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A86253 The law of conveyances, shewing the natures, kinds, and effects, of all manner of assurances, with the manner of their several executions and operations. Also directions to sue out and prosecute all manner of writs, of extent, elegit, and judiciall writs upon statutes, recognizances, judgments, &c. A warrant to summon a court of survey: and the articles to be given in charge, and inquired of in that court. With an exposition of divers obscure words and termes of law, used in ancient records, &c. And also plaine decimall tables, whereby may be found the true values of lands, leases, and estates, in possession, or reversion. With a concordance of years, &c. / By John Herne Gent. Herne, John, fl. 1660. 1655 (1655) Wing H1570; Thomason E1597_2 165,473 258

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Uses are raised by way of Covenant that Covenantor may not make leases by any Proviso But he may make voide the Indenture of Covenant and all the Uses in the same Indenture if he hath such a Proviso Nicholas Scroope seised in Fee of divers Mannors Vses and powers in Contingency and possibility may be by mutuall assent of the parties revoked and determined for as they may be raised by Indenture so by Proviso or Limitation annexed to them in the same Indentures they may be extinguished and destroyed either before or after their essence Co. 10. pars fol. 68. A Fine shall be paid to the King for the execution of an Vse upon a Covenant though no Fine be levied by force of the Proviso in the Statute of 27 H. 8. which otherwise should not have been 6. pars Coke fol. 28. having issue Anne his Daughter by Indenture dated 26. Junii 23 Eliz. for the preferment of Wynifride his Wife and Anne their Daughter covenanted with divers to stand seised of the said Mannors to the use of the said Nicholas Wynifride and Anne for their lives and after to the said Anne and of the Heires of her body with other Remainders over with a Proviso that if the said Nicholas during his life and after the debts paid mentioned in the Schedule annexed to the Indenture should be disposed or determined to disanull change alter enlarge diminish or make void the Uses or Estates or any of them of the Premisses that then it shall be lawfull to and for the said Nicholas at all times at his will and pleasure by his writing indented under his hand and Seale subscribed in the presence of thirteen Witnesses to determine disanull c. And also by the same writing at his will and pleasure or any other writing whatsoever signed and subscribed as aforesaid to limit declare and appoint the Uses of the same to the persons abovesaid or to any other person or persons c. Wynifride dieth and then Nicholas espouseth Elizabeth Morris and by Indenture ultimo Novemb. 33 Eliz. subscribed in the presence of three witnesses in consideration of a Joynture to be made to the said Elizabeth covenanted with W. and W. to stand seised of the said Manors to the use of the said Nich. and Eliz. for their lives and then to the use of the right Heires of the said Nicholas for ever The Covenant in this case to stand seised to the use of himselfe and of his wife Elizabeth and after to his right Heires is a good revocation in Law of the former Uses and the last Vses are well raised though he never made any expresse signification to determine or disanull the same But it was resolved that all incident circumstances prescribed by the Proviso viz. As to the subscription witnesses and other circumstances ought to be observed in the second Indenture Note that in the case of Cheny in Cur. Wardor 27 Eliz it was resolved that where he in reversion enfeoffed his Lessee for yeares to the use of others that although the Lease should be surrendred and extinguished by the Common Law yet by the saving of the Statute of 27 H. 8. of Uses the terme of the Feoffee was saved Also in the same Court 28 Eliz. in the case of one Ised it was resolved that where the Lord enfeoffed the Copyholder to the use of others that the Copy-hold estate by the saving of the said Act was preserved Where any be seised to the use of a Trustee of another Ceste que use or Trustee shal have the possession in such quality manner and condition as he had the Use or Trust So when any be seised to the use or intent that another shall have a yearly rent out of the said lands Ceste que use of the rent shall be deemed in the possession thereof of like estate as he had that use 27 H. 8. cap 10. Vses created by Bargaine and Sale and by way of Covenant Bargaine and Sale and Covenants vide fol. 7. A Deed was made Habendum eis heredibus eorum imperpet ad propriū opus usū of the Feoffees imperpetuum and not heredum suorum cum clausula warranti heredibus assign suis in forma praedicta whereby it was doubted that the Feoffees had not fee because it was to them without Heires but if those words had failed it had been cleare that the consideration of seven hundred pounds had given fee for the Law intends sufficient consideration by reason of the said summe but when the Use is otherwise expressed by the party himselfe otherwise it is Dier 169. If a man sel his land by Deed indented and inrolled to I. S. and his Assignes the Barginee hath but estate for life for the word Assignes conteyned in the Deed interrupt the operation and construction of the Law and maketh exposition that it was not the intent of the parties to have a Fee-simple transferred A man selleth land to another and executeth an estate to the Vendee Habendum sibi imperpetuum without the words heires where the intent of the Barginor is to sell the Feesimple and the vendor upon request refuseth to make other assurance the vendee shall have a subpoena liber fundment legum Angl. A man in consideration of 100 pounds and of marriage covenanteth from thenceforth to be seised of certaine land to the use of himselfe for life and after to the use of his son in taile and the Deed is not inrolled according to the statute of 27 H. 8 yet the use and possession is charged because the said statute speaketh of Bargaine and sale only and the use is not because of bargaine and sale onely but also for marriage Plowden fo 4. Manxils case A consideration not expressed in the Indenture may be averred though that otherwise is contained in the said Indenture besides that which is averrable as for marriage and mony of marriage nothing is spoken It seemeth that any consideration which is good and reasonable and where there is a quid pro quo Bargaines and Sales to raise an use of inheritance or freehold must be by Deed indented and inrolled within six months in a court of Record at Westminster or in the county where the Land lyeth 27 H 8. cap. 10. is sufficient to alter an use at this day and the statute transferreth the possession to the use except only in case of Bargaine and sale which is excepted by the statute of uses Plowden fo 301. A consideration expressed in the Indenture is not examinable be it true or false Dier fo 169. A man by Indenture doth covenant in consideration that it shall raigne before Easter next and grant to bee seised to the use of another in Fee this altereth the use although the cosideration doth not availe for the consideration is not examinable where it is by Indenture and much more an use altereth where an Indenture is made for diverse good causes and considerations that he
covenanteth and granteth to be seised to his use in Fee although no consideration be expresly showne because the Indenture is an Estopell to say it was not a good consideration and it seemeth the Court may not examine the consideration and there is a diversity where the Grant is by Indenture and where by word only Nota. If a man hath power to make Leases for three lives he may not make a Lease for 99. yeares determinable upon three lives But if a man hath power by proviso to make any lease or Grant provided that such lease or Grant exceed not the number of three lives or 21. yeares there he may make a lease for ninety nine yeares if three lives so long live for that doth not exceed the number of three lives but that in truth is lesser for every tearme for yeares which is but a Chattle is lesser in estimation of the law then estate for life which is Frank-tenement If A. be Tenant for life the remainder in taile and A. hath power to make leases for twenty one yeares rendant the ancient rent he may not make a lease by Warrant of Attorney by force of his power because he hath but particular power which is personall unto him Lands may be conveyed 6. manner of wayes First by Feoffment executed from one man to another man and his heires by solemn livery and Seisin By Feoffement By Fine By recovereys Bargain and Sale By use By Covenant By Will if a lesser Estate be given then Fee-simple is it not cal●ed a Feoffement unless the Fee-simple be conveighed A man in consideration of 100. l and of marriage covenanteth from thenceforth to bee seised of certaine land to the use of himselfe for life and afterwards to the use of his son in taile and the deed is not inrolled according to 27 H. 8. the use and profits is charged because the statute speaketh of bargain and sale only and the use is not because of Bargain and sale only but also for marriage Ploudens case Manxell fo 4. A Fine is a reall agreement made upon record in the Kings Court of Common Pleas at Westminster upon Fines What a Fine is and how lands may be converred therby Tenant for life the remainder to A. in taile the remainder to B. in tail c. with diverse remainders over and tenant for life suffers a common recovery wherein he voucheth A. and he the common vouchee that shall binde all the otheir remainders for no Covin or collusion may be supposed when the next in remainder in taile which hath the immediate inheritance is vouched Coke 10 pars fo 48. a rent may be reserved but no condition or Covenant this fine is a record of great credit and upon this Fine are made foure proclamations made openly in the common Pleas in every Terme and for foure termes together and if any man having right to the same make not his claime within 5. yeares after the proclamations ended hee looseth his right for ever an Infant a Feme covert a Madman or one beyond the Seas only excepted whose rights are saved so that he claime within 5 yeares after full age death of her husband recovery of the Wits or returne beyond the Seas it barreth the heires in taile presently whether the heire doth claime within 5. yeares or not if he claime by him that levied the fine A recovery barreth entailes and all remainders and reversions that should take place after the entailes saving where the King is giver of the entaile and keepeth the reversion to himselfe then neither the heire nor reversion is barred by the recovery And now by use recoveries are become common assurances against entailes remainders and reversions and the greatest security purchasers have for their money for a Fine will barr the heire in taile but not the remainders nor reversions Why recoveries doe barr remainders and reversions but a common recovery will bar them all and the reason why the heires remainders and reversions are thus barred is because in strict law the recompence adjudged against the cryor that was vouchee is to goe in succession of estate as the Land should have done and then it was not reason to allow the heire the liberty to keep the land it selfe and also to have recompence and therefore he loseth the Land and is to trust to the recompence Vpon Feoffements and recoveries the estate doth settle Vpon Fines Feoffements and recoveries the estate doth settle according to the intent of the parties as the use and intent of the parties is declared by word or writing before the act was done as for example if they make a writing that any of them shall levie a Fine make a Feoffement or suffer a common recovery to the other but the use and intent is that one shall have it for his life and after his decease a stranger to have it in taile and then a third in Fee-simple in this case the Law setteth an estate according to the use and intent declared And that by reason of the statute of 27 H. 8. of uses concerning the land in possession to him that hath interest in the use or intent of the fine Feoffement or recovery according to the use and intent of the parties The Statute of 27 H. 8. doth not passe land upon the payment of money without a Deed indented and inrolled Vpon this Statute is likewise grounded the fourth and the fifth of the sixt conveyances viz. Bargaines and Sales and Covenants to stand seised to uses for this statute wheresoever it findeth an use conjoyneth the possession to it and turneth it into like quality of state condition rent and the like as the use hath But the Parliament that made the statute did foresee that it would be mischievous that mens lands should suddenly upon the payment of a little money be taken from them peradventure in an Alehouse or a Tavern upon straineable advantages did therefore gravely provide another Act in the same Parliament that the Land upon payment of this money should not pass away unlesse there were a writing indented made between the said 2. parties and the said wrighting also within six months inrolled at some of the Courts of Westminster or in the Sessions Rolls in the Sheir where the land lieth The first conveyance by covenant is a conveyance to stand seised to uses it is in this sort A Covenant to stand seised to a use needeth no Inrolement as a Bargaine and Sale to an use doth so as it be to the use of Wife Child or Cousin or one he meaneth to marry a man that hath a wife and children brethen and kinsfolke may by writing under his hand and Seale agree that for him they or any of their heirs he wil stand seised of his lands to their uses either for life in taile or in Fee so as he shal see cause upon which agreement in writing there ariseth an equity or honesty that the land should
go according to those agreements nature and reason allowing those provisions which equity and honesty is the use and the use being created in this sort the statute of 27 H. 8. containeth the estates of the Land as the use is appointed and so this covenant to stand seised to uses is at this day a conveyance of land and with this difference from a bargaine and sale in that this needs no inrolement nor needeth not to be a writing indented as a bargain and sale must and if the party to whose use he agreeth to stand seised of the land be not wife or Child Cosin or one that hee meaneth to marry then will no use arise and so no conveyance Vpon a fine Feoffement or recovery a man may limit the use to whom he will without consideration of bloud or money otherwise in a bargaine and sale or Covenant for although the law alloweth such weighty considerations of marriage and bloud to raise uses yet doth it not admit so trifling considerations as of acquaintance Schooling service or the like but where a man maketh an estate of his land to others by Fine Feoffment or Recovery he may then appoint the use to whom he listeth without respect of marriage kindred money or other thing it is not so when he maketh an Estate but agreeth to stand seised nor when he hath taken any thing as in the cases of Bargaine and Sale and Covenant to stand seised to Uses The last of the six conveyances is a Will in writing which course of conveyance was first ordained by the statute of 32 H. 8. before which statute no man might give land by will except it were in a Burrowgh-Towne where there was a speciall custome that men might give their lands by Will as in Lond. and many other places In what manner the statute of 32. H. 8. giveth power to dispose of lands by Wil. By the Statute of 32 H 8. a man may give lands by will in this sort first it must be by Will in writing Secondly he must be seised of an estate in Fee-simple for tenant for another mans life or tenant in taile cannot give lands by Will by that statute If a man be seised of Capite Lands and Socage he cannot devise but two parts of the whole Thirdly he must be solely seised and not jointly with another and then being thus seised for all the Land he holdeth in socage being tenure he may give it by the Will except he holdeth any peece of Land in capite by Knights service of the King and laying all his lands together he can give but two parts by will for the third part of the whole aswell in socage as in capite must discend to the heire to answer Wardship Livery and Primmer seisin to the Crowne And so if he hold Lands by Knights service of a subject he can devise but two parts of his Lands and the Lord by Wardship and the heire by discent is to hold A conveyance by devise of Capite Lands to the wife for her Joyner or to his Children for their good or to pay debt is void for a third part by 32 H. 8. And if a man that hath three Acres of Land holden in capite by Knights service do make a Jointure to his wise of one and convey another to any of his children or to friends to take the profits to pay his debts or Legacies or daughters portions then the third Acre or any part therof he cannot give by Will but must suffer it to descend to the heir and that must satisfie Wardship Yet a man having three acres as before may convey all to his wife and children by conveyance in his life time as by Feoffment Fine Recovery Bargaine and Sale or Covenant to stand seised to Uses and to disinherit the Heire but if the Heire be within age when the Father dieth the King or other Lord shal have that Heire in VVard and shall have one of the three acres during the VVardship to sue Livery and primer Seisin But at full age the Heire shall have no part of it but it shall go according to the conveyance made by the Father It hath been debated how the Thirds shall be set forth for it is the use The King nor Lord can intermeddle if a full third part be left to descend to the heir Entailed lands part of the Thirds that all lands which the Father leaveth to descend to the Heire being Fee-simples or in taile must be part of the Thirds and if it be a full Third then the King nor Heire nor Land can intermeddle with the rest if it be not a full Third yet they must take it so much as it is and have a supply out of the rest This supply is thus to be taken if it be the Kings VVard then by a Commission out of the Court of VVards whereupon a Jury upon Oath may set downe so much as shall make up the Thirds except the Officers of the Court of VVards can otherwise agree with the parties if there be no VVardship due to the King then the other Lord is to have a supply by a Commission out of the Chancery and a Jury thereupon But in all the Cases these Statutes do give power to him that maketh the VVill The Statute giveth power to the Testator to set out the Thirds himselfe and if it be not a third part yet the King or Lord must take that in part and have a supply out of the rest to set forth and appoint of himselfe which lands shall go for the Thirds and neither King nor Lord can refuse it and if it be not enough yet they must take that in part and onely have a supply in manner as before is mentioned out of the rest A Feoffment made to the use of ones VVill if his VVill be declared before or at the time of his Feoffment it cannot be altered because it is executed otherwise it is if his Will be declared afterwards 20 H. 7. 11. vide fol. 27. b. What persons may make Leases at this day There be three kinds of persons at this day which may make Leases for three lives c. in such sort as hereafter is expressed which could not so do when Littleton wrote Any person seised of an Estate in Fee-simple in the right of his Church and any person seised of an Estate in Fee-taile in his owne right Any Husband and VVife seised of any Estate of Inheritance in Fee or in Fee-taile in the right of his wife or joyntly with his wife before the Coverture or after viz. The Tenant in taile by Deed to bind his Issues in taile but not the Reversion or Remainder The Bishop by Deed without the Deane and Chapiter to bind his Successors the husband and wife by Deed to bind the wife and her and their Heires and these are made good by the Statute of 32 H. 8. which enableth them thereunto but to the making
the mortgagor or obligor needeth not to tender it againe before the last instant for by the expresse letter of the condition the money is to be paid upon the day indefinitly and convenient time before the last instant is the extreame time appointed by the law to the end the one should not prevent the other the one being sometimes there and the other not and therefore the law appointeth the extream time in the day to the intent both parties may certainly meet together But if both parties meet at any time of the same day and the Mortgagor or Obligor make tender in the place to the Mortgagee or Obligee and he refuse the penalty is saved for ever and needs not make any other tender Wades case 5. part fo 1141. If a condition be broken for non payment of rent Condition broken Assise brought Distresse Acceptance Bar of entry yet if the Feoffer bring an Assise for the rent due at that time he shall never enter for the condition broken because he affirmeth the rent to have continuance and thereby waiveth the condition and so it is if the rent had had a clause of distresse annexed unto it if the Feoffer had distrained for the rent for non payment wherof the condition was broken but hee may receive that rent and acquit the same and yet enter for the condition broken but if hee accept a rent due at another day after he shall not enter for the conditon broken because he therby affirmeth the Lease to have continuance All grantees of reversions may enter upon Farmors If a lessor bargaine and sell the reversion by Deed Indented and inroled or or if the lessor make a Feoffment in fee and the Lessee re-enter the grantor or feoffe shall not take any advantage of any condition without making notice to the Lessee for any forfeiture or condition and have like advantages against them by action onely for any other covenants condition or agreement contained in the Indenture of their lease as the Lessors their heires or successors might and the like for the Lessees against the Grantees of the reversion recovery in value only excepted 32. H. 8. cap. 34. If a man make a gift in taile or a lease for life And albeit the whole words of the statute of 32. H. S. be for non-payment of the rent or for dooing of wast or other forfeiture yet the entry or claime must be made upon a condition broken upon condition that if the Denee or Lessee go not to Rome before such a day the Lease shall cease or be void the Grantee of the reversion shall never take advantage of this condition because the estate cannot cease before an entry but if the lease had beene for yeares there the Grantee should have taken advantage of the condition because the lease for yeares ipso facto by the breach of the condition without any entry was void for a lease for yeares may begin without ceremony and so may end without ceremony but an estate of free-hold cannot begin nor end without ceremony and therefore not to be avoided without an entry which entry descendeth to the heire and not to any stranger Grantees or Assignes shall not take benefit of every forfeiture by force of a condition but onely of such conditions as either are incident to the reversion or rent or the benefit of the estate as for not doing of waste for keeping the houses in reparations for making of Fences scowring of ditches for preserving of Wood and such like and not for payment of any sum in grosse delivery of Corne Wood or the like And therefore regularly when any man will take advantage of a condition if he may enter he must enter and when he cannot enter he must make a claime and the reason is for that a free-hold and an inheritance shall not cease without entry or claime and also the Feoffor or Grantor may waive the condition For if a man grant an Advowson to a man and his heires upon condition that if the Grantor c. pay 20. pounds on such a day c. the estate of the grantee shall cease or be utterly voide the Grantor payeth the money yet the estate is not revested in the Grantor before a claime and that claime must be made at the Church And so it is of a reversion or a remainder of a Rent common or the like there must be a claime before the estate bee revested in the Grantor by force of the condition and that claime must be made upon the Land If a man bargaine and sell Land by Deed indented and inrolled with a Proviso that if the bargenor pay c. that then the estate shall cease and be void hee payeth the money yet the estate is not revested in the Bargenor before re-entry and so it is if a bargaine and sale be made of a reversion remainder advowson rent common c. If a Lessor bargaine and sell the reversion by Deed Indented and Inroled or if the Lessor make a Feofment in Fee and the Lessee re-enter the Grantee or Feoffee shall not take advantage of any condition without making notice to the Lessee When a man by Deed indented If a man make a lease for life or yeares and after levie a fine to A. to the use of B. and his heires B. shall distraine and have an Action of Waste although the conusee had never any Attornment because the reversion is vested in him by force of the statute and hath no remedy to compell the Lessee to Attorn New Litttleton fo 32. doth bargaine and sell lands and before the inrolement levieth a fine thereof and after the deed is inrolled the conusee shal be in by the fine and not by the indenture inrolled and therefore the conusee in this case cannot take advantage of a condition before Attornment Where conusee by fine of a Revertion before Attornment doth bargaine and sell the revertion to another by Deed Indented and Inrolled But if conusee of a 〈◊〉 before any attornment by Deed indented and inrolled bargaineth and selleth the Seignory to another the bargainee shall not distraine because the bargenor could not distraine the Bargaine shall not distraine for the Rent reserved upon the Lease but if the conuse hath had express attornement then the Bargaine shall distraine without any Atornement If the Lessor bargaine and sell his revesion by Deed indented and inrolled But if a fine had been levied to a stranger to the use of a second party then the second person had been in by the statute and so Attornement needles quod nota the bargainee although he needs not any Attornement shall never take benefit of a condition upon a demand of rent without giving notice to the Lessee of the bargaine and sale and therefore notice in this case is requisite Note that a fine levied before the Inrolement of the bargain and sale maketh the conusee to be in by the fine and not
claiming under him with penalty in the Statute of 27. Eliz. Cap. 1. This doth not extend to the avoyding of any grant c. upon good consideration and bona fide if any such conveiance be made with clause of revocation or alteration at his pleasure by writing and after he shall bargaine demise sell grant convey or charge the same Lands c. for money or other good consideration the conveyance not revoked or altered then the conveyance c. shall be void against the Barganees c. and all claiming under them lawfull Mortages only excepted A Lease was made of a Messuage and Lands for yeares A grant of land Habendum the reversion if the Lessee so long should live and afterwards the Lessor by his Deed indented granted the Messuage and Land to another to have and to hold the reversion to the grantee for life cum per mortem sursum redditionem vel forisfacturam of the Lessee aut aliter acciderit reddendo inde annuitie to the Grantor and his heires when the said reversion shall happen nine shillings and foure pence per Annum The Lessee dieth the Grantor of the reversion distraineth for the arrearages of the rent aswell before the death of the Lessee as afterwards whereupon four points were clearely resolved upon by the Court. That by the Demise of a Messuage and Land for life the reversion thereof doth passe but by the Grant of a reversion land in possession doth not passe Lofields case 10. pars fo 107. Plowden 197. A grant of the reversion Habendum the land By the Grant of a Messuage and Land Habendum revertionem c. or life after the death of the Lessee c. that the Habendum is good for in judgement of law nothing but the reversion is granted by the Premises and as in Throchmertons case Plowden Coment fo 147. when the reversion is granted habendum the land the habendum is adjudged good so when the land is granted habendum the reversion and after the death of the Lessee c. is in consideration as much to say as to take effect in possession after the death c. Also the habendum had been good although no mention had been made either of the Land or of the reversion in the habendum for the Office of the habendum is to limit the estate of the land contayned in the Premises It was resolved that by the said reservation the rent shall not commence before the reversion fall in possession and these words cum revertio predict acciderit shall be expounded according to the intention of the parties which was not that the Grantee for life should pay the rent before that he may take the profits to make the rent of them That the distresse was well taken for the Arrerages after the death of the Lessee and not for the arearages incurred before Statute released by matter in Law A statute was acknowledged the 26. of May the Cognusee by his release Dated the 25. May before released to the Cognusor all demands from the beginning of the world untill the making therof and sealed and delivered the release as his Deed the 27. May following the statute is freely discharged for the day of the delivery is dies confectionis but if the words had been untill the date or day of the Date of these presents then otherwise it had been See Dier fo 307. Defeasance of a statute mis-recited the statute becometh single If a Defeasance be made of a statute which is recited to bee made the tenth day of May where indeed it beareth Date the first day of May the Defeasance is void for the Mis-prision of time for the Law saith that in so much as it may be that there were two statutes the one dated the first day and the other the tenth day the time of the date is materiall Plowden fo 393. Attornement needlesse A reversion granted for yeares for consideration of money doth passe without Attornement Coke 8 pars fo 941. for let the case be that there is Lessee for terme of yeares or life rendant-rent Afterwards the lessor by Indenture for the consideration of 50 l. demiseth and granteth the Premises to another for 90. yeares rendant 40 pounds per annum although the first Lessee doth never Attorne yet the second demise shall be good and shall passe as a Bargaine executed by the statute of 27 H. 8. whereunto there needeth no Attornemnt or Inrolement of the Deed because it is not but a terme for yeares and no Frank-tenement And note that if a man for money do enffeoffe Alien and grant Land to one and his heires or in taile or for life by deed indented and inrolled that doth amount to a bargaine and sale and the land shall pass without livery and Seisin Attornement needlesse A grant of a reversion of Land habendum the land from the end and expiration of a former Lease in being is a good lease and needeth no attornement A demise of the reversion of Land Attornement needles habendum the reversion of the land from the end and determination of a former lease in being is a good Lease and needeth no attornement If a man make a gift in taile or a Lease for life Remainder voide the remainder to his owne right heires this remainder is void and he hath the reversion in him for the Ancestor during his life beareth in his body in the judgment of the law all his heires and this appeareth in a common case that if Land be given to a man and his heires all his heires are so totall in him that he may give the land to whom he will So it is if a man be seised of Lands in Fee by Indenture make a Lease for life Remainder voide the remainder to the heirs males of his owne body this is a void remainder for the donor cannot make his owne right heire a purchasor of an estate taile without departing of the whole fee-simple out of him as if a man make a Feoffement in Fee to the use of himselfe for life and then to the use of the heires males of his body this is a good estate taile executed in himselfe and the limitation is good by way of use because it is raised out of the estate of the Feoffees which the Feoffor departed with for a limitation of a use to himselfe had been good without question Cokes Littleton fo 22. b. The King may make a Lease for yeares rendant rent to a stranger and that is a good reservation Conditions Entries and re-entries may not be given or reserved to strangers and the stranger may distraine for it or have an Action of Debt after the lease determined and that is by reason of his prerogative which he hath above all persons for he is not bound so strictly by the lawes as others are but in the case of a common person otherwise it is because that no rent which is properly
his wife and to the heires of A. of her body by I. to be begotten * Tail generall in the husband the wife for life only Habendum to I. and A. his wife and to the heires which I. shall beget upon the body of A. his wife both have estate taile because these words heires is not limited more to one then to the other * The wife hath taile generall the husband frank tenement Both have estate taile Taile speciall in both Habendum to I. and A. his wife and to the heires of their two bodies this is taile speciall as well in the husband as in the wife But if I. give Lands to I. A to his heires which he shall beget of A. his wife here A. hath but estate for life and I. hath estate in taile speciall but in this case if he had said to the heires and not to his heires then either of them should have had an estate in taile speciall because these words heirs is referred as well to the one as to the other If Tenant in taile speciall hath issue and die the issue is forthwith remitted to the taile generall and such issue and all his issue shall stand so seised for evermore Vses 27. H. 8. cap. 10. Creation of estates taile raised by way of limitation of uses The expression of divers and sundry uses TO have to the said Feoffees their heirs and assignes for ever by the severall uses intents and purposes and under and upon the conditions provisoes and limitations hereafter in and by these presents limited and declared and to no other use intent or purpose that is to say the aforesaid Mannors of Compton c. withall and singular their and every of their rights members and appurtenances whatsoever to the use and behoofe of the said H. P. for the terme of his life without impeachment of c. For sale of Lands to pay debts and Legacies and after his decease to the use and behoof of the abovenamed Feoffees and their heirs in trust and confidence and to the intent purpose that they the said Feoffees and the survivors or Survivor of them shall and will by sale of such parts and parcels of the Premises as they or the survivors or survivor of them or their heirs shall think fit to bee sold and by the issues and profits of the residue pay and discharge all the Debts Legacies and Funeral expences of the said Sr. H. P. and after payment and discharge of the same debts Legacies and expences shall and will conveigh and assure all the residue of the Premises limited to their use For intailing of Lands to the tenth generation and remaining unsold unto the said H. P. Esq sonne of the said Sir H P. and the heires of his body issuing and for default of such heires to the use of the said La. F. P. La. S. and I. F. and the heires of their severall bodies issuing and for default of such issue to the use of the right heires of the said Sir H. Poole for ever To the use of the first son of the body of the said K. P. lawfully to be begotten and of the heires males of the body of such first son issuing Entaile first to the issue male and then to the issue female when they shall come to the age of 〈◊〉 And the said Mannors of S. P. C. c. and all other the Premises whereof and wherein there is not any use in and by these presents already specially lymited and declared to the use and behoofe of the said Sir H. P. Knight for the terme of his life without impeachment c. And from and after his decease to the use and behoofe of the said H P. son of the said Sir H P. for the tearme of the life of the said H P. the son without impeachment c and from and after his decease to the use of the first son to be begotten of the said H. P. son of the said Sir H. P. and of the heires males of the body of the said first son issuing and so on to the tenth son and for default of such heires to the use of every other the sons to be begotten by the said H. son of the said Sir H P. as they shall be in seniority or age and of the heirs males of the severall bodies issuing that is to say as for and concerning the Mannors of c. with their and every of their severall rights members and appurtenances to the use of him the said H. P. for and during the tearme of his naturall life without c. and from and after his decease to the use of the first son of the body of the said H P lawfully to be begotten A Fine was levied to the A. uses of and the heries males of his body untill hee or the heirs males of his body have done such an act and after such a thing or act done to the use of another in taile died without issue without anything done and it was adjudged that the remainder was in contingency shall never fall Coke 10. a part fo 85. Uses Jointer for the Wife Taile speciall and of the heires males of the body of such first son issuing and so to the tenth son And for default of such issue then to the use of every other the sons c. and for default of such issue to the use of B P. the now first begotten daughter of him the said H P. from and after such time as the shall accomplish the age of sixteen yeares for and during the terme of her life and after her decease to the use of the first Son of her body which shall be begotten by such her husband which shall be of the sirname and blood of the Pooles and of the heires males of the body of such her first son issuing and so to the tenth son Then entaile the lands in forme aforesaid to the first 2. 3. 4. 5. and tenth daughter and this limitation following and to the use of the Executors of him the said H P. for and untill such time as the severall daughters which shall take any benefit by vertue of these presents shall accomplish their severall ages of 16. yeares respectively and after the death of the said H P. without issue male or female qualified as aforesaid Then to the use of Dame F P wife of one Sir N P Knight sister of the said H P for and during the terme of her naturall life and after her decease to the use of H P. Esq the first son of the said sir N. P. and Dame F and of the heires males of the body of the said H issuing and so to the tenth son And for default of such issue then to the use of the right heires of the said H P party to these presents for ever And as for and concerning the Mannors of C and S to the use of the said H P for
and Administrator and for so much onely as concerneth or may concerne his owne act and not one for anothers act doth severally and respectively and not joyntly covenant promise and agree to and with the said E. F. c. And the said A. B. C. D. do severally covenant c. to and with the said E. this is a severall covenant without further words Coke 5 part fo 2. 3. And the said A. B. C. D. each of them severally for himself his severall heirs Executors and Administrators doth severally and not jointly covenant c. Proviso conditions the apt words to make them Vide. plus fo 186. 19. a Vid. Coke 2. pars fo 71. 72. 73. good matter touching Provisoes and conditions No condition may be made to be properly said a condition but by him which departeth with the estate and by his owne words and the words conditionall must be restraining and must compell the person to do or not to do a thing upon paine of forfeiture of the thing given and no words make a condition unlesse it be uncertaine and may be broken or kept and every condition must either go to the inlarging of the estate or utter destruction thereof and these are the apt words to make a condition Illa quod if the Lessee doth such an act Si contingat proviso semper sub conditione for these are words conditional pro in case of a grant executory maketh a condition as a grant of Annuity Pro concilio impendendo but those words ad effectum ea intentione ad solvendum or such like make no conditions If a man by Deed make a Lease for yeares wherein is this clause and the said Lessee shall continually dwell upon the Lands leased upon pain of forfeiture of the said terme the words amount to a condition Quod non licebit to the Lessee to give grant or Alien his estate upon paine of forfeiiure this will make the Lease defesible and this reason was given by the Court in the common Pleas tempore Reginae Elizabethae that a Lease for yeares was but a contract which may begin by word and by word may be dissolved But such words in a Lease for life make no condition in that a Franke-tenement cannot be avoided by word without conditional words that will give an entry tamen quere The apt words of lymitation are quam diu dum Words of limitation which determine an estate without entry or claime Vide plus fo 5. When this word proviso shall make an estate or interest conditionall three things are to be observed viz. that the proviso dot not depend upon another sentence nor participate thereof that the proviso be the word of the Bargenor Feoffor Donor Lessor c. That it be compulsary to enforce the Barginee Feoffee c. to do an act Coke 2. pars fo 71. 72 73. quousque durante as a grant out of the Mannour of Dale quam diu the Grantee shall dwell there a Lease of Land dummodo the Lesse shall pay 20. pounds a lease to a Feme dum sola vixerit a Feoffment in Fee tanque the Feoffor hath paid him certaine tanque hee be promoted to a benefice tanque the Lessee hath levied a 100 pounds If a man make a Lease quousque I. S. come from Rome a Lease for life to a Widdow si tam diu in pura viduitate viveret A Lease for a hundred yeares if the Lessee live so long dummodo solvat to the Grantor for his life 10 pounds all these are words of lymitation which determine the estate without entry or claime and if no livery bee made then those Lessees have estate but at will A man seised of Lands in Fee having issue divers sons by deed indented covenanted in consideration of fatherly love and for the advancement of his bloud or any other good considerations to stand seised of three Acrees of land to the use of himselfe for life and after to the use of Thomas his eldest son in taile and for default of such issue to the issue of the second son in taile with divers remainders over with proviso that it shall be lawfull for the covenantor at any time during his life to revoke any of the said uses c. This proviso being coupled with a use is allowed to be good and not repugnant to the former states but in case of a Feoffement or other conveyance whereby the Feoffee or Grantee c. is in by the common Law such a proviso were meerely repugnant and void If a man hath power of revocation and after to the intent to defraud a purchasor doth Levy a fine or make a Feoffment or other conveyance to a stranger whereby he extinguisheth his power and after bargaines and sells the land to another for valuable consideration the bargainee shall enjoy the Land for as to him the Fine Feoffement or other conveiance whereby the condition was extinct was void by the statute of 13. Eliz cap. 5. and so the first clause whereby all fraudulent and covenous conveyances are made void as to the purchasor extend to the last clause of the act viz. when he that makes the bargaine and sale had power of revocations and it was said that the Statute of 27. Eliz. hath made voluntary estates made with power of revocation as to purchasors with equall degree with conveiances made by fraud and covin to defraud purchasors and such volunteary conveyances which are originally subject to power of revocation be it in presenti or in futuro shall not stand against a purchasor bona fide for valuable consideration 3. part Lo. Co. fo 80. Twines case vide Twines case 3. part fo 83. And first in the case aforesaid if the covenant or who had an estate for life doth revoke the uses according to his power he is seised againe in Fee without entry or claime Secondly he may revoke part at one time and part at another Thirdly if he make a Feoffement in Fee or levy a fine c. of any part this doth extinguish his power but for that part whereas in that case the whole condition is extinct but if it be made of the whole all the power is extinguished so as to some purpose it is of the nature of a condition and to another in nature of a limitation Fourthly if he that hath such power of revocation hath no private interest in the Land nor by the Cessor of the estate shall have nothing then his Feoffement or fine c. of the land is no extinguishment of his power because it is meere collaterall to the land Fiftly by the same conveiance that the old uses be revoked by the same may new be created or limited if the revocation doth so mention Sixtly that these revocations are favourably interpreted because many mens inheritances depend on the same Note That every use ought to be raised either by covenant out of the estate of the covenantor or by Feoffment Fine
8. of Uses the terme of the Feoffee was saved Also in the same Court Anno 28 Eliz. in the case of Ized it was resolved that where the Lord enfeoffed the Copyholder to the use of others that the Copyhold Estate by the saving of the said Act was preserved Devises IT is a principle in Law A Lease to A. for life the remainder to the right heires of B. B. haveing a daughter dieth his wife privily with child of a Son in this case the daughter claimeth by purchase and therefore the son borne after shall never divest it Coke 1. pars fo 95. that in all gifts be they by devise or otherwise it behooveth to have a donee in esse which hath power and capacity to take the thing given at the very time when it ought to vest for if there be not any such in rerum natura when the thing ought to vest then the gift shall be void Plow fo 345. For if a man devise a Lease or goods to I. S. which dieth and then the devisor dieth the Executor of I. S. shall not have them And if a man seised of lands in Fee devisable make his will and thereby devise his lands to I. S. and his heires and then I. S. dieth and afterwards the devisor dieth I. S. and his heires nor any of them shall take nothing by this devise and here the thing ought not to vest in the devisee untill the death of the devisor at which time the devisee was dead and so was not in rerum natura And as to that heires are named in the gift that is to say it is given to the devisee and to his heires for which cause they shall be contemned and concluded in the intent that is not so for heires are not there taken to be immediately takers but onely to expresse the quantity of the estate that the devisee should have for without expressing heires the Devisor might not properly make an estate in Feesimple in the devisee and none other But if a man devise Lands to one and his heires and the devisor dieth in the life of the devisee and then the devisee dieth now the heire shall take by the devise Coke prima pars fo 95 If a man lease lands to a man for life Contingent remainder and if the Lessor die without heire of his body that then the Lessee shall have the land to him and his heires in this case if the Lessee for life dieth and then the lessor dieth without heires of his body the heire of the lessee shall not have the land and so clearely holden Plowden com fo 483. Quere de hoc It was agreed for good law that the occupation of a Chattel may be devised by way of remainder but if the thing it selfe were devised to use the remainder were void for the gift or devise of a Chattel for an howre is pro imperpetuum and the donee or devisee may give it sell it and dispose it and the remainder thereupon is void Brook devise fo 13. The occupation of a Chattel personall may be devised by way of remainder A Lease devised 20. yeares to one for the first ten yeares the remainder to another or devised to one for so many yeares as he shall live the remainder to another a delivery to the first devisee serveth for him in the remainder also So though it be but the occupation of a terme which is so devised for the occupation and profits of the Land is all one with land it selfe but if the occupation of a Booke glasse or other Chattel personall be devised to one for life and after his death to another in like sort there a delivery to the first is no delivery to the other for their occupations are severall and in such Chattles personall the occupation is distinct from the property 7 H. 6. 30. Plowden fo 522. A devise to one and his heires Males is an estate taile but a devise to I. S. in Fee upon condition that if he pay not I. D 10 l. then I. D. to have it in Fee is a void condition and remainder for it is contrary to the law 27 H. 8. 27. 29 H. 8. Dier 33. But a devise of the fee-simple to Alice S. and after her death to B. is onely an estate for life the remainder for life to B. the remainder to Alice in Fee so as the husband of Alice In a devise by what words Fee-simple passeth if she die in the life of B. cannot be Tenant by courtesie 19 Eliz. Dier 357. If a man devise lands to a man for ever or to give and to sell or in fee-simple or to him and his Assignes for ever Fee-simple passeth but if the devise bee to a man and his Assignes without saying for ever the Devisee hath but an estate for life if a man Devise lands to one sanguini suo that is Fee-simple but if it bee semini suo it is estate taile If a man Devise Lands upon condition A devise upon a condition repugnant is voide that the Devisee shall not Alien this condition is void and so it is of a Grant Release Confirmation or other conveyance whereby a Fee-simple doth passe And so it is if a man bee possest of a Lease for yeares or of a Horse or of any other Chattel reall or personall and give it or set it upon any such condition When a man deviseth that the Executors shall set the Land A devise that the Executors shall sell the Land there the Land descendeth in the meane time to the heire and untill the Sale be made the heir may enter and take the profits But when the land is devised to his Executor to be sold there the devise taketh away the discent A device of Land to the Executors to be by them sold and vesteth the state of the land in the Executors and they may enter and take the profits make sale according to the Devise and here it appeareth that when a man deviseth his Tenements to be sold by his Executors is all one as if he had devised his Tenements to his Executors to be sold And the reason is because he deviseth the Tenements whereby he makes the discent Although that the last Will shall avoid the former Will yet if a man be seised of lands in Fee No alteration of such a Will and therof enfeoffe a stranger and declare his Will upon the Livery of Seisin made to the stranger that is that the Feoffee shall bee seised to the use of the Feoffor for terme of his life the remainder to I. S. in Fee now he may not alter this Will by a latter Will in prejudice of ceste que use in remainder because the use is in him in remainder forthwith so that he may set it but if in the same case the remainder of the use had been to the right heires of the Feoffor then the Feoffor might alter
this use by his last Will and if the Feoffor had declared his Will upon the Livery of Seisin that the Feoffee should be seised to the use of I. F. for life the remainder to the use of the Feoffor or in taile the remainder to the use of a stranger in Fee in this case the Feoffor may not alter this Will by his last Will Perkins Testaments fo 93. and 92. Such a Wil may be altered If a man seised of Lands in Fee thereof enfeoffe a stranger to the intent to performe his Will and after the Feoffor maketh his Will and deviseth the same Land to a stranger in Fee in this case the Devisor may alter this Will by a latter Will because in this case the Devisee shall not have this Land but by force of the Testatment and that may not take effect till after the death of the Devisor And the same law it is of Lands Tenements Rents or Common c. devisable by the custome used in any place c. And also the same law is it of all Chattels reall and personall devised Perkins Testaments fo 93. A Feoffment to performe a Will When a Feoffement is made to a future use as to the performance of his last Will the Feoffees shall bee seised to the use of the Feoffor and his heires in the meane time 35 H. 6. 22. 15 H. 7. 12. 37 H 6. 36. 11. H. 4. 52. 7 H. 4. 22. 1 Mariae 111. Dier Of such Will there is no alteration A Feoffment made to the use of ones Will if his Will be declared before or at the time of his Feoffment it cannot bee altered because it is executed otherwise it is if his Will be declared afterwards 20 ● 7. 11. If a man devise his land to W. N. solvendum 10 l. to his Executors and die A man deviseth lands to his wife so long as she should continue sole and if she marry the remainder in taile the remainder to his right heire so that the marriage is the limitation which determineth the estate and so the remainder beginneth upon the estate ended there Coke 10. pars fo 41. the Devisee hath Feesimple by reason of the payment without words to his heires for ever And that shall bee intended the intent of the Devisor so if a man sell land to W. N for 20 l. that shall be intended a Sale in Fee-simple without words heires for conscience c. Brook estates fo 78. Termor deviseth to his wife the Land for so many yeares as she should live and afterward the terme to his son and made his wife Executrix and died the wife prooved the Testament and entred and agreed to the devise and afterwards shee aliened the terme and died the son or his Administrator may enter A man deviseth his Land to I. S. that shall bee taken but for terme for life but if he saith paying 100 l. to W. N. that shall bee intended Fee-simple and if hee doth not pay it in his life time yet if his heire or Executor pay it it sufficeth Quaere of his Assignee Brooke Testament 18. A Devise to a man and his heires hee hath issue a daughter and dieth his wife privily with Child of a Son the daughter entreth she shall retaine the land for ever and yet the son is heire but not to toll the land before vested in the daughter If Lessee for yeares devise his terme or other his goods or Chattels by Testament to one for terme of his life the remainder over to another and dieth and the Devisee entreth and doth not Alien the terme nor give nor sell the Chattel and die there hee in remainder shall have it but if the first devisee had aliened given or sold it he in remainder had beene remedilesse Brook Chattel 23. And so B. thinketh it if it be forfeited in his life he in remainder is without remedie If a terme be devised to one his heirs males of his body his heire shall not have it but his executor for a terme which is but a Chattel may not be entailed and such Devisee may well Alien the terme to whom please him Coke 10. pars fo 22. If a man devise Lands to one to have to him and his heires after the death of the Devisors wife the wife although she were not named before the Habendum shall have an estate for life by this Devise The husband possest of a terme in jure uxoris suae maketh a Lease of parcell rendant rent the wife shall have the residue of the terme but not the rent 9. Eliz. Dier fo 246. If a man devise his land to his wife for her life upon condition that if she marry that then the land shall remaine to I. S. in taile this is a good remainder for the construction of this devise is to make the same condition to be a lymitation and not any condition and upon a lymitation or determination of a particular estate which is certaine and not uncertaine a remainder clearly may well depend A man possessed of a terme of yeares in the right of his wife cannot devise it to another by his Will for she hath an estate in it before and at the time of his death which preventeth the Devisee nor can he grant charge out of it for she surviving is remitted to the terme and therefore shall avoide the charge But by by an expresse Act he might in his life time have given it away but if a woman having Chattels personall take a husband the law devesteth the property out of her and vesteth it in her husband only What Deeds of Gifts shall be counted fraudulent Fraud IF a man make a generall Deed of Gift of all his goods this is suspicious to bee done upon fraud to deceive the Creditors And if a man which is in debt make a Deed of gift of all his goods to protract the taking of them in execution for his debt this deed of gift is void as against those to whom he stood indebted But as against himselfe his owne Executor or Administrator or any man to whom afterwards he shall sell them or convey them it is good What is sale bona fide and what not By sale any man may convey his own goods to another although he may feare Execution for debts he may sell them out-right for money at any time before the Execution served so that there be no reservation of trust between them that providing the money he shall have the goods againe for that trust in such case doth prove plainely a fraud to prevent the Creditors from taking the goods in execution A Deed of gift of goods to defraud Creditors is voide against them but is good against him his Executors or ministrators Where Sale in a Market Overt shall Bar the owner and where not IF a man steale my Goods or Cartel Market Overt or take them from me in jest or borrow them of mee and
been usually lopt Tythes shall not be paid for them for as the Law priviledgeth the body of the Tree being parcell of the inheritance so doth it priviledge the Branches also so if a man cut his timber trees Tythes shall not be paid for the boughs or sprouts which are going out of the roots or stowles in respect that the root is parcell of the inheritance so if a timber tree become arda sicca non portans folia nec fructus in aestate nec existens macorin and the owner cut him no Tythes shall be paid therof in respect of the inheritance which was once in him so for the barke of Oakes being timber no tythes shall be paid but for Acornes tythe shall be paid because that groweth yearely Inheritance doth passe without livery and seisin by a grant If I grant all my Trees within the Mannor of G. to one and his heires the Grantee shall have inheritance in them without any Livery and Seisin Coke Barringtons case S. pars fo 137. And so if I grant to you my Trees in my Wood you may come with Waines or Carts over my Land to carry them Coke 11. pars fo 53. Vsery Clayton requested Reynolds to lend him 30. l. and upon communication between them Reynolds lent Claton 30. pound the sixth day of December 34 Eliz. unto the second of June next following to pay unto him for the principall and Lone thereof 33 l. upon the said second of June if the sonne of Reynolds were then alive and if he died before the day that then he should pay unto him twenty seven pounds which was 3 l. under the principals this is by the resolution of the whole Court was usery within the letter of the Statute Coke 5. pars fo 70. It was agreed between T. W. and A. G that A. Boortons case Coke 5. pars fo 69. should lend to T. W. 100 l. and that the said T. W. should grant to the said A. and his heires a rent which was in esse of 20 l. upon a condition that the said A. should lend to the said T. W. 100 l. as aforesaid And that the said T. should grant to the said A. and his heires the rent of 20 l. upon this condition that if the said T. should pay to the said A. 100 l s. the 17. of July 1580. which was a full yeare before the contract made that then the rent should cease and hereupon the money was received and the rent granted accordingly This was not within the statute of usury because nothing was to be paid by T. W. the Grantor within a yeare and a quarter after the Grant made for within the 17. day of Iuly 1579. and Christmas 1580. at which time a distres was taken for the rent no rent was limitted to be paid and if the Grantor had paid the 100 l. the 17. of July 1580. the rent had ceased without paying any thing for the same 100 l. So the whole Court adjudged that it was a plaine bargaine and conditionall purchase of such a rent and no usery But it was resolved by the Court that if it had been agreed between the Grantor and the Grantee that notwithstanding such power of redemption that the 100 pounds should not have been paid at the day and that the clause of redemption was inserted to make an evasion out of the Statute then it had been an usurious bargaine and contract within the Statute Coke 3. pars fo 69. Where a man for 100 l. selleth his land upon condition that if the Vendor or his heire repay the sum citra festum Pasch or such like then next comming that then he may re-enter that is not usury for he may repay it the morrow after or at any time before Pasc●… And therefore he hath not any gaine certaine to receive any profit of the land And likewise where any Defeasance or Statute is made for the repayment citra tale festum But it is otherwise if the condition be that if the said Vendor repay such a day such a yeare or two yeares after this is usury for he is sure to have the Land and the rents land or profits that yeare or these two yeares And so when a Defeasance or Statute is made for the repayment at such a feast which is a yeare or two years after B. Usury 1. If a man morgage his Land upon Defeasance of repayment to re-enter by which Indenture the Vendee leaseth the same land to the Vendor for yeares rendant rent there if there bee a condition in the Lease that if the Vendor repay the same before such a day that then the lease shall be void that is not usury But otherwise it is if he be to pay it such a day certaine or such a yeare or more after B. usury 2. 32 H. 8. Inheritances lineall and collaterall Lands purchased may goe to the heires both of the part of the father and mother of the Purchasor unlesse it be once attached in the heire of the part of the Father for the heir of the part of the Mother shall never have it because they are not of blood to him that was last seised But Lands discended goeth onely to the heire of that part from whence it discends as if from the Father who did purchase it then it may goe to the heirs of the part of the mother of the same father but not to the heirs of the part of the sons mother for though they be of blood to the sonne that was last seised yet they are not of blood to the father which was the first purchasor And if a man Purchase Lands in Fee-simple and die without issue he which is next Cousin collaterall of the whole bloud how far soever he be from him in degree may inherit and have the Land as heire to him These words do intend that where a man doth purchase lands and dieth without issue and having neither brother nor sister then his next Cosin collaterall shall inherit So as there is implied a division of Heires viz lineall who shall ever first inherit and collaterall who are to inherit in default of lineal for in discent it is a Maxime in Law Quod linea recta semper praefertur transversali Lineall discent is conveyed downward in a right line as from the Grandfather to the Father from the Father to the Son and so downward collaterall discent is derived from the side of the lineall as Granfathers Brother Fathers Brother c. Vpon this word Next I put this case One hath issue two Sons A. and B. and dieth B. hath two Sons C. and D. and dieth C. the eldest Son hath issue and dieth A. purchaseth lands in Fee-simple and dieth without issue D. is his next Cosin and yet shall not inherit but the issue of C. for he that is inheritable is accounted in Law next of blood And therefore here is understood a division of next viz. next jure representationis and
it shall begin on the day in which it is delivered for the words of the indenture are not of any effect till the delivery and thereby from the making or from henceforth take their effect But if it be a die confectionis or a die datus or a datu then it shall begin the next day after the delivery If the habendum bee for the terme of twenty one yeares without mentioning when it shall begin it shall begin from the delivery for there the words take effect as is aforesaid If an Indenture of Lease beare Date which is void or impossible as the 30. day of February or the 40. of March if in this case the terme be limited to begin from the date it shall begin from the delivery as if there had been no date at all And so it is if a man by his indenture of lease either recite a Lease which is not or is void or recite a Lease amisse in point materiall which is in esse to have from the ending of the former Lease this Lease shall begin in course of time from the delivery therof Coke 5. pars fo 1 12. Eliz. Dier fo 286. 14. El. Dier 307. 5. Eliz. Dier fo 218. Re-enter and take the profits untill c. If a man make a lease for yeares reserving a rent with condition that if the rent bee behind that the Lessor shall re-enter and take the profits untill therof he be satisfied there the profits thereof shall be accounted as parcell of the satisfaction and during the time that he so taketh the profits he shall not have an action of debt for the rent for the satisfaction whereof he taketh the profits but if the condition be that he shall take the profits untill the Feoffor be satisfied or paid off the rent without saying thereof or to the like effect there the profits shall not be accounted in part of the satisfaction but to hasten the Lessee to pay it New Littleton fo 203. 30 E. 3. 7. 27 H. 8. 4. 43 E. 3. 21. Livery Seisin Tantamount Of free hold and inheritances some be corporeall as Houses Lands c. these are to pass by Livery and Seisin by Deed or without Deed some bee incorporeall as Advowsons Rents Commons Estovers c. these cannot passe without Deed but yet without any Livery And the Law hath provided the Deed instead of a Livery and so it is if a man make a Lease and by Deed grant the reversion in Fee here the Free-hold with the Attornment of the Lessee by the Deed doth pass which is in lieu of the Livery To say that money is fallen Actions on the case that he hath gone about to get poison to kill the child that such a woman goeth with that a man did lie in wait to rob one or procured another or agreed with another to murder him or sought his life for his land to call a Marchant bankerupt but not to call a Gent. c. bankerupt is not actionable to call an Attorney Ambidexter or or to say that he dealeth corruptly But words of choller and heate as to call one cousiner crafty-knave common Extortioner Drunker Witch Rogue Pillory-Knave Villain unlesse he say Villaine to such a man or regardant to such a Mannor are not actionable But if the speaker be able to justifie the words for then it is not falsely As to call a man perjured by reason of a perjury comitted in the Star-chamber Murtherer Thiefe or such like upon a conviction too but to call one Theife or Murtherer upon an inditement or common fame is actionable If one having another mans goods convert them to his owne use if a Smith cloy my horse these are actionable but not if he take him to cure without warranting of him and doing all he can yet the Horse impaire If being committed to the Goale the Jaylor of malice put upon me two many Irons or otherwise use mee so hardly that I become lame thereby this is actionable Sir Hen. Finch fo 186. A grant by an Infant under the age of twenty one yeares A grant one out of his right mind whom wee call non sanae memoriae or non compos mentis or one compelled to doe an act either by duress of imprisonment or feare of some bodily hurt threatned to himselfe but not to his Father mother Brother c as losse of life and member or though it be but of imprisonment for imprisonment is a corporeall paine and one may be imprisoned that he die of it otherwise of menace to breake or burne downe ones house for that is but the losse of ones goods is avoidable and may be avoided at any time by entry action c. if they deliver it with their hand as in a grant of a rent advowson c or a Feoffment by letters of Attorney it is meerely void and nothing at all passeth So if a grant made by one which hath no understanding as if he be borne Dumbe Deafe and blind but one Dumb may make a good grant or borne dumb and deafe for diverse may have understanding by their sight only though dumb and deafe If an infant bargaine for his necessary meat drink and apparell c. it shall bind him Other Grants of his where himselfe hath likewise benefit we call it quid pro quo are onely voydable and not void as if he let lands for yeares reserving a rent Sir H. Finch fo 102. Pretended right None shall buy sell or get or take promise or grant to have any pretended rights or titles to lands c. except the seller or these by whom he claimeth were in possession or took the profits by the space of a yeare next before upon paine that the sellor c. shall forfeit the value of the land and likewise the buyer knowing the same provided he that is in lawfull possession by taking the yearly profits may buy c. anothers pretended right 32 H. 8. ca. 9. Tole in market The seller shall not pay Toll but the buyer neither shall a man pay Toll for the things he bringeth to the Faire but for the things he selleth but by the custome he may for every thing brought to the faire and for his standing also Finch fo 166. If the Parson of a Church purchase a Mannor within his Parrish now by this purchase and unity of possession the Mannor which was titheable before is now made non decimabilis because hee cannot pay tithes to himselfe but if the Parson make a Lease of his Parsonage and Rectory to a stranger now the Parson himselfe shal pay Tythes of his Mannor to the Lessee of the Rectory and if the parson make a Feoffment of the Mannor the Feoffee shall pay Tythes to the Feoffor Parson because that Tythes may not be extinct by any unity of possession as rent-charge may which is issuing out of Lands but tythes are due by the Law of God ex debito by the manurance and
such lease or terme yet false recitall notwithstanding if the Sheriff sell also all the interest that the Debitor hath in the said land that sale is good Also the Sherriff need not to mention any certainty of a terme in his returne of Fieri facias but generally quod fieri fecit de bon catall c. Note that it is at the election of the Sheriff to extend or to sell a lease or terme as long as it remaineth in the hands of the Debitor scil the Sheriff at his election may sell that quite or he may extend and deliver it to the Connusee at a certaine yearely value as of Frank-tenement and there the Connusee to whom the terme is delivered hath a property which is uncertain and the Lessee or connusor himselfe hath another propetty so that upon the payment of the debt or upon the debt received of the revenew of that by the connusee the connusor shall have his terme Plow 5. 24 Co. 8. 171. Note there a diversitie between the sale by the Sheriff of a terme and an extent of a terme and that upon sale of a terme by the Sheriff the partie hath no remedie to have his terme againe if any remain after the debt satisfied as it seemeth Execution upon Capias ad satisfaciendum NOte upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum although the Defendant be not found the Plantiff may not have another execution 20. E. 2. and this capias ad satisfaciendum is onely against the body which the Sheriff must be sure to keep safe or else perhaps pay the debt himselfe and therefore if the Sheriff shall take a upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum to him directed or shall have any prisoner to him committed for debt upon any execution and he after shall let the Prisoner goe at liberty before the debt be satisfied the Creditor may either have his action of debt against the Sheriff and shall recover his debt or the Creditor may have his action of the case against the Sheriff 22 H. 7. 23 Fitz. 93. a. c. And if the Prisoner doe escape of his owne wrong against the Will of the Officer although he escape and get out of sight or into another County where the Sheriff or Officer hath no authority yet if fresh suite be made and he be taken again upon the fresh suite he shall be said to be still in execution Co. 3. 52. And if the Prisoner do escape against the will and without the consent of the Sheriff or his Officer may then the Sheriff or his Officer take him again where or whensoever hee can find him by vertue of the same Writ before the returne thereof yea though it be in another County And if that the prisoner which so escaped be followed with fresh suite and taken again before an action be brought by the Plantiff against the Sherriff for the escape it shall be adjudged no escape Co 3. 44. 52. And if the Plantiff hath brought his action against the Sheriff for the escape before he hath taken the prisoner againe Or if upon the escape the Sherriff or his Officers did not make fresh suit after the Prisoner yet in both these cases if the escape were against the will of the Officer the Sheriff may take such prisoner again and keep his body in custody untill the prisoner hath made his agreement with the Sheriff or otherwise the Sheriff may have his action upon the case against such prisoner for such his wrongfull escape if the prisoner that so escaped be able to make him satisfaction And the prisoner in these cases shall not be relieved because the escape was of his owne wrong and without the consent of the Sheriff or Officer co 3. 52. If the connusor of a Statute Merchant or Staple is taken and dies in execution yet the connusee shall have the execution of his goods and lands Co. 5. 87. Connusor upon a Statute is taken and escape yet his goods and lands upon the same statute may be extended For although by the law unica tantum fiat executio yet that is to be understood of an execution with satisfaction Where 2. men are condemned in debt and the one is taken and dieth in execution yet the other may lawfully be taken in execution co 5 86. So if two be bound joyntly and severally in one Obligation and the one is sued condemned and taken in execution yet the other also may be sued and taken in execution untill the Plantiff be satisfied in deed of his intire debt co 5. 86. If a man hath judgement in an action of debt and after the judgement outlawes the Defendant there if the Defendant be taken by Capias utlegat at the suite of the King he shall be in execution for the Plantiff if he will co 5 88. Also in all cases when the Plantiff may have a cap. ad satisfaciendum and the defendant is taken by cap. pro fine there the Defendant is in execution forthwith if the Plantiff will without any prayer of the partie co ibidem And in such cases if the Sheriff suffer such prisoner to goe at large it seemeth to be an escape and that thereby the Sheriff is subject to pay the Plantiff his debt Fitz. 121. p. By the law those which are in execution ought not to goe at liberty within the prison much lesse abroad though with their keeper but such prisoner ought to be keept in arcta salva custodia yea the Sheriff may keep such as are in execution in Gives and Fetters to the intent that they may the sooner pay and satisfie their creditors 13 E. 1. cap. 11. 2 R. 2. cap. 12. co 3. 44 Plow 360. a Where the Sheriff hath one in execution for debt an Habeas Corpus commeth to him to have the body in the Kings Bench at a certain day and he carrieth his prisoner to London to an Inne c. and the Prisoner of his owne head goeth at large and after commeth againe to the Sheriff so as the Sheriff at the day of the returne of the Habeas corpus doth deliver the body in court this was adjudged to be no escape for that the commandement of the Writ is performed scil to have the body in court at such a day and in such case the Sheriff may go and take what way or place he shall think to be most sure and safe for himselfe and to carry his prisoner co 3. 44. It was adjudged if one being in execution no commandement although of the K. himselfe without Writ is sufficient Warrant to discharge the Keeper c. and so by the same reason shall not discharge the Sheriff But note that inasmuch as escapes are so penall to Sheriffs Bayliffs of Liberties and Goalers the Judges of the Law have alwaies made a favourable construction as much as the law will permit in favour of the Sheriffs Bayliffs of Liberties and Goalers who are Officers and Ministers of Justice co 3. 44. Note if
by F.G. Esquire Fol. 1654. The fourth Volume of Artamenes or the Grand Cyrus that excellent new Romance being the seventh and eighth parts written by that famous Wit of France Monsieur de Scudery Governour of Nostre-dame and now englished by F.G. Esquire Fol. The fifth Volume of Artamenes or the Grand Cyrus that excellent new Romance being the ninth and tenth parts written by that famous Wit of France Monsieur de Scudery Governour of Nostre-dame and now englished by F.G. Esq Fol. Ibrahim or the Illustrious Bassa an excellent new Romance the whole work in four parts written in French by Monsieur de Scudery and now englished by Henry Cogan Gent. Fol. Clelia an excellent new Romance written by that famous Wit of France Monsieur de Scudery Governour of Nostre-dame The second Volume of Clelia that excellent new Romance written by that famous Wit of France Monsieur de Scudery Governour of Nostre-dame and now englished by J.D. Fol. 1656. The History of Philosophie by Thomas Stanley Esq containing those on whom the attribute of the wise was conferred with divers figures The second Volume of the History of Philosophie by Thomas Stanley Esquire Fol. The History of Suethland and Poland by John Fowler illustrated with divers Figures Fol. The twelfth part of the Reports Sir Edward Coke Knight The Reports of that Reverend and learned Judge Sir Richard Hutton Knight Fol. The Reports of Judge Owen in Fol. The Reading upon the Statute of the thirteenth of Elisabeth Chapter 1. 7. touching Bankrupts learnedly and amply explained by John Stone in 8o. Anti-Socinianisme or a brief explication of some places of holy Scripture for the confutation of certain grosse Errors and Socinian Heresies lately published by William Pinchion Gent. also a brief description of the lives and true Relation of the death of the authors promoters propagators and chief disseminators of this Socinian Heresie how it sprung up by what means it spread and when and by whom it was first brought into England by N. Chewney M. A. and Minister of Gods word in 4o. M. Cragg against Tombes concerning Infants Baptisme in 8o. The life and death of Freeman Sonds Esquire by Robert Boreman B.D. in 4o. sticht An Exhortation for desperate sinners written by the Right Honourable the Lord Viscount Grandison Prisoner in the Tower A Sermon preached at the Assises at Huntington by John Gaule Sand's Psalms in 8o. large Good Thoughts for every day in the week by D.S. in 24o. Modern Policies taken from Machiavel Borgia and other choice Authors by an eye-witnesse Mirza A Tragedy really acted in Persia written by Robert Barron Esquire in 8o. large Five new Playes written by Richard Broome in 8o. large Poems Amorous Lusorie morall and Divine written by Edward Sherburn Esquire in 8o. large Poems by Robert Barron Esquire in 8o. large Poems by William Hammond Esquire An Apologie for Paris written by Robert Baron Esquire A Catalogue of the Lords Knights and Gentlemen that have compounded for their estates with the summes that payed their Compositions The second part of Massaniello his body taken out of the Town-ditch and solemnly buried A Continuation of the Tumult The Duke of Guise made Generalissimo taken prisoner by young Don John of Austria the end of the Commotions by J. Howell Esquire The naturall and experimentall History of Winds c. written in Latine by the Right Honourable Francis Lo. Verulam Viscount Saint Alban translated into english by R. G. Gent. A TABLE OF THE Principall matters contained in this BOOKE A. ABeyance Where an estate or Remainder is in Abeyance 14 Ancestors what act is an assurance of rents arrear or a Condition broken 26 Actions on the Case For what words lye 133 For what acts lye 133 Ages The severall ages of Men and Women 116 Administrators To whom Letters of Administration to be granted 86 Who to grant them 87 Where one may do an act without his companion 88 Who shall administer and be an Administrator of an Administrator 88 Alien where may inherit and may have Heirs 42 43 Appurtenants what passe by those words Cum pertinentiis 104 105 Licence to Alien where may be countermanded where not 107 Assignee who properly is sayd an Assignee 14 Where they are bound in Covenant where not 107 108 109 110 Assise what it is to arraign an Assise 130 Attornement where requisite 33 34 37 38 By whom to be done 38 What acts or words a good one 38 Where the Lands passe without attornement 98 99 B. BAile the effect of speciall Baile in the Kings Bench 92 Bargain and Sale what consideration sufficient 58 Where Inrollment is necessary in it 58 63 What words raise it 59 6 What consideration averrable 59 What consideration sufficient to alter an use in it 55 60 C. COmmon Recoveries their force 62 What are fraudulent 68 What best to binde estates taile 105 111 Conditions The manner of an Entry upon a Condition 119 120 What is a Condition without words conditionall 119 Against two where voyd and the Estates or Deeds voyded 114 115 Repugnant where voyd and the estates or Deeds vyod 114 Who may enter and take advantage of them 6 79 95 99 What act is an affirmance of a Condition broken 31 94 Who may enter for them broken 31 48 Words to make it 44 In Deed and in Law and their constitutions 487 Where one is in of his former estate upon their breaking 48 Where estates taile may be restrained by conditions 95 Who may be bound not to alien 110 Where may apportioned 111 By whom the money to be payd by whom not 112 113 Impossibles where voyd and avoyd the estate or Deed 114 Considerations which good 63 Conveyances by how many wayes lands may passe 60 61 Covenant The form of one joynt several 43 44 What words make a Covenant what not 110 Corruption of blood How restored 41 D. DEed The premisses what they are and their office in a Deed 1 Habendum what it is and its office 1 Where a Habendum is repugnant and voyd 1 Its force over the premisses 2 When a Deed shall commence 14 15 Where a Habendum is good 69 Where a Habendum is voyd and the premisses good 103 Deed Where voyd 103 104 Where to be sued if dated in what place 118 Solvendum in a Deed where voyd and the Deed good 119 Voydable where voyd and by what persons 133 134 Deceit where lyes for doing acts out of Ancient demesne 135 Defeasance of a Statute where voyd 98 What may be defeated 130 Demand For what things it must be made and at what time 25 26 29 30 Where to be made 26 27 28 29 30 Who shall take advantage without it who not 27 Dower where lost 72 Distresse what may be distreined without property what not 130 Where a distresse and detention is Tortious 130 E. ENtry To vest what estates entry is lawfull 31 Estates what persons may take them 4 What Estates may depend one upon another 14 What