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A33636 An exact abridgement in English of the eleven books of reports of the learned Sir Edward Coke, knight, late lord chief justice of England and of the councel of estate to His Majestie King James wherein is briefly contained the very substance and marrow of all those reports together with the resolutions on every case : also a perfect table for the finding of the names of all those cases and the principall matters therein contained / composed by Sir Thomas Ireland. Coke, Edward, Sir, 1552-1634.; Ireland, Thomas, Sir. 1650 (1650) Wing C4919; ESTC R26030 276,990 515

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defeasible Title the other shall distraine for the moity of the Seigniory and the Act of the Coparcener shall not prejudice her There are foure manner of Avowries 1. Upon his very Tenant 2. Upon his very Tenant by the manner where the Tenant had but a particular estate 3. Upon his Tenant by the manner when the Lord had but a particular estate 4 Upon the matter in the Land as within his fee but the Lord hath liberty to Avow according to the Common Law Thoroughgoods Case 9. Jacobi fol. 136. TEnant in fee infeoffeth one by Deed indented and delivereth it upon the Land in the name of seisin this is good and hath a double operation at one instant Viz. to deliver the Writing as a Deed and to deliver seisin of the Land according to the Deede 1. Resolved this is his Deed although he doth not say so but delivers it in the name of seisin for delivery is good without any words if one deliver a Deed to one as an escrow to be his Deed upon performance of conditions this is his Deed presently otherwise if he deliver it to a stranger so words are good without actuall delivery as if he saith take it like to a livery within view If the Obligee deliver the Obligation to the Obligor to redeliver the Obligor may retaine it for the words to redeliver are void 2. Delivery of the deede upon the Land amounteth not to livery and seisin but it doth if delivered in the name of seisin so of any other thing or if he saith I deliver you seisin without delivering any thing this is good also Beaumonts Case 10. Jacobi fol. 138. I. B. and E. his Wife Tenants in speciall Taile the remainder to the Heires of the Baron I. B. levies a Fine to K. E. 6. who grants to the Earle of H. in fee I. B. dyeth E. enters the Earle of H. confirmes her estate to have to her and the Heires of the body of I. B. E. dyeth seised having issue F. B. who accepts a fine Sur conusans de droit tantum with Proclamations and dyes having issue Sir H. and I. Sir H. in Ward to the K. after full age and before livery Covenanteth to stand seised to the use of himselfe and his heires Males of his body and dyes having issue onely a Daughter in Ward whether shee or I. B. shall have the Land c. 1. Resolved that E. had an estate taile and the Statute of 4. H. 7. c. 24. which inableth the Baron to barre the issue saveth the right of the Feme if shee enter or c. and one may have an estate taile which cannot discend as if the Sonne in the life of the Father levyeth a fine the Father remaineth Tenant in taile still although it cannot discend and E. here hath an estate taile so long as shee liveth or the Heires in taile remaine 2. The Confirmation is void for he who did confirme had but a possibility which passeth not by the confirmation and if he had a reversion in fee yet it should be void 1. Because the taile which the Feme had was confirmed which cannot descend 2. The confirmation doth not add a descendible quallity where he who should have it is disabled to receive by discent 3. This would in effect repeale 4. H. 7. 32. H. 8. two of the principall Pillars of the Law 4. 5. If Tenant in Dower grants her estate there is a discendible quality in the Heire to bring wast against Tenant in Dower and although the Heire confirme her estate for life and after shee assigneth it to I. S. who committeth wast yet the action of wast is maintainable against her Pari ratione in the Case at Barre in regard the confirmation doth not inlarge the estate of E. it cannot add unto it a discendible quallity 6. There are but three manner of Confirmations Viz. Perficiens Crescens aut diminuens and the Confirmation in this Case is none of them and if E. had no power to levy a fine or suffer recovery the reason is because she cannot barre that which was barred before by her Husband but this point was not now in Question The End of the Ninth Booke THE TENTH BOOK The Case of Suttons Hospitall Baxter Plaintiffe Sutton and Law Defendants in Trespasse in the Kings Bench and adjourned into the Exchequer Chamber and judgemet given against the Plaintiffe 1. Obj. BY the Parliament 7. Jacobi the Hospitall was Founded at H. in Essex Ergo the incorporation made after by the Kings Letters Patents is void and the Charterhouse is not given by the said Statute because S. purchased it after 2. Sutton who had License to Found an Hospitall before the Foundation dyed 3. The K. cannot name the House and Lands of S. to be an Hospitall because in Alieno solo 4. Every Corporation ought to have a place certaine but here the License is to found an Hospitall at or in the Charterhouse Ergo before that S. had made it certaine there was no incorporation also the place of Corporation ought to be certaine by Meates and Bounds and a place knowne will not serve 5. The King intended to make an incorporation presently which cannot be before that S. name a Master 6. Governors cannot be untill there be poore in the Hospitall Ergo S. calleth it in his Will his intended Hospitall 7. The Foundation cannot be without the words Fundo erigo c. and before such Foundation a Stranger cannot give Lands unto it 8. The Master was named at will where he ought to be for life and have freehold in the Lands also the Hospitall must be Founded before a Master be named 9. The bargaine and sale made by S. is void 1. Because the Money paid by the Governours in their private capacity shall not inure to them in their politick capacity 2. The Habendum is to them upon trust which cannot be in a Corporation 3. Because as before no Hospitall was Founded 10. The King cannot make Governours of a thing not in Esse To the first it was answered that the Letters Patents recite the preamble of the Act whereby and in many parts of the Act it appeareth that the incorporation was to be In futuro when it shall be erected and the Statute doth not give any Lands unto it but power to give without License of alienation and mortmaine and it appeareth by the Letters Patents that the erection precedes the License 2. The License is to him his Heires Executors c. at any time hereafter and the words of incorporation are in the present and so the incorporation precedeth the execution of this License 3. Although the King gave the name yet S. devised it and assented to it and the K. did it at his Suite 4. The K. makes an Hospitall of all the premises so that it is certaine and as to that which was said that a place uncertaine cannot be an Hospitall It was answered that a Mannor may be which is
land of M. was lost by the Statute of 4. and 5. P. and M. ca ' 8. Resolved that there were two manners of custodies or Gardianships the one by the common law the other by the Statute at common Law foure manner of Gardians viz Gardian in Chivalry Socage Nature by Nurture The first two are fully described in our Bookes but great controversie was at barre for Gardian by Nature Some held that the Father onely shall have the custody of his sonne and heire apparent within age not the Mother Grandfather c. Also that the Father shall not have the custody of his daughter and heire for it ought to be such an heire as shall continue sole and apparent heire as the Father shall not have the custody of the youngest sonne in Borough English for tenure in Chivalry Others affirme that not onely the Father but every auncestor male or female shall have the custody of his heire apparent male or female Trespas quare 〈◊〉 consanguinium haeredem of the plaintiffe cujus maritagium ad ipsum pertinet c. rapuit c. lyes The Mother though she had no land brought ravishment of ward of J. her Sonne and heire against the grandfather who had land that might descend By the Court both erre for 't is true that every auncestor shall have trespas or ravishment of ward against a stranger for his heire male or female and the Writ shall say Cujus maritagium ad ipsum pertinet and good reason for the establishment of his house consists upon providing of a convenient marriage for his heire apparant and it matters not of what age such heire is but such action lyes not against gardian in chivalry by any of his auncestors but the Father So the Court resolved here the Mother could not be gardian in Socage if the land had descended to the daughter nor by nurture because she was above 14. but the common Law gives remedy against a Stranger as aforesaid Resolved here the Mother shall have the custody within the provision of the Act which hath ordained two new manners of custodies 1. By reason of nature 2. By assignation the first the Father after his death the Mother the second by assignation of the Father by his will or any act in his life See the Booke at large for the exposition of this Statute Resolved that the assent of the husband was not materiall for the Statute hath annexed the custody to the person of the Mother jure naturae which is inseperable and by marriage cannot be transferred to the husband the Father shall not forfeit the wardship by outlawry nor shall his Executors have it Resolved though she departed out of the house sixe houres before the contract yet in judgement of Law the Mother had the custody at the time of the contract for 't is inseperably annexed to the person of the Mother Resolved that by this devise the two daughters wete tenants in common in taile by these words equally to be divided though they never make partition in facto and so it hath been often adjudged Resolved that the husband and wife damsell had good title upon this verdict against the other daughter for by these words to the next of kin to whom the inheritance should c. come after her decease during the life of such person who shall so contract c. it seemes the daughter shall not have the forfeiture for though she be of the blood yet if M. dye her issue shall have the land if without issue the Mother in the remainder To the objection that the Mother cannot have it for she is not of the blood of the daughter but econtra Father or Mother are not next to whom administration shall be granted and land shall escheate rather then it shall goe to Father or Mother Resolved often against 5. E. 6. that the Father or Mother are next to whom administration may be granted and Littleton says that the Father is neerer of blood then the Uncle and therefore the Father shall have a remainder limitted to the next of blood of the Sonne but he shall not have an inheritance by discent from the Sonne for a Maxime prohibits it And 't was said at barre if he in reversion had been brother of the halfe blood he might have entered as Proximus de sanguine yet none of the halfe blood could inherit See the Booke at large where is excellent learning of discents as also the learning of Possessio fratris c. Resolved by the Court that it doth not come in question who shall enter for the forfeiture by the Statute for the issue was joyned upon a collaterall point whether the Mother had the custody at the time of the contract and the finding of the Jury is not materiall and therefore though the Plaintiffe who was lessee of the husband of the damsell as appeared had good title against the defendant being lessee of the husband of the other Sister yet because the issue was found against him judgement was given Quod nihil capiat c. Boytons case 35. Eliz. in Banco regis fo 43. A Writ of cap ad satisfaciendum is retornable at Westminster die Lunae prox post Crastin Animarū the partie is arrested the Sheriffe is not bound to bring the prisoner in recta Linea from the place where he was arrested or from the Countie But if he have the prisoner in Court at the day of the returne being never out of his custody in the meane season it is good But if a Sheriffe or a Bayliffe assent that one who is in execution and under their custody to goe out of the Gaole for a time and then to returne yet although he returne at the time it is an escape And so it is likewise if a Sheriffe suffer him to goe with a Bayliffe or a Keeper for the Sheriffe ought to have him in arcta custodia the Statute of Westminster 2. cap. 11. says Quod carceri manucipentur in ferris So as the Sheriffe may keepe him in yron and fetters to the intent that they may sooner satisfie their Creditors The Sheriffe upon a Habeas corpus for one in execution may bring the partie what way he will so as he have his bodie at the day according to the Writ If one in execution escape out of the Gaole and fly into another Countie the Sheriffe upon fresh suite taketh him again before any action brought against the Sheriffe the Judges have adjudged this no escape and if one in execution escape de son tort and be taken againe he shall never have an audita querela because a man shall not take advantage of his own wrong Sir George Brownes case 36. of the Queene fo 50. ISsue in speciall taile the remainder to himselfe in fee in the life of his Mother tenant in speciall taile levies a Fine in truth with Proclamations though they were not found to Sir G. B. the Mother living the Sonne leased for three lives
sustenance c. his Chattells eyther reall or personall Hales Case 8. Jacobi fol. 172. THe Heire Ward comes to full age and tenders his livery and bargaines and sells and dyes the interest of the King is determined and the Bargainee shall not answer for the meane profits for the Heire had done all that he could doe and no default in him otherwise if he had not tendered it Sir Henry Constables Case 8. Jacobi fol. 173. THe Sonne of the Tenant of the King is made a Knight in the life of his Father the Father dyes the Sonne within age tenders his livery by that the meane profits are saved and the King shall not have the rates within age Virgill Parkers Case 8. Jacobi fol. 173. VIrgill Parker seised of the Mannor of Fushell in fee houlden of the King in Chivalry of his Dutchie of Lancaster maketh a feoffement of the one halfe to the use of himselfe for life and after to the use of Mary Coney whom he intended to Marry for her life for her joynture and after he Married her and then Leased the other halfe to I. C. for yeares for payment of his Debts and Legacies and dyed his Heire within age Question whither the King should have the third part out of the Mannor so Leased onely or out of the whole and it was resolved that it shall be out of the whole Mannor although the estate of the Wife was precedent that is equally out of both parts The End of the Eighth Booke THE NINETH BOOK Dowmans Case 28. Eliz. Communi Banco fol. 7. An Assize pleaded THe Defendant in an Assize makes Title by a recovery suffered by P. V. to certaine uses the Plaintiffe confesseth the recovery and saith That it was to the use of the said P. in fee and traverseth that it was to the uses mentioned by the Defendant the Jury found that it was suffered as the Defendant had alleadged and that by Indenture subsequent the intent of the parties was declared by them to be as the Defendant had alleadged adjudg'd for the Defendants 1. Resolved that this subsequent Indenture directs the uses of the precedent recovery by estoppell against the Recoveree and his Heires and although that it be granted that a deede is requisit to the priviledge without impeachment of wast yet the estate without deede is good No averrment can be taken that the recovery was to other uses then are mentioned in a precedent indenture otherwise in an Indenture subsequent because if uses were declared by a precedent indenture no Declaration after shall devest them So if P. V. had charged the Land and then had made such a Declaration this shall not devest estates of grantees c. but no declaration being the uses by Declaration subsequent be devested 2. In all actions betweene all persons and in all issues the Jury may give a Verdict at large and the Statute of W. 2. cap. 30. which giveth it in Assize is but an affirmance of the Common Law but a Jury cannot find a thing impertinent to the issue The death of Sir James Dyer Chiefe Justice of the Common Pleas with an ample and memorable Encomium of him by Sir Edward Cooke c. Vivit post funera virtus Anna Bedingfeilds Case 28. Eliz fol. 15. In dower A Common essoyne is allowable in dowre and the Statute of 12. E. 2. is to be intended of an essoyne in the Kings service for the Statute saith in prorogation of the right which is properly this essoyne which is for a yeare and a day 2. If tenant of the King dyeth seized of diverse Mannors and it is found by office that he dyed seized of one in dowre brought against the Heire of full age he sueth a Circumspecti agatis this extends not to more then is in the Office for this Writ is in the nature of an ayde praier and the King hath no right to seise more then is in the Office and as to this Mannor it was objected that it shall be allowed as well as if the Heire be within age for in this Case by the Statute of Praerogat Regis cap. 4. that the Feme may be indowed in Chancery It was answered that by the Statute of Bigamis cap. 4. ayde shall not be granted of the King in that Case and therefore before the Statute of Praerogat the King nor other Lord could not indow the Feme if the Heire were of full age because he is not then Gardian and the Statute of Praerogat giveth power to the King to indow the Wife in such case if shee will and not otherwise Where the Heire pleads to Dower detinue of Charters they ought to concerne the same Land and this Plea is to be allowed because the Feme who deteineth Chartars is not worthy to have Dower and also for the privity which is betweene the Heire and her 2. The Heire ought to shew the certeinty of the Charters or that they were in a Chest 3. None but the Heire himselfe shall have this plea nor the Heire himselfe if he commeth in by purchase or if the Feme had them by his delivery nor if he comes in as Vouchee having no Lands in the same County or as Tenant by resceite because in these Cases he cannot pleade as he ought that he is ready to render Dower 4. A Gardian shall not pleade it because the Charters doe not belong unto him but he may pleade detinue of the Ward and if be be not restored unto him unmarried the Feme shall loose her Dower and after the Tenant waived this plea and pleaded Vnques accouple in loyall Matrimony and the Bishop of N. certified that they were lawfully married where upon the Demandant had judgement Case of Avowry fol. 20. IF there be Lord and Tenant by fealty and rent and the Tenant make a Lease for yeares and the Lessee hath done his fealty and paid his rent continually and yet the Lord distreineth the Beasts of the Lessee for the rent and avowed upon a meere stranger as upon his very Tenant Question whither the Lessee be without remedy for it is a position in Law that a stranger to the avowry shall not plead but Hors de son fee c. But it was resolved that the Lessee shall be releeved and he must alledge that the Lessor is seised of the Tenancy c. and the Lord shall be compelled to avow upon the Tenant and the false avowry of the Lord upon a stranger which is not very Tenant shall not hurt the Lessee against the verity of the Case Quia veritas nihil veretur nisi abscondi If one come to distreine for damage Fesant and seeth the Beasts and the owner chase them out the party may not distreine them damage feasant but is put to his Action of Trespasse for the beasts must be damage feasant at the time of the distresse taken he who distreines for services upon fresh suite may avow upon the Land by the equity of 21. H. 8. c. 19. if
devise of Land purchased after 2. The statute doth not regard this seck reversion but inheritances of annuall value Resp To the first that this reversion shall hinder the devise by the words of the Statute for he had a reversion of Lands holden but although the Statute saith that he may alien two parts by act executed or will if he alien to one of the three uses by act executed he may devise the reversion for the Statute is to be intended of an intire Alienation and where the Statute saith in reversion or remainder it is to be intended that the devisor be seised of such a remainder which drawes wardship To the second it was answered that things which of their nature are seck are out of the Statute but not things which of their nature are of annuall value but are not of value in respect of some Lease or gift Absque abliquo inde reddendo and therefore seck reversions are devisable by the said Statutes but if they be not yet they shall hinder the devises of other Lands To make one able to devise by those Statutes the time of Having Holding and disposing must concurre and therefore if a grant to the second Sonne here had beene in fee although with power of revocation the devise had been good because he had no Lands In Capite at the time of the devise if the Father conveyeth his Land to the use of his younger Sonne the eldest being within age after the death of his Father he shall be in ward although nothing discend A true Child and not in reputation is within the Statute and if the Sonne purchase Land Bona fide of his Father this is out of the Statute because it is not for his advancement If Tenant in socage devise and after purchase Land in Chivalry the devise is void for a third part but if Tenant in Chivalry and socage devise all and after aliens the Land holden this is good To make division that the King shall have a third part holden the Lands shall be taken according to their value at the time of the death of the Devisor The time of provision that a third part must discend needs not concurre with the time of alienation but it is sufficient that he had it at the time of his death The estate to any of the three purposes ought to continue to the time of death and the Tenure must till after death to make it within the Statute and the estate also of Lands holden ought to continue after death therefore if Tenant in taile in Capite devise socage Land and dye without issue this is good so privity must continue after death therefore if he who made the conveyance be attainted this is out of the Statute The uses to the second Sonne are in contingency and not executed by 27. H. 8. by the power to make Leases and devise reserved to the feoffor and therefore the fee is in the feoffor in the meane time so that having disposed of it and being seised of it he cannot devise the Land purchased after It was Objected that the Statute saith lawfully executed in his life but here no use was to be executed in the second Sonne untill after his death It was Answered that after his death the uses were derived out of the feoffement and so are as it were executed in his life It was holden by the Chiefe Justice that the remainder to the second Sonne is contingent in regard no alienation is found to be made by the Eldest and if there had been then it would be repugnant that after alienation the Land should remaine to the second Sonne and so Quacunq via data the remainder as this Case is cannot vest in him but this point was not resolved by the Court. 2. The revocation is good although the Indenture precedeth the feoffement and that the uses are in contingency and that the revocation is but in part and the Chiefe Justice held that the Eldest Sonne had but a terme determinable and the second an estate taile But in this the Kings Bench and Common pleas differ in Opinion and that if Lands be devised to one and the Heires of his body for 500. yeares the Executors shall have it and not the Heire and the devisee may alien it for it cannot be intailed and so in Peacocks Case 28. Eliz. Banco Regis was it resolved Doctor Leyfields Case 8. Jacobi fol. 88. in Trespasse IN Trespasse for Corne taken at O. C. the Defendant pleads that Q. Eliz. granted the Rectory of O. C. to C. P. without shewing the Letters Patents who demised to G. P. for 8. yeares if the said C. P. so long live and that he as servant of G. P. tooke the Corne and avers the life of C. the Plaintiffe demurreth because the plea amounteth to the generall issue and it was adjudged in the K. Bench that the barre was insufficient because the Defendant shewed not the Letters Patents and Error was brought in the Exchequer-Chamber because the plea amounts to the generall issue because the Defendant gave no colour wherein judgement ought not to be given against the Defendant but onely to answer over 2. Because he is not bound to shew the Letters Patents It was answered that colour shall not be given for colour shall not be given where the plea goeth to the barre of the right for it would be in vaine to give colour of right and to barre him if he had right as if a collaterall warranty fine Statute be pleaded or if he claimes by a waife otherwise where he pleads a discent for this doth not barre the right but the possession he who claimes by sale in a Market overt shall not give colour if he pleads generally but if he pleads that I. S. was possessed as of his owne goods and sold them in a Market overt or waived them there he shall give colour because he confesseth no interest in the Plaintiffe 2. If the Defendant claimes by the Plaintiffe he shall not give colour 3. If the plea be to the Writ or action of the Writ no colour shall be given 4. Colour shall not be given in case of Tithes for to whomsoever the Lands belong the Tithes belong to the Parson 1. Colour ought to be a doubt to the Laygents 2. It must have continuance 3. It must be such a colour that if it be effectuall will maintaine the Action 4. It ought to be given by the first conveyance 2. Resolved Lessee for yeares of Lessee for life of the K. must shew the Letters Patents for he who is privy in estate or interest or who justifieth in right of a Party or privy although he claime but part must shew the first deed and the reason that deeds are shewed to the Court is that the Judges and Jury that which respectively to them belongs shall judge of the sufficiency thereof therefore a deed shall not be suffered to be given in evidence by Witnesses or Copy except it be burned
the husband had and to the remainder A. tenant in taile the remainder to B. the remainder to C. the remainder to D. A. makes a Feoffement the feoffee suffers a recovery B. is vouched and he vouches the common vouchee A. is not bound but B. and all the remainders are for though the remainders are discontinued and cannot be remitted till the taile be recontinued yet in a common recovery which is the common assurance he which comes in as vouchee shall be in judgement of Law in privity of the estate which he ever had though the precedent estate upon which the estate of the vouchee depends be discontinued so here the husband shall be said in of the taile and 't is the stronger because the estate of the wife was put to a right so that the husband came in as sole tenant in taile and not joyntly with his wife because she is not vouchee and he cannot be in of another estate because once he had a taile but had they had a joynt estate to them and the heires of their two bodies he being onely vouched it might be doubted whether the taile should be barred because the wife had a joynt inheritance with him 8. of the Queene Dyer Knivetons case A Praecipe is brought against tenant for life and the remainder in taile they vouch over it shall not binde the taile for the remainder is not tenant to the Praecipe and the land is recovered against the tenant for life onely and recompence shall not goe to the remainder and the remainder was never seised by force of the taile and so 't was adjudged in Leach and Coles case 41. of the Queene Heydons case 26. of the Queene fo 7. THe Gardians and Cannons Regular of the late Colledge of O. seised of the Mannor of O. granted a Coppihold to Father and Sonne for their lives c. and after they leased it to H. for fourescore yeares rendring the ancient Rent and after surrendred their Colledge Resolved that the lease to H. was voyd the Coppi-hold for life continuing by the Statute of 31. H. 8. For Coppihold is an estate for life and the Statute saith of which any estate or interest for life c. at the making of such grant had continuance reade the Booke at large where you have admirable rules for true interpretation of all Statutes Resolved when a Parliament alters the service tenure interest of the land c. in prejudice of the Lord custome or tenant the generall words shall not extend to Coppi-holds as the Statute of W. 2. de donis conditionalibus doth not extend to them for if the Statute should alter the estate this should also alter the tenure for the donee ought to hold of the donor and to doe such services without speciall reservation as his donor did to the Lord and the intent of the act was not to extend to such base estates which were taken then but tenants at will and the Statute saith Voluntas donatoris observetur in carta c. So that which shall be intailed ought to be such an hereditament which may be given by Charter and great part of the land within the Realme being granted by Coppy it would be inconvenient that Coppi-holds should be intailed yet neither Fine nor Recovery should barre them so that the owner cannot without making a forfeiture by assent of the Lord and a new grant dispose of it for payment of debts advancement of his wife or younger issues wherefore the Statute doth not extend to them by Manwood Ch' Baron which the Court agreed But 't was objected that the Custome and the Statute cooperating might make a taile as if by a custome a remainder had been limitted over and injoyed and plaints in nature of a Formedon in discender brought and the land recovered by it so neither the custome without the Statute nor the Statute without the custome can make a taile And Littleton saith that if a custome hath been that lands c. have been granted c. or in taile c. paulo post that a Formedon in discender lyes of all tenements which Writ was not at common law Manwood answered if the Statute doth not extend to them without question the custome cannot for before the Statute all estates of inheritance were fee simple and no custome can commence after the Statute for this being made 13. E. 1. is made within time of memory and Littleton is to be intended of a fee simple conditionall for he knew well that no custome could commence after the Statute of W. 2. as appeares in his booke 2. ca. 10. and 34. H. 6. and a Formedon in discender in speciall cases lay at the common Law And by the Court another Act made at the same time which gives an Elegit extends not to Coppiholds for the reason aforesaid but other Statutes made at the same time extend to them as ca ' 3. which gives a Cui in vita receite and ca ' 4. which gives to the particular tenant a Quod ei deforceat Resolved that though 't was not found that the said rents were the usuall rents accustomed to be reserved within 20. yeares before yet because 't was found that the accustomed rent was reserved and a custome goes to all times before it shall be so intended without shewing the contrary and judgement was enterd for the Queene The common Law is founded upon the perfection of reason and not according to any private and sudden conceite or opinion Borastons Case 29. of the Queene fo 19. B. Devised land for eight yeares and after to his executors to performe his will till H. his youngest Sonne come to the age of 21. yeares and when H. comes to 21. yeares then that he shall have to him and his heires H. dyed at the age of 9. yeares Objected that till H. attaines to 21. yeares the land descends to the heire and for that he never attained to 21. yeares this remaines in the heire and the intent appeares by the words that he should not have till he come to 21. yeares and this ought to precede the commencement of the remainder and if land were leased till H. comes to 21. yeares H. then being of 9. yeares 't is no absolute lease for 12. yeares for if H dye before 21. the lease shall be determined which the Court agreed 'T was also said that when the particular estate which should support the remainder may determine before the remainder can commence there the remainder doth not vest presently but depends in contingency If one make a Lease to A. for life and after the death of B. the remainder to another in Fee this remainder depends upon contingency for if A. dye before B. the remainder is voyd A Lease is made to A. for life the remainder to B. for life and if B. dye before A. the remainder to C. for life this is a good remainder upon contingency If A. survive B. which case is all one with
not be taken by any strained construction against the letter for then 't is requisite to have a new Act of explanation upon the explanation sic in infinitum By 4. H. 7. every one hath liberty to pursue a Fine according to the said Act viz. with proclamations c. or without as at common Law and therefore the Act of 32. H. 8. of necessitie prescribes that Proclamations shall be made according to 4. H. 7. to distinguish it from a Fine at common Law and not to inable the issue for to make claime for this should be against the expresse intent of the Act in the preamble and purview Also it should be very inconvenient if when such Fine is levied for a valuable consideration advancement of his issues or payment of his debts and he dyes before Proclamations that all should be avoyded by the claime of the heire when the conusee could not have better assurance by Recovery for that he was not tenant to the Praecipe See the Booke at large in what case the issue in taile may averre seisin in a Stranger quod partes Finis nihil habuerunt what not Objected 1. 't is provided by the Statute de donis c. that as to the issue Finis ipso jure sit nullus 2. That the Statute of 27. E. 1. extends not to the heires in taile as 8. H. 4. is for the issue is not bound by any Record which inures by way of Estoppell 3. 27. E. 1. speakes De finibus ritè levatis and when there wants seisin which is the essence of a Fine 't is not ritè levatus 46. E. 3. that 't is a good plea. Answered the Statute de donis c. was made 13. E. 1. and the Statute of Fines 27. in which the issue is not excepted therefore he is bound and according there is a good opinion 8. H. 4. To the second though the issue was not barred of his right before 4. H. 7. yet he was estopped to say Quod partes Finis nihil habuerunt To the third Finis ritè levatus is intended in due forme of Law which it may be though it be onely by way of conclusion for the same Act ousts the parties from such averment and 46. E. 3. is to be intended of a collaterall auncestor from whom the heire doth not claime the Land and then the averment is good In Conisbies case 't was resolved upon a Fine levied to tenant in taile in remainder by tenant for life and a grant and render of a rent that this was not within the Statutes of 4. H. 7. or 32. H. 8. for the Fine was not of the land it selfe which was intailed but of the rent newly created out of the land And in the Lord Zouches case 't was resolved that 4. H. 7. and 32. H. 8. doe extend to Fines levied by conclusion and shall binde though partes c. nihil habuerunt as if tenant in taile makes a Feoffement or be disseised and levies a Fine for the Statute says All Fines of any lands c. in any wise intailed to the person so levying or to any of his auncestors and in 4. H. 7. the exception Quod partes c. is saved to all persons not party nor privy to the said Fine and the issue in taile is privy for he claimes as heire by discent and if such Fine shall barre where the tenant in taile had nothing though the issue enter after the death of the auncestor before all the Proclamations passe a fortiori here when tenant in taile at the time was seised of an estate though 't were in reversion See Archers case where a Fine shall barre the issue where the Father had onely a possibility at the time of the Fine levied Purslowes case 32. of the Queene tenant in taile levies a Fine Term. P. T. and dyed in August next his daughter being heire to the taile and her husband brought a Formedon and pending the plea the Proclamations passed and 't was agreed by the Court that the tenant shall plead the Fine and the Proclamations which passed pending the Writ shall barre the demandant yet there the issue did all that might be done for the conveyance is the Fine and the Proclamations are but a short repetition of the Fine out of this foure things are to be observed 1. Though after the Fine a right descends to the issue yet after Proclamations the right is barred 2. Though he pursues a Formedon yet after Proclamations he is barred ergo in the principall case he is barred notwithstanding his entry or claime in pays 3. When tenant in taile levies a Fine and dyes before Proclamations the issue is not within any of the savings for then the bringing of a Formedon should avoyd the barre 4. The Proclamations serve for no purpose but to distinguish the Fine from a Fine at the common Law Trin. 4. of the Queene Bendlowes tenant in taile disseised the discontinuee and levied a Fine and tooke an estate by render the discontinuee enters and claimes before all the proclamations passed and avoides the estate after the proclamations passe tenant in taile continues his possession and dyes within the yeare after the entry and claime Resolved that the issue was not Remitted but barred by 32. H. 8. Though the estate was avoyded before all the Proclamations passed Resolved though the issue be beyond the Sea yet because he is privy c. he is bound as if he he were within age covert or non compos Which was agreed by all the Justices Ergo the claime of the issue is not materiall and if Infancy c. should avoyde the Fine no man should be assured of land conveyed THE FOURTH BOOK Vernons Case 14. 15. of the Queene fo 1. IN Dower the tenant shews that the husband made a Feoffement of other Land to the use of himselfe for life and after to the use of the demandant for life c. and averres that the said estate was for her Joynture c. and that the demandant hath entered c. and agreed to the estate the demandant shews that the estate was upon condition for to performe the will of the husband and that divers things were to be performed in it judgement if the tenant shall be admitted c. Resolved that at Common Law a right or title to a Freehold cannot be barred by acceptance of a collaterall satisfaction or recompence As if a disseisor of the Mannor of P. gives to the disseisee the Mannor of S. in satisfaction of all his right c. And therefore 't is said in our Bookes that an accord with satisfaction is a good plea in a personall action where damages are to be recovered not in a reall and therefore no barre in Dower but Dower ad ostium Ecclesiae or ex assensu patris concludes her if she enters after c. for the Law allowes them c. to be Dowers in Law Before 27. most lands were in use
personam The Lord cannot claime common in his owne soyle A diversitie was taken and agreed upon between a prescription and a custome a prescription is alwayes alledged in the person and a custome ought alwayes to be alledged in the Land for every prescription ought to have by common intendment a lawful commencement but otherwise of a custome for that ought to be reasonable and ex certa causa rationabili usitata as Littleton saith But it needeth not to have intendment of a lawfull commencement as custome to have Land Devisable or of the nature of Gavelkinde or Borough English These and such like customes are reasonable but by common intendment these cannot have lawfull commencement by grant or act or agreement but onely by Parliament and the custome in the case at barre was repugnant for it was alledged that the Custome of the Towne was that every Inhabitant had used to have common within a place in the Towne of H. which was another Towne Catesbyes Case 4o. Jac. fol. 61. SIx moneths being halfe a yeare semestre is given to the Patron of an advowson to present and according to the Kalander and not after 28. dayes to a Moneth and the Statute saith Si tempus semestre non transierit adjudicentur damna ad valorem c. per dimidium anni and being ambiguous it shall be construed for the benefit of the Patron Sir Moyle Finches case 4. Jac. Com. Banco fol. 63. THe Lady M. tenant for life of the Mannor of B. the remainder in fee to the Lady Finch shee and S. her husband and D. levyed a fine to one of the demesnes who grants and renders to D. for 50. yeares the reversion to S. and his wife and her heires with proviso in the Deedes which directed the fine that the reversioner shall enter and hould Courts And it was averred that this was knowne by the name of the Mannor of B. D. maketh his sonne of three yeares of age executor and administration was committed to R. T. S. and his wife levy a fine of all the lands of the wife in K. except the Mannor of B. to the use of the feme for life the remainder to Sir M. F. R. T. demiseth to P. L. for ten yeares Dame M. dyeth P. L. entreth by vertue of a power of revocation and limitation of new uses S. with the assent of the Lady F. his wife limitteth the uses to one who ousteth P. L. and maketh a feoffment to the use of the La F. for life the remainder to H. F. in taile P. L. reenters Dame F. dyeth H. F. for rent arreare distraineth 1. Resol By the grant and render of the demesnes the Mannor is destroyed because in an instant the services and demesnes are severed by act of the party but otherwise it is if by act in Law as upon partition so it is of an advowson appendant c. and upon partition many Mannors may be made of one but not by the act of the party 2. B. is excepted by the name of a Mannor 1. Because the intent of the parties is so 2. Exception of misnosmer shall not be favoured in Law 3. It is sufficient in Law in many cases that a thing be reputed as it is named as if a remainder be limitted to a Bastard by the name of sonne of J. S. and as to that was objected that this reputation is not time out of minde this needs not if it be of convenient time as this was for it was a Mannor revera before to levy a fine and continue the name after so that this reputation is stronger having such a ground and reputation serveth in Writts amicable although not in adversarie 3. The lease made by the administrator durante minori aetate is good because the administration is generall and not speciall to the benefit of the Infant but howsoever this is good during the administration 4. P L. in the life of the Lady M. had but interesse Termini so that attornement cannot be in his life but after the death of the La. Mo. by entry of the lessee the reversion is in S. and his wife without attornement because attornement needs not because the reversion is setled and he hath no meanes to compell c. otherwise it is where an attornement may be had and although that P.L. lessee of a lessee of part cannot make an expresse attornement yet his reentry shall be an attornement in Law so he who hath interesse termini may make a surrender in Law but no expresse surrender and a man of non-sane memory may make an attornement in Law but not an expresse attornement The Lord Darcies Case 4. Jacobi Com. Banco fol. 70. TEnder is not necessary to have the single value of the heire male or female but the heire female shall not forfeit the double value because the Statute of Merton is si se mavitaverit at the age of 14. yeares c. at which time the heire female is out of Ward and where by the Statute of Westm 1. cap. 22. it is provided that the Lord shal have two yeares to make a Tender it giveth not the double value but if he waive the two yeares he shall have the value without Tender quia de mero Jure c. Burrells case 5. Jac. Com. Banco fol. 72. IF the father make a lease by fraud and dyes the sonne sells the land knowing or not knowing of it the vendee shall avoyd it 2. If the father makes a lease to the sonne who assigneth it over by fraud the father dyes the sonne sells the land the vendee shall avoyd it Sir Drue Druries case 5. Jac. Cur. Wardor fol. 73. E. 1. granted to the Towne of Y. Quod omnes de villa oriundi licet terras c. extra libertatem villae c. te nuerint in Capite se maritare possint juxta libertates villae praedictae R. D. dyed seised of a house parcell of a Monasterie dissolved in the time of H. 8. houlden in Capite the King grants the wardship of his sonne to the plaintiffe and makes the Ward Knight the plaintiffe brings a valore Maritagij The Charter doth not discharge the defendant 1. Because it is juxta libertates villae praedict ' and the liberties are not shewed 2. This Charter cannot extend to a Tenure created in the time of H. 8. 3. It is not shewed that the defendant was borne within the Towne 1. Resol If the heire in Ward be made a Knight he is out of Ward for his body because by intendment he is able to doe Knights service otherwise if made a Nobleman 2. By the death of the tenant the value of the marriage is vested in the Lord and cannot be devested by Knighthood c. 3. If he be Knighted in the life of his auncestor he shall not be in Ward at all 4. If making of the heire in ward Knight shall devest the value it will be prejudiciall to the Subject and to the King for
countenance that dangerous and desperate error of the Spencers viz. That Homage and Oath of legeance was more by reason of the Kings Crowne that is of his politique capacity then by reason of the person of the King which was condemned by two Parliaments one in the Reigne of E. 2. called Exilium Hugonis le Spencer and the other in 1. E. 3. cap. 1. No one Opinion in all our Bookes is against this judgement The Lord Chancellour and 12. of the Judges concurred in one opinion herein and not in any remembrance so Honourable and Intelligent an Auditory as was at this Case Bulwers Case 27. Eliz. fol. 1. H. H. recovered against the Plaintiffe in the common place and dyeth the Defendant in the name of H. Outlawed the Plaintiffe who brings an Action of the Case in N. where the first Action was brought and recovered for there was the visible torte when matter in one C●unty dependeth upon matter in another County the Plaintiffe may choose in which County to bring his Action except that the Defendant upon generall issue pleaded may be prejudiced of his Triall as if two conspire in one County to Endite one in another County and doe it an Action may be brought in either but if he be indited but not by them there it shall be brought where the conspiracy was If Manasse be made in E. whereby my Tenants recede into L. an Action shall be brought in E. if an action be founded upon two things materiall and traversable in two severall Counties an action may be brought in any of them An Annuity granted in one County to be paid in another the Action shall be brought where the grant was he who is robbed may have an appeale of felony in every County where the goods came but of robbery where the fact was done onely A lease for yeares in one County of Land in another Debt shall be brought where the Lease was made and wast where the Land lyeth every Action which concerneth the life of a man shall be brought where the offence is committed Every issue which ariseth upon an Action in which Land shall be recovered shall be brought where the Land lyeth as in right of ward of Land or body or intrusion of ward and forfeiture of Marriage Valore maritagij and Quare impedit but ravishment of ward where the ravishment was and a Quare non admisit where the refusall was before the Statute of 7. R. 2. c. 10. an Action for Land in diverse Counties or for common in one County appendant to Land in another County shall be brought by severall Writs in both Counties but now In confinio comitatuum a per quae servitia shall be brought where the note of the fine is levyed Sir Miles Corbets case 27. Eliz. in Scaccario fol. 5. REsol That the speciall manner of Common in Norf called Shacke to be taken in arrable land after harvest untill sowing begin is good Resol also if in D. there are fifty acres and in S. 100. l. who ought to intercommon for vicinage D. cannot put in more in their Common then it will depasture and so to escape reciprocally for the originall cause of this Common was onely to prevent suits in Champian Countries Cases upon the Statute of 13. E. 1. of Winchester upon hue and cry Sendills case 27. Eliz. in Com. Banco fol. 6. A Robbery for which the Hundred must answer by force of the said Statute is to be done openly so as the Country may take notice thereof themselves but a Robbery done secretly in the house the Country cannot take notice thereof for every one may keepe his house as strong as he will at his perill For it was adjudged in Ashpoles case that the partie robbed needed not to give notice thereof to the Country For it may be that the partie robbed was bound or maimed c. so as he could not make hue and cry to give notice A robbery was done in January presently after the Sunne setting during day-light and it was adjudged that the Hundred should answer for the same for it was a convenient time for men to travell or to be about their businesse One was killed in the Evening and escaped and by the common Law the Towne was amerced for that was accounted in Law parcell of the day and not of the night But by the Statute 27. El. ca. 13. none shall have action upon the said Statute except the partie robbed so soone as he may give notice of the same to any of the Inhabitants of any Village Towne or Hamlet next to the place where the robbery was done and if they in pursuite apprehend any of the offenders that will excuse the Towne Mibornes case 29. Eliz. in Com. Banco fol. 6. A Robbery was done in the morning ante lucem the Hundred shall not be charged Cum quis felonicè occisus fuit per diem nisi felocaptus fuit tota villata illa amercietur The Earle of Bedfords Case 29. Eliz. fol. 7. 1. REsol If tenant in taile make a voydable lease for yeares and dyeth his heire in ward to the King or other Lord the Lord shall avoyde this lease but if an infant make a feoffment the Lord by Escheate shall not avoyde it but a gardian shall because he doth it in right of the infant 2. This avoidance is but during the interest of the Lord for afterwards the heire may make it good But if he who hath a particular estate avoideth an act in all after his Interest determined it shall not be made good as if a feme be indowed of an appropriation and her clerke inducted the appropriation is defeated for ever so if a feme Covert as a feme sole levy a fine and the Baron enters and dyeth the Con●see shall not have the land for the estate is wholly defeated Vghtreds Case 33. Eliz. fol. 9. THe M. of W. granted the Captainship of a Fort to the plaintiffe and for exercising of the said office and for finding a Master Gunner and six Souldiers granted to him an Annuity of 32. li. per annum the plaintiffe brings an Annuity 1. Except It doth not appeare by the Count that the M. had power to grant this office Non allocatur 2. The plaintiffe doth not averre the exercising of the said office Non allocatur for if he had not used it that shall come in on the other part because this is a condition subsequent and not precedent but if one be to have a thing in consideration of an act to be done by him there he must shew the performance because that amounts to a condition precedent as in debt for salarie but if each party had equall remedy one for the money and the other for the act to be done there the Count shall be without shewing the performance as if one Covenant to serve c. and the other Covenants to give money c. But although that an interest vested is to be devested by non feasance
taile with crosse remainders to J. and K. M. discontinueth and dyeth without issue J. dyeth without issue K. dyeth and her issue brings a Formedon in the remainder and good although severall remainders for they depend upon one estate and commence by gift at one time In actions reall in which title is expressed a man shall not have one Writ for Lands to which he had severall Titles as in escheate cessavit Writ of Mesne c. but he may have a Writ of ward of Land onely although it be by severall Tenures nor one formedon upon two distinct gifts where the foundation is severall but he shall have it if there be one gift although it take effect at severall times because the foundation was joynt and single as upon a gift in taile to Brother and Sister who dye without issue or if the Brother dye without issue and the Sister dye having issue who dyes without issue he to whom the remainder limitted shall have one formedon although it vest at severall times so in an estate taile to Father and Sonne and so here In actions reall founded upon Torte a man shall have one Writ to recover Lands to which he had severall Titles as in an assize a Writ of entry c. but in a Writ of entry upon disseisin made to my Mother and her Sister Coperceners because there title is in the Writ it appeareth he ought to have severall actions but in personall actions one may comprehend severall torts and causes of actions as trespasse for trespasse made at severall dayes and places wast upon severall Leases and so of Debt Nota if a remainder be executed issue in remainder shall not have a formedon in remainder but in the discender and Count of an immediate gift but if there be a Lease for life to one the remainder in taile to A. the remainder in taile to B. A. dyes without issue if B. be chased to his formedon he shall not count of an immediate remainder but shall shew the first remainder to A. and that he is dead without issue 2. In formedon in the remainder or reverter omission of issue inheritable in the pedigree of the demandant abates the Writ but not upon the part of the perticular Tenant 3. The Demandant must make mention of the Sonne who survived the Father to which Son the Land discended but was not seised by force of the taile but he shall name him Sonne but not heire 4. The Demandant in a formedon in the Discender must make himselfe heire to him that was last seised and he to the Donee Note here because K. was never seised the Writ shall say Remanere not descendere and the Writ was Remansit jus because a discontinuance otherwise it should be Tenementa remanserunt Fraunces Case 7. Jac. fo 89. THe Plaintiffe pleads in barre of avowry that R. F. devised to I. his Sonne who leased to him the avowant replyeth that after the devise R. F. made a Feoffement to the use of the said I. upon condition that he shall suffer his Executors to take away his goods and the estate limitted to him was for sixty yeares if he should so long live with diverse remainders over and that after the death of F. I. hindered the Executors to carry away the goods whereupon T. in remainder entered and judgement given for the Plaintiffe 1. Resolv Although the condition be taken strictly the uses to I. onely and to his Heires are onely avoided by it 2. A disturbance by paroll is no Breach of the condition and because the avowant did not shew a speciall disturbance his replication was void 3. I. ought to have notice of the condition being a Stranger to it or otherwise he cannot breake it as a Copy-holder shall not forfeite for denyall of rent to him to whose use a Mannor is transferred before notice but he who bindes himselfe to doe any thing must take notice at his perill because he hath taken it upon him 4. Although that the Title which the Plaintiffe had made in barre to the avowry be destroyed yet he shall have judgement because his count is good and another Title that is to have the Land for sixty yeares by force of the uses declared upon the feoffement is given unto him by the Replication although that the title which he made for himselfe be destroyed yet the Court must adjudge upon all the record and judgement was entered for him accordingly Edward Foxes Case 7. Jacobi fo 93. A Revertioner upon a Lease for life the remainder for life in consideration of 50. l. demiseth granteth c. his reversion for 99. yeares rendering rent this is a bargaine and sale and there needs no attornement for the words of bargaine and sale are not necessary if there are words which tantamount as if at the common Law one had sould his Land an use had beene raised to the Vendee because their intent so appeared so here but if it appeare that their intent was to passe it at the common Law as if a Letter of Attorney be made to make livery the use had not risen and here appeareth their intent to passe it as a bargaine and sale because rent is reserved presently therefore it is reason that he shall have the rents of the particular Tenants presently which cannot be if it passe not by bargaine and sale and inrollment is not necessary because a tearme for yeares onely passeth in this case and ●o freehold See Sir Rowland Heywards Case 2. Report fo 35. Matthew Mannings Case 7. Jacobi fo 94. LEssee for yeares is bound in 200. Markes to W. C. and deviseth to his Wife for life and after her death to M. M and makes his Wife Executrix who agrees and dyeth intestate M. M. enters and takes administration of the goods not administred W. C. brings Debt against him Resolved that M. M. takes by Executory devise and not as a remainder and the estate limmitted to him in construction precedeth the limittation to the Wife as if he had devised that if the Wife die within the terme that then M. M. shall have the residue and also devised it to his Wife for life 2. This case is most strong because a Chattell which may vest and revest at pleasure of the Devisor without mischiefe to the Praecipe 2. A devise of the Terme and Occupation thereof all one Viz. So many yeares as the Feme shall live the remainder to M. M. 4. After the Executrix had agreed the first devisee cannot barre the Executory devise 5. A man may devise an estate which he cannot convey by act executed as to his Executors untill his Debts shall be paid the remainder over they have a Chattell determinable upon payment of the Debts which cannot be at the common Law If a Sheriffe sell a Terme upon a Fieri facias and judgement is reversed the sale shall stand otherwise none will buy any thing upon Execution and judgement was given for the Plaintiffe and affirmed in Error
life his heire shall not be in ward although he be within age by that Statute because he is not immediate heire Sondayes Case 8. Jacobi fol. 127. M. S. deviseth to his Wife for life the remainder to W. S. and if he shall have issue that then his issue shall have it the remainder to S. the remainder to T. c. Totidem verbis upon condition that if any of them or this heires of their bodies goe about to alien that he in the next remainder to enter after the death of M. W. and S. T. suffereth a common recovery to his owne use in fee he in the next remainder enters 1. Resol Every one of the Sonnes hath an estate taile 1. These words if he dye without issue Male are sufficient to create an estate taile 2. The generall clause if any of his Sons or heires of his body doe it maketh it manifest 3. The condition proveth it for they cannot alien if they have but for life for this would be a forfeiture 2. The restraint of tenant in taile to suffer a common recovery is voyd See Mildmayes Case in the sixth Book Quicks Case 9. Jacobi fol. 129. THe King Lord I. N. and Tho. Q. mesnes of a Mannor which they hold in common in Capite and tenant of three Acres holden in Chivalry T. Q. maketh a feoffment of his moity to the use of himselfe for life the remainder to I. Q. his Son in taile the tenant infeoffeth I. Q. who infeoffeth T. Q. to defraud I. N. of the wardship of his Sonne within age and dyes I. N. seiseth the Son T. Q. dyeth the King shall not have wardship of the body and moity of the three Acres 1. Resol By the death of I. Q. it was a Chattell vested in I. N. and the King had but a possibility to have it if T. Q. dye during the minority of the ward which possibility shall not devest the wardship out of I. N. 2. When the tenant infeoffeth a stranger to defraud the Lord of wardship the Lord shall not have ravishment of ward before recovery of the Land in a right of ward and although the title of I. N. be but in action yet it shall not be devested by a descent after See the Statute of 34. H. 8. in Case of collusion Bewleys Case 9. Jacobi fol. 130. THe King Lord mesne by Socage and tenant the tenant is attainted of Treason the King grants to one tenendum by Chivalry and Rent and to doe his services to other Lords the tenant shall hold by Socage of the mesne and he by Socage of the King because the intent of the King was to revive the mesnalty which cannot be by any other way and the reviving of the ancient tenure shall be in construction preferred before the reservation of a new and the honour of the King shall be preferred before his profit and there was no default in the mesne Thomas Holts Case 9. Jacobi fol. 131. GRandfather tenant in Chivalry in Capite Father and Son the Grandfather conveyeth part of his Lands to the use of the Father and his Wife the remainder to the Son in taile c. the remainder to the right heires of the Grandfather and conveys other Lands to his younger Children for life with diverse remainders over and dyeth the Father tenders livery and before he sueth it dyeth 1. Resol By the death of the Father before livery sued and after tender the King loseth the primer seisin but not meane rates if any be due 2. The Son shall not pay primer seisin nor sue livery because the Father and not he was within the Statute of 32. H. 8. 3. If the King had had one primer seisin he shall not have another of the Lands conveyed to the younger Children but that ought to be an effectuall seisin Ergo here because the King had not the effect of the primer seisin of the Father he shall have primer seisin of the Lands conveyed to the younger Children as if hee had the grant of a prochein avoidance and presents and his Clerk dyeth before Induction he shall present again and before the Statute of Donis If tenant in taile the revertion to the King had aliened post prolem suscitatam with warranty which descends upon the King it is no barr without assets the effect of the warranty 4. The King shall not have primer seisin in regard of a secke revertion which descends to the Son otherwise if a rent be reserved the King may have that for a yeare So note for a fruitlesse revertion there shall be wardship but no primer seisin Matthew Menes Case 9. Jacobi fol. 133. TEnant of the King of a Messuage in Capite who holds other Gavelkinde Land deviseth all to his 4. Sons equally 1. Whether the King shall have a third part of the Messuage onely 2. Whether out of the part of the heire onely because Praerogativa Regis cap. 1. Rex habebit c. De quocunque tenuerint c. is intended if the Land descend to the same heire to whom the Land holden did discende 1. Resolved if no Will had beene made the King shall not have the Lands holden of others in socage but when by the Will to which he is inabled by the Statute he deviseth it to his Sonnes there the saving in 32. H. 8. giveth to the King ward and primer seisin So if Lands in chivalry devisable by custome are devised to the Feme although the devisee be good for all without aide of the Statute yet the King shall have a wardship of a third part 2. The King shall have his third part out of all their Estates equally Ascoughs Case 9. Jacobi fol. 134. THe King Lord Mesne in Capite and Tenant in socage the Mesne grants to the use of himselfe for life the remainder to the Tenant in taile if the remainder suspends the Mesnalty during the life of the Mesne Resolved that during his life the Mesnalty is not suspended 1. Not as to the Mesne because he remaineth Tenant to the Lord nor by reason of the remainder for the avo●ding of Fractions otherwise if the remainder be liimitted in fee for then he hath as high an estate in the Mesnalty as in the Tenancy and this can never be revived and otherwise a Seigniory in fee shall issue out of a Mesnalty for life and there will be Lord and Tenant in fee and Mesne for life but if the Lord Grant his Seigniory for yeares the remainder for life to the Tenant the Mesnalty is suspended A Mesnalty or Seigniory cannot be suspended in part and in esse for part by the Act of the party but they may by act of Law or of a third party As if the Lord take a Lease of part of the Tenancy all the Seigniory is suspended but if a Gardian indow the Feme the Seigniory is in esse for that part and suspended for the residue If two Coparceners are of a Seigniory and one commeth to the Tenancy by
grant after Office and before the retorne is good ib. The Bishop must shew the cause of refusing a Clerke Page 203 The Constable may bring an Offendor to what Justice he will ib. Vpon refusall to find surety the Constable may commit him ib. Where a man shall avoid a fraudulent deed by 27. Eliz. Page 204 The Defendant pleads another Action depending for the same Page 205 Cases of By-laws Where the Inhabitants of a Towne may make By-laws and where the consent of the greater part shall bind all ib. Who are liable towards the repaires of a Church Page 207 Against a devise of Lands by writing no averrment can be received Page 208 Cases of Usury What manner of contract is Vsury Page 208 209 A demurrer is a confession of all matters in fact well pleaded Page 208 What things may be released before the day Page 209 Daggs Pistolls c. are within the Statute of 33. H. 8. c. 6. ib. The Sheriffe or his officers may carry Weapons invasive or defensive ib. One man cannot have an Action for a common nusance Page 210 If an Orphan sue for goods in the Court Christian a prohibition lyeth ib. A Deed shewed in Court remaineth there all that Terme Page 211 In the K. B. imparlances in barre are entered but not to reply ib. The Wife Tenant for life dyes the Baron is not liable for wast ib. When amends may be tendered after a distresse but not after impounding tender to the Bailiffe is not good Page 212 The Plaintiffe may pray a Deed to be entered In haec verba the same Tearme but not after ib. An action of wast lies after the death of him in remainder for life ib. Every assignee of every Lessee mediate or immediate is within 11. H. 6. c. 5. Page 213 An award must be certaine and binds none but parties Page 214 A prescription for common where it is good ib. Where a warrāty comenceth by disseissin Page 214 215 A confirmation of the Land and of the terme a diversity Page 215 Cases of Customes Where a custome binds Strangers Page 216 Where property is altered by sale in a Market Overt ib. A custome which addeth more solemnity to the Law is good ib. Who shall have the Corne upon the ground Page 216 217 Where judgement finall shall be given in Wales Page 217 Cases of Executions One in execution escapeth yet the other is liable Page 218 VVhere the Defendant is in Execution for the King he shall be also for the Plaintiffe Page 219 If a Man be in custody and another VVrit commeth to the Sheriffe he is in custody of force of the second VVrit also Page 220 A judiciall VVrit needs no returne but not so of an Elegit ib. VVhere restitution shall be after reversall of Outlarly or judgement Page 221 VVhere the Sheriffe may breake the House to make Execution Page 222 That a House is not a defence of Strangers ib. A false consideration is void as to the Queene Page 223 224 The Law findeth not an assignee in Law where one in Fact Page 224 Foure bring a Quare impedit and one releaseth it barreth onely him ib. After a Divorce issue by the second Husband legitimate Page 225 False evidence to the Grand Inquest is not within 5 Eliz. ib. Commissioners of Sewers must tax all who are in danger ib. A Quod permittat for a Nusance where it lyeth without request Page 226 227 And where against a Feoffee or assignee Page 227 Two have Title to present by turne one presents I. S. who is deprived or Merè laicus it is a turne not if the admission be void ib. Vterque taken sometimes discretive sometimes collective Page 228 The Plaintiffe cannot refuse to joine in demurrer but the King may ib. A man cannot have an Action for damage by Coines ib. None may erect a Dovehouse but the Lord of a Mannor ib. Ancient demesne is a good plea in Ejectione sirmae not in Trespasse Page 229 Excellent diversity of Learning touching Wrecke ib. When the high Admirall shall have jurisdiction Page 230 Plentifull matter touching goods wayved goods of Fellons Deodands c. Page 231 What things may be gained by usage without matter of Record ib. Rendring rent to one and his heires and to one or his heires is all one Page 232 The King by his Proclamation may make forreigne Coine currant ib. A Tender of money in bagges is a good tender Page 233 In a writ of Estrepement the Sheriffe may take posse com ib. Estrepement lyeth in wast as well before judgment as after ib. Feme Copiholder durante viduitate soweth the Lord shall have it ib. Payment of parcell before the day is satisfaction for all Page 234 Grantee of a remainder liable for arreares of a rent charge ib. Debt against one joint obligor hee cannot plead Non est factum Page 235 But hee may if the deed become void by matter Ex-post facto ib. In Indictments certainty to a certaine in generall is good ib. False Latine shall not quash an Indictment ib. In Indictments of death Percussit must be except in case of poisoning Page 236 A lense for yeares is an interest within 4 H. 7. c. 25. ib. A libell may be as well against a private man as a Magistrate ib. Non refert whether it be true or the party of good fame ib. If a man finde a Libell advise how to to preserve himselfe Page 237 Gardian in chivalrie shall have the single value of the marriage without Tender ib. The great Case De jure regis Ecclesiastico upon the Statutes of 1 Eliz. c. 1. p. 2. Touching a Deprivation by the Bishop and the Kings supremacy in Causes Ecclesiasticall Page 237 238 THE SIXTH BOOKE VVHere services shall be multiplyed apportioned or extinct Page 239 Where the parole shall demurre for nonage of the demandant and where the Tenant shall have his age much good learning Page 240 The King grants the tenancy by attainder the mesnalty is revived Page 241 The K. grants land Tenendum by a rose pro omnibus c. what Tenure Page 242 Resolutions and Diversities when a barre in one action shall be a barre in another ib. Where a Writt shall be brought by Journeyes accounts Page 243 Who are Judges in Inferiour Courts Page 244 Jointenants cannot make partition by words after 28. H. 8. c. 1. ib. A Parson deprived for Adultery which is pardoned he is restored Page 245 A Visne must be from the most certain place ib. Tenant for life and hee in remainder joyne in a lease how it inureth Page 246 Riens passa tryed where the land is not where the patent dated ib. A devise to his brother paying 20. s. he hath fee ib. A devise to Baron and Feme and their children what estate it is Page 247 Where the will is directory and where declaratory without reference to power ib. A diversity betweene a suite by Citation and an Appeale Page 248 If a Statute speaks