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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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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
life make a Feoffment that is a forfeiture and yet nothing passeth but his own estate But making a Livery in fee it is a forfeiture though none of the remainders be divested Coke 2. pars fol. 76. b. Bredons case vide plus fol. 50. this is a forfeiture and yet no reversion or remainder is divested out of the King A particular Estate of any thing that lyeth in Grant cannot be forfeited by any grant in Fee by Deed As if Tenant for life or years of an Advowson Rent Common or of a reversion or remainder of Land by Deed grant the same in fee this is no forfeiture But if such a Tenant levy a Fine c then it is a forfeiture Note The diversi●y between Livery and Se●sin of Land and the delivery of a deed and what is a good delivery of a deed in Law there is a diversity between Livery and Seisin of Land and the delivery of a Deed for if a man deliver a Deed without saying of any thing it is a good delivery but to a Livery of Seisin of Lands words are necessary as taking in his hands the Deed and the ring of the doore if it be of a house or a turff or twig if it be of Land and using the words aforesaid And a Deed may be delivered to the party without words without any act of delivery As if the Writing sealed lyeth upon the Table and the Feoffor or Obligor saith to the Feoffee or Obligee Go and take up the said Writing it is sufficient for you or it will serve the turne or take it as my Deed or the like words it is a sufficient delivery Cokes Littleton title Dower fol. 36. a. 29 H. 8. Dyer fol. 95 43 Eliz. inter Hawsly Lacker in Banco Rs. Hillary 12 Jac. Rs. in Com. Banco The Grant of a Seignory Rent-charge Rent-seck Attornment in toto withall incidents therunto as also the Remainder or reversion of any of these or the remainder or reversion of the Land it self is nothing worth without Attornment viz. the agreement of the Tenant that must be presently charged As Lord Mesne and Tenant the Lord grants his Seignory the Mesne must attorne and not the Tenant prevaile for the Mesne is Tenant to the Lord Lord and Tenant the Tenant letteth the Land for life or giveth in taile saving the reversion to himself Now if the Lord grant his Seignory he in the reversion must attorne to the Grantee and not the Tenant for life or Tenant in taile for he in the reversion is Tenant to the Lord and not the other But if the Tenant had let his Land to one for life the remainder in fee thereupon a grant of the Seignory the Tenant for life must attorne for he is Tenant to the Lord so is not he in the remainder so long as Tenant for life liveth If Lands be let for years or given in taile saving the reversion upon a Grant of the reversion the Tenant of the Land must attorne And an Attornment may either be by word as to say I agree or am content with the Grant Or I attorne to you and become your Tenant by force of the Grant or else by the delivery of a penny and to the Grantee c. in name of Attornment or by any other matter implying an agreement as by a surrender to the Grantee of the reversion praying in aide of him c. and if such an Attornment be not to the Grantee in the life of the Grantor then the Grant is void In the Grant of a Reversion depending on a Freehold the attornment of the Freeholder is sufficient though he be not the Tenant that must presently be charged As if Lands be let to a man for years the remainder to another for life and hee in reversion grant the reversion to another the attornment of him in the remainder is sufficient 1 Littleton fol. 1●… 〈◊〉 the 〈…〉 nly and where not If a man bind himself and his Heires in an Obligation or 〈◊〉 covenant by writing for him and his 〈…〉 or 〈◊〉 grant an Annuity for him and his ●…res in all these cases the Law chargeth the Heire after the death of the Ancestor with this Obligation Covenant Annuity Warranty yet with these three cautions that the party must by speciall name bind himself and his Heires for if the party in the bond Covenant Annuity or Warranty doth not bind himself as well as his Heires in such case the Heire shall never be bound 2. Some Action must be brought against the Heire whilest the Land or other Inheritance resteth in him unalienated away For if the Ancestor dye and the Heire before an Action be brought against him upon those Bonds Covenants or Warranties do alien away the Land then the Heire is cleaned discharged of the burthen 3. No Heire is further to be charged then the value of the Land descendeth to him from that Ancestor that made the charge and that not to be sold outright but to be kept in extent and at a yearly value untill the Debt or damage be run out Neverthelesse if an Heire that is sued upon such a Debt of his Ancestor doth not deale clearly with the Court when he is sued that is if he come not immediatly by way of confession and set down the true quantity of his Inheritance discended and so submit himself as the Law requireth then that Heire shall be charged of his owne other Lands Goods and money for this Deed of his Ancestor As if a man bind himself and his Heirs in an Obligation of a hundred pounds and dieth leaving but ten acres of Lands to his Heire if his Heire be sued upon the Bond and cometh in and denieth that he hath any by discent and it is found against him by verdict that he hath ten acres this Heire shall be now charged by his false plea of his owne Lands Goods and body to pay the hundred pounds though the Land be not worth ten pounds All words which do prove by specialty Words onely which do shew a man to be a Debtor to another is a good Obligation without binding the Executor that the maker of the Writing is a Debtor to another that is a sufficient Obligation and though the Executor or Administrator are not expressed yet the Law will charge them because they represent the Estate of the Testator but the Heire shall never be charged without expresse mention of the Heire Dyer fol 2 3. Acquittance for one Rent is a discharge of all former Rents Those cannot be heirs If a Rent be behind for twenty years and the Lord make an Acquittance for the last that is due all the rest are presumed to be paid and the Law will admit no proofe against this presumption Cokes Littleton fol. 373. A Bastard can be no Heire nor have any unlesse it be his owne Child A man attainted of Treason or Felony can be no Heire nor have an Heir though it be his
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
of the Indenture or from the day of the date or from the day of the making or from the day of the sealing and delivery such leases are meerly void for the date is excluded and the lessee may not enter untill the morrow for when a man makes a lease for life to commence at a day to come he may not make present livery to a future estate and therfore in such case nothing passeth and Livery or Attornment afterwards will never make a void Grant to be good Coke 5. pars fol. 94. 2. pars fol. 55. If a Lease be made for years or at Will by Deed and Livery and Seisin be made to the Lessee yet he is but Tenant for years or Tenant at Will according to the limitation of the Deed and not Tenant for life by force of the livery But if a lease be made for years the Remainder to a stranger for life and livery is made to the Lessee who enters this livery shall vest the Remainder in the stranger and if the Lessee enter by force of his lease before livery be made unto him then the Remainder is void Condition where an en●ry is reserved to a stranger vide casus tertium prox sequent A man enfeoffeth one upon condition that he shall pay ten pounds to B. and upon default that B. shall enter now if the rent be not paid the Feoffee may enter in Law and Conscience and not B. for he is a stranger to the Condition and B. hath no remedy in Conscience to have the land And when the Feoffment is made upon Condition although it doth not speak that for default of payment he may re-enter yet that is implied in the word Condition and as to the words that B. shall enter by default of payment they are void words Doctor Student fol. 93. Condition for non-payment of rent and then an Assise is brought or a Distress taken If a Condition be broken for non-payment of rent yet if the Feoffor bring an Assise for rent due at that time he shall never enter for the Condition broken because he affirmeth the rent to have continuance and whereby waiveth the condition and so it is if the rent had had a clause of Distresse annexed unto it if the Feoffor had distrained for the rent for non-payment whereof the condition was broken he should never enter for the condition broken but he may receive that rent and acquit the same and yet enter for the condition broken Acceptance of rent barreth a re-entry But if he accept a rent due at another day after he shall not enter for the condition broken because he thereby affirmeth the lease to have continuance Coke Lit. fol. 211. b. If a man enfeoff one by Indenture by which it is covenanted and agreed that the Feoffee shall pay to a stranger and his Heires ten pounds per annum at a certaine day and if he faile that the stranger and his Heires may enter in that case if the Feoffee doth not pay it the stranger shall have use of the land in conscience and not by the common law and shall have a Subpaena to constraine the Feoffee to make an estate unto him But in the said case if it had been upon condition that a stranger may enter for non-payment of the rent there the Feoffor himself shall enter and not the stranger for none may enter for a condition annexed to Fee but for lives and when the Feoffor hath entred he is not holden to convey the land to a stranger that ought to have the Rent Doctor Student 100. 101. In Mary Portingtons case Coke 10. pars fol. 39. Incidents to an estate taile It was observed and agreed for Law that to an Estate-taile there are three manner of incidents some by the common Law some by Act of Parliament and some by custome by the common law they are such which are not restrained by the Statute and may not be restrained by any condition 22 E. 3. 17. as Dower and Tenant by the curtesie after issue are incident to an Estate taile and may not be restrained by any condition An Estate taile cannot be restrained by any condition or limitation vide Coke 9. pars fol. 128. 6. pars Sir Anth. Mildmaies case Recovery fraudulent Also the Estate of him and Tenant in taile after possibility are dispunishable for Waste And collaterall Warranty is a bar to the Estate-taile and so is a common recovery also and none of these may be restrained by any condition or limitation by the Statute law as to make leases by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 36. and to levie a Fine by the Statute 4 H. 7 cap. 24. and 33 H. 8. cap. 36. to bar Issues and none of those which are incidents to that Statute by act of Parliament may be restrained by condition for when a man maketh a Gift in taile he tacire doth give these incidents thereunto And therefore to restraine them by condition or limitation shall be repugnant And as to the case upon the Statute of 11 H. 7. it was answered that when the husband for advancement of the wife with competent Joynture and preferment of their Heires of their two bodies engendred hath caused an estate to be made to himself and to his wife in tail and after the deaths of the husband the wives to disinherit the issues of their former husbands suffer recoveries and convey the land to strangers of the bloud of the husband such recovery was worthy by the Parliament to be noted with the marke to be suffered by Covin And the act of the wife either when she is sole or with her and her second husband is so odious that a recovery had upon a good title against them by Covin is made void by the said Act. Fraud So in the said Acts of 32. H 8. and 14. Eliz. when a common recovery was had against Tenant for life to the prejudice of those who had the inheritance that may be well termed covenous and by collusion and yet in the same case when tenant for life the remainder to A. in taile the remainder to B. in taile c. with divers remainders over and Tenant for life suffereth a common recovery wherin he voucheth A. and he the common vouchee that shall bind all the other remainders for no Covin or collusion may bee supposed when the next in remainder in taile which hath the immediate inheritance is vouchee as it was adjudged in Jennings case Fraudulent conveyances to defraud purchasors Vide plus de hoc fo 18. 27 E. cap. 4. every Conveyance Grant Charge Lease Estate incumbrance and limitation of use of Lands Tenements or Hereditaments made since the beginning of her Majesties Raigne or hereafter to be made for the defrauding of Purchasors of the Land it selfe or any part or profit out of it shall be void against the person so purchasing for money or other good consideration and against all
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
to the Major to make Certificate notwithstanding the first Certificate and to have out of the Chancery a new Capias or no or whether at the suite of the Executors the Justices of the Bench might have awarded an alias Capias or a Writ of extent upon the first proceeding or not But it was agreed by the Court that no Scire facias did lie in this case but upon oath made by the Executors in the Chancery that the debt is not satisfied they shall have a new Certiorari to the Major c. to make a new Certificate of the Statute and so to begin all anew again Dier 180. Satute Staple THe Statute Staple is of two sorts or in two manners the one by force of the Statute 27 E. 3. cap. 9. the other by force of the Statute 23 H. 8. cap. 6. The first is an obligation of Record acknowledged before the Major of the Staple in presence of one of the Constables of the same Staple and is sealed with the seale of the Staple and Seale of the party but such Statute Staple shall not be taken but onely amongst Merchants of the same Staple and for Marchandizes of the same Staple 23 H. 8. ca. 6. The other is an obligation also of Record and of the same nature and force as the first is as to the execution thereof But it is acknowledged before the one of the chief Justices and in their absence out of Terme before the Major of the Staple at Westminster and the Recorder of London and is sealed with their Seales viz. with the Seale of the Connusor of the King and of one of the said Justices or of the Major and Recorder 23 H. 8. cap. 6. The formes of these Statutes Staple vide West 108. 109. Note that all Statutes Merchant and Staple shall be brought to the Clarke of the Recognizances within 4 Months and inrolled within six months or else such Statute shall be void against Purchasors c. 27. Eliz. cap. 4. A Statute Staple must be certified into the Chancery in the like manner as a Statute Merchant and upon that Certificate a Writ of execution shall go presently forth both against the body si laicus sit and against the lands and goods of the Connusor returneable in the Chancery in the petty-bagg Office there and not into the Court of common Pleas or Kings Bench as the Writs of Execution upon a Statute Merchant shall and upon the Writ of execution the Sheriff shall take the body of the Connusor and shall also per sacramentum proborum legalium hominum juxta verum valorem Fitz. 131 d. presently extend and price and shall seise into the Kings hands his Lands his Goods and Chattels and that extent and prizement or valuation of the Lands and goods shall returne and certifie into the Chancery as aforeraid and therupon the Reconusee shall have another Writ called a liberate to the Sheriff out of the Chancery to deliver to the Conusee those lands and goods to the value of his debt and upon that liberate delivered to the Sheriff then such lands and goods as are taken in execution shall be delivered to the Connusee by the Sheriff and not before And this execution shall be made in manner as is before declared upon a Statute Merchant 27 E 3. cap. 9. Plow 62. b. And so note that upon a statute Merchant the connusor shall bee imprisoned for halfe a yeare and if hee doth not sell his lands within the same time for to pay his debts then his lands shall be delivered to the obligee until his debt be satisfied And upon statute staple the Debitor or connusor after that hee is taken shall not have liberty to sell his lands and goods within the halfe yeare as he shall have upon Statute Merchant But by force of this statute Staple if the money be not paid at the day forthwith after certificate therof in the chancery the creditor may have Execution of the body Lands and goods of the Debitor ss the connusor shall be imprisoned and all his lands and goods shall be extended instantly 27 E. 3 cap. 9 Also note that upon Statute staple the extent shall be first made and returned and aftet a Writ of liberate shall be awarded but delivery shall not be made at the beginning untill the thing appeareth certainly by the return of the Sheriff Plow 62. b. All obligations and specialties made to the King or to his use for any cause shall bee of the same force as Statute Staple is 33 H. 8. cap 59. and so for obligations made by parsons for their first fruits 26 H. 8. cap. 39. The lands of many Accomptants to the King shal be liable and put in execution as if they had been bound in Statute Staple 13. Eliz. Cap. 4. The heir that claimeth by the gift of his Ancestor shall be bound to pay the Kings debt 33 H. 8. cap. 39. The heir in taile by the same Statute shall be liable to pay the Kings debt due by his Ancestor Plow 240. b. 249 b. 554. b. Fitz. 217. c. But if tenant in taile become in debt to the King by receipt of the Kings moneyes or otherwise unlesse that it be by judgement recognisance obligation or other specialty and dieth the land in the seisin of the issue in taile by force of the said act of 33 H. 8. shall not be extended for such debt of the King For the Statute of 33 H. 8. extendeth only to the said 4. cases and all other debts of the King remain at the common law Execution upon Statute IF Tenant in Taile become in debt to the King by one of the said 4. wayes scil by judgment recognisance obligation or other specialty and dieth and before any prosces or extent the issue in taile bona fide alien or Lease the Land intailed now this Land shall not be extended by force of the said Act of 33 H. 8. C. 7. 22. So where debt was originally due to a subject and after comes or accrues to the King by reason of attainder Out-lawry Forfeiture gift of the partie or by any other way or meane such debt is not within the said Statute of 33 H. 8. to charge lands intailed in the possession of the heir in taile Co. 7. 22. But lands in fee-simple were extendable at the common law for debt of the King into whose hands soever they should come and therefore as to them the said Statute of 33 H. 8. was not but a declaration of the ancient law Co. 7. 21. Two Joyntenants in fee the one of them being a debtor of the King dieth the other shall hold discharged Fitz. Execut. 113. The heire shall bee chargeable to pay debt of the King although he bee not named or that this word Heir be not comprised within the recognizance obligation or specialty 33 H. 8. cap 39. The King shall be preferred in his suit and execution before common persons by the Statute 9 H. 3.
cap. 18. and 33. H. 8. cap. 39. Debitor of the King possessed of a Lease selleth it bona fide This bindeth the King for it is but a Chattel Co. 8. 172. Note that the King shall levie the summe for which any is chargeable unto him not only against the party himselfe scil of his body his lands and goods in his own hands but in the hands of his Heires Assignes Executors or Administrators and if he hath no Executors or Administrators then in the hands of the possessors of the goods of the dead What Lands and goods shall be extended or taken by the Sheriff in Execution upon Statute c. in case of a common person NOte that upon Statute Merchant or Staple all the Fee-simple Lands which the said Connusor had at the time of the said Statute acknowledged or at any time after shall be liable to the said Statute into whose hands they shal ever come afterwards by alienation Feoffement or otherwise Stat. de mercator 13 E. 1. 27 E. 3. cap. 9. 23 H. 8. Co. 3. 12. But if the Debitor die the body of his heire shall not be taken but his Fee simple lands which descendeth to him from the Connusor shall be taken in form aforesaid if he be of full age or when he commeth to full age untill the debt be levied Statut. de mercator And so was the common Law before that in debt against the heir the Plaintiff shall have all the Land which discendeth to the heir in execution and yet he shall not have then execution of any part of the land against the father himselfe Note that it hath been holden that the heir shall not be charged where the Executors have assets Fitz. Executors 25. Br. Debt 237. 17 E. 4. 13. Plow 439. 440. But at this day the law seemeth otherwise scil that it is at the election of the Creditor to sue the heir or Executors when both have assets 4 E. 4. 25. 22 H. 6. 4. 10 H. 7. 8. Doct. Stud. 153. Dier 204. Plowden 439. 440. Also it seemeth that if the heire doth not confesse the action and shew the certainty of the assets which he hath by discent but plead nothing by discent or is condemned by default that there the Plaintiff shall have execution of his other lands or of his goods or of his body by cap. ad satisfac Plow 440. Note that Fee-simple lands of the heire which he hath by discent the day of the Writ purchased or after shall be liable but otherwise if he hath aliened before the Writ purchased unlesse it be by covin Co. 5. 60. Possession in law discendeth upon the heir shall charge him So where he enters upon a condition Br. assetts 8. Reversion upon an estate for life discends upon the heire that shall charge him Br. Assets 12. 19. A reversion shall be put in execution and the judgment shall be cum acciderit and in the meane time of the rent Di. 373. Fitz. Assetts 237. Note in debt a man shall have execution of no land but of that which the Defendant hath the day of the judgement given 2. H. 4. Fitz. Executors 24. If a man sue a Statute Merchant of parcell of the Lands in name of all the Lands he shall not have other execution afterwards Fitz. Execution 13. 4. If I have but one Acre by discent I shall be charged with 1000 l. by obligation made by my father by Belk 40 E. 15. Fitz. Execution 32 vide quaere For it seemeth that the heire may confesse what he hath by dscent and demand judgement whether of more then of the value therof he ought to be charged Lands intailed are liable but during the life of the Connusor as if tenant in taile be bound in a Satute or Recognizance the land taile shall be bound during his life but it is not bound against the issue in taile Br. Recog 7. yet if the issue in taile enfeoffe a stranger now execution shall be against the Feoffee 19 E. 3. Fitz receipt 112. But if Tenant in taile acknowledge a Statute or Recognizance and after alien the lands in the hands of the Feoffee or alienee shall be subvert to this Statute or Recognizance Co. 1. 62. and 2. 52. 8 H. 7. 89. Copy hold Lands are not liable nor shall bee extended upon a Statute or Recognizance Lease or Terme for life shall be extended Lease for tearme of yeares and all other goods and Chattels of the Connusor or Debitor are liable and shall be extended ss such which the Connusor c. hath in his owne possession and to his own use at the time of the execution sued or awarded But sale of Chattels bona-fide after judgement and before execution awarded is good but not after execution awarded as appeareth in 2 H. 4. fo 14. per curiam Yet by Babington 7 H. 6. Br. execution 116. if a man be condemned in debt or bound in a Statute the goods which he hath the day of the judgment or knowledge of the Recognisance shall be bound to the execution in whose hands soever they shall come quod non fuit negatum Co. 7. 39. a every execution in judgement of law hath relation and retrospect to the judgment But a fraudulent conveyance or gift of Lands or goods shall not advoid any execution vide le statutes 50 E. 3. ca. 6. 1 R. 2. ca. 9. 2 R. 2. Stat. 2. ca. 3. 3 H. 7. ca. 4. 13 Eliz. ca. 5. 7 les liures 43 E. 3. fol. 3. Dier 295. Co. 3. 81. 82. 83. Lands in ancient demesne are liable to the Statute vide Fitz. Execution 118. and retorne 109. contra Lands or goods holden joyntly by the Connusor with a stranger and the connusor is condemned in damages and dieth before execution those lands or goods comming to the stranger by survivor are not extendable Br. execution 126. 148. 13 H. 7. 22. a. Lands of a wife are extendable during the coverture by debt of the husband 15 H. 7. fo 14. Rent may be delivered in execution Fitz. avowry 237 Exec. 63. Rent extent by release of the party may be extended Co. 7. ●8 39. As if a man hath judgement to recover debt or damages by that the rent which he hath of any estate of Frank-tenement is liable to it and therefore although that after judgment that be released yet that may be extended But a man shall never have a thing extended upon an execution except that he may grant and assigne the same thing by Shelly 28 H. 8. fo 7. So the profits of an Office or other thing which may not be granted or assigned over shall not be extended Dier fo 7. Goods demised pawned or pledged may not be taken in execution for his debt that demised or pawned them during or terme that they are s● demised or pawned 22 E. 4. fo 10. 34 H. 8 Br. pledges 28. As as if a man bona fide lease his Sheep or Oxen for years or if he
the terme of his life without c. and from and after his decease to the use and behoofe of B. P. his wife for and during the terme of her life for her joynter And from and after the severall deceases of them the said H and B P. then to the use of the heires males of the body of the said H P lawfully to be begotten And for default of such issue then to the use of Dame F. P. for and during the terme of her life untill such time as she the said Dame F. or any other by her allowance shall by any publick act by him or them done or suffered to be done seek endeavour To the use limited for life untill she shall practise to do an act or put in practise for to avoide or question the joynter of the said B P either in part or in all or any other estate grant Lease or use whatsoever now made or at any time hereafter to be made and limited by the said H P of any part or parcell of the said Mannors Lands and other the Premises and immediately from and after such publike act as aforesaid or after the decease of the same Dame F then to the use of H P Esquire son of the said c. untill c. And for and concerning the inclosed ground and Park to the use and behoofe of the said H P for his life To the use of a woman for part of her Joynter Joynter by way of the lymitation of a yearely anuity and after his decease to the use of the said Dame G. for terme of her life for part of her Joynture And after her decease to the use intent and purpose that such other wife as the said H P. shall have at his decease other then the said Dame G shall and may receive and take out of the said Parke ground and other the last mentioned Premises one yearly rent of 200 pounds of lawfull money of England for the terme of the life of such wife for her joynter the said rent to be paid at the feast of St Michael the Arch-angell and the anuntiation of our Lady by equall portions And after c. to such uses intents and purposes Vses limited to ones last will and testament and for want of such will to any other uses c. vide plus 18. 2. 8 Vses first of all raised for divers mens lives as the said H P by his last will and Testament in writing or by any writing or by any writing to be made by him sealed and subscribed shall limit and declare and for default of such limitation or declaration to the use and behoofe of the said H P. and his heires for ever That is to say to the use and behoofe of the said F M and of his Assignes for and during the joynt lives of him the said F M. and the said E M his son without impeachment c. and from and after the decease of the said F in case the said F shall fortune to depart this present life during the life of the said E M. his son then as for and concerning the mannor and Lordship of T. with all his rights members appurtenances to the use and behoofe of the said A. now wife of the said F F.M. and of her assignes for and during the terme of her naturall life if the said E. M. the son shall happen so long to live and from and after the decease of the said E. M. Vses raised for satisfaction of Joynter dower then as for and concerning the Scite or chiefe Mansion house c. to the only use and behoofe of the said B. for terme of her naturall life for and in full satisfaction and recompence of all such Joynter and Dower as to the same B. shall or of right ought to belong or appertaine by from and after the decease of the said E. M her husband And as for and concerning the residue of the said Mannor of c. to the onely use and behoofe of the said A. and of her assignes absolutely for tearme of her life in full satisfaction of the Joynter of the said A. And then after the lives ended the use of the reversion expectant on those lives is setled And as for and concerning the reversion and reversions remainder or remainders of the said Mannors c. as the said uses estates and interest therof herein before lymited or expressed shall be fully ended and determined and for and concerning the said Mannor of c. as the estates and interests therof before limited or expressed in these present Indentures shall fully end and determine Then to the use and behoofe of the said F. M. for terme of his naturall life without c. and from and after his decease then to the use and behoofe of E. M. for terme of his life without c. and from and after his decease to the use and behoofe of the first son to be begotten by the body of the said E. M. and of the heires males of the same first son lawfully begotten To the use of every other the sons as they shall be in seniority or age Lands conveighed to uses for the raising of portions for daughters and so to the second son unto the tenth son And for default of such issue then to the use and behoofe of every other the sons to be begotten by the body of the said E. M. successively as they shall be in seniority or age and of the heires males of their severall bodies lawfully begotten And for default of such issue then to the use and behoofe of all and every the daughters which the said E. M. shall have begotten on the body of the said B. at the time of his decease being then unmarried and of their assignes from and after such time as each of them shall have accomplished their severall ages of 18 yeares or be married to and untill such time as every of the same daughters successively one after another as they shall be in seniority or age shall or may levy receive and take to every of their own propper uses and behoofes of the rents profits and issues of the Premises the severall summes of 300. pounds a peece of currant money of England or otherwise shall be fully satisfied contented or paid of the said severall summes by such person or persons to whom the next immediate reversion or remainder of the premises shal then by the intent and meaning of these presents of right belong and appertaine And from and after such time as the said severall sums of 300. pounds shall be fully levied received or paid as is aforesaid c. and for default of such daughters whichsoever of them shall first happen Then to the use of T. M. second son of the said F. M. for tearme of his life and so on with an intaile as before and for default of such issue then to the use and behoofe of the said E.
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
tenants of the Frank-tenement but such limitation after the Statute is void for then the Frank-tenement shall be in suspence for nothing may remaine in the Feoffees But hee said that those remainders in futuro were divested and destroyed by the Feoffment of Tenant for life and although the remainders are in custody of the Law yet they ought to be subject to the rules of the law for the law will never preserve any thing against the rule of the Law and because that the rule of the law is that he in remainder ought to take the Land when the particular estate determineth or otherwise the remainder shall be void and in this case forsomuch as by the feoffment of tenant for life their estate was determined and title of entry given for the forfeiture then those in the future remainder were not in esse to take it for this cause these remainders in futuro by this matter ex post facto were all utterly destroyed made void And no diversity when the estate of tenant for life determineth by the death of tenant of life and when it determineth in right by his forfeiture for in both cases entry is given to him in the next remainder and then if he may not take the Land when the particular estate determineth the remainders void A gift in taile was made to A. C. the remainder to the right heirs of A. S. the Donee made a Feoffment to B. in fee and after A. S. dieth his right heire shall never have the remainder nor any Charter that concerneth it for the estate of the Land was by the feoffment of S. in taile divested and discontinued and all estates vested in the Feoffee and there was not any particular estate either in esse nor in right to support the remainder when that shall fall for by the Feoffment of S. in taile his right heire was utterly gone But if tenant in taile were deceased and dieth that shall not toll the remainder for there is a right of particular estate to support the right of the remainder but when tenant in taile made a feoffment no right remained in him and so note that there ought to be a person in esse of both parties viz. that shall be seised to use and that shall take the use so that there needeth not onely to have a use limited but a person capable of the use when this Statute transferreth the possession thereunto and therefore if a person wanteth it is impossible to have the possession executed by this Statute to one which is not in rerum natura for the Statute saith c. If by a Feoffment to uses the estate shall be utterly out of the Feoffees and all vest in them which have the present uses then the future use shall never rise for it is impossible that it should be raised out of the possession of ceste que use for a use may not be raised out of a use for if A. enfeoffe B. in fee to the use of C and his heires with proviso that if D. pay to C. 100 l. that C. and his heires shall stand seised to the use of D. and his heires that is utterly void for the future use ought to be raised out of the estate of the Feoffee and not out of the estate of ceste que use And it was holden that the Feoffees after the Statute had possibility to serve the future use when it cometh in esse and that in the mean time all the uses in esse shall be vested and when the future use commeth in esse then the Feoffees if the possession be not disturbed by disseisin or other meanes shall have sufficient estate and seisin to serve the future use when that shall come in esse to be executed by force of the Statute and that seisin and execution ought to concurr and meet together at one selfe same time and in such case when the future use commeth in esse the Feoffees shall have by force of the act a qualified estate sufficient to serve the future use All the Justices and Barons of the Chequer but Periam Walmsley Gawdy concluded c. that forasmuch as the Statute of 27. H. 8. doth not extend but to uses in esse and to persons in esse and not to any uses that depend in possibility onely for this cause these contingent uses in the case at barr remaine so long as they depend in possibility onely at the common Law and by consequence they may be destroyed or discontinued before they come in esse and by all such meanes as Uses might have beene discontinued or destroyed by the common law And all the Justices and Barons of the Chequer agreed with the chiefe Baron and VValmsley in this point that these remainders limited in use in the case at the barr shall follow the rule and reason of estates executed in possession by the common law and therefore they al only agreed that if the estate for life in the case at the barr had been determined by the death of the Feoffees before the birth of the eldest son that the said remainders in futuro were void and never shall take effect although that the son were borne afterwards for a remainder in use ought to vest either during the particular estate or eo instante when the particular estate endeth as well as estates in possession All these cases last before touching contingent uses see Coke prima pars fo 120. Chudleis case unto the end of the said case If a future use come not in esse during the particular estate then it shall never take effect because it is in nature of a remainder which ought to take effect and vest during the particular estate and no use shall be executed by 27 H. 8. which are limited against the rule of the common law A use is in nature of a remainder and therefore in the raising of uses the order and rule of the common law touching remainders in all things must be observed but upon and by the limitation of a devise or limitation of a use a remainder may commence upon a condition which goeth to the destruction of the particular estate and one fee-simple may depend upon another If a man at this day make a feoffement in Fee to the use of A. for yeares and after to the use of the wife of B. which shall be this limitation to the right heirs to the wife is void because if it had been void it had been limited in possession So in the same case if the use be limited to A. for life and after to the use of the right heires of B. or to the wife of B. which shall be if A. dieth and then B. dieth or taketh a wife this remainder limited to the right heires or to the wife of B. is void for it were void if it had been limited in possession And 72 H. 8. intended to restore the good and the ancient common law and not to give more priviledge
entry the first livery is made void and there is no perticular estate continuing whereof a remainer may depend If a man devise his Lands to his wife for her life upon condition that if she marrie that then the Land shall remaine to F. M. in taile this is a good remainder for the construction of this demise is to make the same condition to be a limitation and not a condition and upon a limitation or determination of a perticular estate which is taken and not uncertaine a remainder clearely may well depend As if a Lease be made for life upon condition that if the Lessee die the remainder to a stranger that is a good remainder because it commenceth upon the determination of an estate which is certaine and not uncertaine for every man must die and every terme must end and therefore it is no condition but a limitation or appointment when the terme shall commence If I make a Lease for life upon condition that if the Lessee doth such an act he shall have fee and he doth it accordingly there he shall have Fee because he is privie to the condition and therefore shall take the benefit thereof A Lease made for yeares if the Lessee shall so long live which is a word conditionall and doth precede the remainder therefore the remainder which doth commence upon a condition is voide Plowden fo 25. But if I make a Lease for life upon condition that if the Lessee doth such an act that then hee shall have Fee and he doth it accordingly there he shall have fee because he is privie to the condition Lessee for five yeares upon condition that if he pay me twenty pounds within two yeares he shall have fee the Fee passeth forth of the lessor forthwith Lessee for yeares upon condition that if I. S. marry my daughter during the estate for life that then it shall remaine unto him this is a good remainder and yet it doth commence upon condition for there is an estate whereupon a remainder may be founded and the condition doth not tr●nch to the destruction of the particular estate If I make a lease for yeares the remainder for life upon condition that if he in remainder doth not such an act that the remainder shall be void Now before the condition is broken the remainder is good and in him to whom it is appointed but if the condition be broken then the remainder is out of him and in the person of lessor again Lessee for life the remainder to A his wife for her life if she live so long sole and unmarried the remainder to D. their Son for his life the remainder to D. is good though it commence upon a condition because the particular estate continueth and the condition goeth not to the destruction of the particular estate and the first remainder doth vest during the particular estate which maketh the latter to be good though it commence upon the condition But quaere whether the 2. remainder shall begin upon her marriage or death WHen a particular estate which doth support a remainder may determine before the remainder may commence there the remainder doth not vest forthwith but dependeth in contingency Contingent Remainders Vid. fol. 29. As if one make a Lease to I S. for life and after the death of I D. the remainder to another in Fee this remainder dependeth in contingency for if I S die before I D. the particular estate is determined before the remainder can commence So if a Lease be made to A for life and if B die before A that then it shall remaine to C for life this is a good remainder upon contingent if A survive B A Lease is made to one for life the remainder to the right heires of I S. this remainder is good upon contingent that is if lessee for life survive I. S. or else not A lease to A. for life the remainder to B for life if B. dy before A. the remainder to C for life this is a good remainder on contigent if A survive B Plowden Colethirst and Beiushin H. leased to I. for the life of I. after the death of H. to I and his heires this is a good remainder upon contingent for if H. die living I. then the remainder is good but if H. survive I. then the remainder is voide WHen a remainder is limited to take effect by doing of an act which act shall be the determination of the particular estate yet if the act depend upon a casualty and meere incertainty whether it shall happen or not there the remainder vesteth not forthwith but dependeth in contingency Vide fo 51. a good note if a man make a Feoffment to the use of B until C. shal come from Rome into England after from such coming to remain over in fee this remainder dependeth in contingency for it is uncertain whether I. will ever come into England or not and a remainder ought to commence in possession when the particular estate endeth as well in Wils as in grants for there may not be a mean time between them And every remainder contingent ought to vest either during the particular estate or eo instante Contingent remainder that it determineth for if the particular estate be ended or determined in deed or in Law before the contingency happen then the remainder is void As for example Fr. Archarde was seised of lands in fee holden in Socage and by his will in writing devised the Land to Ro. Archarde the father for his life and after to the next heire male of Robert and to the heires males of the body of such next heir male Ro. hath issue Jo. Fr. dieth Ro. enffeoffeth Ren. with warranty upon whom J. entreth and Ren reenters and then Ro. dyeth the right heir male of Robort may not enter for the forfeiture in the life of Robert for hee may not be heire as long as Robert liveth Note that By the Feoffment of tenent for life the remainder is destroyed for by the Feofment of Ro. his estate for life was determined by condition in law therunto annexed and that may not be revived afterwards by any possibility therfore the contingent remainder destroyed So if Tenant for life the remainder to the right heirs of I S be disseised and the disseisor levies a fine at the common Law the right heir of I S shall be bound But in the former case if the tenant for life had been disseised and died yet the remainder is good for the particular estate remaineth in right and might have been revested but not in this case Archers case prima pars Lo. Coke Remanere definitio Remanere dicitur quasi terra remanens A remainder is that which passeth forth of the Lessor at the time of the perticular estate made Reversionis definitio A reversion is that which is left in him that made the perticular estate reversion is derived of this word revertor so
M. and of his heires for ever And as for and concerning the said Mannor of c. Vses raised for payment of debts and performance of his last Will. to the use of F. M. for life and then to daughters for portions in such manner as is next before limited And from and after such time as the said severall summes of c. shall or may be had levyed or taken then to the use and behoofe of the Executors and Administrators of the said F. M. for and during the terme of ten yeares then next following for and towards the payment of the debts of the said F. M. the father and for and towards the performance of his last Will Testament and from and after the end of the said terme of 10. yeares then to the use and behoofe of the said E. M. for his life without c. and so on with an intaile et supra Reddendo reservando A rent must be reserved out of Lands or tenements whereunto the Lessor may have resort or recourse to distrain therfore a rent cannot be reserved by a common person out of any incorporeall inheritance as advowsons commons Offices corody multure of a Mill. Reservations of Rent with all incidents belonging thereunto and how tenant in taile must reserve the rent upon his Lease A Man makes a Lease the first of October for ten yeares from the feast of St. Michael then last past yeilding to him and his heires 20. pounds at Michaelmas or within one month after in this case if the lesser die between the feast of St. Mic. and the end of the month the heir shall have the rent as incident to the reversion and not the executors as rent behind because it was not due till the end of the Month. And so if the Lessor betweene the said two daies had granted the reversion over and the Tenant attorne the Grantee shall have the rent as incident to the reversion Tithes Faires Markets Liberties Priviledges Franchises and the like But if the lease be made of them for years by deed it may be good by way of contract to have an action of debts but distrain the lessors cannot neither shall it passe with the grant of the reversion for that it is no rent incident to the reversion but if any grant be reserved in such case upon a lease for life it is utterly void because in that case no action of debt lieth But if a man deviseth the vesture or herbage of his land he may reserve a rent for that the thing is maynorable and the lessor may distraine the cattle upon the land a reversion or remainder of Lands or Tenants may he granted reserving a rent for the apparent possibility that it may come in possession they are tenements within the words of Litleton Vide fo 44. A man makes a Lease for yeares yeilding a yearly rent at the feast of Pasch or a month after with condition of re-entry and the Lessee tenders the rent at the last instant of the day of the feast of Pasch The Lessor in the case may not re-enter upon demand made the last instant of the month because the Lessee hath liberty to pay it then and the diversity was taken between the disjunctive reservation and when the reservation is at a certain feast and a condition is added that if it bee behind by the space of a month after the feast that then the Lessor shall re-enter there the lessee for the salvation of his Lease may not tender it at the last instant of the Feast day because he hath not such liberty and election as in the other case and it was resolved by all the Justices that in the said case of the disjunctive reservation if the lessor dy between the said two daies the heire shall have the rent and not the Executor A man leased certain lands for years yeilding yearly a rent of thirty pounds at Michaelmas and the Anuntiation or within 12. daies after every of the said feasts payable at the Fontstone in the Temple Church London upon condition that if the said rent of 30 l. or any part thereof be behind and unpaid by the aforesaid space of twelve daies next after any of the aforesaid Feasts or daies of payment thereof as is aforesaid therof as is aforeraid that then the said Lease shall be voide and it was adjudged that the lessee in safegard of his Lease shall have 12. daies after the 12. daies to pay the rent for when the rent is not paid at the first day it is as much as if it had been reserved upon the twelfth day after And where it is said per perdictum spacium 12 dierum post c. by good construction all the words ought to take effect viz. post aliquod festorum praedict seu dierum solutionis inde and dies solutionis is the 12. day after the feast and therefore the Lessee shall have 12. daies after the twelfth day which is dies solutionis post festum c. and that for the most a vaile of the Lessee for whose benefit over time was given and those words praedictum spatium 12. dierum standeth well in good sence viz. post praedictum spacium 12. dierum post praedictos 12. dies for that is praedictum spacium though it hath not the same commencement a the other hath And so the quere in 3. and 4. P. M. fo 142. well resolved Dier A Parson of a rectory made a lease for yeares rendant rent at Michaelmas or within a month after The Lessor died ten daies after Michaelmas and was barred by judgement of the Court because the lessor died before the rent was due Dame Eliz. Pawlet seised of the Mannor of Wade for her life by Deed indented demised the Mannor to William Pawlet for 99. yeares if she the said Dame Eliz did so long live yeilding the rent of 100. pounds at Michaelmas and Pasch or within 40. daies after either of the said feasts W. Pawlet made Dulcibel his wife Executrix and died Dulcibel took to husband Iohn More Esq Dame El. Pawlet made Edward Walgrove her Executor died the thirteenth day after Michaelmas her Executor brought an Action of Debt for the halfe yeares rent ended at the Feast before the death of the said Eliz. tota Cu●ia contra quaerentem Yeilding and paying therefore yearly during the said terme unto the said c. the yearely rent or sum of a 100. pounds Rent reserved to be paid of the thing demised and without any demand of the rents so note that by speciall consent of the parties a reentry may be for default of payment of rent without demand thereof Nomine penae forfeited for non-payment of rent without any demande made at two tearmes or Feasts in the yeare most usuall by equall portions the first payment therof to begin at the Feast c. next ensuing the date hereof the same payments to be made yearely at or in
owne Child Attainders which give Escheat Attainder by Verdict Confession Outlawry Abjuration but upon either of them judgment must be given Forfeiture of Goods and Chattels Going beyond the Sea without license Exigent awarded in Felony though he yeild his body thereupon Clergy in Felony standing mute in Felony Felo de se Flying for Felony though he returne and be tryed and found not guilty These bring a forfeiture of all a mans Goods and Chattels as well reall as personall Attainder to what time it shal relate for the forfeiture of Lands and Goods Forfeiture He that is attainted of Felony by Verdict Confession or Outlawry doth forfeit all the Lands he had at the time of the offence committed so that he can do no Act afterward to encumber the Land If Tenant in taile be attainted of high Treason he shall forfeit for no longer time then for his owne life If a man have an Estate for life of himselfe or of another do commit Treason or Felony the whole Estate is forfeited to the King but no escheat to the Lord. But a Copyhold of Fees as for life is forfeited to the Lord and not to the Crowne and if it be entailed Forfeiture by a Copy-holder the Lord is to have it during the life of the Offender and then his Heire is to have it A man attainted may purchase Pardon Corruption of blood but it shall be to the Kings use untill the party be pardoned yet the pardon giveth not back their Lands or Goods without a speciall Patent of Restitution which cannot restore the blood without an Act of Parliament So if a man hath a Son and then is attainted of Felony and pardoned and then purchaseth Land and then hath issue another Son and dieth the Son he had before the pardon though he be his eldest Son and the Patent have words of restitution to his Lands yet he shall not inherit them but the second Son shall inherit them because the blood is corrupted by the Attainder and cannot be restored by Patent alone but by Act of Parliament And if a man hath two Sonnes Where a man shall be said to dye without Heire although he have one and the eldest is attainted in the life of his Father and dieth without issue living the Father the second Son shall inherite the Fathers Lands but if the eldest Son have any Issue though he dye in the life of his Father then neither the second Son nor the Issue of the eldest shall inherit the Fathers Land but the Father shall be there accounted to dye without Heire and the Land shall escheat whether the eldest Son hath issue or not though he be pardoned after the death of his Father Note that the Heires procreate after the Attainder shall not inherite the Lands of his Father nor of his Mother But the Heires begotten before the Attainder shall inherit the Lands of that Father and of that Mother which was not attainted but the Lands of his Father attainted or of his Mother which is attainted he shall not inherit although the King hath pardoned the Attainder The operation and effect of a pardon For a pardon doth but onely cleare the corruption of the bloud of these children which be borne after the pardon and so to make them capeable to inherit such lands which their Ancestor shall purchase at the time of the pardon or any time after but not to inherit such lands as the Ancestor was seised of before nor to purge the bloud of those children begotten before the pardon as to make them inheritable to any Ancestor Alien and Denizen A man seised of lands in Fee hath issue an Alien borne out of the Kings Leigeance he cannot be heire Propter defectum subjectionis though he be born within lawfull marriage if made Denizen by the Kings Letters patents yet cannot he inherit to his father or any other but otherwise it is if he be naturalized by act of Parliament for then he is not accounted in law Alienigena but Indigena but after one is made Denizen the issue that hee hath afterwards shall be heire to him but no issue that he had before If an Alien come into England and hath issue two sons these two sons Indigenae subjects borne because borne within the Realme and yet if one of them purchase land in Fee and dieth without issue his brother shall not be his heire for there was never any inheritable bloud between the Father and them and where the sons by no possibility can be heire to the Father the one of them shall not be heire to the other An Alien that is naturalized by Act of Parliament is to all intents and purposes as a naturall born subject differs much from denization by Letters patents for if he had issue in England before his denization that issue is not inheritable to his father but if his father be naturalized by Parliament such issue shall inherit so if an issue of an English man be born beyond Sea if the issue be naturalized by act of Parliament he shall inherit his fathers land but if he be made denizen by Letters Patents he shall not and many other differences there are between them An Alien borne out of the Kings leigeance his ancestors not being of the faith and leigeance of England is neither heire to inherit nor to purchase within this realme yet the Lord shall not have the escheate because he died without heire but the King which is the supreame head and the supreame person shall have this Land by the common Law But an Alien borne out of the Realme and within the Legiance of the King his Father and Mother being then and all their live of the legiance of the King shall inherit by the common Law Infants borne out of the Kings legiance the father and mother at the time of the birth being leigemen of England shall inherit by the Statute of 25 E. 3. so that the mothers of the children pass the Sea with the husbands leave and consent this statute extendeth all to children whose fathers and mothers were dwelling in England If an Alien marry here an english woman and hath issue this issue shall inherit to the wife the same law where the husband an English-man marry a woman that is an Alien and hath issue he shall inherit his father All which said trusts every one of them the said A. B. C. D. for himselfe severally and respectively Covenant severall no joynt covenant and for his severall and respective heire Executors and Administrators for as much as shall concerne him or them and his or their said heires Executors or Administrators c. doth covenant c. And the said A. B. C. D. do severally and respectively that is to say either of them for himselfe and by himselfe his severall heires Executor When Covenants are severall they are as severall Deeds written in one Parchment Coke 5. part fo 23.
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
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
good of such Leases by the said Statute there are nine things necessary to be observed belonging to them all and some other to some of them in particular 1. The Lease must be made by Deed indented 2. He must be made to begin from the day of the making or from the making thereof 3. If there be an old Lease in being it must be surrendred or expired or ended within a year of the making of the Lease and the surrender must be absolute and not conditionall 4. There must not be a double Lease in being at one time As if a Lease for years be made according to the Statute he in the Reversion cannot expulse the Lessee and make a Lease for life or lives according to the Statute nor e converso for the words of the Statute be to make a Lease for three lives or one and twenty yeares so as the one or the other may be made and not both 5. It must not exceed three lives or one and twenty yeares from the making of it but it may be for a Lesser terme or fewer lives 6. It must be of Lands Tenements or Hereditaments maynorable or corporeall which are necessary to be letten and whereunto a Rent by Law may be reserved and not of things that lye in Grant as Advowsons Faires Markets Franchises and the like out whereof a Rent cannot be reserved 7. It must be of Lands or Tenements which have been most commonly letten by the space of twenty years next before the Lease made so as if it be letten for eleven yeares at one or severall times within those twenty yeares it is sufficient A Grant by Copy of Court Roll in fee for life or yeares is a good letting to farme within this Statute for he is but Tenant at will Secund. Cons Manerii And so it is of a Lease at will by the Common Law But those lettings to Farme must be made by some seised of an Estate of inheritance and not by a Guardian in Chivalry Tenant by Gurtesie Tenant in Dower or the like 8. That upon every such Lease there be reserved yearely during the said Lease due and payable to the Lessors their Heirs and Successors c. so much yearly Farme or Rent as hath been most accustomably yeilded and paid for the Land within twenty yeares before such Lease made Hereby first it appeareth that nothing can be demised by authority of this Act but that whereon a Rent may be lawfully reserved Secondly that where not only a yearly Rent was formerly reserved but things not annuall as Herriots or any Fine or other profit at or upon the death of the farmor yet if the yearly rent be reserved upon a Lease made by force of this Statute it sufficeth by the expresse words of the Act And if twenty acres of land have been accustomably letten and a Lease is made of these twenty and one acre which was not accustomably letten reserving the customably yearely rent and so much more as exceeds the value of the other acre this Lease is not warrantably letten and the rent issueth out of the whole If Tenant in taile let part of the land accustomably letten and reserve a rent pro rat or more this is good for that is in substance the accustomable Rent If two Coparceners be Tenant in taile of 20. acres every one of equall value and usually letten and they make partition so as each have ten acres they may make Leases of their severall parts each of them reserving the halfe of the accustomable rent If the usuall Rent had been payable at foure dayes or Feasts of the yeare yet if it be reserved yearly payable at one Feast it is sufficient for the words of the Statute be reserved yearely Ninthly nor to any Lease to be made without impeachment of Waste therefore if a Lease be made for life the Remainder for life c. this is not Warranted by the Statute because it is dispunishable for VVaste but if a Lease be made to one during three lives this is good for the Occupant if any happen shall be punished for VVaste the words of the Statute be seised in the right of his Church yet if a Bishop that is seised in jure Episcopatus A Deane of his sole possessions in jure Decanatus An Arch-deacon in jure Archidiaconatus A Prebendary and the life are within the Statute for every of them is generally seised in jure Ecclesiae All Grants Feoffments Leases and other Conveyances or Estates to any Master or Fellowes of a Colledge Deane and Chapiter Master or Guardian of an Hospitall Parson Vicar c. other then for one and twenty yeares or three lives from the time of such Lease or Grant reserving the accustomable yearely rent yearly payable shall be meerly void 18 Eliz cap. 11. All Leases made by such persons as 13 Eliz. cap. 10. before where another Lease for yeares is in being not to be expired surrendred or ended within three years next after the making of such new Lease shall be void All Bonds and Covenants for renewing or making of any Lease contrary hereunto or to 13 Eliz. cap. 10. before shall be void But a Parson and Vicar are excepted out of the Statute of 32 H. 8. and therefore if either of them make a Lease for three lives c. of lands usually letten reserving the usuall rent it must be also confirmed by the Patron and Ordinary because it is excepted out of 32 H. 8. and not restrained by the Statute of 1. or 13 Eliz. and what hath been said concerning a Lease for three lives doth hold for a Lease of one and twenty yeares Now to speak somewhat of the disabling Statutes of 1. and 13 Eliz. the words of the exception out of the restraint and disability of 1 Eliz. are Notes of things well and duty to be observed other then for the terme of one and twenty years or three lives from such time as any Grant or assurance shall be given whereupon the old and accustomed yearely rent or more shall be reserved And to that effect is the exception in the Statute of 13 Eliz. First it is to be understood that neither of these nor any other do in any sort alter or change the enabling Statute of 32 H. 8● but leaveth it for a patterne in many things for Lease to be made for others Secondly it is to bee knowne that no lease made according to exceptation of 1 Eliz and 13. Eliz. and not warranted by the Statute of 32 H. 8. if it be made by a Bishop or any sole Corporation but it must be confirmed by the Deanes and Chapiters or others that have interest as hath been said in the case of the Parson and Vicar but examples do illustrate If a Bishop make a Lease for one and twenty yeares and all these yeares being spent saving three or more yet may the Bishop make a new Lease to another for one and twenty yeares to begin from the making
Administration of the goods at this day to the Wife if she require it or children or next of kin if they refuse it as often they doe because the debts are greater then the estate will beare then some Creditors or some other will take it as the Bishops Officers shall think meet It groweth often in question what Bishop shall have the right of proving Wills and granting Administration of Goods In which Controversie the rule is thus That if the party dead had at the time of his death Bona notabilia in divers Diocesses of some reasonable value the Arch-bishop of the Province where he died is to have the approbation of his Will and grant the Administration of his Goods as the case falleth out otherwise the Bishop of the Diocesse is to do it If there be but one Executor made yet he may refuse the Executorship coming before the Bishop so that he hath not intermeddled with any of the Goods before or with receiving Debts or paying Legacies And if there be more Executors then one so many as list may refuse and if any one take it upon him the rest that did once refuse may when they will take it upon them no executor shal be further charged with Debts or legacies then the value of the goods come to his hands So that he foresee that he pay Debts upon Record Debts to the King Then upon Judgments Statutes Recognizances then Debts by Bond and Bill sealed Rent unpaid Servants Wages payment to head-workmen and lastly Shop-books and Contracts by word for if an Executor or Administrator pay Debts to others before to the King or Debts due by Bond before those due by Record or Debts by Shop-book and Contracts before those by Bond Arrearages of rent and Servants Wages he shall pay the same over againe to these others in the said degrees But yet the law giveth them choice that where divers have debts due in equall degree of record or specialty he may pay which of them he will before any Suit be brought against him but if Suit be brought he must first pay them that get Judgment against him Any one Executor may convey the Goods or release Debts without his Companion and any one by himselfe may do as much as all together But one mans releasing of Debts or selling of Goods shall not charge the other to pay so much of the Goods if there be not enough to pay debts but it shall charge the party himself that did so release or convey But it is not so with Administrators for they have but one Authority given them by the Bishop over the Goods which Authority being given to many is to be executed by all of them joyned together And if an Executor dye making an Executor the second Executor is Executor to the first Testator But if an Administrator die intestate then his Administrator shall not be Executor to the first But in that case the Bishop whom we call the Ordinarie is to commit the Administration of the first Testators Goods to his Wife or next of kin as if he had died intestate Alwaies provided that that which the Executor did in his life time is to be allowed for good And so if an Administrator die and make his Executor the Executor of the Administrator shall not be Executor to the first Intestate but the Ordinarie must new commit the Administration of the Goods of the first Intestate Again if the Exetutor or Administrator pay Debts or Funeralls or Legacies of his owne money he may retaine so much of the Goods in kind of the Testator or Intestate and shall have property of it in kind Legacy PRoperty by legacie is where a man maketh a Will and Executors and giveth legacies he or they to whom the Legacies are given must have the assent of the Executors or of one of them to have his Legacy and the property of that Lease or other Goods bequeathed unto him is said to be in him but he may not enter nor take his legacy without the assent of the Executors or of one of them because the Executors are charged to pay debts before legacies And if one of them assent to pay legacies he shall pay the value thereof of his own purse But this is to be understood by debts of Record to the King or by Bill and Bond sealed or Arrearages of Rent or Servants or Work-mens Wages and not debts of Shop-books or Bills unsealed or Contract by word for before them legacies are to be paid And if the Executors doubt that they shall not have enough to pay every legacy they may pay which they please first but they may not sell any speciall legacie which they will to pay debts or a lease of goods to pay a money legacy But they may sell any legacie which they will to pay debts if they have not enough besides If a man make a Will and make no Executor or if the Executors refuse the Ordinary is to commit Administration cum Testamento annexo and take Bonds of the Administrators to performe the Will and he is to do it in such sort as the Executor should have done if he had been named A Lease was made to one William Cecill for the terme of one and forty yeares if he so long live and if he dye within the terme aforesaid Remainder void fol. 56. then E. the wife of the said W. should have and hold all the said Premisses for the residue of the said terme if she so long live and if she die within the same terme then W. Cecill Son of the said W. Cecill should have and hold all the Premisses for the residue of the terme aforesaid unexpired By Catelin and Dier the Remainders are all void because that the terme is determinable on the life of W. Cecill so the residue of the said terme may not remaine Dyer fol. 253. Releases AS a Release of Suits is more large and beneficiall then a Release of Querela's or of Actions so a Release of demands is more large and beneficial then any of them for thereby is released all that which are released by the others and more By a release of all Demands all Free-holds and Inheritances Executory are released as Rents and the like by a Release of all Demands all Executions are released by a Release of all Demands to the Disseisor the right of entry to the land and all which is contained within it is released So it is resolved in Chamies case 34 H. 8 titulo Release that he which releaseth all Demands excludeth himself of all Actions Entries and Seisures Littleton holdeth cap. Garranties 80. 170. That if Tenant in taile enfeoff his Uncle who enfeoffs another in fee with Warranty if after the Feoffee by his Deed release to his Uncle all manner of Warranties or all manner of Covenants reall or all manner of Demands by such Release the Warranty which is a Covenant reall and executory is extinct And the reason of all that was
said to be a rent may in any wise be reserved to a stranger which is not privie to the Lease or Deed. Also nothing which goeth in privity as conditions entries or re-entries for conditions or such like which are given by the law to privies onely may not be limited or granted to others which are strangers by the common Law and therefore if a Lease bee made for yeares rendant rent and upon condition of non payment that it shall remaine to a stranger and livery and seisin is made accordingly that is a void a remainder which commenceth upon a repugnancy precedent and which dependeth upon a condition which goeth in destruction of the perticular estate and especially where such a remainder is created by lease or grant Vpon and by the limitation of a devise or limitation of an use a remainder may commence upon a condition that goeth to the destruction of the perticular estate But by limitation of a devise or limitation of use such a remainder is good as a Feoffement made to the use of I. S. for yeares and upon non payment by him of such a summe that it shall remaine to I. D. for life c. this is a good remainder so it is where the remainder is created by the limitation of a last Will. As if a man devise his land to his wife for her life upon condition that if she marry that the Land shall remaine to F. M. in taile that is a good remainder for the construction of this devise is to make the same condition to be a limitation and not any condition And upon a limitation or determination of a perticular estate which is certaine or not uncertaine a remainder clearely may well depend As if a Lease be made for life upon condition that if the Lessee die it shall remaine to a stranger that is a good remainder A remain● by a limitation of an use may commence or depend upon any condition and one feesimple may depend upon another by way of use Where one hath an Office of charge as to be Steward Officers Stewards Bayliffs c. Bayliffe Parker c. the grantor may out them and pay their Fee if the Fee bee only certaine but not where they have profits of Court 34 H. 8. titulo 243 Kitchin fo 143 a. Stewardship Parker It was agreed that the Owner of Parke may dispark the Park notwithstanding a grant of the said Office the Office of Steward was granted to one for life with a Fee of forty shillings for the execution thereof if the Lord discharge him yet hee shall have the Fee But if the grant be to him to be taken out of the issues and profits of the Court the Lord may not discharge him 1 S. E. 4. 8. And if a Parker for life which hath a Fee for the exercising of the Office is discharged of his Office yet he shall have the Fee for it is but an Office of charge but if the Parker hath the Office for life and hath Windfalls Deer-skins and such like he may not be expulsed from his Office and of such Office hee may have an Affize Brook 134. 38 H. 8. whereby I conceive that where the Steward hath a cetaine Fee for execution of his Office yet if he hath other profit incident to his Office as Fees for entries of Plaints making of grants by Copie taking of surrenders and admittances of Copy tenants and such like the Lord cannot remove the Steward Officers that have no other profits but a Collaterall certaine fee there the grantor may discharge him As to be a Bayliffe Receivor Surveior Auditor or the like the exercise whereof is but labour and charge to him but hee must have his Fee for the maine rule of the Law is that no man can frustrate or derogate from his owne grant to the prejuice of the Grantee And where albeit the Grantee hath no other profit but his Fee yet that fee is to be taken out of the profits appertaining to the Lord within his Office for there the grantor cannot discharge him of his service or attendance for that may turne to the prejudice of the grantee if the Grantor will not grant the Office at all but in all cases where the Officer relinquisheth his Office and refuseth to attend he loseth his Office Fee profits and all There are three causes of the forfeiture of an Office as the Office of a Steward Parker Wood-ward and such like viz. Abuser non-user and refuser vide Coke 8 pars the County of Rutlands Case fo 55. 9 pars County of Salops Case fo 49. for in all cases when an Officer upon request doth refuse to execute his Office that is a forfeiture as if the Steward of a Mannor upon the Lords request to hold a Court refuse to do it this is a forfeiture There is another diversity where the Grantee besides his certaine Fee hath profits and availes besides his Office there the Grantor cannot discharge him of his service or attendance as if a man doth grant to another the Office of the steward-ship of his Court or of his Mannors with a certaine fee the Grantor cannot discharge him of his Office service or attendance because he hath other profits and fees belonging to his Office Parker If a Parker kill any deere without warrant or cut any Trees Woods or Vnder-woods and convert them to his owne use it is a forfeitute of his Office Parker for life may not assigne his Office to another because it is an Office of trust but otherwise it is if hee bee Parker in Fee Plow fo 379. and so for a Steward as I conceive without words in the Patent to make a deputy There is a condition in Law annexed to every Office of trust as to the Office of Steward or Parker and such like viz. that the Parker shall keep well the game and shall do all things pertaining to the Office of Parker and so for steward c. A parker kept not his Parke such a day by reason whereof the Deere were killed by unknowne persons this is a forfeiture of his Office A Parker is not holden to keep his Parke in Festivall dayes for he ought to be at divine service nor in the night nor to keep the Parke with 6 or 8. men vide 2 H. 7. 8. that in Assize of Office it was said by the reporter and not denied that if the Office of Parker be granted if he doth not keep the Parke or if he destroy the Deer that is a forfeiture of his Office if a Forrester or Parker cut or fall Woods unlesse it be for necessary bruse for the Deere this is a forfeiture of their Offices for the destruction of vert is the destruction of venison If a man hath a lease for yeares Grants in toto and grants to another all his tearme that shall bee to come at the time of his death that grant is void because he would retaine the terme
during his life If a rent be granted to one for life by deed and willeth that the Grantee and his heires distraine in the Lands charged for the same rent the grantee hath in this case fee-simple in the rent and not estate for life for the distresse is the creation of the rent-charge and therefore the limitation and creation of the rent-charge shall enure according to the effect and limitation of the distresse for therein he retaineth it for a terme which is as long as he hath in the Land and therefore hath not any certainty that terme will ever commence and therefore the grant void And where Lessee for yeares without any habendum granteth to another all his tearme which shall be to come at the time of his death shall be all void A Termor reciting by Indenture his terme and lease granted all his terme estate and interest to another habendum sibi assign suis immediate post mortem ipsius the Grantor and the case was ruled and adjudged that the habendum was void and the premises of the grant good to make the whole terme to passe forthwith Dier fo 272. If I have a rent in Fee if I grant it to another and stay there this is a grant for life but if I goe further and say habendum after the death of I. S. there all shall be void vide fo 2. If tenant for yeares of land grant out of that a rent-charge to another for the life of the Grantee the grantee shall not have a state of Frank-tenement because he cannot have a stare of Frank-tenement derived out of a Chattel reall but he shall have the rent during all the yeares if the Grantee so long shall live Plowden fo 525. If I have a rent in fee and grant it to another post mortem I. S. this grant is void for the nature of a grant is that the thing ought to passe forthwith If a man make a lease for yeares and afterwards the lessor grants a rent charge out of the Land that grant shall charge the reversion And this proveth that the Land and the reversion are nor two distinct things but that in the reversion the Land is contained Plowden fo 173. The Abbot leased land for life and afterward leased the reversion to have the Land from Michaelmas next after the first Lease ended by death surrender or forfeiture for 21. yeares this is a good Lease Plowden fo 146. A grant of a reversion Habendum the said reversion after the end and expiration of the Tenant for life Attornement needdes for sixty yeares this is a good grant without Attornement If I make a Lease to one for life and afterwards I grant the reversion to another habendum from the Feast of St. Michael next ensuing to him and his heires this grant is void because that no franke-tenement be it in possession reversion or remainder may be limited to commence at a day to come If I have a rent in Fee I may not grant it to commence in futuro or at a day to come but if I have land I may grant a new rent out of it to commence at a day to come for there I shall not have any particular estate in the meane for it was not in esse before but doth commence of new and therefore I may appoint it to commence when I will Pertinentiis A man makes a Feoffement of a house cum pertinent nothing passeth by these words cum pertinentiis but the Garden Curtilage and close adjoyning to the house and whereupon the house is built and no other Land though other Lands have been occupied with the house A man leased a house cum pertin no land passeth by these word but otherwise it is where a man leaseth a house cum omnibus terris eidem partin there the lands therewithall used doe passe If a man makes a Feoffement of a house ac omnes terras tenementa heriditamenta eidem messuagio pertin aut cum eodem occupata locata aut dimissa existent hereby the land used with the house doth pass Tenant in taile and the Lessee shall acknowledge the Tenements to be the right of one A stranger Lease by fine to bind Tenant in Taile and his issue and that A. shall grant and render by the same fine to the Lessee for 60. yeares the remainder to the Lessor and his heires and it was with proclamations which shall bind the taile after proclamation made If Tenant in taile make a Feoffement and a common recovery is had against the Feoffee Recovery the best to barr estates taile and remainders who voucheth tenant for taile who voucheth over c. there the tail shall be barred because that he when he commeth in as vouchee shall bee in the degree of tenent in taile and the recompence in value which he hath or may have shall goe in taile and therefore such manner of recovery is best and the surest way to barr the taile and all the remainders and the reversion also If A. be tenant in taile the remainder to B. in taile the remainder to C. in taile the remainder to B. in Fee A makes a Feoffement the Feoffees suffer a common recovery wherein B. is vouched he over the common vouchee In this case A. is not bound but B. and all the remainders over are barred For although that by the Feoffment of A. all the remainders were discontinued and the estates that B.C.D. had converted into meere rights and though the remainders may never be remitted before the estate taile in possession be recontinued yet in case of a common recovery which is the common assurance of the Land he that commeth in as vouchee shall bee in judgement of Law in privity of estate which he over had though the precedent estate wherupon the state of the vouchee dependeth be devested or discontinued Coke 3 pars fo 60. Tenement is a large word Tenement and Hereditament to passe not onely lands and other inheritances which are holden but also Officers Rents Commons Profits apprender our of lands and the like wherein a man hath any Frankenement and whereof he is seised ut de libero tenemento but an Hereditament is the largest word of all in that kind for whatsoever may be inherited is an hereditant be it corporeall or incorporeall reall or personall or mixt Vesturam terrae If a man hath twenty Acres of Lands and by Deed granteth to another and his heires Vesturam terrae and maketh Livery secundum formam chartae the Land it selfe shall not passe because he hath a particular right in the land for thereby he shall not have the houses timber trees and other reall things parcell of the inheritance but he shall have the vesture of the Land that is the Corne Grasse and Vnder-wood Sweepage and the like and shall have trespasse quare clausam fregit Herbagium terrae If a man grant herbagium terrae he hath a
it is if a man make a Feoffment in Fee upon condition that the Feoffee shall not take the profits of the Lands this condition is repugnant and against law and the estate is absolute But a Bond with condition that the Feoffee shall not take the profits is good If a man bee bound with a condition to enfeoffe his wife the condition is repugnant void and against law because it is against a Maxime in Law and yet the Bond is good Deeds suspitions to be forged Yet before anno 13 H. 8. the Deed do stile the King Defender of the Faith or Supream head before the 20. H. 8. such a Deed is a forged Deed. King H. 8. used not the stile of Supreame head in his Charters till 22. of his Raigne nor King of Ireland before 33. of his Raigne New Littleton fo 7. Age to bind man or woman 21. yeares is the full age for man or woman to make good any act they doe 14. their age of discretion and therefore that is the competent age to bind a man in matter of marriage 12. to bind a woman and 9. to deserve her Dower Remainder No remainder may commence upon any repugnancy or impossibility precedent nor upon any condition that goeth to the destruction of the particular estate for conditions alway enure in a privity so that none shall take advantage of conditions but those which are privies for none shall enter for a condition broken but onely the Feoffor Donor Lessor or their heires and as none shall avoid an estate formerly made by the Breach of a condition but onely the privies so none shall take a new estate by performance of a condition but onely the privies Generall Livery and speciall Livery the difference A generall Livery hath two properties first it is full of charge to the heire for he must find an Office in every County where he hath Land or else he cannot sue a generall Livery and he must sue out his Writ of aetate probanda The second property is it is full of danger first it concludeth the heir for ever after to deny any tenure found in the Office Secondly if Livery be not sued of all and of every parcell which the King ought to have whether it be found in the Office or not found the Livery is void and the King may reseise the Land and be answered of the meane profits so it is if the Office be insufficient or the process wherof the Livery was made be insufficient or the like the King shall re-seise Therefore for the ease of the heire and for avoiding such danger the heire for the most part sueth out a speciall Livery which containeth a beneficiall pardon and saveth the said charges and preventeth the said conclusion and other dangers which being of grace and not of right as the generall Livery is the King may justly take more for a speciall Livery then for a generall but ever with such moderation as the heire may ever goe cheerefully through with it 23 Eliz. 77.28 H. 8. One Mr. Shotbolt was bound in an obligation to one Hickman and in the Obligation he was named John Shotbolt which was mistaken but Mr. Shotbolt well perceiving his misnaming sealed and delivered the Obligation as his Deed and in Debt brought upon this Obligation against him by the name of William Shotbolt alias dictus Johannes Shotbolt he pleaded non est factum and this speciall matter was found by verdict at Guild-hall London and whether he should be charged by this Obligation and plea that was the doubt and the Postea was speciall ut supra and by the opinion of the Justices of the Bench the plantiff shall not recover upon this Verdict but it had been better for him to have brought the Action by the name of John Shotbolt as he is named in the Obligation and then if he appeared therunto and pleaded ut supra non est sactum he should have been concluded by the Obligation v●… 3 H. 6. 34 H. 6. 5 E. 4. this matter well debated similis casus inter Turpin Jaxon viz Ann for Agraes and she sued by her right name nuper dicta Anna. Hillar 18. Rotulo 738. Dier fo 279. An obligation made beyond the Seas may be sued here in England in what place the party will what if it beare date Bourdeaux in France where shall it be sued and answer was made that it may be alleadged in quodam loco vocat Bourdiaux in France in ●slington in the County of Midd. and there it shall be tryed for whether there be such a place in Islington in the County of Midd. or not is not traversable in that case and so the varieties of opinions in our Bookes well reconciled New Littleton 361. b. 6. pars fo 47. Dondales case 32 H. 6. 25. 48. E. 3. 3. 11 H. 6. 16. Mise Mise is a word of Act appropriated onely to a Writ of right so called because both parties have put themselves upon the meere right to be tried by grand Assize or by Battel so as that which in all other actions are called an issue in a Writ of right in that Case is called a Mise A yeare how into how many parts it is divided A quarter of a yeare is 91 daies halfe a yeare is 182 daies a yeare is 365 daies and to the 6. houres the Law hath no regard Diers Abridgement fo 89. this is according to the computation in the Kalender And when a Patron is to present hee hath six months to present according to the computation of the Kalender which is 182. daies before any Lapse shall accrue But a Month according to the computation of the Law for reservation of rents and re-entries for non payment of Rent c. doth account 28. daies to the Month and no more Kings-Silver Note that the fine pro licencia concordandi is that which is called the Kings-Silver or post fine And if the Fine in the Hamper which is commonly endorsed upon the writ of Covenant be 26. shillings 8. pence then alwayes the Kings-Silver or post-fine is halfe as much more as the Fine in the Hamper Suspension If a Lease be made of 10. Acres of Land for yeares reserving rent and after the Lessor enters in 2. Acres the entire rent is thereby suspended for a contract which is entire may not be apportioned but being suspended in part it is suspended in all being destroyed in part is destroyed in the whole and especially as to the Act of the Lessor which doth suspend or extinguish it Suspension A man gives Land in taile or leaseth it for life or yeares rendant rent with condition for default of payment to re-enter there if the Lessee lease part of the Land to the Donor or Lessor or if the Donor or Lessor enter in part of the land he may not re-enter for rent behind after for the condition is suspended in all and a condition
next jure propinquitatis that is by right of representation and by right of propinquity And Littleton meaneth of the right of representation for legally in course of discent he is next of blood inheritable And the issue of C. doth represent the person of C. and if C. had lived he had been legally next of blood And whensoever the Father if he had lived should have inherited his lineall heire by right of representation shall inherit before any other though a Mother be jure propinquitati●… neerer of blood But if there be Father and Son and the Father hath a brother that is Uncle to the Son and the Son purchase lands in fee and die without issue living the Father the Uncle shall have the lands as heire to the Son and not the Father yet the Father is neerer of blood because it is a Maxime in Law that inheritance may lineally descend but not ascend yet if the Son in this case die without issue and the Uncle enter into the land as heire to the Son and after the Uncle dieth without issue living the Father the Father shall have the land as heire to the Uncle and not as heire to his Son for that he cometh to the land by collaterall discent and not by lineall ascent and his Uncle enter into the land for if the Uncle in this case doth not enter into the land then cannot the Father inherit the land for there is another Maxime in Law herein implied That a man that claimeth as heir in Fee-simple to any man by discent must make himself heire to him that was last seised of the actual Freehold and inheritance And if the Uncle in this case doth not enter then had he but a Freehold in Law and no actuall Freehold but the last that was seised of the actuall Freehold was the Son to whom the Father cannot make himself heire And therefore Littleton saith And his Uncle enter into the land as he ought by the Law to make the Father to inherit as heire to the Uncle Note that true it is that the Uncle in this case is heire but not absolutely heire for if after the discent to him the Father hath issue a Son or a Daughter that issue shall enter upon the Uncle And so it is if a man hath issue a Son and a Daughter the Son purchaseth land in fee and dieth without issue the Daughter shall inherit the land but if the Father hath afterward issue a Son this Son shall enter into the land as heire to his brother and if he hath issue a Daughter and no Son she shall be Co-partner with her Sister As he ought by the Law These words as a Key do open the secrets of the Law for hereupon it is concluded that where the Uncle cannot get an actuall possession by entry or otherwise there the Father in this case cannot inherit And therefore if an Advowson be granted to the Son and his Heires and the Son die and this discend to the Uncle and he die before he doth or can present to the Church the Father shall not inherit because he should make himself heire to the Son which he cannot do And so of a rent and the like But if the Uncle had presented to the Church or had Seisin of the rent there the Father should have inherited For Littleton putteth his case of an entry into land But for an example if the Son make a Lease for life and die without issue and the Reversion discend to the Uncle and he die the Reversion shall not discend to the Father because in that case he must make himself heire to the Son If the Father make a Lease for years and the Lessee entreth and the Father dieth the eldest Son dieth before entry or receipt of the rent the younger Son of the half blood shall not inherit but the Sister because the possession of the Lessee for years is the possession of the eldest Son so as he is actually seised of the Frank-tenement and the Inheritance and consequently the Sister of the whole blood is to be heire And so if lands be holden by Knights service and the eldest Son is within age and the Guardian entreth into the lands An so likewise if Guardian in Socage enters But in the case aforesaid if the Father make a lease for life or a gift in tail and dieth and the eldest Son dieth in the life of Tenant for life c. the younger brother of the half blood shall inherit because the Tenant for life or Tenant in tail is seised of the Freehold and the eldest Son had nothing but a Reversion expectant upon the Freehold and therefore the youngest Son shall inherit the land as Heire to his Father who was last seised of the actuall Freehold And albeit a rent had been reserved on the estate for life and the eldest Son had received the rent and died yet it is holden by that the younger brother shall inherit because the seisin of the rent is no actuall seisin of the Freehold of the land but Liber Ass part 2. seemeth to the contrary Ideo quaere He that claimeth Lands Tenements Maxime upon collaterall discent or Hereditaments as collaterall heire to any one must claim from such an one that had an actuall possessession and died actually seised of the Frank-tenement and the inheritance in Fee-simple of those lands which he so claimeth by discent and not from such a one who had but a possession in Law or a reversion in Fees expectant on a Frank-tenement discendible unto him But to the lineall heire it sufficeth that the Ancestor should have been heire if he had lived But if such a collaterall heire claime from a collaterall Ancestor that had a possession in Law by his own purchase or reversion in Fee-simple expectant on a Frank-tenement by his own purchase it is sufficient Actuall possession Note that an actuall possession must be gained either by a mans own act or by the actuall possession of another but if neither by his own act nor by the possession of another he doth gain no more then discendeth unto him then the brother of the half blood shall inherit Possessio quid And this word Possessio is no other but pedis positio and extendeth onely to things whereof a man by his entry or other act may gain an actuall possession for when the eldest Son hath not an actuall possession or if it be such inheritance whereof any possession may not be gained per pedis positionem or by any other act then the inheritance by the Law shall discend to the brother of the half blood As for example The King by his Letters Patents createth a Baron and giveth the Dignity to him and his Heires and he hath issue a Son and a Daughter by one venter and a Son by another venture and dieth the eldest Son dieth without issue To whom shall the dignity discend To the younger Son for it may not be said that the
elder son was in possession of the dignity no more then of his blood for the dignity is inherent to his blood and neither by his own act nor by the act of another hath he gained more actuall possession then by the Law descended to him Coke 3. pars fol. 42. Actuall possession quid Possession in Law quid Here 's jure proprietatis heres jure representationis An actuall possession is when a man entreth in Deed into lands to him discended A possession in Law is when lands be discended to a man and he hath not yet really entred into them nor hath seisin of the rents reserved upon any estate made for life by him from whom he claimeth Every one that is heire unto another is as the eldest Son shall inherit onely before all his brothers Aut heres jure representationis as where the eldest Son dieth in the life of his Father his issue shall inherit before the youngest Son for although the youngest Son be magis propinquus yet jure representationis the issue of the eldest Son shall inherit for he doth represent the person of his Father And even as none may be procreate but of one Father and one Mother and ought to have in him two bloods viz. the blood of his Father and the blood of his Mother those two bloods commix in him by lawfull marriage doth constitute and make him heire So none may be heire to any one unless he hath in him both the bloods of him to whom he shall make himself heire And therefore the heire of the half blood shall not inherit because he wanteth one of the bloods that should make him inheritable for as in this case the blood of the Father and the blood of the Mother make but one blood inheritable and both are necessary to the procreation of an heire therefore desiciente uno non potest esse haeres And this is the reason of the Maxime of Possessio fratris de feodi simplex facis sororem esse haeredem Co. 3. pars Ratcliffs case fo 37. If a man be attainted of felony by judgment the heires begotten after the attainder are foreclosed from all manner of hereditary Succession as well on the part of the Mother as on the part of the Father And Britton gave this reason because the Son procreate after the judgment had not two bloods inheritable in him for at the time of his birth the blood of his Father was corrupt for ex leproso parente leprosus generatur filius And when the Father is attainted of felony the blood in respect of what it shall be inheritable being corrupt the Son as like to it hath not but half blood viz. the blood of the Mother in him without corruption And therefore he holdeth that such a Son shall not inherit his Mother And with him Bracton accordeth for saith he Non valebit felonis generatio nec ad hereditatem paternam vel maternam si autem ante feloniam generationem fecerit talis generatio succedit in hereditatem patris a quo non fuit felonia perpetrata Because that at the time of his birth he had two lawfull bloods commixt in him which may not be corrupt by attainder subsequent but onely as to that Father or that Mother by whom the Felony was done and committed Assise To arraigne an Assise is to cause the Demandant to be called to make the plaint and to set the cause in such order as the Tenant may be inforced to answer thereunto and is derived of the French word Arrayner to order or set in right place and the Assise is Arrained in French and entred in Latine Executed and things executory a difference There is a diversity between Inheritances executed and Inheritances executory As Lands executed by Livery c. cannot by Indentures of Defeasance be defeated afterwards And so if a Disseisee release to a Disseisor it cannot be defeated by Indenturs of Defeasance made afterward but at the time of the Release or Feoffment c. the same may be defeated by Indentures of Defeasance for it is a Maxime in Law Quae in continenti fiunt in esse videntur But Rents Annuities Conditions Warranties and such like that be inheritances executory may be defeated by Defeasance made either at that time or at any time after And so the Law is of Statutes Recognizances Obligations and other things executory Distress for a mercement He that distraineth for an Amercement and such like must be sure to distraine the Goods and Chattels of him that is amerced because he may not distraine another mans beasts for this amercement But for rent or services it is otherwise for the party may distraine the beasts found in the land that are levant and couchant there N. B. fol. 100. B. Distress Damage-feasant And if a man take beasts for Damage-feasant and the other offer sufficient amends he refuse c. Now if he sue a Replevin c. for the beasts he shall recover Damages onely for the Detinue of them and not for the taking for that was lawfull F.N.B. 69. The Lord may seise a Herriot service aswell as a Herriot custome Herriot service Herriot custome may be seised Warde and so it was then adjudged by the whole Court Plow fo 96. Replevin Woodland versus Mantle It was resolved that when the King maketh an heir apparent which in age of a Tenent by Knights service a Kt in the life of his ancestor after the ancestor dieth the said heir within age in this case he shall be out of ward and shall pay no value of his marriage nor the Lord shall have the custody of the Land for in such ease by the making of him Knight in the life of his Ancestor he is made as of full age so that when his Ancestor dieth no interest either in the body or in the land ever vesteth in the Lord. It was also resolved that when the heir within age is made Knight after tender made to him although that he within age marry else where yet he shall not pay the forfeiture of marriage Cok. 6. pars fo 73. Sir Drue Druries case If an infant in the life of his father be made Knight and his Father die he shall be in Ward but otherwise it is where an infant in Ward is made Knight there he shall be out of Ward 2. E 6. tit Garde 42. Magna Char. Cap. 3. Touching the time of the beginnning of a Lease for yeares it is to be observed Commencement of a lease Inclusive exclusive that if a Lease be made by indenture bearing Date the 26. of May c. to have and to hold for 21. yeares from the Date or from the day of the Date it shall begin the 27. day of May. If a Lease beare Date the 26. of May. c. to have and to hold from the making hereof or from henceforth or from the sealing and delivery hereof
there he hath but an estate for life for there want words precedent to direct the words in the disjunctive these words Heires are of the essence of the estate and without them no estate of inheritance shall pass And so by the same reason if a reversion upon a Feoffement in Fee be made to one or his heires such reservation is good no longer but during the life of the Feoffor A. covenants to make a lease to B. and his assignes for 21. yeares the sence of these words shall be taken that he shall make the Lease to B. or his Assignes for 21. yeares Plow Com. fo 289. The defendant bound himselfe by Indenture to pay to the Plantiff a certaine sum if so be that the Defendant did not enfeoffee the plantiffe nor his heires of certain Land when he came to his aunt and the Plantiffe declared that the Defendant came to his aunt and the Plantiffe required him to enfeoffee him and he did not enfeoffee him per quod actio accrevit and exception was taken to this declaration because the condition was in a disjunctive that is to say that the Plantiff should have the sum if the Defendant did not enfeoffee him nor his heires and he hath said that he did not enfeoffe him not speaking of the Feoffment to his heires and if he had performed any of the parts ' of the disjunctive the Plantiffe might not have the debt but the Count was holden very good notwithstanding that exception for the plantiff might not have an heir during his life so that although the condition in words be disjunctive yet forasmuch as the Plantiffe was alive in sence it was not disjunctive for he might not have an heir being alive and the sence of the words are to be taken to enfeoffee the Plantiffe if he be alive if he were dead then to enfeoffee his heires and as the Plantiffe may not have an heire during his life so heere in the case above B. may not have an executor during his life and as the condition there in the disjunctive to enfeoffee at a time to come him or his heirs was taken to enfeoffe him at the time limitted if hee were alive and if he were dead at the time then to his heirs so here the Covenant to make a lease at a time to come to him and his assignes copulatively shall be taken disjunctively in sence that is to say to him if he be alive and to his assignes if he be dead Plow com fo 289. Of uses in esse in futuro A. makes a Feoffment in Fee to the use of D. for life and after to the use of him which shall be his first son in taile and for default of such issue to the use of B. in taile and for default of such issue to the use of C. in fee. In this case forthwith by the Feoffment D. hath estate for life the remainder to B. in taile the remainder to C. in Fee and no estate is put in abeyance or left in the Feoffees but if after A. hath issue a son then the possibility which the Feoffee had becomes to an estate in Law and forthwith the statute of 27. H 8. cap. 10. executeth the possession according to the limitation of the use But if Tenant for life be disseised before the birth of the son and after he hath issue a son now nothing vesteth in the son because there ought to be a use in esse before that the Statute can execute the possession But who shall enter to remoove the impediment and to restore the privity of the estates Surely if the tenant for life shall re-enter hee shall revive all the former estates which the statute of 27 H. 8. hath executed to the former uses in taile and for that also the statute transferreth the estate of the Land to the son in taile for that is the privity which the Statute requireth scil privity of estates which the same statute hath executed upon the lymitation of the uses in the same conveyance before and after the death of tenant for life the Feoffees may enter and revive the use and as lessee for yeares or for life upon condition to have fee may not have increase and inlargement of his estate but upon the privity of the estate of the Lessee so no remainder of a future use may be transferred in estate by force of the Act before the particular estates executed by the statue upon lymitation of uses in the same conveyances be recontinued but if Tenant for life make a Feoffment in fee or dy before the birth of the son his remainder is destroyed as if a Lease be made for life the remainder to the right heires of I. S if lessee for life make a Feoffement or die during the life of I. S. the remainder to the right heires is destroyed and that is the best construction of the statute of 27 H. 8. The chief Baron said that Scintilla juris which is mentioned in 17 Eliz. is like to Sir Tho. Mores Eutopia and they said that after this Statute no trust or confidence was reposed in the Feoffees for now as Walinslow said the Feoffees non possunt agere aut permittere aliquid in prejudice of ceste qu●… use before the Statute the office of the Feoffe was to execute the estate according to the use but now the statute hath taken all Walinslow said even as a fountain giveth to every one that commeth in their time unto it their just measure of water so likewise the first estate and seisin in fee given by the first Feoffment to the feoffees is sufficient to all persons to whom any use present or future is limitted a competent measure of estate in their time proportionable to their estate which they shall have in the use so that the first seisin by force of the Feoffment whereby the fee-simple is given to the Feoffees shall bee sufficient to serve all their particular uses as well future as present in their severall times and nothing shall remaine in the Feoffees but Walinslow said that all the estate shall be first vested in those which are in rerum natura and the possession shall bee vested in him which hath the future use when that commeth in esse by force of the first livery and shall divide the estates which were conjoyned before If a feoffment in fee be made to the use of one for life and after to the use of the right heires of I. S. the fee simple of the land shall be in abeyance and before the Statute if a man had made a feoffment to the use of one for yeares and after to the use of the right heires of I. S. the Fee-simple of the land shall be in abeyance And before the Statute if a man had made a Feoffement to the use of one for yeares and after to the use of the right heires of I. S. this limitation had been good for the Feoffees shall remaine
to some of the neighbours of the towne where the goods were by them safely to be kept and by the opinion of M. Brook tit forfeiture 44. this order ought to be observed concerning the goods of every one which committeth felony untill he be attainted but yet the felon must have reasonable maintenance out of them for himselfe and his family in the meane time Plowden 68. Sur Statute Merchant of the body Lands and Goods Statute Staple of the body Lands and Goods Recognizance Elegit Of the moietie of the Lands and al the goods Executions Of the moiety of the Lands and of all the Goods of the Debitor Capias ad satisfact Of the body only Fieri facias Of the goods only Levare Facias Of the profits of the Lands and Goods Statute Merchant AN execution finall is when the Defendants lands are extended or his goods sold and delivered to the Plantiff who accepting this in satisfaction ends the suit Execution finall quousque An execution with a quousque and not finall is in the case of a Capias ad satisfaciendum where the body is taken to the intent to satisfie the Plantiffe but is no satisfaction but a pledge for the debt Note that the statute Merchant is a bond or obligation of record acknowledged before the Major of London York Bristoll or of other City or before the Bayliffe of any Burrough or Towne or before other persons there to that purpose appointed and it is sealed with the seale of the Debitor and of the King the forme wherof see Wests pre 106. If a Statute Merchant be not sealed by the party non valet 6 R. 2. Fitz. Execution 131. If a man be bound in a Statute Merchant and doe not pay the debt at the day execution shall be done thereof in this manner How the Statute Merchant shall be executed the money being unpaid at the day First the Connusee may come to the Major or other Officer before whom the Statute was acknowledged and pray him to certifie the same into the Chancery under his seale c. and if he will not certifie it then a Writ of Certiorare must be sued forth of the Chancery directed to the said Officer of the place where the Statute was knowledged to certifie the acknowledgement of the same Statute into the petty-bag Office in the Chancery Executions shall be of body and upon the certification a Writ of Execution ss a capias shall goe out against the body only of the Cognisor si laicus sit to take his body and command the Sheriff to keepe him safely in Prison untill he hath agreed for or fully satisfied the debt But the debitor after he is taken hath liberty given him within a quarter of a yeare to sell his lands and goods to discharge his debts and if he do not agree for his said debt within the next quarter Lands and Goods then all his lands and goods shall be delivered by the Sheriff to the Creditors upon a reasonable extent to hold untill the debt be paid and yet neverthelesse the body of the debitor shall remain in Prison untill the debt be paid And this Writ may be returnable into the Court of Common Pleas or into the Kings Bench. But upon the returne by the Sheriff of that Shire to whom the capias was directed quod laicus est non est inventus in Bal. sua then shall go out an extent against all the Connusors lands and goods and against his body see the Register 247. And upon such an extent come to the Sheriffs hands the Sheriff shall or may presently cause the moveable goods of the debitor to be prized and sold as far as the debt doth amount and the debt without delay to be paid Stat. Acton Burnell 13 E. 1. Note that if the Sheriff can finde no buyer he shall cause the same goods to be delivered to the Creditor at a reasonable price as much as doth amoūt to the debt and if the Prizers of the goods doe set an over high price to the damage of the Creditor then shall the things so prized be delivered to the prizors at the same price and they shall be forthwith answerable to the Creditor for his debt But the Sheriff must sell the goods to them which offer most for them And yet if the Sheriff shall sell them at an underprice it seemeth the Debitor hath no remedy Fitz. Extent 7. see the Statute of Acton Burnell If the Debitor have no moveables whereupon the debt may be levied then shall his body bee taken and kept in prison untill he hath made agreement 13 E. 1. If the Sheriff doe not returne the Capias or do return that the Writ came too late or that he directed it to the Bayliffe of some Franchise he shall be punished and yeild damages to the party grieved according to the Statute of Westminster 2. cap. 39. If the Sheriff returne that the Debitor is a Clark then shall there go out an extent against his lands and goods onely to be delivered upon a reasonable extent as aforesaid but his body shall not be taken If the Debitor found sureties which acknowledged themselves to be principall debitors after the day passed they shal be ordered in all things as the principall debitors scil for their bodies and delivery of lands and goods Stat de mercator But so long as the debt may be fully levied of the goods of the Debitor the sureties shall receive no losse Stat. de Acton Burnell And if any of these Debitors being in prison shall happen to escape the Sheriffe or Goaler must answer the body or the debt and therefore it behooveth the Sheriffe and Goler that the prisoners be safely kept Statute de mercator Note that when any Statute Merchant is certified into the Chancery and thereupon a Writ awarded to the Sheriff and returned into the Common place and the Statute there once shewed that howsoever the process after the same shewing be discontinued that at what time the party sueth to have the process recontinued and to have execution of the same Statute that the Justices of the Bench where the Statute was once shewed may upon the same Record make and award full Execution of the Statute Merchant aforesaid without having the sight thereof another time 5 H 4. cap. 12. And the Dier fo 180. Terminum Pasche anno 2. Eliz. where the Connusee of a Statute Merchant having the same certificate into the Chancery upon a certiorari directed to the Major thereupon sued a Capias against the Connusor returnable into the Bench at which day the Sheriffe returned non est inventus and the connusee there shewed the Statute as he ought and had another Capias before the returne whereof the Connusee died and it was doubted whether his Executors should have a scire facias against the Connusor or that they should begin of new ss to sue a new speciall Writ out of the Chancery
deliver his goods in pledge after shal be condemned in personall actions there such Sheep or goods shall not be taken and put in execution untill the lease be determined or the money paid for the pledge Br. distresse 75. So it seemeth of Goods which are distrained for just cause as for rent amercement damage feasant such like and are impounded they are now in custodialegis as long as they are so they may not be taken in execution Br. pledges 28. If the Connusor enfeoffe the King that land is discharged from execution Fitz. 266. so all other lands of the King are exempted from distresses and executions Plowden 242. b. If many men be severally seised of lands and they all severally joyne in one recognizance Satute Merchant or Statute staple in this case the connusee may not extend the land of any of the Connusors onely but all the Connusors ought equally to be charged the one of them alone shall not beare all the burthen because they are all in equall degree and in executions which concerne the realty and charge of the land the Sheriff may not doe execution of the Land of the one alone Co. 3. 13. a 14. When the Connusor hath aliened part of his land yet the Connusor himselfe at the Will of the Connusee may be solely charged because he himselfe is the person which was the debtor and which was bound and therefore he and his lands may be solely charged Co. 3. 14. Br. suite 10 12. And as to a purchasor of lands although their said Lands after the judgement recognisance or Statute be subject to the execution yet such purchasors have greater priviledges given to them by the law then the Connusor himselfe or his heires have So that if land of a purchasor be onely extended for the entire debt such purchasor shall have contribution against all the others of the purchasors and against the connusor or his heir but note that by this word contribution it is not to be understood that the others shall give or allow to him any thing by way of contribution but ought to be intended that the purchasor or party which hath his lands onely extended for all may by Audita querela or scire facias as the case requireth defeate the execution and therby shall be restored to all the meane profits and drive the Connusee to sue execution of all the land so that in this manner every one shall be contributory that is the land of every ter-tenant shall be equally extended co 3. 14. But if the Connusor enfeoffee the connuse of parcell of the land and a stranger of another parcell and reserve parcell in his hands now the connusee shall not have execution against the stranger or any other Feoffee for all shall be extinct against the Feoffees but yet against the connusor the connusee shall have execution of parcell which remaineth in his hands If connusor of Statute Merchant or statute Staple be taken and die in Execution yet the connusee shall have execution of his lands and goods co 5. 86. 87. Fitz. 246. b. If the connusor upon a Statute c. be taken in execution and escape yet his goods and lands upon the same statute may be extended for the escape and the action which the Plantiff had against the Sheriff for the escape is not satisfaction for the debts co 5. 86. By the statute of 3. Jacobi cap. 8. no execution shall be stayed or delayed by Writ of Error or superseded for reversing of any judgement in any action of Debt except the party which sued such Writ of error with two sufficient sureties be first bound to the party for whom such judgement is given to prosecute the said Writ of error with effect and to pay all the debt damages and costs c. if the judgement be affirmed and also costs and damages for such delay And therefore if a man be condemned in any court and his body put in execution and after he procures a Writ of corpus cum causa or certiorari to be directed to the Sheriff to remove his body there the Sheriff upon the said Writ ought to return the truth scil that his prisoner is condemned by judgement given against him upon which the Prisoner shall be forthwith remanded to prison there to remaine untill he hath satisfied the Plantiff 2 H. 5. cap. 2. Fitz. 151. e. If a statute be acknowledged to 2. and the one of them after purchase lands of the connusor then it seemeth that the said statute hath lost his force against both see the Register 147. If execution be sued of the body and of the land and after the connusor enfeoffeth the connusee of the Land or surrender parcell descended to him in all these cases the body shall be discharged for by discharge of part of the thing in Execution all is discharged Plow 72. b When the extent upon a Statute is satisfied and ran out by efluxion of time the Connusor may enter againe Co. 4. 67. But when the extent is satisfied by casuall profit the Connusor must have a Scire facias ibid. Defeasance to a Statue made after execution is good and defeateth aswell the Statute as the execution thereupon Co. 6. 13. But note where the Statute of Actor Burnell is that if the Prisors of the goods of the Connusor prize them too high in favour of the Debitor and to the dammage of the Creditor the things so prized shall be delivered to the Prisors by the same price and they to yield the Credtior his debt these Statutes are penall and extend not to any other Writs of execution but upon the Statute Merchant or Staple or recognizance and therefore upon a Writ of Elegit or other Writ of execution upon judgement if the extenders or prisors praise the lands or goods too high the Plantiff scil the Creditor hath no remedy Benl 4. P. and M. Note that when the lands or goods are delivered to the extenders they forthwith shall answer to the Creditor his debt by the words of the Statute and yet they shall not pay the money untill the daies assessed and limited in the extent Plow 205. b. If the Debitor complaine that his goods or lands were sold or delivered to the Connusee at too low a rate yet he hath no remedy Stat of Actor Bur. for in such cases the Debitor may pay the money and recover his lands and good 15 H. 7. 15. The creditor may well refuse to accept because the Sheriff will not deliver but parcell of the lands of the Connusor for if he accept it he shall be concluded to demand all afterward Fitz h. execution 84. 88. Execution upon a Recognizance REcognizance is an obligation of record acknowledged in any Court of Record or before any Judge or other Officer having authority to take it as before the Judges of the Kings Bench or of commons Pleas the Barons of the exchequer the masters of Chancery the Justices of Peace
c. those which are meere Recognizances are not sealed but are inrolled And sometimes are sealed with the seale of the party and may be with condition annexed or may bee single and then to have indentures of defeasance Also the King may by his commission give authority to any man to receive connusance of another man and to returne it in Chancery and by vertue of such commission if the man knowledge it before a commission any debt to another to be paid to him at a certain day and that certifieth into the Chancery with the commission c. Now upon certificate made of this connusance if he doth not pay the debt at the day he shall have an elegit upon this recognizance so taken aswell as if it were taken in the Chancery Upon a Recognizance there shall not goe a Capias but a Scire facias returnable in Chancery and upon the returne thereof they use to award a Capias a fieri facicias or an Elegit at the election of the Connusee 48 E. 3. fo 14. Upon a Recognisance the connusee may not have an action of debt against the heire for the recognizance is quod tunc vult concedit quod dictae pecuniae summa de bonis catall terr tenementis c. levetur so that the charge is imposed upon his Goods and Lands so that debt lieth not therupon against the heire co 3. 15. Yet upon a recognizance acknowledged to the use of the King although the words of the recognizance are de bon catt terr tenemenntis c. levetur the King shal have liable to his execution as wel the body as the lands goods of his Debitor see co 3. 12. b 11 93. a. Execution by force of a Recognizance in case of a common person shall bee of all the Goods and Chattels of the Connusor except his Plowcattle and implements of husbandry and of the moietie of his lands west 103. Note that this word Recognizance extendeth oftentimes in our Books to Statute Merchant and Statute staple Execution by Elegit AN Elegit is a Writ judiciall and lieth for him that hath recovered debt or damages in the Kings Court and must be sued within the yeare Tearmes de ley By force of an Elegit the Sheriff may take in Execution and deliver unto the party scil unto the cerditor the one halfe of the lands of the Connusor and all his good and chattels praeter Boves affros de carvia sua saving onely his Oxen and beasts of his plow untill the debt be levied upon a reasonable price or extent And this is by force of the Statute of Westminster 2. cap. 18. which is the first statute that did subject land to be taken in execution or upon a recognizance which is in the nature of a judgement 13 E. 1 ca. 18. co 3. 12. This Statute of Westminster 2. which giveth the Elegit provideth quod Vicecomes liberet ei omnia cattalla c. medietatem terrae suae quousque debitum fuerit levat per rationabile praetium extentum which last word praetium is to be referred to Chattels extentum to be referred unto lands rationabile praetium extentum ought to be sound by inquisition and verdict scil the apprizing of the goods and the extent or valuation of the Lands ought to be per sacram 12. probor legalium hominum c. for the Sheriff himselfe cannot appraise the goods nor value nor extend the lands upon an elegit neither can the Sheriff upon an elegit deliver any goods in Execution or extend any lands but onely such as are appraised and valued by the Jurors of the inquisition Co. 4. 74. otherwise it seemeth of all other sorts of Executions The words of this Statute of Westminster 2 ca. 18. are thus liberent ei medietaeem terrae debiteris which by construction of Law is the moietie of all that he hath at the time of the judgment given or at any time after Co. 7. 19. and by the equity of that Statute the Sheriff may deliver to the Creditor or Connusee the moietie of the Rents Br. Parliament 10● Plow 178. Also these words in the said statute quousque debitum fuerit levatum shall be intended be or might be levied for if the Conusee or tenant by elegit or tenant by statute Merchant or Staple neglect to take the profits yet when the connusee might have been satisfied of his debt according to the extent the connusor shall have againe his land but it seemeth he may not enter in such case but is put to his scire facias Co. 4. 82. If Tenant by elegit be outed by a stranger there the time shall on and he is put to his remedie against the trespasser ibm If the Connusee be outed by wrong by the connusor or by any other claiming under him for life or years c. the connusee shall hold over co 4 66. If the lands delivered in execution be lawfully recovered taken or evicted from the possession of the connusee before his debt be satisfied he shall have a scire facias and upon that a new writ of Execution Statute 32 H. 8. ca. 5. co 3. 87. This Statute of Westminster 2. cap 18. that giveth the elegit doth not extend to Copyhold Lands for it should be prejudiciall to the Lord and against the custome of the Mannor that a stranger should have interest in the land holden by copy where by the custome it may not be transferred to any without c. co 3. 9. Terme for yeares may not be extended by the Sheriff upon elegit without finding the beginning and certainty of the terme by inquisition for execution by elegit ought to be by inquisition and if it be found by the inquisition that the debitor was possessed of certain land per terminum quorandum annorum ad tunc ventur This inquisition is insufficient for they ought to find the certainty and the reason is because that after the debt satisfied the party is to have again his terme if any part thereof remaine which certainty of terme ought to appear upon the returne of the Sheriff as it seemeth Cok. 4. 74. But upon a Fieri facias the Sheriff may sell the lease or terme without reciting any certainty scil the Sheriff may recite that the Debitor hath a terme of such a thing pro terminis diversis annorum ad nunc ventur and that he sold that by force of a fieri facias to I. S. and that is good so if the Sheriff sell all the interest that the Debitor hath in the Land that is good notwith●standing misreticall for by the common intendment the Sheriff may not have precise connuzance of the certainty of the commencement and certainty of the end of the terme but if he take upon him to recite the terme and mistake it reciting it falsly and sell the same terme this sale is void because there is not any