 〈◊〉 ofheer surmising them to be outlawed where they b● not because they bear such names as they who b● outlawed for want of good declaration of the Si●name Stat. 9. H. 6. 4. A writ of Identit ate nominis shall be 〈◊〉 this case maintainable by executors as well as by the testato● himselfe if he were living Rule 18. Stat. 5. E. 3. 12. where the Plaintiffe h●● recovered damages and he against whom damages are recovered is outlawed at the Kings suit no Charter of pardon shall be granted except the plaintiffe be satisfied for his damages When one is outlawed by p●ocesse before his appearance no such Charter shall be granted except he yield himselfe before the Justices from whom the Exigent issued who shall cause the party to be warned to appear before them at a day whereupon if the plaintiffe appear they shall plead upon the first originall as if no Outlawry had been If the plaintiffe appear not and the warning be duely witnessed he that is outlawed shall be delivered by vertue of his Charter Stat. 31. El. 3 Upon every Exigent in a personal action a writ of proclamation shall go out of the same Court to the Sheriffe of the County where the defendant at the time of the Exigent shall be dwelling whereupon three Proclamations shall be made viz one in open County-Court another at the Quarter-Sessions and the third one month at least before the Quinto exact at the door of the parish Church where the defendant shall be dwelling at the time of the Exigent upon a Sunday immediately after Divine Service All Outlawries otherwise executed shall be void But before reversing of any such outlawrie in this respect the defendant shall put in bail not onely to answer the Plaintiffe in a new action but to satisfie the condemnation if the Plaintiffe begin his suit within two Termes Rule 20. Stat. 25. E 3. Stat 5. 14 The second Capias in case of Felony must be returned three weeks after Rule 24. Westm 2. 39 13 E. 1. The Plaintife may averre that the Sherife might have returned greater issues and thereupon shall have a Judicial writ to the Justice of Assize to inquire of what and how great issue he might have answered from the day of the purchase of the writ to the day of the return and the Sheriffe shall be charged with the surplussage not returned Stat. 1. E. 3. Stat. 1. 5. The like averment of too small issues returned given against Bailiffes of Franchises as well as against the
Sheriffe Rule 30. Westm 1. 17. 13. E. 1. the Sheriffe or Bailif●● may take the power of the County or Baliwick and beat down a Castel or Fortresse where such beasts are inclosed if he that took them will not make deliverance Rule 33. Westm 2. 11. 13. E. 1. Processe of Outlawrie given in an action of accompt Stat. 25. E. 3. Stat 5. 17. Such processe shall be made in a writ of debt and detinue of Chattells and taking of beasts by Capias Exigent as is now used in a writ of accompt Stat. 7. H. 5. 1. In writ against forgers of false charters and muniments like processe shall be made by Capias Exigent as in writs of trespasse Stat. 19. H. 7. 9. Like processe given in actions upon the case sued in the Kings Bench and Common place as in actions of trespasse and debt Stat. 23. H. 8. 14. Like processe shall be had in every action brought upon the statute of 5 R. 2. 7. concerning forcible entry as in trespasse and like processe in every writ of annuity and covenant as in debt CHAP. 38 Rule STat. 25. H. 8 20 for the election nomination presentation investing and consecrating of Arch Bishops and Bishops Rule 32. Stat. 5. R. 2. 2. Prohibits going beyond s●● without licence but it is repealed by 4. Ja. 1. Rule 35. Stat. Carlile 15. E. 2. The Dedimus potestatem shall be directed to two of the Justices or to one Justice and a Knight CHAP. 39. Rule 5. GLocester 5. 6. E. 1. An Action of waste is maintainable aginst tenant by the courtesie in dower for life or years and the party attainted thereof shall lose the thing wasted and recompence the party grieved thrice so much as such waste shall be taxed at Westm 2. 14. 13. E. 1. the processes in a writ of waste shall be summons attachment and distresse and if he come not then a writ unto the Sheriffe taking with him 12 men to go to the place wasted aed there enquire of the waste and upon that waste returned judgement shall be Stat. 11. H. 6. 5. Where the tenants grant over his estate but notwithstanding takes the profits and commits waste an action lies against him Magn Cart. 4. 9. H. 3. The Guardian may not commit waste in pain to lose the Wardship And Cap. 5. must repaire and sustain the houses of the profit of the land Glocester 5 6. E. 1. If the Guardian commit waste and the Wardship lost answers not the damages before the heires age he shall render damages to the heir otherwise Artic. super Cart. 18. 28. E. 1. An Escheator committing Waste upon Wards lands shall answer damages Stat. 36. E. 1. Stat. 1. 13. The heir shall have an action of waste against the Escheator committing waste as well within age as when he is at full age See also 14. E. 3. 13. Westm 2. 22. 13. E. 1. A writ of waste is given for one Jointenant or tenant in common against another wherein the defendant is to be at his choise to take his part in certain and then to have for his part the place wasted or to agree from thenceforth to take nothing more then his Companions do Glocester 13 6 E. 1. Hanging a plea by writ the tenant may not commit waste nor estrepment of the land in demand and if he do the demandant may have awrit to cause the land to be kept that no wast nor estrepment be done CHAP. 40 Rule 2. 36 E 3. 15. Declarations shall be good enough if they have matter of substance though the termes be not apt Rule 10 Westm 1. 46. If a writ of novel disseisin be purchased and the disseisor die before the Assize be pasesed the plaintiffe shall have a writ of entry sur disseisi● against his heir The like shall the heir of the disseisin have in case he die c. The nonage of the heir of the disseisor or disseisee shall not prejudice in an Assize If the Inquest pass against the heir of the disseisee he shall have an Attaint gratis Glocester 2. 6 E. 1. Where an Infant is held from his Inheritance whereby he is driven to his writ the Inquest shall passe notwithstanding his non-age Exposition of the Stat of Glocester 26. E. 1. Touching an Enquest to be made for an Infant that Statute shal run without limitation of time Westm 2. 40 13. E. 1. The suit of a woman or her heir in a Cui in vita or a sur Cui in vita after the death of her husband shall not be delayed by minority of the heir who ought to warrant the land Rule 31. Westm 2. 42. Certain cases wherein vie● shall not be granted Stat. de visu terrae Essoyne de servitio Domini Regis 12. E. View shall be granted in a writ of Ward in a writ of Customes and services in a writ of Advowson of a Church where there be more Churches then one in a Town and all of one Saint in a writ of Dower and in a nuper obiit Rule 32. West 2 3. The reversioner may be received in default of tenant for life dower curtesie c. If Judgment be given by reddition or default the reversioner shall have a writ of entry after the death of the Ter●or so shall the heir also where the tenant was tenant in tail Stat de defensione Juris 20. E. The reversioner desiring to be received before judgment shal finde surety as the Court shall allow to answer the value of the issues of the tenant from the day of the receit till judgement if it passe for the demandant Sta. 13. R. 2. 17. The like receit shal be for the reversione upon the faint pleading of such a tenant and he shall plead in chief without delay and the Judges by discretion shall give dayes of grace between the demandant and him that is received without giving the Common day in plea of land unlesse it be by the demandants assent Surety for the value shall be found as before in 20. El. as well where the receit is counter pleaded as where it is granted Glocester 11. Tenant for years shall be received before judgment rendred to say that the Action was by Covin Westm 2. 3 Receipt is given to the Wife in her Husbands life time if he lose her land by default and the tenant that recovered against the husband must maintain his own right Rule 33. Westm 1. 39. What Counter-pleaders are good in Mortdancestor nuper obiit Intrusion and such like actions and also in writs of Entry in the degrees c. See also Stat. de vocat ad warrant 20. E. 1. 1. 4. E. 1. 18. Westm 2. 6. Rule 48. After Sanctuaries were taken away for sundry offences by divers Statutes at last by the Statute of 21 Jac. 28 They were totally annulled Rule 5 3. Glocester 3. The heir shall not be barred of his Mothers Inheritance by the Warranty of the father being tenant by courtesie or alienation without
of him when the Tenant in a Court of Record disclaimeth to hold of him TABLE 29. A reall Praecipe quod faciat which is either to recover an Heredittament and this is either In respect of a Seigniory A Writ de consuetudinibus servitiis Secta ad molendinum To recover some other Herediament A Quare Impedit A Quod permittat A Curia claudenda Some reall thing that concerns an Hereditament as A Writ of Covenant as to levie a Fine of Lands c. Writs in the nature of a Covenant reall A Writ of Mesne A Warrantia Cartae TABLE 30. A reall Si fecerit te securum An Assise Of his own possession as An Assise of Novell D●seisin An Assise of Nusance Of his Ancestors Possession as an Asise of Mortdancestor Either of his own or his Ancestors posession as an Assise of Darrein presentment A Juris utrum for a Parson or Vicar upo● his Predecessors alienation Others Such as be between Privies in blood as A Partitione fa●enda A Nuper obiit A Quo jure to try for Common TABLE 31. A personal Originall Writ is also A Praecipe A Praecipe quod reddat Debt and a Writ of Annuity Detinue A Praecipe quod faciat An Action o● Account An Action of Covenant A Si fecerit te securum Tab 32 TABLE 32. A personal si fecerit te securum which is Without force Where the peace is not broken 1 Rationabili parte bonorum 2. Valore Maritagii 3 VVrit or forfeiture of marriage 4 Intrusion of VVard 5 Ejectione custodiae 6 Quare ejecit infra terminum 7 Trespasses upon the Case not against the Peace Where the Peace is broken yet not Vi as An Action of Deceit An Action of Conspiracy With force An Action of Trespass Speciall Actions of Trespass as De parco fracto Rescous Ejectione firmae TABLE 33. An Appeal which concerneth life and is the parties private Action prosecuting also for the Crown in respect of a Felony and this is given only to the Heir of the party slain TABLE 34. A Commissionall Writ which is either Commissionary as A Writ of right Patent A Justiciis An assise of petty Nusance Admeasurement of Dower Admeasurement of Pasture A Nativo habendo A Rationabilibus divisis A Homine re●legiando A Replevin Also many of the Actions th●● went before as Consue●●● nibus Servitiis Secta 〈◊〉 molendinum Quod permit●● Mesne Dower Unde 〈◊〉 habet Annuity Debt Detinue Covenant Trespas● c to what summ● soev●● be brought and also dete●mined in the County by J●stices Meer Commissions as Oyer and Terminer Association Si non omnes Ad quod damnum Perambulatione faci● de TABLE 35. In Courts that hold plea without original Writ the Suit may be by Plaint in matters that conce●● Common pleas Bill in Pleas of the Crown a● Officers of any Court by p●●viledge may sue or be 〈◊〉 there and not elsewhere by 〈◊〉 TABLE 36. Suits for the King are A Quo warranto for the trying of the right of Franchises As inquiry by a Jury which is an Office to entitle the King to som Possession wherof consider The severall wayes how it may be found viz. Virtute officii brevis Commissionis The severall Writs or Commissions used therein concerning a Wardship viz For finding of it Diem clausit extremum within the year after the ●enants death Mandamus after the year Devenerunt when the Ancestor dyed in Ward to the King For mending it Quae plura Melius Inquirendum Datum est nobis intelligi For discharge of it An Aetate probanda A Writ of Livery for Lands in Capite An Ouster le main for other Knight-service Lands How the party may be releived against it By Traverse or Monstrans de droit when the King is entitled by Office only By Petition when he is intitled by double matter of Record as when the Office finds an Attainder of Treason or the like Presentment or Indictment to find an Offence against the King and for penall Lawes an Information TABLE 37. The Originall Process which is Proper Single By the Possessions By the Land In all reall Praecipes quod reddat Summons i● Land Grand cape i● seise it into the Kings hands A Mortdancester juris utrum da●rein presentment Summons Re-summons upon default the Inquest awarded By the Goods as in Assises of nove● Disseisin Nusance Attachme●● by the defendants goods which h● shall lose if he appear not and up on default the Inquest awarded By the person in Mayhem Felony and Treason Cap. Exig Outlawry Mixt By the goods and lands In all other reall Actions and in all personal Actions except Trespas offences against the publike and also in all Justicies Summons b● the Goods Attachment Distress Inf●nite and ●sues of the Land In all Trespasses upon the Case except Deceit and conspiracy and in all Offences in the nature of Trespasses upon the Case Attachment Distres● infinit● and i●sues By the goods and person as in Trespa●● vi Deceit Conspiracy and Offence against the publike Attachment D●stress infinite and upon nihil returne 3. Capias Exigent Outlawry Improper Tab. 38. TABLE 38. Improper which is not to bring any matter into Plea or solemn Action but only to do or leave undone something and in is Commandatorie as Dote assignanda Homagio capiendo Scutagio habendo De Corrodio habendo De Annua pensione hab De Libertatibus alloc De executione Judicii De restitutione Temporalium De securitate pacis De vi laica removenda Of cleansing Streets De excommunicato capiendo De excommunicato deliberando De leproso amovendo De cautione admittenda De haeretico comburendo De Coronatore exonerando De Coronatore eligendo De exoner vi● forest De Electione vi● forest A Writ for the Royall Assent to elect an Abbot De securitate invenienda All Dedimus potestatems de fine leuando de attornato faciendo c. Prohibitory Tab. 39. TABLE 39. Prohibitory as 1 A Protection cum clausula nolumus to free ones Possessions that nothing be taken against his will for the Kings business 2 To discharge Spirituall Persons of Fi●teens 3 Quod clerici non eligantur in Officium B●livi c 4 To forbid Tenant in Dower by the Curtesie or Guardian by Knight service o● in Soccage to commit VVast to the destruction of the Inheritance 5 A Quo minus for Grantee of Estover to restrain the Grantors from committing VVast so as he cannot have his Estovers 6 De exoneratione sectae for Tenants by Suit of Court or other Services that they be not distrained to do the same for such ti●● as they ought to hold the Land discharged 7 D● deonerando pro rata to discharge the Tenant of parcell of the Land according 〈◊〉 the rate of his Land when he i● lawfull● distrained for all the Rent and Services 8. De essendo quieto de Thelonio 9. De non ponendo in Juratis 10. Ne exeas
regnum TABLE 40. The Proceeding which consists in The Count or Declaration The pleading which Pleas are The Defendants first Pleas viz. Dilatory by taking Exceptions In disability To the jurisdiction of the Court. To the person In Abatement To the Writ as default of form false Latine c. and here if the default be not caused by the Plaintiff a new Writ may be had by Journies Accounts To the Count as insufficiency variance from the Writ c. Forraign advantages In all Actions as Oyer of the Writ Condition c. In real Actions as View Ayde-prayer Voucher In certain personall Actions Garnishment Enter pleader which may also be in a Quare impedit Sanctuary and there continuing viz. for Treason and other Capitall Offences To the action as Pleas in Bar Confessions to which place Abjuration may be referred when one guilty of bare Felony flyeth to the Church c and there before the Coroner confesseth the Fact and abjures the Realm The mutual pleas of Plaintiff Defen Tab 41 Other mean Acts Tab 42. TABLE 41. The mutual Pleas of Plaintif and Defendant viz. The delating before issue as Replication Rejoynder Sur-rejoynder c. The Issue it self Of the Fact and then the tryall is 1 Of a matter done in the Country by Jury where challenges are allowed viz. To the Array To the Poles 2 In Writs of right or appeals for life by Battail 3. In a Writ of Dower when the issue is taken upon the death of her husband by witnesse 4. By wager of Law 1. When the Tenant in a reall praecipe quod read● was not summoned 2. In meer personal actions growing without deed or privity of others 3. In Plaints in Coun● Barons Of the Law as a Demurrer which i● when admitting the matters alledged either of them resteth in th● Judgment of the Law TABLE 42. Other mean Acts as 1. Apparance where of essoins which are Common as Essoine de mal venir Speciall 1. Of going beyond Sea 2. Of going ad terram Sanctam 3. Of the Kings Service 4. Demalo lecti 2. Continuance By Process Upon the Roll Dies datus Emparlance 3. Judiciall process A Mesne processe which is for any necessary act to be done as against Vouchee Prayee in aide also 1. Upon a fine levied to compell Attornment as 1 Per quae servitia 2. Quem redditum reddit 3. Quid juris clamat 2 In Petitions a Writ of search 3. In real praecipe upon a default petty Cape 4. Upon default after Voucher a petty Cape ad valentiam 5. In such as are for other Hereditaments upon default a distress 6. Against Jurors 1. A Venire facias 2. A Habeas Corpora 3. A Distress infinite Processe in nature of new Originals Tab 43. TABLE 43. Process in the nature of new Originalls they are Commandatory viz. such as command something to be done 1 Resummons Re-attachment 2 All certificatory Writs 3 A Certiorari to remove a Record into the Chancery 4. Writs to remove Suits By Writ as a Tolt to remove a Writ of right out of the Lords into the County-Court Pone to remove out of the Lords Court into the common place in all other causes By Plaint as a Recordare to remove Plaints in the County-Court Accedas ad curiam to remove Pl●ints in a Court-Baron 5 A Mi●timus to send a Record out of the Chancery into another Court of Record 6 A Procedendo to proceed in Suits 7 A Consultation to proceed in the Spirituall Court 8 A Writ of Main-prise to set one at liberty upon Bail 9 A Recaption for him whose Goods are distrained for the same thing 10. A Writ de Magna Assisa eligenda 11 A Certificate of Assise to Jurors to give a more perfect Verdict 12 A Proprietate probanda Prohibitory Writs Tab 45. TABLE 45. Prohibitory VVrits or Proces as 1. Prohibitions of this kind is an Indicavit 2. A Supersedeas of which kind are 1. A VVrit of Peace 2. A Libertate probanda 3. An Identitate nominis 3. Protections Cum clausula uolumus as Protectio quia profecturus Protectio quia moratur whither also may be referred Protectio quia in prisona 4. Essoine de malo lecti 5. A Ne admittas 6. A Quare incumbravit TABLE 46 Judgment which hath Judicial Writs belonging to it viz. Meer Judiciall and they are Such as lye within a year and a day after the Judgment In reall actions 1. Habere facias seisinam to pu● him in possession upon a Free-hold recovered 2. A Writ to the Bishop to admit ones Clerk In personall Actions to have Execution of his Possessions as 1. Fieri facias to levy execution upon his Chattels 2. Levari facias to levie execution of the profi●● of his Land and Chattels 3. Habere facias possessionem upon recovery of a term for years in a● Ejectione firmae c. 4. A Distringas for the Kings Amerciaments c. Bodily as Capias ad satisfaciendu● Capias pro fine Regis Capias Utlagatum For the King A Scire facias to warn the Defendan● afte● a year upon recovery in real Actions to shew cause why the Plaintiff should not have Execution New Originals Tab. 47. TABLE 47. New Originals in the nature of Judiciall Writs to order some matters concerning Judgments and these are grounded Upon an Error A Writ of Error which is upon an Error in a Court of Record A VVrit of false Judgment which is upon an Error in a base Court Otherwise as Attaint which is to enquire whether a Jury of twelve men gave a false Verdict Audita querela which is for one being or to be in Execution to releive him upon good matter of discharge which he hath no means to plead A TABLE shewing the Pages in the English Copy of Sir Henry Finches Treatise of the Law from whence each Tablet takes it's beginning Table Page 1 77 2 95 3 106 4 111 5 116 6 130 7 134 8 155 9 159 10 164 11 167 12 184 13 190 14 198 15 205 16 These are taken out of the French Copy being omitted in the English 17 18 19 20 206 21 218 22 221 23 225 24 249 25 252 26 264 27 266 28 269 29 272 30 284 31 294 32 303 33 310 34 312 35 320 36 322 37 343 38 490 39 502 40 356 41 390 42 427 43 441 44 446 45 450 46 459 47 478 FINIS