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B13659 The second part of the Parallele, or conference of the ciuill law, the canon law, and the common law of this realme of England Wherein the agreement and disagreement of these three lawes touching diuers matters not before conferred, is at large debated and discussed. Whereunto is annexed a table ... Handled in seauen dialogues, by William Fulbecke.; Parallele or conference of the civill law, the canon law, and the common law of this realme of England. Part 2 Fulbeck, William, 1560-1603? 1602 (1602) STC 11415a; ESTC S102691 206,828 373

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any wayne ouer such a bridge being fraught with carriage shall paie iiij d' and the partie causeth all the thinges in the wayne when he commeth to the bridge to be caried ouer the bridge on mens backes here is no defraudation of the Law But if he should giue iiij pence for the cariage ouer the bridge but not currant money now the Law should be defrauded e Io. in §. penult Insti de ●dop And when a man is preiudiced by the fraudulent dealing of an other man he may by our Law haue an action against him which is called actio doli an action of Deceit Canonolog Indeede the difference of Dolus is vsed likewise in our Law And we haue a rule of that which you haue tearmed dolum bonum 3. The same difference the common Law obserueth Frangenti fidem fides frangatur eidem f 23. q. 1. noli existimare C. de pac l. cum proponas in glo Accur And likewise an example of it vsed in our law namelie of Salomon who did vse such cunning betwixt the two harlots in searching out who was the true and naturall mother of the child But the deceit which of you hath ben tearmed dolus malus is in our Law nomen reatus which it doth punish as being done against the Law for qui peccat non peccat de legis authoritate g 23. q. 4. qui peccat Anglonomoph That deceit which of ye both 4. Dolus malus punishable at the common Law by an action vpon the case or a writ of Deceit hath been tearmed dolus malus doth not in our Law escape punishment but for the more strong inhibiting and repressing of it it doth afforde a double remedie against such as endammage others by deceit namelie either a writ of Deceit or an Action vpon the case For if a man plaie with an other at dice and he hath false dice with which he plaieth and winneth the other mans money he that loseth his money in such sort may haue an Action vpon the case for this deceit And in other like cases an Action vpon the case or a writ of Deceit will lie at the pleasure and election of the plaintife And if I present one to a Church whereof I am Patron to the Ordinarie and one T. disturbeth me wherefore an other man purchaseth a Quare impedit in my name retournable in the Common place I not knowing thereof against the said T. and after causeth the writ to be abated or me to be nonsuit in the action I may haue a writ of Deceit against him h 5. 5. E. 3. Quare impedit 37. 20. H. 6. 20. Fitzh nat bro. 96. A. And in euery case an action vpon the case is maintenable against him which sueth an originall in the name of the plaintife against his will i 7. H. 6. 45. So if a man forge a statute merchant in my name sue a Capias therupon whereby I am arrested and had in execution I may haue a writ of Deceit against him that forged it k 19. H. 6. 44. 58. 34. H. 6. 19. Fitzh Nat. be 96. B. So if the Warden of an Infant vouch one by couin who is not sufficient or pleadeth some bad plea wheras he might haue pleaded a better plea the Infant shall haue a writ of Deceit against him and shall recouer the full value in dammages l 9. E. 4. 34. And 11. H. 6. a writ of Deceit was brought against an Attourney for acknowledging a satisfaction whereas his master was not in truth satisfied m 11. H. 6. 34. And in a Praecipe quod reddat if the Shirife retorne the tenant of the land to be summoned whereas in truth he was neuer summoned whereupon the tenant loseth by default vpon the Graund cape retourned Now the tenant may haue a writ of Deceit against him that recouered and against the Shirife for his false retourne n Fitzh Nat. bre 97. C. But the writ of Deceit in this case doth not determine the right of the land but doth only defeat the iudgement o 35. H. 6. 44. 18. E. 4. 11. 33. H. 6. 43. 41. E. 3. 2. 43. E. 3. 31. 50 E. 3. 18. And 5. E. 4. is that no dammages in this case shall be recouered against the Shirife but he shall be onelie fined p 5. E. 4. 49. And if a man recouer in a writ of Wast by default whereas the defendant was neuer summoned the defendant in this case may haue a writ of Deceit q 20. E. 3. Disceit 5. 29. E. 3. 54. 48. E. 3. 59. 19. E. 2. Disceit 56. 19. E. 3. Disceit 3. And if a man bargaine with an other and assume vpon consideration to enfeoffe him of certaine land and he enfeoffeth an other he to whom the assumpsit was made may haue a writ of Deceit r 20. H. 6. 36. 16. E. 4. 9. Fitzh Nat. br 98. F. or an Action vpon the case at his pleasure ſ 3. H. 7. 14. 2. H 7. 11. And if one sell to an other a Horse which he knoweth to haue a secreat disease in his bodie or selleth certaine quarters of Graine which is full of grauell a writ of Deceit lieth t 20. H. 6. 36. So 13. H. 4. a writ of Deceit was brought for selling a certaine quantitie of wooll and warranting it to be 50. sackes whereas it wanted of that measure the defendant pleaded in barre that it was weyed before the sale and that the seruants of the plaintife being his factors did accepr it and caried it beyond the sea whereupon the plaintife demurred u 13. H. 4. 1. And if a man lose his land by default in a Praecipe quod reddat whereas he was neuer summoned and die his heire may haue an action of Deceit and shall haue restitution of the land uu 8. H. 6. 5. per Rolfe 15. E. 3. Disceit 43. 18. R. 2. Disceit 50. Fitzh Nat. bre 98. Q. And 1. E. 3. in the booke of Assises it is said that if a recouerie in such case be had against the father by default whereas in truth the father was dead at the time of the recouerie the heire may auoide this by writ of Disceit or Error a 1. Ass p. 16. And whereas there be two tenants for life the remainder to the heires of one of them and they both lose by default being not summoned and the tenant for life dieth the suruiuor shall haue a writ of Disceit for the whole Otherwise it had been if the recouerie had been against the tenant for life onelie by default b 8. E. 3. Disceit 7. Nomomath You haue sufficientlie discussed 7. Diuision the point of deceit Now I would craue your opinions of an other matter Suppose that a man by slaunderous and opprobrious speeches is impeached and his good name impaired this being but a verball iniurie whether doe your Lawes inflict punishment vpon such
thy ring be as a vessell to be vsed at any mans pleasure but as thy selfe not as a seruant to an other mans will but as a witnesse of thine owne Nomomath What if the Master doe promise ● Diuision vnto his Bailie or Attourney that if he can procure him the possession of the land in question he shall haue the halfe or some part of it for his rewarde Will your Lawes allow of such an assumpsit Codicgn Our Law doth not allow it But 1. That the bailie or attourney may not take halfe the land for purchasing or compassing the other half he may safelie take a speciall collaterall reward for that particular effect b Gazalup in ver procurat Canonolog So in our Law he that giueth part of the profites of a benefice to be admitted to the benefice is so far from being allowed 2. That the like matter is forbidden by the Canon Law that his fault is accompted to be enorme and indispensabile c 13. disti nerui For it is held to be simonie corrupt cheuisance if any valuable consideration be giuen in such regard pacto vel facto And he that buyeth so is called Simoniacus of Simon Magus and he that selleth so is called Gieziticus of Giezi d 1. q. 1. Studet Anglonomoph In our Law it is held that 3. The common Law agreeth with them there is no diuersitie where a man selleth land depending a writ petitorie of the same land or doe giue it depending the writ for in both cases there is Champertie e 8. E. 4. ●9 Nomomath I praie you let me know whether 7. Diuision anie persons be accomptable by the meere and sole operation and enforcement of Law Codicgn Yes there be two sortes of accomptes publike and priuate The publike 1. Two sortes of accomptants by the ciuill Law accomptes are such as are to be made by a publique officer who is charged with some speciall administration appertaining to the common weale ee L. officialis c. de epis et cler For the Presidents of Prouinces amongest the Romanes did customablie vse to make vp their accompts before they departed out of the Prouince to which accompt they were obliged by Law Therefore Cicero saith Illud certe factum est quod Lex iubebat vt apud duas ciuitates Laodicensem et Apamensem quoniam ita necesse erat rationes confectas et consolidatas deponeremus f Cicer. ad Rufum Priuate accomptes are such as belong to priuate men by the administration of their goodes or affaires as the proxies or bailifes of priuate men Canonolog The same difference doe we 2. Likewise by the common Law hold in matters of accompt g d. l. officialis ibid. Anglonomoph And by our Law there be 3. And also by the common Law some which be accomptable by Law some by a particular charge imposed vpon them or vndertaken of them And in the former case a writ of Accompt will lie though there be no priuitie infacto but onlie in Law Wherefore Mast Prisot said 33. H. 6. that the king might bring a writ of Accompt against one as his bailie who did occupie the land de son tort demesne of his owne wrong And the same Law is as he there affirmeth if a man occupie the manour of a common person de son tort demesne And according to Wangf opinion if a man seise an Infant as wardein in Socage and is not the prochein amy yet a writ of Accompt lieth against him but there he claimeth to the vse of the Infant h 33. H. 6. 2. per Prisot et Wangf And the same Law seemeth it to be to Mast. Brooke i Brook Accompt 8. where a man presumptuouslie and of his owne head vndertaketh to be my bailie a writ of Accompt will lie in such case But if he enter to his owne vse there it seemeth saith he that a writ of Accompt will not lie for there Ne vnques son Receiuor pur accompt render is a good plea. And 49. E. 3. a writ of Accompt was brought against the Lord by the tenant as occupier of the land which the tenant now plaintife holdeth of the defendant in Socage and the def said that the auncestor of the plaintife did hold the land of him by knights seruice wherfore he seised the land in warde k 49. E. 3. 10. By which case it appeareth that a writ of Accompt is admitted to lie against the occupier of the land without any priuitie in facto And 4. H. 7. it is held by Brian that if a man receiue my rent of my tenants without my assent yet I shall charge him for the possession and receit of the rent l 4. H. 7. 6. But a writ of Accompt will not lie against a disseisor because that cannot be without priuitie in Law or in facto as by assignement or as Warden or in like sort or by the pretence of the defendant of occupying to the vse of the plaintife m 2. Mar. Br. Accompt 89. Nomomath I will not presse you any further with mouing doubtes of Accompts but will now make transition to other matters that remaine to be discussed The fifth Dialogue Of Wast done in a mans Ground NOmomath The next matter that by order offereth it selfe to your conference is to treat of Wast done in a mans land And for my more perfit apprehension of the thinges concerning that point I will prescribe vnto you certaine particulars wherein you may imploy your trauell for my further instruction First of what things Wast may be committed 2. What thing properly your Lawes censure and determine to be wast 3. What punishment by your lawes is to be inflicted vpon these that commit wast You shall doe me great pleasure in vnfolding the secrecie of your knowledge hereof And first to begin 1. Diuision with the first let me know of what things wast may be committed Codicgnost Wast may be committed in suffering 1. Of what things wast may be committed by the ciuill Law the walles of houses or closes to fall a Gazalup verb. rudera So if there be a wood which is thick with great tymber trees which in Latin is called Saltus or which is but thinly set with slender trees wherin hunters may ride vp and downe which the Latinists do call Nemus spoile or hauock made in such woods may be accompted wast b C. de ●un pa. et Salluen li. 11. But 2. Cutting of wood in silua caedua by the ciuill Law is ●o wast to cut wood in silua caedua which is apt to be cut is no wast and therfore it is said apt to be cut because it groweth easilie again Neither doth wast seeme to be committed in silua pascua if brush-wood small wood or vnderwood be cut for the better pasturage of the beasts that go vpon the soyle Likewise wast may be
by the Canon Law 3. The common Law agreeth with them 7. Diuision 1 Two sortes of Accomptants by the Ciuill Law 2. Likewise by the Canon Law 3. And also by the common Law The diuisions and principall contents of the fifth Dialogue of Wast done in a mans ground 1. Diuision 1. OF what thinges Wast may be committed by the Ciuill Law 2. Cutting of Wood in Sylua caedua by the ciuill Law is no Wast 3. The common Law agreeth with the ciuill that Wast may be in the decaie of an house 4. A speciall couenant will binde the partie to repaire houses and walles battered downe by violence vnresistable by the common Law 5. The tenant by the common Law may cut Trees for the reparation of houses 6. The common Law agreeth with the Ciuill in the cutting of silua caedua 7. The common Law agreeth with the Ciuill in tollerating the lopping of Trees which may be auaileable for their groweth 2. Diuision 1 That both by the Ciuill and common Law where land is empeired by the inundation of water this is wast 3. Diuision 1 That by the common Law he that commeth to land by an other mans graunt ought to vse it according to the graunt 2. The digging for coale or claie in the land demised is Wast by the common Law 3. The suffering of the ground to become rushie or weedie by the common Law is Wast 4. That the Ciuill Law agreeth with the common Law in suffering one to amend conduit-pypes in an other mans ground 3. Diuision 1 The punishment of Wast by the Ciuill Law 2. The punishment of Wast by the common law The diuisions and principall contents of the sixth Dialogue of Parceners 1. Diuision 1. TWo sortes of Parceners Parceners by the common Law and Parceners by Custome 2. Who be Parceners by the common Law 3. Who be Parceners by the Custome 4. That by the ciuill Law where 3. heires are instituted they are not reputed as one heire 5. That by the common Law Parceners are reputed as one heire as to the discent of the land 6. Parceners in regard of the particion are accepted as seuerall persons 2. Diuision 1 The Statute of 31. H. 8. giueth a writ de Partitione facienda as well to Iointenants and Tenants in common as to parceners 2. The three seuerall actions against Parceners Iointenants and Tenants in common by the Ciuill Law 3. Diuision 1 Diuerse kindes of Particion at the common Law First A particion to haue a third part or a 4. part 2. A particion by way of release 3. Particion by the graunt of a thing de nouo 4. Particion by way of reseruation 5. Particion by taking the third part or the fourth part of the profites 6. A difference in the Ciuill Law where a thing that hath partes cohaerentes is diuided and where a thing that hath partes distantes The diuisions and principall contents of the seauenth Dialogue of Conditions 1. Diuision 1. SI doth not alwaie signifie a condition in the Ciuill Law 2. Sometime it signifieth an vncertaine cause 3. Sometime it signifieth a certaine cause 4. Sometime an vncertaine euent 5. Sometime a condition 6. Si doth signifieth an vncertaine cause at the common Law 7. Si signifieth a certain cause at the common Law 8. Likewise an vncertaine euent by the common Law 9. Likewise a condition 2. Diuision 1 The word Nisi or vnlesse doth sometimes signifie a condition at the Ciuill Law 2. How a modification or limitation of a graunt is made 3. A difference betwixt a limitation and a condition at the common Law 4. The common Law is more ample and large-handed then the Ciuill Law in matters of limitation 3. Diuision 1 Rursus or the word againe signifieth once againe by the Ciuill Law 2. How farre forth a word of restraint is to be extended by the common Law 4. Diuision 1 An agreement by word may defeat a matter in writing by the ciuill Law 2. The common Law is quite contrarie to the aforesaid assertion of the uill Law 5. Diuision 1 Three sortes of impossibilities at the Ciuill Law 2. What impossibilitas iuris is at the Ciuill Law 3. What impossibilitas facti is at the Ciuill Law 4. Impossibilitas naturae by the Ciuill Law 5. Which be conditions against Law by the censure of the Canon Law 6. What conditions impossible in fact are at the common Law 6. Diuision 1 Conditions by the ciuill law are taken according to equitie 2. The common lawe taketh conditions many times strictly 7. Diuision 7 There may bee a substitution conditionall of one heire after another or one executor after an other at the ciuill law 2. The heire at the ciuill law must succedere in vniuersum ius defuncti 3. By will according to the common law an entre may be limited to a straunger 4. The aduantage of entry limited to a stranger is in the late reports doubted of 5. That the entry for the condition broken defeateth the whole estate Errata Faultes Page Corrections   nations fol. 2. a. matrons There want these words fol. 4. a. There bee two sorts of tithes ecclesiasticall and feudall stande fol. 6. b. sue There want these wordes fol. 10. a. or Darius linea 22. Tertorike 17. b. Teutonike   harde 38. a. pore fate 59. b. foote puerpercie 60. a. puerperie lande 69. b. Lord. FINIS THE PANDECTES OF the law of Nations CONTAYNING seuerall discourses of the questions points and matters of Law wherein the Nations of the world doe consent and accord Giuing great light to the vnderstanding and opening of the principall obiects questions rules and cases of the Ciuill Law and Common law of this Realme of England Compiled by WILLIAM FVLBECKE Opinionum commenta delet dies Nationum iudicia confirmat LONDON Imprinted by Thomas Wight 1602. To the curteous Reader CVrteous Reader when Sulpitius returning out of As●a sailed from Aegina to Megara he began to cast his eye and bend his contemplation to the regions round about him behind him was Aegina before him Megara on the right hand Piraeus on the left hand Corinth which had bene in ancient time verie flourishing Cities but were now ruinated prostrated and buried in dust that wise Romane whose eye did alwaies ayme at some conuenient marke and whose mind made perfect vse of her selected obiect when he saw these carkasses of townes considered his owne estate which was far more brittle I likewise wandring in my thoughts through the paradise of learning amongst many delightfull apparitions espied foure excellent lawes the first was the canon-law to which for the grauity I bowed the second the Ciuil which for the wisedom I admired the third the Common law to which I did my homage the fourth the law of Nations which I submissiuely reuerenced yet the hew and state of her seemed to bee much chaunged and the iniquitie of crabbed times had set the print of her metamorphosis vppon her Her other three sisters did condole with her
the case was such A man being found in arrerages vpon his account did promise to the dettee that if he wold forbeare him per paruū tempus that hee would pay him the money without further delay and the dettee did forbeare him accordingly and after vpon this assumpsit brought an action vpon the case and it seemed to three of the Iustices of the common pleas that the action would not lie because that paruū tempus was no good consideration neither could it be beneficiall to the partie but one of the Iustices saide that if the dettee had brought an action vpon the case without any consideration alleadged and had proued the dette that would haue sufficed for that had beene an assumpsit in law and that there must be a reciprocall consideration in such case may most clearely and euidently be proued by 44. E. 3. A writte of dette was brought and the plaintife declared that the defendant did owe vnto him fiue poundes for a house which hee had sold vnto him the defendant said that there was a couenant betwixt the plaintife the defendant that the pr shold remoue the same house at his owne costs charges within a certaine day to a certaine place and when he had so remoued it that then the defendant would pay him his money and that the house or the frame of the house was not as yet remoued and this was held a good plea b 44. E 3. 28. And where two considerations are to be accomplished the performance of them both is to bee auerred Wherefore the case was that in an action of trespasse the defendant pleaded a concord that he before a certaine day should make certayne windowes and should paye certaine money and he said that he payed the money by vertue of the concord before the day and demaunded iudgement si actio c. But hee spoke nothing of the making of the windowes and the plaintife replyed Nul tiel accorde and it was for the plaintife and it was held by all the court a ieofaile For when they accorded that the defendant should doe two things the concord is not performed vnlesse both be done and so the matter of the plea is not good and therefore the replication cannot make it good c 6. H. 7. 10. And if I buy a horse of you for sixe pound you may deteine the horse till I haue payed you d 10. E. 4 1● and so if one buy an horse of an other in Smithfield and do not pay to the vendor money presently but doth onely promise it the vendor may sell it to another immediately and the other can haue no remedie against him for otherwise he may be compelled to keepe his horse in perpetuum against his will e 17. E. 4. 1. per Choke And to this agreeth the booke of 21. H. 7. where it is said that in the bargaine it is implyed that the bargainee shall pay the money presently otherwise hee shall not haue the thing solde but if it were for a certaine day the money were not to bee payed before the daye because the bargainor hath giuen vnto him expresse libertie to pay at any time within the time prefixed f 21. H. 7. 6. And so is the booke of 28. H. 8. that a contract or bargaine is not good without present payment vnlesse there bee a certayne day limited so that one of the parties may haue an action of dette for the money and the other a writte of Detinue for the wares g 28. H. 8. 30 Dy. and if a man assure and promise to one that he will make for him certaine waines for carriage c. and hee taketh parcell of the money before hand to do it and after he doth it not according to his assumpsit the other may haue an action of trespasse vpon his case h Fitz. N. B. 94. A. so an action vpon the case was brought because the defendant promised to the plaintife that if the plaintife wold discharge I. S. of execution in which hee was at the suite of the plaintife that then he would pay vnto him his dette and in truth the promise was made to the wife of the plaintife to which the husband agreed and thereupon he discharged the partie and it was ruled by the court that the action was maintenable because a feoffement of lands or gift of goods is auaileable to the wife if the husbande doe not disagree so it is of an assumpsit i 27. H. 8. 24. 25. Nomomath Trouble your selfe no further Anglonomoph let me aske this one question of Codicgn whilest it resteth in my mind Suppose that I haue hyred a ship or gallie to transport my family and some of my houshold 4. Diuision goodes by lawfull permission and I agree to pay for the carriage of euerie poll or person of them a certaine summe of money admit that three or foure of them die in the ship whether shall the owner of the shippe haue the entire summe of money or shall it bee apporcioned for them that be dead before they be brought to the land k Ludou●c de Rom. in singulari Codicgn To cleare your doubt this diuersitie must bee vnderstood if the owner of the 1 That no fare ought to be payed for them that die in a ship if the master of the ship did assume to bring them safe to shoare shippe did make a couenant with you that he would bring them safe to such a place then surely you ought to pay no fare for them that bee dead l Id. in d. singu ad regu praedict but if the couenant were to take them into the ship and to carrie them to such a place thē the law wil be otherwise and so if a 2 If a child be borne in sea-faring nothing is to be paied for that child child be borne in the ship whilest it is vpon the sea there is nothing due in respect of that child m ff locat l. si adest §. si quis mulier Canonolog All contractes are bonae fidei and what is a contract but stipulatio verborum so that it is to be taken as the words doe sound no violence being offered to apparant equitie n Pecki ad reg iur Anglonomoph In our law there is a case not much swaruing from this purpose if we stand not too much vpon the common and verball way to go to the end of a question I. B. did 3 The barrister putteth a case of carrying a horse safe and sound ouer Humber declare by bill that A. at a certaine day and yeare vpon Humber did assume to carrie his horse being taken into his barge ouer the water of Humber sound and safe and the said A. did surcharge his barge with other things by which meane his horse perished in the water and this was held a good cause of action o 22. Assis pl. 41. but surely in this case without
not agreed before what I shall pay for the making hee can not haue an action of debt otherwise it is for victuailes and for wine n 12. E. 4. 8. Likewise an action of 8 An action of debt lyeth at the commō law for a loan of money debt lyeth vpon a loane of money made by the creditor to the debtor o Fitzh N. B. 119. G. or it lyeth for a meere dutie as when an Attourney bringeth 9 An action of debt lyeth at the commō law for a meer duety an action of debt for money expended in the suite of his client p Fitzh N. B. 121. L. 10. H. 4. Dette 158. 3. E. 4. 29. or vpon an obligation as when the especialtie is Nouerint vniuersi me teneri c. And after the deed saith ad fideliter computandum de proficuis in this case the obligee may vse an action of debt or an action of accompt at his pleasure q 41. E. 3. 10. 42. E. 3. 9. 28. E. 3. 98. Vpon which case Baker 28. H. 8. in Cores case thus distinguisheth that if the deliuerie of the money were to this intent that an increase or profit might rise of it and not that money might be repaied there no action of debt will lie but a writte of accompt onely r 28. H. 8. 20. Dy. Cores C. And if a man do make a contracte to paye certaine money for a thing bought by him if hee make an obligation 10 An obligation made after a contract dissolueth the contract by the common law for the money the contracte is discharged and he shall not haue an action of dette vpon the contracte ſ 9. E. 4. 25. 28. H. 6. 4. 21. H. 7. 5. 1. H. 6. 8. per ●ab 20. H. 6. 23 35. E. 3. det 83. But if a man make a talie and writeth wordes obligatorie vpon the talie and ensealeth it and deliuereth it as his deede yet this shall not binde him but hee may pleade nihil debet against it or may wage his law for an obligation ought to be writte in parchment or paper and not vpon a peece of wood t 25. E. 3. 40. 44. E. 3. 21. 2. R. 2. dett 4. 12. H. 4. 13. But the Queene may maintayne an action of dette against her Farmour vppon such a talie u 5. E. 4. 10. And a man shall not be fined for denying a talye ensealed x 4. E. 2. en le title de fine And whereas you say that a man may bee bounde by deede indented that is likewise so with vs 11. A man may be bound by deed indented by the common law For if one acknowledge himselfe by indenture to bee indetted to another man in an hundred pounde for which hee deliuereth him certayne Veluet that the other may sell it after the best manner that hee can and to reteigne it for payment and if any thing remayne of the dette that hee will pay it the other may sell the Veluet for twelue pence and vse an action of dette for the remnant a 18. E. 4. 5. and 11. H. 6. an action of dette was brought for an hundred markes deuised by the last will and testament of A. being in the handes of the defendant the def by Indenture acknowledged that the said summe of mony remained in his hands the deuisee made his executors died the abouesaid action of det was broght by the executors it was allowed the law is likewise so of an accompt b 11. H. 6. 46. And if the words of an indenture be so Ita conuentū est inter nos quòd A. soluat B. 20. li. ad festū Pasch B. may haue an action of dett hereupon c 30. H. 6. per Yeluert Stath tit Couenant So when a man maketh such a bill namely this bill witnesseth that I A. haue borrowed so much money of C. without saying more this shall charge the executor as well as an obligation and the testator could not haue waged his law against this bill for these words recepisse or debere or teneri ad soluendum 20. li. doe make a good obligation and shall bind the executor for euerie word which prooueth a man to bee dettor or to haue a strangers mony in his hands though it be by bill yet it shall charge the executor d 28. H. 8. 20. Cores c. per Fitzia et Mountague As for your instrumentum garrantigiae an instrument 12 A statute bond is resembled to an instrument of warrantie at ciuill law of warrantie as you haue tearmed it it is fully and proportionably resembled by a recognisance vpon a statute merchant or staple for thereupon the partie to whom the reconisance is made vpon the certifying of the same in Court shall haue present execution For if a stranger to the reconisance of a statute come into the Chauncerie and shew the statute and pray execution he shall haue it and if a statute marchant be acknowledged to two one of them commeth into the conrt with the statute he shal haue execution in both their names e 11. E. 4. 9. And 17. E. 3. two sued a Cerciorari of a statute merchant and after the Cerciorari returned the parties came not but others as executors profered themselues and shewed forth the testament and praied execution and had it f 17. E. 3. 31. But the opinion of Hill is to the contrary 18. E. 3. for a Ceciorari was sued vpon a statute merchant and before execution the plaintife died wherefore Greene praied execution for executors But Hill said that he should haue sued a Scire facias for the the executors for it may be that the testator hath released Wherefore you must sue a Scire facias out of the certificat g 18. E. 3. 10. And vpon a statute staple the partie shall haue execution of the bodie landes and goods by one writ And vpon a statute merchant first a Capias till a quarter of a yeare be past and vpon a retourne of Non est inuentus the partie shall haue a writ to haue execution of his lands and goodes h 15. H. 7. 14. Fitzh Nat. bre 131. D. And a man may sue an action of Dette vpon a statute staple vpon a statute merchant and vpon any other recognisance i Fitzh Nat. bre 122. D. et fol. 17. And whereas you haue said that a deede razed 13. A deede razed is not good at the cōmon Law is not good in your Law no more it is in ours if it be razed or interlined and in such case the obligour may conclude his plea if he be impleaded in an action of Dette with a Non est factum k 1. H. 7. 14. Doues C. per Keble And whereas you haue affirmed that there be three sortes of bondes in your Law Naturalis Ciuilis and Praetoria For the first 14. The common Law agreeth in substance
with the Ciuill Law in the three sorts of bonds two I haue shewed that our Law agreeth with yours and as to the last it agreeth in the substance of the thing though not in the sound of the name For an action of Dette may by our Law be brought vpon a recouerie or iudgement conteining the dette For if a man recouer dammages in a writ of Wast he may sue a writ of Dette vpon this recouerie if he will l Fitzh Nat. be 122. C. 20. H. 7. 3. And so for dammages recouered in a Redissesin a writ of Aiel Cosinage and a writ of Entre sur disseisin m 43. E. 3. 2. But in that you said that 15. The common Law dissenteth from the Ciuill in not making the redeliuerie of a bond an acquitance the redeliuerie of a writing Obligatorie vnto the obligee is in steede of an acquitance this is not so in our Law For though it be notably well obiected by Fineux 1. H. 7. that there be as manie waies for him to whom a deede is made to dissolue the deede as for him who maketh a deede to make it a deede as where as it is ensealed he may break the seale and whereas it is deliuered as the bond of the partie he may redeliuer it in steede of an acquitance m 1. H. 7. Dones C. per Fin. Yet it is better aunswered by Mast. Keble that a redeliuerie may be either of a deede executorie or a deede executed The redeliuerie of a deede executorie hath some operation in Law n ibi per Keble as if a man deliuer a writing obligatorie as a scroule to I. S. to deliuer as his deede to I. N. vpon a certaine condition perfourmed if I. S. deliuer the scroule back to the bailor before the deliuerie of it to I. N. and before the condition perfourmed the bailor shall not anie way be charged by vertue of this bond But if it had been deliuered at the first as his deede to I. N. vpon a condition perfourmed o Perkins tit Faits Now the redeliuerie of it nequè ligat nequè soluit worketh nothing because a deede can haue but one deliuerie and if the first deliuerie be good the second is voide if the first be not good the second may be good p 1. H. 6. 4. And so it is of a release executed for if a man be disseised and after release to the disseisor and after the disseisor redeliuereth the deede of release to the disseisee and saith that he will not haue aduantage of it yet this is to no purpose for by the release executed no right may bee demaunded by him to whom the deede is redeliuered but a right may be defended by him who is in possession to whom the first deliuerie was q 1. H. 7. Dones c. per Vauisor Keble But if the disseisee reenter vpon the disseisor and the disseisor bringeth an Assise and hath not the deed of release readie to intitle himselfe to the land the other may still hold possession of the land but then the redeliuerie of the deede of release doth him no good directlie but onelie per accidens because the want of it doth hurt to the disseisor Nomomath Now I pray you resolue vpon 2. Diuision this whether shall the Executor or Administrator be charged in all respects with the dettes and Legacies of the testator or how farre forth they shall be charged For I accompt a Legacie to be a kind of dette Codicgn The making of an Executor which 1. By the Ciuil Law the Executor succeedeth in vniuersum ius desuncti of vs is tearmed haeredis institutio is to appoint one to be an vniuersall successor in the right of all his goodes after his death by his Testament or last will r C. de haere l. 1. which is not of force till the death of the testator but vntill that time it is kept clausum signatum and as Isiodore saith rather according to the truth of the thing then according to the true deriuation of the word as manie times he doth it is therefore called Testamentum quia non valet nisi post testatoris monumentum vntil the testator be laied in his graue ſ Isiodor li. 5. And such Testaments must be insinuated to 2. Insinuation of a wil necessarie by the ciuill Law the Officiall or Commissarie of the Bishop of the Dioces within foure monethes after the death of the testator which insinuation is appointed by Law Ad euitandum falsitatem et sciendum veritatem Testamenti t L. iubemus C. de test l. si C. de fideicom But de iure Praetorio though a Testament be not made yet some person may be appointed by the Praetor to administer the goodes u Iusti de bo poss §. 1. et ff eo tit And as well the administrator 3. By the Ciuill Law the executour or administrator ought to make an Inuentorie of the goodes of the partie deceased as the executor ought to make an Inuentorie or sufficient Catalogue of all the goodes of the partie in whose right they succeede which shall come to their handes And it is a good and safe waie for them so to doe for if they doe so they shall not be charged further with anie debtes then the goodes of the testator or him that died intestate will extend And such an Inuentorie by our Law cannot be disprooued vnlesse the number of the witnesses that disprooue the Inuentorie be twice as manie in number as they which doe prooue it which are commonly called Prizors uu cum Io. de si instru And the Inuentorie ought to be begun by the Executor within 30. daies after the death of the testator or at least within 30. daies after that he hath notice that he is made Executor and it ought to be finished or consummated within thirtie daies after or at least within a yeare after if the thinges be farre distant and dispersed in remote places and then he shall be charged no further then the goodes will stretch otherwise he shall be charged in solidum for the whole dette d Gazal in verb. Inuentar Canonolog These thinges which you haue proposed are not reiected of vs but are of validitie in our Law Nomomath I pray you Anglonomoph rip vp the particulars of Codicgnostes his late discourse as distinctlie as you can for these things vttered by him are of great importance and vse at this day wherefore I would haue you studiouslie and with care to discusse these things Anglonomoph In the substance of these matters 4. The power of the Executor dependeth wholie vpon the will of the Testator by the common Law which he hath mencioned I doe not see at the first glimse any discordance in our Law but in the circumstance there will be some dissonancie and variance First to speake of the power of an Executor by our Law it dependeth wholie
goodes Canonolog In this we dissent not from you Nomomath Let me know Anglonomoph what maner of execution ye vse for dette at the common Law Anglonomoph The execution is foure-fold 5. A fourefold execution for dette by the common Law either of goodes onely by Fieri facias or of the moitie of landes by Elegit or vpon all the landes by an Extendi facias vpon the reconusance of a statute or of the bodie by Capias ad satisfaciendum euery of which by your pacience I will explane by cases and examples or by shewing their originall A Fieri facias issued out of the Eschequer for the king against 6. The execution of goodes by Fieri facias is opened a Parson for money due to the king out of an Abbey to which the Church of the Parson was charged in xx markes and for two markes behind a Fieri facias issued to the Shirife in these wordes Fieri fac de bonis et catallis spiritualibus et temporalibus prouenientibus de Rectoria de R. and the Shirife by his bailie tooke two bookes in the Church and sold them for the kings dette l 8. H. 5. 4. And wheras A. did recouer dammages in a speciall assise before speciall Iustices and brought an action of Dette for the dammages it was resolued that the defendant was dettor of recorde and therefore ought to be discharged by matter of recorde and for that cause the Fieri facias is ita quod habeas denarios hic to the intent that the payment of the money to the plaintife may be of recorde and the defendant discharged by recorde m 11. H. 4. 58. Execution by Elegit is warranted by the Statute of Westminster 2. cap. 18. which saith Si quis recuperet debitum aut damna sit in electione querentis an habere velit Fieri facias de terris catallis it should seeme to be meant de bonis catallis vel quòd Vicecomes liberet it seemeth to be better et quòd Vicecomes liberet ei omnia catalla debitoris exceptis bobus et affris carucae suae medietatem it seemeth more agreeable to the purpose vel medietatem terrae suae quousquè debitum fuerit leuatum per rationabile pretium et extentam The execution vpon 8. Execution vpon statute merchant is opened Statute merchant may appeare by this case A man had execution out of statute merchant and the Shirife returned an Extent of the lands of the reconusor in this maner sciz that he had sent to the baylie of the fraunchise c. who had retourne of writs to extende the landes which were within the fraunchise and so he did and that which was within the bayliwicke of the Shirife namelie in guildable himselfe caused to be extended by parcels and at the end he put the summe of the value and after the summe he put the charges as rents and other charges which were due out of the said landes and amongest other charges he retourned that the land was charged to the reconusee with xx li. yearely for euer And the Iustices cast all the charges of the landes and the value and they did perceiue that the charges passed the value by xl s' and after it was shewed that the Shirife had sent to an other Baylife of an other fraunchise in which the partie had lands and of these landes he made the third extent so that by that extent the value passed the charges by tenne shillinges wherefore execution was awarded n 29. E. 3. 1. And 9. E. 3. one sued a writ to take the bodie of him who had made a statute merchant to him and the Shirife retourned that he was dead wherefore he praied a writ to the Shirife to deliuer vnto him all the lands which he had the day of the reconusance or at any time after and he had it o 9. E. 3. 24. Execution by Capias 8. Execution by Capias ad satisfaciendum is shewed and imprisonment is after this manner Dammages were recouered against I. in a writ of Trespas in the kinges bench in the time of king Henry the fourth and after in the time of king Henry the fifth he was condemned in London at the suit of an other and put in Newgate and he at whose suit he was condemned in the kings bench had a Capias ad satisfaciendum to the Shirifes of L. which did send the bodie and did certifie that he was condemned at manie mens suites in London and now he that sued the Capias came into the Court and did acknowledge agreement to be made and the defendant was readie to make a fine to the king and praied to be deliuered But because he was condemned in the time of an other king and the Iustices which be now haue not knowledge of the persons which were parties to the pleas in the time of an other king as the Law doth intende and likewise because if he be acquited heere he must be sent backe into London because hee is condemned there and thirdlie because by couin betwixt him which acknowledgeth agreement and the defendant he may defraud him at whose suit he is condemned of his execution for if he be deliuered the other is without remedie therefore a Scire facias was awarded p 8. H. 5. 7. The like Law is in an execution vpon an Action of Dette and in an acquitall the fine to the king being excepted Nomomath Well I will trouble you no further about questions of Dette Now let vs passe according to the platforme of the conference to examine doubtes touching Accomptes The fourth Dialogue Of Accomptes NOmomath Suppose Codicgnostes 1. Diuision that I deliuer vnto you my horse or hauke to sell him for fyue poundes and to deliuer me either the fiue poundes or redeliuer the thing againe Shall you not be accomptable to me in this regarde Codicgn Yes truelie and that by an action 1. In what case a man is accomptable at the Giuill Law per actionem aestimatoriam which we call Actionem aestimatoriam because it is conceyued vppon the speciall and prescript wordes of the valuation of the thing a ff de aestima ac in rubro et l. 1. et Insti de actio §. actionum Anglonomoph So by our Law we haue a 2. The difference of a speciall bailie and generall bailie at the common Law speciall bailie and a generall bailie A speciall bailie is he which is bailie after a speciall maner and to a speciall purpose For if a man deliuer an Obligation to an other to receiue so much money as he can get of that which is contained in the bond if he receiue no money vpon the bond a writ of Accompt lyeth not but a writ of Detinue for the bond But it seemeth that if hee receiue a lesse summe then a writ of Accompt will lie But if he receiue the verie summe conteined in the bond then a writ of Accompt will
lie against him as receiuor of his money But if his bailie be also bailie of his mannour and this Obligation be deliuered vnto him as bailie of the mannour then an Accompt will lie against him as bailie of the mannour habentem curam of this Obligation b 2. R. 2. Accompt 46. for a bailie of a mannour may well be tearmed a generall bailie And Brian 2 R. 3. putteth an expresse difference betwixt a generall and a speciall bailie A man saith he may be bailie of a mannour or of an house if he be bailie of a manour he hath 3. What things belong to the charge of the bailie of a manour charge of all the oxen horses ploughes belonging to the manour and of all the profites arising and growing out of the manour and he shall be accomptable for them But if he be bailie of an house he shall not be accomptable but onelie for the house c 2. R. 3. 14. per Br. But this is the difference betwixt a bailie and a receiuor according to the bringing of a writ of Accompt A writ of Accompt will not lie against one as bailie for a certaine and a peculier thing But whereas A. giueth twentie pound to B. to merchandize for him and to his vse for the profite hereof because it is a thing vncertaine a writ of Accompt will lie to the ende that by the writ of accompt the incertaintie may be brought to certaintie d 9. H. 5. 3. per Hyl. But in your case proposed the bailie is to bee intended a speciall bailie But this generall and currant rule we haue touching all bailies as well generall as speciall If the bailie be preiudiciall to his his master he is to make recompence to his master As if my bailie sell a quarter of corne 4. That by the common Law if the baile be preiudiciall to his Master he is to make recompence for fortie pence whereas he might haue sold it for vj. s' viij pence he must aunsweare for this e 6. R. 2. Accompt 47. per Belkn So if he buy thinges for xx pound which are not worth x. li. he shall not be allowed this vpon his accompt though he did as much as he could according to his knowledge f 41. E. 3. 3. per Finch But if a baylie doe a thing which toucheth his bayliwicke and which duetie bindeth him to doe as if hee pay rentes or other dueties which are due of the mannour he shall be satisfied for this otherwise it is if hee doe any thing which toucheth not his bailiwike for then hee ought to haue speciall warrantie g 42. E. 3. 6. per Belkn Canonol Our law dissenteth not from these assertions Nomomath Suppose I giue money to Titius 2 Diuision to buy for mee and to my vse the land of Sempronius lying in dale whether is Titius accomptable to me for this Codicgnost There is no question but he is h ff acti mandat direct l. si vero §. fi but if your selfe or some other to your vse doe 1 By the ciuill law the bailie is discharged if the maister intermeddle buy the lande of Sempronius now is Titius discharged vnlesse he more expediently and with lesse cost might haue bought it of Sempronius i ff eod tit l. si procurator §. mandat act Anglonomoph This is not repugnant to our law and in all cases a writte of accompt lyeth where a man is put in trust to procure the profite 2 That by the common law as wel as by the ciuill hee that is put in speciall trust to puocure the profit of an other is accomptable of another and is not his apprentice for if the king graunt to a village certaine tolle of things which shall bee fold in the same village and the townesmen of the village make collectors to receiue the toll if afterward the collectors will not make accompt hereof they may haue a cōmission out of the Chauncerie to enquire who hath receyued this tolle or money and to heare their accomptes and to determine the matter k Fitzher N. B. 119. f. 114. c. And 8. E. 4. it was said by Nedham that the Churchwardens of a certaine parish might haue a writte of accompt against their predecessors but the parishioners could not l 8. E. 4. 6. per Nedh And so the master of an hospitall may haue a writte of accompt against him that was receyuor or bailie in the time of his predecessor m Fitz. N. B. 117. F. And 30. E. 3. a writ of accompt was made by a master of an hospitall against one as the bailie of his Church and this forme of writ was allowed and the action was brought by him as parson he being not named parson in the writ and yet the writte was allowed because hee demanded nothing which might continue to the Church for euer as he must do in a Iuris vtrū n 30. E 3. 1. 13. H. 4. Accompt 124. 29. E. 3. 60. And 4. E. 3. a writ of accompt was brought for a receit of certain money in the time of his predecessor o 4. E. 3. Accompt 97. and 34. E. 3. in a writ of accompt against one as the bailie of his woode the pr declared how the def was the bailie of his wood to cut it and to sell it and the declaration was allowed without saying that hee did any way administer for this must come in by way of answere and so the writte may bee against the bailie of a mannor habentē administrationem bonorum Moubrays opinion was that the bailie of a wood ought to make account for the fruits of the trees herons and hawkes p 34. E. 3. Accompt 131. But a writ of account cannot be brought against one as his bailie vnlesse he be the bailie of his house land or mannor q 9. E. 3. Accompt 95. And if one ought to be bailie by reason of his tenure though he do not occupie the office yet he shall be charged in a writt of accompt r 18. H. 8. 2. And if a receiuor or bailie do make a deputie yet the writ of account ought to be brought against the bailie himselfe or against the receiuor himself not against their deputies for the deputies resceiue the money and administer the goods to the vse of the master ſ Fitzh N. B. 119. B. but a writte of accompt will lie for the receiuor against his deputie as for the vicount against his deputie t 11. R. 2. Accompt 48. And a man may haue a writte of accompt against a woman as receptrix denariorum u 8. E. 2. brief 847. Fitzh N. B. 118. D. And 4. E. 4. there is an excellent difference taken where a woman is bailie or receiuor to a man and after she taketh a husband a writ of account lyeth against them both as econuerso it lyeth for
an elme tree in the place where the waste was assigned and did make a ditch in that place to water cattell which went vpon that ground which was necessary because the water was very lowe and almost dryed vp in that place by that meane he deduced water out of the earth and this was adiudged a good answere r 33. E. 3. Double plea. 9 Codicg That which you haue said is to reason consonant to our law correspondent for as to your first case of the clearing or amending of the conduit-pipes c. Though it be in another mans ground this in our law is not accompted iniurious ſ l. 1. c. de quae duc l. 11. l. de cernimus eo ti li. 2. But wee haue a rule in our 4 That the ciuil law agreeth with the common law in suffering and to amend conduit-pipes in another mans ground lawe that if a man ought to conuey water per subterraneos meatus through certain chinkes or crauies of the earth in an other mans ground he must not doe this by a leuill of stones but with pipes of leade because the other mans grounde is by stones more annoyed and empaired t ff de contrah emp. l. si aquae duct But for the improouing of ground from worse to better is clearely permitted by our law As to turne waste grounde into arable or fennish ground into firme ground this we accompt rather a benefite to the owner of the soyle then an iniurie u c. de fund patr l. si li. 11. So it is if a wood become arable x c. quod per noual de verb. signif but to destroy any thing in an other mans ground or to digge a pitte and so to alter the forme and nature of the soyle and by that meane to make it worse is accounted of vs very iniurious but to repaire an olde building or to make some commodious addition is not wrongfull but beneficiall because Non videtur nouum opus facere sed vetus reficere a ff de noua l. 1. §. nouum et §. si quis aedificium Canonol Our lawe doth not withstand any of these assertions Nomomath Well now I pray you proceed 3. Diuision to speake of the penaltie which hee is to suffer by your lawes that committeth waste Codicgn By our Law he that in such case 1. The punishment of wast by the Ciuill Law will denie the wrong done shall be punished with double damages But if he iustifie and it be found against him with single b ff de insti l. 1. §. 1. But he that doth breake the sluces of Nilus so that verie great iniurie is done and to verie manie he is burnt in the same place where the fault was committed in a fire of the height of twelue cubites and his goodes and landes are confiscated because it is crimen quasi laesae Maiestatis c C. de agge Ni non rump l. v● ●● Canonol Our Law in this doth not gainsay you Anglonomoph By an action of Wast at our 2. The punishment of wast by the common Law Law the plaintife if it be found for him shall recouer treble dammages d Fitzh nat bre 58. H. and execution may be had by Elegit of the landes which the defendant had at the time of the inquest taken e 17. E. 3. 5. 18. E. 3. 38. 31. E. 3. Execut 66. and he shall recouer likewise the place wasted f Stat Glouc. cap. 6. Nomomath I will put you to no more paines in this matter but will discend to other things which haue not yet been discussed The sixt Dialogue Of Parceners NOmomath Let me know Codign whether in your Law there be any definition set downe established 1. Diuision touching Parceners as they are tearmed at the common Law and concerning the making of Particion betwixt them agreeable to the common Law Codicgn I would first that Anglonomoph should shew who be Parceners at the common Law and in what sort partition is made otherwise I should but roue at an vncertaine marke Nomomath I pray you do so Anglonomoph for that course is not to be disliked Anglonomoph Mast. Littleton a learned man 1. Two sortes of Parceners Parceners by the common Law and Parceners by custome in our Lawes and a great patriarch of our profession maketh two sortes of Parceners Parceners by the common Law and Parceners by custome Parceners by the common Law are when a man or woman seised of landes or tenements in fee simple or fee taile haue no issue but daughters and die and the tenements discende to the daughters and they enter into the said landes or tenements now they are Parceners and how manie daughters so euer they be they are but one heire to their auncestour And they are called Parceners 2. Who be Parceners by the common Law because by the writ which is called de Particione facienda the Law will compell them to make particion of the land Also if a man seised of tenements in fee simple or in fee taile do die without issue of his bodie ingendred and the tenements discende to his sisters they are Parceners by our Law So if his landes discende to his Auntes a Littlet lib. 3. c. 1. fol. 54. And none bee called Parceners in our Law but women or the heires of women which come to landes and tenements by discent For if two sisters purchase landes or tenements thereof they be called Iointenants and not Parceners b Littlet ibidem fol. 56. But bretherne may be Parceners by the custome as by the custome of Gauelkind in Kent bb Littlet ibid. 59. Codicgn We haue an action in our Law 3. Who be Parceners by the Custome verie like to your aboue mencioned writ of Particione facienda and it is called actio familiae herciscundae and it lieth for them which haue a common inheritance to bee deuided betwixt them As when two sisters brothers or kinsfolkes are instituted heires and by that meane are reputed as seuerall heires to the auncestor or him that instituteth them c ff famil hercis l. 1. et 2. C. de verb. sign l. sin For if the Testatour pointing with his finger at three seuerall persons doe saie vnto them quilibet vestrum haeres mihi esto his 4. That by the Ciuill Law where three heires are instituted they are not reputed as one heire meaning by our Law is taken to be this that euery one of them should be heire in parte non in solidum for maeteria subiecta the thing it selfe doth require it because it is vnpossible by our Law that euery one of them should haue the inheritance in solidum d L. hoc artic ff in fi ff de haere insti But if he doe not speake distributiue but collectiue as if he said Quisquis mihi haeres erit det Titio centum solidos now whether there be one heire or
more heires then one yet Titius shall haue but fiue pounds because of the collectiue word quisquis e L. ab omnibus in princip ff de leg 1. et l. si quis in fundi vocabul in fi eo ti But if the Testator doe say Quicunque primò ingressus fuerit Castrum habebit centum solidos and two doe enter the Castle together they shall euery of them haue fiue poundes because of the distributiue word quicunque which may be verified either in one or moe doing the same act at one time because primus est qui alium ante se non habet f L. qui filium §. 1. ff de leg 1. And if the Testator saie Quilibet haeredum meorum det Titio decem solidos Titius shall haue as many tenne shillinges as theire be heires g L. si pluribus et ibi no. gl ff de leg 2. which prooueth that by our Law the seuerall heires are not accompted as one heire Canonolog Our Law holdeth not the contrarie Nomomath You haue good reason for it But I pray you resolue me Anglonomoph are these which you call Parceners reputed in your Law as one heire to all intents Anglonomoph Yea to all intentes in regard 5. That by the common Law parceners are reputed as one heire as to the discent of landes of the discent though as to the making of particion it accompteth them as seuerall persons gg Fitzh nat bre 197. A. For a Nuper obis● ought to be brought by that Coparcener who is deforced from the 6. Parceners in regard of the particion are accompted as seuerall persons tenements against all the other Coparceners which do deforce her although some of them haue nothing in the tenancie h 32. E. 3. Nuper obijt 7. 9. Ass pla 8. For seuerall tenancie or nontenure is no plea in a Nuper obijt because of the priuitie of bloud i 7. E. 3. 16. 9. E. 3. Nuper obijt 8. 8. H. 6. 8. Nomomath Whether shall a writ de Particione 2. Diuision facienda be vsed against Iointenants or tenants in common as well as against Parceners or some other remedie shall be vsed against them Anglonomoph Before the Statute of 31. H. 1. The statute of 31. H. 8. giueth a writ de Particione facienda as well to Iointenants and tenants in common as to parceners 8. Iointenants and Tenants in common were not compelable by writ to make particion of landes and tenements which they vndiuidedly held But by that Statute a writ de Particione facienda may be sued against them as against Parceners k 31. H. 8. c. 1. Rastall Particion 3. But by the common Law Iointenants may make particion by mutuall assent without deede l 47. E. 3. 22. 19. Ass pla 1. And by such particion the iointure is seuered m 30. Ass pla 8. 2. The three seueral actions against Parceners Iointenants and tenants in common at the Ciuill Law Codicgn By our Law seuerall remedies are vsed against these which be both of one bloud or one familie which you haue tearmed Parceners as an action de familia herciscunda and an other maner of action against such as come to the land by ioint title though not by one discent which you haue tearmed Iointenants namely an action which is called of vs Actio pro socio and an other against these which come not in by ioint title but yet claime vnder these which came to the land by ioint title as by your Law are Tenants in common against whom or betwixt whom for the effecting of particion an action lieth at our Law which we call Actionem de communi diuidundo Canonolog To this our Law is not contradictorie Nomomath Let me now vnderstand in 3. Diuision what sort particion of landes or tenements and other thinges is made by your Lawes Anglonomoph Of landes and tenements the 1. Diuers kinds of partion at the common Law particion by our Law is to haue a seuerall part or portion as to haue a third part if there be 1. A particion to haue a third part or a fowerth part three Coparceners or a fowerth part if there be fower c. And if there be two Coparceners and one of them releaseth to the other 2. A particion by way of release with warrantie this hath been helde to be a good particion in Law n 44. E. 3. Counterplee de vouch 22. 34. E. 1. Partition 17. And particion of landes is sometime made by the graunt of 3. Particion by the graunt of a thing de nouo a thing de nouo as if an hundred shillinges of rent be graunted by one of the Coparceners to two of her sisters for equalitie of particion o 2 H. 6. 14. So when land entailed is deuided betwixt Parceners and a rent is reserued vpon 4. Particion by way of reseruation the particion for equalitie the rent reserued shall be in taile and of the same condition whereof the land was at the time of the particion made p 2. H. 7 5. 15 H. 7. 14. But a particion of a Mill is by taking the third part or the fowerth part of 5. Particion by taking the 3. part or the 4. part of the profites the profites as the case requireth q 11. E. 3. Briefe 478. And 45. Ed. 3. it was ruled that Milles Douecots and the like could not be actuallie locallie and as I may saie artuatim as it were by iointes diuided But if a woman ought to bee endowed of the third part of such thinges the third part of the profites ought to bee assigned vnto her r 45. E. 3. Dower 50. Yet 47. Edw. 3. the case was that two Iointenants were of a Mill and they agreed to repaire the Mill the one of them of the one side and the other on the other side in perpetuum and after the Mill was leased to farme and they tooke the rent seuerallie according to the moities and the Inquest said that their meaning was that the particion should bee good against them and their heires ſ 47. E. 3. lib. Ass pla 22. But Quaere whether the Shirife by writ de Particione facienda may make any such particion Likewise particion may be of a reuersion that one of the parceners shall haue the reuersion of three acres and the other the reuersion of other three acres and it may be without deede t Fitzh nat bre 62. D. 28. H. 6. 2. And so particion may bee made of a waie u 21. E. 3. 2. And also of a seigniourie uu 27. E. 3. 29. But of an aduowson the particion is to present by tourne x 38. H. 6. 9. 42. Eliz. 87. Corbets case per Iust Walmesley Co. Canonolog Our Law agreeth fully with 6 A difference in the Ciuill law where a thing that hath partes coh●rentes is diuided and where it
vnto you vpon the aforesaid condition I shall now owe vnto you absolutelie and without condition whether in this case is the agreement of any force to defeat the condition Codicgn By our Law it is of force to ouerthrow 1. An agreement by word may defeat a condition in writing at the ciuill Law the condition for it is a renewing of the bond as we tearme it and so the later bond shall preiudice and swallow vp the former k ff de nous et C. eo ti Anglonomoph Our Law holdeth the contrarie 2. The common Law is quite contrarie to the aforesaid assertion of the Ciuill Law and the reason is this because it is an inconuenience in reason that an especialtie sealed and solempnlie deliuered should be auoyded by the bare agreement of the parties which is but a meere matter in facto l 1. H. 7. 14. Dones case per Dauers Yet in some cases it is not inconuenient that an obligation should be auoided by a matter in fasto where there is a strong and peremptorie operation in Law As if a man be bound to a feme sole and afterward he marieth her Or if a man be bound to a villaine and after he purchaseth the manour to which the villeine is regardant the mariage the purchase may be pleaded in auoidance of the especialtie So in an auoydance of a statute merchant it is a good plea to saie that part of the land is purchased by the reconusee So in a writ of Annuitie it is a good plea to saie that he hath paied it in a foreine countie So if a man by deede graunt a rent if the grauntee surrender the rent with the especialtie this is a good auoydance of the especialtie m 1. H. 7. Dones case per Keble But where a man was bound to paie xx nobles at a certaine day and if he failed that then he would loose x. li. paiable at the same day an action of Dette was brought for the x. pound and it was allowed n 26. E. 3. 71. for here there were two seuerall bandes one of them consequent vppon the other but not abolishing the other And if a defeasance vpon a statute marchant be that the payment of the money should be made at Bristowe and the conusee receiued it at an other place this is a good discharge of the statute for now the Law hath discharged it o 46. E. 3. 4. But one matter of recorde may be auoided by an other Therefore the case was 20. E. 3. in a writ of Accompt the defendant said that the plaintife by a deede which he shewed forth did graunt that if the defendant did make a reconusance vpon statute marchant such a daie at Canterburie to the plaintife that the writ of accompt should be held as voide This was admitted by the Court to be a good agreement to auoide the writ of annuitie as soone as the statute is deliuered to the plaintife p 20. E. 3. Accompt 79. Nomomath I would know Codicgn what your Law doth determine of impossible conditions whether it doth vtterlie reiect them or what force and effect it assigneth vnto them Codicgn Impossibilitie our Law maketh 1. Three sortes of impossibilities at the Ciuill Law three-fold iuris facti et naturae Iuris as when there is a repugnancie in the condition so that the Law doth wholie frustrate and disanull the condition or els it is directlie contrarie to the Law As if a man should contract with a 2. What impossibilitas iuru is at the Ciuill Law woman si prolem euitauerit or si adulteram se praestiterit the one of these being against the Law of nature the other against the Law of God both of them are by our Law made voide q C. fi de condi appo And indeed there is a repugnancie betwixt the contract and the condition mariage being a thing instituted and ordeined for the procreation of children and the auoyding of fornication Impossibilitas facti is when 3. What impossibilitas facti is at the Ciuill Law there is great difficultie in the thing that is to be done and it is not possible to bee easilie done howbeit it is not absolutelie impossible to be done this impossibilitie of the condition doth frustrate the act precedent As if I say that Stichus my villeine shall be free if he will giue a thousand pound for his freedome this though it be not impossible yet it is verie difficult for a villein to performe because of the difficultie the Law will imagine that I did but trifle by this forme of enfranchisement and so Stichus shall gaine nothing by it r L. cum haere §. 1. ff de sta li. So it is if a man being at Yorke bee bound to paie to an other at London x. pound before sunne-set this though it be not impossible in it selfe because a Pegasus or poast-horse may help the matter yet because it can not with any facilitie be pefourmed within so short time our Law holdeth the condition to be voide ſ Insti de verb. obli §. loca Impossible by nature that is said to be which is 4. Impossibilitas naturae by the Ciuil Law repugnant to naturall reason and contrarie to the course of nature As if I giue a horse to one vppon condition that he shall touch heauen with one of his fingers or that he shall extinguish fire with oyle or that he shall build a village in the cloudes t Ioan. ad reg Nemo li. be reg iur Nomomath These differences haue been well opened by Codicgnostes Now I will request you Anglonomoph to explane and illustrate them by cases Anglonomoph I will particularlie speake of 5. Which be conditions against Law by the censure of the common Law them all And first of Conditions against Law If estates in land be made vppon conditions contrarie to Law the estates be good and the conditions voide But then the estates must not begin neither take effect by force of the condition neither depende vpon such conditions as to the existence of them But if a man seised of land doe enfeoffe a straunger vppon condition that if the feoffour doe kill I. S. one of the Queenes subiectes it shall be lawfull for him to reenter the estate is good and the condition voide u 4. H. 7. 4. 2. H. 4. 9. So it is if one enfeoffe an other vpon condition that if the feoffour doe burne the houses of I. S. it shall bee lawfull for him to reenter uu Perk. Condic 139. for such conditions are impossible to bee good by Law But if a lease for life be made or a lease for yeares of land vpon condition that if the lessee kill I. S. within such a day that then he shall haue and hold the land to him and to his heyres foreuer notwithstanding that the lessee do kill I. S. within the day yet his estate
not meant that in regard of fiue pounde receiued of Titius I doe make him my heire or executor but the words are conditionally meant if the testator doe receiue 5. li. of Titius c h l. a testatore ff de condi demon So if I deuise to one xx li. pro docendo talem discipulum this pro doth signifie a condition because by common vsage prius docendus est discipulus quàm soluendū salarium magistro i l. nec semel ff qu. di le ce So if I doe contract with a woman in this sort I promise vnto you A. that you shal be my wife donec terra ponatur super oculos meos these words are not generally to bee vnderstood for so the partie may lay earth vpon his eyes and slip the collar and breake promise but they must be vnderstood according to common intendement that she shall be his wife vntill his carkasse bee couered with earth that is vntill he be buried so it is if he should haue said Donec oculi os mihi claudantur k c. ex literis 1. de spon Angl. Our law many times taketh the words 2 The commō law taketh conditions many times strictly of a condition strictly to preserue an estate A lease was made to one vpon conditiō that the lessee shal not alien to A. the lessee alieneth to B. who alieneth to A. the cōditiō is not brokē for a condition which goeth to defeat an estate must be taken strictly l 31. H. 8. 45. Dy. And 28. H. 8. the case was thus A lease for yeares was made by indenture the lessee did couenant and grant that if he his executors or assignes did alien that it shold be lawful to the lessor to reenter after he made his wife his executrix and dyed the woman tooke an other husband which aliened The first question was whether the wordes of the couenant abouesaid did make a cōdition And if it were a condition the 2. question was whether there were any breach of condition in the case Some held that there was no breach of condition because the husband was possessed of the tearme by acte of law is not an assignee no more then a tenant by the curtesie is or the land of a villaine But Browne and Shelley held that the husband was an assignee in law and that the land was subiect to the cōdition into whose hands soeuer it did come m 28. H. 8. 6. Dy. But lately in Ridgeleys case the condition was extēded by equity for the safegard of the party The case was thus A man was bound to another in a c. l. that he shold discharge the obligee saue him harmeles of all suits incumbrances against I. S. and after the said I. S. sued the obligee proceeded vnto iudgement wherefore the obligee brought an action of det vpon the obligation and the defendant pleaded non damnificatus est And Beamond Sergeant did maintayne the plea in his argument because that hee was not damnified in the eye of law vntill the goodes or the lande or the person of the plaintife were actually charged For before that time he was onely chargeable but not charged Sergeant Harris argued to the cōtrarie for he said that he was chargeable to the execution of the partie so not saued harmelesse two sorts of damages were held by Iustice Walmesley the one executorie the other executed executorie which a man may in future time sustayne Executed as if the land or the person shoulde bee in present execution And if the disseisee make a release to the disseisor and a straunger cancelleth the deede of release the disseisor may haue an action of trespasse against him and yet the disseisor doth continue possession and is not as yet actually damnified And Iustices saide that the land of the party was in some sort charged for none in such case would buy the land of the partie but onely vnder the value because of the iudgement executorie n 33. Eliz. Ridgeleys c. But wee haue a rule in our law that when a condition is to bee performed to a straunger it is to bee performed most strictly and if the condition bee performed at an other place this is not sufficient o 36. H. 6. 8. And 21. H. 6. it is said that if a man be bound that he or his feoffees of the mannor of W. shal graunt to the obligee 20. s. rent for tearme of life and he hath three feoffees two of the feoffees cannot graunt this rent p 21. H. 6. 19. But 7. E. 4. it was affirmed in the kings bench that if a man were bound to make one a sure sufficient and lawfull estate in certaine land by the aduise of I. S. if he make an estate according to the aduise of I. S. be it it sufficient or not or lawfull or not he is excused of his bond and a like matter was in the common place the same terme and they were of the same opinion q 7. E. 4. 13. Nomomath I wold gladly be satisfied in this when a man maketh one his heire or executor 7 Diuision and if hee refuse to performe any thing that is comprised in his will then he willeth that I. S. shall bee his heire or executor and shall performe his will and shal seise his goods and enter into his lands post haereditatē aditam though the heyre or executor haue intermedled with the will and haue performed some thinges according to the intent of it Now if the Testatour die and the heire or executor haue perfourmed some thinges of the will but refuseth to perfourme other some and hath seised the goodes and entered into the landes of the partie deceased Whether may I. S. enter vpon him for the condition broken and defeat his whole interest in the landes or goodes or shall he still reteine part of the landes and goodes because he hath perfourmed part of the will Codicgn I. S. or the substitute of the Testatour 1. There may be a substitution of one heire after an other or of one executor after an other at the Ciuill Law is now by the will and breach of the the condition become directly the heire or executor to the Testatour And all the authoritie or interest of the fomer heire or executor is vtterlie determined frustrated and defeated r Insti de vulga substi §. quo casu 2 The heire at the ciuill Law must succedere in vniuersum ius defuncti for the authoritie or interest of the heire or executor by our Law may not be apporcioned but he must succedere in vniuersum ius defuncti ſ ff de verb. signif l. nihil aliud est haereditas et l. bonor eo tit And there is an other substitution in our Law which we call a reciprocall substitution and it is thus The Testatour saith I doe make S. and T. my sonnes within age my heires and
§ Sed natural instit de iu. na as I haue sufficiently shewed in my Direction to the study of the Law Cap. 7. 8. but onely of such thinges as belong to them by the Ciuill law yet by the opinion of the later Ciuilians this is helde to bee no law but that the Princes haue for speciall causes free disposall of their landes and goods as Decius fully proueth k Deci. Cons 209. in casu 2. 69. consultus 390. quoniam 519. visis 557. accurate and this later opinion seemeth to bee more reasonable and more consonant to the truth for first though the distinction of demesnes and the propertie of goods be parcel of the law of nations yet the meanes wherby they are acquired are prescribed by the ciuill and common lawe so that they are not altogether parcell of the law of nations l Bal. ●a in l. omnes C. Si con ius vel vtilitat pub Againe the right of demesne and property is not alike in all nations m Herodot li. 4. Strab. lib. 11. Arist lib. 2. polit Tacit. de mor. Germa Caes lib. 4. 6. de bel Gal. but is moderated and ordered by the lawes of particular cōmon weales But suppose that the king wil take away from any of his subiectes the right and power of vsing and pursuing an action for the recouery of their lands goods chattels or dammages Surely this is permitted by no law but by the ciuill n l. 2. C. de prec imp off and common law expressely prohibited for the king cannot grant to any person that he shal not be impleaded or sued in this or that action though his highnesse may graunt that I. S. for trespasses or any thing done wrongfully in his mannor of Dale shal hold conisance of pleas within the same mannor yet in this case he doth not take away the action of the partie but doth onely restreine him to bring his actiō in a certain place o 8. H. 6. 19. But here it may be obiected that a king or absolute monarch may p li. vlt. C. de consul without cause seise the lands goods of his subiects for it is plaine that a king hath more power ouer his subiectes then the father hath ouer his children but by the ciuil law the father may take away the goods of his children when hee will q l. placet 79. D. de acquir haere l. acquirit 10. D. de acquir re do therefore the king may take away c. To this reason grounded vpon the ciuill lawe I do thus answere that by the law of nations kinges haue not such an indefinite power ouer their subiects as fathers by the ciuill law haue ouer their children for by the law of nations kinges were chosen and ordeined at the first for the safegard and protection of the lands goods persons of their subiects so that they may not without cause bereaue them of their goods and therefore there is a good rule in the ciuill law that in priuatorum agris nihil ne publico quidem consilio cum ipsorum iniuria capi ius est r l. Venditor 13. D. de com praed And to that purpose Cicero speaketh well Videndum erit ei qui rempub administrabit vt suum quisque teneat neque de bonis priuatorum publice diminutio fiat and for this cause God did appoint a certain portion of land to euery tribe of the Israelites ſ Deutero 17 and by reason of a priuate title Naboth would not sell or chaunge his vineyard with Achab t 1. Reg. 21. and in the inauguration of the king of Hungarie this was exacted of him by oath vt iura regni integra conseruaret u C. in tellect 33. ex tr de iureiuran And in the ciuill law it is said Qui pleno iure Dominus est alienandi dissipandi disperdendi ius habet a l. 7. cod de relig l. sed etsi l. 25. §. consuluit D. de hae●ed petit And againe suae quisque rei arbiter ac moderator est b l. in remandat 21. C. de mand So that it is euident that without cause the propertie which subiectes haue in goodes and landes may not bee altered by their prince And therefore wittily sayeth D. Gentilis that they which argue to the contrarie do not dispute or drawe their arguments ex castis fontibus Philosophiae aut ex ipsis iurisprudentiae riuis sed escholis sophistarum hallucinati sunt Theologi adulati sunt iurisconsulti qui omnia principibus licere asceuerarunt c Alberic Gentil Dec. 1. disput 2. disput I would not be mistaken in this Chapter sithence I hold an indifferent course betwixt prince and people neither consenting to them which say that princes may seise the lands and goods of their subiects without cause nor to them which thinke that they may not seyse their lands and goods for any cause but my resolution is and the summe of this discourse is if it bee diligently and impartially obserued that princes may lawfully claime and take to their owne vse the lands and goods of their subiects for the causes abouesaid and prescribed by lawe and not otherwise and by this word Princes I meane none but absolute Monarches for the law of nations alloweth this prerogatiue to none other And therfore I do greatly like of that saying of Hipocrates vrged in the ciuill law Lex est rerum omnium domina quia scilicet ciuitatis cuiusque ciuium singulorū patrimonium constituit definit tuetur Lex sola dominiū rerum confert sola dominij acquirendi modos constituit citra quos acquiri nullius rei dominium potest f §. 2. de bon posses apud Vlpi eo tit reg 19. This foundation being laid I hope my assertion may firmely stande that the law of England in giuing to the Queene the lands and goods of subiects for some peculiar causes is iust and reasonable as when a true man is pursued as a felon and he flieth and waiueth his owne goods these are forfeited as if they had beene goods stolne g 29. E. 3. 29. 37. H. 8. Br. Estray 9. Stam. fol. 186. a. And so if a man be outlawed of felony or treason he shall forfeyt all the landes tenements which he had at the time of the felony or treason cōmitted or at any time after as well as if he had beene attainted by verdict h 28. H. 6. 5. howsoeuer M. Parkins holdeth opinion that attaynder by outlawrie shall haue relation to the exigent as to the landes and tenements so that a feoffement of land or a graunt of rent made before the exigent awarded by him that is attainted in such manner is good in his conceit but he saith that as to an attainder by verdict that it shal haue relation to the time of the felony done according to the supposall of the inditement as to
lands and tenementes and so it is of an attainder by confession i Parkins Graunts 6. But M. Stamford being better aduised saith that as soone as any of the offences aforesaid are committed hee is restrained to make a gift or any other alienation of his lande and if he doe it shall presently bee made void by his attainder and it is not materiall whether the attainder be by outlawrie or verdict and this is agreeable to the booke of 38. E. 3. fol. 37. k Stamford fol. lib. 3. 31. ● but he saith that the forfeiture of the goods by attainder by outlawrie shall haue relation to the exigent and forfeiture by attainder by verdict shall haue relation to the verdict l Stamford 192. The third Chapter That the worthinesse of blood hath beene principally respected of all nations THe diuision of inheritances in stirpes in capita hath made great diuision in diuerse common weales yet in all of them the worthinesse of bloud hath beene regarded By the Romane law the sonne of the elder sonne who is dead shall equally succeede in the inheritance with the second sonne And whereas in Germanie there was a contention betwixt the vncles and nephewes of the right of inheritances and for the deciding of it the Emperour Otto the first did cause a Parliament or generall assemblie of estates to be held for the disceptation and deciding of this doubt When after much busines and argument no determination could be had the matter was ordeined to be tried by single combate an vsuall thing in these daies for it was about the yeare of the incarnation of our Sauiour nine hundred fortie and two a Witichindus lib. 2. histor 2. Sigebert in chronic Ottonis 1. and a formall triall referred to God when mans wit was at a nonplus But in this case that part ouercame which did accompt the sonnes of elder sonnes as sonnes and therefore it was ratified by Law that they should equally diuide the inheritance with their vncles Amongest other nations diuers contentions haue risen about this matter for when Eunomus the King of the Lacedemonians had two sonnes Polydectes the elder and Lycurgus the yonger and Polydectes deceased leauing no sonne lyuing at the time of his death and therefore Eunomus being dead the septer of that kingdome came to the handes of Lycurgus afterward when Polydectes his widow had brought forth a sonne Lycurgus did willingly and readilie yeeld to him the septer b Plut. in vit Lycurg Iustin lib. hist 3. Which act of Lycurgus agreeth fully with our Law whereby it is ruled that if a man haue a sonne and a daughter and the sonne purchaseth land and dyeth and the daughter entreth and after the father begetteth an other sonne of the same wife this sonne shall haue the land c 19. H. 6. 6. So if a man enfeoffe an other vpon condition and the condition is broken and the feoffor dyeth without issue his wife priuement enseint and the brother of the feoffor entreth for the condition broken and after a sonne is borne he shall auoide the possession of his vncle may lawfully claime the inheritance d 9. H. 7. 25. And it is likewise said that after two or more discents the heire afterward borne claiming by discent may enter into the land but he shall not haue a writ of Accompt for the mesne profites nor any writ of Wast e 9. H. 6. 23. But in cases of purchase the Law taketh a difference and therfore it is said 5. E. 4. by Billing that if a man deuise land to a man and his heire and the deuisee dieth hauing issue a daughter his wife being priuement enseint with a sonne who is afterward borne the daughter shal reteine the land in perpetuum which the Court graunted f 5. E. 4. 6. And 9. H. 6. it is said that if a remainder cannot veste in any at the time when it falleth it shall not veste in him that is borne afterward where an other hath entred before g 9. H. 6. 23. 2. Eliz. 190. pla 18. But to retourne to the examination of this matter by historie Pausanias reporteth that Cleomenes the king of the Lacedaemonians being dead a controuersie sprung betwixt Areus the sonne of Acoratus the eldest sonne of Cleomenes who died before his father and Cleonymus the second sonne the vncle of Areus but by Senate-decree the kingdome was adiudged to Areus h Pausan lib. 3. And Polydore Virgill reporteth that king Edward the third being deceased Richard the second the sonne of his eldest sonne obteined the kingdome and was preferred before Iohn Edmund and Thomas the sonnes of king Edward i Polyd. virg in hist reg Angl. Paulus Aemilius an excellent writer of the matters of Fraunce likewise telleth that when Hanno had inuaded the kingdome and expulsed Erkenbalde the sonne of his elder brother this matter was brought into question in the ende Hanno was constrayned to laie aside armes and to stande to the iudgement of the Peeres who adiudged that Erkenbalde should haue the same power and interest in the kingdome which his father might haue had if he had suruiued k Paul Aemil. in tit Carol. Crass Neither will I denie that examples may be produced on the contrarie part as namelie the contention betwixt Artemenes and Xerxes for the kingdome of Persia for it is deliuered by Herodotus l Herodot lib. 7. Iustin m Iustinus lib. 11. Plutarch n Plut. in Artaxerx that a controuersie beeing raysed in the kingdome of Persia betwixt Artabazanes as Herodotus Artemenes as Iustinus calleth him and Xerxes the sonnes of Darius Hystaspes about the succession in the Monarchie of Persia Demaratus was at the same time there who was driuen and expulsed out of the kingdome of Sparta and he signified vnto them that the Law and custome of the Spartanes was that the sonne that was borne after the father had attained to the kingdome was to be preferred before the elder brother who was borne before for which cause the kingdome was adiudged to Xerxes the yonger sonne who was borne of Darius being king whereas the other was begotten of him being a priuate man But this iudgement was after reuersed For when after the death of Darius the same controuersie was handled betwixt Arsica begotten of Darius being a priuate man and Cyrus being borne of him after his aduauncement to the kingdome and Parysatis the mother did in the behalf of Cyrus vrge and reuiue the controuersie betwixt Xerxes and his brother the Persians notwithstanding the former iudgement did now adiudge the kingdome to Arsica o Plut. in vit Artaxerx Neither am I moued though in the contention for the Dukedome of Millayne betwixt Lodwike and Galeatius bretheren whereof the one was borne before his father obteined the Dukedome the other after the contrarie were determined for Law p Guicciard lib. 1. histor For by the most examples of euery
support a common weale then societies and fraternities For Numa Pompilius the king of the Romanes did ordeine certaine guildes of workmen and merchants and did binde them by solemne sacrifices and feasts which might be at certaine set daies celebrated to preserue loue and friendship amongest the people that they might with more ioy and comfort proceede in their priuate and publike affaires i Plut. in Num. Dionys Halicar lib. 2. And this he seemeth to haue done by Solons example who made fraternities of all sorts of men and permitted them to make Lawes touching their fraternities so they were not contrarie to the Law publikely receiued k Plut. in Solon But Lycurgus did not prescribe certaine feastes to be obserued but continuall meetings and comessations that friendship might not at any time be intermitted In other cities of Greece societies called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and throughout all Italie sodalitia were obserued To this end and purpose the Cretensians of all ages orders and sexe did banquet together in publike place l Arist in polit And in the famous Citie of London there is annuall and solemne obseruation of their feastes in euery guild which mightilie preserueth the wealth tranquilitie and florishing estate of that citie Neither is this custome dissonant from God his owne ordinance in the Iewish common weale who appointed certaine feastes and sacrifices to be obserued of the Iewes that religion towarde God and friendship amongest men might bee maintained m Numer 1. Leuit. 23. But as to the making of priuate Lawes by such guildes and fraternities Solons Law abouesaid hath been obserued almost of all common weales But the Statute of 15. Henr. 6. giueth somewhat a larger scope to guildes and fraternities in these wordes Guildes and fiaternities and companies incorporate shall not make nor vse any ordinance which may be to the diminution of the Kinges fraunchise or of other fraunchises or against the common profit of the people vnlesse it be first discussed by the Iustices of peace or the chiefe gouernors of the village and before them entred of recorde c. But when I speake of colledges companies meetings feastinges and assemblies I doe with the maine force of my hart exclude vnlawfull societies conuenticles and secreat meetinges of male-contents phantasticall and priuate humored persons But to colledges fraternities and companies erected and created by Law I see no reason but that landes and yearelie maintenance may be giuen and allowed vnto them yet not without the Princes permission who for some speciall causes fore-seene may stoppe and hinder such donations And therefore wiselie by diuers Statutes in this Realme is remedie prouided against this and a writ of Ad quod damnum deuised n Statut. de Religios 18. E. 3. pro clero cap. 3. 15. R. 2. cap. 5. Antonius the Emperour did first of all permit legacies and donations to bee made to colledges and companies excepting the colleges of the Iewes whom notwithstanding hee suffered to meete together and to haue their synagoges for religious vse o L. 1. de Iud. C. Alexander magnus did bestowe vppon his citie Alexandria built at the seauen-folde mouth of Nilus manie great priuiledges fraunchises and immunities p Ioseph lib. 3. bel Iud. So Frauncis the first being the founder of that citie which standeth at the mouth of Sequana gaue great immunitie to such as should inhabite it q Bodin lib. 1. de republ c. 6. And so diuerse of our kinges of England haue bestowed many liberties fraunchises and benefits vpon seuerall citties which M. Camden hath verie profitably very learnedly amongst other things in their due places set downe whome I need not further commende to my country-men of England to whom by his great worth and desert he is more deare and precious Quàm si illum Veneris commendet epistola Marti But I will further proceed in shewing the great prerogatiues graunted by princes and other supreame estates to citties and corporations In all ages and all common weales cities and corporations haue not only had their courts folkemote and the like but euen common councels as they are commonly tearmed and publike meetinges for the generall good of the corporations For as great profite doth arise by such societies and meetinges so nothing doth more debilitate and weaken the state of a common weale then the taking away of such Councels therefore the Romanes when they had ouercome Macedonia because they would make the estate of it weake and impuissant they did vtterly forbidde all common Councels and publike meetinges so they did when they had ouercome the Achaeans Memmius the Consull saith Liuie did dissolue all the common councels of the particular nations of Achaia and of the Phocensians and Baeotians and the other partes of Greece r Liui. lib. 35 But when these regions and prouinces were sufficiently quieted and soundly knit to the bodie of the Romane Empire then as Strabo reporteth their auncient Councels were restored vnto them but the Romanes did neuer alter the liberties of any citie vnlesse they were abused to their hurt as appereth by the words of Florus Critolaus causa belli qui libertate a Romanis data aduersus ipsos vsus est ſ Flor. lib. 2. Neither were the liberties of the Aetolians impeached vntill they reuolted to Antiochus as Iustin sheweth Offensi Aetóli quód non ex arbitrio eorum Macedonia quoque adempta Phillippo data sibi in praemium belli esset Antiochum in Romana bella impellunt t Iustin lib. 3. And such abuses many times happen in cities for as Liuie that excellent writer in wit diligence and history matched by none in wisedome and grauitie by very few in pietie ouercome onely of one of the heathens 1 Varro 2 Cicero and but of one in eloquence well auoucheth Nulla est ciuitas quae non et improbos ciues aliquādo u Liui. lib. 45. imperitam multitudinem semper habeat but as they did fauour lawfull and conuenient councels so vnlawfull and secrete conuenticles they did greatly abhorre wherefore the nocturnall meeting at the sacrifice of Bacchus was iustly abiudicated and disanulled by the whole Senate the conuēticle of the black-religioned Brownists by the L. Archbishop of Canterburie the high Commissioners who though a greater number of them were women pretended themselues to be harmeles vnapt to do hurt yet as Liuie saith A nullo non genere summum periculum est si coetus consilia et secret as consultationes esse sinas x Liui. lib. 34. And this ought especially to be feared and preuented whē contumelious contumacy is vailed with the shadow of religion and reformation for as the same Liuie saith againe very well Nihil in speciem fallacius praua religione vbi deorum numen praetenditur sceleribus subit animum timor y Liui. li 1. 39. O lord how long shall Sathan abuse the soules created by thee with a
vaine sophistrie in steade of true religion and such societies and such families whether of loue or of lust I can not well define which delight in latebris are worthy to be sent ad carceres that they may there liue in tenebris for it is fit to send corrupt humors which ouerloden and pester the bodie in latrinam For surely such Fanatickes may doe as great hurt in a common weale as the Pythagoreans did in Greece and Italie who pretending themselues to bee professors of wisedome did bring a great number to the admiration and imitation of them and finding such strength in the weakenesse of the multitude they beganne to plant their ramme and sette their force against kingdomes common weales and had thought vtterly to haue subuerted them but their companies were quickly dispersed and the greatest parte of these companions was destroyed by fire and sword a Polyb. li. 3. Now to speake somewhat of the liberties of a citie S. Paul when he was by the commandemēt of the magistrates apprehended being accused that he troubled the publike tranquilitie by seditious assemblies professing himselfe to bee a citizen of Rome hee appealed to Caesar b Act. 25. v. 11 though hee were by nation a Cilician by bloud an Israelite by tribe a Beniaminite yet because his father c Acto 22. v. 28. had beene a citizen of Rome the liberties were affoarded vnto him he likewise when he was commanded to be scourged pleaded for himselfe that he was a Romane d ibid. v. 25. But because the abundance of liberties of all the cities of Asia Africke and Europa are sufficiently knowne I will not stay any longer vpon this point but wil passe to matters of greater importance and more difficultie The ninth Chapter That the distinguishing of demesnes the difference of the degrees callings of men is according to the law of nations COnfusion breedeth alwaies contention partition peace according to the old prouerb Diuide et impera for which cause our ancestors did thinke it best to distinguish their dominions and inheritances by lottes and boundaries as Abraham Lot in Palestine Masinissa and the Carthaginians in Numidia and Mauritania the Romanes and Nolanes in Italie the Romanes and Carthaginians in Spayne and Sicilie the Emperour Valens and the Gothes in Missia and the regions on this side Danubius through the whole tracte of the Romane Empire was a partition made by Theodosius betwixt his sonne Archadius whom he prefected ouer Bizance and all the orientall partes and his other sonne Honorius to whom he allotted Roome and all the occidentall countries and so Darius would haue made a partition with Alexander of the whole world that the one of them shold haue all on the one side of Euphrates the other all on the other side yet in the first age and infancie of the world this kind of partitioin was vnused and vnknowne as may appeare by these authorities first of Virgill who saith Ne signare quidem aut partiri limite campum Fas erat a Virgi Georg. 1. And of Tibullus non fixus in agris Qui regeret certis finibus arua lapis b Tibul. 1. Elegi 3. And that of Seneca Nullus in campo sacer Diuisit agros arbiter populis lapis c Senec. in Hippoli act 2. yet the case was altered when Ouid writ thus Gentibus est alijs tellus data limite certo Romanae spatium est vrbis orbis idem d Ouid. 2. Fasto And vpon good reason was it altered for as Boetius saith well Dimensiones terrarum terminis positis vag antibus ac discordantibus populis pacis vtilia praestiterunt e Boeti in geomet And the great vse of limits and boundaries Plutarch sheweth when he condemneth the vnsatiable couetousnes and illimited encroachment or inuasion of Romulus verie wittily Noluit Romulus mensurâ proprij agri prodere mensuram alieni siquidem virium compedes terminos esse nouit seruarentur iniuriae iudicium si non seruarentur f Plut. in Num. pr. R. 15. And this was the cause that Numa Pompilius the king of the Romanes did cause as well a publik perambulation to be made throughout his whole kingdome as priuate limitations bounds betwixt partie partie and for the more solemne and effectuall confirmation and establishing of this course he did dedicate a chappell vpō the top of the Tarpeian hill vnto Terminus and this idoll was made of stone g Plut. in Num. He was set in a chappell as not fit to be remoued hee was made of stone as hard to be remoued he was placed vpon a high rocke as not possible to bee remoued and to this idoll nothing was sacrificed but cakes pulse and the first fruites of the field the meaning doubtles of Numa was good if it had not beene signified set forth by an euill meane For to make him immoueable was to good purpose and agreeable to the truth of diuine iustice Wherefore Salamon saith that which also is commaunded in Deuteronomie Thou shalt not remoue the auncient boundes which thy fathers haue made h Deut. 27. 17 Prou. 22. v 28. 23. v. 10. but the manner of diuiding lands dominions according to the custome of nations is fully set downe by M. Littleton though applyed to another purpose it is fiue-fold 1. By setting out an equal rate of the lands to be diuided 2. By the agreement of frends or intermediation of others 3. By casting lots 4. By writ de partitione facienda at the commō law the action de herciscunda familia at the ciuill law 5. By making an vnequall partition equall by a forrein reseruation i Littlet lib. 3. c. 1. Distinctions likewise of the degrees of men hath beene in all nations in all ages established obserued and vsed For the aduancing of noble men aboue them of lesse note and the preferring of the gentleman before the yeoman and peasant is very ancient and hath beene vniformely reteigned neither is it to bee maruelled at for nature her selfe hath tought the nations her schollers this lesson Trauaile through all her kingdome that is through the whole world you shall find this difference in force and of great validitie Consider the scituation of the celestiall orbes and ye shall note that the fierie heauen is placed aboue the chrystaline as more worthie both these aboue the firmament the firmament aboue the other Spheares as surpassing them Marke the birdes of the ayre ye shall perceyue that the Eagle the Phaenix and the Parott holde preheminence aboue the rest Looke vpon the riuers ye shall obserue Euphrates in his forme and compasse of his streame to be more excellent then Ganges Ganges better then Danubius Danubius better then Tagus Tagus then Padus Padus then Tempse Tempse then Seuerne Note the fishes of the sea yea shall find these to haue place aboue the rest the Whale the Dolphin the Sturgeon