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A34802 Lex custumaria, or, A treatise of copy-hold estates in respect of the lord, copy-holder wherein the nature of customs in general, and of particular customs, grants and surrenders, and their constructions and expositions in reference to the thing granted or surrendred, and the uses or limitations of estates are clearly illustrated : admittances, presentments, fines and forfeitures are fully handled, and many quaeries and difficulties by late resolution setled : leases, licences, extinquishments of copy-hold estates, and what statutes extend to copy-hold estates are explained : and also of actions by lord or tenant, and the manner of declaring and pleading, either generally or as to particular customs, with tryal and evidence holder may recieve relief in the Court of Chancery : to which are annexed presidents of conveyances respecting copy-holds, releases, surrenders, grants presentmets, and the like : as also presidents of court rolls, surrenders, admittances, presentments, &c. / by S.C., Barister at Law. Carter, Samuel, barrister at law. 1696 (1696) Wing C665; ESTC R4622 239,406 434

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and Assigns all those Messuages Cottages Lands Tenements Pastures Feedings and Hereditaments whatsoever situate lying and being in K. and S. or any other Town in the said County of Norfolk which are Copy-hold or customary Lands holden of the Manor of H. within the said County of Norfolk and which the said T. P. holdeth by Copy of Court-Roll of the Manor aforesaid or of right ought to hold as Copy-hold or of some customary Tenure of the said Manor of H. or of the Lord or Lords thereof or of any other Manor or Lordship now or late of the said A. B. and E. B. or either of them and the Free-hold of all and singular the said Messuages Cottages Lands Tenements Pastures Feedings and Hereditaments whatsoever with the Appurtenances and also all the Freehold of the Inheritance of all those Copy-hold and customary Messuages Cottages Lands Tenements and Hereditaments whatsoever which were surrendred lately by J. G. unto the use of the said T. P. and his Heirs and also all such Rents and Arrearages of Rents Services Suits and other Demands whatsoever which now or at any time heretofore have been due or payable or that shall or ought to be hereafter due payable or done for all or any of the said Messuages Cottages Lands Tenements Pastures Feedings and Hereditaments whatsoever all which said Messuages Cottages Lands Tenements Pastures Feedings and Hereditaments with the Appurtenances were late in the occupation of c. and the Reversion and Reversions Remainder and Remainders of all and singular the Premisses all Rents and Reservations reserved or payable by or upon any Demises Leases or Grants heretofore made or granted of the said Premisses or any part or parcel thereof To have and to hold all and singular the said Messuages Cottages Lands Pastures Feedings and Hereditaments and all and singular the above-mentioned or intended to be hereby granted and bargained Premisses with their and every of their Appurtenances unto the said T. P. R. S. and T. P. their Heirs and Assigns to the only proper and absolute use and behoof of them the said T. P. R. S. and T. P. their Heirs and Assigns for ever and the said A. B. and E. B. for themselves and every of them their and either of their Heirs Executors and Administrators and every of them do covenant and grant to and with the said T. P. R. S. and T. P. their Heirs Executors and Assigns and every of them by these presents in manner and form following That is to say that they the said A. B. and E. B. or one of them are or is at the time of the sealing and delivery of these presents lawfully joyntly or solely seized in their or one of their Demesns as of Fee of and in the said Manor of H. and of and in all and singular the said bargained Premisses and every part and parcel thereof with the Appurtenances of a good perfect and absolute Estate of Inheritance in Fee-simple without c. and unto the use of them or one of their Heirs and Assigns without any manner of Condition power of Revocation Limitation of Use or Uses Trust or other matter or thing whatsoever to alter change charge incumber impeach determine or make void the same And that they the said A. B. and E. B. or one of them have or hath at the time of the sealing and delivery of these presents and at the time of the execution of the first Estate hereby to be made and granted shall have full Power good Right and lawful Authority to Grant Bargain and Sell all and every the said Messuages Cottages Lands Tenements Pastures Feedings Hereditaments and Premisses before-mentioned to be hereby granted bargained and sold with their and every of their Appurtenances unto the said T. P. R. S. and T. P. their Heirs and Assigns in manner and form aforesaid and according to the effect of these presents And also that all and every the said afore-mentioned to be hereby granted and bargained Messuages Cottages Lands Tenements Pastures Feedings Hereditaments and Premisses and every part and parcel thereof now are and at all times hereafter shall and may be remain and continue unto the said T. P. R. S. and T. P. their Heirs and Assigns and every or any of them free and clear and freely and clearly acquitted exonerated and discharged or otherwise upon reasonable request well and sufficiently saved and kept harmless and indemnified by the said A. B. and E. B. their Heirs Executors or Administrators or some or one of them of and from all and all manner of former and other Gifts Grants Bargains Sales Estates Wills Entails Alienations Joyntures Right and Title of Dower Statutes Merchant and of the Staple Judgments Executions Rents arrearages of Rents Mortgages and of and from all other Charges Titles Claims and Incumbrances whatsoever And farther the said A. B. and E. B. for themselves their Heirs Executors Administrators and Assigns and for every of them do covenant and grant to and with the said T. P. R. S. and T. P. their Heirs Executors and Administrators and every of them by these presents That they the said A. B. and E. B. and either of them their and either of their Heirs and Assigns lawfully having claiming or pretending to have or which hereafter shall or may lawfully claim or pretend to have any Estate Right Title Interest Claim or Demand of in or to the said bargained Premisses or of in or to any part or parcel thereof by from or under them the said A. B. and E. B. or either of them their or either of their Heirs and Assigns shall and will from time to time and at all times hereafter at the reasonable request costs and charges in the Law of the said T. P. R. S. and T. P. their Heirs and Assigns make do acknowledge or cause to be made done executed acknowledged and suffered all and every such farther act and acts thing and things devise and devises assurances and conveyances in the Law whatsoever of the said Premisses as by the said T. P. R. S. and T. P. their Heirs or Assigns their or any of their Councel Learned in the Law shall be reasonably advised or required be it by Fine or Feoffment Deed or Deeds Inrolled or not Inrolled Recovery or Recoveries with single double or more Voucher or Vouchers or by any other lawful ways or means whatsoever for the better assurance and sure making of the said bargained Premisses and every part and parcel thereof with their and every of their Appurtenances unto the said T. P. R. S. and T. P. their Heirs and Assigns for ever c. A Letter of Attorny to deliver seisin A Lease of Copy-hold Land with the Lords Licence recited This Indenture c. Between A. B. of c. of the one part and C. D. of c. of the other part Witnesseth That the said A. B. by virtue of a Licence before the sealing and delivery of these presents by him procured and obtained of
and from E. F. Lord of the Manor of W. in the County of S. for the granting and letting to Farm the Tenements c. hereafter in and by these presents demised to the said C. D. according to the tenor and true meaning of these presents Hath demised leased and to farm let and by these presents doth demise lease and to farm let unto the said C. D. c. all c. To have and to hold the said c. with their and every of their Apputenances unto the said C. D. his Executors Administrators and Assigns from the c. for and during the term and unto the full end and term of c. from thenceforth next ensuing and fully to be compleat and ended Yielding and paying therefore yearly and every year during the said term unto the said A. B. his Heirs and Assigns the yearly Rent or Sum of 3 s. of c. at c. with clause of Distress c. and usual Covenants to repair c. And also the said C. D. for himself his Executors Administrators and Assigns and every of them doth covenant promise and grant to and with the said A. B. his Heirs Executors and Assigns That he the said C. D. his Executors nor Assigns nor any of them shall do or wittingly or willingly permit or suffer any act matter or thing whatsoever which may forfeit lose or impair the Estate or Interest of the said A. B. of in or to the said hereby demised Premisses or of in or to any part or parcel thereof or which may be otherwise hurtful or prejudicial to the said A. B. his Heirs or Assigns for or concerning the having holding or enjoying of the same or any part thereof And the said A. B. for himself his c. doth covenant and grant to and with the said C. D. his Executors and Assigns that he the said C. D. his Executors and Assigns under the payment of the said yearly Rent and performance of the Covenants and Agreements aforesaid which on his and their parts and behalfs are and ought to be performed shall and may quietly and peaceably have hold and enjoy all and singular the before-mentioned to be hereby demised Premisses and every part and parcel thereof during the term hereby demised without any interruption molestation or eviction of him the said A. B. his Heirs and Assigns or of any person or persons whatsoever now lawfully claiming or that shall or may hereafter lawfully claim any Estate Right Title or Interest of in or to the same or any part thereof by from or under him them or any of them And also that he the said A. B. his Heirs Executors and Assigns or some or one of them shall and will from time to time and at all times hereafter discharge or upon reasonable request save harmless and keep indemnified the said C. D. his Executors and Assigns of for and from all Quit-Rents payments Duties and Services to be had paid made or done for or out of the said hereby demised Premisses or any part thereof to the said E. F. Lord of the Manor aforesaid his Heirs and Assigns A Release of a Copy hold Estate To all Christian people to whom these presents shall come A. B. of c. and C. B. of c. Brother of the said A. B. send Greeting Whereas the said A. B. is or was seized for and during the term of his natural Life according to the Custom of the Manor of W. in the c. of and in one Copy-hold Messuage or Tenement with the Appurtenances in W. aforesaid being parcel of the said Manor late in the Tenure or Occupation of c. deceased and of and in several parcels of Land Meadow and Pasture to the same belonging or reputed part thereof And whereas the said C. B. hath a Copy-hold Estate for the term of his Life in the said Messuage and Premisses in Reversion after the death of the said A. B. as by the Court Rolls of the said Manor of W. more at large appeareth Now know ye therefore That the said A. B. and C. B. for and in pursuance of an Agreement heretofore made and concluded between the said A. B. E. F. Esq Lord of the said Manor of W. of and for the said Copy-hold Estate and for and in consideration of the Sum of c. of lawful mony of England by him the said E. F. in hand paid to the said A. B. and C. B. or one of them before the sealing and delivery hereof the receit whereof they do hereby acknowledge and for other good causes and considerations them hereunto moving have granted yeilded up surrendred remised released and quit claimed and by these presents they the said A. B. and C. B. do and either of them doth grant yield up surrender remise release and for ever quit claim unto the said E. F. and unto F. C. of c. and to their Heirs Executors and Administrators for ever which said E. F. and F. C. are or one of them now is Lord of the said Manor of W. and are or one of them now is in the actual possession of the said Premisses their said several and respective Copy-hold Estates in the said Messuage Lands and Premisses and in any part or parcel of the same and all their and either of their Estate as well Free-hold as Copy-hold Right Title Interest Possession Claim and Demand whatsoever either in Law or Equity or according to the Custom of the said Manor or otherwise howsoever And the said A. B. and C. B. do for themselves their Heirs Executors and Administrators covenant and grant to and with the said E. F. and F. C. their Heirs Executors and Administrators by these presents that they the said A. B. and C. B. shall and will from time to time and at all times hereafter upon request and at the Costs and Charges in the Law of the said E. F. and F. C. or either of them do and perfect or cause to be done and perfected all such lawful and reasonable acts and things in the Law for the surrendring barring and extinguishing of their or either of their Right and Estate as well Free-hold as Customary and all their or either of their Claim or Demand in or to the said Messuage or Tenement and Premisses or any of them as by them the said E. F. or either of them their or either Heirs or Assigns of the said Manor shall be reasonably advised and required In Witness c. Copy of a Court Roll or an Extract of a Surrender out of the Rolls of the Court. Ad curiam Baron F. R. Mil Baronet Dom manerij pred ibid tentur die Lune videlicet secundo die Junij Anno Domini millesimo sextentesimo nonagesimo Annoque Regni Domini 〈◊〉 Gulielmi Mariae Dei gratia Anglie Scotie Francie Hibernie Regis Regine fidei defensor c. primo coram S. C. Arm Senescallo ibid Irrotulatur sic Ad hanc curiam venit A.
his Heirs The Question was whether he should have Common still Per tot Cur. he should not Custom hath annexed the Common to his customary Estate which being determined and destroyed by his own act in making it a Freehold the Common is also destroyed and cannot continue without special words and the general words cum pertinentiis will not help Yelv. p. 190. Cro. Jac. 253. Marsham and Hunter's Case Noy 136. mesme Case This is a local Prescription not to the Land but to the Estate and this proves well the words of the Prescription for the Copy-holder ought to Prescribe That every customary Tenant within the Manor c. so he hath his Common in respect that he is a customary Tenant and this is in respect of the Estate which he hath by the Custom and not in respect of the Land So was the Case of Forth and Ward where a Copy holder had used to take Estovers to repair his Hedges and the Lord granted to him the Freehold of the Copy-hold by the words of Grant unto him all the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments thereunto appertaining and thereto used and occupied It was resolved he should not have Common in the Land of the Lord 2 Brownl 209. Marsham and Hunter More n. 866. Forth and Ward the words cum pertinent do not create a Common A Copy-holder claims Common in another man's Land and the Lord Enfeoffs the Copy-holder of his Copy-hold Land he hath now lost his Common But if a Copy-holder hath Common in the Lords Wastes and the Lord Enfeoffs him of the Copy-hold with all his Commons the Common is not gone 1 Brownl 173. Lee and Edwards And all Pastures and Common whatsoever to the said Messuage or Tenement belonging or used or demised with the same and it his intent that a like Common shall be granted 2 Anderson 168. Wolredg's Case Abbot of F. was was seized of a Manor and there was a Prescription for Common in the Waste of the Manor as belonging to every Ancient Tenement King H. 8. granted the Manor to Sir J. G. which came to Sir T. G. who was Plaintiff in Trespass The Defendant justifies by an usitatum fuit That it had been there used time out mind that every Tenant for years of an Ancient Tenement and Close within the said Manor used to have Common of Turbary on the Waste of the said Manor and that the Tenement and Close he now hath is an Ancient Tenement and was granted to him with all Common appurtenant to the said Messuage and Close accepted or reputed as part parcel or member of the same And the Question upon a special Verdict was when the Lord of a Manor is seized of a Waste and a Tenant of an ancient Tenement prescribes to have Common in the Waste of the Lord afterwards the Tenement is severed from the Manor and granted for a Term to the Defendant with all Common appurtenant to the said Messuage and Close whether this Common that was before belonging to this Ancient Tenement shall pass to the Grantee Per Cur. This Prescription as it is here laid with an usitatum fuit Pleading by an usitatum fuit annexed to the Estate of a Termor is not good is not good It was agreed That if a Copy-holder doth purchase the Inheritance of his Copy-hold and afterwards grants this with all Commons belonging to the same The Common that was before used with the Copy-hold shall pass to the Grantee but the Pleading here is not good The beginning of this Common was by Grant and by permission of the Lord and this for the advancement of his Tenant and not by Prescription and no remedy he hath for this but only in Equity Per Williams a Termor may prescribe but not in his own name but in the name of his Lord That he hath had for himself and his Farmers c Had it been laid here with all Commons Profits used occupied and enjoyed with the Tenement by the Farmers this with an averment had been good but not as it is here the Grant is here with the usitatum fuit now here the usitatum est is annexed to the Estate of the Termor which is not good 1 Bulstr 17 18. 7 Jac. Grimes and Peacock 2 Brownl 222. mesme Case Lessee for years cannot alledge an Usage for every usitatum ought to go in one self same current not interrupted as in the Case of a Copy-hold but it might pass by apt words It was pleaded That all the Inhabitants in such an ancient Messuage ratione commorantiae Pleading Common ratione commorantie have used to have Common of Pasture in loco in quo c. 't is ill for in this word Inhabitants is included he which hath no Interest but Habitation only and he that hath no Interest cannot have Common 6 Rep. Gateward's Case My Lord Hobart's Reason is good Common is an Interest which must inhere in somebody and cannot be pleaded by way of Custom for the Inhabitants that are not permanent to prescribe Tenants in Fee must prescribe for Common c. in their own name and others that have Interest as for Life Years by Elegit at Will c. in the name of the Lord Gateward's Case 6 Rep. It was a Question in Roberts and Hoskin's Case Modern Rep. 74. and 2 Keb. 757. Sanders p. 324. Sola separalis pastura excluding the Lord is a good Custom Vaughan 251. North and Coe Whether a Custom for the customary Tenants to have solam separalem pasturam excluding the Lord were a good Custom Per Cur. it is notwithstanding this Prescription for the sole Pasture yet the Soil is the Lords and he hath Mines Trees c. And my Lord Coke is express in the point a man cannot Prescribe for sole Common but for sole Pasture he may As for the manner of pleading it Vide the Books cited Customs as to devising by last Will and Testament Vide infra Surrender to the use of 〈◊〉 mans last Will. CAP. IX Of custumary Incidents or collateral Qualities Of Copy-hold Estates and how to 〈◊〉 governed With the Illustration of seven particular Cases YOU may observe what has been befor● treated about the nature of Copy-hold Estates that amongst the rest of the Cons●derations in that Chapter where the Copy-hold Estate is inheritable and the Land discendible That in such Case the Law shall direc● the descent according to the Rules and Ma●ims of the Common Law as incidents to ever● Estate descendible as it was in the Case of Uses When they had gained the reputation of Inheritances descendible the Common Law directed the descent of them and that there should be a possessio fratris of them as well as of other Inheritances So it is in Copy-hold Inheritances possessio fratris facit sororem esse haeredem Vide prius sub titulo Maxims But now such customary Inheritances shall not have by the Law any other collateral Qualities which do not concern descents of Inheritance which other
that Copy-hold Land may well be parcel of the Demesns and the Frank-tenements are resting in the Lord but indeed the customary Inheritance is in the Copy-holder and he shall plead That he is seized with this farther addition In Dominico suo ut de feodo secundum consuetudinem Manerij Services As for Services whether Corporeal Annual or Accidental they are Duties accrewing to the Lord by reason of his Seigniory And respecting Copy-holds I shall under their proper Titles hereafter speak of Herriots Forfeitures Amerciaments and Fines for not doing Suit and Service and the like It was ingeniously said by Doddridge in Herns and Strouds Case Latch 63. That no Case resembles a Manor more than a Rectory as a Manor is intire so is a Rectory and the Glebe Lands resemble the Demesns and the Tythes the Services If I let my Manor excepting the Demesns the Exception is void Winch p. 23. Description of a Manor The New Expositor of Law-Terms describes a Manor as a thing compounded of divers things as of an House Land Arable Pasture Meadow Wood Rent Advowson Court Baron and the like and this ought to be by long continuance of Time to the contrary whereof Man's Memory cannot occur So that a Manor consists of Demesns and Services Manor not made at this day and a Court Baron as Incident and this must be time out of Memory for a Manor cannot be made at this day because a Court Baron cannot now be made To a Manor a Court-Baron is incident and two Suitors at least and a Manor cannot be without a Court Baron and Suitors or Freeholders Two at the least for if all the Free-holds except one Escheat to the Lord or if he purchase all except one there his Manor is gone for that it cannot be a Manor without a Court Baron and a Court Baron cannot be holden but before Two Suitors at the least A Court Baron is incident to a Manor as a Court of Pye-powders to a Fair. By the Grant of a Manor cum pertinentijs the Court passeth and a Man cannot grant his Court but he may grant the Profits of his Court 1 Brownl 175. Browns Case Now though a Man cannot make a Manor at this day yet he may make Gifts in Tayl reserving a Tenure and Suit of Court Yet a Tenure may be created because though he may create a Tenure yet he may not create a Court and a Court cannot be but with a continuance time out of mind 35 H. 8. Broke Tenure 102. A Manor as I said before may not be made at this day neither by a common person The King cannot make a Manor or parcel of a Manor at this day nor by the King himself and the King cannot make a thing parcel of a Manor at this day as if he grants Lands to hold of him as of the Manor of Greenwich by a certain Rent this Rent is not parcel of the Manor Yet though a Seigniory or Appendancy cannot be made at this day yet if an Advowson be Appendant to a Manor Advowson appendant and the Lord grants part of the Manor with the Advowson to J. S. it is now Appendant to that part Cro. El. p. 39. Morris and Smith In truth Manors cannot at this day be created but by way of derivation as being derived out of an ancient Manor Manor by derivation or by act in Law as in the Case of Copartners Vide infra A Manor is entire A Manor is an entire thing and cannot be divided If the Lord will transfer over unto a Stranger the Services of all his Tenants and reserve unto himself the Demesns or if he will pass away the Demesns and reserve the Services Now in both Cases the Lord hath not a Manor really but nominally only and in reputation Manor in reputation and if I am disseised of a Manor and the disseisor sever the Demesns from the Services as it is 4 E. 4. I which have right ought to make my demand according to my right and not to take notice of his severance for to me it is a Manor still Manor in suspence If a Manor descendeth to Co-partners and they make partition and the entire Demesns are allotted to one and the entire Services to the other the Manor is now in suspence for neither hath a Manor but in name only but if part of the Demesns and part of the Services be allotted to each then they each of them have a real Manor 26 H. 4.8 6 Rep. 64. Sir Moyle Finch's Case To Explain this I shall cite a Case or two Joynt-tenants make partition of a Manor yet both keep but one Court If two Joynt-Tenants make partition this day of a Manor and each of them hath Demesns and Services yet each of them hath not a Manor nor can keep several Courts but must both keep one Court Croke El. p. 39. Morris's Case A. seized of a Manor whereof part of the Tenants were Freeholders and part Copy-holders had Issue two Daughters and dy'd the Daughters entred and made partition of the Demesns only but the Services of the Free-holders and Copy-holders remain'd in Common By the partition the Demesns are now become in gross and severed from the Manor and if partition be made of a Manor so as the Demesns be allotted to one Sister and the Services to another now the Manor is dissolved or rather suspended Manor suspended and revived yet if the other Sister dyes without Issue and her part descendeth to the other now it is become a Manor again 1 Leon. p. 204. Thetford's Case By this you see we read in our Books of two sorts of Manors 1. A real and perfect Manor such as is before described 2. A nominal Manor a Manor by reputation A Manor nominal as you may see by several Instances before Some call it a Manor in gross as Manor in gross a man may have the Right and Interest of a Court Baron with the Perquisites thereunto belonging but this is improperly called a Manor in a strict sense and another may have the Scite and every Foot of Land thereunto belonging And as to this I will only cite a Case which refers to practice 6 Rep. 64 65. Sir Moyle Finch's Case Reputation is sufficient to pass a thing in a Conveyance by the name of a Manor Manor in reputation will pass by the name of a Manor in a Conveyance not in a Fine which is not re vera a Manor yet it ought to be in truth and not reputation which ought to challenge and hold Priviledge of a Manor as to have a Court Baron c. But a Manor in reputation which is not in truth a Manor will not pass by the name of a Manor in a Fine or Common Recovery for they shall not be taken by intendment Croke Eliz. 524. Mallet's Case Of Customary Manors A customary Manor may be held by Copy and such customary
or of the nature of Gavel-kind c. but by common intendment they may not have a lawful commencement by Grant or Agreement but by Act of Parliament Gatward's Case 6 Rep. So 4 Rep. 32. in Foyston's Case Prescription is personal and is always made in the name of a person certain and his Ancestors or of those whose Estate he hath But Custom is local and alledged in no person but that within a Manor c. is such a Custom and this shall serve for those which cannot Prescribe in their own name nor in the name of a person certain In Gateward's Case 6 Rep. Defendant justifies in Trespass by Custom That all the Inhabitants in such an Ancient Messuage within the Vill of D. ratione commorationis have used to have common of Pasture in loco in quo c. this is ill pleaded for in this word Inhabitants are included Tenants in Fee for Life Years by Elegit at Will and also he that hath no Interest but Habitation only Now Tenant in Fee ought to Prescribe in his own Name Tenant in Fee in whose name to Prescribe in whose name others and the others which have Interest in the name of the Lord and he that hath no Interest cannot have Common But there is no one that hath an Interest be he Tenant at Will but by good Pleading he may enjoy it Now Copy-holder in Fee or for Life may by Custom of the Manor have Common in the Demesns of the Lord of the Manor but then he ought to alledge the Custom of the Manor to be Quod quilibet tenens customar cujuslibet anti qui Mesuagii Custumarii c. How a Copy-holder shall plead and not Quod quilibet Inhabitans infra aliquod antiquum Mesuag Custumar c. And a Prescription for the Inhabitants to be discharged of Tythes by a Modus or Freemen of London to be discharged of Wharfage c. must be pleaded by way of Custom When a thing must be pleaded by way of Custom and when by way of Prescription and not by way of Prescription because the Inhabitants or Freemen cannot Prescribe in their persons and therefore are allowed to lay a Custom for their Discharge and the nature of the things is not changed but remains still a Prescription in his kind though it be allowed to be pleaded by way of Custom for necessity sake And in Gateward's Case a thing lying properly in Prescription as Common did in that Case being an Interest which must inhere in some body Common for Copy-holders in the Lords Soyl must be pleaded by a Custom in the Soyl of another by Prescription cannot be pleaded by way of Custom as there they would have made it for Inhabitants that are not permanent to Prescribe but yet Common for Copy-holders in the Lords Soyl is allowed to be pleaded by Custom for necessities sake whereas in the Soyl of another it must be laid by Prescription in the Lord and yet the nature of both is a Prescription but a matter of discharge may be laid by way of Custom for that is not an Interest but an Exemption thus that great man my Lord Hobart p. 86. in Day and Savage his Case My Lord Coke in the Argument of Rowls and Mason's Case makes four differences between Prescription and Custom 1. In the beginning pugnant ex diametro for nothing may be good by Prescription but that which may have beginning by Grant 2. Prescription is incident to the Person and Custom to some Place and holds place in many Cases which cannot be by Grant As Lands may be devised by Custom So Gavel-kind and Burrough English c. which cannot have their beginning by Grant But Prescription and Custom are Brothers and ought to have the same Age and Reason ought to be the Father and Congruence the Mother and Use the Nurse and Time out of Memory to Fortifie them both 3. They vary in Quality for Prescription is for one man only and Custom for many if all but one be not dead 4. They vary in Extent and Latitude for Prescription extends to Fee-simple only but Custom extends to all Interests and Estates whatsoever as appears by the Pleading Prescription that a Copy-holder of Inheritance may sell the Trees is not good but such a Custom is good Tenant in Tayl for Life or Years cannot Prescribe in a Que Estate nor against the Lord in his Demesns Who may prescribe in a Que Estate or not but they ought to alledge the Custom and against a Stranger they ought to Prescribe in the name of the Lord 2 Brownl 198. In a Manor the Custom was That every Copy-holder for Life had Estovers for Fuel c. in the customary Lands Now if the Lord aliens the Woods c. in Fee and after Grant Copy-hold Lands and Houses for Lives the Grantees shall have Common of Estovers Pasture c. notwithstanding the Severance but after such Severance of the Waste or Woods Common is due to the Copy-holder notwithstanding Severance by the Lord and how to be pleaded the Copy-holder when he would entitle himself to Common or Estovers the Copy-holder shall not plead generally Quod infra Manerium praed talis habetur c. consuetudo c. for after the Severance this Waste or Wood is not within the Manor but absolutely divided from it but he shall plead That until such a time viz. before the Severance Talis habebatur a toto tempore c. consuetudo c. and then shew the Severance as in Murrel's Case 4 Rep. So he must do where the Lord aliens the Freehold and Inheritance of the Copy-holder Swain's Case 8 Rep. 2. It is said a Prescription goeth to one man and a Custom to many 1 Brownl Rep. 133. in Rowls and Mason and yet in Foystons Case 4 Rep. the Custom for Common may be applied to one single Copy-holder 3. The Allegation of a Custom shall serve when it is referred to a thing insensible as that such Lands are devisable c. Foystons Case There is nothing more common than for the Lord to Prescribe for his Tenants by Copy in another mans Land whereas if it be laid in his own it shall ever be laid by Custom Hobart p. 286. Roberts and Young There is a difference between a Prescription for Freehold Land and for Copy-hold Land for Custom which concerneth Freehold Difference between a Prescription for Freehold Land and for Copy-hold Land ought to be throughout the County and cannot be in a particular place 45 Ass but Precription concerning Copy-hold Land is good in one particular Cro. El. p. 353. Taverner and Cromwel 4. A Prescription must be in a thing done and not in posse therefore a Custom that Quaelibet femina vira cooperta poterit devisare her Copy-hold Inheritance to her Husband is not good 3 Leon. 83. Skipwith's Case To Customs and Prescriptions these two things are inseparable Incidents viz. Possession or Usage Interruption
in the possession in the right and Time Possession must be Longa continua pacifica Now observe a Title once gained by Custom or Prescription cannot be lost by interruption of the Possession for ten or twenty years but by interruption in the Right As if a man hath had a Rent or Common by Prescription unity of Possession of as high and perdurable Estate is an interruption in the Right Co. Lit. 114. b. And if a man hath Common by Prescription and takes a Lease of the Land for twenty years the Common is suspended for that time and after the years ended he may claim the Common again by Prescription 1. Personal Prescription and in that Inhabitants may Prescribe as for a Way or matter of Ease or Discharge Gateward's Case 2. Real Prescription and this is inherent to the Estate and this is where a man Prescribeth That he and all those whose Estate he hath c. Prescription as to the Estate of the Land and not to the Land it self 3. Local Prescription not as to Land but to the Estate and therefore the Custom was That the Copy-holder should have Common in the Waste of the Lord the Lord by Deed confirms to a Copy-holder to have to him and his Heirs with its Appurtenances The Question was whether his Copy-hold now being destroyed he shall have Common by the word Appurtenances Per Cur. the Common is extinct and not revived for this is a local Prescription not to the Land but only to the Estate and this proves well the words of the Prescription for the Copy-holder ought to Prescribe That every customary Tenant within the Manor c. So he hath his Common in respect that he is customary Tenant and this is in respect of the Estate which he hath by the Custom and not in respect of the Land 2 Brownl 210. Marsham and Hunter Copy-holder for Life cannot Prescribe against his Lord but Copy-holder in Fee may Copy-holder for Life may not Prescribe against his Lord. Copy-holder in Fee may and how for he hath the Copy-hold in nature of Land of Inheritance Stiles 233. Cage and Dod. Per Cur. a Copy-holder may Prescribe by an usitatum est against his Lord but against a Stranger he must Prescibe in the name of the Lord More n. 647. 6. Rep. 60. Copy-holder of Inheritance may Prescribe in the name of the Lord to be discharged of Tythes Noy p. 132. Copy-holders may not Prescribe against their own Lord omnino nor against any other but only in the name of their Lord and the manner of laying it is by a Custom when they claim any thing or profit out of the Lords Soyl vide Sanders 324 5 6. Hoskin and Roberts What shall be said a pursuance of a Custom or not If the Custom be That the Lord may Demises Copy-hold in Fee he may Demise them for Life Years or in Tayl for these Estates are included in a Fee which is greater 1 Roll. Abr. Staunton and Barns Cok. Lit. 52. Vide supra Maxims and Customs 4 Rep. 23. The Case of the Manor of Allesly in Warwickshire Solummodo how expounded If the Custom be That the Lord may solummodo Demise his Copy-hold Land in Fee yet the Lord may Demise this for Life or Years or in Tayl though there was never any such Estate made before for the word solummodo is not to be taken so strictly to restrain the Lord of this liberty which the Law gives upon the general Custom but that he had used solummodo to grant in Fee which doth not take away the liberty which the Law gives 1 Rolls Abr. 511. mesme Case Custom is to Grant for one two or three Lives a Grant to one durante viduitate is within the Custom for the Estate granted was less than the Custom warranted The Custom was That the Wife shall have the Land for term of her Life The Evidence was That the Custom was that she shall have it durante viduitate Per Cur. This Evidence doth not maintain the Custom 4 Rep. 30. Downe and Hopkin's Case A Grant to three for the Lives of two is within the Custom of three Lives If the Custom be That Copyholds may be granted for three Lives a Copy may be granted to three for the Lives of two within this Custom For it is no inconvenience to the Lord although it be pur auter vie for there shall be no occupancy of it but the Lord shall have it if the Tenants pur auter vie dye living cesty que vies and this is not a greater Estate than three Lives but lesser Rolls Abr. 511. Ven and Howel But to one for Life Remainder to another for Life c. is not good A Copy-holder where the Custom was to Demise for three Lives demised to one for Life the remainder to such an one as he should marry and the first Son of his Body resolved that both the remainders were void but the Estate for his own Life is good More n. 922. Webster and Allen. Custom is when any Tenant sells his Tenement three Proclamations shall be made the next Court day and if any of the Blood of the Vendor will give as much mony as the Vendor will he shall have it A Tenant in consideration of one hundred pounds in Mony and that the Vendee being his Physician had cured him sold it to him and the next of Blood at next Court offers a hundred pound yet he shall not have it for it was given partly for the other consideration and the Custom shall be for mony only 1 Rolls Abr. 568. So if he had sold it in consideration of a Lease for years and 1 d. ibid. CAP. V. Of particular Customs either enabling or disabling in respect of the Lord of the Tenant and of the Estate Limited or Leased and in respect of Discents WHAT particular Customs have been adjudged good or what not either enabling or disabling Customs Vide supra of Customs ratione loci And they may be considered in three respects Of the Lord. Of the Tenant Of the Estate 1. In respect of the Lord and his Priviledge The Wife of the Lord shall not be endowed against a Copy-holder for the title of Dower is not consummate before the death of her Husband Dower so as the title of the Copy-holder is paramount and compleated before the title of Dower Leon. 152. Waste The succeeding Lord shall not take advantage of Waste done in the time of the preceeding Lord 2 Siderfin p. 9. Chamberlain and Drake Vide infra Common A Custom That none shall put his Cattel into the Common before the Lord puts in his is not good Vide supra the Rules of Customs 1 Bulstr Earl of Northumberland vers Wheeler 21 Ed. 4. 28 b. Fine A Custom that a Copy-holder shall upon the change of every Lord pay a Fine is void Vide the Rules of Customs For the Lord may change his Manor every day Had it been that
Manor after the Grant made hath stablish'd and fixed this firm to the Grantee So if the Copy-holders for Life used to have Common in the Lords Wastes or Woods and the Lord aliens the Wastes or Woods to another in Fee and after grants certain Copy-hold Lands or Houses for Lives such Grantees shall have Common of Pasture or Estovers notwithstanding the Severance for the Title of Copy-holder is paramount the Severance and the Custom unites the Common or Estovers which are but accessories and incidents so long as the House and Land being the principal is maintained by the Custom which customary Appurtenants are not pertaining to the Estate of the Lord for he is Owner of the Free-hold and Inheritance of the whole Manor but they are appertaining to the customary Estate of the Copy-holder after the Grant made 8 Rep. 63. Swain's Case Voluntary Grants made by Feoffee of Manor on Condition good Feoffee of a Manor upon Condition grants Land by Copy and afterwards the Manor becomes forfeited and the Feoffor entreth yet the Copy-hold Estate remains untouched so if Feoffee of a Manor on Condition to Enfeoff a Stranger and the next day makes a voluntary Grant by Copy this shall bind Coke Cop. Voluntary Estates granted during the time of the Lords Interest shall be good though the Lords Estate be avoided ab initio Nay though the Estate of the Lord in the Manor by Relation happen to be void ab initio yet if he grant by Copy during the continuance of his Interest it is good So Copy-holders Estates granted before a Divorce causa praecontractus shall be good So if a man espouseth the Lady of a Manor under the Age of consent and after she disagreeeth though the Marriage by relation was void ab initio yet Copy-holds granted before disagreement shall never be avoided So by Popham in Rowse's Case Owen 28. If a Manor be devised to one and the Devisee enters and makes Copies and then the Devise is found to be void yet such Copies of Surrenders are good Aliter where such Devisee makes new or voluntary Copies If the Lord of a Manor commits Felony or Murder and Process of Outlawry is awarded against him after the Exigent he granteth Copyhold Estates according to the Custom and then is Attainted these Grants are good though by relation the Manor was forfeited from the time of the Exigent awarded So if the Lord had been Attainted by Verdict or Confession If the Lord of a Manor acknowledgeth a Statute and then granteth Lands by Copy Grant after Stat. acknowledged and the Manor extended yet shall be good and after the Manor is delivered to the Conusee in Extent the Grant cannot by this be impeached Lease for years is made of a Manor and to be void upon breach of a Condition Condition is broken and Lessee before entry of the Lessor grants Estates by Copy these Grants shall never exclude the Lessor for upon breach of the Condition the Lease is void But in case of a Lease for Life or Grant in Tayl or Fee of the Manor on such Condition the granting Estates by Copy before Entry of the Lessor c. may be good for before his Title be executed by Entry the Tenant c. hath a lawful Interest to grant by Copy Coke Cop. p. 100 101. Sect. 34. But if a Parson before Induction grant Lands by Copy being parcel of a Manor which is Glebe Land this admitting binds not though he be afterwards Inducted Ibid. Tenant in Dower shall not avoid such Grant If the Lord of a Manor taketh a Wife and after that granteth Copy-hold Estates according to the Custom and dyeth and the Feme hath this Manor assigned to her in Dower yet she cannot avoid these Copy-hold Estates because the Copy-holders are in by a Title paramount to the Feme viz. by Custom Coke 8 Rep. 63. b. Swain's Case But if the Lords Heir make such assignment of Dower she may avoid them But in all these Cases before put observe these three Rules 1. These Grants must be according to the Custom of the Manor and Rents and Services customary must be reserved 2. Though it is not material what Estate or Interest the Lord hath Tenant at sufferance Grants c. shall not bind yet it must be an Estate or Interest and therefore Tenant Pur auer vie of a Manor is Cesty que vie dyes the Tenant continued possession of the Manor and held Courts and made voluntary Grants by Copy Per Cur. This shall not bind the Lord for he was but Tenant at sufferance who had not any Interest and so he was a Disseisor of the Manor More n. 369. Rouse and Artois 3. As to the Lords Grant of the Copy-hold Estate in respect of his Estate in the Copy-hold there the quantity of the Lords Estate is to be regarded for if a Copy-holder in Fee surrender to the use of the Lord for Life the remainder over to a Stranger or reserving the reversion to himself if the Lord will grant this by Copy in Fee whatsoever Estate the Lord hath in the Manor yet having but an Estate for Life in the Copy-hold no larger Estate shall pass than he himself hath Coke Cop. 96. What acts of the Lord in granting Copy-holds are not confirmed by Custom but only strengthned by the Power Interest and Authority of the Lord have no longer continuance than the Lords Estate continueth Therefore if a Tenant for Life of a Manor granteth a Licence to a Copy-holder to alien and dyeth the Licence is destroyed and the power of Alienation ceaseth Now as to the Quality of the Lords Estate he must be Legitimus Dominus he must have a lawful Estate in the Manor The Rule in Cokes 4 Rep. Clark and Pennyfeather's Case is universally true Grant by one that hath a tortious Title not Good If a Disseisor or Feoffee of a Disseisor or any other who had a tortious or defeazable Estate or Interest subject to the Action or Entry of another hold Court and make any voluntary Grant upon Escheat or Forfeiture of a Copy-hold such voluntary Grant shall not bind him that hath right when he hath re-continued the Manor by Action or Entry for to this intent the said Custom shall be understood of a Lord who hath a lawful Estate or Interest A Grant upon an usurped Title shall never bind the right Owner but that by Action or Entry he may avoid them for the Law will not support a Custom which shall work or tend to the disherison of the right owner If the Heir of a Disseisor who comes in by descent Grants any Copy-hold Estate it may be avoided by the Disseisee So of a Feoffee of a Disseisor who comes in by Title If Tenant in Tayl of a Manor discontinueth the Tayl and after the discontinuance granteth Copy-hold Estates and dyeth now the Discontinuee comes in under a just Title and shall enjoy against all the World during the
At the Court Baron of the Honour of Hampton J. S. and J. D. Tenants of the Honour of Hampton do present An Honour That J. R. did Surrender into the Hands of two Tenants of the Honour Per Jones This being a Court of the Honour and into the Hands of the Tenants of the Honour it s not good but by the other three Justices its good enough For Toddington being in the Margent it shall be said a distinct Court by it self For an Honour consisteth of many Manors yet all the Courts for the Manors are distinguished and have several Copyholders Cro. Car. 366. Seagood and Hone. Special Verdict was That Copy-holder of Inheritance bargained and sold his Copy-hold Land c. to the Lessee of the Manor and this was by Indenture and the Indenture was to this effect Verdict found not according to the Indenture That he bargained and sold all his Lands and Tenements as well Copy-holds as other Lands bought of John Culpepper in such a Town but it is not found by the Verdict nor averred by the Party That the Land was bought of John Culpepper and so ill Winch Rep. p. 67. Hasset and Hanson Custom not well found A Copy-holder of Inheritance made a Letter of Attorny to two Joyntly and severally to Surrender his Copy-hold Lands in Fee to certain Uses after his death but the Verdict doth not find that the two Attornies were custumary Tenants nor doth it appear that they were customary Tenants at the time of the Admittance and the primier possession will make a disseisin by the Defendant if the Custom be not well found It is not found that the two Attornies were customary Tenants but it was objected here is so much found as shall make it to be presumed that they were Tenants of the Manor for it is found that the party is admitted secundum consuetud Manerij which cannot be a good Admittance if they were not Tenants But Rolls answered to be admitted secundum consuetudinem goes to the Admittance not to the Letter of Attorny the Custom is not good neither is it found that the Land is demisable at the will of the Lord c. and so it may be free Land and the Custom reaches it not Stiles p. 311. Wallis and Bucknal The Plaintiff entitles himself to have Common of Pasture c. to his Copy-hold and the Custom was traversed it was found he ought to have the same Common but that every Copy-holder used to pay time out of mind c. pro ead communia unam gallinam quinque ova annuatim upon this Verdict the Plaintiff shall have Judgment Failure of Custom found this is not a common sub modo for the Ter-Tenant had remedy for the Hen and Eggs by distress and it is not parcel of the Issue but had the Jury found that the Plaintiff shall have Common paying so many Hens and Eggs the Issue had been against him and it had been parcel of the Custom it s not Modus Communiae but collateral recompence One prescribes to carry Water out of the River the Jury find he ought to have this paying 6 d. yearly Failure of Prsecription found Per Cur. he hath failed of his Prescription for he had prescribed absolutely and the Jury found it conditionally or sub modo and the Ter-Tenant in this Case hath no remedy but by disturbance 5 Rep. 68. Gray's Case If the Issue be whether Jury must find directly and not argumentatively where a Copy-hold is granted to three for the Lives of two he who dies seized c. ought to pay an Harriot Custom and the Jury find there never was a Grant of such Estate within the said Manor This is not well found for this is but an argument that no Harriot ought to be paid but they ought to have found it directly M. 15 Jac. B. R. Ven and Howel If the Issue be whether by the Custom of the Manor a Copy-hold may be granted to three for the Life of two and they find that by the Custom it may be granted for three Lives this is not well found because it is only by Argument because if a greater Estate may be granted a lesser may be So if the Issue be whether a Copy-hold may be granted in Tail and they find it may be granted in Fee mesme Case What shall be intended by the Juries finding if c. then for the Plaintiff Special Verdict upon a Patent from King H. 8. which Patent was adjudged void to pass the Estate the Jury find if it were a good Patent then for the Defendant if otherwise they find for the Plaintiff It is intended there is a sufficient Title found for the Plaintiff unless by this Patent it be defeated If Jury be satisfied the Plaintiff hath Title the Court ought not to doubt thereof so that if the Jury be satisfied that the Plaintiff hath any good Right by any other manner of Title the Court ought not to doubt thereof and so is Goodal's Case 5 Rep. 97. Cro. Car. 21. Castle and Hobbs Custom was pleaded by the Defendant That if a Copy-holder in Fee hath a Wife at the time of his death and two Sons or more that the Wife shall have her Free-Bench during her Life and that if the eldest Son dye living the Wife though he hath Issue his Issue shall not have it Custom must be found in the manner that he pleads it but the second Son The Jury found the Custom that the youngest Son should have it unless the eldest Son was admitted thereto as to the Reversion or made a Fine for it with the Lord in his Life-time Per Cur. The Custom is not found in that manner that he pleaded it therefore it is found against him that pleaded it for he pleaded a general Custom without exception and the Custom found is with an exception and special as the Case is in Dyer 192. Where a Custom was pleaded That a Feme should have it and it was found she should have it Verdict not aptly concluded durante viduitate but in this Case there was not any Verdict upon this Issue for they concluded their Verdict Si c. they found the Defendant guilty if otherwise not guilty and so there is not any conclusion of the point in Issue Per Cur. a gross fault and a Venire Facias de novo was awarded Cro. El. 415. Boraston and Hay In Trespass the Plaintiff in his Replication makes Title That this Land is parcel of the Manor of D. and demisable c. by Copy in Fee in Tail for Life or years c. and the Land was let to him by Copy in Fee Substance found the Prescription was traversed and found that it was demisable c. in Fee but never in Tail and that it was granted to the Plaintiff in Fee this was found for the Plaintiff for the Allegation That the Land was demisable in Fee or in Tail