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A01292 A parallele or conference of the ciuill law, the canon law, and the common law of this realme of England VVherein the agreement and disagreement of these three lawes, and the causes and reasons of the said agreement and disagreement, are opened and discussed. Digested in sundry dialogues by William Fulbecke. At the end of these dialogues is annexed a table of the sections ...; Parallele or conference of the civill law, the canon law, and the common law of this realme of England. Part 1 Fulbeck, William, 1560-1603? 1601 (1601) STC 11415; ESTC S102689 180,892 262

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Seuenth Dialogue Of Deuises and Legacies NOmomathes First I pray you tell 1. Diuision me whether this manner and custome of disposing by a mans last will and Testament hath bene in auncient time practised or no. Codicgn It is very auncient for it was one 1. The antiquity of willes of the Lawes of the twelfe Tables Vti legassit suae rei ita ius esto a L. verbis legis ff de verb. signif But before Solons time it was not lawfull for a man to deuise his goods Extra familiam to straungers and therefore when Solon did by Lawe established graunt this libertie to the Athenians it was plausibly receiued of them and accompted the best of all his Lawes b Plutarch in Solon But Plato in his writings straungely 2. Plato his exception against Solon his Law concerning willes howsoeuer diuinely conceited dispraiseth this Lawe and calleth the makers of it childish because by that meane a window is opened to deceite and to flatterie for hee saith that when men are at point of death they beginne to dote and their vnderstanding is broken and therefore it is very likely that euery man dying will dispose and appoint many thinges contrarie to the Lawe to the vsuall practise of them that liue to the example of their ancestors c Plat. lib. 11. de legib This sentence of Plato Iustinian an Emperour exquisitely busied in the compiling of Lawes because hee had rather erre with Plato then yeelde vnto the truth with Solon alloweth and frameth his Lawes accordingly d Authent de trient sem in l. Paulus ad Treb. and S. Ierom writeth that Solons Lawe was repealed in his time because Priestes which were commonly employed in the making of willes did greedily and odiously drawe to themselfes the inheritance of the dead dd L. 1. C. de sacr Eccles and an other reason may be added in defence of Platoes opinion because men in daunger of death are for the most parte too prodigall which Aristotle noted e Diogen Laerti in vit Aristotel and Tacitus pronounceth more peremptorily speaking of Otho f Tacit. lib. 2. lustor Pecunias distributt parce nec tanquam periturus hauing affirmed before Difficilius est temperare qua te non putes diu vsurum But Solons 3. Solons lawe is mainteined and defended against Plato Lawe leaneth to a more stable roote then that it may bee shaken by the weake blaste of such colourable reprehensions and Solon did make exceptions to his Lawe for hee made these testaments voide which were made by any in the extremitie of his disease or which a man was enforced to make by imprisonment or torment or by the perswasions and flatterie of his wife But surely the making of willes is necessarie g L. 3. D. qui test fa. pos and without it men can not effect the good education and bringing vp of their children nor be able of their proper goodes chattels and other mooueable substaunce to discharge their dettes and after their degrees set foorth and aduance their children and posteritie h 32. H. 8. c. 1. Willes 2. nor leaue their wife 's such comfortable support as in conscience they ought Nomomathes Lette mee know I pray you 2. Diuision what persons may be legataries or deuisees and who not Codicgnostes Euerie one that may bee made 1. Such as bee vncapable of inheritances goods may not be deuisees heires or executors by the Ciuill law 2. A difference in the Ciuill law betwixt the making of a deuisee and the making of an executor heire or executor may be a legatarie or deuisee but to thē which are vncapable by Law of inheritances or goods no deuise can be made neither can they be made heires or executors i C. de haered instit l. 1. but there is a difference betwixt the making of a deuisee and the making of an heire or executor because he that is to be made heire or executor must bee an able person in Lawe as well at the time of the making of the Testament as at the death of the testator and the vndertaking of the executorship or entre into the inheritaunce k ff de haered Insti l. si alienū §. de extraneis Iust de haer qual differ §. in extraneis but as to the deuisee it is sufficient if he be capable at the time of the death of the testator l ff de donat causa mort l. in mortis de condit demon l. eū qui. ff de iur fisc l. non intelligitur §. quando Anglonom By our Law to al such persons to whom a graunt may be made a deuise may bee 3. That by the Common law all persons to whom a graūt may be made a deuise may be made vnlesse it otherwise happen in some fewe cases made vnlesse it otherwise happē in some few cases and the deuise ought to be good effectual at the time of the death of the deuisor as if a mā seised of landes deuisable doe deuise the same to the fellowes of a colledge or the Priestes of a Chauntery and there is no such Colledge nor Chauntery at the time of the death of the deuisor after such a colledge or chauntery is made yet the deuise is void because deuises are purchases and when a man taketh lands or tenements 4. That the deuisee must be a person capable of the thing deuised by purchase hee must be an able person to take when it falleth to him by the purchase m Park 97. Sect. 505. 9. H. 6. 23. 2. Eliza. 119. Pl. 18. Dy. 13. Eli. 303. Pl. 49. Dy. 300. Pl. 39. 5. E. 4. 6. p Billing and the Cōminaltie of a guild which is not incorporate by the kings charter to purchase lands is not capable of lands and if a mā seised of lands deuiseable in fee do deuise the same land to A. for life to find a Chapleine chaunting in the Church of Dale the remainder to two of the best men of the Guilde or fraternitie of Whittawers in Londō to find a chaplaine c. if the Whittawers be not incorporate by the Kings charte● enabled to purchase this remainder is void n Park 98. sect 510. 49. E. 3. 3. and if a rent be granted for life to I. S. the remainder in fee to him that shall first come to Powles the next daie in the morning this remainder is good though it be vpon condition if I. S. die not before the next daie and if one come to Powles the next daie in the morning if he which commeth thither then be not a person disabled to take by the graunt o 30. Assis pl. 47. Perk. 13. Sect. 56. so that whereas you say that by your Lawe it is 5. That by the Common law the deuisee ought to be capable at the time of the death of the deuisor sufficient
that the deuisee be capable at the time of the death of the testator so it is likewise by our law for though a man may not graunt nor giue lands to his wife during the couerture because they both are but one persō in law yet by custome heretofore which the Cōmon law did fauour and now by statute he might or may deuise his lands to his wife to haue in fee simple or otherwise because such deuise taketh not effect till the death of the deuisor p Littl. lib. 2. c. 10. Sect. 8. 27. Assis pl. 60. and then they are not one person q 24. H. 8. Br. Deuis 34. Nomom Now let me know what things may 3. Diuision be deuised Codicgn Whatsoeuer things the testator hath 1. That by the Ciuill law all such things may bee deuised as the testator hath in his owne right at the time of the deuise as in his owne right r ff de legat 2. l. vinum §. si rē tuam if he happen to deuise a thing which is not his owne but an other mās the executor is by our Lawe compelable to buy it and to giue it to the deuisee by vertue of the will or if the owner will not sell it hee ought to pay the very value and full estimation of it to the deuisee ſ ff de legat 3. l. dubium §. vlti and if lande bee bought by the deuisor for which he hath not payed any monie or not all the monie if he died and the deuisee will haue the land hee must pay the monie and so enioy the land t L. 39. §. Idē Iulianus de legat 1. but if the deuisor haue solde lande and hath not receiued the monie and he deuiseth the lande so solde to I. S. the deuisee in this case shall not haue the lande solde but the monie that is to bee payed for it for an argument is rightly drawne ab augmento ad diminutionem u L. si ex toto eo tit so that this conclusion may bee made is the thing bought due to the deuisee then the deuisee ought to pay the monie is the thing not solde not due to the deuisee then hee must haue the monie that is to bee payed for it Anglonomoph In our Lawe the making of a testament 2. The three degrees of a testament by the Common law hath three partes Inception which is the writing of the testament Progression which is the publication of it Consummation which is the death of the partie and when after the deuise the deuisor purchaseth other lands it cānot 3. A differē o● in the Cōmon law where a man deuiseth a thing wherof he is not seised particularly and by name and where not be intended by any possibilitie that hee would haue them to passe by the deuise for there is nothing conteined in the will which doth purport such intent but it was held in Brettes case that if a man deuise land in certaintie as the mannor of Dale or white acre and he hath no interest nor possession in them at the time of the making of the will and after the doth purchase it in such case it shall passe to the deuisee for then it shall be taken that his intent was to purchase it as it is said 39. Henr. 6. 13. and it was likewise sayd that the statutes of 32. and 34. Henr. 8. required that the deuisors should bee seised of the land deuised at the time of the deuise for the words be Euerie person hauing or which after this acte shall haue c. a 10. Eli. Com̄ Brets case per Louel touts les Iust Nomom I pray you let me know more particularly what things may be deuised Codicgn A thing may be deuised which is not 4 That things which are not in esse at the time of the deuise made may be deuised in rerum natura at the time of the deuise if afterwarde it may be as the corne which shall grow in such a soyle or the lambes which shall come of his flocke of sheepe in such a field b Instit de legat §. ea quoque res ff de legat 1. l. quod in rerum but if the testator doe deuise tenne quarter of corne comming of the corne which shall growe in such a soyle or two tunnes of wine of his grapes in such a vineyard or tenne lambes of such a flock though so much corne or wine or so many lābes doe not arise of the thinges abouesaid yet the heire or executor is compellable by law to make them good integraliter because he may seeme to haue mencioned the soile the vineyard and the flocke rather by way of demonstration then by way of condition c l. quid testamento in prin ff de leg 1. l. Paulo Callimacho §. Iullanus Seuerus ff de legat 3. l. Lucius ff de alim leg but if the testator doe deuise certaine goods or a certaine summe of money to I. S. and in his life time after recouerie of his health he giueth the goods or payeth the money to the said I. S. now without any alteration of the deuise in the will the executors shall bee discharged of perfourming the deuise after the death of the testator d l. Lucius Titius in testamento in prin ff de legat 2. gl in Clem. dudum de Sepultur Angonomoph It is said in our bookes that if a 5 That the deuise of tenāt for terme of life or tenant i● dower of corne growing at the time of their death is good man which hath estate for life or tenaunt in dower doe deuise their corne growing vpon the lande at the time of their death this is a good deuise and hee in the reuersion shall not haue the Corne e 4 H. 3. Deuis 26. But if a man seised of lande in fee as in right of his w●fe doe lease the same land for yeares to a straunger and the lessee soweth the lande and after the woman dyeth the corne being not ripe in this case the lessee may deuise the corne growing vppon the lande and yet this estate is determined and it was certaine but a thing non-certaine was the cause of the determination of it f 7. E. 3. 67. 7. E. 4. 17. Park 99. sect 513. 10. E. 3. 29. And if a man bee seysed of lande in the right of his wife and sowe it ad deuiseth the corne growing vpon the lande and dyeth before it bee seuered the deuisee shall haue it and not the wife but otherwise it is of hearbes or meadowe growing vpon the lande and not seuered at the time of the death of the deuisour g 7. Ass pl. 16. And if tenaunt in taile of lande lease the lande for life and the lessee soweth the lande with Corne and the tenaunt in tayle dyeth and the issue recouereth in a Formedon in discender before the
Corne bee seuered the issue in taile may well deuise it h Park Deuis 100 sect 520. and if a man which is seised of land in fee haue issue a daughter and dyeth his wife being grossement enseint with a sonne and the daughter entreth and soweth the lande and after the sowing and before the seuerance the sonne is borne and one of his next friendes entreth for him yet the daughter may deuise the Corne growing vppon the lande i 19. H. 6. 6. And the Statute of Merton which sayeth that omnes viduae possint legare blada is but an affirmation of the common Lawe which was vsed in the time of King Henry the thirde aboue mencioned in the beginning of his raigne and so it is of other thinges future contingent they may bee deuised well enough for if a man enfeoffe a straunger of his lande vpon payment or non-payment on the part of the feoffee as if the feoffee shall pay vnto the feoffour twentie poundes at the feast of Easter next ensuing that then he may reteigne the lande to him and to his heires and if hee doe not pay that then it shall bee lawfull for the feoffour to re-enter nowe if the feoffour make his will and deuise the money when it shall bee paied to A. and dyeth before the day of payment this is a good deuise condicionally that is if the feoffee pay the mony to the executors k 12. E. 3. Condic 8. For when 6 That when the partie hath a certaine and lawfull interest in a thing he may lease it graunt it or deuise it before the existence of it the partie hath a lawfull and a certaine interest in a thinge hee may graunt lease or deuise it before the thing haue actuall existence therefore the saying of Master Keble that worthie man is well to be marked when hee sayeth that the King cannot graunt any disme before it bee graunted to his highnesse by Parliament neyther a wardshippe cum acciderit otherwise it is of the amerciaments of his tenants in such a village the wrecke of the Sea or catalla felonum for he hath an inheritance in them and a possession in law but in the disme hee hath no interest before the graunt l 21. E. 4. Abbot de Walth case 45. p Keble Codicgn By our Law a man may deuise to one 7 That a deuise may be vncertaine but yet good in Law because it may by special meanes be reduced to certaintie that he shall haue yerely xx loade of stone out of his quarrie in Dale or three load of wood out of his groue or coppies in Sale m ff de legat 1. l. apud Iulian §. si quis and if the testator doe deuise one of his vineyardes one of his horses or one of his rickes of corne it shall be in the election of the heire or the executor what vineyarde what horse or what ricke of corne he will giue him so that he giue him not the verie worst but these which be indifferent n l. legato generaliter ff de lega 1. Anglonomoph So in our Law a man may graunt therefore as I think if one deuise vnto an other one of the horses in his stable and he hath fiue in his stable the grauntee may chose which of them he will haue and if a man graunt to one xx s. of rent charge or xl s. of rent charge I may distreine for which of the rents I will o 9. E. 4. 39. 11. E. 3. Annuity 27. Park Grāts 17. sect 74. Nomomat Let me aske you this question The 4. Diuision Testator hauing but one daughter deuiseth by his wil that 1000. li. shal be payd for the mariage of his daughters meaning as well other daughters that shoulde be borne as her that is liuing there is none afterwarde borne the testator dyethw hether is the executor bounde to pay the whole thousande poundes to the daughter that is liuing Codicgn I thinke he is bounde by Lawe to pay 1 That by the Ciuil law Ius acrescendi taketh effect in legacies the whole summe vnto her p l. qui quartā §. fin ff de legat 1. for ius accrescendi habet locum in legatis q d. §. fin cum l. seq l. a Titio ff de verbo oblatio and so if the testator do deuise that if he shall haue a daughter the executor shoulde giue a C. li. for the mariage of his daughter and two daughters be borne nowe the executor shall pay to euery of them C. li. r l. qui filiabus §. si quis ita ff de legat 1. and if the case be that the testatour doth deuise the sixthe part of his houses of his landes or vineyards to Sempronius whereupon Sempronius demaundeth a sixth part of euery house of euery farme and of euery vineyarde and the heire saith that these thinges cannot well be deuided but that hee is readie to pay to the deuisee the verie 2 Whether when the 6. part of a thing is deuised the heire is compellable to deuide it by the Ciuil law or to render the value value of euery sixth parte the question is whether the law regardeth this aunswere of the heire and for this doubt we haue this generall decision if the thing which is so to be deuided be indiuisible by the nature of it or if it cannot bee commodiously diuided the heire hath the choise to pay the value but if it be deuisible then the law is otherwise ſ l. non amplius §. cum honorum ff de legat 1. Anglonomoph As to your last case our law doth accorde with yours for legacies shal be fauoured and ordered as dower is and if a woman haue title of dower to a house a chamber in the house may be allotted vnto her as the third part of the 3 That by the common law some time there may be a seuerance of the thing deuised sometime of the profits of the thing or of the aduantage house or in allowance of her dower but she shal not so be indowed of a milne but shall haue the third part of the profit of the milne because the milne cannot be seuered and a woman may bee endowed of a villaine ingrosse as to haue his seruices euery third day and of an aduowson in grosse to haue the third presentment and of the moitie of an aduowson ingrosse to haue the sixth presentment and a woman shall be endowed of a bailywicke to haue the third part of the profit of it t 1. H. 5. 1. 45. E. 3. Dower 50. Na. Br. 7. 2. H. 6. 11. 13. E. 2. Dower 161. Fitz. na br 148 C. 150. G. 149. K. 148. C. 12. E. 2. Dower 157. 11. E. 3. Dower 85. 15. E. 3. Dower 81. Nomomat Let the case bee that the Testatour 5. Diuision deuiseth to one a plotte of grounde and speaketh nothinge of the house which is built vppon it
whether shall the deuisee haue the house Codicgn By our Lawe hee shall haue the 1 That if a man deuise a plott of groūd whereon a house is built the house also passeth house whether it were built before the Testament were made or after u l. seruum silij §. si are ae ff de l. si are ae ff de leg 2. and wee haue a rule in our Lawe Quidquid plantatur seritur vel inaedificatur omne solo cedit radices si tamen egit Anglonomoph It is so likewise in our Lawe 2 A house built vpon lād entailed after the gift shal be recouered in a Formedon for if a man giue lande in taile and the donee buildeth a house vpon it and dyeth without issue the donor if he be deforced from the land shall demaunde it in a Formedon per nomen mesuagij a 32. H. 8. 47. Dyer Nomomat Put case the Testatour deuiseth to 6. Diuision one a deede or instrument conteyninge a certaine debt whether doth he deuise the debt or noe b l. seruum silij § ●um qui chirographum de legat 1. Codicgn In that case the debt passeth h but 1 That by the ciuil law when an especialtie conteining a debt is deuised to one the debt it selfe passeth if tenne seuerall payments ought to bee made by the condition of a bonde as suppose tenne poundes is to be payd yerely by tenne seueral payments and fiue yeres be past and fiue payments made and the testator deuiseth the summe comprised in the condition to I. S. in this case the deuisee shal not recouer against the executor the whole summe conteigned in the condition but fiue pounds onely c d. l. seruum filij §. sed et si nomen Anglonomoph Master Perkins a man that writeth 2 Master Parkins his opiniō touching the deuising of an obligation is examined of diuerse Titles of our Law rather subtilly then soundely saieth that if twentie pounds be due to a man vpon an obligation or a contracte which ought to be payd at the feast of Easter and he euiseth it to a straunger this is a good deuise if the money bee afterward payd but if he had deuised the obligation or the counterpaine of the Indenture of couenants wherein the bond is conteined the deuisee shall not vse an action vpon the bonde in his owne name but he may giue or sell the obligation to the obligor or to a straunger d Perkins 101. sect ' 527. but howe bonds or things in action may passe directly from one to another by way of graunt or deuise I cannot yet perceiue by any authenticke opinion in our yere bookes for to say that the especialty or bonde conteyning the debt or duety doth passe vnto the deuisee though the debt doe not passe as namely the parchment ynke and waxe but not the summe conteigned is as if one shoulde imagine that a man roweth ouer Thames in body and yet remaineth at the Temple staires in soule for if the debt being the principall doe not passe I cannot vnderstand how the parchment or paper or the deede it selfe being the accessorie can passe for accessorium sequitur suum principale Nomom Resolue in this if a man deuise to an 7. Diuision other a horse a garment or the like and they perishe in the handes of the executour whether is the executor bounde by Law to make them good Codicgn In such case either the executor doth linger and delay the deliuery or giuing of the thing deuised to him to whom it was deuised and then I doubt not but he is bound to pay the 1 That by the Ciuil Law the executor is bound to make good the thing which perisheth through his default value of the thing which perisheth through his default or there is no default in him and then he is not to bee charged with the making of it good e l. cum heres §. si l. huiusmodi §. si cui homo ff de legat 1. and then the executor or heire may bee said to delay the administration of the legacye when he may speedily performe it and will not but if he be by the acte of a straunger hindered from executing the bequest as suppose he hath not the monie readie which is deuised or the deuise be that hee shall purchase an other mans lande with the money of the deuisor and assure 2 That in some cases the time of performing legacies is left to the discretion of the Iudges it to I. S. if he cannot easilie compasse this purchase doing his best endeuour the rigor of lawe is to be tempered in this case by discretion and respite must bee giuen by the arbitrage of the Iudge f l. si domus §. in pecunia ff de legat 1. Anglonomoph In our Law we haue many cases wherein they that are charged with the deliuery of a thing vpon some trust and confidence 3 That by the common law the executors are bound to performe the deuise in conuenient time reposed in them and the thing that should be deliuered perisheth through their default they are enforced by lawe to make full amendes for if a man be seised of lande deuisable in fee and deuiseth by his Testament that his executors shall sell his land and shall distribute the profits comming thereof to the vse of the poore and the deuisor dyeth if a straunger tender vnto them monie for the lande but not so much as the lande is worthe in their opinion and they to the intent they may sell it more deere differre the sale for two yeres space and take the profit themselues nowe the heire for their longe delaying may enter 4 A diuersitie betwixt an obligee and a deuisee and put them out of the land g 38. Ass pl. 3. 39. Ass pl. 3. but if a man be bound in xx li. to pay x. li. at the feast of Saint Michael the obligee refuseth the money when it is tendered in pollardes which afterward are embased the obligor shall beare the losse of the embasement because he must pleade vncore prist h 7. E. 6. 83. Dyer and yet the refusal was the default of the obligee Nomom Put case that a man deuiseth to one a 8. Diuision beadsteede whether shall the deuisee by force of this deuise haue the curtaines of the bed Codicgn The accessorie goeth alwaies with the 1 That things which are acc●ssory doe passe with their principal principal and the curtaines therefore in this case shall passe with the bedsteade i l. liberorum §. sin ibi glo de legat ' 3. so if a man deuise to one his land or his house the arrerages due by the farmor or inhabitant from the death of the Testator are payable to the deuisee but not the arrerages before k l. praedijs §. 1. ff de legat 3. l. Nomen §. filio ex parte de
her executor shall haue the summe otherwise it had beene if the wordes of the deuise had bene to be paied at the daie of her mariage or at the age of 21. yeares and she dieth before t 36. H. 8. 59. Dy. and 16. Eliz. A man deuised laude to one so that he doe paie 10. li. and if not that it should remaine to his house prouided that the lands shall not be sold but shall goe to the next of bloud being male it was helde that this was an estate taile that these words shall goe to his house shal be construed to the eldest person of his familie and these wordes being male shall be construed in the future tense and in many cases an estate may be limited in a deuise by implication as if a man deuise lande to one and to his heires males in fee simple the remainder to the next heires males of the kinne there is an entailemēt both in the first estate and also in the remainder u 16. Eliz. 333. Dy. 2. Eli. 171. Dy. but where a deuise is contrarie to Law it is voide of effect for a man deuised land in London to the 3. That the Common law frustrateth these deuises which are repugnant to Lawe Prior Couent of S. Bartholmewes so that they pay to the Deane and Chapiter of Powles 10. li. yeerely and if they failed then their estate to cease and that the lande should remaine to the Deane and it was helde by Fitzh Baldwin Iustices that this was a void remainder because it could not be limited after an estate in fee and as of a condition the Deane Chapiter could not haue aduantage but the heire a 29. H. 8. 32. Dy. and so if a man deuise lād to one in fee that if he die without heire that then it shall remaine to an other in fee this is a voide remainder because one fee simple cannot depend vpon an other b 19. H. 8. 8. Nomom What if the testator doe deuise to his 16. Diuision wife certaine land whilest she should liue chastly and she marieth whether is her estate determined Canonolog I thinke it is not determined for 1. That by the Cannon lawe if land be deuised to a woman whilest she shall liue chastly mariage is not implicatiuely and absolutely prohibited though the words of the deuise do implie a cōdition yet the condition is not broken because matrimonium est reshonesta and therefore not to be imagined to be within the intent of the condition c Authent de nupt in princ 28. quaest 1. ca. sic enim 33. q. 2. c. 2. l. 2. C. de indict viduit toll Nomoma Yet it seemeth that the condition faileth Quia coitus castitas opponuntur d D. authent de nup. §. qu●a vero therefore it may seeme that she should lose the legacie as well by marying as by liuing incontinently Canonol But I thinke rather that she shal not lose the legacie because there was no condition expressed in the deuise that shee should not marrie and therefore she can not be said in marying to do against the will of her husband but yet it may seeme that if she had maried within a yeare after the death of the testator she had broke the condition e ff de iur patron l. adigere §. fi for doubtles otherwise Mulier secundò nubeus castitatem seruat f D. authen de nup. §. fin autem idē Extra de diuor c. gaudeamus in fin l. mulier §. cum proponaretur ff ad Trebel 2. That the Ciuill law and Common law do fauour mariage Codicgn Our Lawe in such cases fauoureth matrimonie g ff de reg iur l. In ambiguis l. in testamentis eod and where there is no condition prohibitorie expressed the Law will not in such case intende it h In authent hoc locum C. de secund nupt Anglonomop In our Law we haue a case that King Edward the sixth graunted to his sister the Ladie Mary the mannor of D. as long as shee should continue vnmaried and this is admitted in our Law to be a good limitation but no condition as hath bene before surmised i 4. Mar. 1. 141. Dy. 37. H. 6. 29. 10. Assis pl. 8. 17. Assis pl. 7. 3. Assis pl. 9. 6. Nomom Let this be the case the husbād deuiseth 17. Diuision to his wife the ꝓfits of al his goods the question is whether the wife may take the profits by her sole authoritie or by the appointment of the iudge or by the administration of the executor 1. That there is a diuersitie in the Ciuill lawe where a man maketh his wife vsufructuariam of his goods and where he deuiseth them to her Codicgn In our law we take this difference where he maketh his wife by his will vsufructuariam of the goods and where he doth deuise vnto her his goods For where he maketh her vsufructuariam she may of her owne power take the profit and benefit of the goods and she needeth not to expect or attend the curtisie of the executor k L. si habitatio §. si vsus fūdi l. fundi ff de vsu hab But if he deuise his goods or the profits of his goods or commaund and charge his heire or executor by his will that they allow sufficient maintenaunce to his wife out of his lands or goods now the woman is a deuisee and she must take that which is deuised by the hāds of the heire or executor or else sue for it by law l ff de vsuf●uct legat l. patrimonij l. si quis Anglonomoph By our law the power and authoritie 2. That by the Common law the administration of the goods and chattels of the testator doth appertaine only to the executor of deliuering goods and chattels or putting the deuisee in possession belongeth onely to the executors who must see debts paide before legacies performed m 37. H. 6. 30. ● Prisot 2. H. 6 16. Perkins Testam 94. D. S. Dialog 2. 79. And therefore if a straunger take goods deuised to me out of the possession of the executors I cannot haue an action of trespasse for the taking For it is not like to a gift of goods which is presently executed and if a man deuise the ●ourth part of his goods to another the deuisee may not seise the fourth part but he must sue for it in the spiritual court n 27. H. 6. but if a man deuise a booke or some other thing to one for tearme of life the remainder to an other for euer if the executor deliuer the booke or the goods to the first deuisee the second deuisee may seise thē without liuerie of the executor for the possessiō of the first deuisee was the possessiō of thē both otherwise it is if the first deuisee hath the possessiō die
E. 3. 35. and 2. That by the Common law a writ of accompt will lie if one iointenant take all the profites for cutting of wood which is held pro indiuiso the selling of it a writte of accompt will lie for the one iointenant against the other e 47. E. 3. 22. and the plaintife need not shew in certaine in his writte of accompt by whose handes the resceit of the mony giuē for the profits was f 39. E. 3. 35. and if one of the iointenants doe cut wood and carie it away the other may take it and remooue it to his owne house g 2. E. 4. 24. p Danby but if one of the iointenants take monie for all the profites the writte of accompt shal not be brought against him as receiuor generally h 14. E. 3. Accompte 70. 19. E. 2. Briefe 339. but as receiuor to the common profite of them both i 30. E. 1. Accompt 127. and if two executors be the one assigneth auditors he that assigneth auditors shal not haue a writ of dette sole for the arrerages of accompt without his compaignion k 9. H. 6. 11. also there is an other case in our bookes that E. and I. did deliuer an hundred pounds to R. and T. and R. and T. did put a hundred pounds of their owne together with this monie to merchandise with the whole stocke for the common profite of them al according to the rate of euery one of thē in such case E. sole may not haue a writte of accompt against R. and T. l 10. E. 3. 489. 10. E. 4. 5. so if their be two iointenants of a Manor and the one of them vndertaketh to be baily for the other for his moity a writ of accōpt shal be maintenable against him m 21. E. 3. Accompt 66. if he haue any especialty to shewe proouing the assumpsit otherwise not n 17. E. 2. Accompt 122. yet in an accōpt brought against one as the baily of his Manor which the plaintife had in ferme the defendant said that himselfe was ioint farmor with the plaintif of the lease of A. this plea was allowed though the plaintife shewed forth a deed of demise made to him onely o 8. E. 2 Accompt 115. and if two Merchants occupie their goods and merchandise in common to their cōmon profite the one of them may haue a writ of accompt against his cōpanion p Fitzh Nat. Bre. 117. D. 10. H. 7. 16. or the writ may suppose that the defendant was receiuor of the plaintifes monie the defendants for all manner of contracts to their cōmon profit q 30. E. 1. Accompt 127. 39. E. 3. 35. 16. H. 7. 16. p Keb. but one executor shal not haue a writ of accompt against his coexecutor for the goods of the dead r 39. E. 3. 35. 6. H. 4. 3. 13. E. 3. Execut. 91. Nomomath Whether is iointenancie though 2. Diuision it be a iointenancie of the inheritance dissolued and determined by the death of one of the iointenants Codicgn Iointenancie is dissolued by naturall 1. That iointenancie is dissolued by death vnlesse there be some clause in the creation of the estate to the contrarie death vnlesse there be some clause in the demise of the land and in the creation of the estate to the contrarie ſ ff pro socio l. actione §. morte in fin Iusti eo §. soluitur Anglonomoph Indeede there be such clauses sometimes vsed in demises for wee haue such a case that a lease was made to two habendum ijs pro termino vitae successiue vni eorū post alterū sicut nominantur in Indentura non coniunctim the question was in this case whether they were iointenants or no it was ruled without argumēt that they were not iointenants but that there is a remainder to him who is put in the secōd place in the Indenture t 20. Eliz. 361 Dy. And so where a lease was made to three by the premisses habendum to the one for life the remainder to the second the remainder to the third the opiniō of the court was that they should take successiuely not iointly u 5. Mari. 160. Dy. Codicgn And by a ciuill death iointenauncie may be determined w ff pro socio l. actione §. publicatio Iusti eod §. publicatio Likewise by the will and by the alienation of one of the iointenants x L. verum in sin l. societatem §. 1. ff eod l. tamdiu C. eod Anglonomo By our law the nature of iointenancy is such that he that suruiueth shall haue the whole tenancy according to such estate as he should haue had if the iointure had stil continued For if there be three iointenāts in fee simple and the one of thē hath issue dieth yet they that suruiue shall haue the whole tenementes to thēselues the issue shal haue nothing y Littl. lib. 3. c. 3. Sect. 5. and if lands be giuē to two the heirs of one of thē this is a good iointure the one hath freehold the other fee simple if he which hath the fee die he that hath the frehold shal haue the entierty by suruiuor for the terme of his life z Littl. lib. 3. c. 3. Sect. 13. and if two iointenāts be seised of an estate of fee simple and the one of thē grāteth by his deed a rent charge to another mā out of so much of the laud as belōgeth to him in this case during the life of the grauntor the rent charge is effectuall but after his decease the graunt is void as to charge the lande and he that holdeth by the suruiuor shall holde it discharged because he claimeth the land by suruiuer and not by discent from his companion a Littlet lib. 3. c. 5. Sect. 15. And so the law seemeth to haue beene when one iointenant did enter into religion least the freehold of a moitie might be in suspence as well as an assise of Mortdauncestor will lie and a warrantie collaterall may discende in the like case b Fitzh N. B. 166. a. 5. E. 4. 3 34. E. 3. Garrantie 71. Nomoma If a man grant all his goods to two what passeth by this 3. Diuision 1. That by the Ciuill lawe by the ioint gift of all the goods of a man all corporall things passe Codicgn By our law all corporall things passe both in demesne and possession and they are iointenants of them c ff eo l. 1. 2. but actions doe not passe but the grauntor if he will haue the grauntees to take any benefit by the graunt must make the grauntees or one of them his procurators to sue in his name and to recouer to their owne vse d L. 3. in princip ff eo Anglonomoph By the name of goods in our law no inheritance passeth
liuerie onely transferreth the land otherwise it had beene if the word exchaunge had beene vsed in the deede and the estate which the parties are to haue in the land exchaunged ought to be equal 3. That the estates most be equall and Choke saith that both the things exchanged ought to be in esse at the time of the exchaunge and therefore an exchange of land for rent granted de nouo is not good but an exchaunge betwixt 4. That the things exchaūged must be in Esse a rent and a common which are in esse at the time of the exchaunge is good and so it is of land and rent c 9. E. 4. 21. p Brian Choke Nedham And according to his opinion an exchange of the right which the dissesee hath to the land wherof the disseisin is committed for an acre of land in which the disseisor hath right is no good exchaunge d 3. E. 4. 10. p Choke And where the worde exchaunge is mentioned though the conueyance be but an Indenture of couenants yet it shall amount to a good exchaunge for an Indenture of couenants was made betwixt a Prior and the Maister of Gunnell hall in Cambridge that the Maister should haue three acres of land to him and to his successors in perpetuall exchaunge for one chamber of two chambers to be assigned by the said Maister at his election to the said Prior and his successors this hath beene held to be a good exchaunge though it be by way of couenant e 9. E. 4. 38. And though it be auouched for lawe that if by a deed of composition it be agreed betwixt two that the one shall haue such landes in allowance of other lands belonging to him that this is a good exchaunge f 3. E. 3. 19. yet I doubt whether an exchange may be accōplished by such counteruaileable words but a man may 5. That an exchaunge is good though the one parte of it doe mure by way of extinguishment giue land in exchāge for a release which cannot mure but only by way of extinguishmēt though there be some authoritie against it g 7. E. 3. 37. therefore Nortons opiniō is iustly denied by Thorpe wheras he held that in euery exchaūge there must be a mutuall transmutation of the possession h 16. E. 3. Exchaunge 2. for if a man release to an other his estouer of wood which he is to take yeerely in his wood in exchaunge for land giuen to him in exchaunge for the same release this is a good exchange though the release take effect by way of extinguishmēt but it is as great a profite and aduauntage to the tenant to be discharged of the estouers as if so much had bene graunted vnto him out of an other mans wood i Park tit Exchaun 53. 31. E. 1. Exchange 16. and the Law well perceiueth the profite which a man may haue by way of extinguishment for if the father being tenant in taile doe alien the land entailed with warrantie and hath a rent charge in fee issuing out of the lande of his Sonne which doth discend vnto the sonne this is a good assets in value notwithstanding the extinguishment k 31. E. 3. Garrantie 29. Nomomath Whether may Ecclesiasticall benefices 2. Diuision promotions and liuings bee exchaunged or no. Canonolog The incumbents may not by their 1. That incūbents may not exchaunge their benefices by the Canon law sole authoritie chaunge their benefices but they may exchaunge them Interueniente authoritate Episcoporum ad quos pertinet collatio but there is a question in the glosse whether the Chapiter 2. That the Chapiter may warrant permutations sede vacāte in such benefices wherein they haue interest or authoritie may authorise such permutations sede vacante l C. quaesitū de rer permut glos in Clem vnica E. tit and it resolueth briefly that in such things wherein they haue a common collation either by reason of authoritie or by reason of interest and consent it may authorise exchanges sede vacante but in other cases not m Glos in d. Clem. vnic super verbo Conferantur Anglonomophylax The reason in our Lawe 3. That by the Common law Ecclesiasticall persons their patrons and ordinaries ioyning together can not make any good exchange of Ecclesiasticall benefices wherefore such ecclesiasticall persons nor their patrons and ordinaries though they all agree can not exchaunge the inheritances of spirituall liuings is because the statute strictly prouideth that no alienation be made in mortmaine for a thing which was amortised before may be again amortised and therefore if a religious person do appropriate a Church which is of his owne presentation without the kings licence it is forfeited though it were amortised before n 19. E. 3. Mortmain 8. and in such case where one Abbot did alien to an other the collusion was to bee enquired of as well as in the alienation of land made by a secular man to a religious corporation o 16. Assis pl. 1. for the wordes of the Statute of Mortmaine bee very 4. That the statute of Mortmain is most strict and pregnant in wordes strong and large against such purchasors which are thus Prouisum est quòd nullus religiosus emere vel sub colore donationis aut termini aut alterius tituli cuiuscunque ab aliquo recipere aut arte vel ingenio sibi appropriare praesumat per quod terrae tenementa huiusmodi ad manum mortuam quocunque modo deueniant p Statut. de religios 7. E. 1. Mortmain 3. and therefore the case was that a femme sole purchased lande in fee and tooke to husbād the villaine of a Bishop which he had in right of his Bishoprike and the Bishop entred and this was adiudged a mortmain for according to Wickinghams opiniō the words of the Statute of Mortmaine are quocunque modo otherwise it shall be if the tenant of the Bishop do die without heire q 41. E. 3. 21. but 19. Henr. 6. the contrarie is held to be Lawe but if the villaine himselfe purchase lande it is helde there that in such case a Bishop or an Abbot can not enter r 19. H. 6. 56. but Thorpes opinion is 41. E. 3. that though hee may not enter in the case aforesaid yet hee may reteigne the land against the villaine and the king may afterward ratifie his estate which is no more in plaine tearmes then that an estate so gained is voidable onely and not voide and as to the exchaunge of benefices betwixt parson and parson it is seuerely punished by edict of Parliament in our realme ſ 31. Eliz. Nomomathes I will not stay longer vpon the inquirie of exchaunges for you haue opened vnto mee the nature of them and how farre they extende in these few cases now let vs passe to a larger examination of the doubts and pointes of deuises and legacies The
legat 3. And if a house be deuised the Bathe belonging to the house and the orcharde also which belongeth to it doe passe if from the house there be a way to the Bathe or orcharde for then they may well be sayd to belong to the house and to be prouided for the benefit of the inhabitant l l. praedijs in §. balneas §. qui domum ff de legat 3. and if a man do by his last wil deuise land liue many daies after the testament made 2 That a mine of coale passeth with the land if it be iointly vsed with it otherwise it is if it be seuerally vsed and in his life time a myne of coale lead or tinne is opened and discouered in the soile then the testator dieth after that hee hath vsed the myne iointly with the land in this case the deuisee shal haue the mine but if he had demised for life or for yeres the mine to one and the land to an other so that they had beene seuered and disioined in particuler interest then the deuisee should not haue had the mine m l. cū fundus nominatim ff de legat 2. but if the Testator deuise all his corne which he hath in such a barne and the deuisee being one of his housholde seruants of purpose bringeth a greater quantitie of corne into the barne the deuisee shall not haue this increase because it grewe by the fraude of the deuisee n cum ita legatur in princ ff de legat 2. Anglonomoph As to your two last cases deuises as I haue said before are so to be fauoured as dower and I thinke that if a man doe marrie a wife and die seised of lande and after his death a mine of coale is discouered in the ground and 3 That a woman shall be endowed of a mine of coale discouered after her husbands death then the woman bringeth a writ of dower she shal haue her dower as well of the mine being parcell of the lande as of the lande it selfe being the principal o 14. E. 3. Admeasurement 10. 13. E. 1. Itin North. 17. Fitz. na br 149. C. and as to your other case where the corne in such a barne is deuised and it is afterward increased the deuisee shall haue no more corne then was in the barne at the time of the deuise for it is as much as if he should haue said al the corne which he now hath in his barn for words of the present tense which hath a present beginning and ending may not be drawne either to a time past which hath had his beginning and 4 That words of the present tense in a deuise may not be extended to the future tense end or to a time future which hath neither beginning nor end and therfore if a man be bound to keepe the prisoners of the gaole of D. that they shall not escape this shall extende onely to the prisoners which are in the Gaole at the time of the making of the bonde and not to such which shall be afterwarde in the Gaole vnlesse it had beene expresly said which be or shall be in the Gaole p 21. H. 7. 37. and so if the Queene graunt to me visum franciplegij in omnibus terris meis feodis I shall not haue viewe of frankepledge in any landes but such as I haue at the time of the graunt q 38. H. 6. 10. so if a man be bound for the tenants of I. S. it shall be intended of these tenants onely which I. S. hath at the time of the obligation made r 39. H. 6. 6. and if a man graunt to another housewood and hedge-wood to be burnt in his houses in Dale this shal not extend to houses which are afterward built ſ Temps E. 1. Common 28. and though Wilbyes opinion be that if a man grāt to another a way ouer his land with waines and the grauntee hath no freeholde at the time to which he may haue caryage yet if he purchase freehold afterward he may haue a way to it and Hankeford seemeth to be of this opinion 11. H. 4. t 21. E. 3. 2. per Wilby 11. H. 4 82. per Hank because in a generall graunt there needeth to be no naming of a certaine freehold yet in that very case dubito quid sit lex Nomomat Admitte that a man deuise the profittes of his lande for fiue yeres to I. S. the deuisee dyeth within two yeres next after the deuise then the deuisour dyeth whether shall the residue of the terme goe to the benefit of the executor 1 That by the ciuil law if the deuisee of a terme die before the deuisor the executor shal haue the terme or administrator of the deuisee Codicgn We haue expresse authoritie in our Law that it shall a l. vxori v●ufru §. quaesitū ff de v●ufru le Angonomoph Brettes case which is very famous in our law is to the cōtrary aa 10. Eliz. 46. Com̄ Brets case but if a man deuise 2 By the common law a diuersity is taken where the deuisee dieth in the life of the deuisor and where after his death but before the legacy executed xx li. to be paied yerely in 4. yeres after his death to I. S. and died and after the deuisee dyeth within foure yeres yet the executours of the deuisee shal haue the money or the residue of it by suite before the Ordinary in the spiritual Court for it is a duetie by the testament or deuise b 24. H. 8. Br. Deuise 27. 45. Condic ' 187. and an administrator may as well sue for that duety in the spiritual Court as he may haue a writte of Couenant at the common law vpon the couenāt made with the partie intestate c Fitz. na br 146. D. 2. Mar. 112. Dy. Nomom What if the testator do say I deuise such 10. Diuision a thing to God or to Christ what is wrought by this deuise Cononol The thing so deuised is due to the 1 That by the ciuil law when a thing is deuised to God or to Christ it shall goe to the Church of the parishe where the Testator dwelt Church of the parish where the testator did dwel at the time of the deuise d Authent de ecclesiast ' tit̄ §. si quis in nomine argu l. quae cōditio §. sin ff de cond de monstr Anglonomoph In auncient times such deuises were good and so was a fine leuied deo ecclesiae but the lawe is now altered e Scir faci 18. E. 4. 22. 19. E. 4. 2. 4. 7. per Pigot en le cas de Prior de Merton and in the one and twenteth yere of king Richarde the second a deuise of lande was made to one for life the remainder to an other for life the remainder to the Churche of S. Andrew in Holborne and this was adiudged
a good deuise f 21. R. 2. Deuis 27. but now such a deuise is made voide by the statute of 23. H. 8. cap. 10. but before that statute it appeareth by the booke of 37. H. 6. that vpon a gift made to the parishioners 2 That by the common law and by the statute of 23. H. 8. such a deuise is void of such a parish without naming them the Churchwardens might haue an action g 37. H. 6. 3● but thē the gift must haue bin of a personal thing for of inheritance of land they cannot take to the vse of the Church h 12. H. 7. 27. but if a man in auncient time had giuen his landes or his goods deo Ecclesiae sanct ' Petr ' Westimonast ' this had ben a good deuise because the Church is not the house nor the walles but the entier spiritual house that is the Abbot and the Couent and because they may take by such a gift it is good but if the Abbot were dead at the time of the gift it is not good be cause the Couēt is not persona capax but a church 3 What is meant by a Church parochiall according to Rolfes opinion parochiall by Rolfes opinion as to the endowement of it with lande cannot otherwise be intended but a house made of stones walles and roofe which cannot take by any gift or feoffement and so it is of a Church conuentual which lacketh a soueraigne i 8. H. 5. 4. per Babi Rolfe Nomom Suppose that two testaments be exhibited 11. Diuision to the ordinary which were made in one day conteining seuerall summes to the same deuisees bequethed whether shall they both be approued and the legacies of both stand good Codicgn These legacies onely shal stand good 1 That by the ciuil law where two testamēts conteigne in them seueral summes that which conteineth the lessee shal stād but by the cōmon law the later which do conteigne in them a lesser summe k l. Sempronius Procul ff de legat 2. Anglonomoph In our Law we haue a case that if a man make a testament and in it he maketh one onely man his executor and then he maketh an other testament and in it he maketh him and a stranger executors and the first testament is proued that onely shall stande l 2. H. 5. 8. but by other authoritie the later onely shall take place what summes soeuer they conteigne ll 4. H. 7. 13. Nomomat Say that an oxe is deuised to one and 13. Diuision the oxe dyeth without any default in the executor whether is the skinne or hide of the oxe due to the deuisee or no Codicgn By our Lawe it is not due m l. mortuo boue ff de legat 2. for the 1 That by the Ciuil law if an oxe be deuised and he dye the skin is not due to the deuisee thing deuised that is the oxe did perish and was non ens before the skinne were taken off and the skin was not taken from an oxe but from a carcasse Anglonomoph It seemeth in that case that the 2 That by the common law it semeth to be due otherwise it should be if there had bin an exception of the hide deuisee shall haue the hide for it is parcel of the oxe and the oxe was an entier thing but if hee had giuen the oxe excepting the hide that perhaps would amount to a seuerāce in law so that the oxe liuing should haue belonged to the deuisee but being killed the flesh should belong to the deuisee the hide to the executor of the deuisor and if a man make a lease of land excepting the trees which grow vpon the lande the trees are seuered in Law for hee hath no reuersion of them and if he sell them and after the sale make a feoffement the feoffee shall not haue them because they were seuered by the vendition n 20. H. 6. 22. Nomomat Put case that I. S. doe borow a C. 13. Diuision li. of I. N. and for the sure repayment thereof he bindeth all his landes and goods by recognisans of statute Marchant to the said I. N. after he deuiseth all his landes to the recognisee and dyeth the recognisans is forfaited the recognisee bringeth an action of dette and recouereth against the executors and hath execution of the goods of the testator by Fierifacias and then he claimeth the land by vertue of the deuise whether is his claime good or no 1 That if the recognisor deuise all his goods to the re●onusee yet he shall haue execution of the land Codicgn I thinke he may claime the lande also if it may not be prooued by circumstances or directly that the land was deuised vnto him in satisfaction of the debt and vpon condition implyed that he should not alter the propertie of the goods by execution o l. creditorē ff de legat 2. Anglonomoph I doe not perceiue any repugnancie in our Lawe to that which you haue saide Nomomath If he had made his creditour his executour in this case what woulde then haue followed Anglonomoph Then the debt had bin extinct p 11. H. 4. pl. 31. 2 That if the obligee make the obligor his executor the det is extinct for if two be bound to one in a certaine summe of money and the obligee maketh one of them his executor this is a release in law of the bond and debt to them both q 21. E. 4. 81. so if one make his dettor and an other his executours and die in this case if the executor who was not indebted suruiue he shall not haue an action of debt against the executour of his coexecutour although the partie indebted did not administer in his life time for the action was once extinguished and determined for no action can be brought but in the name of them both r 20. E. 4. 17. 21. E. 4. 3. 21. H. 7. 31. per Fineux but if one that is indebted make his creditour and an other his executours the creditour may haue an action if he doe not administer ſ 8. E. 4. 3. per Brian but when the testator is indebted to me and maketh me his executor I may deteigne the goods for my bebt so that it seemeth that though the action be extinct in regarde of the testatour yet the debt is still in esse in respect of straungers t 7. H. 4. 18. 27 H. 6. en Scire fac ' 7. Eliz. Com̄ Greysbrookes case 275. Codicgn When the creditour maketh the debtor his executor by the executorship the debt is confounded and because of impossibilitie in Lawe forsomuch as the executor may not bring an action of debt against himselfe being one and the same person the obligation therefore is by secreate act of Law disanulled u Philip. Deci ad reg iur Nomom Now I will put you a case which is
14. Diuision a common cōtingent The testator ordeigneth by his will that his daughters shall be married by the appointment and disposall of Titius his brother the Testator dieth Titius also dieth before he hath disposed any thing of the maryage whether may the mariage and the portion be arbitrated disposed by some other or no as namely by the executor of Titius Codicgn I thinke the executor of Titius may 1 That by the Ciuil law if a man ordeigne by his wil that his daughters shall marry by the appointment of Titius that Titius his executor may dispose of the mariage well enough order and accomplishe this matter according to the degree of the daughters the wealthe of the father and the number of the children a l. si filiae pater ff de legat 3. Anglonomoph I thinke quite contrary because there is a confidence reposed specially incommunicably in the person of Titius and there be many cases in our Lawe to proue this assertion Cesty que vse before the statute of 27. of king H. 8. did deuise that A. B. and C. his feoffees should 2. That by the Common law where a confidence is reposed in certaine persons it is incommunicable to others sell his land whereof they were seised to his vse A. dieth it was helde that B. and C. could not sell the land otherwise it had beene if he had spoken generally of his feoffees without naming them specially b 2. Elizab. 177. Dy. Likewise a man deuised that after the death of his wife his land should be sold by his executors together with the assent of A. and maketh his wife and a stranger his executors and dieth the wife dieth A. dieth the authoritie of selling the land is fully determined and gone c 5. Eliz. 219. Dy. and so it was held per curiam that if a man did declare his will that B. and C. his executors should sell his land and the testator dieth and B. dieth and C. maketh M. his executor and dieth and M. selleth it this sale is void for the trust is strict but M. Brudnell saith that if a man deuise by his will that H. and N. his executors shall sell his land and they refuse to be executors yet they may sell the land because they are named by their proper names d 19. H. 8. 9. But where the executors are not specially named for the sale of the land there one of them onely may well enough sell the land for the case was that a man did deuise all his lands to his sister except one manor which he appointed to pay his debts and he made two executors and died the one executor died yet the other may sell the mannor and pay the debts per intentionem testatoris the words of the deuise as touching the sale were generall which I appointe to pay my debts e 23. Eliz. 371. Dy. Nomomath I haue often heard that a deuise 15. Diuision shall be taken most largely and beneficially for the profite and auaile of the deuisee I praie yee let me heare some cases which may cōfirme this vnto me Codicgnostes If the testator doe deuise all his 1. That by the Ciuill law deuises are for the most parte construed for the deuisce horses to one all his horses and mares shall passe by the deuise f L. legatis seruis §. iūctis ff de legat 3. and if the testator doe deuise all his beastes all fourefooted cattaile which are beasts of pasture doe passe by this deuise g D. l. legatis §. pecoribus if a flocke of Sheepe bee deuised the Lambes and the Rammes are conteined in the deuise h L. seruis legat §. si ff but if he deuise his Sheepe without saying his flocke of sheepe his lambes do not passe i D. l. legatis seruis §. ouibus and if a man deuise his plough horses to one and after the deuisor selleth the horses and buyeth and vseth mares for his plough and dieth now the mares shall passe by the deuise k L. qui duos mulos ff de legat 3. and if the testator doe deuise to one all his woolle all his wo●lle as wel washed as not washed spunne as not spunne generally al his woolle which is not wrought into clothe is deuised l L. si cui lana in princip in §. lanae ff de legat 3. and herein it differeth from lyne because vnder the name of lyne euen lyne that is wrought or linnen is conteined m D. l. si cui lana §. lino so if a man deuise all his siluer to one his siluer cuppes and all his other vessels of siluer doe passe n L. cum aurum ff de auro argent leg in princip l. lana §. fi ff de legat 3. but no siluer coine doth passe o L. Quintus in prin ff de aur argent leg otherwise it had beene if he had deuised all his siluer wrought or laboured p Ibid. for if the testator deuise to one all his cloth which is in such a cheste no garments nor apparell are contained within the deuise but onely the rude and plaine matter of clothe because when marble is deuised the imageries of marble are not meant but the grosse matter of marble q L. quaesitum §. illud fortassis ff de legat 3. and if wood be deuised onely wood fit to be burnt is comprehended in the deuise but not timber r L. ligna ff de legat 3. yet the testator his meaning is in these later cases to be examined by circumstances ſ L. pediculi §. labeo ff de aur arg leg Anglonomoph And by our Lawe the fauour of which is equally diuided betwixt the aduantage of the deuisee and the intent of the deuisor Deuises are often times ampliated and extended by beneficiall construction for the helpe and profite of the deuisee if they be not repugnant to 2. That the Common law so fauoureth deuises that it vpholdeth equitie the correspōdence of reason law but if they bee repugnant the Lawe then as a Lady iealous of her Iustice doth vtterly frustrate and make voide the deuises That which I affirme shall by cases and examples better appeare The L. Latimer did deuise to his Ladie and wife the third part of all his goods and chattels and great question was made whether this deuise should be intended of the third part of the goods and chattels as it should be after the dettes and legacies paied or as it was at the death of the testator and whether the third parte of the dets due to the testator doe passe by this deuise but it was agreed by the Iustices that by the woord vtensils Plate and Iewels doe not passe and if a man deuise to his daughter fiue hūdred poūds for and towarde her mariage and she dieth before the mariage by the opinion of the greater parte
doct ' in l. quod ●eruus eod dict l. 1. §. est autem §. penult l. Lucius eod l. lic●t in sin eod and in the one is the propertie in the other the trust Angonomoph To this our Law accordeth for 2 The nature and course of it at the common law if a man deliuer goods chattels to one to keepe and he will deliuer them he that deliuered them may haue a writ of Detinue against the other for these goods and chattels and so if a man deliuer goods or mony to an other in a bagge ensealed b Fitz. na br 138. A. or not ensealed c 18. H. 6. 20. or in a chest or coffer to deliuer to an other and hee to whom they are deliuered will not deliuer them ouer accordingly hee to whom they should bee deliuered may haue a writ of Detinue but if a man deliuer money to one being not in a bagge or coffer to redeliuer to him or to deliuer ouer to a straunger in such case neither he that deliuereth nor he to whom the money or goods are to bee deliuered shall haue a writte of Detinue for the money but a writte of Accompt because a writte of Detinue ought to be of a thing certaine as of money in a 3 A diuersiti● where a writ of Accompt of Detinue and of Trespas are to be brought concerning things deliuered at the cōmon law bagge or of a horse or twentie kyne or such things in certaine d Fitz na br 138. A. 7. H. 4. 13. 13. E. 3. Detin 53. 6. E. 4. 11. 36. H. 6. 9. per Wāgef Billing 5 Ma 152. Dy. 39. E. 3. 30. 46. E. 3. 16. if the bailie open the bagg in which money is deliuered the partie to whom the mony belongeth may haue a writ of Trespas or Detinue at his pleasure e 21. E. 4. 36. or if he doe burne or consume the things deliuered vnto him f 33. H. 6. 26. per Litt ' 20. H. 6. 17. So where a deed is deliuered to one to deliuer ouer vpon a condition to be performed to a straunger and hee deliuereth it without mencioning the condition a writ of Detinue will lye against the first Bailie and no other remedy may be had g 9. H. 6. 37. per Curiam and where I deliuer goods and a straunger taketh them out of the possession of the Bailie I may haue a writ of Detinue against the straunger or against my Bailie h 20. E. 4. 11. for my Bailie is chargable into whose hāds soeuer the goods do come but if he deliuer them ouer to an other that baily is not chargeable to me but onely for the possession i 12. E. 4. 12. Nomomat Suppose that a man enfeoffeth me 2. Diuision of certaine landes with warrantie who reteigneth all the deeds and euidences concerning the landes in his owne possession whether may these deedes after liuery made to me of the lands be said to bee my depositum in his handes as a thing which I haue left in his hands and whether will a writ of Detinue lye for them at the common law Codicgn They cannot be said to be deposita in 1 That a thing cannot be said to be a depositum at the ciuil law except it be deliuered to the partie his hands because a thing cannot be said to be depositū except it be deliuered to the partie k l. 1. ff de pos ibi Doct ' and if these writings which you speake of do belong to the feoffor as I thinke they doe then they cannot be said to be deposita for wee haue a rule in our law that res propriae frustra deponuntur apud dominum cum ex deposito non obligetur and it is contra l quirem eod bonā fidem that the owner should redeliuer his goods in which he hath a propertie to an other man m l. bona fides ff depos in s● Anglonomoph It is good to be considered to 2 That by the common law the feoffee of the land is to haue the charters when the feoffement is without warrantie otherwise it is when it is with warrantie whom these charters or deedes aboue mencioned doe belong The authority is very pregnant that if a man make a feoffement of his land to an other by deede the feoffee shall haue the charters concerning the land though the feoffor doe not expresly giue them to the feoffee n 18. E. 4. 14. 9. E. 4. 53. 39. E. 3. 22. 7. H. 4. 7. 34. H. 6. 1. And if a man make a lease for terme of yeares and after confirme the estate of the lessee in fee and he to whom the confirmation was made dyeth now his heire shall haue as well the deed of the lease for terme of yeares as well as the deed of confirmation because that deed maketh the confirmation good o 9. E. 4. 53. Fitz. nat br 138. K. and so where a gift is made to one for life the remainder to an other in taile if the donor release all his right to the tenant for life he in the remainder cannot haue a writte of Detinue for this release after the death of the tenaunt for terme of life p 9. H. 6. 54. But in the case which you haue proposed because the feoffement is with warrantie so that the feoffour is bounde to warrantie nowe the feoffee shall not haue the charters concerning the lande for so the feoffour might sayle of the maintenance of his warrantie and so if a man be enfeoffed with warrantie and after enfeoffeth an other with warrantie the heire of the feoffour may haue a writte of Detinue against a straunger in whose possession are any deedes or charters concerning the lande because he may haue aduauntage of this warrantie q Fitz. na br ibid ' L. but let the feoffement or gift bee made without warrantie it is cleare that the donee or feoffee may claime the charters concerning the inheritance de iure and therefore if a gift of lande be made to A. in taile the remainder to B. in fee and after A. dyeth without issue B. shall haue the deede r 3. H. 7. 15. so if lāds be giuen to two and the heires of one of them by deede now if the tenant for life die hee that hath the fee simple shall haue a writte of Detinue for the deede ſ Fitz. nat br 138. F. for the deede runneth with the land and is of the nature of the inheritance and therefore a repleuin lyeth not for such charters t 4. H. 7. 10. and it is saide by Newton 22. H. 6. that he in the remainder in taile shall not haue a writte of Detinue against the tenant for terme of life if he haue the deed specifying the remainder yet he cannot haue a Formed on in the remainder nor an action of Waste without shewing the deede u 22. H.
haue the thing solde but if the payment bee respited vnto a certaine day vpon the contract this is good ynough so that the money 2 That a contract is not good without money payed in hand or a certaine day of payment limited be payed within the time prefixed l 21. H. 7. 6. and 28. H. 8. it is positiuely set downe for Lawe that a contracte is not good without present payment vnlesse a certaine day of payment bee limited so that the one of them may haue an action of debt for the money the other a writ of Detinue for the wares m 28. H. 8. 30. Dyer An implied consideration is when the Law it selfe doth intende and enforce a consideration and therefore the Hoste of a common Inne may deteine a mans horse if he wil not pay him for his horse meate And so if a Taylor make a gowne for any man he may deteine the gowne till he be paied for his labour n 5. E. 4. 2. Nomomat Doth not the defect of forme in 8. Diuision 1 Whether the defect of forme doe destroy the contract a contract frustrate and defeate the contract Codign Yes for as the substanciall fourme in materiall things is necessary to the essence and constitution of such things o ff ad exti●b l. Iulian. §. l. falsi l. si is qui. §. quidem so in contractes a 2 That solempnitie and concurrence of circumstances is required in contracts by the Ciuil law certaine solemnitie and concurrence of circumstances is required for the perfiting of them as their naturall and proper forme p ff de verb. obligat ' l. sciend l. continuus in princip Eo l. §. si quis ita and without such ceremoniousnes the contract is of no force Anglonomo Our law likewise requireth forme either in pronouncing the wordes of the contract or els in obseruing some other circumstances belonging to the contract For the first if a man promise to another xx li. with his daughter in maryage if he marrie the daughter and the money be not paied he shall not haue any action of debt or action vpon the case at the Common Law but he must sue for this money in the Spirituall 3 That matrimoniall contracts if there be no assumpsit in them are to be decided by the ecclesiastical Law if there be an assumpsit by the common law Court. q Fitz. nat br 44. a 14. E. 4. 6. Reg. 46. 48. 15. H. 3 Prohibition 22. 16. H. 3. Prohi 24. For here is no good forme of contract and as Master Bracton sayeth Matrimonium est principale eiusdem iuris id est iurisdictionis esse debet accessorium r Bracton lib. 5. cap. 16. And therefore if a man by reason of matrimonie or testament doe acknowledge in a Spiritual Court that he ought to pay to one a hundreth markes or some other summe at a certaine day if the money bee not payed at the day accordingly he may be sued for this money in the Spirituall Court and no prohibition lyeth s Fitz. na br 41. b. but if in the former case he had promised one x. li. if he would marrie his daughter if he doe marry his daughter and the other will not pay the money hee may not sue him in the Spirituall Court for this money but at the Common Law t Fitz. na br 44. a et 22. Ass pla 70. p Tho. 16. H. 3. Prohibit 22. for now it goeth in fourme of contract as for the other matter where forme is required in obseruing some other circumstance in the contract that may appeare by this case if a felon sell a horse without couin in a market ouert this doth alter the propertie and the verie proprietary cannot haue restitution of the horse notwithstanding the statute of 21. H. 8. c. 11. but if he had solde him out of a market ouert the propertie had not bin altered u 33. H. 6. 5. 18. E. 4. 24. 7. H. 7. 12. Crompt Iust de Peace 172. Nomom I will trouble you no further in this matter but will proceede to inquire somewhat touching Gifts and Graunts The second Dialogue of Gifts and Graunts NOmomathes In handeling the learning 1. Diuision 1 What things may be giuen or graunted of Gifts and Graunts I think it most fit in the first place to be inquired what things may be giuen or graunted wherefore first I pray you satisfie me in this Codicgn A man may giue all such thinges as 2 That all things that lye in commerce and may be receiued may be giuen an other may receiue a l. in aedibus §. fi ff Eo tit for dare accipere sunt correlatiua and all such things may be receiued which lie in commerce Nomomat Then thinges consecrated and ecclesiasticall may not be aliened because they lye not in contract Canonologus Thinges ecclesiasticall though they 3 That things ecclesiasticall though they be not consecrate cannot regularly be graunted be not consecrate cannot regularly be giuen or graunted b Cap. 2. de donation Eod. tit de re ecclesi non alien in antiquis 6. Cle. in c. sine except cap. si quisquis 12. q. 2. in l. Iubemus cum suis authen C. de sacrosan eccle and I did vse this worde regularly because where such alienation may bring profit to the Church it shall be of force c In dict iur Anglonomo In our Lawe a writ of Contraformam alienationis lyeth where a man gaue landes or tenements to an Abobt or house of Religion before the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum to holde of him in frankalmoigne and after the 4 That if an Abbot did alien lands giuen in frankealmoigne to his house the donor might haue a writ of Contra formam collationis Abbot with the Couent did alien the same land in fee to another nowe he that gaue this lande or his heire may sue this writte of Contra formam collationis against the Abbot or his successor but not against the tenant of the lande but when he hath recouered the lande hee may sue a Scirefacias against the tenant of the freehold d Fitz. na br 210. f. and this writ of Contra formam collationis lyeth not though the Abbot doth alien in fee vnlesse the Abbot and the Couent doe alien in fee e 19. E. 3. Contra formam collationis 5. Fitz. nat br 211. c. and if an Abbot with the Couent doe alien an Aduowson in fee at the next auoydance the foundor or his heire may present to the aduowson because they cannot in such case sue a Contra formam collationis f 20. E. 3. Contra form collat 6 Nomom Let me know I pray you how many 2. Diuision kinds of Gifts there be Anglonomoph They be of diuerse sortes some 1 The diuerse kinds of giftes some being fre some compensatory are called
free gifts which proceede merely of a mans good will and beneuolence others may be called Compensatorie because they are giuen for some cause or consideration Gifts or graunts of the first kinde are such as I nowe shall recite out of our bookes First the Queene may graunt 2 What is wrought by the Queenes graunt ex mero motu to one lande ex mero motu and though her highnesse doe rehearse some consideration in the patent of her graunt which is not true as if the consideration bee that whereas the grauntee hath done her Maiestie good seruice on the Sea or beyond the Sea or in her Maiesties warres or in some other busines though the consideration be meerley supposed and not true and therefore no good consideration in Law yet the words ex mero motu do make the grant good g 26. H. 8. 1. per Fitz. and whereas the Queene ex certa scientia mero motu doth confirme a graunt supposing that a graunt was made before where in truth there was no such thing it is held that her highnes shall be concluded to say that no such graunt was made otherwise it had bin if this worde informamur had 3 What is wrought by her Maiesties graunt by words of Informamur bin vsed in reciting the graunt h 9. H. 7. 2. For if her highnesse graunt any thing vpon the false suggestion of the partie this graunt is voide because shee is deceiued in her graunt i 11. E. 4. 1. per Littlet ' and wee haue a rule Si suggestio non sit vera literae patentes sunt vacuae k 3. H. 7. 6. For when the graunt is made vpon the suggestion of the partie the wordes of the graunt shal be taken strictely but when it is ex mero motu it must be construed and interpreted according to the Kings intent and as fauorably for the grauntee as reason will permitte l 21. E. 4. 25. Abbe de Walthams case per Browne Genney and if a common person do without consideration giue to I. S. his goods indefinitly al his goods do passe and if a common person doe by deede enrolled enfeofee the Queene of his lands without any consideration the Queene shal be seised to her owne vse as hauing such prerogatiue in her person that she shall not bee seised to the vse of any other m 28. H. 8. 7. Dyer Bokenhams case per Knightley Gifts made vpon consideration may be explained by cases likewise drawne out of our bookes though in a common persons case the consideration which is mencioned be false yet the vse shall be to the feoffees as appeareth by Wilkeses case who reciting by his deede falsely 4 Whether vpon a false consideration expressed an vse shal be raised in a common persons case that in consideration of 700. li. payed he had enfeoffed A. and B. to haue and to holde to them and to their heires to the proper vse and behoofe of the said A. and B. in perpetuum afterwarde by Office it was founde that Wilkes was seised of the lande and that he helde in Capite and I. was founde to bee his heire and of full age yet it was helde that the heire should not be receiued to auerre the consideration false against the acknowledgement of his auncestor n 1. Eliz. 169. Dy. Wilk case and so it hath beene helde in Villiers his case that where money is the consideration expressed an other consideratiō shal not be auerred neither shal a Causa 5 That a consideration may be auerred which is not repugnant to the vse expressed matrimonij prelocuti be auerred where an other consideration is expressed but where no consideration is expressed there a consideration may be auerred or where the consideration auerred is not repugnant to the consideration expressed in the deed o 4. Mar. 146. Dy Villier case And though the consideration be not valuable yet it may bee a good consideration to raise or to alter an vse for in Sharingtons case it hath bin adiudged that the affection of the father for the prouision for the heires males which he may beget and the affection which he hath that the lande may remaine in his bloud and name be 6 That an vse may be altered by a consideration not valuable causes sufficient to make vses in the lande for as it is there said Naturae vis maxima Natura bis maxima p 8. Eliz. 298. Com̄ Sheringtons case And so betwixt brethren pro fraterno amore is a good consideration to raise an vse q 13. Eliz. 302. Dyer and a man leuied a fine to the vse of himselfe and such wife or wifes as he should marry and after hee tooke to wife A. she shal take in iointure being by way of vse otherwise it had beene by estate executed r 10. Eliz. 274 Dy. per Wray Mead Plowden Ownslaw 3. Eliz. 100. Dame Brayes case Conono By our law a man cannot giue any thing to the common weale without consideration but to a priuate person he may rr l. hoc iure in princi ff de donat Gl. in d l. hoc iure et l. Campanus ff de oper libert Ganonal By the Cannon Lawe nudum pactum doth binde the partie especially being confirmed by an othe much more a bare donation rrr c. 1. de pact Nomom As to the point of consideration wee 3. Diuision shall better perceiue the strength and properties 1 In what cases graunts shal be taken most beneficially for the grauntee therof when we enter into discourse of bargains and sales now let me knowe in what cases and how farre forth graunts shal be taken most beneficially for the grauntee Anglonomoph When a graunt is non-certaine 2 That a grant non certaine must be taken most strongly against the grauntor it must be taken most strongly against the grauntor for if a man graunt an annuitie out of certaine lande and he hath no lande at the ●ime of the graunt yet the graunt shal charge his person ſ 9. H. 6. 12. p Babingt and if a deede of graunt be good in parcell and 3 That a grāt may be good in part and for parcel not for parcel not that which is for the aduantage of the grauntee shal be taken to be good as if a man graunt vnto me an annuity prouiso that it shall not charge his person the prouiso is voide and the graunt is good t 20. E. 4. 8. p Towns 14. H. 4. 30. p Hank And if an annuitie be graunted pro consilio impendendo though the grauntee be well skilled in diuerse sciences or faculties yet counsel shal be giuen in that facultie only which was intended at the time of the graunt u 41. E. 3. 6. Annuit●e 19. But in some cases the graunt must be construed according to a reasonable and indifferent intendment as if a man make
not aske yee what 1. Diuision 1 What things are forbidden to be sold things may be solde least perhaps you aunswere me such thinges as may be bought according to your aunswere in your last discourse of Gifts Graunts but I would haue ye shew vnto me what things are forbidden to be sold Canono Things consecrate religious may not 2 That by the Canon Lawe things consecrate and religious may not be solde be sold as Monasteries and other places deputed to religious vses whatsoeuer name they challeng as Temples Hospitals Chappels and such like a C. de Xeno docti eo tit C. de Epis cle●i in l. orphanatroph 42. distinct oratorium and that is accompted a religious place in which a mans bodie or head is buried b ff de reli sump sune and therefore if a man be buried in an orchard parcel of a mans farme that becommeth Religious and it may not be pleadged or solde but demised it may be c C. quae res obligar poslūt l. 1. l. quid ergo §. sed si mortuum ff de leg 1. Anglonom Of this matter I haue spoken I hope sufficiently in the beginning of our second conference or Dialogue Codicgn By our Law euill poysons are forbidden 3 That poysons by the ciuil law are forbidden to be sold to be solde d l. quod sepe § veneni ff de contrah Nomom Why say you euill poysons as if any kinde of poyson can be good Codicgn Yea there be some good and sit for 4 That there be some poysons which be medicinable and profitable the prohibition extendeth not to these the expelling of diuerse diseases though they be not mixt with any other matter or thing which is medicinable so neesingwort doth cure phrensie or madnesse wolfe bane the biting of a scorpion quicke siluer the scabbe or ytch and arsenicke is profitable against the plague as Mercurialis auoucheth and sheweth further that many artificers doe vse poyson and many creatures do eate and liue vpon poyson and pustles be cured by poysons and poysons were before the fall of Adam e Mercurial lib. 1. de vene c. 3. 4. yet there are some kinds of poison which are euill in themselues may not be vsed alone and though Plato amongst his other lawes promulgeth that no man ought to sell or any way intermeddle with poyson f Plat. li. 11. de legi And Galen doth condempne Orpheus who taught the vse of poisons g Galen li. de antid c. 7. and reporteth that the inuentor of a poysonfull herbe was therfore punished h Galen li. de purg me yet because there 5 That some poysons are profitable alone some with the mixture of other things be some which are profitable alone other some as our law speaketh adiectione alterius materiae i Cai. in d. li. 3 therefore poyson generally and absolutely is not forbidden to be sold by our Law Anglonomoph By our Lawe corrupt vitaile is forbidden to be solde and leather not sufficiently tanned ii 13. H. 4. 1. 11. E. 4. 7. 1. R. 3. 1. Nomom Let me heare of you some speciall kinds 6 What things are forbidden to be solde by the common Law and cases of bargaine and sale out of your Law and some good diuersities whereby me thinkes the knowledge and vnderstanding are greatly 2. Diuision enlightned and increased Codicgn If a man bargaine and sell landes or 1 Where a thing was not sold at the first and where it was sold but the sale is defeasible vpon condition goods to one vpon condition that if the whole price or that which remaineth to be payed bee not payed or satisfied at such a day then the thinge whereof the price is agreed vppon betwixt them shall bee vnbought nowe if the money bee not payed at the day the thinge whereof the communication was in the intendement of Lawe was not solde at the first k l. 1. ff de leg Comm. li. qui ea lege C. cod But if it had beene sayed that if the money had not beene payed at the day then the thinge solde shoulde reuerte to the vendour heere there had beene a perfitte bargaine and sale but resolubilis sub conditione defeasible vppon the condition not perfourmed l l. 1. ff de leg commissor and in all conditions of bargaine and sale this is done that eyther an imperfitte sale is perfitted or a perfitte sale is defeated For when communication is had about the buying of a thing and the price is agreed vppon and the bargaine concluded nowe if the vendour doe at the time of the bargaine and sale adde such a condition that if any other man within a moneth or fifteene daies next after ensuinge will giue more money for the thing solde that then the bargaine and sale shall bee voide m L. 2. 1. respon ff de in diem adiec now the bargaine 2. A differēce betwixt a perfite sale and a sale to be perfited vpon a condition performed and sale is perfite but it is defeasible vpon a condition but if in the same case the price be agreed vpon so that no person do within a moneth or fifteene daies giue more for it now this sale is to be perfited vpon a cōdition performed n d. l. 2. 2. respon and there is great difference betwixt these two bargaines and sales For in the first case the buyer doth become owner of the thing Sed retractabiliter o l. 1. §. sed Marcellus ff de addicti in diem And in the meane time he shal take enioy the profits of the thing sold p d. l. 2. in si l. Item quod dictum ff de in diem addict the peril of the thing solde if it bee destroyed lost or made worse doth belong vnto him q l. vbi autem §. 1 ff d. ti de in diē addict but in the other case namely when an imperfite bargaine and sale is to be perfitted the bargainee doth not take the profits neither doth the perill belong to him r d. l. vbi autē in princip Anglonomop You haue put good diuersities and we haue many cases suteable vnto them in our Lawe which I will not omit If a man grant to one the keeping of his Parke vpon condition that if the grauntee do not well keepe his Deare within the Parke the graunt shall be helde as no graunt and after the grantee killeth some of the Deare the grauntor may bring an action of trespasse 3. That a priuiso though it be placed amongst couenants may defeate a bargaine and sale for the breaking of his Parke and for the killing of his Deare ſ 2. R 2. Barre 237. and a prouiso in an Indenture of couenants though it be placed amongst couenants yet it shall be of force in some case wholy to defeate and dissolue the bargaine
and sale as if a man bargaine and sell a mannor with the aduowson in fee habendum to the vse of the bargainee and his heires in such māner as in the Indenture of couenants is agreed and he couenanteth to suffer a recouery to the vse expressed in the Indenture rēdring a rent to the bargainor and his heires with a distresse for the same and a nomine paenae further pro vlteriore securitate it is concluded that the bargainor should leuie a fine to the bargainee with a rendring of the rent to the bargainor prouiso that the bargainee shal regraunt the aduowson for life to the bargainor and if it be couenaunted farther that all estates afterward to bee made shall bee to the said vses now if a recouerie be suffered and a fine leuied but varying from the Indenture of couenants the bargainee dieth before the regraunt of the aduowson the prouiso in this case is a conditiō and for the breach of the cōdition the bargainor may enter t 14. Eliz. 311. Dyer and as to that which you haue said 4. That where a bargaine sale is perfite but defeasible vpō conditiō the vēdee shal take the profits till the cōdition be performed that where the sale is perfite but defeasible vpon cōdition the vendee shal take the profites till the cōdition be performed it agreeth to a case in our law where a feofmēt is made to a feme couert of certain land the husbād after disagreeth to the feofmēt yet the mesne profits which were takē betwixt the time of the liuery and the disagreement shall not be restored to the feoffor For if a Praecipe quodreddat had bene brought against the husband and the wife after liuerie and the husbande had disagreed pending the writte the writte shall abate yet the taking of the profites is iustifiable for the feofment made to the woman is good till the husband disagree u Per Br. Feofm de terres 36. contra opinion Brian 1. H. 7. 16. Nomom Suppose that no day be limited whē 3. Diuision 1. When no day is limited for the payment of a summe what time the Law will require the vendee is to pay the residue of the money or a stranger is to offer more money as in your cases put before Codign shall the defeasance be void or what time will the Law require for the payment of the money 2. In such case the party charged with the payment shall by the Ciuill lawe haue lx daies Codicgn In such cases the Lawe doth limit a time and doth assigne to the party charged with the paiment the space of lx daies a Gl. mag in c. Illo vos de pignori facit optime l. quod si nolit §. qui mancipiū ff de Aedil edict Anglono In our law we haue a rule that whē 3. That by the Common law when no day is limited the monie is presently due yet in some case by some authority the discretion of the Iudge is to limit a time a mā is boūd in xx li. to pay x. li. no day of paymēt is limited the lesser sūme is a duty presently ought presently to be tendered b 20. E. 4. 8. 21. E. 4. 38. le case del maior de Exetor per touts les Sergeants ascuns des Iustices howbeit in such cases by the opiniō of Starkey c Ibid. per Stark the discretiō of the Iustices shall limit a time hauing regard to the distance of the place and to the space of time wherein such a thing may be performed for the obligor is not cōpelable to pay the mony within one houre neither may he differ the paimēt the space of 7. yeeres but the time must be adiudged by law so if I prescribe to haue cōmō because of vicinage in such a village namely euery yere after the corne be seuered caried away to put in my beasts into the field al the terre tenants of the village haue caried away their corne and hay except one man onely now the Law shall adiudge whether he had sufficient time to carie away his corne hay when his neighbors did carie it away d Ibi. p Stark ●airef so in the case before the discretiō of the Iustices ought to measure the time surely his opinion seemeth reasonable vnto mee though I dare not affirme it to be Law For euery mans busines ought to be rated by a conuenient time and therefore the learned Philosopher hath well 4. The definition of time according to the opinion of Aristotle defined time in this sort Tempus est mensura motus secundum prius posterius and as the motion doth measure the place so doth time measure motion for a daies iourney is measured of a day an howres of an howre e Arist physicor 4. c. 11. 12. lib. 1. de anim c. 3. lib. de generat corrupt 2. c. 10 and if a man be bound to enfeoffe one and no certaine day is limited when the feofment shall be made that may be done and performed in a reasonable time f 14. E. 3. Dette 138. Nomom Are there no other things to defeat a 4. Diuision bargaine and sale but onely conditions 1. That a bargaine and sale may be auoyded thorough defect of some substantiall thing belonging to the acte Codicgn Yes for a bargaine and sale may be auoided for some defect of some substātial thing required to the perfection of the contract as where the thing that is sold is not markettable or the price is not certainly sette downe g §. pretium Iusti Eo C. Eo l. si or when lawfull consent is wanting as when a bargaine and sale is extorted or enforced thorough feare or threatning h Metus causa ff C. quod met causa l. si voluntate C. de rescin vend or when there is fraude and deceite in the contract i ff de dol l. eleganter l. si voluntate C. de rescin vēd as if the thing solde haue some inward fault As if a horse or some other 2. That fraude and deceite in the cōtract by the Ciuill law doth defeate the contract beast that is to be sold be troubled with some inward or secrete disease k C. de act empt l. emptor l. ex empto §. animalium quoque ff eod for buying and selling being a contract bonae fidei whatsoeuer thing is done in it vltra probatum vendendi modum is auoiable by law l d. l. 1. l. Ex empto §. redhibition ff de act emp. §. si quis virginem ibid. but the fault in such case which is 3. A differēce where the fault of the thing solde is Latens or Patens in the thing sold is either latens or patens if it be plaine and visible the bargainor is cleared from fault m §. nūc qualit
the Law of God which recompenseth these bondmen with freedom whom the Master hath by some blowes maymed o Exo. 21. ver 26. 27. which lawe Constant the Emperor did put in practise p l. 1. de Emēd seruor C. but all the lands goods purchased possessed by the villaine the law frankly giueth to the Lord if he wil seise claime thē q Litt ' lib. 2. c. 11. sect ' 8. 10. wretched I cōfesse is the estate of such men but yet paciently to be tollerated because quā potestatē alijs deferre voluimus ferre debemus and they whose auncestors or thēselues haue acknowledged thēselues to be villains must now duetifully beare the yoake though Cui plus licet quàm parest plus vult quàm licet r Gellius lib. 17. c. 14. and let the Lords of such villaines harken to that which is spoken of an heathen man diuinely Boni moderatoris est restringere potestatem ſ Ammian lib. 29. but to leaue these particulers to proceed more generally as one man may hold lands of another by euery of these 4 The tenure wherby a man holdeth of an honor or Manor is discribed and by examples illustrated abouesaid seruices as of his person so likewise he may hold of him as of his Honor or Manor for if a man hold of the king as of any Honor which is come to his highnes by discēt from any of his aūcestours he shall not holde in Capite for by the words in the first Chapter of Prerogatiua regis it is euident that if it shal be said a tenure in Capite it must be holden of the Crowne of a long time the words be ab antiquo de Corona and that cannot be when it is but newly comen to the Crowne and the statute of Magna Charta cap. 31. did as Master Stamford saith helpe this matter by expresse words if such an Honor came to the Crowne by way of escheate but not if it came by way of discent or any other way and that statute doth set 5 Certain honors which be not of the auncientnes of the Crowne forth certaine honours by name which be not of the auncientnes of the Crowne that is to say the honor of Wallingford Notinghā Bullingbrook and Lancaster therefore he that holdeth of the King as of these Honors holdeth not of the king in chiefe t Stamfords Praerog c. 7. but other honors there be which of so long time haue been annexed to the Crowne that to hold of thē is to hold in chiefe for wheras one held of the king as of a certaine honor to 6 Some honors which are annexed to the C●owne yeeld a certaine rent to the keeping of the Castell of Douer this hath beene taken to be a tenure in chiefe and so it hath been thought if one held of his highnes as of the Honour of the Abbe of Marle u Fitz. nat bre 256. and Anno vndecimo of king Henry the seuenth the honor of Ralegh was annexed to the Crowne therefore if any man hold as of that honor it is a tenure in capite x 34. H. 8. ●r Cas 230. and therefore there is a good rule in the Register of Writtes that a man shall not make a fine for alienation of lands helde of the King as of his honor but for lande helde in Capite onely for there be certaine honors which be held in Capite there is a certain writ that the Eschetor shal not greeue any mā for alienation of land held as of an Honor for that is as of an honor and not as of the kings person no Fine shall be paied for the alienation of such lande a Regist ' 184. Br. Alienac ' 33. And whereas it was found by Office that lande was helde of the Queene as of her principalitie of Wales by the seruice of goinge with the Prince in Warre at the charge of the Prince per Curiā b 18. Eliz. Dy. per Curiam This is no Tenure in capite and Master Finchden putteth this diuersity that where an Honour is seised into the Kings handes if a Manor held of the Honor do escheat to the king by a common Escheate if the King alien the Manor to holde of him the tenant shall hold by the same seruices as hee helde by before of the Honour for the Honour seemeth to bee vice domini in this case and as a meane Lord but if it come to the King by forfaiture of warre or by some other treasō or by some other cause which toucheth the Kings person and the King seiseth and enfeoffeth an other the feoffee shall holde of the King as of his Crowne c 47. E. 3. 21. per Finchden and though the Statute of Magna Charta Cap. 31. before recited doe say Si quis tenuerit de nobis de aliqua escaeta vt de honore Wallingforde Bolen c. non faciet aliud seruitium quam fecit praeante yet this is to be intended of a common Escheate and not otherwise d 19. H. 8. 〈◊〉 Ca. 114. So a man may holde of the King as of his Manour and yet not holde in Capite for it was found by office that one helde land of the King as of his Manor of Plimpton and other landes as of his Manour of Darington which came to the king by the attainder of treason of the Marquesse of Exetor this hath beene thought to be no Tenure in capite for tenures in chiefe did begin in auncient time vpon the graunts of Kings to defende them against rebelles and enemies and at this day the Queene may create a tenure in Capite if shee giue lande to holde of her person otherwise it is if it be giuen to hold of an Honor Manour c. for a Tenure in chiefe must be immediatly of the King and is created by the King onely for a tenure created by a subiect cannot be a tenure in chiefe nor haue any prerogatiue annexed vnto it and if the tenants of an Honour should holde of the King in Capite the Honour when it came to the King should bee destroyed which may not be and there is no reason that the tenant in whom there is no default should be preiudiced in his tenancie by the offence of the Lorde e 30. H. 8. 44. Dyer and if the Q. purchase a Manour of which I. S. holdeth by knights seruice the tenant shall holde as he helde before and he needeth not to tender his liuerie nor primer seisin for he doth not hold in Capite but as of a Manour and if his heire be in ward by reason thereof he may haue an Ouster le maine at his ful age and if the Queene graunt the Manour afterward to W. N. in fee excepting the seruices of I. S. now I. S. holdeth of the Queene as of her highnesse person yet hee shall not holde in Capite but by such seruices as he
tenancie of whom fealtie is demaunded and he refuseth to perfourme it ſ C. vnico que fuit prima causa §. sed non est alia so that the Lorde doe demaunde fealtie at due times and allowed by Lawe because if he should demaund it euerie yere the vassalle should not loose his tenancie t §. si vastallus si de feud de funct ' §. licet vastallus c. domino guerrā in tit hic finit lex c. also the vassall looseth his tenancie if 2 Many causes of the tenants forfaiture in the ciuil Law being at full age he be not in expedition with his Lord or if he doe not depute some able person for the discharge of the duetie or if he doe not pay to his Lord stipendia militiae pro quantitate feodi when he is lawfully demaunded u de pace iuram firm §. fin and that is said to be a due quantitie of a knights see whē the vassall which goeth not in war nor sendeth a sufficient man doth yeelde the halfe part of the yerely value of his tenancy to the Lord. x C. Imperialem § firmiter de prohi feud alien p Freder Angonomo There be many conclusions in our 3 Some cause of forfaiture at the common Law Lawe aunswerable to that which you haue said for it hath bin affirmed that if a man holde his land of his Lord by homage and fealtie and he hath done homage and fealtie to his Lorde and the Lorde hath issue a sonne and dyeth and the seignorie discendeth to the sonne in this case the tenaunt which hath done homage to the father shal not do homage to the sonne because when a tenaunt hath once done homage to his Lorde hee is excused for tearme of lyfe to doe homage to any other heire of the Lord a Litt ' lib. 2. c. 7. sect 13. But if a man bee seised of a Mannour and an other man holdeth lande of him as of the foresayde Mannour by homage and hath done his homage vnto him and a straunger bringeth a Precipe quod reddat against the owner of the Mannour and recouereth the Mannour against him and sueth execution in this case the tenaunt shall agayne doe homage to him that recouered the Mannour though he haue done homage before because the estate of him who receiued the first homage is defeated by the recouerie and it lyeth not in the mouthe of the tenaunt to falsifye or defeate the recouerie which was against his Lorde b Litt ' ibid ' sect ' 17. And if if a tenaunt which ought by his tenure to doe homage to his Lorde come to his Lorde and say vnto him that hee is readie to doe him homage for the tenements which hee holdeth of him and the Lorde doth then refuse to receiue it after such refusall the Lord cannot distreigne the tenaunt for the homage before the Lorde require him to doe homage vnto him and he refuseth c Litt ' lib. 2. c. 7. sect ' 19. 20. and he that holdeth by Knights seruice of the King neede not goe to warre with him if hee will finde a sufficient person conueniently armed and fitte to goe with the King and this seemeth good reason For it may bee that hee that holdeth by such seruices doth languishe in sickenesse so that he cannot goe nor ryde And a Feme sole which holdeth by such seruices may not in such case goe in proper person and it hath beene said that Escuage shall not bee graunted vnlesse the King goe to warre himselfe in proper person and after such a voyage royall it hath beene likewise affirmed that by authoritie of Parliament Escuage shall be assessed and put in certaine how much euery one that holdeth by an entier fee of Knightes seruice which was not with the King by himselfe or by an other for him shall pay to his Lord of whom he holdeth by Escuage as if it be ordeigned by authoritie of Parliament that euery one which holdeth by an entier fee of Knights seruice that was not with the King nor any other c. for him shall pay to his Lord fortie shillinges then euery one that holdeth of his Lord by the moitie of a Knights fee shall pay to his Lorde fortie shillinges and he that holdeth by a fourth parte tenne shillinges and soe pro rata d Litt ' lib. 2. e. 3. sect ' 5. 6. 8. 7. E. 3. 29. Nomom Resolue me I pray you whether when 9. Diuision the tenant hath committed treason or felonie and thereof is conuicted and attainted he shal as to his tenancie incurre any preiudice Codicgn In such case either the offence is 1 Whether when the tenant hath cōmitted felony or treason and is attainted he shall suffer any preiudice in his tenancie 2 A diuersitie in the Ciuil law where the offence is committed against the person of the Lord and where against the person of a straunger committed against the person of his Lord and so he doth preiudice all these that are to succeede him in the land by order and course of Law depriuing them of the aduantage of inheritance e Cap. vnico §. denique in si in illis verbis si tamen fuerit paternumt it que fuit prima causa ben amitt or he hath offended against some other person and not against the person of the Lord then the children onely and such as were to take benefit by the person of the father as issuing from his bodie are repulsed from the inheritance f §. Si vassallus culpam si de feud● defunct ' and then it goeth to them of the kinred which are nearer in degree g Gloss super verbo reuocabuntur in d. si vassallus culpam Anglonomoph By our Lawe where the tenant is outlawed of felonie it is in the Lords election to haue a writ of Escheate supposing that his tenant was outlawed of felony or that he dyed without heire for by the attainder the bloud is corrupted h 48 E. 3. 2. But it seemeth by Nicholses case 3 That by the common law by attainder of felonie or treason the bloud is corrupted and in the one case the land shall eschete to the king and in the other to the immediate Lord. that the partie attainted ought to bee dead before the lande can escheate for according to the opinion of Dyer and Barham in the Kinges case after the attainder and till Office be found the see simple shall bee in facto in the person attainted so long as he shall liue for as he hath a capacitie to take land of a new purchase so he hath power to hold his auncient possessions and he shall be tenant to euery Precipe and if he died before office found and the land be held of the King the lande shall goe to the King in nature of a common eschete i 18. Eliz. Com̄ 477. Nichols case but this is to be intended in
but it is a question with vs if one deuise to his wife the third part of all his goods and chattels whether this shall be intended as they shall be after the legacies or debts paid or as they were at the time of the deuise d 30. H. 8. 59. Dyl But this doubt of later time hath receiued decision for where a man deuised the 2. That by the Common law if a man deuise the third parte of his goods to his wife it shal be so rated as they weare at the time of the death of the testator 3. That the Queene may graunt a thing in action moitie of his goods to his wife and died it was ruled that she shall haue the goods as they were at the time of the death of the testator if the testator be not indebted e 5. Mari. 164. and as for graunting things in action we haue this positiue grounde in law that the Queene may grant ouer her rent and condition of reentrie for the nonpaiment of it and her action or any thing that her highnes hath in action but contrariwise it is of a common person f 2. H. 7. 8. Nomom Now shew me of what thinges and 4. Diuision in what sorte iointenancie or tenancie in common may be Codicgn It may be of all such things as lie in 1. That iointenancie by the Ciuil law may be of all such things as lie in contract contract as lambe milke woll cheese and corne and whatsoeuer is gained by the labour of oxē or the harrowing of horses or the letting to gift of kine g L. si nō fuerint ff pro soc and by the nature of the contract when two are agreed to be tenants in common of the profites comming and rising of beasts the losse of the beastes perteyneth onely to him in whom the very propertie of the beastes be but the charge of the pasture and labour which is to be taken about thē belongeth onely to him who is admitted to be tenant in common for the profites 2. That the limitation of tenancie in cōmon is by the partie but the construction of it by the law The possession in cōmon of beasts doth cōtinue vntill they haue yong if the possessiō were limited at the first vntill they had yoong and if two be agreed to be tenants in common of all the profites of a certaine ground the tenancie in cōmon ceaseth not till all the profites be taken and therefore if two be agreed to be tenants in common from the Calends of March vntill such time as their fields are new to be tilled sowne they shal be tenants in common vnto the Calendes of Nouember because betwixt both the Calendes the fields may be tilled sowne or suppose that they haue contracted a tenancie in common of kine from the Calendes of Iuly vntill they haue yonge this tenancie in cōmon shall continue till the Calends of Aprill next ensuing because for the most part they are wont to calfe betwixt both the Calends h L. si conuenerit in princ ff pro socio Anglono A parson may grant to another the moitie of his tithes for years whether it be lamb wooll or corne yet he hath no possession of them because they are not yet in esse i 38. E. 3. 6. but yet he hath an interest in them may grant the moitie of them as wel as one may grant to another that it shall be lawfull for him to take euery yeere a Deare or a Hare or a Cony within his soile this is a good grant k 10. H. 7. 30. and by the same reason that he may grant his tithes he may grant the moitie of them and so make a tenancy in common Nomoma Suppose the case to be this that two 5. Diuision iointenants or tenants in common haue agreed to make a common wall about their ground or that they should plant a certain number of trees in their common soile and one of them alieneth his part whether is his assignee bound to performe the couenant 1. That an assignee in the Ciuill lawe is bound by the the couenant of his grauntor Codicgn In our law there be many authorities that he ought to performe the couenant l L. quaesit §. quod a Titio ff de praeca arg l. in hoc iudiciū §. penult ff de cōmun diuid ff de damn infect l. fluminū §. adducitur ff pro soc l. 1. demque Anglonomoph To that our law agreeth for if a man lease a house and land for yeares by deed indented and the lessee doth couenant that he 2. That by the Common law in such case the assignee is bound by the couenant and his assignees shall repaire the house and after the lessee granteth ouer his terme and the assignee doth not repaire it an action of couenāt lieth against the assignee for this is a couenant which runneth with the land m 25. H. 8. Br. couen 32. Deputie 16. and according to M. Brookes opinion it lieth also against the lessee after that he hath assigned ouer his terme if he bring seueral writs of couenāt against thē both there is no remedie till he haue had execution against one of them and then if he sue the other he may haue an Audit a querela n Br. Couen 32. Nomom I will content my selfe at this time with your instructions touching iointenants tenants in common will passe ouer to the examining of the course of exchaunges The sixth Dialogue of Exchaunges NOnomath What if two do deale together 1. Diuision after this sort the one of thē giueth a horse and x. s. for the horse of an other man whether is this a bargaine and sale or an exchaunge Codicgn In such case either it is intended and 1. That by thē Ciuill law cōtracts for a certaine price are not exchaunges vttered betwixt the parties that the one shal haue such a thing for a certaine price as namely that A. shall haue the horse of B. for ten pounds and B. taketh of A. sixe pounds and an other horse in full paiment and satisfactiō this is cleerely a bargaine and sale a L. tenetur §. 1. de action emp. but if A. had giuen B. a horse for a horse that had bene an exchaunge b Ar. I. item si pretio §. 1. ff locat Anglonom By our Law there must bee the expresse 2. That by the Common law the word Excambium must be vsed in the exchaunge word of exchaūge mētioned otherwise a thing cā not be said to passe by exchaūge for the word excambiū only maketh an exchaūge as the words liberūmaritagiū onely doe make frankmariage for if I giue to one an acre of land by deed indented and he by the same deed giueth to me an other acre for this acre nothing passeth except liuerie be made and then the
discretiō or ful age Codicgn I thinke it shal be meant of his ful age 1. That by the Ciuil law whē maintenance is deuised to one till the ripenes of age is intended of full age for that is the cōmon intendmēt the authorities of our bookes do sway to that point o l. Mela. ff de aliment ci●a leg Anglono In our law though there be but two ages for the heire male namely the age of 14. which is the age of discretion and the full age 2. The diuersities of ages by the Common law which is the age of 21. yeares oo Littlet lib. 2. c. 4. Sect. 8. 9. yet the heire female hath in our Lawe many ages namely at 7. yeares to haue aide to be maried and 9. yeares to deserue dower and 12. yeares to consent to mariage and 14. yeares to be out of warde and 16. yeares for the lord to tender vnto her a mariage and 21. yeares to make a feofmēt or a deed which may bind her p 35. H. 6. 4● but by cōmon intendment ripenes of age is fulnes of age full age by constitution of our law is the age of one and twentie Nomom Then I know your opiniō as touching 20. Diuision this question now let me demaund an other If the testator do deuise his māsion house which he hath in the parish of S. Andrew and that hath some appurtenaunces lying in the parishe of S. Giles whether doe these appurtenances passe by the deuise or no Codicgn The appurtenances do passe we 1. That by the Ciuill law whē a mansion house that is in one parishe is deuised the appurtenances in an other parishe doe passe by the deuise haue good authoritie for it in our Law q L. patronus §. Sempronio ff de legat 3. Anglonomoph And me thinks the appurtenances being in an other parish doe not passe by this deuise for not to aid my self with ancient authoritie of law it hath bin lately fully vpō ample discourse of this verie point ruled that nothing shall be said to bee appurtenant to a house saue onely the garden the curtilage and the close adioyning to the house and no other lande though other lande haue bene occupied with 2. That by the Common law land cannot be appurtenant to land the house r 23. H. 8. Br. Feosm 53. for land cānot belong to a house because they be of seuerall natures for the house is a place to inhabite land is a thing to be plowed or sowed or improued so cānot properly be appurtenant to a house no more then one liberty may be appurtenant to an other liberty of seueral nature as a warren to a leete or a leete to a hundred ſ 3. Mar com 168. Hilles case per Walpoole Rastall Morgan and all the Iustices but Cooke who spake not to this point in Patridges case agreed that land cannot appertaine to a house and this Mountague said was a ground in the law but Hales there said that a garden may containe 11. acres in quantitie and by such speciall meane be parcell of a house t 6. 7. E. 6. Comm. 85. Partriges case this is sufficient to prooue that the appurtenances doe not in this case passe by the deuise of the house without the authoritie of 27. H. 6. where it is consonantly auouched that though a man may giue an acre of land vnto me by the name of a carue a carue by the name of a Manor yet by a deede of feofment of a house land cannot be cōueied as parcel of the house u 27. H. 6. 2. Nomomath Ye haue remoued all the doubtes touching deuises which perplexed my mind we haue bin long in cōference of this title now frō reall things let vs passe to personall in which I pray yee continue your paines according to your former diligence and first ye are to speake of borowing and lending The eight Dialogue of Borowing and Lending NOmomath I would knowe the perfite 1. Diuision difference by the Ciuill lawe betwixt Mutuum and Commodatum I pray you Codicgn let me vse your help herein Codicgn They differ in our Law many waies 1. That which wee call Mutuum doth consist 1. The difference in the Ciuill law betwixt mutuum and Commodatum onely in things which are consumed by the very vse which consist in nūber weight or measure as corne spices salt and such like Cōmodatum is that which by vsing is not spēt as it is not deliuered by weight nor measure so neither is it restored by weight or measure as bookes apparel the like 2. In lending that which we cal mutuum the very propertie of the thing leant doth passe a L. 2. §. appellata ff si cert pet but wee doe still retaine the propertie of that which wee call Commodatum b L. rei commodatae cum l. seq ff commod 3 That which wee call Mutuum is leant for euery vse in generall as if the lender should say vnto him that boroweth Vtare fruare pro tuo arbitrio sicut dominus c L. in re mādata C. mandat but Cōmodatum is leant for a certaine prescript vse d L. in cōmodato §. sicut ff commod and if any man doe vse it otherwise he cōmitteth theft e L. 5. §. quin imo ff eo §. placuit instit de oblig quae ex delicto nasc 4. If the thing which we call Mutuum be made worse or perish he to whom the loane is made shall not susteine any dammages otherwise it is of Commodatum if through his faulte defaulte couin or negligence the thing leant doe perishe or become worse f L. si vt certo §. nunc viden vers quod vero l. cum qui in princ l. ad eos l. argentum cum l. sin ff commod Nomomath What persons may be bound by 2. Diuision borowing and lending Codicgnost Euery particular person euerie 1. That particular persons corporations and Churches parochial may be bound by contract of borowing and lending by the Ciuill law church being parochiall or conuentuall g In authent hoc ius porrectum C. de sacros Eccles euery vniuersitie comminaltie or corporation h L. ciuitas ibi plene per Ba●tolum ff si cert pet yet with this restreint if the monie be conuerted to the vse of the Citie or Church i Innocent in c. 1. Ext. de pos per Ferrar in form libell de act hypoth in glos super verb. sub ead obligati Anglonomoph Indeed thereto doth our Lawe accord for before the dissolution of Abbeys monasteries the successor of a Prior should haue 2. That by the Common law Abbots Prior● and such religious persons might charge the house by their contract and by recognisans bene charged with an annuitie graunted by his predecessor pro consilio
de singulis q Stamf. lib. 1. c. 26. Nomomat Well I pray you proceede in your purpose Anglonomoph As to that which is vttered of 10 How treason is committed by coining of money according to the censure of the common law Codicgnostes touching the vnlawfull coyninge of money it is for the most parte consonant to the Common Lawe of this Realme as nowe it is and as it was in auncient times by the testimonies of Bracton r Bract li. 2. ti● de crim laes mai Britton ſ Britt fol. 16. and Glanuille t Glan lib. 14. and the aforesayd Statute of 25. Edward the 3. maketh it treason for a common person to coine the kings money without his warrant and authentike which the statut calleth Counterfaiting wheras the statute saith the kings mony it must be intended the coine of this Realme or the dominions of it u Sramf 1. lib. 1. ca. 1. and this worde counterfeit doth import that if a man doe counterfait the Kings money though he doe not vtter it this is treason w 6. H. 7. 13. 1. R. 3. 1. and the forging and counterfaiting of coyne of another Realme is made treason awel as the coūterfaiting of the coyne of this Realme a 4. H. 7. c. 18. 1. 2. Phi Ma ca. 11. But then it must be currant by proclamation in this Realme b 1. M●r c. 6. Cromp I P 40. and as to the clipping of money heare the statute of 5. of our Soueraigne Ladie the Queene Be it enacted c. that after the first day of May next cōming clipping washing rounding or filing for wicked lucre or gaine sake of any the proper money or coyne of this Realme or the dominions thereof or of any other Realme allowed or suffered to be currant within this realme or the dominions thereof c. shal be taken and adiudged to be treason by vertue of this act c. c 5. Eliz. c. 11. Nomomat I pray you now declare the forfaitures and punishments of these seueral treasons Anglonomo The iudgment of him that is conuicted 11 The seueral punishmēts of treasons by the common law of high treason is to bee caryed backe to the place whence he came and from thence to be drawne vpon a hurdle vnto the place of execution there to be hanged by the necke and to be cut downe quicke and his entrailes and priuy members to be sundred from his body and to be burnt within his view and his head to bee cut off and his body to be diuided into 4. parts and to be disposed at the Queenes will d Stamf. lib. 3. ca. 19. This is the Iudgement and sentence of condempnation of a man but of a woman it is otherwise namely that she shall be drawne on a hurdle and burnt e Stamf. ibid 23. lib. Ass pl. 2. Com̄ 31 6 and the offendour shall forfait his goods and landes to the King of whosoeuer the landes are holden f 25. E. 3. c. 2. Stamf. ibid 1. H. 6. 5. Stamf. li. 2. c. 37. c. 40. lib. 3. ca. 20. 4. H. 7. 11. per Towns but hee which hath estate in landes for terme of life or for yeares shall forfaite his estate onely g Stamf. lib. 3. c. 26. and by the statute of 26. H. 8. ca 13. and 5. and 6. Ed. 6. ca. 11. tenant in taile shall forfait his lande if he offende in high treason but no man shall forfaite lands which he hath in the right of an other as in the right of his wife or in the right of a Church h 5. 6. E. 6. ca. 11. Stamf. lib. 3. c. 26. and with the lande which a man forfaiteth he shall forfaite his ●uidences which concerne the lande i 49. H. 6. 15. and if a man leuie warre against the King and is slaine in it yet his lande shall be forfaited k 7. H. 4. 27. P Mark 34. E. 3. c. 12. 39. H 6. c. 1. Stamf. lib. 3. 29. and in such case the wife of such offendour shall loose her dower and his bloud or linage shall bee corrupt l Stamf. lib. 3. c. 19. But such as clippe washe round or file money are onely to forfait their lands during their life m 5. Eliz. c. 11. but such offence causeth not corruption of bloude nor the losse of Dower Nomomat Now time and order doth require that ye should speake of Homicide The fourtenth Dialogue of Homicide that is Murder Manslaughter Homicide by chaunce or misfortune NOmomat Because the apt diuision 1. Diuision of thinges giueth great light and ministreth exceeding helpe to the knowledge and vnderstanding of them I would therefore knowe Codicgnostes how many kindes of Homicide are set downe in your Law Codicgn Homicide in our Law is either the 1 The seueral kinds of Homicide by the ciuil Law and first murder is described wilful killing of a man of set purpose a l. 1. in princ in §. diuus ff ad l. Corn. de sicar l. 2. C. eod or els the killing of a man in the defence of his owne person as if I. N. should assault I. S. with a sworde he 2 Manslaughter se defendendo by the ciuil law may defend himselfe with a sworde and so auoid the iniurie if otherwise he cannot eschewe it but if I. S. may flie from him without daunger then the Lawe bindeth him to flie but if a man should so assault me that he should driue me to a very narrow pinch so that I cannot find a meane to escape with my life in this case it is lawful for me manfully to defende my selfe though it bee with killing him b Iodoc Dā●ouderius in re●ū criminal prax c. 78 79 and these sorts of manslaughter may be committed with clubbe c in d. §. Diuus l. 1. ff ad leg Corn de sicar stone sword or dart with arrowes launces pertisanes iauelins or with gunnes d Iusti de pub iudic §. Itē lex Cornelia or a man may be killed by poyson dd l. 3. §. 1. ff Ad Corn de sicar or by precipitation and being throwne headlong from the toppe of some house or some bridge or some hill or some tree e d. l. 1. ff ad leg Corn de sicar There is an other 3 The discription of selfe-slaughter by the ciuil law kind of Homicide which is tearmed homicidium sui ipsius whē a man killeth himselfe such offendors are punished by our Law according to the quality of their minde whereby they were moued for if they kill themselues through griefe or impatience ee G. de Bon● eorū qui mort sibi consc of some infirmitie no punishmēt followeth their fact but they are left to the tribunal 4 A diuersitie of killing a mans selfe by the ciuil Law of the almighty Iudge of the quick and the dead but if
land it selfe 2. That by the ciuill lawe a man may grant and demise the vse of a thing and yet not grant the thing it selfe The 6. Diuision 1. When a man selleth land wherein treasure is hidden and the vendor knoweth not of it whether the vendee shall haue the treasure 2. How this word treasure is taken in the ciuill lawe 3. That by the ciuill law money and other things necessarie to the common vse of this life are forbidden to be hidden and buried in the ground 4. Plato his superstitious opinion of things hidden in the earth 5. How the ciuill lawe doth order and dispose of treasure 6. What the common lawe doth determine of treasure The diuisions and principall contents of the fourth Dialogue of seignories and seruices The first Diuision 1. THe description of a seignorie by the ciuill lawe 2. By the Canon law 3. Likewise by the common law The 2. Diuision 1. What homage is and how it is to be performed by the common law 2. That homage hath beene practised in ancient time The 3. Diuision 1. What a Manor is and whereof it consisteth 2. The originall of a Manor The 4. Diuision 1. Statutes made for the preseruation of seignories and Manors The 5. Diuision 1. Fealtie is the most generall seruice in the common law 2. In the ciuill law 3. That by the ciuill law the common law and the Canon law a religious man ought to do fealtie The 6. Diuision 1. The diuerse kinds of seruices in the ciuill law and their definitions 2. The diuers kinds of seruices in the common lawe and their definitions 3. The originall of villenage and the nature thereof 4. The tenure whereby a man holdeth of an honour or manor is described and by examples illustrated 5. Certaine honours which be not of the ancientnes of the Crowne 6. Some honours which be annexed to the Crowne The 7. Diuision 1. Whether one within age be compellable by lawe to doe all manner of seruice either by himselfe or some other 2. A diuersitie in the Ciuill lawe whether the father of such an infant died in a iust warre or at home in his bed 3. That by the Common lawe the infant shall be in warde if his father died seised of lande held by Knights seruice without anie such diuersitie 4. A diuersitie in the Common lawe where the heire of the tenaunt by Knightes seruice is within age and a Knight at the time of his fathers death and where not The 8. Diuision 1. What penalties lie vpon the tenaunt if he doe not his seruice 2. Many causes of the tenaunts forfeiture in the Ciuill law 3. Some causes of forfeiture by the Common lawe The 9. Diuision 1. Whether when the tenaunt hath committed felonie or treason and is attainted he shall suffer any preiudice in his tenauncie 2. A diuersitie in the Ciuill lawe where the offence is committed against the person of the lord and where against the person of a straunger 3. That by the Common lawe by the attainder of felonie or treason the bloud is corrupted and in the one case the land shal eschet to the King in the other to the immediate Lord. 4. The aforesaid determinations and conclusions of Ciuill and Common lawe touching the forfeiture of the offendorare examined by the law of God The Diuisions and Principall contents of the fifth Dialogue of iointenauncie and tenauncie in common The first Diuision 1. THat iointenaunts and tenauntes in common ought to haue equall profit 2. That by the Common lawe a writ of account will lie if one iointenaunt take all the profits The 2. Diuision 1. That iointenauncie is dissolued by death vnlesse there be some clause in the creation of the estate to the contrarie The 3. Diuision 1. That by the Ciuill lawe by the ioint gift of all the goods of a man all corporall things passe 2. That by the Common lawe if a man deuise the third part of his goods to his wife it shall so be rated as they were at the time of the death of the testator That the Queene may graunt a thing in action The 4. Diuision 1. That iointenauncie by the Ciuill lawe may be of all such things as lie in contract 2. That the limitation of tenauncie in common is by the partie but the construction of it by the lawe The 5. Diuision 1. That an assignee of a moitie in the Ciuill law is bound by the couenant of his grauntor 2. That by the Common lawe in such case the assignee is bound by the couenant The Diuisions and principall contents of the sixth Dialogue of exchaunges The first Diuision 1. THat by the Ciuill lawe contractes for a certaine price are not exchaunges 2. That by the Common lawe the word excambium must be vsed in the exchaunge 3. That the estates must be equall 4. That the things exchaunged must be in esse 5. That an exchaunge is good though one part of it doe inure by way of extinguishment The 2. Diuision 1. That the incumbents may not exchaunge their benefices by the Cannon lawe 2. That the Chapiter may warrant permutations sede vacante in such benefices wherein they haue interest or authoritie 3. That by the Common law ecclesiasticall persons their patrons and ordinaries ioining together cannot make anie good exchaunge of ecclesiasticall benefices 4. That the statute of mortmaine is most strict and pregnant in words The Diuisions and principall contents of the seuenth Dialogue of Deuises and Legacies The first Diuision 1. THe antiquitie of willes 2. Plato his exception against Solons law concerning willes 3. Solons lawe is maintained and defended against Plato The 2. Diuision 1. Such as be vncapable of inheritaunces and goods may not be deuisees heires or executors by the ciuill lawe 2. A difference in the ciuill law betwixt the making of a deuisee and the making of an executor 3. That by the Common lawe all persons to whom a grant may be made a deuise may be made vnlesse it otherwise happen in some fewe cases 4. That the deuisee must be a person capaple of the thing deuised 5. That by the common lawe the deuisee ought to be capable at the time of the death of the deuisor The 3. Diuision 1. That by the ciuill lawe all such things may be deuised as the testator hath in his owne right at the time of the deuise 2. The three degrees of a testament by the common lawe 3. A difference in the common lawe where a man deuiseth a thing whereof he is not seised particularly and by name and where not 4. That thinges which are not in esse at the time of the deuise made may be deuised 5. That the deuise of tenaunt for life or tenaunt in dower of the corne growing at the time of their death is good 6. That when the partie hath a certaine and lawfull interest in a thing ●e may lease it grant it or deuise it before the existence of it 7. That a deuise may