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A10218 De pace Regis et regni viz. A treatise declaring vvhich be the great and generall offences of the realme, and the chiefe impediments of the peace of the King and kingdome, as menaces, assaults, batteries, treasons, homicides, and felonies ... and by whome, and what meanes the sayd offences, and the offendors therein are to bee restrained, repressed, or punished. ... Collected out of the reports of the common lawes of this realme, and of the statutes in force, and out of the painfull workes of the reuerend iudges Sir Anthonie Fitzharbert, Sir Robert Brooke, Sir William Stanford, Sir Iames Dyer, Sir Edward Coke, Knights, and other learned writers of our lawes, by Ferdinando Pulton of Lincolnes Inne, Esquier. Pulton, Ferdinando, 1536-1618.; Fitzherbert, Anthony, Sir, 1470-1538.; England and Wales. Public General Acts. Selections. 1609 (1609) STC 20495; ESTC S116053 719,079 571

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Eliz. doth repeale as well the before mentioned statute of 1. H. 5. and all other statutes before that time made and prouided for forging of false deeds Lib. in t fol. 359. and hath ordained a new action of forger of false deeds to be founded vpon that Statute and other new remedies yet seeing both those statutes were made and prouided to one end viz. to auoid and punish the enormities of forgerie of false deeds to the disherison or hurt of others though vpon seuerall penalties Notwithstanding in some cases the like reason and so the same law is to be retained in the said statute of 5. Elizab. which was before in the first mentioned statute of 1. H. 5. As in action of Forger of false deeds 9. H. 6. 26. 20. H. 6. 11. 19. H. 6. 29. 21. H. 7. 15. 37. H. 6. 37. brought vpon the said statute of 1. H. 5. Pleas in bar of forgerie it is a good plea in barre for the defendant to plead not guiltie or that he did not forge that deed or to plead that he gaue to the plaintife a gallon of wine in satisfaction of the said offence which he did accept And so it is a good plea in barre in an action of forger of false deeds brought vpon the statute of 5. Elizab. and the same plea being confessed by the plaintife or found by verdict shall not onely barre the plaintife of the recouerie of his double costs and dammages but shall also discharge the defendant of all corporall punishments to be inflicted and of the forfeiture of the issues and profits of his land to the king For this is not a release or discharge after verdict but a discharge before verdict whereby the whole Action and sute is discharged and so not within the compasse of the said statute of 5. Eliz. 14. touching the plaintifes release or discharge after verdict Where one shall haue an Action of forgery though he hath but a right to the land 18 There be some cases where a man shall haue an Action of forger of false déeds though he hath neither possession reuersion or remainder but onely a title to the land As if a man die seised of certaine land and a stranger doth abate and enter vpon the same land before the entrie of the heire and holdeth out the heire and after the same abator doth forge some charter deed or other writing sealed of the same land to the intent to disturbe trouble or defeate the estate of the heire in the same in this case the heire may haue an Action of forger of false deeds against the same stranger though he hath then no possession reuersion or remainder in the same land And so it is 4. H. 6. 25. 22. H. 6. 15. 15. Ed. 4. 24. if one man doe disseise another man of land and after doth forge false deedes c. of the same land to the intent aforesaid the dissesee may maintaine an Action of forger of false deeds against the disseisor vpon the Statute of 5. Elizab. as he might haue done before vpon the Statute of 1. H. 5. for that his right and title to the same land is molested troubled defeated recouered or charged by the same forged deed And the same law is if a man doe bring a reall Action against an other of certaine land 9. Ed. 4. 37. and before iudgement one claiming a lease for the terme of yeares of the same land praieth to be receiued to saue his terme according to the Statute of Gloucester and doth shew his said lease which lease is forged Stat. 6. Ed. 1 11. In this case the Demandant in the saide Action may haue a writ of forger of false deedes against him that claimeth the said terme though he hath as yet nothing in possession reuersion or remainder in the same land but onelie a right for this lease is forged to ●he intent to defeate him of his right viz. of his present possession 19 If a man hath neither possession reuersion remainder or title of in or to land Where no Title no Action of forgerie and yet will bring against another an Action of forger of false deedes of the same land it is a good plea in barre for the defendant to pleade 21. H. 6. 51. 8. H. 6. 34. that hée himselfe is seised of the same land without that the plaintife hath any thing therein for if the plaintife hath nothing in the freehold or inheritance of the land nor any estate for yeares copihold or annuity in the same then he cannot be the party grieued in that Action neither his right title or interest of in or to the same can be molested troubled or defeated recouered or charged And the same law is if a man hath in land no mediate or immediate estate expectant vpon any lease or leases for life liues or yeares nor profit right of entry but onely a possibilitie 33. H. 6. 22. As if A. doe giue land to B. and the heires of his body lawfully begotten the remainder thereof to C. and his heires for euer If E. doe forge a deede containing that A. gaue same land to the said B. and the heires of his body lawfully begotten the remainder thereof to him the said E. and his heires for euer In this case C. cannot pursue an Action of forger of false deedes against E. during the liues of B. or of any of the heires of his body lawfully begotten for the said forgery séeing that during the said time his right title or interest into that land is not molested troubled defeated recouered No Action in respect of a possibilitie or charged for that he hath therein during that time but onely a possibilitie which possibilitie it may be shall neuer come into Esse And further C. cannot for the said forgery recouer double costs and dammages according to the said Statute of 5. Eli. for that he is not as yet a partie grieued nor damnified nor hath sustained any dammages neither peraduenture euer shall if B. and his heires doe continue from one generation to another and not die without issue of their bodies c. And of a bare possibilitie no value can be made neither single or double dammages assessed 18. H. 6. 5. 9. H. 6. 26. Kel fol. 114 20 If there be two Ioyntenants or tenants in common of land and a stranger doth forge a déede concerning the same land Forging of a déed touching ioyntenants land if one of those Ioyntenants or tenants in common doe bring an Action of forger of false déedes against the offender and the Defendant doe pleade that another hath an estate in Ioyntenancie or in common with the plaintife who is in full life this writ shall abate for séeing this Action is but in the nature of an Action of Trespas wherein the plaintifes are onely to recouer dammages Ioyntenants and tenants in common must ioyne in the same Action for though their right in
right to another and if any doe and bée attainted thereof the taker shall forfeit to the King so much of his lands and goods as doth amount to the value of the part that he hath purchased for such Maintenance and to obtaine that any person that will shall be receiued to sue for the king before those Iustices before whom the suit doth depend and the iudgement shal be giuen by them But it may not be vnderstood in this case Pleaders may giue counsell for their fées that a man may not haue counsell of pleaders and learned men for his fée nor of his next friends And after to the intent to impose a sharper punishment vpō such as should be offendors in Maintenance Champerty or the like by a statute made Ann̄ 33. E. 1. it was enacted St. 33. Ed. 1. That if any person do take vpō him for Maintenance Champerty or the like bargaine any manner of suit or plea against another The punishment of champertors is attainted of such assumption suit or bargaine or of consent thereunto he shal be thrée yeares imprisoned and further punished at the kings pleasure 8 And so it appeareth by the foresaid statutes that it is Champerty Fit Nat. Br. 171. 7. Ed. 3. 9. Fit champ 6. where a man by couenant or agréement made by writing or word What is chāperty what not doth bargaine to haue parcell of the land debt or other thing which is in suit if it be recouered to aid and maintain the party to that suit and in this case he that is the other party to that suit oppressed or grieued by this Maintenance may prosecute a writ of Champerty against the same offendor 9. H. 6. 64. or a writ of Maintenance at his choice for euery Champerty is Maintenance but euery Maintenance is not Champerty And in this case of Champerty he that selleth his land or demiseth his land for life or yeares or any part thereof during the time that the same land is in suit shall be punished according to the foresaid statute of 28. Ed. 1. as well as he that purchaseth the same land Fit champ 5. 30. Ass p. 5. 8. Ed. 4. 13. And the writ of Champerty may be brought against the buyer alone or against the seller alone And it is all one penalty where he selleth his land for mony or other consideration and where hée fréely doth giue his land for if it be giuen during the time that the land is in suit it is Champertie for the Law doth prohibite euery man to obtaine land when it is in suit But if a man purchase land after iudgement it is no Champertie for then there is no suit depending touching that land and if a man that is learned in the Law and doth giue counsell therein 13. H. 4. 19. doe take part of the land that was in variance of his client for his fées after the same is recorded this is no Champerty So that the bargaine be made after the recouery of the land and not depending the suit 47. E. 3. 9. 7. E. 4. 15. And if a man doe bring an action against another and do recouer the thing in question against the defendant yet the plaintife may haue an action of Maintenance against euery person that shall maintaine the defendant in that suit though he hath lost nothing by that Maintenance for that the same Statute of 28. Edw. 1. is a prohibition of Champertie And if a man doe bargaine for land before any suit is commenced for the same and after a suit is prosecuted against the tenant of the land for the same Fit champ 15. if the same tenant doe make a feoffement or other assurance to the purchasor according to his bargaine of the same land during the time of the same suit yet this is no Champertie For in this case the seller did not assure this land to the purchasor vpon couenant to haue Maintenance but to performe his former bargaine and the sale was before the suit though the performance thereof was after And if a man doe make a feoffement of land to others to his owne vse 8. E. 4. 13 during the time that a suit is depending for the same land this is no Champertie for the feoffement was not made to haue Maintenance in that suit but to haue the possession of the land to bée transferred to others and yet to the same vse it was before And a man may giue land to his sonne in Franke-marriage 6 E. 3. 33. or for the terme of his life during the time that a suit is depending against him of the same land and it is no Champertie for that the words of the statute of Anno 28. Edw. 1. be But it is not intended that a man shall not haue counsell of pleaders and of learned for his fée nor of his next friends and the father is bound to relieue and helpe his sonne as much as he may and it is no Maintenance nor Champertie in him to assure the land to his sonne nor in the sonne to take it 21. Ed. 3. 52. And in a writ of Champertie it is a good plea for the defendant to plead That he purchased the land of him who recouered it for his money and not for Champertie to maintaine the suit And if a man doe make a lease for the terme of life of land Fit champ 14. and after the tenant for life is impleaded for the same land and depending that plea the tenant for life doth surrender his estate for life to him in Reuersion this is no Champertie 6 Maintenance may also bée committed in other sorts then be aforesaid Maintenance by Embracery viz. by Embraceors St. 33. Ed. 1. and by Iuries By the Statute of Anno 33. Edw. 1. an Embraceor is described to be one that commeth to the barre with the party and speaketh in the matter and is there to suruey the Iurie And he is accounted an Embraceor Fit Nat. Br. 171. who will threaten the Iurie or any of them if they doe not giue their verdict by his direction and he also who is a procuror of a Iurie to appeare 13. H. 4. 19. that is commonly called a leader of Enquests And the punishment of Maintenance both in Embraceors and Iurors is assigned by the Statutes of Anno 34. Edw. 3. Anno 38. Edw. 3. whereby it is ordained St. 34. E. 3. 8. 38. Ed. 3. 12. That if any Iuror sworne in Assises Maintenance by Iurors or other Enquests to be taken betwéene the King and the party or betwéene party and party doe by himselfe or any other take any thing of the plaintife or defendant to giue his verdict and thereof is attainted at the suit of the party which will sue for himselfe or for the king or of any other person entring his plaint by Bill immediatly before the Iustices before whom the Iurie was sworne the
same in a writ of Maintenance brought against him but he cannot retaine or intreat a man learned in the law to be of counsell with the principall partie nor meddle further in that cause than to sée the mainprise performed and himselfe discharged Maintenance in respect of his interest in the land 24 Euerie person that hath any interest in land may meddle and maintain him who is impleaded for the same land and not bee punished therefore in a writ of Maintenance As if tenant for terme of life or in taile of land bée impleaded for the same land or any part thereof Bro. Maint 53. he in the reuersion or remainder thereof may at his owne charges maintaine him in that suit for the safegard of his owne estate for it is in a sort his owne case and the defence of it is to his owne benefit and the euiction to his owne disheritance But this maintenance must be after tenant for terme of life hath atturned vnto him in the reuersion for i● he maintaine the suit before it is punishable in him 9. H. 6. 64. And so it is if a man being seised of land hath issue a daughter who is maried to another if the father in law be impleaded of that land in a reall action the sonne in law may maintaine him at his owne charges for that by possibilitie that land may after the decease of his father in law descend to his wife and so come to him in her right But if the daughter dye without issue of her bodie begotten by the said husband before the said suit commenced 14. H. 7. 2. 6. E. 4. 5. 19. E. 4. 3. then the sonne in law cannot maintaine the father in law in that suit Neither can hee maintaine him during the life of his wife if an action of Debt couenant account or any other personall action be brought against him for he is neither to take benefit or losse by any of those suits 6. E. 4. 2. 39. H. 6. 20. And if a man seised of land make a lease for certaine yeares of the same and after a suit is commenced betwéene the said lessée for yeares and a stranger touching the same land or any part thereof the lessor may giue euidence for the lessée vpon the triall of the cause in question or otherwise may maintaine him in that suit at his owne charges for it tendeth to his owne priuat benefit or losse And in some case a man may maintaine a suit lawfully though he be neither heire to the land nor in possession reuersion Maintenance in respect of his possibilitie or remainder thereof As if a man being seised of land 9. H. 6. 64. doe make a lease thereof to another for the terme of the life of the lessee and after doth grant to a straunger that if the said tenant for terme of life doe dye during the same lessors life that then the same stranger shall haue and enioy the same land for the terme of xx yeares after the death of the same tenant for life if in this case the tenant for life be impleaded for this land the same stranger may maintaine him for the sauing of his owne estate for yeares and yet he hath no certaintie but a possibilitie of a terme for yeares which peraduenture will neuer chance And likewise in some other case a man may maintaine a suit lawfully though he be neither in possession reuersion remainder or possibilitie of the thing in question Maintenance in respect of his warranty As if a man be seised of a rent going out of another persons land 11. H. 6. 49. to him and to his heires and by his déed doth graunt the same to another and to his heirs with clause of warrantie and the tenant of the land out of the which this rent is issuing doth atturne to the grauntée of this rent if after the grauntée be impleaded of this rent vpon tryall of the issue the grantor may come into the Court and shew to the Iurors such euidence as he hath to prooue the title of this rent and it is lawfull maintenance and not punishable in him though he was neither called into the Court by voucher to warrantie or by Warrantia Chartae And so might he haue done if he had beene called to warrantie by any of the meanes aforesaid vpon a warrantie made of land or rent for it is to preserue himselfe out of daunger and from recompencing in value of that whereof before he had made warrantie 25 As it is in lands and leases so is it in rents goods and debts Maintenance in respect of his rent for euerie person that hath interest in them may meddle and maintaine and defend him who is impleaded or prosecuted by suit or doth implead or prosecute by suit any other for any matter or cause concerning him or whereupon hee doth depend so that the same suit doth tend to impeach preiudice or trouble his estate therein or may redound to his benefit or profit or may be a meane thereof 9. H. 6. 64. As if a man haue a rent charge in fée out of certaine lands and another man hath in custodie a boxe of writings concerning the same rent and after hée that hath the rent doth graunt it to a stranger and his heires to the which graunt the tenant of the land charged doth atturne and moreouer the grantor of that rent charge doth graunt to the assignee of the same that if he can recouer the same boxe of writings that then the same assignee shall haue them If after this graunt the grauntor doth pursue a writ of Detinue against him that hath the custodie of this boxe of writings he to whom the same rēt charge was graunted may lawfully maintaine him in that suit for that by promise he is to haue the same boxe of writings if it be recouered for the preseruation of his estate in the said rent charge 11. H. 6. 47. And a Lord may maintaine his tenant if he be impleaded for his freehold A Lord may maintaine his tenant in respect of his rent and seruices that he is to receiue and haue of him And so it was before the Statute of Vses made anno 27. H. 8. if a man had made a feoffement of land to others to his owne vse the feoffor might maintaine the freehold tenant which held of his feoffees in respect of the vse which he hath in the rent and seruice of that tenant 15. H. 7. 2. 26 And the same law is touching debt As if A. do owe vnto B. xx l. and C. doe owe to A. xx l. due by Obligation Maintenance in respect of debt and A. will deliuer vnto B. the same Obligation in satisfaction of the xx l. which he doth owe him In this case B. may sue an Action of Debt vpon this Obligation against C. in the name of A. and retaine an Attourney and learned counsell and pursue and
30. St. 18. El. 13. an 18. El. it was established That euery such person which shal be Atturney for any other person or persons being demandant or plaintife tenāt or defendāt in any actiō or suit cōmenced in any of the K. courts of record at West plead to an issue in the same shal deliuer or cause to be deliuered his lawfull warrant of Atturney to be entred of record for euery of the said actions or suits wherin he is named an Atturney to the officer or his deputy ordained for the receit or entring therof in the same terme whē the issue is entred of record in the said court or before vpon paine of forf of x. l. for euery default for not deliuery of the said warrāt the one moity to the K. his heirs successors the other to such officer to whō or in whose office the same warrāt shold be deliuered entred or filed to be rec by A. of det B. P. or I. wherin no W. E. P. c. also he shal suffer such imprisonmēt as by the discretiō of the I. of the Court where any such default shall be made shall be thought good Fit N. B. 9 6 If a man make an Atturney in a real action brought against him Deceit by an Atturney after by couin agréed vpon betwéene the demandant and the said Atturney the same Atturney maketh default whereby the tenant doth loose his land then the same tenant who lost his land may haue a writ of Deceit against the Atturney And so it is if a man bring an action of Trespasse against two others Register fo 113. Fit N. B. 96. and the plaintife and an Atturney by couin agréed vpon betwéene them doe cause two straungers not parties to the writ to come into the court and to say that they be the same two defendants named in the writ and that they do constitute the same man to be their Atturney in that suit wherupon the same Atturney as Atturney to the defendants named in the writ do plead to an issue and after suffer the enquest to passe by his default by which meanes the plaintife doth recouer against the defendant in this case they who be indéed defendants and against whom the same action of Trespasse was brought may haue a writ of Deceit against the same Atturney that appeared as Atturney for them and shall recouer their dammages 10. Ed. 4. 9. 20. Eliz. Dyer 367. If an Atturney be informed by his client to plead a false plea which he cannot in conscience plead he may procure this Entrie to bée made Quod non fuit veracitér informatus ideo nihil c. to defend him in a writ of Deceit brought against him by his said client If an Atturney do sue forth a Capias where there was no originall writ before 20. H. 6. 39. he shal be committed to prison and thrust out of his place in that and all other Courts 4 As the law doth punish her Officers who do practise or commit any deceit or fraud in stead of truth in place of iustice The law reiecteth fraudulent acts so doth she renounce and condemne all acts of greatest importance if they be intermixt with guile and falshood For though Iudiciall acts as Fines Recoueries Warranties deedes inrolled c. being of their owne natures iust and lawfull and meanes to settle titles to appease controuersies and to yeeld each person his due bee therefore greatly respected and fauoured in her sight yet if any of them be deuised or executed by couin or to deceiue then she doth vtterly reiect them and adiudge them void Co. li. 3. 77. As a man was Lord of the Mannor of D. wherein there was a tenant which had some parcels of freehold land in fee simple the Lord demised certaine lands parcell of the demesnes of his said Mannor to the said freeholder for xxj yeares reseruing certaine rent and demised some other lands parcell of the said demesnes to the same fréeholder at will reseruing another rent and graunted by copie of Court roll certaine other lands parcell of the same Mannor to the sayd freeholder for the terme of life according to the custome of the sayd Mannour reseruing a third rent And after the same freeholder demised all the sayd lands which hee held by lease for yeares at will and by copie in D. to a straunger for the terme of life and then the same freeholder leuied a fine with proclamations of so many messuages so many acres of land medow pasture c. as he had by lease for yeres at will by copie of Court roll of his owne inheritance in D. by couin fraud to barre the lord of his inheritance All the proclamations were made and the fiue yeres were past the same fréeholder continued in possession of the land which was graunted to him by lease for yeres at will and by copie and paid to the Lord yerely his seuerall rents for the same And after the stranger to whom the fréeholder made the lease for life died and the lease which the Lord made to the fréeholder for xxj yeares expired And then the same freeholder claimed the inheritance of all the land which the Lord demised vnto him for yeares at will by copie intending to barre the Lord thereof by force of the fine with proclamations the fiue yeares past But this fine was adiudged void against the Lord and that it did not barre him to clayme and enter vpon his land for that it was leuied by him who had but estate in those lands for yéeres at will or by copy of court Roll and that neither had nor could pretend any title to the inheritance of the land but only by fraud practised the disheritance of the leassor And whereas the meaning of the makers of the statute of Anno 4. H. 7. St. 4. H. 7. 24 was as it may appeare by the preamble of the same that fines ought to be of the greatest strength to auoid strifes and debates when the lessée for yeares at will or copyholder shall make an assurance by fraud and couin A fine leuied of land to defraud the right owner therof to the intent a fine may be leuied to disherit the right owner of his land this is not a meanes to auoid or appease strife but to begin it where none was before and therefore the same statute did not intend to ratifie such an estate begun by deceit And further the meaning of the makers of the said statute was not That he who could not leuie a fine of this land in respect of the debilitie of his estate therin should be enabled by his owne practise and deceit to leuie a fine therof to barre him who had a lawfull title therein and a right to leuie a fine thereof And the same lessée for yeares tenant at will and copyholder contriued his fraud in so secret manner that by his couert practise he depriued his
lessor of the remedy which the said statute of Anno 4. H. 7. did giue him viz. to make his entry or to pursue his action within fiue yeares which he could not do being ignorant of the lease for life which his tenant had made of this land to a stranger and also conceiuing that the lessée hauing land of his owne fée simple in the same towne he leuied a fine of that land which hee might lawfully doe And the deceit and fraud in this case is the more odious because it was practised by the lessée against his lessor and by the copyholder against his Lord who is by the law bound to do fealty to the lessor and Lord which is a bond of confidence and a linke of trust And if a man seised of land in fée Fit Fines 120. do make a lease to another thereof for terme of life and the lessée for life doth leuie a fine therof to a stranger he in the reuersion may enter into the same land for a forfeiture and put forth the conusée in the fine and auoid the fine for it was leuied by deceit to defraud him of his reuersion If a fine be leuied of lands to secret vses to deceiue the purchasor of the same land it may be auerred to be leuied by fraud and so by the statute of 27. El. 4. auoided St. 27. Eli. 4. And so if a fine be leuied vpon an vsurious contract and that be auerred the same fine shal be void by the stat of 13. Eliz. 8. St. 13. Eli. 8 A fine leuied of ancient demesne lands to defraud the Lord. 5 The law is as prouident to protect mens seigniories rents and seruices from euiction by deceit as she is their lands and tenements knowing that a fine in some cases leuied by couin of the one may be as preiudiciall to his inheritance as of the other hath therefore ordained seuerall remedies to redresse seuerall wrongs as if a man seised of lands in ancient demesne do leuy a fine thereof at the common law to another this is a deceit to the lord of that manor of whom the said lands be holden 21. Ed. 3. 20 Fit Nat. Br. 98. therefore he may haue a writ of Deceit against the cognisor and the tenant of the lord thereby auoid the said fine and then he that leuied the said fine shall be restored to the possession and the title which he had before in the same land and also the same land shall returne and become auncient demesne as it was before for that the said fine shal be vtterly void 21. Ed. 3. 56. And he that is lord of a manor of auncient demesne but for the terme of his life only may maintaine this writ of Deceit And so may he in reuersion if tenant for the terme of life doe not bring it during his life and either of them by his said writ may auoid the same fine for by the leuying of a fine at the common law of lands in ancient demesne 8. E. 4. 6. or by recouerie of them at the common law the same lands do become Franke fée and pleadable at the common law and so the lord should be deceiued of his right and loose his seigniorie in them And the writ of Deceit will auoid the said fine or recouerie because the fine was leuied and the recouerie was suffered coram non iudice in deceit of the Lord viz. not before that Iudge nor in that Court where they ought to haue béene 17. Ed. 3. 31. 7. H. 4. 44. 8. H. 4. 23. Fitz. Na. Br. 98. But if a man seised of lands whereof parcell be auncient demesne and parcell Franke fée doe leuie a fine at the common law of both parcels in this case though the Lord of the auncient demesne doe by his writ of Deceit auoid the fine for so much as is ancient demesne yet the residue of those lands which be Franke fée shall continue in force for a fine leuied of them was no wrong or deceit to any 6 And the same law is where land is recouered by deceit A writ of Deceit to auoid a recouery as if one man do bring a Praecipe quod reddat against another and demaund certaine land by force whereof the tenant ought to be summoned to be before the Iustices at a certaine day and the shirife doth returne the tenant of the land against whom the said Praecipe is brought Fit Nat. Br. 97. summoned whereas in truth he was not summoned by which false returne and deceit of the shirife the demaundant doth vpon the Graund Cape recouer seisin of the land by default of the tenant in this case the tenant to whom this deceit is done 3. E. 3. 28. Fitz. Deceit 49. may after iudgemēt giuen for the demaundant haue a writ of Deceit against him that did recouer and against the shirife for his false return And by this writ of Deceit the tenant shal be restored to his land againe 18. E. 4. 11. so that it be brought during the life of the summoners viewers and pernors or any of them for if it bee not brought vntill all the summoners viewers and pernors be dead it will not lye for after the death of them the tenant shall not haue a writ of Deceit for proces shal be awarded against the summoners viewers and pernors to appeare in Court and by the examination of them it is to be tried whether the tenant was summoned or not 50. Ed. 3. 16. 8. H. 6. 1. Fitz. Deceit 48. Fitz. Deceit 32. 33. 34. 46 for the summons must be made by two summoners at the least and two viewers And if any of them did not their duty then the writ was not executed as it ought to haue béene and therefore the plaintife in the writ of Deceit ought to be restored But the K. shall haue the issues of the land in the meane time And if the demaundant who did recouer by the shirifes false returne do make a feoffement of the land then the writ of Deceit must be brought against the demaundant the feoffée and the shirife and if the demaundant that doth recouer 8. E. 3. 6. 10. Ed. 3. 43. the shirife also be both dead yet the writ of Deceit may be brought against the heire of the demaundant and the tenant of the land if the summoners viewers and pernors be liuing And if a man do lose his land by default in a Praecipe quod reddat Fit Nat. Br. 98. Fitz. Deceit 43. 80. whereby he was not summoned and then dieth his heire may haue a writ of Deceit as well as his auncestor and shall haue restitution and the vouchée The vouchée may haue a writ of Deceit where he doth loose by default if he were not summoned 7 And so it is if a man sue a Scire facias against another Deceit to auoid a recouerie vpon a Scire facias
to haue execution of a fine if the shirife returne the tenant of the land summoned by two summoners whereas he was not summoned by which returne the demaundant shall recouer and haue execution of the land if the tenant do not appeare and the tenant shall loose the land in this case the tenant may haue a writ of Deceit against the shirife and the demaundant that did recouer and him that is then tenant of the land and shal be restored to his former possession And the like law is 17. Ed. 3. 12. if a man sue a Scire facias vpon a Recognizance against another for a debt before recouered Deceit to auoid a recouery of debt if the shirife returne the defendant summoned whereas he was not summoned by reason wherof the defendant hath execution awarded against him of the debt then the defendant may haue a writ of Deceit against him that had the execution and the shirife and the shirife shall be punished for his false returne and the party who did recouer shall make restitution of that which he recouered and if the defendant die his executors may haue a writ of Deceit Where executors shall haue a writ of Deceit and be restored if the deceit be proued and that the Testator was not garnished whereupon the garnishers shal be examined And so it is if a man recouer in a writ of Annuity Annuity and after doth sue a Scire facias and recouereth by default of garnishment Fitz. Deceit 42. the defendant may haue a writ of Deceit For by the statute of Anno 2. Ed. 3. St. 2. E. 3. 17. 17. a writ of Deceit holdeth place and is maintenable as well in case of garnishment which toucheth plea of land where such garnishment is giuen as in case of Summons in a plea of land for in all the cases aforesaid a Deceit was wrought by the shirife to the Court and the party grieued by his false returne and the Law hath ordained That euery of those deceits shal be reformed by the writ of Deceit And a recouerie and iudgement had made and giuen to the intent to defraud and frustrate the true meaning of a statute shal be void as amongst others it appeareth by the statute of Anno 43. A iudgement to defraud the meaning of a statute Eliz. whereby it was ordained St. 43. Eli. 9. That all iudgements which shal be had for the intent to haue enioy any lease of a benefite with cure or any bonds contracts promises couenants made for any person to enioy the same contrary to the statute of An. 13. El. 20. An. 14. El. 11. or any of them shal be void in such sort as bands couenāts are appointed to be void which are made void for that purpose for that the suits whereupon the same iudgements be giued were commenced prosecuted vpon collusion fraud to defeat and make frustrate the true intent and meaning of the said statutes or of one of them Deceit vhon recouery in a Quare impedit 8 If any person do recouer against another in a Quare impedit by default of the defendant whereas he was not summoned 27. H. 6. 5. Fitz. Deceit 57. 19. Eliz. Dyer 353. then the same defendant may haue a writ of Deceit and the Summoners and the pledges vpon the attachment and the mainpernors vpon the distresse shall be examined and if the deceit be found the first iudgement shal be reuersed and there shal be a writ awarded to the Bishop to remoue the Clerke that was in the Church And so it is Deceit vpon a recouery in wast if any person do bring an action of Wast against another 29. Ed. 3. 42. 48. Ed. 3. 20. Fitz. Deceit 30. the plaintife doe recouer against the defendant by default whereupon a writ is awarded to the shirife to inquire of the wast whereas the defendant was not summoned the defendant may haue a writ of Deceit against him that recouered in the same action of Wast and he shall suppose that hee was not summoned attached nor distrained and proces shal be awarded against the summoners the pledges and the mainpernors who shal be seuerally examined and if they all did not their duty according to the Law the plaintife in the writ of Deceit shal recouer and be restored to that which before he lost in the action of Wast Deceit vpon a recouery by a Praecipe in capite 9 And the like law is 17. Ed. 3. 31. 36. if any person doe recouer land against another by a Praecipe in capite where the same land is not holden of the King in chiefe but of a meane lord by other seruices and where the demaundant had no licence of the chiefe lord to sue at the common place then the chiefe lord may haue a writ of Deceit against him that recouered the same land wherein he shall recouer his dammages the demandant shal be imprisoned for the deceit and also the lord shal retaine his seigniory in the same land But the recouery shal remain in force and he that did recouer shall also hold of the K. in chiefe by the way of estoppell And this writ of Deceit is maintenable in this case by force of the stat of Magna Charta 9. H. 3. 24. whereby it is ordained That the writ which is called Praecipe in capite shal be granted to no man wherby any fréeman may loose his Court. 10 Couin is accounted so professed an enemy to iustice Where a good title shal be impaired by a couenous recouery therefore is so hated by the law that she adiudgeth that bad and vnlawful which is mixed with couin though before of it selfe it were good lawful as if the issue in taile who hath good cause to bring a Formedon in discender vpon a discontinuance made of certaine lands by one of his auncestors 44. Ass p. 28 41. Ass p. 28 be of couin that a stranger shall disseise the tenant of the land against which stranger he doth bring his action doth recouer this land and hath execution in this case he shall not be remitted to his former estate though his title be good but shall be adiudged in possession by disseisin 44. Ed. 3. 46. 15. E. 4. 4. 7. H. 7. 11 Co. lib. 5. 31 in respect of the couin And so it is if a woman that hath good cause to be indowed of her late husbands lands will be of couin that a stranger shall disseise the tenant of the land wherof she is indowable against which stranger she will bring a writ of Dower and recouer hath execution she shal be adiudged in possession against the disseisée but as a disseisor in respect of her couin though she had good title to be indowed And so couin mingling together vertue vice persuadeth the law to reiect condemne a lawfull title which is vnlawfully atchieued 11
any person or persons or to his or their right heires Or at any time since the said 20. day of Iuly hath conueyed or hereafter shall conuey or make by couin contrarie to the true intent of the Act prouided 34. H. 8. for the making of Wils any estates conditions mesnalties tenures or conueyāces to the intent to defraud or deceiue the King of his Prerogatiue primer seisin liuerie reliefe wardships mariages or rights or any other Lords of their wardships reliefes heriots or other profits which should or ought to accrue growe or come vnto them or any of them by or after the death of his or their tenant by force and according to the Statutes made 32. H. 8. 1. 34. H. 8. 5. and the same estates and other conueyances béeing found by office to be so made by couin fraud or deceit contrary to the true intent of the said Acts Then the king shal haue as wel the wardship of the bodie and custodie of the lands c. as liuery primer seision reliefe and other profits which should or ought to appertaine to him according to the true meaning of the said acts as though no such estates or conueyances by couin had neuer béene had or made vntill the said office be lawfully vndone by trauerse or otherwise And the other Lord and Lords of whom any such lands c. shal be holden by Knights seruice as is aforesaid shall haue their remedy in such cases for his or their wardships of bodies and lands by writ of right of ward and shall distraine and make auowrie or cognisance by themselues or their bailifes for their reliefes heriots and other profits which should haue béene to them due by or after the death of their tenant as if no such estate or conueyance had béene had or made Sauing the right and title of the donees feoffées leasées and deuisées thereof against the said deuisor and his heyres after the interest and title of the King or other Lord therein ended 24 If the father doe make a feoffment of his lands holden by Knights seruice Fitz. Collusion 29. 33. H. 6. 14. Co. li. 1. 122. to his eldest sonne He that is not partie to a fraud shall sustaine no losse then by the foresaid Statute of Marlebridge the Lord of whom the same lands be holden is inpossibilitie to haue the wardship of the said sonne if the father die his said sonne being within age But if the same sonne doe after make a feoffment of the same land to an other bona fide and after the father doth die leauing his sonne within age there this possibilitie is destroyed for that the stranger who had no notice of this fraud hath purchased the land bona fide and therefore shall sustaine no preiudice by it And yet in that case if the sonne had made the Feoffment after the fathers death Co. li. 2. 94. this alienation had not depriued the Lord of his wardship which was once lawfully deuolued vnto him 25 And it is a deceit collusion and defrauding of the lawe and a great disheritance and preiudice to the Lords of the Fee of whome any lands bee holden to giue the same lands in Mortmaine or to doe any Act or procure any thing to be done whereby they may come into Mortmaine contrarie to the statutes of Magna Charta 7. Ed. 2. 13. Ed. 1. 15. R. 2. and 23. H. 8. for the Lordes doe loose the wardships mariages reliefes and other seruices of their Tenants by that meanes And therefore by the Statute of West 2. it was enacted That if any religious or Ecclesiasticall person doe impleade an other St. 13. E. 1. 31. by a Reall action of land and the Tenant will make default after default whereby hee ought to loose the land Then hee which doth recouer shall not haue Execution of the same Land recouered vntill he hath sued forth the kings writ of Quale ius directed to the Escheator of the same countie to make enquirie by a Iurie what right hee that recouered the land hath to the same And if he hath right Deceit and Collusion to bring land into mortmaine iudgement shal be giuen for him he shall haue execution of the same land And if it be found that he hath no right to recouer by his said action but that the lands were lost by collusion betwéen him and the tenant of the land then the land shall accrue to the next Lord of the fee if hée demaund it within a yéere next after the Enquest taken And if he doth not demaund it within a yeare it shall accrue to the next Lord aboue if he demaund it within halfe a yeare after the same And so euery Lord after the next Lord immediat shall haue halfe a yeare to demaund it successiuely vntill it come to the King to whom through the default of other Lords the land shall accrue For this recouerie of land by default by a compact and couin before agreed vpon betwéene the demaundant being a religious or Ecclesiasticall person and the tenant is to defraud the intent and meaning of the Statutes of Magna Charta and an 7. Ed. 1. whereby it was ordained St. 9. H. 3. 37 St. 7. Ed. 1. That if any religious person or other whatsoeuer will buy or sel any lands or tenements or wil receiue the same by colour of any gift or lease or by reason of any other title whatsoeuer or will by other practise or deuise procure the same to himselfe whereby such lands or tenements may come into mortmayne he shall forfeite the same lands And by the equitie of the foresaid Statute of Westminster 2. if any Ecclesiastical person doe recouer land against another by reddition 3. Ed. 4. 14. confession or action tried yet the collusion shal be inquired of for that the same recouerie may be by collusion before had betweene the demaundant and the tenant And because that by feoffments fines recoueries and other assurances made of trust of lands to the vse of parish Churches Lands assured in Mortmaine to churches chappels Guilds c. Chappels Guildes Fraternities c. there groweth to the King and other Lords and subiects of the Realme the like losses inconueniences and is as much preiudiciall to them as doth and is where lands be aliened in mortmaine Therefore for the eschuing and auoydance of them by a Statute made an 23. H. 8. it was enacted St. 23. H. 8. 10. That all feoffments fines recoueries wills and other estates deuised or in any wise made of trust of any mannors lands tenements or hereditaments to the vse of any parish churches chappels churchwardēs Guildes fraternities or brotherhoods erected or made of deuotion or by common assent of the people without any corporation Or that the Feoffees Conisees Recouerées or other persons and their heires thereof seised shall take leuie or perceiue or cause to be taken c. the issues and profites thereof and the same to
nothing for that they be discharged of their charge and seruices which they did hold by which was as much as they receiued of the tenant perauaile And if they held of the King by lesse rent than their tenant perauaile held of them they shall haue the surplusage of that which was holden of them of the king by the way of petition Fitz. Assise 124. Fitz. Petition 19. And if the king doe not kéepe the land so escheated vnto him in his hands but will assure it to another hée must reuiue the tenure in the Mesne Lord to hold of them of whom it was holden before the attainder It appeareth by the statute of Praerogatiua Regis cap. 12. That the Kings and whole Court of Parliaments meaning was at that time when it was published and established by Parliament which were the Prerogatiues royall annexed to the Crowne of England by the common law That of such lands as did escheat to the King the seruice of the Lord of the fée should be reserued for the words of the Statute bee these viz. St. 17. Ed. 2. 12. The King shall haue escheat of the lands of Normans to whose sée soeuer they belong Sauing the seruice appertayning to the chiefe Lordes of the same Fée And King Henrie the third gaue the Escheates of Normans landes to bee holden of the chiefe Lordes of the Fee by Seruices and Customs due and accustomed thereunto Some of which Normans dwelling in Normandie at that time had lands in England and were subiects to the King of England and did forsake their obedience to the King of England and became subiects to the K. of Fraunce the King of Englands enemie and therby did forfeit those lands which they had in England by the common law and they did escheat to the king 48 In Petit Treason Who shal haue the forf in petit treason and felony and Felony the king shal not haue the escheat of the offendors land vnlesse it be holden immediatly of him but the king shal haue the profits of the said offendors land by the space of a yeare and a day and the land shall be wasted and destroyed in the houses woods and gardeins and in all things belonging to the same and then it shall bee deliuered to the chiefe Lord of the fée of whom the same land is immediatly holden And yet in some cases the King shall haue the forfeiture of the land of him which doth commit Petit Treason or Felonie though the land be holden of others and not of him St. 17. E. 2. 14. as it appeareth by the Statute of Praerogatiua Regis which hath ordained That the king shall haue the escheates of lands of Archbishops and Bishops fréeholders when such tenants be attainted of Felony committed in time of vacation whilest their temporalties were in the Kings hands to bestow in what sort it shall please him Sauing to such Prelats the seruice that to them is due and accustomed And therefore sauing in the cases aforesaid the mesne Lords of whom the lands be immediatly holden shall haue their escheats of their fréeholders lands that haue committed Petit Treason or Felonie which land after the King hath hath had the yere day and wast thereof they must haue deliuered vnto them out of the kings hands by suing out of a writ S. Br. 39. 49 If any stranger The Lords remedy for lands escheated vnto him or other sauing the King doth intrude into that land whereof the felon attainted was seised at the time of the felony committed the immediat Lord of the fée of whom the same land is holden may enter vpon him and put him out or else he may haue his writ of Escheat against him In the which writ he must rehearse the iudgement giuen against the person attainted viz. if he were attainted by outlawrie to alledge Eo quod praedictus A. feloniam fecit pro qua vtlagatus fuit and if he were attainted by abiuration to say Pro qua regnum nostrum abiurauit and if he were attainted by confession or verdict to say Pro qua suspensus fuit and if hee doe alledge one of those iudgements Fitz. Escheat 14. Fitz. Escheat 8. Fitz. Escheat 6. in the stead of another his writ shall abate And yet he néed not rehearse the manner of the felonie in his writ nor in his count but generally that he committed felonie And though there be error in the iudgement yet the Lord shall haue a writ of Escheat and the tenant shall not falsifie the iudgement by the errour 46. E. 3. 4. 50 Island escheat to the auncestor The heirs remedie for land escheated to his auncestor because his tenant was attainted of felonie and the auncestor dyeth before he doth bring his writ of Escheat or doth enter In this case the heire may haue a writ of Escheat and suppose that the partie attainted did hold of his auncestor Fitz. Escheat 17. 51 If a lease of land be made for the terme of life reseruing to the lessor a rent and the lessor payeth his seruices to the chiefe Lord and then the lessor is attainted of felonie Where the Lord shall haue his writ of Escheat and where he may enter and after the tenant for terme of life dyeth In this case the Lord paramount may haue a writ of escheat of the land for the rent which was reserued vpon the lease doth come in stead of the land and so in the consturction of law he died seised of the land But if no rent had béen reserued the Lord might haue entred into the land as escheated vnto him 6. H. 7. 9. but could not haue recouered it by a writ of Escheat no more than if his tenant being disseised had bin attainted of felony in which case his only remedy is to enter The forme of a 〈◊〉 of Escheat 52 This is the forme of the writ of Escheat Rex vicecomiti B. salutem Praecipe A. quod iuste sine dilatione reddat B. decem acras terrae cum pertinentijs in N. quas C de eò tenuit quae ad ipsum B. reuerti debent tanquam Escaeta sua eò quod praedict ' C. feloniam fecit pro qua suspensus fuit vt dicitur Vel pro qua vtlagatus fuit vt dicitur vel pro qua regnum abiurauit vt dicitur Et nisi c. And though the indictment was executed in other maner than is rehearsed in the writ yet the writ shall not abate Register fo 165. as if he were Decapitatus non suspensus for the execution of the iudgement is not material so that he had such a iudgement for the action is true though the writ be not true The K. remedie for land escheated to him 53 In all cases of felony if the king ought to haue the escheat he must haue an office found for him before he can enter for vntill the office found the king hath but a
put out by force cannot maintaine an action of trespas of forcible entry against him who hath title to enter for that his entry was no disseisin to the other who was not lawfully seised thereof but he may invite him for this forcible entry this indictment being found he shal be restored to his possession againe by a Iust of peace by vertue of the said statute of 8. H. 6. And after that 22. H. 6. 18. he that did first enter forcibly by lawful title may again enter peaceably or bring an assise of Nouel disseisin at his pleasure Fit Na. B. 249. 22. H. 6. 37. 20 If a man do enter into lands or tenements disseise one with force He that hath possessiō sueth a writ of forcible entry and after the disseisée doth réenter againe yet the same disseisee may pursue an actiō of Trespas of forcible entry against the disseisor recouer his treble damages though he be seised of the land at the time of the writ brought And therefore it is not a sufficient plea in a writ of forcible entry for the def to plead that the plaintife was seised of the same land the day of the said writ brought 20. H. 6. 12. 22. H. 6. 23. 21 A man may haue a writ of Forcible entry of a rent as well as of land Forcible entry of a rent or common for one may distraine with force for rent and that doth counteruaile an entry with force And one may haue a writ of Entry of a rent which doth suppose that the def did enter into the rent And in an Assise of rent the disseisin may be found to be done by force 39. Ass p. 4. If there be thrée iointenants of land out of the which there is a rent going vpon a distresse taken one of thē maketh rescous by force he only shal be imprisoned yet the others be disseisors And the like law is of a commō of pasture for a commoner may be force be expelled or kept out of his common And a man may kéepe his beasts in another mans ground by force 27. Ass p. 30 claiming common where he hath no common and that is disseisin by force And in either of the cases aforesaid a Iust of peace vpō complaint to him made may remoue the force but not award restitution because they are to be taken vsed in another mans land 2. H. 7. 16. 17. Ass p. 14 22 If diuers do enter with force to the vse of another Forcible entry to the vse of another who himself doth not enter but after doth agrée to this entry to his vse this agréement doth make him a disseisor or a trespassor but he shall not thereby be punished for the force for there can be no forcible entry without an actuall entry Forcible detaining by words only And yet there may be a forcible detaining of possession by words only without act as if he that hath wrongfully but peaceably entred into another mans house expelled and put out the owner thereof shall say to the same owner if he do come thither againe to enter he will kill him this is a forcible detaining of possession 23 If there be two iointenants or tenants in common of certaine lands one of them doth expell put forth the other out of possession of the said lands by force Iointenants or tenants in common expelling each other by force he that is so expelled 8. Ed. 4. 9. 19. 10. H. 7. 27. Fit Na. Br. 249. 21. E. 4. 10. 18. H. 6. 5. may haue an action of Trespas of forcible entry against his companion that did so expell him vpon the said statute of 8. H. 6. for the words of the writ may be verified Expulit Disseisiuit and therupon he shall haue a writ of Restitution to restore him to his former estate But if one iointenant or tenant in common of lands doe expell the other by force out of the same lands he that is so expelled cannot maintaine a writ of Entry vpon the statute of 5. R. 2. against his companion that so put him foorth and suppose that he did enter into the same lands vbi ingressus non datur per legē for that his entry and possession in that land is lawful through the whole land in respect of his owne moitie or estate and further séeing by that action the plaintife is to recouer but only dammages as in an action of Trespas and not to be restored to his possession which action of Trespasse one iointenant or tenant in common cannot maintaine against another for any Trespas done in the land so holden by them Who may bring a writ of Entry vpon the statute of 5. R. 2. 24 None can maintaine a writ of Entry vpon the said statute of 5. R. 2. 8. E. 4. 9. 19. vbi ingressus non datur per legem but onely tenant in fée simple tenant in fée taile or tenant for terme of life at the least for tenant for terme of yeares a copyholder or a tenant at will cannot pursue and maintaine it seeing they haue but the manurance and occupation of the land 4. H. 7. 1. Neither can the King bring the said Action nor an Assise Eiectione firmae nor action vpon the statute of 8. H. 6. Nor any other action which doth proue him out of possession of the land Turning a watercourse by force 25 If a man do enter into another mans ground Plow Com̄ 467. and turne away by force an ancient watercourse which he hath running to his myll the party grieued may haue a speciall Assise of Nusance vpon the statute of 4. H. 4. against the offendor recouer his double damages yet he was not put out nor disseised of his freehold but a Nusance was done to the dammage thereof The plea of not guilty in forcible entry 26 In a writ of Forcible entry the defendant may plead not guilty Lib. int̄ fol. 330. Fit N. B. 249. 14 H. 6. 16. 22. H. 6. 57. 22. H. 6. 17. 9. H. 6. 19. 21. H. 6. 39. that shal be a good plea. But if the defendant doe plead some matter in barre yet he must in the end of the barre trauerse and deny the entry with force which is alledged against him as to say without that he did enter with force c. And the plaintife must answer to that speciall matter alledged in the barre without answering to the Trauerse of the force and vpon that speciall matter the issue must be ioyned and not vpon the force And if that speciall matter alledged in the barre be found by verdict with the defendant he shal be excused and the force shall not be inquired of But if it be found with the plaintife and against the defendant then the defendant shal be attainted of force and render treble dammages and treble costes without inquirie of the force
As one brought an action of Forcible entry vpon the statute of 8. H. 6. and supposed that the defendant with force and armes entred into a messuage c. 15. H. 7. 17. Whereunto the defendant pleaded The finding of the speciall matter doth charge or discharge the def of force That a stranger was seised of the same messuage c. and enfeoffed him thereof by means wherof he entred peaceably without that that he entred by force And the plaintife made a title and trauersed the barre and the issue was found for the plaintife 1. H. 7. 19. and thereupon it was adiudged that the force should not be inquired of For séeing the title is found against the defendant he shall be conuict of the force as on the other side if the barre had béene found for the defendant the force should not haue béene inquired of for that if the title of the plaintife be not good although the defendant doth enter with force the plaintife hath no cause of action and yet in that case he that entreth with force shal be indited thereof and shall pay a fine to the K. therefore And if the defendant doth enter peaceably where his entry is not lawfull he may plead that he did not enter contra formam statuti and by that meanes the force and the disseisin shal be inquired of But if he make a title to the land by pleading in barre as is aforesaid then it shal be adiudged his owne folly As in a writ of Forcible entry when the defendant doth plead in barre yet he must trauerse the force So in a presentment of Forcible entry Presentment of forcible entry before the Iustices of peace 7. H. 6. 13. it was found and presented that A. was seised of the manor of B. in his demesne as of fée vntill C. did enter vpon the said manor and put him out with force and armes against the kings peace And this presentment being remoued into the kings bench and proces being awarded for the king against C. he appeared and pleaded to the force and armes all that is against the peace not guiltie But the court enforced him to plead to his entry and then he iustified his entry by reason of a remainder intailed to his father of the same land and that his father entred and died seised thereof that he as heire to his father did enter And so it is if a man be indited for the taking away of certaine goods by force and armes he shal answer to the taking and if he be found guilty of the Trespas there shal be no inquirie made of the force and armes 19. H. 6. 32. 27 A man brought an action of Forcible entry against diuers others vpon the statute of 8. H. 6. and counted One action for entring detaining with force that they did with force armes enter vpon his land and put him out and so declared according to the statute whereupon they were at issue And it was found by verdict that some of the defendants entred vpon the land with force and armes and did not hold it with force and some others of them did enter peaceably into the same land and held it with force and armes and so the Iurie taxed the dammages seuerally vpon both those points vpon which verdict it was adiudged That the plaintife should recouer treble dammages against those that entred forcibly and also should recouer treble dammages against those that entred peaceably and held with force and the costs of his suite and further that the said plaintife should bée amerced for that he supposed that all did enter with force which was found against him And in like sort if two be indited of Forcible entry and detayning with force and vpon their Trauerse it is found that one of them entred with force and the other detained with force yet restitution shall be awarded to the party put out of possession Fit Na. B. 249. 28 And further if a man do enter by force or detaine by force any lands or tenements the partie grieued may haue a writ out of the Chauncery directed to the Sherife of the Countie onely or to the Sherife and Iustices of peace or some of them Sta. 2. E. 3. 3. vpon the statute made at Northampton anno 2. Ed. 3. The form of which writ is this viz. Iacobus Dei gratia c. vicecomiti Buck. Salutem A writ vpon the statute of Northamptō Quia datum est nobis intelligi quod quamplures malefactores pacis nostrae perturbatores in conuenticulis congregati armati modo guerrino arraiati apud Westburie accederunt et clausuras et domos quorundam legiorum nostrorum ibidem per vim potentiam armati intrauerunt res redditus prouentus ac alia bona sua quaecunque de quibuscunque possessoribus suis ibidem prouenientia capere consenserunt asportare intendunt ad hoc parant in nostri contemptum ac quorundam de populo nostro ibidem terrorē commotionē manifestam ac contra formam statuti apud Northampton de armis contra pacē domini Edwardi nuper Regis Angliae tertij progenitoris nostri non portandis editi contra pacem nostram Nos statutum praedictum inuiolabiliter obseruari idem infringentes iuxta vim effectum eiusdem statuti castigari facere volentes puniri Tibi praecipimus quod apud villam de Westbury et alibi in comitatu tuo vbi necesse fuerit publice proclamari ex parte nostra firmiter inhiberi facias ne quis cuiuscunque status seu conditionis fuerit ibidē armatus cōtra pacem nostram ac contra formam statuti praedicti accedat nec armatam potentiam nec quicquid aliud ibidem seu alibi facere per quod pax nostra seu statutum praedict ' laedi vel populus noster turbari terreri aut indebité grauari poterit quouismodo sub poena amissionis armorum suorum incarcerationis corporū suorum ad voluntatē nostram prout in statuto praedicto plenius continetur Et omnes illos quos post contra proclamationē et inhibitionem p̄dictam inueneris contraria facientes vel per inquisitionem per te modo forma debita capiendam inueneris fecisse vnà cum armis armaturis suis secum inuentis arrestari capi corpora ipsorum arrestatorum in prisona nostra quousque aliud a nobis pro deliberatione sua habueritis in mandatis saluò custodiri et arma armatur̄ praedicta appreciari nobis inde responderi facias Nos verò in Cancellaria nostra sub sigillo tuo de nominibus arrestatorum praedictorum de armis armaturis suis quae cuiusmodi fuerint de pretio de vero valore eorundē ac de toto facto tuo in hac parte reddatis distinctè apertè sine dilatione certiores hoc
As the law doth both condemne reiect fines and recoueries Warranties deuised by fraud which bée practised or put in execution by fraud or deceit so doth she renounce and make frustrate all sorts of warranties that be deuised or contriued vpon collusion or couin to defeat or defraud others of their iust lawfull titles for though warranties be much fauored in the law for that they be meanes to establish the title of those who be tenants of land in possession but yet if any of thē be vndertaken performed or mixed with fraud then it doth not only loose his fauor but also his force in law Co. lib. 5. 79 50. Ed. 3. 12. 43. E. 3. 7. As if land be giuen to the father for the terme of his life the remainder to his sonne heire apparant in taile and the father by couin agréement betwéene him and another to barre his sonne by a collaterall warranty of his remainder will make a lease of the same land to that other person who will make a feoffement in fée to a third person of the same land to whom the father will release with warranty and thē the father dieth the warranty doth discend vpon his sonne being of full age yet this warranty wil not barre the sonne of this land for the feoffement of the lessée for yéeres was a disseisin and the father was partaker of the offence an actor agréeing thereunto and though the release with warranty was made after the disseisin yet séeing the disseisin was made to that end the law doth adiudge the whole fact frō the beginning to be fraudulent the warranty to begin by disseisin so all that assurance to be void against the heire in taile And in like sort other warranties that do commence by disseisin be contriued to deceiue defeat the right heirs of their iust and lawfull titles 20. H. 6. 10. Regist f. 113 44. Ed. 3. 4. 12 If one do bring a Praecipe quod reddat against two other men Deceit by getting of a Protection and they do purchase a protectiō for one of thē suggesting that he is to go beyond the sea in the kings seruice whereas he doth not so but remaineth still in England and so hath done euer sithence his protection purchased by which meanes the demaundant is delayed of his suit in this case the same demaundant may haue a writ of Deceit against the said tenants for this deceit and delay and shall recouer his dammages Deceit by purchasing a writ to charge another 13 Whereas according to the course of the Chauncery Fit Nat. Br. 96. the king is to haue of euery person who doth bring against another an action of Debt of the summe of fortie pounds or more vj. s̄ viij d. for a fine and for an hundred markes vj. s̄ viij d. and so for euery hundred markes vj. s̄ viij d. and for euery Praecipe quod reddat brought of land to the yearely value of fiue markes vj. s. viij d. and so according to that rate vnlesse it be a writ of right patent If any other person doe purchase a writ in the Chauncerie in my name without my priuitie whereby I shall be charged to pay to the king for a fine any of the summes aforesaid I may haue an action of Deceit against him and recouer my dammages for this writ was obtained to put me to charges and thereby to deceiue me of so much Deceit for purchasing a writ in anothers name 14 If A. being patron of a Benefice Fitz. Na. Br. 96. Regist f. 112. 7. H. 6. 45. when the Church is void do present his Clerke to the Ordinary and B. doth disturbe him whereupon C. doth purchase a Quare impedit against B. in the name of A. returnable in the common pleas A. not knowing thereof and after doth cause the writ to be abated or A. to be nonsuit in that writ in this case A. may haue a writ of Deceit against the same C. and recouer his dammages Deceit for procuring of a suit And if B. doe procure C. to sue an action against A. whereby A. is vexed Fitz. Na. Br. 98. A. may haue a writ of Deceit against B. Deceit by acknowledging of a statute 15 If A. and B. doe come before the Mayor of the Staple Fitz. Na. Br. 105 100. Regist f. 115 or before any other Mayor of any Citie Borough or Towne hauing authority to take acknowledgement of debts and there A. doth acknowledge a statute to B. of an hundred pounds or c. in the name of C. and doth report himselfe to be C. where he is not so whereupon C. is troubled and this statute extended against him then the same C. may haue a writ of Deceit against the said A. and B. and shall recouer his dammages And so it is if another man will leuie a fine of my land in my name Deceit by doing of a iudiciall act in anothers name or confesse an action brought against me in my name or will enter into a voucher in my name 19. H. 6. 44. Regist f. 113 and confesse the demaundants action or will acknowledge a Recognizance or statute Marchant or other matter of Record in my name I haue no other remedie but by an action of Deceit But it is otherwise if he seale and deliuer an obligation in my name for I may plead that it is not my déed which I cannot doe against a Record Deceit by forging of a resignation 16 If a Notarie Fitz. Na. Br. 99. Regist f. 114 and other persons doe by agréement counterfeit the seale of any Parson or Vicar and forge letters of resignation of his Parsonage or Vicarage in the name of the same Parson or Vicar by which meanes he is remoued from the possession of the same Parsonage or Vicarage he may haue a writ of Deceit against the same forgers 20. H. 6. 36. 21. H. 7. 41. 16. Ed. 4. 9. 17 If a man doe bargaine with another to enfeoffe him of certaine lands within twenty daies Deceit by assuring of land to one man which was bargained to another or c. and after he doth enfeoffe a stranger of the same land the he with whom the bargaine was made and was deceiued therein may haue a writ of Deceit against him that so bargained and defeated him thereof And so it is if a man doe compound with another to purchase a mannor or certaine land for him and hée doth buy it for himselfe the partie may haue an action of Deceit against the same purchasor And in all cases where a man doth promise to doe a thing and he doth it falsely a writ of Deceit is maintainable against him Deceit by charging of land after sale as if a man doe promise to assure land to another and after he doth graunt a Rent charge or a common out of it or doth make a Lease for life
or yeares of it and then doth assure it to the bargainée this is deceit and a writ of Deceit is maintenable against him for it for though he hath assured the land he hath not assured it clére and discharged according to his bargaine but hath deceiued the purchasor therein 11. E. 4. 6. 18 If a man doe sell a piece of cloth to another Deceit vpon a warranty and warrant it to be fortie elles long and it is not so long the buyer may haue a writ of Deceit against the seller of the same cloth by force of his warranty although the warranty be by word onely 6. Ed. 6. Dyer 76. without writing so that it be at the time of the bargaine made But if the warranty be at another time after the bargaine made then the buyer must haue some writing to testifie this warranty or otherwise hée shall not haue a writ of Deceit against the seller 9. Ed. 4. 13. Fit Nat. Br. 98. 19 If an action of Debt bee brought against two as executors Deceit by confession of an action brought against executors whereas one of them was neuer executor nor administrator and if he which is executor do make default he who was not executor doe appeare confesse the action he that was named executor may haue against the other an action of Deceit for he hath vndertaken to plead a plea to the action of debt which he could not doe and that also to the deceit and hurt of another 26. H. 8. 7. 20 If a man doe marry a wife possessed of goods Couin by aliening of his wiues goods those be the husbands to giue and dispose at his pleasure during the mariage betwéene them But if after they be diuorced the wife shall haue her goods againe vnlesse the husband hath giuen or sold them before the Diuorce for in that case the wife is without remedie And yet if the husband doe alien those goods by couin to the intent to defraud and defeat his wife of them and after they be diuorced then shee may auerre the couin and recouer the goods from the alienée 35. H. 6. 5. Co. lib. 3. 78 83. li. 5. 83. 21 Though buying of goods in an open marketh doth worke an alteration of the property of the same goods Sale of goods in opē market by couin and doth bind the Title as well of all strangers as of the owner if the goods be sold in such a shop or place as is commonly vsed for the selling of goods of the same kind or nature yet if one man do steale purloine or iniuriously take away another mans goods and then by couin betwéene him and a third person doth sell the same goods in an open vsual place of sale 7. H. 7. 12 in an open market or faire to the third person who at the time of buying of the same goods did know that the seller came not lawfully by them or that they were not his goods this is a void sale And in respect of this Couin the first and right owner of these goods may lawfully take and carrie them away notwithstanding the said sale in open market Fraudulent assurances to defeat the discontinuée in tayle 22 If the father being tenant in tayle of certaine lands M. 34. E. 1. Fitz. Garrantie 88 will make a feoffement thereof to another with warrantie and so discontinue the estate taile hauing assets of other lands in fée simple to leaue to discend to his son and heire and then within few dayes before his death will alien the same fée simple land to his sonne and heire and to his heires vpon couin and to the intent that the same fee simple land should not be pleaded to come by discent from the sayd father to his sonne nor adiudged as Assets by discent in his hands yet this couin being found by verdict in a writ of Formedon brought against him by the heire of the land entailed shall giue the discontinuée aduantage to plead that the same heire had assets by discent in fee simple left him by his said father for that the law doth adiudge this alienation made by the father to the sonne a little before his death by couin to defraud the discontinuée of his lawfull plea to be as no alienatiō but that the father dyed seised of the same fée simple land and that it came to his sonne and heire by discent 23 Because Lords of Mannors lands and tenements haue as great right to enioy the wardship of the bodies and lands of their wards Fraudulent conueyance to defeat a Lord of his wardship as they haue to their other inheritances lands and goods and it is as great an iniury to deceiue them thereof by couin and collusion as to defeat and defraud them of their other lawfull titles therefore by a statute made at Marlebridge anno 52. H. 3. it was enacted That if any man do enfeoffe his eldest sonne or heire St. 52. H. 3. 6 being within age of his inheritance that therby the Lord might loose his wardship yet notwithstanding such feoffement the chiefe Lord shall haue his wardship And by the said statute it was further ordained That if any persons meaning to demise their lands for terme of certaine yeares that they might thereby defeat the Lords of the fee of their wardships will faine false feoffements containing that they are satisfied of the whole seruice due vnto them vntill a certaine terme and that such feoffées are bound to pay at the said term a great summe to the value of the same lands or much aboue so that after the said terme the land shall reuert to them or their heires for that no man wil desire to hold the same of so great a price yet by such fraud no chiefe Lord shall loose his wardship And if the chiefe Lords do by iudgement of the Court recouer their wardships yet the feoffees shall haue their action reserued to recouer their terme or fée when the heires shall come to their lawfull age And for the further preuention of couin in auoiding of wardships by one other stat made anno 34. H. 8. it was ordained St. 34. H. 8. 5 That if any person or persons hauing estate of inheritance of or in any Mannors lands tenements or hereditaments holdē of the king by Knights seruice in chief or otherwise of the king by Knights seruice or of any other person or persons by Knights seruice haue giuen at any time since the 20. day of Iuly anno 32. H. 8. anno Dom. 1540 or hereafter shall giue will deuise or assigne by will or other act executed in his life his mannors lands tenements or hereditaments or any of them by fraud or couin to any other person or persons for terme of yeares life or liues with one remainder ouer in fee or with diuers remainders ouer for terme of yeares life or liues with one Remainder ouer in fée simple to
dispose or otherwise imploy or suffer or cause to be paid disposed or imploied to any of the foresaid vses or to any of the like vses aboue the terme of 20. yeares next after the first making and beginning of any such vses shal be vtterly voide But for the preuenting of collusion and fraud which might bee deuised for the further establishing or corroboration of such vses by the said Statute of an 23. H. 8. Collaterall conueyaunces to defraud the assurance to Churches it was moreouer prouided That if any person or persons in defraud of the said Statute doth bind or ordaine any of their heirs or successors or any other persons that they shall suffer such vses intents or purposes to continue contrarie to the said statute vpon paine of losse of any other lands or of any other thing or doe deuise by any colour craft or meanes any thing to make such vses declared contrarie to the meaning of the said Act to continue for any longer time then is aboue limitted for the same Then euerie such penaltie craft colour and euery other thing that is made or deuised in defraud of the said act shal be voide for the said Statute shal be interpreted as beneficiallie as may be to the destruction or vtter auoyding of the vses aboue remembred and of all other like other then such as are before expressed Co. lib. 1. 26 Notwithstanding the foresaid Statute of An̄ 23. H. 8. To what vses lands may be giuen it is lawfull for any person at this day to giue his lands tenements or hereditaments to any person or persons to his or their heirs for to find a preacher for the maintenāce of a Schoole for the reliefe of maihemed souldiers for the sustentation of poore people for the reparation of churches highwayes bridges cawseis for the discharge of the poore inhabitants of a towne of cōmon charges for to make a stock for poore labourers in husbandrie poore apprentices for the mariage of poore maids or for such other charitable vses for the said stat was made onely to restraine the assuring of lands to superstitious vses and not to charitable vses And in this case it shal be expedient that the feoffor which doth assure his land to any of the vses aforesaid doe reserue to himselfe some annuall rent or take some money of the feoffées at the first for then the feoffement or assurance shal be good to the feoffées and their heires though the vse be vnlawfull And it appeareth by the stat made an 43. Stat. 43. El. 4. El. that they be accounted good and charitable vses no superstitious vses to giue lands tenements rents annuities profits hereditaments goods chattels money and stocks of money for the reliefe of aged impotent and poore people or for the maintenance of sicke and maihemed souldiers mariners schooles of learning frée schooles schollers in Vniuersities or for repaire of bridges ports hauens cawseys churches sea-bāks high waies or for education or preferment of orphans or for or toward reliefe stocke or maintenance for houses of correction or for mariage of poore maids or for supportation helpe ayd of yong trades-men handicrafts-men and persons decaied or for reliefe or redemption of prisoners or captiues or for aid or ease of any poore inhabitants concerning paiment of fifteens setting out of souldiers and other taxes For the said Stat. of 43. El. doth giue authoritie to the L. Chauncelor the L. Kéeper c. to the Chauncelor of the Duchie to award commissions from time to time into all or any parts of this Realme to certaine persons to enquire of al singular such gifts assignments appointments and of the abuses breaches of the truce negligences misimployments not imploying concealing defrauding misconuerting or misgouernment of any lands tenements rents c. goods chattels money c. heretofore giuen or assigned or which hereafter shal be giuen limited or assigned to or for any the charitable or godly vses before rehearsed And after such enquiry hearing and examining thereof to set downe such orders iudgements and decrées as the same lands tenements rents goods money c. may be duly and faithfully imployed to and for such of the charitable vses and intents aforesaid respectiuely for which they were giuen or appointed by the donors and founders thereof 26 Because when tenants for terme of life tenants in dower or by the curtesie of England or tenants after possibilitie of issue extinct were impleaded they would often be of couin with the demandants that the tenemēts demanded should be recouered against them they would not pray in ayde nor vouch to warrantie them in the reuersiō but plead in chiefe such a plea wherby they knew the tenements should be lost for the preuention and eschewing of which couin St. 13. R. 2. 16. by a stat made an 13. R. 2. it was ordained That if any such tenant be impleaded and he in the reuersion come into the Court and prayeth to be receiued to defend his right at the day that the tenant doth plead to the action or before he shal be receiued to plead in chiefe to the action without taking delay by voucher ayd-prayer nonage or other delay whatsoeuer Couin by a particular tenant to defraud him in the reuersion so that after such receipt he shal haue no delay by protection essoine of the Kings seruice or common Essoine but the sute shal be hastened as much as it may be by the lawe And dayes of grace shal be giuen by discretion of the Iudges betwixt the demaundant and him which is receiued and not the common daies giuen in pleas of land except the demaundant will thereunto assent to the intent the demaundant shal not be too much delaied which must plead with two aduersaries And he in the Reuersion which praieth to be receiued shall finde sureties for the issues of the Land aswel where the receite is counter-pleaded as where it is grauted Stat. West 2. 13. Ed. 1. 3 And by the Statute of Westminster 2 it was established That if by default or yeelding of such tenant in dower or c. iudgement shal be giuen then the heyres or they which haue the reuersion shal recouer after the death of such tenants by a writ of Entrie ad communem legem The wiues receit vpon the husbands default And by the same Statute of Westminster 2. it is also ordained That if in an Action brought against the husband and the wife of lands which bee the right of the wife the husband will absent himselfe and will not defend his wiues right or will against his wiues consent yeeld the land If the wife wil come before iudgement and be ready to answere to the demaundant and to defend her right she shal be thereunto admitted And for the further auoiding of Couin in Recoueries suffred by particular tenants by the Statute of Anno 14. Eliz. it was enacted Stat. 14. El. 8.
be supported and maintained with land to vphold the countenāce charge of the owner thereof And therfore this Earldome being by the K. giuen to the Earle the heires males of his body begotten is an inheritance which may discend from one heire male to an other and then by the speciall words of the before rehearsed Statute of 26. H. 8. and 5. Ed. 6. it shall be forfeited to the King by the said heires attainder of high treason for it was in the same heire an hereditament and whereof he had an estate of inheritance And moreouer when the King at the first did giue to this Earle and the heires males of his body begotten the foresaide great title of honour though there was no condition expressed in the same grant yet there was a secret condition implied therein viz. that the said grauntée and the heires males of his body should be assistant and seruiceable to the King his heires and successors by his Councell in the time of peace and by his force and prowesse in the time of warre Therefore when the heire male of this Earle the first grauntée did take Councell to breake the peace of the King and leuied warres and imployed his force and power against him he first brake the same secret condition which was annexed to his ancestors graunt of the Earledome And so there is reason and cause whie his said title of honour depending vpon the same condition should therewith cease and determine and that the same should returne againe to the Crowne from whence it was deriued The forfeture of lands in fée simple 27 Besides the forfeitures aforesaide 30. H. 6. 5. euery person that is attainted of high treason petit treason or felonie shall also forfeit his lands in fée simple which he hath in his owne right in vse or possession sauing that the attainder of treason by force of the Statute of Anno 5. El. 1. St. 5. El. 1. ordained against the maintaining of the authoritie of the Bishops and Sea of Rome shall not extend to make any corruption of bloud the disheritance of any heire forfeiture of any dower nor to preiudice the right or title of any person other than the offendor or offendors during his or their naturall liues onely And sauing that the attainder of treason by force of the Statute of Anno 5. Eliz. 11. St. 5. El. 11 prouided against the clipping washing filing or rounding of money maketh no corruption of bloud in the heire or forfeiture of dower in the wife And sauing that the attainder of treason by force of the Statute established Anno 18. El. 1. against impairing diminishing falsifying skaling St. 18. El. 1 or lightning of money maketh no corruption of bloud nor the wife to loose her dower for he that is attainted of that treason shall suffer death and forfeit all his goods and chattels to the King and all his lands during his life onely And likewise sauing that the attainder of felonie by force of the Statute made Anno 1. Iac. 12. against coniuration witchcraft enchantment St. 1. Iac. 12 charme and sorcerie maketh no corruption of bloud nor the forfeiture of the heires or successors inheritance of any land nor of the wiues title of dower And further sauing that the attainder of felonie by force of the Statute prouided Anno 1. M. 12. against vnlawfull assemblies St. 1. M. 12 maketh no corruption of bloud And moreouer sauing that the attainder of felonie by force of the Statute ordained Anno 5. El. 14. against the forging of Euidences St. 5. El. 14. and writings maketh no corruption of bloud nor forfeiture of land or dower And furthermore sauing that the attainder of felonie by force of the Statute of Anno 31. Eliz. 4. St. 31. El. 4 prouided against the imbeseling of the Quéenes ordnance armour or artillery maketh the offendor to forfeit no lands tenements or hereditaments any longer than during his life St. 4. Iac. 1. S. Triall by the country 10. Co. li. 7. 34 S. Br. 56. no corruption of bloud nor the wife to forfeit her dower And the same lawe is if an Englishman doe commit any felonie in Scotland And if a man haue an annuitie to him and his heires The forfeture of an annuity and he doe commit high treason and is attainted thereof he shall forfeit to the King the same annuitie by force of the before recited Statute of Anno 26. H. 8. 13. for that the same annuitie is an inheritance 28 He that is attainted of high treason petit treason or felonie Forfeiting of a title to land shall also forfeit such lands whereof he hath neither possession reuersion or remainder but onely a title or right or cause of action As if a man be disseised of lands and then the disseisée committeth high treason Co. l. 3. 10 after an office found thereof the king may seise those lands as forfeited and escheated vnto him in respect of the same persons attainder of treason And if the disseisée be attainted of petit treason or felonie the Lord of the Fée of whom the same lands be holden may enter into the same lands as escheated vnto him in respect o● the attainder of his lawfull tenant But the Lord cannot haue a writ or escheat or other action to recouer the same land because his tenant died not or was not seized thereof but his onely remedie is to enter 6. H. 7. 9 And if a man make a lease for the terme of life of his land and after committeth felony and then the tenant for the terme of life dieth the Lord may enter but cannot haue a writ of escheat 29 As he that is attainted of treason or felony shal forfeit his lands Forfeiting of euidence so shal the Lord to whom those lands be forfeited 49. H. 6. 14 haue the euidēce of the same lands as escheated or forfeited vnto him to maintaine his title in the same lands escheated and to prooue how his late tenant came by and held the same lands St. 9. H. 3. 29 30 Though it is ordained by the statute of Magna Charta That iustice shall not be sold deferred or denied to no man neither shall any man be condemned but by lawfull triall and that it be further established by the statute of Anno 5. Edw. 3. St. 5. E. 3. 9 That no man shal be attached nor foreiudged of life lands or goods against the forme of the great Charter and the Law of the Realme So that the Law of the Realme doth allow to euery man that is an offendor his answere and lawfull triall be his crime supposed to be neuer so great and the proofe thereof neuer so manifest But if a man that is arrested of Treason or Felony or being vehemently suspected to haue committed Treason or Felony is attempted to be arrested be so wilfull stubborne or rebellious Forfeiture without at-attainder that he will
of him that was first menaced then assaulted Menacing beginneth the quarrell assaulting doth increase it battery accōplisheth it menacing laieth togither fire coales in the house of peace assault bloweth it maketh it burn And battery doth endeuor to consume the whole building to the ground And therfore because some sorts of menacing assaulting battery be professed enemies to the peace wherof I do write I will endeuor plainly to expres which be those menaces c. that the law doth inhibit in what sort by what means she doth restrain punish the offēdors therein 3 The law hath alwayes had that speciall regard to the preseruation of the peace of the Realme and of euerie member thereof that she could not endure neither would suffer one person so much as to menace or threaten another of life or member or of any thing tending to the breach of the peace And therfore she hath not only assigned in all countries places of this realm Sherifes Iustices of peace Constables Thirdboroughs and diuers other officers to be as watchmen continually attending bending their cares industries to preserue the peace and to defend each person from the violent sting of menace assault or batterie but also she hath giuen and prouided for him who is only menaced 40. E. 3. 40. an action of Trespas as she hath done for him who is assaulted or beaten wherby he shall recouer his damages so that the same menacing do tend to the hurt of him who was menaced his seruant tenāt or any other person by whom he liueth or receiueth benefit And therefore the plaintife in an action of Trespas of menace may declare That he is an Atturney The declaration in Trespasse of Menace and that in respect of the defendants menace he durst not attend his clients suites from such a day in M. vntill such a day in O. or that he is a husbandman and could not attend or ouersée his husbandrie or that he is a bailife or collector of rents and could not in respect of such menace 37. H. 6. 3. by the space of many monethes attend his bailiwick collection of rents or other businesses or that in regard of such menacing 30. Ass p. 14. he was not able nor durst trauell abroad to apply his trade or get his liuing without such force and defence as his estate was not able to maintaine As the collector of a fiftéene brought an action of trespas for the king and himselfe 27. Ass p. 14. against one and declared That the defendant did so rebuke him Rebuke in Assault that he durst not tarie in the towne to gather vp the fiftéene for feare least the defendant would haue beaten him And though the defendant did not beat him yet this rebuke was adiudged an assault and the plaintife recouered an C. s̄ in damages And in like sort one brought a bill of trespas in the Cōmon pleas for the king and himselfe 30. Ass p. 14. and declared That whereas hee was comming towards the Commō pleas to answer in a plea of land the defendant came and did so beat assault and menace him that hee durst not bring his writings or come thither without great charges in contempt of the king contrarie to his peace to the damages of the plaintife c. Whereunto the defendant pleaded not guiltie And the defendant was compelled to find pledges of his good behauior for the peace that he should not meddle with the plaintife by himself nor by any others Fitz. Trespas 159. openly nor secretly In an action of Trespas the plaintif declared That the defendant so menaced him in one county that he could not do his businesse in another county and this was adiudged a good declaration and it was ordered 37. H. 6. 2. that the issue shold be tried in the county where the menace was for there was al the trespas cōmitted the other county was put in only to increase the damages Li. Intr. 592 22. Ass p. 76. 20. H. 7. 5. 4 And in like sort if one man do menace or threaten the seruant of another Menacing a seruant whereby he departeth of life or member in such sort as the same seruant doth depart frō his master wherby the master doth for a time lose the seruice of his said seruant in this case the master shal haue an action of trespas declare against him that did so menace his seruant That he made assault vpon his seruant did beat him wound him and euil intreat him so often menaced to kill dismēber him did him so many iniuries wrongs that his said seruant durst not for such menaces for feare of being killed or maimed attend his businesse viz. the bailiwike of his husbādry his seruice in husbādry or kéeping of his horses beasts shéep c. And so his said busines seruice lay vndone the said pl. lost the seruice of his said seruāt frō the 20. day of M. vntil the 20. day of N. thē next following to his great damage against the K. peace whereof he cōplaineth that he is endamaged 20. l. And so note 7. E. 4. 24. 27. Ass p. 11. that a man shall not haue an Action of Trespasse for menace onely vnlesse he hath also thereby some other losse or hurt for the menace and the hurt which the partie doth sustaine thereby doe make the Trespasse and doe giue cause of the action of Trespasse But it is otherwise 20. H. 7. 5. if a man beat the wife or villaine of another for in those cases the partie wronged viz. the husband or Lord shall haue an action of Trespasse though hée hath receiued no losse nor hindrance in commoditie For hée must ioyne in suit with his wife to recouer recompence for the batterie and wrong done vnto her by the trespassor and also hee may punish him by action of Trespasse who beateth his villaine as hée may doe him who beateth his horse cow oxe c. Menacing a tenant whereby he departeth 5 And the same law is if one man doe so menace of life and member Li. Intr. 592 20. H. 7. 5. 9. H. 7. 7. the tenants of another which doe hold of him certaine lands and tenements at will paying to him therefore certaine yearely rent and seruices in respect of which menace the same tenants doe depart from their said tenements and leaue the said rents vnpaid and the same seruices vndone In this case the Lord or owner of the same tenements may haue an action of Trespas against such menacer in the Kings Bench or Common Pleas and declare of the sayd menacing of his tenants at will of their departure from his tenancies thereby and the losse and preiudice that he hath sustained by his rents vnpaid and seruices vndone and he shal recouer damages accordingly And in this case it is a good plea for the defendant Menacing
9 And because seruants in husbandrie labourers artificers and other persons of meane degrée should take no incouragement nor occasion to breake the peace nor weare any weapons therewith to menace threaten or terrifie others Therefore by a Statute made anno 12. R. 2. it was ordained St. 12. R. 2. 12. That no seruant in husbandrie or labourer nor seruant of artificer or victualler shall beare any Buckler Dagger or Sword vpon paine of forfeiting of the same except it be for the defence of the realme in the time of warre and then by the suruey of Arraiers for the time beeing or in trauelling with their masters or on their masters businesse And Sherifes Mayors Baylifes and Constables shall haue power to arrest all offendors against this Statute and seize the said Bucklers Swords and Daggers and kéepe them vntill the Sessions of the Iustices of peace and the same shall present before the same Iustices in their Sessions together with the names of them that did beare the same But this shall not be preiudiciall to the franchises of Lords touching forfeitures due to them By the foresaid two Statutes of 2. Ed. 3. and 12. R. 2. it doth appeare that the meaning of the makers of those lawes was not onely to preserue peace to eschew quarrels but also to take away the instruments of fighting and batterie and to cut off all meanes that may tend in affraie or feare of the people Assurances made by menace 10 As menace of life and member giueth cause of an action of trespasse to him that receiueth losse or hurt thereby intituleth the king to a fine 20. Ass p. 14 28. H. 6. 8. in like sort an obligation a release or déed of annuitie made and granted by menace are voidable by the law so that the same menace be of life member or libertie viz. of some hurt to be done to his body by death maiheming or imprisonment and not to his lands or goods for if A. will menace B. that if he will not make him an obligation of xx l that then he wil disseise him of such land 7. Ed. 4. 21. 4. H. 4. 2. 39. H. 6. 51. or dispossesse or take from him such goods in this case if B. doe make and deliuer the said obligation of xx l to A. in an action of debt brought by A. against B vpon the said obligation B. shall not auoyd this obligation in respect of this menace because this menace did not tend to the hurt of the person of B. but to preiudice him in his lands or goods for the redresse and recouerie whereof the law would haue giuen B. a sufficient remedie if A. should haue done him the wrong which he menaced And he that will take an aduantage to auoid his déed by menace must in this plea expresse Fitz. Dures 13. how and in what sort the other partie did menace him viz. that he drewe his sword against him and threatened to kill him if he would not seale and deliuer such an obligation release annuitie c. If A. doe menace B. in one countie that he will kill or maihem him 33. H. 6. 24. 2. H. 5. 10. if hee doe not seale him an obligation of xx l or stand to the arbitrement of C. in a cause depending in question betweene them And after B. beeing at libertie in another countie doth seale the same obligation or doth stand to the arbitrement of C. this obligation or arbitrement is void for it shall be intended to bee done by force of the first menace And if A. doe menace B. that he wil kil him imprison maihem or beate him if he doe not make an obligation of xx l to C. 39. H. 6. 36. Co. li. 2. 9. if in this case B. do become bound by obligation to pay vnto C.xx l. in an action of debt brought vpon this obligation by C. against B. the same B. may auoid this Obligation which he made by this menace of A. though the menace was made by one man the Obligation was made to an other for that the menace was the cause of the making of this Obligation which the law doth respect and punish and not only the partie to whom the Obligation was made 11 Assault batterie be for the most part an accomplishment of that which menace did threaten a performance by déedes of that What is assault and batterie which the other forewarned by words that is to say a violent forcible abusing or attempting to abuse by blowes and stripes the person of an other contrary to the peace of the Realme and the law of the same which hath ordeined that no person shall be Iudge or reuenger of his own wrong but leaue that to the censure of the law that is alwaies readie to heare redresse euery mans iust complaints for he that doth attempt to assault or beat an other to satisfie his own turbulent spirit or to reuenge his owne priuat iniurie doth as much as in him lieth to wrest the sword of gouernmēt out of the K. hands to take from the law her equal censure in justice to make himself both Iudge executioner in his own cause because this disordered person contemning the justice of the Law hath assaulted or beaten an other without warrant of law broken thereby the peace of the realm the law hath deuised a quiet peaceable course to reduce him again to order in punishing him by an action of Trespas of assault batterie wherin being conuicted he shal satisfie the party grieued his damages pay to the K. a fine his body shal be committed to prison vntill he hath satisfied it Though the party menaced shall not haue his remedy by action of Trespas vnlesse the same menace was of life member and also that the party menaced receiued some losse or preiudice therby in his liuelyhood or estate for that the menace the hurt which the party doth receiue thereby being ioyned together do make the trespas giue cause of the action of Trespas Yet in an action of Trespas of Assault battery where it is proued found that the offendor did make an assault only as one did strike at an other with a hatchet but did make no batterie or hurt the person of any other it is otherwise for séeing assaulting doth tend to the breach of the peace 22. Ass p. 60 42. Ed. 3. 7. 40. Ed. 3. 40. 6. H. 7. 1. he that maketh an assault doth his indeuor to hurt the law doth giue to him that is assaulted an action of Trespas to recouer his damages to the K. a fine for by the assault the party assaulted is put in feare euill handled hindred of his busines And if he be diuers times assaulted 45. E. 3. 24. he may haue one action of Trespas for all those assaults shall recouer damages according to the number and grieuousnes of them And
Ed. 1. 25. and doth not except an Enfant By the statute of Westm̄ 2. if he that is named a disseisour in an Assise do personally alleage any false exception whereby the taking of the assise is deferred viz. that at an other time an assise of the said tenements passed betwéene the said parties or that a writ of higher nature is depending betwéene them of the said tenements Imp. for failing of a record pleaded and doth vouch any rols or records to warrant the same and at the day giuen he faileth of his warrant he shall be adiudged a disseisour without recognizance of the assise and shall restore double dammages of that which shall be found and for his falshood shall be one yeare imprysoned And fourthly a man in diuers cases shall bee imprysoned for his stubbornesse wilfulnesse disobedience and contempt to subiugate and submit himselfe to the censure and iudgement of the Law and to performe accomplish that which the law doth expect at the hands of him and all others being in his case As if a Quid iuris clamat or Per quae seruitia be brought against a man Imp. for not atturning who doth appeare in Court and will not atturne to the plaintife nor plead in barre he shall be imprisoned for his stubbornes And if the tenant that ought to do homage or fealtie to his Lord Imprisonmēt for not doing his true seruice do appeare in Court and will not do such of the said seruices as be claimed of him neither plead in barre thereof Fitz. Per q̄ seruitia 23. he shall be imprisoned vntill he will do his foresaid seruices for his wilfull contempt of the law and disobedience to justice And if a writ of Estrepement be directed to the Shirife to prohibit him to commit wast in lands against whom a reall action Co. Lib. 5. 105. or action of Wast is depending for or touching the same lands the Shirife by force of the same writ may resist him who would do wast And if he cannot otherwise redresse the offence he may impryson him if néed be he may take the power of the Countie to assist him for this disobeying of the Kings writ and resistance of the Shirife is a wilfull frowardnesse and contempt of the law in the offendor and therefore he deserueth to tast the smart of the Law by imprisonment for his contumacy And in like sort by the statute of An̄ 27. Stat. 27. H. 8. 20. Stat. 32. H. 8. 7. H. 8. An̄ 32. H. 8. it was ordeined That if any person after sentence difinitiue giuen against him by the Ordinarie his Commissarie or other competent minister or lawfull Iudge do obstinatly refuse to pay his Tythes or duties or such summes of money adiudged wherein he is condemned for the same Then two Iustices of the peace of the same Shire whereof one to be of the Quorum shall haue authoritie vpon information Imp. for obstinate refusing to performe the Ordinaries sentence certificat or complaint made in writing by the ecclesiasticall Iudge that gaue the same sentence to cause the same person so refusing to be attached and committed to the next Gaole and there to remaine without bayle or mainprise vntill he hath found sufficient suerties to be bound by Recognizance or otherwise before the same Iustices to the vse of the King to performe the said sentence In the same maner may any one of the Kings Councell or two Iustices of peace vpon an Information or request made to them by the Ordinary St. 27. H. 8. 20. commit any offendor to ward for any contempt contumacie disobedience or any other misdemeanour of his in any suit for subtraction of Tythes offerings and other duties of the Church vntill he hath found suerties c. vt gladius gladium iuuet What is Matheining 58 Maiheming is an other gréeuance in the Realme and a speciall cause to disturbe the peace And that is when one member of the Common weale shall take from an other member of the same a naturall member of his bodie or the vse and benefit thereof and thereby disable him to serue the common weale by his weapons in the time of warre or by his labour in the time of peace and also diminisheth the strength of his body and weaken him thereby to get his owne lyuing and by that meanes the common weale is in a sort depriued of the vse of one of her members How many sorts there be of maiheming 59 This maiheming is a dismembring of a man or taking away some member or part of his body or the vse thereof As when a wound blow or hurt is giuen or done by one person or more to an other person whereby he is the lesse able to defend himselfe in the time of warre or to get his lyuing in time of peace And therefore if a man do put out the eye or cut off the hand or foote or any ioynt of the hand or foote of an other it is a Maihem though it be done by chaunce medley Sta. 5. H. 4. 5 But if one man of malice pretended do cut out the tongue or put out the eyes of any of the Kings subiects it is Felonie And if one man do crush the mouth or head of an other or break out his fore-téeth it is a maihem for with them he may defend him selfe in battaile but to breake his hinder téeth or to cut off his Nose Fitz. Corone 458. or Eares whereby he loseth his hearing is no maihem but a deformitie or blemish of his bodie and no weakning of his strength It is a Maihem to pull any boane out of a mans head or to cut off any finger of a mans hand 28. Ed. 3 94. Lib. in t fol. 45. or to breake any of them so that they become shronke vp or dried vp or dead or crooked Gelding of a man is also a maihem though it be in a secret place yet it maketh him more féeble and vnable to defend himselfe in in bataile or to worke for his liuing If by any wound receiued the sinewes or vaines of a man be shronke vp it is a maihem To cut off the chéeke or iawbone of any person Lib. intur fol. 45. or so to crush or breake any of them that the same person is the lesse able to take his meate or drinke is a maihem If one person or more doe take an other person by force and put him in the stocks or otherwise bind him fast and after poure so much skalding what oyle and vinegar or hoat melted lead or other skalding licor vpon any part of his body and so continue it vntill it doth wast and consume the flesh of the same part and drie vp and mortifie the veynes and sinewes of the same parte it is a maihem If A. do strike at B. and the weapon wherwith he striketh breaking or falling out of his hand by the force of the blow doth put
lands hath béen made or after the same lands be holden with force he is either himselfe to reseise the same lands and put the partie in possession againe who was so forciblie expelled or kept out of possession or else he is to make his Precept to the Shirife of the same Countie to make restitution to the same partie The forme of which warrant or precept is this viz. Georgius Throckmorton Miles Buck. A warrant to the Shirife to make restitution vnus Iusticiariorum dn̄i Regis ad pacem in dicto Comitatu conseruandam assignatorum Vicecom̄ eiusdem Comitatur salutem Cum per quandam Inquisitionem patriae coram me captum apud East-Claydon in Comitatu p̄dicto 2. die Dec. Anno regni dn̄i nostri Iacobi quarto suꝑ sacr̄m A. B. C. D. E. F. c. ac per formam statuti in hm̄odi casu ꝓuisi compertū fuerit qd ' L. M. de Horwood magna in Com̄p̄dict ' husb alij malefactores pacis dicti dn̄i Regis perturbatores 26. die No. an̄ dicti dn̄i Regis nunc quarto in quoddam messuagiū c. N. T. in East-Claydon p̄dicta vi armis ingressi fuerunt ac ipsum N. T. inde expulerunt p̄dictū mesuagiū c. a p̄dicto 26. die c. vsque ad dictū secundū diem Decemb. manu forti cum potentia tenuerunt ꝓut per Inquisitionēp̄dictam plenius liquet de recordo Ideo ex parte dicti dn̄i Regis tibi mando precipio quod ad hoc debitur requisitus vna cum posse Comitatur tui si necesse fuerit accedas ad mesuagiū caetera praemissa ac eadē cum ꝑtinentijs reseisiri facias p̄fatū N. T. ad in plenam possessionē suam inde ꝓut ipse ante ingressūp̄dictū fuerat restituas mitti facias iuxta formā dicti statuti de Ingressibus manu forti factis aediti ꝓuisi Et hoc nullatenus omittas sub ꝑiculo incumbentur Teste me p̄fato G. Throckmorton Datum apud Fulbrooke c. tertio die Decembris c. 7. Ed. 4. 18. 4. H. 7. 18. 15. H. 7. 5. 10 If a man be indited before the Iustices of peace in the County Restitution awarded out of the K. bench for that he did with force expell and put another out of his possession of certaine lands within the same County and after this indictment is remoued into the kings bench by a Certiorari the Iustices of the same court may award a writ of Restitution to the shirife of the same County to restore possession to the party so expelled though the words of the statute of 8. H. 6. doe giue that authority only to the Iustices of peace of the County where the forcible entry is made and if he be indited before Iustices to heare determine and after the record is remoued into the K. Bench the Iustices of the same court may award restitution for that they who haue supreme authority and do represent the K. person now haue before them the record whereby the party was indited 11 By the words of the foresaid statute of 8. H. 6. it doth appeare No restitutiō but where the force is found by inguisition that one Iustice of peace alone may remoue the force 21. H. 6. 5. and also enquire thereof so may diuers Iustices But by the aforesaid statute no restitution can be made to the party put out of possession if the said expelling or putting out of possession be not found by inquisition nor but in case where the words of the Indictment vpon the statute of 8. 14. H. 6. 16. H. 6. be adhuc extratenet 12 In the foresaid statute of 8. H. 6. there is a prouiso That they which kéepe their possessions by force in any lands and tenements whereof they or their auncestors or they whose estate they haue in such lands or tenements haue continued their possession by the space of three yeares or more be not endammaged by the force of the said statute And by one other statute made Anno 31. St. 31. El. 11. Eliz. for the explanation and declaration of the meaning and intent of the said prouiso and of the law therein it was ordained declared and enacted That no restitution vpon any indictment of Forcible entry Where no restitutiō against thrée yeares possession or holding with force shal be made to any person or persons if the person or persons so indited hath had the occupation or hath béene in quiet possession by the space of thrée whole yeares together next before the day of such indictment so found his her or their estate or estates therein not ended nor determined which the party indited shall and may alledge for stay of restitution and restitution to stay vntill that be tried if the other will deny or trauerse the same And if the same allegation be tried against the same person or persons so indited then the same person or persons so indited to pay such costs damages to the other party as shal be assessed by the Iudges or Iustices before whom the same shal be tried the same costs and dammages to be recouered and leuied as is vsuall for costs and dammages contained in iudgements vpon other actions If a man hath béene in quiet and peaceable possession of lands thrée yéeres or more by a good title 4. 5. P. M Dy. 141. and then is expelled and disseised of them and the party offending is therefore indited vpon the statute of 8. H. 6. and the disseisée who was expelled is restored to his possession by a writ of Restitution and is in possession accordingly in this case he cannot iustifie the detainer of the possession of those lands by force of the foresaid prouiso contained in the statute of 8. H. 6. because his possession was interrupted discontinued for that possession must be thrée whole yéeres together without interruption before the said party may by the said prouiso kéepe his possession by force And likewise if he that is a iust and lawfull possessor of lands by the space of twenty yéeres together 3. 4. P. M. Dy. 141. be once clearely wholly remoued from the possession of the same land he cannot come againe with force and a multitude of people to put himselfe in possession therof and detaine the same with force by vertue of the prouiso in the said statute of 8. H. 6. because his possession was interrupted Neither in this case if he be indited of a Forcible entry according to the statute of 8. H. 6. shall he be relieued touching his restitution by the foresaid statute of 31. El. for that he had not the occupation nor had béene in quiet possession by the space of thrée whole yeares together of the same lands next before the day of such indictmēt found But if a man be seised of a lawfull possession by the space of thrée yéeres of any
land without interruption 22. H. 6. 18. Fitz. Na. B. 249. he may kéepe his possession by force against all others And he is neither to be remoued from his possession by a Iust of peace though it be found by inquisition that he held that land by force nor yet by an action of Forcible entry brought against him vpon the said statute of 8. H. 6. Otherwise it is of a disseisor where restitution notwithstanding three yeares possession or of a man that commeth to land by a wrongful and vnlawfull title for if he hath detained the land by force thrée yeares 14. H. 7. 28. or twenty yeares he may be indited by vertue of the statute of 8. H. 6. before a Iustice of peace of forcible detaining of the same land and that being found the said Iustice of peace is to reseise the land and to award restitution to the party disseised or expelled thereof And also the same disseisor shall make fine and ransome to the King cui nullum tempus occurrit whose peace is brokē by this long and vnlawfull detaining of the possession of another mans land by force But the party disseised expelled or kept out of possession cannot in this case maintaine an action of Forcible entry vpon the said statute of 8. H. 6. against the said disseisor séeing he hath omitted his time suffered the disseisor to gaine of him thrée yeares possession therby the benefit of the same prouiso contained in the said statute of 8. H. 6. 13 If a man who hath made an Entry vpon the possession of another of any lands or tenements by force or doth hold lands by force 1. R. 3. 4. after a peaceably entry made doe doubt that he shal be thereof indited before a Iustice of peace vpon the statute of 8. H. 6. and that restitution will be thereupon awarded he may haue a Certiorari out of the Kings Bench ready and when the Bill of Indictment is found he may presently deliuer it to the court and that shal be a Supersedeas to stay Restitution A Supersedeas to stay restitution for that by this Certiorari the indictment shal be remoued And though the indictment be found after the Teste of the writ of Certiorari it is not materiall for they be both the Kings Courts And when an indictment vpon the said statute of 8. H. 6. 2. 3. P. M. Dy. 122. is remoued into the kings Bench and that the party indited doth tender to trauerse the same the Iustices of the same Bench may graunt or stay restitution at their discretion according as the truth of the Title shall appeare to them But if a speciall sessions be procured to inquire of a Forcible entry or detaining of possession according to the said statute of 8. H. 6. and the Iustices to whom complaint is made do repaire to the place supposed to be entred vpon or holden with force 2. 3. P. M. Dy. 187. and doe sée the same according to the said statute after they do inquire thereof and that is found and thereupon they graunt restitution no other Iustice of peace can graunt a Supersedeas to stay the same restitution for by the said statute no other Iustice hath authority to graunt restitution but he or they to whom the complaint is made and before whom the force is found the writ shal be graunted vnder the Teste of one of them onely sauing the Iustices of the K. Bench who haue supreme authority and where the law doth intend that the King himselfe doth sit 14 Whereas the words of the foresaid statute of 8. H. 6. be Sta. 8. H. 6. 9. If it be found before any of the Iustices or Iustice of peace that any doth contrary to this statute viz. enter vpon or hold lands with force then the said Iustices or Iustice shall cause the lands or tenements so entred or holden to be reseised and shall put the party so put out in full possession of the same landes or tenements so entred or holden as before they were entred or holden And therefore if the father be put out of possession of lands by force and dieth before or after inquisition thereof his heire shall not haue restitution thereof vpon the said statute of 8. H. 6. for that he was not the same person which was put out And the same Law is if after the death of the father Where force found and no restitution dying seised of certaine lands a stranger doth abate and holdeth the same lands by force against his heire before he had gotten any possession indéed and that force is found before a Iustice of peace by an inquisition the same heire shall not haue restitution by the words of the said statute for that the same heire had but a possession in law and was not in actuall possession of that land neither is hée that party who was put out And so it is if tenant for terme of yéeres of certaine lands be put out of his terme by force and die though after his death the force he f●und by inquisition taken by a Iustice of peace his executors shall not be restored to the possession of that land by the same Iustice of peace causa qua supra But yet in the cases aforesaid the offendor shall be punished by imprisonment fine to the K. for by his forcible entry he hath broken the peace St. 15. R. 2. 2. 15 Whereas by the before rehearsed statute of 15. Rich. 2. it is ordayned That when any forcible entry shal be made into lands and complaint thereof come to a Iustice of peace he shall go to the place where the entry was made and if he find any that hold any such place forcibly after such entry made they shal be taken and put into the Gaole c. The forme of which Iustice of peace Mittimus whereby he shall send the same offendors to the Gaole is this viz. Francis Fortescue knight Buck. A Mittimus to send to the gaole such as do hold land by force one of the Iustices of peace of our Soueraigne Lord the King within the county of Buckingham to the keeper of his Ma. Gaole in Aylesbury in the said county and to his deputie and deputies there and to euery of them greeting Vpon complaint made to me by A. B. of Whaddon in the said county husbandman that C. D. E. F. of S. in the said county labourers and other malefactors and disturbers of the Kings peace had forcibly and with strong hand entred into his house c. in Whaddon aforesaid and him expulsed the same yet held with force I went this present day to the said house and there found the said C. D. E. F. holding the said house c. with swords and bucklers bils and staues to the great disturbance of his Ma. peace and against the forme of the said statute in that behalfe ordained And therefore I send you
by the bringers hereof the bodies of the said C. D. E. F. conuicted of the said forcible holding by my record commanding you and euery of you in his Ma. name that you receiue them safely keepe them in your said Goale vntill they shall haue made their fine and ransome to the King and be deliuered thence by the order of the law Hereof faile you not vpon the perill that will fall thereof Dated at Salden the 30. day of I. in the third yere of the raigne of our soueraign Lord K. Iames c. 16 And though the words of the before rehearsed stat of 8. H. 6. be Vpō cōplaint made to the I. of P. or one of thē c. yet those words do not alwais bind a I. of P. to expect the cōplaint of the party grieued or to omit to do his duty in inquiring of repressing punishing of force because the party grieued by the forcible entry or detaining of possessiō is ignorāt in séeking lawfull redres for his receiued iniury or doth intēd to take his remedy by other means but a I. of P. hauing notice of such forcible entry A Iustice may inquire of forcible entries without complaint or detaining of possession by force though it be by others and not by the party grieued may and of duty ought to goe to the place where the same force is committed to make inquisition thereof 7. E. 4. 18. and if the force be found to make restitution to the party expelled or put out by force And so by his meanes the offendor shall be punished according to his desert the partie wronged shal be restored the king shall be intituled to a fine all which without the said Iustices diligence would be omitted An action of forcible entry 17 If a man that is seised of lands or tenements of an estate in fée simple Fitz. Na. B. 248. fée taile for terme of his owne life or for the terme of anothers life be disseised or expelled thereof by force he may haue an action of Trespas of forcible entry vpon the foresaid statute of 8. H. 6. against him or them that did so disseise or expell him thereof and so he may if he be put out 6. H. 7. 12. or disseised of his lands or tenements peaceably and after the disseisor or he that doth expell him 14. H. 6. 1. doth hold them with force And in like sort he may haue the same action 3. E. 4. 19. 10. E. 4. 11. if any doth enter into his said lands or tenements with force after doth defend and hold them by force then he which is so put out and holden out with force may haue this action though the words of the statute be in the disiunctiue viz. disseised with force or disseised quietly after holden out with force for that the intent of the statute was to punish all such forces whether it were vpon the entry disseisin made or vpon the holding and detaining of the land with force in all which cases he who is so disseised or put out may haue an action of forcible entry vpon the said statute of 8. H. 6. and shall recouer his damages and costs to the treble of that which shal be found by the Enquest that he is endammaged 19. H. 6. 6. 22. H. 6. 57. 9. H. 6. 19. hath spent in his suit The writ of forcible entry must be Vi armis as wel for the occupation as for the first entry And it is to be noted that the writ declaration in an action of forcible entry must be that the def entred vi armis and not illicite or by any other such words for if the writ be otherwise it shall abate seeing a writ of forcible entry is alwaies vi armis 37. H. 6. 23. 38. H. 6. 1. and proces of Outlawry lieth in it and the declaration must expresse the certainty of the lands whereupon the defendant did make his forcible entry and which they be and not suggest that he did enter vpon certaine lands in D. And in this action of Forcible entry 35. H. 6. 6. 49. Ed. 3. 2. Co. lib. 3. 12. and in all actions Quare vi et armis a Capias doth lie and where a Capias doth lie in the proces there after iudgement a Capias ad satisfaciendum doth lie and there the king shall haue a Capias pro fine Who may brīg an actiō of forcible entry 18 None can pursue or maintaine this action of Forcible entry Fit Na. B. 248. but he who hath fréehold at the least in the lands or tenemēts so entred vpon for tenant for terme of yéeres or a copyholder cannot maintaine this action for that the words of the said stat of 8. H. 6. be If any person be put out Sta. 8. H. 6. 9 or disseised of any lāds c. and the words of the writ grounded vpon the said statute be Expulit et disseisiuit and tenant for terme of yéeres or a copyholder cānot be disseised séeing disseisin is alwaies of a fréehold which neither of them haue in that land But if tenant for terme of yéeres or a copiholder be put out by force or put out peaceably after holden out with force of land which either of them doth hold by the said estate then vpon cōplaint made by the party grieued to a I. of peace after inquisition thereof by a Iury the same force found the said Iust may reseise the said lands cause restitution thereof to be made to the party so put out for in this case the same cōplaint may be made to the said I. of P. aswell by him in the reuersiō as by the tenāt for terme of yeres or copiholder séeing he in the reuersiō who is disseised of his fréehold by this forcible entry is may as well be termed the party grieued as the tenant for terme of yéeres or the copyholder for their said particular estates And when the Iustice of peace hath made restitution the particular tenant for terme of yeares or copyholder and also he or they in reuersion shall hold and enioy their said seuerall estates in the same lands 4. 5. P. M. Di. f. 142. in such sort as they did before the said Forcible entry made But if tenant for terme of yeares be expelled out of that land which he so holdeth for the terme of yeeres he in the reuersion cannot bring an action of Forcible entry vpon the statute of 8. H. 6. for the same although it be a disseisin to him for that the expulsion is not done immediatly to him Fit Na Br. 248. 9. H. 6. 19. 19 If a man do enter by force into lands or tenements He that hath title entreth by force wherunto he hath right or title to enter doth put out him who hath the freehold of the same lāds in this case he who is so
false déede or writing as aforesaid after the said first day of Iune Stat. 5. El. 14 11 This Act or any thing therein contained Persons not chargeable by this statute shall not extend to charge any Ordinarie or any their Commissaries Officials Registers or any other their Officers or Ministers with any the offences aforesaid for putting their seale of office to any will to be exhibited vnto them not knowing the same to be false or forged or for writing of the said will or probate of the same Neither shall this Act or any thing therein contained extend or be hurtfull to any Proctor Aduocate or Register of any Ecclesiasticall Court within this realm for the writing setting forth or pleading of any Proxie made according to the Ecclesiasticall lawes or customes heretofore allowed and vsed by the Ecclesiasticall Courts of this Realme for the apparance of any person or persons beeing cited to appeare in any of the said Courts Ecclesiasticall Officiall Nor to any Archdeacon or Officall for putting their authentique seale to the said proxies or proxie Nor yet to any Iudge Ecclesiasticall for admitting of the same but they and euerie of them may hereafter doe in all poynts concerning the same as they and euerie of them might lawfully haue done before the making of this Act. Neither shall this Act extend to any Attourney Attourney Lawyer or Counsellor Counsellor that shall for his client plead shew forth or giue in euidence any false and forged déed charter will court roll or other writing for true being not partie nor priuie to the forging of the same for the pleading shewing forth or giuing in euidence of the same Neither shall this Act extend to any person or persons Exemplification that shall plead or shew forth any deed or writing exemplified vnder the great Seale of England or vnder the great seale of any other authentique Court of this Realme A Iudge A Iustice Nor shall extend to any Iudge or Iustice or other person that shall cause any seale of any Court to bee set to any such déed charter or writing inrolled not knowing the same to bee false and forged Any thing in this Act to the contrarie notwithstanding Forging of a customarie booke 12 If one or more tenants of a Mannor 15. Eliz. Dy. 322. wherein there bee seuerall Copiholders doe make a customarie booke or roll of the same Mannor in parchment or paper and doe insert therein diuers customes whereof some be false and doe set his or their owne seales thereunto and the seales of some other Copiholders of the same Mannour and the same customarie booke or roll is intituled and pretended to be collected renewed set forth and allowed by the Lord and all the Freeholders and Copiholders of the said Mannour where in truth it is set forth and made without the priuitie or consent of the Lord of the same Mannour or of the residue of the Copiholders thereof This is a forgerie and false making of a writing sealed to the intent to benefit themselues and to disinherit the Lord of the Mannor and therefore punishable by the open and shamefull punishment contained in the foresayd Statute of 5. Elizab. The proces to leuie costs and damages of a forger 13 Whereas the sayd Statute of 5. Elizabeth hath ordayned 15. Eliz. Dyer 323. That if any person shall bée conuicted of forging of a false deed vpon a bill or information to bee exhibited into the Court of the Starre chamber according to the order and vse of the Court hee shall pay vnto the partie grieued his double costs and dammages to bee assessed in the same Court Therefore when any man is attainted of Forgerie in the Starre chamber for the recouerie of the double costs and dammages taxed by the Court a writ in English shall bee made and directed to the Sherife of the Countie where the offendor doth dwell reciting the Statute and the conuiction commaunding the Sherife to leuie the said costs and dammages of the goods cattels and profits of the lands and tenements of the offendor and to bring the money into the Starre chamber Which writ shall bee sealed with the great Seale and vnder the Teste of the King And there by the order of the Court the money shall be deliuered to the partie grieued The kings pardon of forgerie 14 If a man be attainted of Forgerie in the Starre Chamber 15. Eliz. Dyer 323. Co. li. 5. 50. or in an action of Forger of false déeds founded vpon the said statute of 5. Eliz. the king may pardon his corporall punishment of setting vpon the pillorie flitting his nostrels and perpetuall imprisonment viz. so much of the penaltie of the sayd statute as is to be inflicted for a terrour or example to his people for that hée onely hath interest therein as hée hath in the issues and profits of the said offendors lands And as he may pardon the second offence of him who béeing once conuicted of forgerie doth eftsoones commit the same againe and thereby doth become a felon And as the plaintifes release discharge or discontinuance by the words of the said statute shall discharge the defendants iudgement or execution touching such costs and dammages as the plaintife should haue had against the defendant So may the kings pardon discharge the same defendant of any penaltie or forfeiture that the same statute doth giue vnto him which be the corporall punishments and the issues and profits of the defendants lands 23. El. Dy. 302. 15 Whereas the said Statute of 5. Elizab. hath ordained Forging of Testament That if any shall forge the will of any person in writing to the intent c. That then hée shall be punished as is aforesaid Yet if one do forge the Testament of another person whereby any lease for yeares shall bée conueyed hée is within the danger and penaltie of the said statute though no mention bee made in the statute of a Testament and he shall be charged onely in respect that hée hath forged a writing sealed But of a will concerning fréehold or inheritance there is speciall mention made in the same statute 12. Eliz. Dyer 288. 16 If a Clerke doe write the will of another man which is deadly sicke and after the Testator is become speechlesse Inserting more in a will than is directed and past memorie doth insert some article or clause in the same will which the Testator did not direct him to doe yet this is no forgerie punishable by the sayd statute of 5. El. nor within the meaning of the makers of the same For the principall déed or writing which was the wil of the Testator was not forged neither was any false déed charter writing or will though the article or clause inserted therein hauing no sufficient warrant was false and therefore not the Testators wil nor part thereof nor to be proued therewith 17 And though the said statute of 5.
Iurors to enquire of riots rout or vnlawfull assembly shall be committed which shall be returned by the Sherife to enquire thereof shall haue lands and tenements within the same shire to the yearely value of xx s. of Charter land or freehold or twentie sixe shillings eight pence of copiehold or of both aboue all charges But in that case by the Statute of Anno 2. H 5. St. 2. H. 5. 8. if they be returned by the Coroners then euery of them shall haue lands and tenements or rents to the yearely value of tenne pounds at the least By the Statute of Anno 1. St. 1. R. 3. 4. R. 3. it was enacted That no officer shall returne in any panell to be taken or put in Iurors in the sherifs Turne or vpon any inquisition or inquirie before the Sherife in his Turne other than such which bee of good name and fame and which haue lands or tenements of freehold within the same countie to the yearly value of xx s̄ at the least or else copyhold lands to the yearely value of xxvj s̄ viij d. at the least aboue all charges By the Statute of An̄ 8. H. 6. Sta. 8. H. 6. 9 it was prouided That euery person which shall be returned to inquire of any forcible entrie into lands Iurors to inquire of forcible entrie or detayning of lands by force shall be a sufficient indifferent person and shall haue lands and tenements to the cléere yearely value of xl s̄ By the Statute of An̄ 1. H. 8. it was established Sta. 1. H. 8. 8. That euery Iuror which is returned before any escheator Iurors returned before Escheators or commissioner to inquire of lands or tenements or some other to his vse shall haue lands or tenements of the yearely value of xl s. aboue all charges in the same shire where the inquirie shall be made St. 11. H. 7. 21. 23. H. 8. 3. 37. H. 8. 5. And by the stat made An̄ 11. H. 7. An̄ 23. H. 8. An̄ 37. H. 8. The Iurors returned vpon an attaint in London or els where shal be of more or greater ability in lands tenements goods or cattels then is before specified 16 The law hauing first vsed al good deuises to cause shirifes vndershirifes Bailifes of liberties coroners al others authorized to return impannel Iuries to be indifferent to returne the said Iuries Iurors without al partiality that they shal be no furtherers maintainors nor assistors to periury subornation or embracery also hauing prouided that all those Iurors which be so returned vpon Enquests to try issues betwéen party party may again one by one be sifted tried examined whether they standing vnsworne be indifferent or not She doth then expect to receiue from those Iurors Veredictū a true tale that is to say a true verdit or presentment of such things as be giuen them in charge according to their euidence But if the same Iurors will decline from truth and make a false presentment contrarie to their euidence then is it not to be termed Veredictum but Periurium and it will be returned to them as Maledictum for by the common Law they being attainted by the verdict of xxiiij other Iurors shall receiue a cursed and villanous iudgement therefore viz. the said Iurors shall loose the fréedom of the Law their wiues children shall be thrust out of their houses Fit Ass 396. 46. Ed. 3. 23. 42. Ed. 3. 26 6. Assi● p. 7. 30. Ass p. 24 40. Ass p. 20. 41. Ass p. 18. Li. Int. fo 92 The iudgement in an at the common law of a Iury proued periured their houses shall be pulled downe to the ground their orchards gardens shall be supplanted their trées shall be digged vp by the roots their meadowes shall be eyred vp All the goods cattels which they had at the time of the Attaint brought or at any time after shal be forfeited to the King The King shall haue all the profits of their lands during their liues And they shall be committed to perpetuall prison Which iudgement was deuised many yeres put in execution to the intent it might be knowen how much the common Law did detest and punish wilfull Periurie and falshood in those who shée trusted in place of justice and from whom shée accompted to receiue truth 17 But sithence by the Statute of An̄ 11. H. 7. and An̄ 23. H. 8. the said iudgement against a petit Iurie attainted is in some cases altered and qualified Sta. 11. H. 7. 21. for by the Statute of 11. H. 7. it is ordained That the party grieued by any false verdict giuen in any of the Courts of the Citie of London shall and may sue Attaint by Bill in the Hustings of London The iudgement in Attaint in London holden for common Pleas before the Maior Aldermen of the same Citie And if the graund Iurie sworne in the same Attaint find that the petit Iurie haue giuen an vntrue verdict then the iudgement shal be against the defendant as is vsed in attaint sued by writ at the common Law And the iudgement shall be against the petit Iurie that euery of them shall loose xx li. or more by the discretion of the Maior and Aldermen of the said Citie kéeping the Hustings to such vses as other issues and penalties béen forfeited in any action or plaint commenced before the Mayor and Aldermen of the said citie and his bodie to bee imprisoned there to remaine without baile or mainprise vj. moneths or lesse by the discretion of the Mayor and Aldermen and to be disabled for euer to be sworn in any Iurie before any temporall Iudge But the iudgement in such Attaint shall not extend to any lands or tenements St. 23. H. 8. 3 An. 13. El. 25. ne to other punishment of the petit Iurie And by the before mentioned Statute of Anno 23. H. 8. it was enacted That vpon euery vntrue verdit giuen betwéene partie and partie in any suit plaint or demaund before any Iustices or Iudges of Record where the thing in demaund and verdict thereupon giuen extendeth to the value of fourtie pounds An attaint where the thing eetendeth to xl l. and concerneth not the ieopardie of mans life the partie grieued by the same verdict shall haue a writ of Attaint against euery person so giuing an vntrue verdict and euery of them and against the partie which shall haue iudgement vpon the same verdict And euery one that shall passe in the same Attaint shall haue lands and tenements to the value of twentie markes by yeare of fréehold out of auncient demesne And if the graund Iurie find that the petit Iurie gaue an vntrue verdict then euery of the said petit Iurie shall forfeit twentie pounds whereof one halfe shall be to the King and the other halfe to him that sueth to be leuied by Capias ad satisfaciendum fieri facias
officers requisit to be had for the spéed of the said suits which shall do their dueties without any rewards for their counsels helpe and businesse in the same And the same law and order shal be obserued in all such suits to be made before the K. Iustices of his Common pleas Barons of his Exchequer and all other Iust in Courts of Record where any such suits shal be 30 As Maintenance in the cases aforesaid is lawfull and iustifiable Maintenance in respect of kindred or alliance in respect of the parties priuat profit or interest in the thing in question or when it is done without malice or hope of profit vpon a charitable disposition so is it in diuers cases allowable in regard of the linke or bond of nature whereby one person is by loue or dutie tied to another 34. H. 6. 26. 6. Ed. 3. 33. as the father may maintaine his son and heire and giue money of his owne in defence of him or his title or suit for he is bound to find him but so he may not doe for another kinsman And the sonne may maintaine the father and mother and one brother another and one néere kinsman another 21. H. 6. 16. 14. H. 7. 2. 20. H. 6. 1. 19. Ed. 4. 3. 21. H. 6. 16. and one ally another in some cases and in some sort as if a man be impleaded another that is his brother or kinsmā or of his alliance may go to the bar with him stand by him comfort him or he may ride to his counsell with him or he may request a man that is learned in the law to bée of counsell with him in that cause 9. Ed. 4. 32. but he must not retaine that learned man nor giue him any mony of his own to be of counsel neither must he giue or promise money to the Iurors or any of them to giue their verdict for him for then it is vnlawfull maintenance in him so it is in a stranger who hath nothing to do in that cause if he doe goe to the barre with him that is impleaded or do stand by him of purpose for to countenance the cause in question or doe request a learned man in the law to bée of counsell with him or doe giue money to any of the Iurors for their verdict this is vnlawfull Maintenance in him And in the cases aforesayd and all other cases of Maintenance Vnlawfull maintenance is continuall this vnlawfull Maintenance is a continuall Maintenance during that suit vnlesse the partie grieued doe in the meane time release the same But if the same Maintenance bee in respect of alliance and that hee who is supposed to bee the maintainor hath maried the daughter sister néece or other kinswoman of one of the parties to the first suit wherein the maintenance was supposed be he must pleade 6. Ed. 4. that his wife was liuing at the time of the maintenance supposed to be for if she were then dead the alliance betwéene them is dissolued and then he had no cause to maintaine that suit but shal be punished as a stranger And yet in that case 14. H. 7. 2. if the same woman hath any issue of her bodie begotten who may inherit the land of him whose suit that husband of the deceased woman and the father of that issue did maintaine then is the maintenance lawfull in any action brought against the same partie in respect of the kindred and also of the benefit that may come to his owne issue And in a writ of maintenance it is a good plea for the defendant to plead Maintenance in respect of gossiprie that hee was gossip to him whose cause he was supposed to maintaine 6. Ed. 4. 5. for that gossiprie is in law adiudged a kind of affinitie Maintenance in respect the partie could not speake English 31 A. brought a writ of Maintenance against B. and supposed 34. H. 6. 26. 15. H. 7. 2. that the same B. did maintaine L. in an action which he brought against the said L. on the part of the said L. Whereunto the sayd B. pleaded that the same L. was a Dutchman borne out of the Kings obedience and could not speake the English or Latine tongue and therefore being acquainted with B. the defendant who could speake the Dutch tongue he desired him to bring him to some man learned in the law to be of his counsell in that suit and to informe that learned man of the truth of his cause in question whereupon hee brought him to one M. a man learned in the law and opened the truth of his case vnto the said M. as he receiued it from the said L. in Dutch which is the same maintenance And this was adiudged a good plea in barre and a lawfull maintenance for it is a déed of charitie to aid and helpe him who could not helpe himselfe And the Dutchman had no meanes to helpe himselfe being a straunger borne and not vnderstanding the English nor Latine tongue but by the assistance and information of some English man Maintenance in a professor of the Law 32 If a Serieant at law an Apprentice or other Councellor 6. Ed. 4. 5. being retained for his fee doe giue vnto his Client the best counsell that he can for the recouerie or defence of the suit which he vndertaketh according to the ordinarie course of the law or doth enforce the euidence at the barre so much as he can at the tryall of his clients cause this is lawfull maintenance and iustifiable But if he doe pay or promise money to any of the Iurie to giue his verdict for his client or do threaten any of them to be killed beaten 22. H. 6. 6. or otherwise euill intreated if they do giue their verdit against his client or if he do spēd 11. H. 6. 13. or do offer to spend his own mony in defence of his clients cause this is vnlawful mainnance and punishable according to the before rehearsed stat of ann 1. R. 2. for those things he doth not as a lawyer or according to the course of the law nor by the warrant of law but by iniustice and vpon his owne corruption and wrong But in the first specified case if a man that is not learned in the law 22. H. 6. 5 hauing himselfe no interest in the cause in question will declare to the Iurie or to the partie or to his counsell the cause in question and the circumstances thereof as a man learned in the law this is vnlawfull Maintenance in him though hee doe it as well as a man learned in the law for hee doeth it vpon Maintenance where the learned man doeth it for his fee. And so it is if a man that hath land in suit or question will bring and shew his euidences and writings to a Nobleman Fitz. Maint 21. Gentleman or other man of countenance that is not learned in the law and
4. 23. by a Statute made Anno 2. H. 4. it was declared That the said Marshall may take the fees héereafter following viz. of euery person which commeth by Capias to the said Court iiij d and if he be let to mainprise vntill his day ij d more And of euery person being defendant which is impleaded of Trespas and findeth two Mampernors to keepe his day vntill the end of the plea ij d. And of euery person committed to prison by iudgement of the steward in whatsoeuer maner the same be iiij d and of euery ptrson deliuered of felony iiij d and of euery felon let to mainprise by the Court iiij d. But if the Marshall or any of his officers vnder him doe take any other fées than are before declared the said Marshall and euery of his officers shall lose their offices A Seruitor of bills in the Marshals Court. and also pay to the partie gréeued treble dammages for the which the said party shall haue his sute before the Steward of the said Court for the time being A seruitor of bills which beareth a staffe of the Court shall take for euery mile from the said Court vntil the same place where he shall do his seruice j. d and for xij miles xij d to serue a Venire facias or a Distringas out of the same court the double And if any Seruitor of Bills do the contrary he shall be imprisoned and make fine to the K. after the discretion of the Steward of the same court and also be foreiudged and banished the same court All which articles the steward at his comming into the country hath authoritie to proclaime and put in execution 21 And for that the kings of this realme haue from time to time bestowed vpon such as they assigned to be muster masters or captains in times of wars liberall and bountifull stipends and allowances the rather to the intent they should not exact or make a pray of such as should be or then were souldiers Therfore to preuent such like exaction by a statute made An̄ 4. 5. St. 4. 5. P. M. 3. P. M. it was ordained Muster masters exacting mony to spare souldiers That if any person which shall be commanded by the Q. her heirs or successors by commission leters or otherwise authorized to leuy muster or to make men to serue in her warres or otherwise for the defence of this Realme do by any meane exact leuie receiue or take or cause to be taken any mony or other reward or thing whatsoeuer of any persō for seruice in wars or that shal be appointed named or mustred to serue in any such seruice or for the sparing or discharging of such person from the said seruice then he shall forfeit ten times so much as he shall receiue exact or take to the Q. I. to be recouered by A.I. c. wherein no W.E.P. If any captaine petit captaine or other hauing charge of men shall for any aduantage or gaine by him to be receiued discharge or licence any of the men or souldiers appointed to serue in the warres vnder his rule or order to depart from the said seruice or shal not pay vnto his souldiers Exacting by captaines of their souldiers to euery of thē their full whole wages conduct and coat mony within x. daies next after he shal haue receiued the same then the party offending in giuing such licence or discharge shall forfeit for euery such offence x. times the value of the thing so receiued to the Q. I. to be recouered by A. I. wherin no W.E.P. c. And also he shal pay vnto euery such souldier from whom he shall with-hold any such wages conduct or coat money treble the summe so with-holden Extortion by taking of scauage of merchants 22 Because Scauage otherwise called Shewage was many times wrōgfully and extortiously taken by Magistrates of cities and corporat townes of merchants that transported or brought their marchandizes thither therefore by a statute made Anno 19. H. 7. it was prouided That if any maior shirife St. 19. H. 7. 8 bailife or other officer in any city borough or towne within this realme doe distraine take or leuie any custome called Scauage or Shewage of any merchant denizen or of any other the K. subiects denizens for any merchandize to the K. before truly customed that is brought by land or water to be vttered in any citie borough or towne in this land or if any maior shirife bailife or other officer in any city borough or towne for non paiment of the said scauage let or disturbe any merchants or any other persons denizens to sel and vtter their merchandize by them brought into any city borough or towne then he which offendeth shal forfet for euery offence xx l. to the K. the party grieued or any other that wil first sue by A. of debt in any shire wherein no W.E.P. shal be allowed But the maior shirifes cōmunalty of London and euery of them shall haue such summes of mony for scauage of euery person denizen as of right they ought to haue 23 Euery of the chiefe Iustices of the Kings Bench and Common Pleas and the maior of the Staple at Westminster and the Recorder of the Citie of London before whom any obligation being of the nature and force of a statute Staple shall be recognized St. 23. H. 8. 6 according to the statute of An̄ 23. H. 8. The Iustices Clarks fee vpon euery Recognisance shal take for euery such Recognisance iij. s̄ iiij d the clarke that shall write make and inroll the same iij. s̄ iiij d and for the certificat of euery one such obligation xx d. And if any of the said Iustices Maior Recorder or Clarke take of any of the K. subiects aboue the summe or summes to them limited by this statute then the same offendor shal forfeit for euery time so offending xl l. to the K. and I. to be recouered by A. I. wherein no W.E.P. c. And by the Stat. of An̄ 27. St. 27. Eli. 4. Eli. it was further ordained That no Clarke of the same Recognisances shall or may take for or in respect of any search to be made for or concerning any statute Merchant or of the Staple The Clarkes fée for search brought vnto him to be entred aboue ij d for one yéers search so after the rate of ij d for euery yéere not aboue vpon paine to forfeit lose to the partie or parties grieued twentie times as much as he shal take contrary to the true meaning of this Act to be recouered in any of the K. courts of Record by action of debt B. P. I. wherein no W.E.P. 24 Because it is well perceiued that learned and expert Atturnies be necessarie members in our State and great meanes to further iustice and to bring sutes to their expected ends and that they must therefore
adiudged Felonie or Trespasse according to the law of the land in auncient time vsed and according as the case doth require And if in such case or any like the Iustices haue adiudged it Treason before this time and there by the offendors lands and tenements haue come into the kings hands as forfeit the chiefe Lords of the fée shal haue their Escheats of those tenements which be holden of them whether the same tenements be in the hands of the King or of any other by gift or in other manner sauing to our Lord the King the yeare and wast and the forfeiture of the chattels which doe belong vnto him in the cases aforesaid And in such cases writs of Scire facias shal be awarded against the tenants of the land without any other originall and without allowing the kings protection in the same suit And touching those lands which be in the kings hands there shal be writs granted to the Sherifes of the Counties where the lands be to deliuer them out of the kings hands without delay 2 By which statute it doth appeare that there be two sorts of Treason by the auncient common lawes of this Realme viz. High Treason and Petit Treason High treason High Treason when any of the grieuous offences aforesaid be done or attempted to the vniuersall and generall Maiestie of gouernment that is to say to the bodie of the whole Commonwealth or to the King the head ruler and directer thereof Petit treason in his person wife issues or authoritie Petit Treason is when the bloudie and grieuous offence of wilfull murder is done and committed by an inferiour person and one in subiection to another that hath a dominion or a kind of Maiestie in gouernmēt ouer the same partie And though sithence the before mentioned Statute of 25. Ed. 3. diuers other offences haue béene made Treason by the Statutes of 21. R. 2. 3. H. 5. 4. H. 5. 8. H. 6. 14. H. 6. 20. H. 6. 4. H. 7. 22. H. 8. 26. H. 8. 27. H. 8. 28. H. 8. 31. H. 8. 32. H. 8. 33. H. 8. 35. H. 8. 1. Ed. 6. yet euerie of the succéeding ages were soone wearie of the sayd new Treasons and thought that the grieuous paines and most hainous punishments of them were too heauy and vnsupportable for the Subiects of this Realme to endure As the Lords and Commons in the Parliament holden Anno 4. St. 4. H. 4. 10 H. 4. 10. did complaine that diuers paines were ordained to be Treason by the statute of 21. R. 2. insomuch that no man did know how he ought to behaue himselfe to doe to speake or say for doubt of such paines and thereupon it was enacted That in no time to come any treason shall bée adiudged otherwise than was ordained by the Statute of 25. Ed. 3. And long time after the makers of the statute of Anno 1. Mar. considering and rehearsing that the state of euerie King Ruler and Gouernour of any Realme Dominion or Comminaltie consisteth more assured by the loue and fauour of the subiects towards their Gouernour than in the dread and feare of lawes made with rigorous paynes and extreame punishment and that lawes iustly made for the preseruation of the Commonwealth without extreame punishment or great penaltie are more often obeyed and kept than lawes and statutes made with great and extreame punishments and in speciall such lawes and statutes so made whereby not only the ignorant vnlearned and rude people but also learned and expert persons minding honestie are often trapped and snared yea many times for words only without any other fact or déed done or perpetrated and therefore to the intent that the seueritie of such like extreame dangerous and perillous laws might be abolished A repeale of former treasons and adnulled St. 1. M. by the said statute of Anno 1. M. Parl. 1. it was ordained That from thenceforth none act déed or offence being by act of Parliament or stat made Treason Petit Treason or Misprisiō of Treasō by words writing ciphering déeds or otherwise whatsoeuer shal be taken had déemed or adiudged to bee High treason Petit treason or Misprisiō of treason but only such as be declared expressed to be high Treason Petit treason or Misprision of Treason in or by the stat of 25. E. 3. concerning Treason or the declarations of Treasons and none other Nor that any paines of death penalty or forfeiture in any wise ensue or be to any offendor or offendors for the doing or committing of any Treason Petit Treason or Misprision of Treason other than such as bée in the said stat of 25. E. 3. ordained and prouided By force of which stat made Anno 1. M. the subiects of this Realme were eased and vnburdened of al acts déeds and offences made or declared to be treason by the space of two hundred and more years before Or as it may more aptly be said of all offences made Treason by any stat or act of parliament whatsoeuer But sithence the stat of repeale made Anno 1. M. there haue béen diuers other offences made or declared to be treason by the stat of An. 1. M. 6. 1. 2. P. M. 11. 5. El. 11. 18. Offences made treason by Statutes El. 1. 5. El. 1. 13. El. 2. 23. El. 1. 27. El. 2. 3. Iac. 4. whereof the first foure were but as an addition augmentation enlargement or exposition of the before specified Treasons ordained by the common law or declared by the foresaid stat of 25. E. 3. All which said last mentioned Treasons I will set downe and expresse verbatim after I haue somewhat more particularly expressed how the Sages and Iudges of this Realme haue construed and expounded seueral branches of the said statute of explanation made Anno 25. Ed. 3. 3 The foresaid statute of 25. Ed. 3. doth confirme it to be high treason for any person to compasse or imagine the death of our Soueraigne Lord the K. the Quéen c. by which words it doth approue what a great regard and reuerend respect the common law hath alwayes had to the person of the K. which it hath endeuored religiously carefully to preserue as a thing consecrated by almightie God and by him ordained to be the head health wealth of the kingdome and therefore it hath ingrafted a déepe and setled feare in the hearts of all sorts of subiects to offer violence or force vnto it vnder the paine of high treason Leges Aluredi cap. 4. Co. li. 4. 124 in somuch as if he that is non compos mentis do kil or attempt to kill the K. it shal be adiudged in him high treason though if he do cōmit petit treason homicide or larceny it shall not be imputed vnto him as felonie for that hee knew not what he did neither had he malice prepenced nor a felonious intent And this law doth not only restrain al persons from laying
condemned and which be fugitiue wheresoeuer they bée found And if they haue any freehold it shall bée forthwith seised into the Kings hands and the King shall haue the profits thereof by the space of a yeare and a day and the land shall bée wasted and destroyed in the houses woods and gardens and in all things belonging to the same except men of certaine places priuiledged And after the King hath had the yeare day and wast the land shall bée restored to the chiefe Lord of the same fee vnlesse that before he redéeme the same yeare day and wast of the King by the paiment of a fine But there is a custome in the Countie of Glocester that after a yeare and a day the lands and tenements of Felons in that Shire shall reuert and be restored to the next heire to whom they ought to haue discended if the felonie had not béene committed And in Kent in Gauelkind the father to the bough the sonne to the plough there all the heires males shall diuide their inheritance and likewise women but women shall not make partition with men 33 By force of which stat of Praerogatiua Regis The yere day and wast of lands of what title shal be forfeited euer sithence that time the King hath had all the thrée things aforesaid viz. the yeare the day and the wast of the lands of him which was attainted of felonie as one of the prerogatiues annexed to the Crowne in all cases where the felon had such an estate in his land Bracton de Corona cap. 13. that he might forfeit the same after his death and that hee himselfe might lawfully haue made wast in the same without being impeached therefore And therefore if the felon be but tenant for the terme of life or for the terme of yeares of lands the king shall not haue the yeare day and wast of them after the felons death for then he might wast another mans inheritance But if a man that is seised of lands in the right of his wife do commit felonie and is attainted thereof the king shall haue the profits of the land during the husbands life if the wife doe liue so long Fitz. Cor. 327. And some doe affirme that the king shall haue the yeare day and wast of the said wiues lands after the felons death because the felon during his life might haue committed wast therein and for that the felon had such an estate in his wiues lands that by the common law he might in his life haue made alienation of them and driuen his wife to her Cuiin vita to haue recouered them But that séemeth to be helped if any such law were before by the Statute of Anno 32. H. 8. where it is ordained That no fine feoffement or other act made suffered St. 32. H. 8. 28 or done by the husband onely of any lands tenements or other hereditaments being the inheritance or fréehold of his wife during the couerture betwéene them shall in any wise be or make any discontinuance thereof or be preiudiciall or hurtfull to the said wife or her heires or to such as shall haue title interest or right to the same by the death of such wife But the same wife or her heires and such other to whom such right shall appertaine after her decease shall and may then lawfully enter into such lands c. according to their rights and titles therein notwithstanding such fine feoffement or other act fines leuied by the husband and wife whereunto the said wife is partie and priuie only except By which Statute the wife after the death of her husband may enter into her owne land notwithstanding any attainder forfeiture or other act done by her husband No yere day and wast of lands holden by ioynt purchase 34 A man seised of land in fée simple holden of a common person did infeoffe thereof the husband and wife and their heires the husband committed felonie and was attainted thereof the King seised the land into his hands for his yere day and wast and after the Kings said terme expired 4. E. 3. 47. the Lord of the fée of whom the same land was holden did sue in the Chauncerie to haue the same land restored to him to whom by warrant the Escheator did deliuer the same lend vpon whose possession the wife of the felon attainted did enter and the said Lord of the fée reentred vpon her whereupon the sayd woman brought an Assise against the sayd Lord and recouered the land Because the fée simple of the same land being in the wife by reason of the ioynt purchase with her husband the K. ought not to haue had the yeare and day after the felons death nor the Lord of the fée the land after by Escheat 35 If tenant in tayle Tenant in tayle generall or speciall or tenant in franke mariage of land do commit petit Treason or Felonie and is attainted thereof and executed the King after his death shall neither haue the yeare day or wast in the felons land nor the Lord of the fée shall haue the land by Escheat but after the felons death the same land shall discend reuert or remaine secundum formam doni to the next heire in tayle of the felon or to him in the reuersion or remainder thereof for in this case the felon was in effect but tenant for the terme of his owne life and thereby could not forfeit a greater estate in his land than that which he had And in in like sort if he that hath land by fresh disseisin or is tenant in fee farme of land A disseiser Tenant in fée farme A mortgagée vpon condition to pay the vttermost yearely value thereof or hath land in Mortgage to be redeemed by the Mortgager vpon condition of payment of money or other condition doth commit petit treason or felonie and is attainted thereof the King shall not haue the yeare day and wast for that would tend to the preiudice of others not partie to the offence who haue or may haue a better right and title to the same lands than the felon attainted Fi. Cor. 310 36 If a man that is owner of land in antient demesne Tenant in antient demesne which hee may sell without consent of the Lord doe commit petit Treason or Felonie and is attainted thereof the King shall haue the yeare day and wast notwithstanding that he hath vsed to surrender the land into the Lords hands by a rod in the Court vpon euerie alienation thereof But if he be owner of the land in auntient demesne of a base tenure it is otherwise Fitz. Cor. 290. 37 A man that tooke a Church for felonie escaped and the towne pursued The yere day wast without attainder and killed him because he would not yéeld himselfe and this matter was presented before the Iustices in Eyre and they adiudged that his goods and the profits of his lands
should be forfeited to the King from the time of his flying vntill the presentment and also that the King should haue the yeare day and wast S. Br. 30. But this land shall not come to the Lord of the fée by Escheat because hée was not attainted of felonie Pi. Cor. 332 38 The King shall not haue the yeare day The yere day and wast of a Clerke conuict Land of small value and wast of the lands of a clerk conuict neither shall the Lord of the fée haue the forseiture thereof for that the offendor is not attainted but onely conuict of felonie And if the land of the felon attainted be but of the yearely value of thrée or foure shillings or of so small value Fi. Cor. 327 that it will cost more to obtaine it by suit out of the Kings hands than it is worth then the King shall not haue the yeare day and wast thereof St. 17. E. 2. 16 39 The words of the foresayd Stat. of Praerogatiua Regis be If they haue any fréehold When the K. shall haue the felons yeare day and wast it shall bée presently seised into the Kings hands This word presently ought to bee intended immediatly after the Office found and not before 49. E. 3. 11. Fitz. N. B. fol. 144. And therefore if an Office of that land bee not found vntill it bee many yeares after the felons attainder yet from the time of the Office found vntill a yeare and a day after the King shall haue the Felons lands And also the King shall haue the profit of the Felons lands from the time of his attainder vntill the Office bée found thereof though it bée twentie years betwéene the attainder and the Office for the heire of the felon cannot haue it in respect of the corruption of bloud And the Lord must not haue it by Escheat vntill the King bée intituled vnto it by Office and vntill one yeare and a day after and vntill the King hath wasted it vnlesse the Lord doth agrée with the King in the meane time for the sayd yeare day and wast And moreouer Fitz. Trauerse 48. 4. E. 3. 47. the Lord cannot at any time enter into the same land as escheated vnto him vntill hée hath sued a writ to haue it deliuered vnto him out of the Kings hands for after a writ is awarded to find the land of him that is attainted of Felonie another Writ shall bée directed to enquire if the King hath had the yeare Regist fol. 165. day and wast and that beeing found the Lord shall haue the land out of the Kings hands and not before because though the attainder of the Felon was found and that the King ought to haue had the yeare day and wast yet it may bee that the King neuer had the profit thereof but was interrupted by some p●●●on or by some casuall meanes 40 This commoditie to the King and forfeiture of the felon of the yeare Fit Cor. 310 day and wast is such a benefit to the King and so firmely and highly annexed to the Crowne The yere day and wast not grantable frō the Crowne that it cannot be seuered from it or granted to any other neither can any person claime it by colour of any franchise or libertie But after the King is intituled vnto it by Office hée may graunt or commit the land to another during the yeare and day and also giue him authoritie to take the benefit of the wast What goods of felons the king shal haue 41 The words of the foresaid stat of Praerog Regis be The K. shal haue all the goods of felons which be condemned and which bee fugitiue which is as much to say as he shall haue all their goods mouable and vnmouable for the King shal haue the corne growing vpon the land of the felon attainted and the issues and profits of the land which he hath in his owne right or in the right of his wife during the time of his life or vntill he doth purchase his pardon But touching the profit of fugitiues lands there is a difference betwéene a flying presented before the Coroner and a flying found by verdict vpon an acquitall for vpon a flying presented before the Coroner Forfeiture vpon flying Fi. Cor. 296 344. he shall forfeit the profits of his lands vntill his death or vntill he be acquit or vntill he hath purchased the K. pardon but vpon a flying found by verdict vpon acquitall he shall forf no issues of his lands for by his acquitall the land is discharged and consequently the issues thereof From what time forf of land shal haue relation 42 The law hath restrained offendors in Treason and Felonie to certaine times to make alienation of their lands and goods and hath prefixed limits whereunto the forfeiture of their said lands and goods shall haue relation and yet with this difference That as soone as any Treason or Felonie is committed the offendor therein is restrained to make any alienation of his lands for then it is not his land but by the committing of the Treason or Felonie Pl. Com. 263. 30. H. 6. 5. Bracton Fitz. Forf 30. Bracton l. 2. 13. hee hath forfeited all the estate which he had therein And therefore if betwéen the time of the committing of the Treason or Felonie and of the offendors attainder thereof the offendor doth make any alienation or assurance of his land after the time that the offendor shall be attainted of the same Treason or Felonie the said assurance shall bée void whether the same attainder bée by verdict confession or outlawrie for the forfeiture of the land shall haue relation from the time of the offence committed From what time the forf of goods shall haue relation 43 The forfeiture of goods and chattels shall not looke backe so farre as forfeyture of landes nor shall haue relation from the time of the Treason or Felonie committed but from the time of the Attaynder of the Treason or Felonie And therefore if one doe commit Treason or Felony Fi. Forf 30 and in the meane time betwéene the Treason or Felony committed and the offendors attainder thereof the offendor doth giue away his goods this is a good gift for as yet they be not forfeit but be his owne to maintaine himselfe and his family vntill he be attainted of Treason or Felony and by the Law adiudged not worthy to possesse or enioy goods nor to haue sustenance And therefore if vpon a fugam fecit presented before the Coroner one doe forfeit his goods he shall not forfeit those goods that hée had at the time of the Felony committed but he shall onely forfeit those goods which he had at that day when the fugam fecit was presented against him And in like sort if one that is indicted of Felony be acquit thereof by verdict and in their verdict the Iury doe find Fi. Cor. 296 that
47 Arresting vpon doubt of Manslaughter 48 A Iustice of peace his Warrant to arrest a felon 49 Arresting of an offendor and committing him to the Constable 50 Imprisonment vntill he had made an Obligation 51 The seruant not chargeable for the masters offence by imprisonment 52 No imprisonment by force of a Iusticies 53 Imprisonment by force of a warrant vpon a Supplicauit 54 Arresting him that would breake the peace 55 Imprisoning of a seruant that doth assault his master 56 In what cases imprisonment is lawfull and in what not 57 Imprisonment for offences done to the Iustices of the realme 58 What is maiheming 59 How many sorts there bee of maiheming 60 Examination of a maihem by the Iustices or Surgeons 61 Where diuers appeales of maihem for one offence 62 Principall and Accessarie in maihem The iudgement in an appeale of maihem 63 Mainprise in an appeale of maihem 64 Why maihem is supposed to be done feloniously 65 Barres in an appeale of maihem 66 Execution in an appeale of maihem 67 An action of Trespas maintenable after an appeale of maihem 68 The peace preserued and affraies restrained by Iustices of Peace The commission of the peace 69 The cōmission doth chiefely respect the peace Why they be called Iustices of the peace Binding suspected persons to their good behauior 70 A Iustice of Peace may take surety of the peace What the surety of the Peace is Certificat of a Recognisance The surety of good abearing 71 For whom and against whō the surety of Peace is to be graunted 72 Vpon what causes the surety of peace is to be graunted 73 Surety of peace enioined by word or writing 74 The seruing of Proces for the peace A warrant of the peace Who may serue it without writing and who without shewing it and who not Refusing to obey the warrant 75 To which Iustice of Peace the party arrested is to be brought 76 A warrant to find sureties to keepe the peace The party must offer his sureties 77 Surety of Peace doth dye with the king The Iustices authority dyeth with the king 78 The sureties of the Peace must be named 79 Hee that is bound to the Peace must appeare at a day prefixed 80 A Supersedeas for the peace 81 Taking a Recognisance for the keeping of the peace Taking a Recognisance for the good abearing 82 A Release of the suretie of Peace The parties release of the peace The Iustices Release of the Peace 83 Causes of the breach of the Peace or good abearing 84 The Sherife Constable and seuerall other officers be conseruators of the Peace 85 Euery able person when need requireth must be a conseruator of the Peace 86 Menaces Assaults Batteries c. in some cases are punishable in the Starre-chamber Riots Routs vnlawfull and Rebellious Assemblies Fol. 24. 1 The enormity of Riots Statutes ordained to preuent forces or Riots 2 The Court of Star-chamber authority to punish Riots c. 3 What is a Riot 4 What is an vnlawfull assembly 5 What is a Rout. Rout by wearing of armour 6 Lawfull assemblies of three persons or more An assembly lawfully begun doth end riotously 7 Disturbing of Riotors 8 The Iustices and Shirifes c. shall arrest Riotors Recording of a Riot 9 Inquiry of a Riot by the Iustices c. A Precept to the Shirife to returne a Iury to inquire of a Riot The forme of an inquisition of a Riot 10 Certifying of a Riot Trauerse of a Certificat 11 Proces against offendors 12 The forfeiture of Iustices which doe not inquire of Riots 13 A Commission to inquire of the Iustices c. default 14 Vpon the Commission the Coroner shall returne the Iurie What issues shal be returned vpon the Iurors 15 Where the Sherife shall returne the Iury and not the Coroner 16 A Writ directed to inquire of Riots 17 Riots shal be inquired of at the Kings costs 18 The punishment of Riotors 19 Each man shall helpe to represse Riots 20 Baylifes of Franchises Riots in Cities and Townes corporat 21 A Iury to inquire of Riots 22 Maintenance wherby a riot is not found 23 What one Iustice of Peace may do alone in a Riot 24 The Iustices must haue notice of a Riot 25 The parties agreement no discharge of the inquisition of a Riot 26 What power of the Countie the Iustices shall vse to represse Riots 27 The Iustices record of a Riot where no trauerse thereunto 28 The credit of the Iustices Record Certificat of a Riot 29 The proces against Riotors 30 The penalty for not executing of this statute 31 A trauerse to an indictment of Riot 32 Twelue or aboue assembled to change lawes 33 Practising to destroy Parks Ponds Conduits Common or Way Destroying of Deere Conies Douehouses Fish Pulling downe houses burning stackes of corne c. 34 Raising of vnlawfull assemblies by acts or words 35 Relieuing them which bee assembled 36 Vnlawfull assemblies aboue two and vnder twelue The remedy of the party grieued 37 Raising of power to suppresse vnlawfull assemblies 38 A copiholder being required refuseth to serue the king 39 A farmer required refuseth to serue 40 Disclosing a commotion wherein one is moued 41 An able person required refuseth to serue 42 Attendance vpon a Lieutenant 43 The forme of the Proclamation 44 Hinderance of the Proclamation 45 Other mens rights saued 46 Procuring others to offend 47 Vnlawfull assemblies by xl or aboue 48 A Lieutenant shall not appoint a deputie 49 Aiding of the offendor before the offence 50 The attainder of those offences no corruption of blood Force and Forcible Entries Fol. 34. 1 Vnlawfull force is an enemie to peace There shall be no forcible entry into lands 2 The penalty of forcible entry into lands or benefices 3 Holding possession by force Feoffement of lands for maintenance An Assise or action of Trespas against a disseisor by force The authority of officers in Cities and Towns enfranchised touching force 4 A speciall Assise against a disseisor with force 5 Seuerall remedies for seuerall offences by force 6 A Precept to the Sherife to impanell a Iury. The Shirifes forfeiture for not due executing of a Precept The proces against offendors in force 7 The forme of a Precept to the shirife to impanell a Iury. 8 The forme of an inquisition of forcible entry 9 A warrant to the Shirife to make restitution 10 Restitution awarded out of the Kings bench 11 No restitution but where forces is found by inquisition 12 Where no restitution against three yeares possession Where restitution notwithstanding three yeares possession 13 A Supersedeas to stay restitution 14 Where force found and yet no restitution 15 A Mittimus to send to the Gaole such as doe hold land by force 16 A Iustice may enquire of Forcible Entries without complaint 17 In an action of forcible entry the writ must be Vi armis 18 Who may bring an action of Forcible entry 19 He that hath title entereth by force 20 Hee that
Maintenance in respect of neighbourhood 35 In what cases the master may maintaine his seruant In what cases the seruant may maintaine his master Deceit Couin Collusion Fraud Fol. 67. 1 The multitude and enormities of deceits and frauds 2 The reward for paines and punishment for deceits of officers towards the Law A Iudge A Clerke A Serieant A Pleader A Philozer An Exigenter No office of Iustice shall be sold or bought No man shal be Iustice of Assise in his owne County 3 Who shal be Atturneyes Sollicitors The penalty for following a suit in anothers name What acts done by Atturneyes in seuerall cases shall bee adiudged deceit 4 The Law reiecteth deceitfull and fraudulent acts A fine leuied of land to defraud the right owner thereof shall bee void 5 A fine leuied of auncient demesne land to defraud the Lord of his Seigniorie is voidable 6 How a recouery of land by deceit shal be auoided 7 A Scire facias vpon a recouery by deceit auoided A recouery of debt by deceit auoided A iudgement to auoid the meaning of a Statute The executors shall haue remedy for a deceitfull recouery against the Testator 8 Deceit vpon a recouery in a Quare impedit Deceit vpon a recouery in wast 9 Deceit vpon a recouery in a Praecipe in capite 10 Where a good Title shal be impaired by a couenous recouery thereof 11 A Warranty deuised by deceit 12 Deceit by getting of a Protection 13 Deceit by purchasing of a writ to charge another 14 Deceit by purchasing of a writ in anothers name Deceit for procuring one to sue another 15 Deceit by acknowledging of a statute in anothers name Deceit by doing of a iudiciall act in anothers name 16 Deceit by forging of a resignation of a Benefice 17 Deceit by conueying of land to one man which before was bargained to another 18 Deceit by not performing of his Warranty 19 Deceit by confession of an action wherein hee hath no interest 20 Deceit by the aliening of the goods of his wife from whom hee meaneth to be diuorced 21 Sale of goods in open Market by deceit and couin 22 A fraudulent assurance to defeat the discontinuee in tayle of his plea of Assets per Discent 23 Fraudulēt assurance to defeat a Lord of his Ward Marriage c. 24 He that is not partie to a fraud shall sustaine no losse by it 25 Deceit collusion to bring land into mortmaine Lands assured in mortmaine to Churches Chappels c. Collaterall assurances to defraud c. Which be charitable and lawfull vses 26 Couin by a particular Tenant to deceiue him in the reuersion 27 Couin by him in the reuersion to deceiue the lessee for yeares Couin to auoid a Statute or Recognizance 28 Fraudulent deeds to auoid other mens duties c. The forfeiture of parties to fraudulent deeds who doe iustifie the same Common recoueries Voucher in Formedon Estates made vpon good consideration and bonafide 29 Fraudulent deedes to auoid forfeitures shal be void 30 A deed without fraud must be made vpon good consideration and bonafide Infallible marks of a fraudulent deed of gift How a deed of gift may be made without fraud 31 Fraudulent assurances to deceiue purchasors The forfeiture of parties to fraudulent conueyances which do iustifie the same Conueiances made vpon good considerations and bona fide Conueiances with condition of reuocation or alteration Morgages 32 A purchasor doth know before of a fraudulent deed 33 The father maketh a fraudulent lease and the sonne selleth the land 34 A womans iointure made by fraud 35 Fraudulent deeds to auoid successors of dilapidations 36 An action popular sued by collusion and fraud 37 Fraudulent possessing of Bankrupts Lands Goods or Debts 38 Fraudulent administration of intestate goods 39 Fraudulent conueyances of Abbey lands 40 Seuerall deceits and frauds in marchandizes and men of trade 41 Deceit by selling of vnholesome victuall Extortion Exaction Fol. 82. 1 What is Extortion What is Exaction 2 Exaction by taking of reward for a report 3 Extortion in the Shirife Coroner or other officers 4 Extortion in a Serieant Crier or Marshall of a Iudge 5 Extortion in a Coroner 6 Extortion in a Sherife vnder-Sherife or Baylife for making of arrests c. 7 Extortion in a Sherife for sparing to returne a Iuror 8 Extortion in a Sherife for the seruing of an Execution 9 Extortion in the Chirographer of the common place 10 Extortion in the kings auditors or their Clerkes 11 Extortion in the Kings Receiuers Extortion in them who do pay fees or pensions 12 Extortion in officers of the Exchequer 13 Extortion in a Clerke of the Signet or priuy Seale 14 Extortion by officers of the faculties 15 Extortion by Gouernours vpon such as be made prentices or freemen 16 Extortion by the officers of the Court of Wards 17 Extortion in taking of Obligations for the payment of first fruits 18 Extortion by Escheators 19 Exaction by the Admirall c. vpon them who trauaile for Fish 20 Extortion by the marshall of the kings house Extortion by a seruitor of bills in the marshals Court. 21 Exaction by Muster-masters to spare the taking of souldiers Exaction by captaines of their souldiers 22 Extortion by taking of Scauage of Marchants 23 Extortion by the Clerke of the Statutes or c. 24 A preuention of extortion by atturneyes in taking of excessiue fees An atturney delaying of a suit or demaunding more then is due 25 A preuention of Extortion in stewards of Courts 26 Extortion in gaugers searchers and packers of fish Extortion in Ordinaries and their Officers for probat of Testaments Administrations c. 28 Extortion in an Ordinarie for the seale of a Citation 29 Extortion in Parsons Vicars c. for Mortuaries 30 Exaction for presenting or collating to a benefice 31 Exaction for admitting to a benefice 32 Exaction for resigning or exchanging of a benefice 33 Exaction for making of ministers or giuing licence to preach 34 Exaction for a voice in electing of a fellow or scholler into a Colledge or c. 35 Exaction by taking money to resigne a place in a Colledge c. 36 Exaction by gathering money which should discharge the fifteene of a Towne 37 Extortion by taking of an amerciament in a Court Baron 38 It is no Extortion to take lawfull fees Taking of barre fees of a prisoner discharged Taking of gloues of an offendor pardoned 39 Extortion by taking of fees of him who doth appeare gratis Oppression Fol. 91. 1 What Oppression is Oppression by disseisins Of what things one may bee disseised 2 Oppression by approuement of common Oppression by surcharge of common 3 Oppression by distresses Powndage money Distraining out of his fee. Excessiue distresse Seuerall distresses for one thing Distresse for damage fesant 4 Oppression by trespasses 5 Oppression by Nusances 6 Oppression by Rescous 7 Oppression by encroachments 8 Oppression by excessiue amerciaments 9 Oppression by committing of wast Wast in land Wast
shal be allowed but once 6 Killing a man by chaunce or in his owne defence Committing of petite Larcenie 7 Offendors in Treason 8 Confession of the Felony 9 Clergie taken away by Statute A Cutpurse 10 Forging of Writings 11 A committer of Buggerie 12 Counterfeiting to be Egiptians 13 Relieuing of a Iesuit or a Priest 14 Committers of Rape or Burglary 15 Taking a woman against her will 16 Practising of Coniuration or Witchcraft 17 Stabbing or thrusting to death 18 A Recusant not abiuring or returning 19 Abiuration of a Popish Recusant 20 A Souldier departing from his Captaine 21 Wandering Souldiers and Mariners 22 Taking away any person in Cumberland 23 Committing of Murther Poyson Burglarie 24 Stealing of a Horse 25 Stealing of goods in one Countie and carrying them into another 26 Robbing of houses booths tents 27 Robbing of a house in the day 28 Commandement or counsell of Felony 29 A Lord of the parliament shall haue the benefite of his Clergie 30 The Indictment must be according to the Statute The words of the Indictment must be proued 31 When Clergie shall be demaunded Clergie demaunded before verdict 32 Denying to be a Clarke and yet is Whether Clergie be allowable without request 33 Who shal allow of Clergy 34 A Felon readeth vnder the Gallowes 35 To what vse the Ordinarie is imployed Clerkes within orders shall be vsed as others be 36 What is reading as a Clerke 37 The Ordinaries attendance requisit Contention who is Ordinarie 38 A Priest shall haue no fetters 39 Bigamus shall haue his Clergie 40 Another time conuict How the conuict shall be marked How offendors within orders shal be vsed 41 Certificat into the K. Bench of Outlawries Attainders and Conuictions 42 A Clarke deliuered to the Ordinarie Clergy allowed without deliuery to the Ordinary The Kings Pardon Fol. 218. 1 The Kings oath at his Coronation touching pardons 2 None but the King can pardon Felonies 3 In what cases the King may graunt pardon 4 Non obstante in a pardon The Suggestion shall bee comprised in the pardon 5 The offences shal be specified in the pardon 6 Suit for an approuers pardon 7 Pardon of the Felony but not of the attainder 8 Pardon of the attainder but not of the Felony 9 A ioynt pardon to two or three 10 A graunt to be quit of escapes of Felony 11 A generall pardon by Parliament 12 The Kings pardon must be shewed vnder Seale A writ of the allowance of the Kings pardon 13 He that hath a Pardon shall find sureties of his good abearing 14 The good behauior broken after pardon 15 A Charter of Pardon must agree with the indictment 16 The pardon and allowance entred vpon the appeale 17 The Kings pardon in plea in appeale 18 Vpon a Pardon a Scire facias awarded against an Appellant 19 Nonsute doth not aid an appellee that is outlawed 20 The Kings Protection 21 Pardon of a Felony before it be committed Standing mute or answering indirectly Fol. 222. 1 Standing mute whereupon paine fort dure doth ensue 2 Felons refusing lawfull triall 3 Pennance onely vpon an Indictment 4 Pennance for Pyracie 5 No pennance for High Treason 6 No pennance for a man before attainted 7 Standing mute after cōfession 8 Inquire of him that standeth mute 9 The iudgement in pennance Judgement and Execution Fol. 224. 1 Iudgement where the prisoner is acquited 2 The iudgement of a man attainted of high Treason 3 The iudgement of a woman attainted of Treason 4 The iudgement of a man attainted of petit Treason 5 The iudgement of a woman attainted of Felony 6 The iudgement in misprision of Treason 7 Attainder of Treason by the common Law 8 The iudgement of pennance viz. of paine for t dure 9 Iudgement in Felony by Iustices of Nisi prius 10 Iudgement by new Iustices 11 Iudgement in petit Larcenie 12 The staying of a womans execution being with child 13 A man hanged falleth down before he be dead Forfeiture Fol. 226. 1 A Felon shall forfeit lands and goods 2 Forfeiture of goods Flying for the Felony 3 The Accessarie fled for the Felony 4 Forfeiture for petite Larcenie 5 Forfeiture for flying before arrest Forfeiture without Attainder 6 Forfeiture vpon the exigent awarded 7 No forfeiture to the accessarie vntill the principall be attainted 8 For●eiture notwithstanding apparance and pleading 9 Forfeiture of a Clarke conuict Of him that committeth Homicide by misaduenture Of him that killeth in his owne defence Of Felo de se Of him that doth stand mute 10 Forfeiture of a right or action No payment of Attainteds debts 11 Forfeiting of goods wherin the offendor hath no propertie 12 A Felon attainted at the suit of one where moe were to sue 13 Forfeiture of other mens goods and his owne 14 The forfeiture where a woman killeth her husband 15 An Executor shall not forfeit his Testators goods 16 The forfeiture of goods holden ioyntly 17 Confiscation of goods Confiscation of his own goods by disclaymer 18 Confiscation by disclaimer in the goods of others 19 Confiscation of goods left out of an Appeale 20 Confiscation of goods by a false Appeale 21 A Waife and the seising thereof 22 The owner seiseth his goods waiued 23 Sildome waife but of stoln goods When waife of goods not stolne 24 No waife of goods stolne from an alien 25 Forfeiture of lands Tenant for yeares Tenant for life or in taile Tenant in the right of his wife or Church 26 Forfeiture of Landes intailed 27 The forfeiture of landes in fee simple The forfeiture of an Annuitie 28 The forfeiture of Title to land 29 The forfeiture of Euidence 30 Forfeiture without attainder 31 Forfeiture of the yeare day and wast 32 By what meanes the King came by the yeare day and wast 33 The yeare day and wast of lands of what title shall be forfeit 34 No yeare day and wast of lands holden by ioint purchase 35 Whether any Forfeiture shall bee made by Tenant in taile A Disseisor Tenant in fee farme A Mortgage 36 Forfeiture of tenant in auncient demesne 37 The yeare day and wast forfeited without attainder 38 No yeare day and wast of a Clarke conuict Lands of small value 39 When the king shall haue the yeare day and wast 40 The yeare day and wast not grauntable from the Crowne 41 What goods of Felons the king shall haue 42 From what time the forfeiture of lands shall haue relation 43 From what time the forfeiture of goods shall haue relation 44 who shall seise and keepe Felons goods and when 45 The goods of an offendor shall not bee seised vntill he be attainted 46 Who shall haue the custody of Felons goods 47 To whom the forfeiture of lands of a person attainted of high Treason shall accrue 48 Who shall haue the forfeiture in petite Treason and Felonie 49 The Lords remedy for lands escheated vnto him 50 The heires remedie for lands escheated vnto his auncestor 51 Where the
Lord shall haue a Writ of Escheat and where he may enter 52 The forme of a Writ of Escheat 53 The kings remedy for lands escheated vnto him An office for those lands which doe escheat for Felony 54 The wiues forfeiture of title of Dower 55 What the appellee that wageth battell shall forfeit 56 A Rent-charge pro consilio not forfeited 57 The forfeitures of an outlaw Corruption of Blood Fol. 239. 1 Corruption of Blood salued by Parliament only 2 Where corruption of blood shall preiudice tenant by the courtesie 3 The eldest sonne attainted during his fathers life 4 Where attainder but no corruption of blood Restitution of stolne goods Fol. 240. 1 Restitution of goods vpon Fresh suit 2 What conuiction shal be sufficient to giue the owner restitution of his goods 3 Where the owner shall haue restitution 4 Before whom and by whom inquirie of Fresh suit is to bee made 5 Restitution vpon attainder by indictment Damages in Appeale Fol. 242. 1 The punishment of the appellant and the abettors when the appellee is acquit No Essoine for the appellant in an appeale of death 2 The appeale must bee commenced vpon malice 3 The statute of 13. Ed. 1. extendeth to all Felons 4 The defendant in an appeale acquited by battell 5 Where the accessarie in an Appeale shall recouer dammages 6 Where the defendant is said to acquit himselfe in due manner and where not 7 Acquitall at the Kings suit is only in appeale 8 What Iustices may inflict the penaltie vpon the Appellant 9 The dammages for seuerall persons assessed seuerally 10 Where the appellant shall pay a fine to the king 11 In what cases inquiry shall be made for the abettors 12 What pleas the abettors may plead 13 Proces against the abettors Nonsute in the proces against the abettors 14 A writ against the abettors by the appellee 15 Procurers of indictments for suits in spirituall courts A Writ of Conspiracie Fol. 245. 1 In what case a Writ of Conspiracie doth lye 2 Conspiracie maintenable vpon an acquitall in an indictment or appeale 3 The indictment must be false which giueth the Writ of Conspiracie 4 Conspiracie doubtfull whether true or false 5 The conspirators do become indictors A Iustice of Peace A giuer of Euidence 6 Who be conspirators 7 A Conspiracie must bee by more then one Where only one shal be charged in Conspiracie 8 No Writ of Conspiracie against the Husband and the Wife 9 The forme of the Writ of Conspiracie 10 The writ of Conspiracy for the accessarie 11 Barres in a writ of Conspiracie 12 Iudgement in Conspiracie A villanous iudgement 13 Inquiry of Conspiracie by Iustices 14 Inquiry of Conspirators at the kings or parties suit 15 Procurers of an indictment or an appeale in a forraine county 16 An offence supposed to bee done in a place where there is none such The Coroner and his authoritie and dutie in Felonies c. Fol. 249. 1 The office and duty of a Coroner 2 The Writ de Coronatore Eligendo 3 Who shall be Coroners and by whom they shal be chosen 4 Whether Coroners ought to be knights 5 Causes to remoue a Coroner 6 Where a Coroner shall haue fee and where not 7 What things Coroners shall inquire of 8 A Coroner shall execute his Office in his owne person A C●●oner shall see the dead body A body buried taken vp againe 9 A Coroner must presently doe his office 10 A Coroner shall onely enquire of the death of a man A man slaine in an arme of the Sea A Coroner concealing or not apprehending a Felon 11 The force of a Coroners Record Which Coroners Record shall be preferred Abiuring before the Coroner Confession of breaking of Prison before the Coroner 12 Who ought to appeare vpon the Coroners Inquisition 13 The Coronour with the Sherife may take Appeales 14 Stopping vp of a place of daunger by the Coroners commaundement 15 Where the presence of all the Coroners is requisite and where but some one of them 16 The Coroner must record the euidence and bind the party to giue it 17 Inquiry of a man slaine within the Kings House and Verge 18 One man Coroner of the Kinges House and the Countie Who shall be Judge in Treason and Felony Fol. 253. 1 The King ought not to bee iudge in Treason or Felony What men of condition Iudges ought to be 2 None shall make Iudges but the King 3 Iudges vpon the arraignement of the Peeres of the Realme 4 Iudges of offences that are done in the Kings Pallace 5 Iudges of Conspiracies made to destroy the King or any Lord c. 6 Iudges within the Verge 7 Iudges of Treason committed out of the Realme 8 Iustices of Gaole deliuerie Iudges in Felony 9 Iudges of Nisi prius Iudges in Felony c. 10 Speciall commissioners Iudges at the arraignement of a Murderer 11 Iudges of piracie or offences done vpon the sea 12 Iustices of Peace Iudges in Felony 13 The Lord of a Mannour Iudge in Felony Infangtheefe Outfangtheefe 14 A Felon first executed and then iudged FINIS