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A19476 The interpreter: or Booke containing the signification of vvords wherein is set foorth the true meaning of all, or the most part of such words and termes, as are mentioned in the lawe vvriters, or statutes of this victorious and renowned kingdome, requiring any exposition or interpretation. ... Collected by Iohn Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1607 (1607) STC 5900; ESTC S108959 487,900 584

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hath in time wrought other vses of this concord which in the beginning was but one as namely to secure the title that any man hath in his possession against all men to cut off intayles and with more certaintie to passe the interest or the title of any land or tenement though not controuerted to whome we thinke good either for yeares or in fee. In so much that the passing of a fine in most cases now is it but mera fictio iuris alluding to the vse for the which it was invented and supposing a doubt or controuersie where in truth none is and so not onely to worke a present prescription against the parties to the concord or fine and their heires but within fiue yeares against all others not expresly excepted if it be leuied vpon good consideration and without Couin as women couert persons vnder 21. yeares or prisoners or such as be out of the realme at the time when it was acknowledged Touching this mater see the statutes anno 1. Rich. 3. cap. 7 anno 4. H. 7. cap. 24. anno 32. H. 8. cap. 36. anno 31. Elizab. ca. 2. This fine hath in it fiue essentiall parts the originall writ taken out against the conizour the kings licence giuing the parties libertie to accord for the which he hath a fine called the Kings siluer being accompted a part of the Crownes reuenew Thirdly the concord it selfe which thus beginneth Et est concordia talis c. Fourthly the note of the fine which is an abstract of the original concord and beginneth in this maner Sc. Inter R. querentem S. E. vxorem eius deforciantes c. Fifthly the foot of the fine which beginneth thus Hac est finalis concordia facta in Curia domini Regis apud Westm à die Paschae in quindecim dies anno c. So as the foote of the fine includeth all containing the day yeare and place and before what Iustice the concord was made Coke vo 6. casu Teye fol. 38. 39. This fine is either single or double A single fine is that by which nothing is graunted or rendred backe againe by the Cognizeese to the Cognizours or any of them A double fine containeth a graunt and render backe againe either of some rent common or other thing out of the land or of the land it selfe to all or some of the Cognizours for some estate limiting thereby many times Remainders to straungers which be not named in the writ of couenant West vbi supra sect 21. Againe a fine is of the effect deuided into a fine executed and a fine executory A fine executed is such a fine as of his owne force giueth a present possession at the least in law vnto the Cognizee so that he needeth no writ of Habere facias seisinam for the execution of the same but may enter of which sort is a fine sur cognizance de droit come ceo que il ad de son done that is vpon acknowledgement that the thing mentioned in the concord be ius ipsius cognizati vt illa quae idem habet de dono Cognitoris West sect 51. K. and the reason of this seemeth to be because this fine passeth by way of release of that thing which the cognizee hath already at the least by supposition by vertue of a former gift of the cognizour Cokes reports li. 3. the case of fines fo 89. b. which is in very deed the surest fine of all Fines executorie be such as of their owne force doe not execute the possession in the Cognizeese as fines sur cognizance de droit tantùm fines sur done graunt release confirmation or render For if such fines be not leuied or such render made vnto them that be in possession at the time of the fines leuied the cognizees must needs siew writs of Habere facias seisinam according to their seuerall cases for the obtaining of their possessions except at the leuying of such executory fines the parties vnto whom the estate is by them limited be in possession of the lands passed thereby for in this case such fines doe inure by way of extinguishment of right not altering the estate or possession of the Cognizee but perchaunce bettring it West vbi supra sect 20. Touching the forme of these fines it is to be considered vpon what writ or action the concord is to be made and that is most commonly vpon a writ of couenant and then first there must passe a paire of indentures betweene the Cognizour and Cognizee whereby the Cognizour couenanteth with the cognizee to passe a fine vnto him of such or such things by a day set down And these indentures as they are first in this proceeding so are they saide to lead the fine vpon this couenant the writ of couenant is brought by the Cognizee against the cognizour who therevpon yeeldeth to passe the fine before the Iudge and so the acknowledgement being recorded the cognizout and his heires are presently concluded and all straungers not excepted after fiue yeares once passed If the writ wherevpon the fine is grounded be not a writ of couenaunt but of warrantia chartae or a writ of right or a writ of mesn or a writ of custome and seruices for of all these fines may also be founded West vbi supra sect 23. then this forme is obserued the writ is serued vpon the party that is to acknowledge the fine and then he appearing doth accordingly See Dier fo 179. nu 46. This word fine sometime signifieth a summe of money paide for an Income to lands or tenements let by lease sometime an amends pecuniarie punishment or recompence vpon an offence committed against the king and his lawes or a Lord of a maner In which case a man is said facere finem de transgressione cum Rege c. Regist Iud. fol. 25. a. and of the diuersity of these fines with other mater worth the learning see Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 141. b. 143. 144. and Lamberds Eirenarcha libro 4. ca 16. pa. 555. But in all these diuersities of vses it hath but one signification and that is a finall conclusion or ende of differences betweene parties And in this last sence wherein it is vsed for the ending and remission of an offence Bracton hath it li. 2. ca. 15. nu 8. speaking of a common fine that the Countie payeth to the king for false iudgemēts or other trespasses which is to be assessed by the Iustices in Eyre before their departure by the oath of knights and other good men vpon such as ought to pay it with whome agreeth the statute anno 3. Ed. pri ca. 18. There is also a common fine in leetes See Kitchin fo 13. a. v. common fine See Fleta l. 1. ca. 48. Fines pro licentia concordandi anno 21. H. 8. c. 1. See Fine Fine force seemeth to come of the french adiectiue fin and the substantiue force i. vis The adiectiue fin signifieth sometime as much as
to vs reliefe he shall haue inheritance by the old Reliefe that is to say the heire or heires of an Earle for one whole Earldome one hundred pound the heire or heires of a Baron for one whole Baronie one hundred merkes the heire or heires of a Knight for one whole Knights fee one hundred shillings at the most And he that hath lesse shall giue lesse according to the old custome of the fees Reade also Glanvile lib. 9. cap. 4. fol. 68. who saith that in his dayes the Reliefe of a Baronie was not certaine The heire in francke soccage when he commeth to his full age after the death of his auncester shall double the rent that he was wont to pay to the Lord and that shall be in place of reliefe old nat br fol. 94. Somewhat more hereof you may reade in anno 28. Ed. prim statut prim and Kitchin fol. 145. ca. Reliefe and Glanvile lib. 7. cap. 9. The Feudists also write of this at large Among others Vincentius de Franchis descis 121. saith that Relevii solutioest quaedam extrinseca praestatio à consuetudine introducta quae non inest feudo quodque soluitur proconsirmatione seu renouatione investiturae possessionis See Heriot This Leo the Emperour Novella 13. calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By the auncienter ciuile lawe it is termed introitus l. penult § Alumno Π de legatis Skene de verb. signif saith that Reliefe is a French word from the Latine relevare which is to releeue or take vp that which is falen For it is giuen by the tenent or vassall being of perfect age after the expiring of the wardeship to his Lord of whome he holds his land by Knights seruice that is by ward and reliefe and by payment thereof he relieues and as it were raiseth vp againe his lands after they were fallen downe into his superiours hands by reason of wardship c. Remainder remanentia signifieth in our common law a power or hope to inioy lands tenements or rents after the estate of another expired For example a man may let land to one for terme of his life and the Remainder to another for terme of his life Litleton cap. Atturnment fol 113. And this Remainder may be either for a certaine terme or in fee simple or fee taile as might be proued by many places in the law writers But in steed of the rest take Brooke titulo Done Remainder fol 245. Glanuile lib. 7. ca. pri in fine hath these words Not andum quod nec Episcopus nec Abbas quiaeorum Baroniae sunt de eleemozina Domini Regis antecessorum eius non possunt de Dominicis suis aliquam partem dare ad remanentiam sine assensu confirmatione Demini Regis Where it appeareth that Dare ad remanentiam is to giue away for euer To the same effect doth he vse it cap. 9. eiusdem libri in these words speaking of the Lords of mancrs during the minority of their wards Nihil tamen de haereditate de iure alienare possunt ad remanentiam In the like sort doth Bracton vse it lib. 2. cap. 23. in fine and also lib. 4. tracta 2. cap. 4. nu 4. See the new booke of Entries verbo Remainder Remembrancers of the Exchequer Rememoratores be three officers or clerks one called the Kings Remembrancer anno 35. El. cap. 5. The other the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer vpon whose charge it seemeth to lye that they put all Iustices of that court as the Lord Treasurer and the rest in remembrance of such things as are to be called on and delt in for the Princes behoofe The third is called the Remembrancer of the first fruites Of these you may read something anno 5. Rich. 2. stat pri cap. 14. 15. to the effect aboue specified These anno 37. Ed. 3. cap. 4. be called clerks of the Remembrance It seemeth that the name of this officer is borowed from the Ciuilians who haue their Memoriales qui sunt notarii Cancellariae in regno subiects officio Questoris Lucas de penna C. lib. 10. tit 12. nu 7. The kings Remembrancer entreth in his office all recognicances taken before the Barons for any the Kings debts for apparences or for obseruing of orders He taketh al bonds for any of the kings debts or for apparance or for obseruing of orders and maketh proces vpon them for the breach of them He writeth proces against the collectors of customes subsidies and fiueteenthes for their accompts All informations vpon penall statutes are entred in his office And all maters vp on English bils in the Exchequer chamber are remaining in his office He maketh the bils of compositions vpon penall lawes taketh the stalments of debts maketh a record of a certificate deliuered vnto him by the clerk of the Starre-chamber of the fines there set and sendeth them to the pipe He hath deliuered vnto his office all maner of indentures fines and other euidences whatsoeuer that concerne the assuring of any lands to the Crowne He yearely in crastino animarum readeth in open court the statute for the elections of Shyreeues and giueth those that chuse them their oath he readeth in open court the oath of all the officers of the court when they are admitted The treasurers remembrancer maketh proces against all Shyreeues escheators receiuers and bayliffs for their accoumpts He maketh proces of fieri facias and extent for any debts due to the King either in the pipe or with the auditors He maketh proces for all such reuenew as is due to the King by reason of his tenures He maketh a record whereby it appeareth whether Shyreeues and other accountants pay their profers dew at Easter and Michelmas He maketh another record whereby it appeareth whether Shyreeues and other accountants keepe their daies of prefixion All extreats of fines issues and amerciaments set in any courts of Westminster or at the assises or sessions are certified into his office and are by him deliuered to the clerk of extreats to write proces vpon them He hath also brought into his office all the accoumpts of customers controllers and other accoumptants to make thereof an entry of record The Remembrancer of the first fruites taketh all compositions for first fruites and tenthes and maketh proces against such as pay not the same Remittere commeth of the French remettre i. restituere reponere and signifieth in our common law a restitution of one that hath two titles to lands or tenements and is seised of them by his later title vnto his title that is more auncient in case where the later is defectiue Fitz. nat br fol. 149. F. Dyer fol. 68. nu 22. This in what case it may be graunted to any man see in Brooke titulo Remitter and the terms of law The Doctor and Student of this mater hath these words if land discend to him that hath right to that land before heshalbe remitted to his beter title if he will capite nono fol. 19. b.
some time for the place or circuit within the which the king or other Lord hath escheates of his tenents Bracton li. 3. tract 2. cap. 2. pupilla oculi parte 5. ca. 22. Escheate thirdly is vsed for a writ which lieth where the tenent hauing estate of see simple in any lands or tenements holden of a superiour lord dieth seised without heire generall or especiall For in this case the Lord bringeth this writ against him that possesseth these lands after the death of his tenent and shall thereby recouer the same in liew of his seruices Fitzh nat br fol. 144. These that we call Escheats are in the kingdome of Naples called Excadentiae or bona excadentialia as Baro locat excadentias eo modo quo locatae fuerūt ab antiquo it a quod in nullo debit a servitia minuantur non remittit gallinam debitam Iacobutius de Franchis in praeludiis ad feudorum vsum tit 1. nu 29. nu 23. v. Maranta singularia verbo Excadentia And in the same signification as we say the fee is escheated the Feudists vse feudum aperitur li. 1. feud titulo 18. § 2. ti 15. ti 26. § 4. Escheatour Escaetor commeth of Escheate and signifieth an officer that obserueth the Escheates of the king in the countie whereof he is Escheatour and certifieth them into the Eschequer This officer is appointed by the L. treasurer and by leters patents from him and continueth in his office but one yeare neither can any be Escheatour aboue once in 3. yeares anno 1. H. 8. cap. 8. anno 3. eiusd ca. 2. See more of this officer and his authoritie in Cromptons Iustice of peace See an 29. Ed. 1. The forme of the Escheatours oath see in the Register original fol. 201. b. Fitzh calleth him an officer of record nat br fol. 100. C. because that which he certifieth by vertue of his office hath the credit of a record Officium escaetriae is the escheatourship Register orig fo 259. b. Escuage Scutagiū commeth of the French Escu i. clypeus a bucler or sneild In our common lawe it signifieth a kinde of knights seruice called seruice of the shield whereby the tenent holding is bound to follow his Lord into the Scottish or Welsh warres at his owne charge for the which see Chyvalrie But note that Escuage is either vncertaine or certaine Escuage vncertaine is properly Escuage and knights seruice being subiect to homage fealtie ward and mariage so called because it is vncertaine how often a man shal be called to followe his lord into those wars and againe what his charge wil be in each iourney Escuage certaine is that which yearely payeth a certaine rent in lieu of all seruices being no further bound then to pay his rent called a knights fee or halfe a knights fee or the fourth part of a knights fee according to his land this leeseth the nature of knights seruice though it hold the name of Escuage being in in effect Soccage Fitzh nat br fol. 84. C. Esnecy Aesnecia is a prerogatiue giuen to the eldest coparcener to choose first after the inheritance is diuided Fleta li. 5. ca. 10. § in diuisionem Esplees Expletia seeme to be the full profits that the ground or land yeldeth as the hay of the medowes the feede of the pasture the corne of the earable the rents seruices and such like issues Ingham It seemeth to proceede from the latine expleo The profits comprised vnder this word the Romans call properly accessiones Nam accessionum nomine intelligūtur ea generaliter omnia quae ex re de qua agitur orta sunt veluti fructus partus omnis causa rei quaecunque ex re procedunt l. 2. Π. De in diem adiectio li. 50. Π. Ad Trebel l. 61. § hiis etiam Π. de furt See the new Terms of law Esquier Armiger is in leters little altered from the french Escuier i. scutiger It signifieth with vs a gentleman or one that beareth armes as a testimony of his nobilitie or gentrie S. Thomas Smith is of opinion that at the first these were bearers of armes to Lords and Knights and by that had their name and dignity Indeede the french word is sometime translated Agaso that is a boy to attend or keepe a horse and in ould English writers it is vsed for a lackey or one that carieth the shield or speare of a knight Mast Camden in his Britannia pag 111. hath these words of them hauing spoken of Knights Hiis proximi fuere Armigers qui scutiseri hominesque ad arma dicti qui vel a clypeis gentilitiis qua in nobilitatis insignia gestant vel quia principibus matoribus illis nobilibus ab armis erant nomen traxerunt Olim enim ex hiis duo vnicuique militi seruiebant galeam clypeumque gestabant c. Hotoman in the sixth chapter of his disputatiōs vpon the feods saith that these which the French men call Escuiers were a militarie kinde of vassall haueing ius scuti which is as much to say he there interpreteth him selfe as that they bare a shield and in it the ensignes of their family in token of their gentility or dignity Essendi quietum de telonio is a writ that lieth for Citizens or burgesses of any city or towne that haue a charter or prescription to exempt them from tolle through the whole realme if it chaunce they be any where exacted the same Fitzh nat br fol. 226. Register fol. 258. Essoine Essonium commeth of the French Essoniè or exonniè i. causarius miles he that hath his presence forborne or excused vpon any iust cause as sicknesse or other incumbrance It signifieth in our common lawe an alledgement of an excuse for him that is summoned or sought for to appeare and answer to an action reall or to performe suite to a court baron vpon iust cause of absence It is as much as excusatio with the Ciuilians The causes that serue to Essoine any man summoned be diuers infinite yet drawne to fiue heads whereof the first is vltra mare the second de terra sancta the third de malo vemendi which is also called the common Essoine the fourth is de malo lecti the fifth de seruitio Regis For further knowledge of these I referre you to Glanvile in his whole first booke and Bracton li. 5. tractat 2. per totum and Brittan ca. 122. 123. 124. 125. and to Horns mirrour of Iustices li. 1. ca. des Essoinis who maketh mention of some more Essoines touching the seruice of the king celestiall then the rest doe and of some other points not vnworthie to be knowne Of these essoines you may reade farder in Fleta l. 6. c. 8. seqq that these came to vs frō the Normans is well shewed by the Grand Custumarie where you may find in a maner all said that our lawyers haue of this mater cap. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44.
Bartolus in his Tractate De insigniis armis vseth these very wordes prioritas and posterioritas concerning two that beare one coate armor Prisage seemeth to be that custome or share that belongeth to the King out of such merchandize as are taken at sea by way of lawfull prize anno 31 Eliz. cap. 5. Prisage of Wines anno I. H. 8. cap. 5. is a word almost out of vse now called Butlerage it is a custome wherby the prince chalengeth out of euery barke loaden with wine containing lesse then forty tunne two tunne of wine at his price Prise prisa commeth of the French prendre i. capere it signifieth in our Statutes the things taken by pourveyours of the Kings subiects As anno 3. Ed. 1. cap. 7. anno 28. eiusdem stat 3. cap. 2. It signifieth also a custome due to the King anno 25. eiusdem cap. 5. Regist origin fol. 117. b. Prisoner priso commeth of the French prisonnier and signifieth a man restrained of his libertie vpon any action ciuill or criminall or vpon commaundement And a man may be prisoner vpon matter of Record or mater of fact prisonervpon mater of Record is he which being present in court is by the court committed to prison only vpon an arrest be it of the Shyrecue Censtable or other Stawnf pl. cor lib. prim cap. 32. fol. 34. 35. Prinie commeth of the French priuè i. familiaris and significth in our common lawe him that is partaker or hath an interest in any action or thing as priuies of bloud old nat br fol. 117. be those that be linked in consanguinitie Eucry heire in tayle is priuy to recouer the land intayled eodem fol. 137. No priuitie was betweene me and the tenent Litleton fol. 106. If I deliuer goods to a man to be caried to such a place and he after he hath brought them thither doth steale them it is felenie because the priuitie of deliuerie is determined as soone as they are brought thither Stawn pl. cor lib. prim cap. 15. fol. 25. Merchants priuie be opposite to merchant straungers anno 2. Ed. tertii cap. 9. cap. 14. ann eiusdem stat 2. cap. 3. The newe Expositour of lawe termes maketh diuers sorts of priuics as priuies in estate priuies in deed priuics in lawe priuies in right and priuies in bloud And see the examples he giueth of euery of them See Perkins Conditions 831. 832. 833. and Sir Edward Cooke lib. 3. Walkers case fol. 23. a. lib. 4. fol. 123. b. 124. a. where he maketh foure kindes of priuies viz. priuies in bloud as the heire to his fathes c. priuies in representation as executours or administratours to the deceased priuies in estate as he in the reuersion and he in the remainder when land is giuē to one for life and to another in see the rcason is giuen by the Expositour of lawe termes for that their estates are created both at one time The fourth sort of priuies are priuies in tenure as the Lord by escheate that is when the land escheateth to the Lord for want of heires c. Priuie seale priuatum sigillum is a scale that the King vseth some time for a warrant whereby things passed the priuy signet and brought to it are sent farder to be confirmed by the great seale of England sometime for the strength or credit of other things written vpon occasions more transitory and of lesse continuance then those be that passe the great seale Priuiledge priuilegium is defined by Cicero in his oration pro domo sua to be lex priuata homini ●●ogata Frerotus in paratitlis ad titulum decretalium de priuilegiis thus defineth it priuilegium est ius singulare hoc est priuata lex quae vni homini vel loco vel Collegio similibus aliis concedit ur cap. priuilegia distinct 3. priua enim veteres dixere que nos singula dicimus Insit Agellius lib. 10. ca. 20. Ideoque priuilegia modò beneficia modò personales constitutiones dicuntur c. It is vsed so likewise in our common law and sometime for the place that hath any speciall immunity Kitchin fol. 118. in the words where depters make sained gifts and feofements of their land and goods to their freinds and others and betake themselues to priuiledges c. Priuiledge is either personall or reall a personall priuiledge is that which is graunted to any person either against or beside the course of the common law as for example a person called to be one of the Parlament may not be arrcsted either himselfe or any of his attendance during the time of the Parlament A priuiledge reall is that which is graunted to a place as to the Vniuersities that none of either may be called to Westm hall vpon any contract made within their owne precincts And one toward the court of Chauncery cannot originally be called to any court but to the Chauncery certaine cases excepted If he be he will remoue it by a writ of Priuiledge grounded vpon the statute anno 18. Ed. 3. See the new booke of Entries verbo Priuilege Probat of testaments probatio testamentorum is the producting and insinuating of dead mens wils before the ecclesiasticall Iudge Ordinary of the place where the party dyeth And the ordinary in this case is knowne by the quantity of the goods that the party deceased hath out of the Dioces where he departed For if all his goods be in the same Dioces then the Bishop of the Dioces or the Archdeacon according as their composition or prescription is hath the probate of the Testament if the goods be dispersed in diuers Dioces so that there be any summe of note as fiue pounds ordinarily out of the Dioces where the party let his life then is the Archbishop of Canterbury the ordinary in this case by his prerogatiue For whereas in ould time the will was to be proued in cuery Dioces wherein the party diceased had any goods it was thought conuenient both to the subiect and to the Archiepiscopall See to make one proofe for all before him who was and is of all the generall Ordinary of his prouince But there may be aunciently some composition betweene the Archebishop and an inferiour ordinary whereby the summe that maketh the prerogatiue is abouc fiue pound See praerogatiue of the Archbishop This probate is made in two sorts either in common forme or pertestes The proofe in common forme is onely by the oath of the exceutour or party exhibiting the will who sweareth vpon his credulity that the will by him exhibited is the last will and testament of the party deceised The proofe per testes is when ouer and beside his oath he also produceth witnesses or maketh other proofe to confirme the same and that in the presence of such as may pretend any interest in the goods of the deceased or at the least in their absence after they haue beene lawfully summoned to see such a will proued
writ and not those that he houldeth of course or custome And in that case also it may be gathered out of the same authour that he hath a record but with the testimony of those annexed that be suiters to the Court. Which seemeth to agree with Bractons words aboue specified Seruiens Hundredi habet recordum in testimonio proborum hominum And to this purpose read Glanuile lib. 8. cap. 8. 9. 10. One Iustice vpon view of forcible detinew of land may record the same by statute anno 15. R. 2. cap. 2. the Maior and Constables of the Staple haue power to record recognisances of debt taken before them anno 10. H. 6. ca. 1. Brooke titulo Record seemeth to say that no court ecclesiasticall is of record how truly it is to be inquired For Bishops certifiing bastardy bigamy excommunication the vacancy or plenarty of a Church a mariage a diuorce a spirituall intrusion or whether a man be professed in any religion with other such like are credited without farder enquiry or controlment See Brooke titulo Bastardy See Fleta lib 6. ca. 39. 40. 41. 42. Lamb. cirenarcha lib pri cap. 13. Glanuile li. 7. ca. 14. 15. the Register originall fol. 5. b. Bracton lib. 5. tracta 5. ca. 20. nu 5. Britton ca. 92. 94. 106. 107. 109. Doct. and Stud. li. 2. ca. 5. but especially Cosius apologie parte pri ca. 2. And a testament shewed vnder the seale of the Ordinary is not trauersable 36. H. 6. 31. Perkins Testament 491. Fulb. paral fol. 61. b. But it may be that this opinion groweth from a difference betweene that law whereby the court Christian is most ordered and the common law of this land For by the ciuile or canon law no instrument or record is held so firme but that it may be checked by witnesses able to depose it to be vntrue Co. plu● valere quod agitur quàm quod simulate concipitur ca. cùm Iohannes 10. extra de fide instrumentorum Whereas in our common law against a record of the Kings Court after the terme wherein it is made no witnes can preuaile Britton ca. 109. Coke lib. 4. Hindes case fol. 71. lib. assisarum fol. 227. nota 21. This reconciliation may be iustified by Brooke himselfe titulo Testaments num 4. 8. 14. and by Glanuile lib. 8. cap. 8. The King may make a court of record by his graunt Glanuil li. 8. ca. 8. Britton cap. 121. as for example Queene Elizabeth of worthy memory by her Charter dated 26. Aprilis anno 3. regni sui made the Consistory Court of the Vniuersity of Cambridge a Court of record There are reckoned among our common lawyers three sorts of records viz A record iudiciall as attainder c. A record ministeriall vpon oath as an office found A record made by conueyance by consent as a fine deede enrolled or such like Coke li. 4. Andrew Ognels case fo 54. b. Recordare facias or recordari facias is a writ directed to the Shyreeue to remoue a cause depending in an inferiour court to the Kings bench or common plees as out of a court of auncient Demesn Hundred or Countie Fitz. nat br fol. 71. B. out of the countie Court idem fo 46. B. or other courts of record idem fol. 71. C. 119. K. Howbeit if you will learne more exactly where and in what cases this writ lyeth reade Brooke in his Abridgm titulo Recordare pone It seemeth to be called a recordare because the forme is such that it commaundeth the Shyreeue to whom it is directed to make a record of the proceeding by himselfe and others and then to send vp the cause See the Register verbo Recordare in the Table of the originall Writs See Certiorart See Accedas ad Curiam Recorder recordator commeth of the French recordeur i. talis persona quae in Ducis Curia â iudicio faciendo non debet amoueri Grand Custumarie of Norm cap. 107. 121. Whereby it appeareth that those which were necessarie Iudges in the Duke of Normandies Courts were called Recorders and who they were is shewed in the ninth chapter of the said booke And that they or the greater part of them had power to make a record it is euident in the chapter 107. Here in England a Recorder is he whome the Maior or other Magistrate of any citie or towne corporate hauing Iurisdiction or a Court of record within their precincts by the Kings graunt doth associate vnto him for his beter direction in maters of Iustice and proceedings according vnto lawe And he is for the most part a man well seene in the common lawe Recordo processis mittendis is a writ to call a Record together with the whole proceeding in the cause out of one court into the Kings Court Which see in the Table of the Register orig how diuersly it is vsed Recordo vtlagariae mittendo is a writ Iudiciall which see in the Register iudicial fol. 32. Recouerie Recuperatio cōmeth of the French Recouvrer i. Recuperare It signifieth in our commō lawe an obteining of any thing by Iudgement or triall of lawe as evictio doth among the Ciuilians But you must vnderstand that there is a true recouerie and a feigned A true Recouerie is an actuall or reall recouerie of any thing or the value thereof by Iudgement as if a man siewed for any land or other thing moueable or immoueable and haue a verdict and Iudgement for him A feigned recouerie is as the Ciuilians call it quaedam fictio iuris a certaine forme or course set downe by lawe to be obserued for the beter assuring of lands or tenements vnto vs. And for the beter vnderstanding of this reade West parte 2. symbol titulo Recoveries sect pri who saith that the end and effect of a Recouerie is to discontinue and destroy estates Tayles Remainders and Reuersions and to barre the former owners thereof And in this formality there be required 3. parties viz. the Demaundant the Tenent and the Vowchee The Demaundant is he that bringeth the writ of Entrie and may be termed the Recouerer The Tenent is he against whom the writ is brought and may be termed the Recoveree The Vowchee is he whom the tenēt vowcheth or calleth to wartantie for the land in demaund West vbi supra In whom you may reade more touching this mater But for example to explane this point a man that is desirous to cut of an estate tayle in lands or tenements to the end to sell giue or bequeath it as him self seeth good vseth his frend to bring a writ vpon him for this land He appearing to the writ saith for him selfe that the land in question came to him or his auncesters from such a man or his auncester who in the conueiance thereof bound him selfe and his heires to make good the title vnto him or them to whome it was conueied And so he is allowed by the court to call in this third man to
such condition The difference betweene a Remainder and a Reversion is that a Remainder is generall and may be to any man but to him that graunteth or conueieth the land c. for terme of life onely or otherwise a Reuersion is to himselfe from whome the conveiance of the land c. proceeded and commonly perpetuall as to his heires also Litleton fol. 112. in fine See Cooke lib. 2. Sir Hugh Cholmleis case fol. 51. a. And yet a Reuersion is sometime confounded with a remainder Cooke li. 2. Tookers case fol. 67. b. Plowden casu Hille fol. 170. b. what this word Reuersion in a deede doth carie See Litleton lib. 2. ca. 12. Revocation Revocatio is the calling backe of a thing granted Of these you haue diuers in the Register originall as Reuovocationem brevis de audiendo terminando fol. 124. Revocationem praesentationis fol. 304 305. Revocationem protectionis fol. 23. Revocationem specialium Iusticiariorum quia c. fol. 205. Reviving is a word metaphorically applied to rents and actions and signifieth a renewing of them after they be extinguished no lesse then if a man or other liuing creature should be dead and restored to life See diuers examples in Brooke titulo Revivings of rents actions c. fol 223. Rewardum See Regard Reweye anno 43. Elizab. cap. 10. Rie is a Saxon word signifiing as much as Regnum in Latine Camd. Britan. pag. 346. Riens passe perle fait is a forme of an exception taken in some cases to an action See Brooke titulo Estaunger al fait or Record Riens dans le gard was a chalenge to a Iurie or Enquest within London for that foure sufficient men of liuelyhood to the yearely value of fortie shillings aboue all charges within the same City and dwelling and hauing within the same ward weare not impanelled therein But it is abrogated by the statute anno 7. H. 7. cap. 4. Rier countie Retrocomitatus seemeth to come of the French Arriere i. posterior and in the statute anno 2. Ed. 3. cap. 5 is opposite to the open countie And by comparison of that statute with Westm 2. cap. 38. it appeareth to be some publique place which the Shyreeue appointeth for the receipt of the kings money after the ende of his Countie Fleta saith that it is dies crastinus post comitatum lib. 2. cap. 67. § Quia Iusticiarii Right Rectum See Recto Ridings be the names of the parts or diuisions of Yorke shire being three in number viz. West riding East riding and North riding Camd. Britan. pag. 530. This word is mentioned in the statute anno 22. H. 8. cap. 5. 23. H. 8. cap. 18. and M. West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditements saith that in Inditements within that Countie it is requisite that the towne and the Riding be expressed sect 70. Q. Right in the Court anno 6. R. 2. stat 1. cap. 12. See Rectus in Curia Ringhead anno 43. Elizab. cap. 10. Riot Riottum commeth of the French Rioter 〈…〉 rixari It signifieth in our common lawe the forcible doing of an vnlawfull act by three or more persons assembled togither for that purpose Westm parte 2. symbol titulo Inditements sect 65. P. The differences and agreements betweene a Riot a Rout and vnlawfull assembly See in M. Lamb. Eirenarcha lib. 2. cap. 5. c. See the statute 1. M. 1. cap. 12. Kitchin fol. 19. who giueth these examples of Riots the breach of inclosures or banks or conduicts parks pownds houses barnes the burning of stacks of corne M. Lamberd vbi supra vseth these examples to beate a man to enter vpon a possession forcibly See Route and vnlawfull assembly See also Cromptons Iustice of peace diuers cases of Riots c. fol. 53. See Trihings Ripiers Riparii be those that vse to bring fish from the sea coast to the inner parts of the land Camd. Britan. pag. 234. It is a word made of the latine Ripa Rise oriza is a kinde of corne growing in Spaine Asia and India with the which both good foodes and medicines be made whereof if you desire farder knowledge reade Gerards herball lib. 1. cap. 52. This is mentioned among merchandize to be garbled in the statute anno 1. Iaco. cap. 19. Roag Rogus seemeth to come of the French Rogue i. arrogans It signifieth with vs an idle sturdie beggar that wandring from place to place without pasport after he hath beene by Iustices bestowed vpon some certaine place of aboade or offered to be bestowed is condemned to be so called who for the first offence is called a Roag of the first degree and punished by whipping and boring through the grissell of the right eare with a hot yron an inch in compas for the secōd offence is called a Roag of the second degree and put to death as a felon if he be aboue 18. yeares ould See the statute anno 14. Elizab. cap. 5. 18. eiusdem cap. 3. anno 36. cap. 17. If you will know who be Rogues and to be punished as Rogues by lawe Reade Lamberds Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 4. See Rout. Robberie Robaria commeth of the French Robbe 1. vestis and in our common lawe a felonious taking away of another mans goods from his person or presence against his will putting him in feare and of purpose to steale the same goods West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditments sect 60. This is sometime called violent theft Idem eodem which is felonie for two pence Kitchin fol. 26. and 22. lib. Assis 39. Robaria is a word vsed also in other nations as appeareth by the annotations vpon Mathaeus de Afflictis descis 82. nu 6. pag. 122. See Skene verbo Reif libro de verbo significat See Cromp. Iustice of peace f. 30. b. Roberdsmen anno 5. Ed. 3. cap. 14. anno 7. R. 2. cap. 5. M. Lamb. interpreteth them to be mighty theeues Eironarch lib. 2. cap. 6. pag. 190. Rodknights aliâs Radknights are certaine seruitours which hould their lands by seruing their Lord on horseback Bracton lib. 2. cap. 36. nu 6. faith of them debent equitare cum Domino suo de manerio in manerium vel cum Domini vxore Fleta lib. 3. cap. 14. § Continetur Rodde Pertica is otherwise called a pearche and is a measure of 16. foote and an halfe long and in Stafford Shire 20. foote to measure land with See ●earch Rofe tyle aliât Creast tyle is that tyle which is made to lay vpon the rudge of the house anno 17. Ed. 4. cap. 4. Rogation weeke dies rogationum is a time well knowne to all being otherwise called Gang weeke The reason why it is so termed is because of the especiall deuotion of prayer and fasting then inioyned by the Church to all men for a preparatiue to the ioyfull remembrance of Christs glorious ascension and the descension of the holy Ghost in the forme of cloven tongues shortly after And in that respect the solemnization of carnall matrimony is forbidden
Scutagium aut servitium regale licet ad vnum obulum vel seriantiam illud poterit dici feudum militare This free Soccage is also called common Socage anno 37. H. 8. cap. 20. Soccage in base tenure or villanum Soccagium is diuided againe in villanum Soccagium purum villenagium Villanum Soccagium est illud de quo fit certum seruitium idque ratione sui tenemēti non personae suae Purum villenagium est illud in quo praestatur seruitium incertum indeterminatum vbi sciri non poterit vespere quale seruitium fieri debet mane viz. vbi quis facere tenetur quicquid ei praeceptum fuerit Bracton lib. 2. cap. 8. num 3. The old nat br fol. 94. maketh three parts of this diuision viz. Soccage of free tenure Soccage of auncient tenure and soccage of base tenure soccage of free tenure is as the booke saith where a man holdeth by free seruice of 12. pence by yeare for all maner of seruices or by other seruices yearely Soccage of auncient tenure is of land of auncient Demesn where no writ originall shall be siewed but the writ of Right that is called secundum consuetudinem manerii Soccage of base tenure is of those that hould in Soccage and may haue none other writ but the Monstraverunt and such Sockmen hould not by certaine Seruice And for that are they not free Sockmen Then againe Soccage is diuided into soccage in cheife and common soccage Soccage in cheife or in capite is that which holdeth of the King as of his Crowne Praerog fol. 41. Common Soccage is that which holdeth of any other capitall Lord or of the King by reason of some honour or maner Ibidem Burgage is also a kinde of Soccage See Burgage Sockmans Sockmanni are such tenents as hould their lands and tenements by Soccage tenure And accordingly as you haue 3. kinds of Soccage soe be there 3. sorts of sockmans as sockmans of frank tenure Kitchin fol. 81. sockmans of anncient Demesn ould nat br fol. 11. and Sockmans of base tenure Kitchin vbi supra But the tenents in auncient Demesn seeme most properly to be called Sockmans Fitzh na br f. 14. B. Brit. c. 66. n. 2. Soke anno 32. H. 8. cap. 15. cap. 29. Of this Fleta saith thus Soke significat libertatem curiae tenentium quam socam appellamus lib. 1. cap. 47. § Soke See Roger Houeden parte poster suorum annalium fol. 345. b. and See Soc. Soken Soca see Soc. and Hamsoken Soken is latined Soca Register originall fol. 1. a. Sokereue seemeth to be the Lords rent gatherer in the Soke or Soken Fleta lib. 2. cap. 55. in principio Sole tenent Solus tenens is he or shee which holdeth onely in his or her owne right without any other ioyned For example if a man and his wife hould land for their liues the remainder to their son here the man dying the Lord shall not haue Heriot because he dieth not sole tenent Kitchin fol. 134. Solicitour Solicitator commeth of the French Soliciteur It signifieth in our commō law a man imploied to folow suites depending in law for the beter remembrance and more case of Atturnies who commonly are so full of clients and busines that they cannot so often attend the seriants and counsellers as the case may require Solet Debet See Debet solet Solidata terrae see Farding deale of land Sollace anno 43. Elizabeth cap. 10. Sommons aliâs summons summonitio commeth of the French semondre i. vocare It signifieth in our common law as much as vocatio in ius or citatio among the Ciuilians And thence is our word somner which in French is semonneur i. vocator monitor The Custumary of Normandie for our sommons hath semonse ca. 61. summons of the Exchequer anno 3. Ed. pri ca. 19. anno 10. eiusdem cap. 9. How summons is diuided and what circumstances it hath to be obserued See Fleta lib. 6. cap. 6. 7. Solutione feodi militis Parlamenti and solutione feodi Burgen Parlamenti be writs whereby Knights of the Parlament may recouer their allowance if it be denyed anno 35. H. 8. ca. 11. Sontage Stow. pag. 284. is a taske of fourty shillings laid vpon euery Knights fee. Sorting Kerseies 3. Iacobi ca 16. Sothale is a kinde of intertainment made by Bayliffes to those of their Hundreds for their gaine Which sometime is called Filctale Of this Bracton lib. 3. tracta 2. cap. pri hath these words De Balliuis quifaciunt ceruisias suas quas quandoque vocant sothale quandoque Filctale vt pecunias extorque ant ab eis qui sequntur Hundreda sua Baliuas sitas c. I thinke this should rather be written Scotale See Scotale Southvicont Subvicecomes is the vnder Shyreeue Cromptone Iurisdict fol 5. Sowne is a verb neuter properly belonging to the Exchequer as a word of their art signifiing so much as to be leuiable or possible to be gathered or collected For example estreats that sowne not are such as the Shyreeue by his industry cannot get and estreats that sowne are such as he can gather anno 4. H. 5. ca. 2. Speaker of the Parlament is an officer in that high Court that is as it were the common mouth of the rest and as that honourable assembly consisteth of two houses one called the higher or vpper house consisting of the King the nobility and Kings councell especially appointed for the same the other termed the lower or commonhouse containing the Knights of the Shires the citizens barons of the cinque ports and the burgeses of borough townes so be there also two speakers one termed the Lord speaker of the higher house who is most commonly the Lord Chaunceler of England or Lord Keeper of the great seale the other is called the speaker of the lower house And the duties of these two you haue perticularly described in M. Vowels aliâs Hookers booke intituled The order and vsage of keeping the Parlament Speciall mater in euidence See Generall issue And Brooke titulo Generall issue and speciall euidence Spiritualties of a Bishop spiritualia Episcopi be those profits which he receiueth as he is a Bishop and not as he is a Baron of the Parlament Stawnf pl. cor fol. 132. The particulars of these may be the duties of his Visitation his benefite growing from ordering and instituting Priests prestation money that subsidium charitatiuum which vppon reasonable cause he may require of his Clergie Iohannes Gregorius de Beneficiis cap. 6. num 9. and the Benefite of his Iurisdiction Ioachimus Stephanus de Iurisd lib. 4. cap. 14. num 14. for these reckoneth exactionem Cathedratici quartam Decimarum mortuariorum oblationum pensitationem subsidium charitatiuum celebrationem synodi collationem viatici vel commeatus cùm Episcopus Romam proficiscitur ius hospitii Litaniam Processionem Spikenard spica nardi vel nardus is a medicinall herbe whereof you may for your farder instruction
signifieth one vsed to call or cite a man to any court These by the common lawe ought to be boni that is by Fleta his Iudgement liberi homines ideo boni quia terras tenentes quod sint coram talibus Iusticiariis ad ce ●tos diem locum secundum mandatum Iusticiariorum vicecomiti directum parati inde facere recognitionemilib 4. cap. 5. § Etcum Summons Summonitio see Sommons Common Summons Marlb cap. 18. anno 52. Henric. 3. is l. Summons in terra petita Kitch fol. 286. is that summons which is made vpon the land which the party at whose suite the summons is sent forth seeketh to haue Summons ad Warrantizandum Dyer fol. 69. nn 35. Sumage Sumagium seemeth to be tolle for cariage on horseback Crompton Iurisd fol. 191. Forwhere the Charter of the Forest cap. 14. hath these words for a horse that beareth loades euery halfe yeare a halfe penny the booke called Pupilla ocult vseth these wordes pro vno equo portante summagium per dimidium annum obolum It is otherwise called a Seame And a Seame in the Westerne parts is a horse loade Superoneratione pasturae is a writ Iudiciall that lyeth against him who is impleaded in the County for the overburdening of a common with his catell in case where he is formerly impleaded for it in the countie and the cause is remooued into the Kings court at Westm Supersedeas is a writ which lieth in diuers and sundry cafes as appeareth by the table of the Register originall and the Iudiciall also and by Fitzh nat br fol. 236. and many other places noted in the Index of his booke verbo Supersedeas But it signifieth in them all a command or request to stay or forbeare the doing of that which in apparence of law were to be done were it not for the cause wherevpon the writ is graunted For example a man regularly is to haue surety of peace against him of whome he will sweare that he is afraide and the Iustice required herevnto cannot denie him Yet if the party be formerly bound to the peace either in Chauncerie or else where this writ lyeth to stay the Iustice from doing that which otherwise he might not denie Superstatutum Ed. 3. vers servants and labourers is a writ that lyeth against him who keepeth my seruant departed out of my seruice against lawe Fitzh nat fo 167. Super statuto de York quo nul sera viteller c. is a writ lying against him that occupieth vitteling either in grosse or by retaile in a Citie or Borough towne during the time he is Maior c. Fitzh natur bre fol. 172. Super statuto anno pri Ed. 3. cap. 12 13. is a writ that lyeth against the Kings Tenent holding in cheife which alienateth the kings land witout the Kings license Fitzh nat br fol. 175. Super statuto facto pour seneshall Marshall de Roy c. is a writ lying against the Steward or Marshall for holding plee in his court of freehould ot for trespasse or contracts not made within the Kings houshold Fitzherbert nat breu fol. 241. Super statuto de Articulis Cleri cap. 6 is a writ against the Shyteeue or other officer that distreineth in the Kings high way or in the glebe land aunciently giuen to Rectories Fitzh nat br fol. 173. Super praerogatiuae Regis cap. 3. is a writ lying against the kings widow for marying without his licence Fitzherbert nat br fol 174. Supplicauit is a writ issuing out the Chauncerie for taking the surety of peace against a man It is directed to the Iustices of peace of the county and the Shyreeue and is grounded vpon the statute anno pri Ed. 3. cap. 16. which ordeineth that certaine persons in chauncerie shall be assigned to take care of the peace See Fitzh nat br fol. 80. This writ was of old called Breve de minis as M. Lamberd in his Emenarcha noteth out of the Register originall fol. 88. Sur cui in vita is a writ that lyeth fot the heire of that woman whose husband hauing alienated her land in fee shee bringeth not the writ Cui in vita for the recouery of her owne land for in this case her heire may take this writ against the tenent after her decease Fitzh nat br fol. 193. B. Surgeon commeth of the French Chirurgien i. Chirurgus vulnerarius signifiing him that dealeth in the mechanicall parte of phisicke and the outward cures performed with the hand The French word is compounded of two greeke words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. manus and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. opus And therefore are they not alowed to minister inward medicine See the statut 32. H. 8. ca. 4. and M. Powltons new abridgement titule Surgeons Surcharger of the forest is he that doeth common with more beasts in the forest then he hath right to common withall Manwood parte 2. of his forest lawes cap. 14. nu 7. Surplusage surplusagium commeth of the French surplus i. corollarium additamentum It signifieth in the common law a superfluity or addition more then needeth which sometime is a cause that a writ abateth Brooke titulo Nugation Superfluity fol. 100. Plowden casu Dine contra Maningham fol. 63. b. It is sometime also applied to mater of accoumpt and signifieth a greater disbursement then the charge of the accoumptant amounteth vnto Surreioynder is thus defined by West parte 2. symb titulo Supplications sect 57. A Surreioynder is a second defence of the plaintifes actiō opposite to the Defendants Reioynder And therefore as he saith Hotoman call eth it Triplicationem quaeest secunda actoris defensio contra Rei duplicationem opposita Not Hotoman onely calleth this triplicationem but the Emperour himselfe De Replicationibus libro 4. Institut titulo 14. Surrender sur sum redditio is an Instrument testifiing with apt words that the particular tenent of lands or tenements for life or yeares doth sufficiently consent and agree that he which hath the next or immediate Remainder or Reuetsion thereof shall also haue the particular estate of the same in possession and that he yeeldeth and giueth vp the same vnto him For euery surrender ought forthwith to giue a possession of the things surrendred West parte pri lib. 2. sectio 503. where you may see diuers presidents But there may be a surrender without writing And therefore there is said to be a surrender in deede and a surrender in law A surrender in deede is that which is really and sensibly performed Surrender in law is in intendment of law by way of consequent and not acutall Perkins Surrender 606. seqq as if a man haue a lease of a serm during the terme he accept of a new lease this act is in law a surrender of the former Coke vol. 6. fo 11. b. Sursise supersisae anno 32. H. 8. ca. 48. seemeth to be an especiall name vsed in the Castle of Douer for such penalties and
assignatos suos eorum haeredes omnes alios secundum quod supradictum est si fortè tenementum datum petatur ab antiquo in Dominico Per hoc autem quòd dicit acquiet abimus obligat se haeredes suos ad acquietandum si quis plus petierit seruitis vel aliud seruitium quam in charta donationis continetur per hoc autem quòd dicit Defendemus obligat se haeredes suos ad Defendendum si quis velit seruitutem ponere rei datae contra formam suae donationis c. But the new expounder of law terms saith that this warranty beginneth two waies one by deede of law as if one and his auncesters haue held land of another and his auncesters time out of minde byhomage which is called Homage auncestrell for in this case the homage cōtinually performed by the tenent is sufficient to bind the Lord to warrant his estate The other is by deede of the party which by deede or fine tyeth himselfe to warrant the land or tenement to the tenent And Sir Ed Cooke in the fourth booke of his reports mentioneth the same distinction Nokes case fo 81. a. calling the one a warranty in law the other an expresse warranty Ciuilians would call these species tacitam expressam Warranty as the said author of the terms of law saith is in two maners warranty lineall and warranty collaterall But Litleton saith vbi supra it is threefold warranty lineall warranty collaterall and warranty that beginneth by disseisin Warranty by disseisin what it is is partly declared in Sir Ed. Cookes reports li. 3. Fermors case fol. 78. a. Whether of them deuideth more aptly let the learned iudge For my part I thinke that lineall and collaterall be no essentiall disserences of warranty as it is originally considered in the first warranter For he bindeth himselfe and his heires in generall And such be bound be they lineall or collaterall vnto him Therefore this diuision riseth rather from the euent of the originall warranty videlicet because it so falleth out that the tenent to whom the warranty was made or his heires when he or they be called into question for the land warranted formerly by the first feoffour is driuen by the meanes of the first warranters death to cal or vouch him to waranty that is his heire and now presently liuing be he descending or collaterall as it falleth out For example A. infeoffeth B. in twenty acres land with clause of warranty against all men So long as A. himselfe liueth he is liable to this couenant and none els after his discease his heire is subiect vnto it be he his sonne brother vncle or what els And whether of these or neither of these it will be none knoweth vntill he be dead Wherefore I conclude that this distinction of lineall or collaterall hath no vse originally in this contract For as the author of the terms of law saith the burden of this warranty after the death of the first warranter falleth vpon him vpon whom the land should haue descended if the warranty had not bene made And that is the next of blood to the warranter be he in the defcending or collaterall line And therefore I resolue that this distinction groweth from an euent after the death of him that couenanteth to warrant But to make this plaine I finde warranty to be vsed equiuocally signifiing in one sort the contract or couenant of warranty first made as appeareth by Bracton in the place formerly noted and in another sort the very effect and performance of this contract either by the warranter or his heires when he or they be by the tenent thereunto vouched or called As also I shew out of Bracton lib. 5. tract 4. ca. pri nu 2. in these words Imprimis videndum est quid sit warrantizatio Et sciendum quod warrantizare nihil aliud est quàm defendere acquietare tenentem qui warrantum vocabit in seisina sua c. With whom agreeth Fleta saying that warrantiz are nihil aliud est quam possidentem defendere li. 5. ca. 15. § 1. lib. 6. ca. 23. quod lege per totum And the former diuision of lineall and collaterall warranty rather belongeth to warranty in this second signification then the former And that this way it is imperfect or at the least obscure I thinke it not hard to declare First to shew this I note out of Bracton who may be called to warrantie And he lib. 5. tractat 4. cap. pri num 5. saith thus Videndum est quis vocari possit ad warrantum sciendum quod tam masculus quam foemina tam minor quàm maior dum tamen si minor vocetur remane at placitum de warantia in suspenso vsque ad aetatem nisi causa fuerit ita fauorabilis quòd aetas expectari non debeat sicut ex causa Dotis Item non solum vocandus est ad warantum ille qui dedit vel venddit verùm etiam vocandi sunt eorum haeredes descendentes in infinitum propter verba in Chartis contenta Ego haeredes mei warantizabimus tali haeredibus suis c. Et in quo casu tenentur haeredes warantizare sive sint propinqui sive remoti remotiores vel remotissimi Et quod de haeredibus dicitur idem dici poterit de assignatis de illis qui sunt loco illorum haeredū sicut sunt capitales Domini qui tenentibus suis quasi succedunt vel propter aliquem defectum vel propter aliquod delictum sicut de eschaetis Dominorum By which words we perceiue that the burden of this warrantie is not tyed to heires only be they in the descending or collaterall line but that vnder this word Haeredes are comprised all such as the first warranters lands afterward come vnto either by discent or otherwise ex causa lucratiua So that if a man haue 20 children yet if he will and may giue his land to a straūger leauing his childrē no land that straunger in this case is his assigne is conteined vnder this word heire So if he commit felonie after such warrantie covenanted and forfeit his lands to his Lord by escheate the Lord is quasi haeres in this case and lyable to the warrantie formerly passed And in these two later cases warranty in the secōd signification seemeth to be neither lineall nor collaterall at the least as Litleton and the other author haue defined or by examples expressed them But yet let vs define these two species as they be wherefore lineall warranty is that which he is called vnto by the tenent vpon whome the land warranted had descended if the warranty had not beene couenanted For example A selleth to B. 20. acres land with clause of warranty and afterward dieth leauing issue C. soone after B. is impleaded for this land by D. and voucheth C. This is called a lineall warranty because but for it the land had descended
bequeath any thing to the redeeming of captives c. and appoint one to execute his will in that point the partie soe appointed shall see it performed and if he appointe none to doe it then the Bishop of the citie shall haue power to demaund the legacie and without all delay performe the will of the deceased Admirall Admiralius cometh of the frenche amerall and signifieth both in France and with vs an high officer or magistrate that hath the gouernement of the Kings navie and the hearing and determining of all causes as well civile as criminall belōging to the sea Cromptons diuers iurisd fo 88. and the statutes anno 13. R. 2. ca. 5. anno 15. eiusdem ca. 3. an 2. H. 4. ca. 11. anno 2. H. 5. ca. 6. an 28. H. 8. ca. 15. with such like This officer is in all kingdomes of Europe that border vpon the sea and his authoritie in the kingdome of Naples is called magna Curia Admirariae quae habet iurisdictionem in eos qui vivunt ex arte maris Vincent de Franch descis 142. nu 1. This Magistrate among the Romanes was called praefectus classis as appeareth by Tully in Verrem 7. but his authoritie was not continuall as the Admirals is in these daies but onely in time of warre Neither doe I finde any such officer belonging to the Emperours in our Code And M. Guyn in the preface to his reading is of opinion that this office in England was not created vntill the daies of Edward the third His reason is probable Britton that wrote in Edw. the firsts time and in the beginning of his booke taking vpon him to name all the courts of Iustice maketh no mention of this courte or magistrate And againe Richard the second finding the Admirall to extend his iurisdiction over farre ordeined by statute made the 10. yeare of his reigne that the limits of the admirals iurisdiction should be restrained to the power he had in his grandfather Edward the thirds daies whereby the saide Master Gwin coniectureth that he did nought els but reduce him to his originall But contrarily to this it appeareth by auncient records the copies whereof I have seene that not onely in the daies of Ed. the first but also of King Iohn all causes of Merchants and mariuers and things happening within the fludde marke were ever tried before the Lord admirall Adiura Regis is a writ for the Kings Clerke against him that seeketh to eiect him to the preiudice of the Kings title in the right of his crowne Of this you may see diuers formes vpon divers cases Register orig fo 61. a. Admittendo clerico is a writte graunted to him that hath recouered his right of presentation a-against the Bishop in the common bank the forme whereof read in Fitzh nat br fo 38. the Register orig fo 33. a. Admittendo in socium is a writ for the association of certaine persons to Iustices of assises formerly appointed Register orig fol. 206. a. Ad quod damnum is a writ that lyeth to the escheater to inquire what hurt it will be to the King or other person to graunt a Faire or market or a mortmaine for any lands intended to be giuen in fee simple to any house of religion or other body politicke For in that case the land so giuē is said to fal into a dead hād that is such an estate and condition that the chiefe Lords do leese all hope of heriots seruice of court and escheates vpon any traiterous or felonious offence committed by the tenant For a bodie politicke dieth not neither can performe personall seruice or commit treason or felonie as a singular person may And therefore it is reasonable that before any such grant be made it should be knowne what preiudice it is like to worke to the graunter Of this reade more in Fitzh nat breu fol. 221. and look Mortmaine Ad terminum qui praeteriit is a writ of entrie that lyeth in case where a man hauing leased lands or tenements for terme of life or yeers and after the terme expired is held from them by the tenant or other stranger that occupieth the same and deforceth the leassour Which writ belongeth to the leassour and his heire also Fitzh nat br fol. 201. Aduent aduentus is a certaine space of time comprising a moneth or thereabout next before the feast of Christs natiuitie Wherein it seemeth that our ancestors reposed a kind of reuerence for the neerenesse of that solemne feast so that all contentions in lawe were then remitted for a season Whereupon there was a statute ordained Westm 1. cap. 48. anno 3. Ed. 1. that notwithstanding the said vsuall solemnitie and time of rest it might be lawfull in respect of iustice and charitie which ought at all times to be regarded to take assises of nouell disseisin mort d'auncester and darrein presentment in the time of Aduent Septuagesima and Lent This is also one of the times from the beginning whereof vnto the end of the Octaues of the Epiphany the solemnizing of mariage is forbidden by reason of a certain spiritualioy that the church so consequently euery member thereof for that time doth or ought to conceiue in the remembrance of her spouse Christ Iesus and so abandon all affections of the flesh See Rogation weeke and Septuagesima Advocatione decimarum is a writ that lyeth for the claime of the fourth part or vpward of the tythes that belong to any Church Register orig fol. 29. b. Advow aliâs avowe advocare commeth of the French advoüer aliâs avoüer and signifieth as much as to iustifie or maintaine an act formerly done For example one taketh a distresse for rent or other thing and he that is destreyned sueth a Replevin Now he that tooke the distresse or to whose vse the distresse was taken by another iustifying or maintaining the act is said to avowe Tearmes of the lawe Hereof commeth advowant Old nat br fol. 43. and advowrie eodem folio Bracton vseth the Latine word in the same signification as advocatio disseisiuae li. 4. cap. 26. And I find in Cassauaeus de consuet Burg. pa. 1210. advohare in the same signification and pag. 1213. the Substantine desavohamentum for a disavowing or refusall to avowe Advowzen advocatio signifieth in our common law a right to present to a benefice as much as ius patronatus in the canon lawe The reason why it is so tearmed proceedeth from this because they that originally obtained the right of presenting to any Church were maintainers and vpholders or great benefactors to that Church either by building or increasing it and are thereupon tearmed sometime patroni sometime Advocati cap. 4. cap. 23. de iure patronatus in Decretal And advowzen being a bastardly French word is vsed for the right of presenting as appeareth by the Statute of Westm the second anno 13. Ed. 1. ca. 5. Advowsen is of two sorts advowsen in grosse that is sole or
scribit Suetonius cap. 42. Hodiè hic vsus in subalpina regione est frequens vt scribit Iacobinus de Sancto Georgio in tractu de homagiis col 8. Etiam pro filia quae religionem ingreditur non modò pro vna filia sed pluribus filiabus non tamen pro secundis nuptijs exigitur In which place the said author maketh mention of diuers other Civilians and feudists that record this custome to be in other places Of this aide our Fleta writeth thus sicutetiam quaedam consuerudines quaeservitia non dicuntur nec concomitantia seruitiorū ficut rationobilia auxilia ad filium primogenitum militem faciendum vel ad filiam primogenitā maritandam quae quidem auxilia sunt de gratia non de iure pro necessitate indigentia dominicapitalis Et non sunt praedialia sed personalia secundùm quod perpendi poterit in breui ad hoc prouiso c. This word ayde is also particularly vsed in matter of pleading for a petition made in court for the calling in of helpe from another that hath an interest in the cause in question and is likely both to giue strength to the party that prayeth in aide of him and also to auoide a preiudice growing toward his owne right except it be preuented For example when a tenent for terme of life by courtesie tenent in taile after possibility of issue extinct for tearme of yeares at will by elegit or tenent by statute merchant being impleaded touching his estate may petere auxilium that is pray in ayde of him in the reuersion that is desire or intreate the court that he may be called in by writ to alledge what he thinketh good for the maintenance both of his right and his owne Termes of the lawe Fitzh mentioneth both prier en ayde and prier ayde de patron c. auxilium petere à patrono nat br fol. 50. d. and the new booke of entries verbo Ayde de parcener auxilium de parcionario fol. 411. columna 4. This the later practitioners in the ciuill lawe call authoris laudationem vel nominationem Emericus in pract titulo 48. This ayde prier is also vsed sometime in the kings behoofe that there be no proceeding against him vntill the kings Councell be called and heard to say what they thinke good for the auoyding of the kings preiudice or losse touching the cause in hand For example if the kings tenent holding in chiefe be demaunded a rent of a common person he may pray in ayde of the king Also a citie or borough that hath a fee ferme of the king any thing being demaunded against them which belongeth the reunto may pray in ayde of the King c. Tearms of the law of this thing you may read the statute de big amis a. 4. Ed. 1. ca. 1. 2. 3. anno 14. Ed. 3. stat 1. ca. 14. The civile law in suites begunne betweene two alloweth a third to come in pro interesse and he that commeth in for his interrest commeth either assistendo or opponendo c. The former is like to this ayde prier the other to that which our common lawyers call Receyte Looke Receyte Aile avo commeth of the French aieul i. avus signifieth a writ that lieth where the grādfather or great grandfather called of our common lawyers besayle but in true French bisaieul was seised in his demaines as of fee of any land or tenement in fee simple the day that he died and a stranger abateth or entreth the same day and dispossesseth the heire Fitzh nat br fo 221. Alderman aldermannus is borrowed from the saxon Ealderman signifying as much as Senator in latine Lamb. in his explica of Saxon words verbo senator See Roger Hoveden parte poster suorum annal fo 346. b. Aler sans iour is verbatim to goe without day the meaning whereof is to be finally dismissed the courte because there is no day of farder appearāce assigned Kitchin fo 140. Ale-tastor is an officer appointed in every court leete and sworne to looke to the assise and the goodnes of bread and ale or beere within the precincts of that Lordship Kitchin fo 46. where you may see the forme of his oath Alias v. Capias alias Alien alienare commeth of the French aliener and signifieth as much as to transferre the propertie of any thing vnto another man To alien in mortmaine is to make over lands or tenements to a religious companie or other body politike Stawnf praero fo 48. looke Mortmayn To alien in fee isto sel the fee simple of any land or tenement or of any incorporeall right West 2. ca. 25. anno 13. Ed. 1. Alien alias alion alienigena commeth of the latine alienus and signifieth one borne in a straunge country It is ordinarily taken for the contrarie to Denizen or a naturall subiect that is one borne in a straunge country and neuer heere infranchised Broke Denizen 4. c. And in this case a man born out of the land so it be within the limits of the Kings obedience beyond the sease or of English parents out of the Kings obedience so the parents at the time of the birth be of the Kings allegiance is no alien in account but a subiect to the King Statute 2. a. 25. Ed. 3. ca. vnico commonly called the Statute De natis vltra mare Also if one borne out of the kings allegiance come and dwell in England his children if he beget any heere be not aliens but denizens Termes of the lawe See Denizen Allaye Allaia is vsed for the temper and mixture of siluer and gold anno 9. H. 5. Stat. 2. cap. 4. Stat. 1. eiusdem anni cap. 11. The reason of which allay is with a baser mettall to augment the waight of the siluer or gold so much as may counteruaile the Princes charge in the coining Antonius Faber de nummariorum debitorum solutionibus cap. 1. Allocatione facienda is a writ directed to the Lord Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer vpō complaint of some accountant commaunding them to allow the accountant such sums as he hath by vertue of his office lawfully and reasonably expended Register orig fol. 206. b. Alluminor seemeth to be made of the French allumer i. accendere incendere inflammare it is vsed for one that by his trade coloureth or painteth vpon paper or parchment And the reason is because he giueth grace light and ornament by his colours to the leters or other figures coloured You shall find the word an 1. R. 3. ca. 9. Almaine riuets be a certaine light kind of armor for the body of a man with sleeues of maile or plates of iron for the defence of his armes The former of which words seemeth to shewe the countrie where it was first invented the other whether it may come from the French verb revestir 〈◊〉 superinduere to put on vpon another garment I leaue to farther consideration Almner elecmosinarius is an officer of the
See Pontage Brigbote Bull bulla seemeth to come from the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. consilium as Polidorus Virgilius saith de inventio rerum lib. 8. cap. 2. It signifieth the leters by the Canonists called Apostolique strengthened with a leaden seale and containing in them the decrees or commandements of the Pope or bishop of Rome The word is vsed many times in our Statutes as anno 28. H. 8. cap. 16. anno 1. 2. Ph. Ma. ca. 8. Bullion cometh of the French billon that is the place where gold is tried It signifieth with vs gold or siluer in the masse or billet anno 9. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 2. and sometime the Kings exchange or place whether such gold in the lumpe is brought to be tryed or exchanged anno 27. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 14. anno 4. H. 4. cap. 10. See Skene de verbo signif verbo Bullion Burghote commeth of burg i. castellum and bote i. compensatio and signifieth a tribute or contribution toward the building or repairing of castels or walles of defence or toward the building of a borow or city Frō this diuers had exemption by the auncient charters of the Saxon kings Whereupon it is taken ordinarily for the exemption or libertie it selfe Rastals expos of words Fleta hath these words of it Significat quiet antiam reparationis murorum civitatis vel burgi li. 1. cap. 47. Burgh English See Borow English Burgage burgagium is a tenure proper to cities townes whereby men of cities or borowes hold their lands or tenements of the King or other Lord for a certaine yearely rent Old Tenures It is a kind of socage Swinborn parte 3. § 3. nu 6. Burglarie burglaria is compounded of two French words bourg i. pagus villa and larecin i. furtum or of bourg laron Coke lib. 4. fol. 39. b. It is according to the acceptance of our common lawe thus defined Burglarie is a felonious entring into another mans dwelling house wherein some person is or into a Church in the night time to the end to commit some felonie therein as to kill some man or to steale somewhat thence or to do some other felonious act there albeit he execute not the same If the intent or fact of this offender be to steale this is like robberie if to murder it differeth not much from murder and so of other felonies West parte 2. symbol titulo Indictments Sect. 56. Burglarie in the naturall signification of the word is nothing but the robbing of a house but as it is vox artis our common Lawyers restraine it to robbing a house by night or breaking in with an intent to robbe or to do some other felonie The like offence committed by day they call house-robbing by a peculiar name How many wayes burglarie may be committed see Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 28. b. fol. 29. 30. Butlerage of wines signifieth that imposition of sale wine brought into the land which the Kings butler by vertue of his office may take of euery shippe anno 1. H. 8. cap. 5. For the which see more in Botyler C CAblish cablicin among the writers of the Forest lawes signifieth brush wood Manwood parte pag. 84. Cromptons Iurisd fol. 165. Calamus is a cane reed or quill the diuers kinds wherof you haue set downe in Gerards Herball lib. 1. cap. 24. This is comprized among merchandize and drugs to be garbled in the statute anno 1. Iacobi cap. 19. Calendrin of Worsseds anno 5. H. 8. cap. 4. anno 35. eiusdem cap. 5. Cantred is as much in Wales as an hundred in England For Cantre in the British tongue signifieth centum This word is vsed anno 28. H. 8. cap. 3. Cape is a writ iudiciall touching plee of land or tenements so tearmed as most writs be of that word in it selfe which carieth the especiallest intention or end thereof And this writ is diuided in Cape magnum Cape parvum both which as is before said in Attachment take hold of things immoueable and seeme to differ betweene themselues in these points First because cape magnum or the grand Cape lyeth before appearance and Cape parvum afterward Secondly the Cape magnum summoneth the tenent to aunswer to the default and ouer to the demaundant Cape parvum summoneth the tenent to aunswer to the default onely and therefore is called Cape parvum or in French English petit Cape Old nat br fol. 161. 162. Yet Ingham saith that it is called petit Cape not because it is of smal force but that it consisteth of few words Cape magnum in the old nat br is thus defined This writ is a iudiciall and lyeth where a man hath brought a Praecipe quod reddat of a thing that toucheth plee of land and the tenent make default at the day to him giuen in the writ originall then this writ shall goe for the king to take the land into the kings hands and if he come not at the day giuen him by the grand Cape he hath lost his land c. A president and forme of this writ you may see in the Register iudiciall fol. 1. b. It seemeth after a fort to containe in it the effect unssionis in possessionem ex primo secundo decrete among the Civilians For as the first decree seiseth the thing and the second giueth it from him that the second time defaulteth in his appearance so this Cape both seiseth the land and also assigneth to the partie a farder day of appearance at which if he come not in the land is forfeited Yet is there difference betweene these two courses of the ciuill and cōmon lawe first for that missio in possessionem toucheth both moueable and immoueable goods whereas the cape is extended only to immoueable secondly that the partie being satisfied of his demaund the remanet is restored to him that defaulted but by the cape all is seised without restitution thirdly missio in possess is to the vse of the partie agent the cape is to the vse of the king Of this writ and the explication of the true force and effect thereof reade Bracton lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 1. num 4. 5. 6. See Cape ad valentiam Cape parvum in the Old na br fol. 162. is thus defined This writ lyeth in case where the tenent is summoned in plee of land and commeth at the summons and his appearance is of record and after he maketh default at the day that is giuen to him then shall goe this writ for the king c. Of this likewise you haue the form in the Register iudiciall fol. 2. a. Why it is called cape parvum see in cape magnum Of both these writs reade Fleta lib. 6. cap. 44. 〈◊〉 Magnum seqq Cape ad Valentiam is a species of cape magnum so called of the end whereunto it tendeth In the Old nat br fol. 161. 162. it is thus defined or described This writ lyeth where any
impleaded of certaine lands and I vouch to warrant another against whom the summons ad warrantizandum hath bene awarded and the Shyreeue commeth not at the day giuen then if the demandant recouer against me I shall haue this writ against the vouchee and shall recouer so much in value of the land of the vowchee if he haue so much and if he haue not so much then I shall haue execution of such lands and tenements as descend vnto him in fee-simple or if he purchase afterward I shall haue against him a resummons and if he can nothing say I shall recouer the value And note ye that this writ lyeth before apparence Thus farre goeth the booke Of these and the diuers vses of them see the Table of the Register iudiciall verbo Cape Capias is a writ of two sortes one before iudgement called Capias ad respondendum in an action personall if the Shyreeue vpon the first writ of distresse returne nihil habet in baliua nostra and the other is a writ of execution after iudgement being also of diuers kindes viz. Capias ad satisfaciendum Capias pro fine Capias vtlagatum Capias vtlaga 〈…〉 inquiras de bonis catallis Capias ad satisfaciendum is a writ of execution after iudgement lying where a man recouereth in an action personall as debt or dammages or detinew in the kings court and he against whome the debt is recouered and hath no lands nor tenemēts nor sufficient goods wherof the debt may be leuied For in this case he that recouereth shal haue this writ to the shreue commanding him that he take the body of him against whome the debt is recouered and he shal be put in prison vntill satisfaction be made vnto him that recouered Capias pro fine is where one being by iudgement fined vnto the king vpon some offence committed against a statut doth not discharge it according to the iudgement For by this is his body taken and committed to prison vntill he content the king for his fine Coke li. 3. fo 12. a. Capias vtlagatum is a word of execution or after iudgement which lyeth against him that is outlawed vpon any suite by the which the shyreue vpon the receite thereof apprehendeth the party outlawed for not appearring vpon the exegend and keepeth him in safe custodie vntill the day of returne assigned in the writ and then presenteth him vnto the court there farder to be ordered for his contempt Capias vtlagatum inquiras de bonis catallis is a writ al one with the former but that it giueth a farder power to the shyreeue ouer and beside the apprehension of the body to inquire of his goods and cattels The forme of all these writs see in the ould nat br fo 154. and see the Termes of law verbo Proces Lastly you may finde great variety of this kinde in the table of the Register iudiciall verbo Capias Capias in Withernamium de averijs is a writ lying for catell in Withernam Register orig fo 82. 83. see Withernam Capias in Withernamium de homine is a writ that lyeth for a seruant in Withernam Regist or fo 79. 80. see Withernam Capias conductos ad proficiscendum is a writ that lieth for the taking vp of such as hauing receiued prest mony to serue the king slink away and come not in at their time assigned Register orig fo 191. Captaine aliàs capitayne capitaneus commeth of the French capitaine and signifieth with vs him that leadeth or hath charge of a companie of souldiers and is either generall as he that hath the gouernance of the whole host or speciall as he that leadeth one only band The word capitanei in others nations signifieth more generally those that are in latine called principes or proceres because as Hottoman saith in verbis feudalibus tanquā caput reliquo corpori sic hij reliquis civibus praesunt He divideth them into two sorts and to vse his words alii sunt capitanei regni quo verbo Duces Comites Marchiones intelligūtur li. 1. feudo tit 1. § 1. ti 7. Alii impropriè qui vrbiū praefecti sunt quibus plebs ab aliquo superiorum gubernanda committitur qui vallasores regit maiores appellantur l. 1. feud tit 1. § 1. tit 7. tit 17. So we haue captaines of castels heere in England and other places as of the Isles of Gearsey and Gearnsey of the Isle of Weight c. Capite is a tenure which holdeth immediately of the king as of his crown be it by knights seruice or socage Broke tit Tenures 46. 94. Dyer fo 123. nu 38. fo 363. nu 18. not as of any Honour castell or maner and therefore it is otherwise called a tenure that holdeth meerely of the king because as the crowne is a corporation and seigneury in grosse as the common lawyers terme it so the King that possesseth the crowe is in accōpt of lawe perpetually King and neuer in his minoritie nor neuer dieth no more then populus doth whose authoritie he beareth See Fitzh nat br fo 5. F. Note by the way that a man may hold of the king and not in Capite that is not immediately of the crowne in grosse but by meanes of some Honour castel or maner belonging to the Crowne wherof I hold my land Whereof Kitchin saith well that a man may hold of the King by Knight seruice and yet not in capite because he holdeth happily of some honour by Knights seruice which is in the kings hands as by descent from his auncesters and not immediately of the king as of his crowne fo 129. with whome agreeth Fitzh nat br f. 5. K. whose words are to this effect So that it plainely appeareth that lands which be held of the king as of an honour castell or maner are not held in capite of the King because that a writ of right in that case shall be directed to the bayliffe of the honour castell or maner c. but when the lande be held of the King as of his crowne then they be not held of honour castell or maner but meerely of the King as King and of the Kings crowne as of a seigneury of it selse in grosse and the cheife aboue all other seigneuries c. And this tenure in capite is otherwise called tenure holding of the person of the King Dyer fo 44. n. 37. Author of the new termes verb. Tenure in capite Broke titulo Tenures nu 65. 99. And yet M. Kitchin fo 208. saith that a man may hould of the person of the King and not in capite His example is this if the King purchas a maner that I. S. houldeth the tenent shall hould as he held before and shall not render liuery or primier seisin nor hould in capite And if the king graunt that maner to W. N. in fee excepting the seruices of I. S. then I. S. holdeth of
or reall Personall may be so called in two respects one because they belong immediatly to the person of a man as a bowe horse c. the other for that being any way withheld iniuriously from vs we haue no meanes to recouer them but by personall action Chatels reall be such as either appertain not immediatly to the person but to some other thing by way of dependencie as a boxe with charters of land the body of a ward apples vpon a tree or a tree it selfe growing on the ground Cromptons Iustice of peace fo 33. B or els such as are necessary issuing out of some immoveable thing to a person as a lease or rent for tearme of yeares Also to hould at will is a chatell reall New tearmes verbo Chatell The ciuilians comprehend these things as also lands of what kin de or hould so euer vnder bona bona autē diuiduntur in mobilia immobilia mobilia verò in ea quae se movent vel ab aliis moventur v. legem 49. l. 208 〈◊〉 de verb. significa interpretes ibidem Bract. also ca. 3. li. 3. nu 3. 4. seemeth to be of the same iudgement Catallis captis nomine districtionis is a writ which lyeth within a borowe or within a house for rent going out of the same and warranteth a man to take the doores windowes or gates by way of distresse for the rent Old nat br fo 66. Catallis reddendis is a writ which lyeth where goods being deliuered to any man to keepe vntill a certaine day and be not vpon demande deliuered at the day And it may be otherwise called a writ of detinew See more of it in the Register orig fo 139. and in the ould nat br fo 63. This is answerable to actio depositi in the ciuile lawe Catchepolle though it now be vsed as a word of contempt yet in auncient times it seemeth to haue bene vsed without reproch for such as we now call sergeants of the mace or any other that vse to arrest men vpon any cause anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 4. ca. 2. Cathedrall See church Casu matrimonii praelocuti is a writ which lyeth in case where a woman giueth lands to a man in fee simple to the intent he shall mary her and refuseth so to doe in reasonable time being required thereunto by the woman The forme and farder vse hereof learne in the Register orig fol. 233. and in Fitzh nat br fo 205. Causam nobis significes is a writ which lyeth to a Mayer of a towne or city c. that formerly by the kings writ being commaunded to giue seisin vnto the kings grantee of any land or tenements doth delay so to do willing him to shew cause why he so delayeth the performance of his charge Coke li. 4. casu communalty des Sadlers fo 55 b. Cautione admittenda is a writ that lyeth against the Bishop houlding an excommunicate person in prison for his contempt notwithstanding that he offereth sufficient caution or assurance to obey the commandments and orders of holy church from thence forth The forme and farder effect whereof take out of the Regist orig pa. 66. and Fitzh nat br fol. 63. Century centuria See Hundred Cepi corpus is a returne made by the Shyreue that vpō an exigēd he hath taken the bodie of the partie Fitzh nat br fo 26. Certiorari is a writ issuing out the chauncerie to an inferiour courte to call vp the records of a cause therein depending that conscionable iustice therein may be ministred vpon complaint made by bill that the partie which seeketh the said writ hath receiued hard dealing in the said court Termes of the lawe See the diuers formes and vses of this in Fitzh nat br fo 242. as also the Register both originall and iudiciall in the tables verbo Certiorari Cromptō in his Iustice of peace fo 117. saith that this writ is either returnable in the Kings bench and then hath these wordes nobis mittatis or in the chauncerie and then hath in cancellaria nostra or in the common bench and then hath Iusticiariis nostris de banco The word certiorare is vsed diuers times in the digest of the ciuile lawe but our later Kritiques think it soe barbarouse that they suspect it rather to be foisted in by Tribonian thē to be originally vsed by those men of whose workes the saide digest is compiled Prataeus in suo lexico Certificat certificatoriū is vsed for a wirting made in any courte to giue notice to another courte of any thing done therein As for example a certificate of the cause of attainte is a transcript made briefely and in few words by the clerke of the Crowne clerke of the peace or clerke of assise to the courte of the Kings benche conteying the tenure and effect of everie endictment outlawrie or conviction and clerke attained made or pronounced in any other court an 34. H. 8. c. 14. Of this see more in Certificat d'evesque Broke f. 119. Certification of assise of novel dissessin c. Certificatio assisae novae disseisinae c. is a writ graunted for there examining or reuew of a mater passed by assise before any Iustices and is called certificatione novae disseisine Old nat br fo 181. Of this see also the Register Original fo 200. and the newe booke of entrise verbo Certificat of assise This word hath vse where a man appearing by his bayliffe to an assise brought by another hath lost the day and hauing something more to pleade for himselfe as a deede of release c. which the bayliffe did not or might not pleade for him desireth a farder examination of the cause either before the same Iustices or others and obteineth leters patents vnto them to that effect The forme of these leters patents you may see in Fitzh nat br fo 181. and that done bringeth a writ to the Shyreeue to call both the party for whome the assise passed and the Iurie that was empaneled vpon the same before the said Iustices at a certaine day and place And it is called a certificate because in it there is mention made to the Shyreeue that vpon the parties complainte of the defectiue examination or doubts yet remaining vpon the assise passed the King hath directed his leters patēts to the Iustices for the beter certifiing of themselues whether all points of the said assise were duly examined yea or not See farder old nat br and Fitzh vbi supra Of this also you may reade Bracton li. 4. ca. 19. nu 4. in fine 5. 6. where he discusseth the reason of this pointe very learnedly and lastly Horn in his Myrrour of Iustices li. 3. ea finali § en eyde des memoyres c. Certificando de recognitions Stapulae is a writte directed to the Mayor of the staple c. cōmaunding him to certifie the chaunceler of a statute of the staple taken before him betweene such and such in case where
the partie himselfe detaineth it and refuseth to bring it in Regist orig fo 152. b. In like maner may be said of certificando de statuto mercatorio eodem fo 148. and de certificando in cancellarium de inquisitione de idemptitate nominis fo 195. and certificando quando recognitio c. and certificando quid actum est de breui super statutum mercatorium fo 151 certificando si loquela Warantiae fo 13. Cessor is he that ceseth or neglecteth so long to performe a dutie belonging vnto him as that by his cesse or cessing he incurreth the daunger of lawe and hath or may haue the writ cessavit brought against him Old nat br fo 136. And note that where it is saide in diuers places the tenent cesseth without any more words such phrase is so to be vnderstood as if it were said the tenent ceseth to doo that which he ought or is bound to doe by his land ortenement Cessavit is a writ that lyeth in diuers cases as appeareth by Fitzh nat br fo 208. vpon this generall grounde that he against whome it is brought hath for 2. yeares foreslowne to performe such seruice or to pay such rent as he is tied vnto by his tenure and hath not vpon his land or his tenement sufficient goods or catells to be distreined Consult more at large with Fitz. vpon this vbi supra with Fleta li. 5. ca. 34. § visa sunt and with the Termes of lawe See Cessauit de cantaria Register orig fo 238. Cessavit de feodi firma eodem fo 237. Cessavit per biennium eodem folio etiam eodem See the newe booke of entrise verbo Cessavit Cestui qui vie is in true French cestui a vie de qui i. he for whose life any land or renement is graunted Perkins graunts 97. Cestui qui vse ille cuius vsui vel ad cuius vsum is broken french and thus may be bettered Cestui al vse de qui It is an ordinarie speech among our common lawyers signifying him to whose vse any other man is infeoffed in any lands or tenements See the newe booke of entrise verbo vses and in Replevin fo 508. colum 3. verbo Trespas fo 606. fo 123. a. b. colum 3. n● 7. Chafe waxe is an officer in chauncery that fitteth the waxe for the fealing of the writs and such other instruments as are there made to be sent out This officer is borowed from the French For there calefactores cerae sunt qui regiis literis in Cancellaria ceram imprimunt Corasius Chase chacea commeth of the French chasser 1. sectari belluas apros cervos It signifieth two things in the commō lawe First as much as actus in the civil lawe that is a dryving of catell to or from any place as to chase a distresse to a fortlet Old nat br fo 45. Secondly it is vsed for a receite for deere and wilde beasts of a middle nature betweene a forest and a parke being commonly lesse then a forest and not endued with so many liberties as the courtes of attachment Swaine mote and Iustice seate and yet of a larger compas and stored with greater diuersity both of keepers and wilde beasts or game then a park And Crompton in his booke of Iurisdictions fo 148. saith that a forest cannot be in the hands of a subiect but it forthwith looseth the name and becommeth a chase and yet fo 197. he saith that a subiect may be lord and owner of a forest which though it seeme a contrariety yet be both his sayings in some sort true For the king may giue or alienate a forest to a subiect yet so as when it is once in the subiect it leeseth the true property of a Forest because that the courts called the Iustice seate the Swain mote and Attachment foorthwith doe vanish none being able to make a Lord chiefe Iustice in Eyre of the Forest but the king as M. Manwood well sheweth parte 2. of his Forest lawes cap. 3. 4. And yet it may be granted in so large a maner that there may be Attachement and Swainemote and a court equiualent to a Iustice seat as appeareth by him in the same chapter num 3. So that a chase differeth from a Forest in this because it may be in the hands of a subiect which a Forest in his proper true nature cannot and from a Parke in that that it is not inclosed and hath not onely a larger compasse and more store of game but of Keepers also and ouerseers See Forest Chalenge calumnia commeth of the French chalanger i. sibiasserere and is vsed in the commō lawe for an exception taken either against persons or things persons as in assise to the Iurors or any one or more of them or in a case of felonie by the prisoner at the barre Smith de rep Anglor lib. 2. cap. 12. Britton ca. 52. Bracton lib. 2. tract 2. cap. 22. Against things as a declaration old nat br fol. 76. Chalenge made to the Iurours is either made to the array or to the polles Chalenge to the array is when the whole number is excepted against as partially empaneled chalenge to or by the polle when some one or more are excepted against as not indifferent Termes of the law Chalenge to the Iurours is also divided into Chalenge principall and Chalenge per cause i. vppon cause or reason Chalenge principall otherwise by Stawnf pl. cor fol. 157. 158. called peremptorie is that which the lawe alloweth without cause alledged or farder examination Lamberd Eirenar lib. 4. cap. 14. as a prisoner at the barre arraigned vpon felonie may peremptorily chalenge to the number of 20. one after another of the Iurie empaneled vpon him alledging no cause but his owne dislike and they shall be still put off and new taken in their places But in case of high treason no Chalenge peremptorie is allowed an 33. H. 8. cap. 23. Fortescue saith that a prisoner in this case may chalenge 35. men c. 27. but that law was abridged by anno 25. H. 8. cap. 3. I cannot here omit to note some difference that in mine opinion I obserue betweene Chalenge principall and Chalenge peremptorie finding peremptorie to be vsed onely in maters criminall and barely without cause alledged more then the prisoners owne phantasie Stawnf pl. cor fol. 124. but principall in ciuill actions for the most part and with naming of some such cause of exception as being found true the lawe alloweth without farder scanning For example if either partie say that one of the Iurors is the sonne brother cousin or tenent to the other or espoused his daughter this is exception good and strong enough if it be true without farder examination of the parties credit And how farre this chalenge vpon kinred reacheth you haue a notable example in Plowden casu Vernon against Maners fol. 425. Also in the plee of the death of a man
pr. cap. 18. which reade See Fine Common plees communia placita is the kings Court now held in Westminster hall but in auncient time moueable as appeareth by the statute called Magna charta cap. 11. as also anno 2. Ed. 3. cap. 11. and Pupilla oculi parte 5. cap. 22. But M. Gwin in the Preface to his readings saith that vntill the time that Henry the third granted the great charter there were but two courts in all called the Kings courts whereof one was the Exchequer and the other the kings bench which was then called curia Domini regis and aula regia because it followed the court or king and that vpon the grant of that charter the court of common plees was erected and setled in one place certaine viz. at Westminster And because this court was setled at Westminster wheresoeuer the king lay thereupon M. Gwin vbi supra saith that after that all the writs ranne Quòd sit coram Iusticiariis meis apud Westmonasterium whereas before the partie was cōmanded by thē to appeare coram me vel Iusticiariis meis simply without addition of place as he well obserueth out of Glanvile and Bracton the one writing in Henry the seconds time before this court was erected the other in the later end of Henry the thirds time who erected this court All ciuill causes both reall and personall are or were in former times tryed in this court according to the strict lawe of the realme and by Fortescue cap. 50. it seemeth to haue bene the onely court for reall causes The chiefe Iudge thereof is called the Lord chiefe Iustice of the common plees accompanied with 3. or 4. assistants or associates which are created by leters patents from the king and as it were enstalled or placed vpon the bench by the Lord Chaunceler and lord chiefe Iustice of the court as appeareth by Fortescue cap. 51. who expresseth all the circumstances of this admission The rest of the officers belonging to this court are these the custos breuium three Protonotaries otherwise called Prenotaries Chirographer Filazers 14. Exigenters 4. Clerke of the warrants Clerke of the Iuries or iurata writs Clerke of the Treasurie Clerke of the kings siluer Clerke of the essoins Clerke of the outlawries Whose distinct functions looke in their places See Common bench Common day in plee of land an 13. R. 2. stat 1. cap. 17. signifieth an ordinarie day in the court as Octavis Michaelis quindena pascae c. as you may see in the statute made anno 51. H. 3. concerning generall dayes in the bench Common house of parlament is vsed for the nether house because the commōs of the realme that is the knights of the shires and burgeses possesse that house Crompton iurisd 9. Commotes seemeth to be compounded of the prepositiō con and mot i. dictio verbum and signifieth in Wales a part of a shire as a hundred anno 28. H. 8. ca. 3. It is written commoithes anno 4. H. 4. ca. 17. and is vsed for a gathering made vpon the people as it seemeth of this or that hundred by welsh minstrels Common law comunis lex hath three diuers significatiōs which see in the author of new termes of law verbo Common law Communi custodia is a writ that lyeth for that lord whose tenent houlding by knights seruice dyeth and leaueth his eldest sonne vnder age against a straunger that entreth the land and obtaineth the ward of the body It may seeme to take the name from the common custom or right in this case which is that the lord haue the wardship of his tenent vntill his full age or because it is common for the recouery both of land and tenent as appeareth by the forme thereof Old nat br fo 89. See also the Register orig fo 161. a. Communi placito non tenendo in scaccario is a writ directed to the treasurer and barons of the exchequer forbidding them to hould plee betweene two common persons in that court neither of them belonging toward the said court Register orig fo 187. b. Companion of the garter is one of the knights of that most noble and honourable order anno 24. H. 8. ca. 13. See Garter Compromis compromissum is a mutuall promise of two or more parties at difference to referre the ending of their controuersies to the arbitriment and equitie of one or more arbitratours West defineth is thus parte 2. Symbol titulo Compromise sect pri A compromise or submission arbitrium compromissum submissio is the faculty or power of pronouncing sentence betweene persons at controuersie giuen to arbitratours by the parties mutuall priuate consent without publique authority Computo is a writ so called of the effect because it compelleth a baylife chamberlaine or receiuer to yeld his accoumpt Old nat br fo 58. It is founded vpon the statut of Westm 2. ca. 2. anno 13. Ed. i. which for your beter vnderstanding you may read And it lyeth also for executours of executours anno 15. Ed. 3. statut de prouis victuall ca. 5. Thirdly against the garden in socage for waste made in the minority of the heire Marlb ca. 17. And see farder in what other cases it lyeth Register orig fo 135. old nat br vbi supra Fitzh nat br fo 116. Concealers be such as finde out concealed lands that is such lands as priuily are kept from the king by common persons hauing nothing to shew for them anno 39. Eliza. ca. 22. They be so called a concelando as mons a mouendo per antiphrasin Concord concordia is in the common law by a peculiar signification defined to be the very agreement betweene parties that intend the leuying of a fine of lands one to the other how and in what maner the land shall passe For in the forme thereof many things are to be considered West parte 2. Symbol titulo Fines and concords sect 30. whome read at large Concord is also an agreement made vpon any trespas cōmitted betweene two or more and is diuided into a concord executory and a concord executed See Plowden casu Reniger Fogassa fo 5. 6. where it appeareth by some opinion that the one bindeth not as being imperfect the other absolute and tyeth the parties and yet by some other opinion in the same case it is affirmed that agreements executory be perfect and doe noe lesse binde then agreements executed fo 8. b. Concubinage concubinatus is an exception against her that sieweth for her dower whereby it is alleadged that shee was not a wife lawefully maried to the party in whose lands shee seeketh to be endowed but his concubine Britton ca. 107. Bract. li. 4. tract 6. ca. 8. Condition conditio is a rate maner or lawe annexed to mens acts staying or suspending the same and making them vncertaine whether they shall take effect or no West parte 1. symb li. 2. Sect. 156. In a lease there may be two sorts of conditions condition collaterall or condition annexed to
the disherison of the house or church This is founded vpon the statute of Westm 2. cap. 41. And of this see the Regist orig fol. 238. and Fitzh nat br fol. 210. And note that the author of the Termes of law saith that this is not brought against the tenent or alience Contra formam feoffamenti is a writ that lyeth for the heire of a tenent infeoffed of certain lands or tenements by charter of feofment by a Lord to make certain seruices and suites to his court and is afterward distreined for more then is contained in the said charter Regist orig fol. 176. old nat br fol. 162. and the Tearmes of the lawe Contributione faciendae is a writ that lieth in case where more are bound to one thing one is put to the whole burden Fitz. nat br fo 162. bringeth these examples If tenēts in cōmon or ioynt hold a mill pro indiviso equally take the profits therof the mill falling to decay one or more of thē refusing to contribute toward the reparation therof the rest shall haue this writ to cōpell thē And if there be 3. coparceners of land that owe suite to the lords court the eldest perform the whole then may she haue this writ to compell the other two to a cōtributiō of the charge or to one of them if one only refuse The old nat br frameth this writ to a case where one onely suite is required for land that land being sold to diuers suite is required of them all or some of them by distresse as intirely as if all were still in one fol. 103. See the Regist orig fol 176. Controller contrarotulator cōmeth of the French contrerouleur i. antigraphus gracè 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in Rome was vsed for him cui id muneris iunctum erat vt observaret pecuniam quam in vsum Principis vel civitatis colligerunt exactores Budaeus in annota prio in pand titulo De officio quaestoris In England we haue diuers officers of this name as controller of the kings house pl. cor fol. 52. anno 6. H. 4. cap. 3. controller of the nauie anno 35. Elizabeth cap. 4. controller of the custome Cromptons Iurisd fol. 105. controller of Calis anno 21 Rich. 2. cap. 18. controller of the Mint anno 2. H. 6. cap. 12. controller of the hamper Contrarotulator Hamperii which is an officer in the Chauncerie attending on the Lord Chaunceler or Keeper daily in the terme time and dayes appointed for sealing His office is to take all things sealed from the clerke of the hanaper inclosed in bags of lether as is mentioned in the said clerkes office and opening the bags to note the iust number especiall effects of all thinges so receiued and to enter the same into a speciall booke with all the duties appertaining to his Maiestie and other officers for the same and so chargeth the clerke of the hanaper with the same Controller of the Pipe contrarotulator Pipae who is an officer of the Exchequer that writeth out summons twice euery yeare to the Shyreeues to levie the Fermes and debts of the Pipe and also keepeth a contrarolment of the Pipe Controller of the pell is also an officer of the Exchequer of which sort there be two viz. the two chamberlaines clerkes that do or should keepe a controlment of the pell of receipts and goings out And in one word this officer was originally one that tooke notes of any other officers accompts or receipts to the intent to discouer him if he dealt amisse and was ordained for the Princes beter securitie howsoeuer the name sithence may be in some things otherwise applyed To the proofe whereof you may take these few words out of Fleta lib. 1. cap. 18. in prin Qui cùm fuerint ad hoc vocati electi speaking of the coroners attachiari praecipiant appella qui capitula coronae in comitatu praesentēt contra quos vicecomes loci habeat contrarotulum tam de appellis inquisitionibus quàm aliis officium illud tangentibus c. Which contrarollum is nothing else but a paralel of the same quality and contents with the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or originall This also appeareth by anno 12. Ed. 3. ca. 3. And this signification it seemeth to haue also in Fraunce For there the king hath his receyuers of taylles in euery prouince and controllers qui ad maiorem fidem susceptoribus accedunt describuntque in tabulis quae colliguntur Gregorii syntagn lib. 3. cap. 6. num 6. Conuentione is a writ that lyeth for the breach of any couenant in writing Register orig fo 185. Old nat br fo 101. Fitzh calleth a writ of couenant nat br fo 145. who deuideth couenants into personall and reall making a sufficient discourse of them both as also how this writ lyeth for both Conuict conuictus is he that is founde guilty of an offence by the verdict of the iurie Stawnf pl. cor fo 186. yet Master Crompton out of Iudge Dyers commentaries 275. saith that conuiction is either when a man is outlawed or appeareth and confesseth or els is founde guilty by the inquest Crompt Iust of peace fo 9. a. Conuiction and attainder are often confounded li. 4. fo 46. a. b. See Attaint Coparceners participes be otherwise called parceners and in common law are such as haue equall portion in the inheritance of their auncestour and as Litleton in the beginning of his third booke saith parceners be either by law or by custome Parceners by law are the issue femall which noe heyre male being come in equality to the lands of their auncestours Bract. li. 2. ca. 30. Parceners by custome are those that by custome of the country chalenge equall part in such lands as in Kent by the custome called Gauel Kinde This is called adaequatio among the Feudists Hot. in verbis feuda verbo Adaequatio And among the ciuilians it is tearmed familiae erciscundae iudicium quod inter cohaeredes ideo redditur vt haereditas diuidatur quod alterum alteri dare facere oportebit praestetur Hotoman Of these two you may see Litleton at large in the first and second chapters of his third booke and Britton cap. 27. intituled De heritage diuisable The crowne of England is not subiect to coparcinory anno 25. H. 8. ca. 22. Copie copia commeth from the french copia i. le double de quelqut escripture latinè descriptio graece 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signifieth in our common language the example of an originall writing as the copie of a charter the copie of a court rolle Copia libelli deliberanda is a writ that lyeth in case where a man cannot get the copie of a libell at the hands of the Iudge ecclesiasticall Register orig f. 51. Copiehould tenura per copiam rotuli curiae is a tenure for the which the tenent hath nothing to shew but the copie of the rols made by the steward of
his lords court For the steward as he inrolleth and maketh remembrances of all other things done in the lords court so he doth also of such tenents as be admitted in the court to any parcell of land or tenement belonging to the maner and the transcript of this is called the court rowle the copie whereof the tenent taketh from him and keepeth as his onely euidence Coke li. 4. fo 25. b. This tenure is called a base tenure because it houldeth at the wil of the lord Kitchin fo 80. chap copihoulds Fitzh nat br fo 12. B. C. who there saieth that it was wont to be called tenure in villenage and that this copihould is but a new name Yet is it not simply at the will of the lord but according to the custome of the maner So that if a copiehoulder breake not the custome of the maner and thereby forfeit his tenure he seemeth not so much to stand at the lords courtesie for his right that he may be displaced hand ouer head at his pleasure These customes of maner be infinit varying in one point or other almost in euery seuerall maner First some copiehould is fineable and some certaine that which is fineable the lord rateth at what fine or incom he pleaseth when the tenent is admmitted vnto it that which is certaine is a kinde of inheritance and called in many places custumary because the tenent dying and the hould being void the next of the blood paying the custumarie fine as two shillngs for an acre or such like may not be denied his admission Secondly some copihoulders haue by custome the wood growing vpon their owne land which by law they could not haue Kitchin vbisupra Thirdly copi-holders some be such as hold by the verge in ancient demesn although they hold by copy yet are they in accompt a kind of Free-holders For if such a one commit felonie the king hath annum diem vastum as in case of Freehold Some other hold by common tenure called meere copy hold and they committing felonie their land escheateth to the Lord of the maner foorthwith Kitchin fol. 81. chap. Tenents per verge in auncient demesn What auncient demesn is see in the right place See Tenent by copie of court rolle This is the land that in the Saxons time was called Folk land Lamberd explicat of Saxon words verbo Terra ex scripto West parte prim symbol lib. 2. Sect. 646. defineth a copi-holder thus Tenent by copie of court rolle is he which is admitted tenent of any lands or tenements within a maner that time out of the memory of man by vse and custome of the said maner haue bene dimisable and dimised to such as will take the same in fee in fee-taile for life yeares or at will according to the custome of the said maner by copie of courtrolle of the same maner where you may read more of these things Coraage coraagium is a kinde of imposition extraordinarie growing vpon some vnusuall occasion and it seemeth to be of certaine measures of corne For corus tritici is a certaine measure of corne Bracton libro 2. ca. 16. nu 6. who in the same chapter nu 8. hath of this mater these words Sunt etiam quaedam communes praestationes quae seruitia non dicuntur nec de consuetudine veniunt nisi cùm necessitas interuenerit vel cùm rex venerit sicut sunt hidagia coraagia caruagia alia plura de necessitate ex consensu communitotius regni introducta quae ad dominum feudi non pertinent de quibus nullus tenetur tenentē suū acquietare nisi se adhoc specialiter obligauerit in charta sua c. Cordiner commeth of the French cordoüannier i. sutor calcearius a shoomaker and is so vsed in diuers statutes as anno 3. H. 8. ca. 10 anno 5. eiusdem ca. 7. and others Cornage cornagium commeth of the French cor i. cornu and in our common law signifieth a kinde of grand sergeantie the seruice of which tenure is to blow a horne when any invasion of the northern enemie is perceiued And by this many men hold their land northward about the wall commonly called the Picts walle Camd. Britan p. 609. hence commeth the word cornuare to blow a horn pupil oculi parte 5. ca. 22. in charta de Foresta This seruice seemeth to haue proceeded from the Romanes For I finde cornicularios mentioned in the ciuile lawe viz. li. 1. Cod. de officio diuerso Iud. 48. lege 3. lib. 12. titulo de apparitoribus praefectorum praetorio 53. lege 1. 3. where Lucas de Penna defineth them eos qui cornu faciunt excubias militares And Brissonius libro 3. de verbo significat saith thus of them hi militum quoddam genus fuere qui corniculo merebant vnde nomen habent Where it appeareth by him out of Suetonius Plinie and Livie that the horne was an honour reward giuen for seruice in war Corner tile See Gutter tile Corodye corodium commeth of the Latine verb corrodo and signifieth in our common lawe a summe of mony or allowance of meate and drinke due to the king from an abbey or other house of religion whereof he is the founder toward the reasonable sustenāce of such a one of his seruants being put to his pension as he thinketh good to bestowe it on And the difference betweene a corodie and a pension seemeth to be that a corodie is allowed toward the maintenance of any the kings seruants that liueth in the abbey a pension is giuen to one of the kings chaplaines for his better maintenance in the kings seruice vntill he may be prouided of a benefice Of both these read Fitzh nat br fo 230. 231. 233. who there setteth downe all the corodies and pensions certaine that any abbey when they stoode was bound to performe vnto the king There is mention also of a corodie in Stawnf praerogatiue fo 44. And this seemeth to be awncient lawe For in Westm 2. ca. 25. it is ordeined that an assise shall lie for a corodie It is also apparent by the statute anno 34. 35. H. 8. ca. 16. that corodies belonged some time to Bishops from monasteries by the new termes of lawe that a corodie may be due to a common person by graunt from one to another or of common right to him that is founder of a religious house not holden in frank almoyn For that tenure was a discharge of all corodies in it selfe By which booke it appeareth also that a corodie is either certaine or vncertaine and that it may be for life yeares in taile or in fee. Corodio habendo is a writ whereby to exact a corodie of any abbey or religious house See Corodie See the Register originall fo 264. Coronatore eligendo is a writte which after the death or discharge of any coroner is directed to the shyreeue out of the Chācery to call togither the free
nat br fol. 138. To this is answerable in some sort actio depositi in the ciuile lawe And hee taketh his action of ditinew that intendeth to recouer the thing deliuered and not the dammages sustained by the detinew Kitchin fol. 176. See the new booke of Entries verbo Detinew Devastaverunt bona testatoris is a writ lying against executors for paying Legacies and debts without specialties to the preiudice of the creditours that haue specialties before the debt vpon the said specialties be due For in this case the executors are as lyable to action as if they had wasted the goods of the testatourriotously or without cause New termes of lawe Devest devestire is contrarie to Invest For as Investire signifieth possessionem tradere So devestire is possessionem auferr● feud libro primo cap. 7. Devise aliâs divise commeth of the French diviser i. disper●iri discernere separare distinguere as diviser par ci par la distribuere This word is properly attributed in our common lawe to him that bequeathes his goods by his last will or testament in writing and the reason is because those that now appertain onely to the Devisour by this act are distributed into many parts Wherefore I thinke it better written divise thē deuise howbeit it were not absurd to deriue this word from the French deuiser i. sermocinari fabulari consilium conferre For in this sence it agreeth in some sort with the nature of the act of the testator and with the Etymologie of a testament set downe by Iustinian who saith that testamentum is quaesi mentis testatio titulo de Testa ordinan in Institut and testatio mentis cannot be so well as by talke and conference with our wise and skilfull friends Devoires of Cales anno 2. R. 2. Stat. 1. cap. 3. anno 5. eiusdem stat 2. cap. 2. were the customes due to the king for merchandize brought to or caried out from Caleis when our Staple was there The word is French signifying as much as officium dutie Devorce aliâs divorce divortium is with our common Lawyers accompted that separation betweene two de facto maried together which is à vinculo matrimonii non solùm à mensa thoro And therefore the woman so divorced receiueth al againe that shee brought with her This is not but onely vpon a nullitie of the mariage through some essentiall impediment as consanguinitie or affinity within the degrees forbidden precontract impotencie or such like See the new Tearmes of lawe Diem clausit extremum is a writ that lyeth for the heyre of him that holdeth land of the Crowne either by Knights seruice or in soccage and dyeth be he vnder or at full age directed to the escheatour of the county for inquirie to bee made by him of what estate the partie deceased was seised and who is next heyre vnto him and of what valew the land is The forme thereof and other circumstances you may learne in Fitzh nat br fol. 251. Dyer was a learned Lawyer and Lord chiefe Iustice of the Common plees in the dayes of Queene Elizabeth who writ a booke of great accompt called his Commentaries or Reports Dies datus is a respight giuen to the tenent or defendant before the court Brooke titulo Continuance Dicker of lether is a quantitie consisting of tenne hides The name may seeme to come from the Greeke decas which is also a Latine word signifying tenne in number Dignitie ecclesiasticall dignitas ecclesiastica is mentioned in the statute anno 26. H. 8. cap. 3. and is by the Canonists defined to be administratio cum iurisdictione potestate aliqua coniuncta Glos in cap. 1. de consuet iu sexto whereof you may reade diuers examples in Duarenus de sacris eccles minist benefic lib. 2. cap. 6. Dioces dioecesis is a Greeke word compounded of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signifieth with vs the circuit of euery Bishops iurisdiction For this realme hath two sorts of diuisions one into Shyres or Counties in respect of temporall policie another into Diocesses in respect of iurisdictiō ecclesiasticall Dieta rationabilis is in Bracton vsed for a reasonable daies iourney lib. 3. parte 2. chap. 16. It hath in the ciuile law diuers other significations not needfull heere to be set downe v. vocab vtirusque iuris Dimy haque See Haque Disalt signifieth as much as to disable Litleton in his chapter of Discontinance Disceite See deceite and deceptione See the new booke of Entry verbo Disceit Discent Discensus in the french Descente signifieth in the common law an order or means whereby lands or tenements are deriued vnto any man from his auncestours as to make his discent from his Auncestours Old nat br fol. 101. is to shew how and by what degrees the land in question cam to him from his auncestours as first from his great grandfather to his grandfather from his grandfather to his father and so to him Or in such other like sort This discent is either lineall or collaterall Lineall discent is conueied downeward in a right line from the Grandfather to the father and from the father to the sonne and from the sonne to the Nephew c. Collaterall discent is springing out of the side of the whole blood as Grandfathers brother fathers brother c. See the new Tearmes of law Disclamer Disclamium is a plee containing an expresse deniall or refusall as if the tenent siew a replevin vpon a distresse taken by the lord and the lord avow the taking of the distresse saying that he houldeth of him as of his Lord and that he distreined for rent not paid or seruice not perfourmed then the tenent denying himselfe to hould of such Lord is said to disclaime and the Lord prouing the tenent to hould of him the tenant leeseth his land Tearmes of law Of this see Skene de verb signif verbo Disclamation Also if a man deny himselfe to be of the blood or kindred of another in his plee he is said to disclaime his blood Eitzh nat br fol 197. G. See Brooke titulo Disclaimer If a man arraigned of felonie do disclaime goods being cleared he leeseth them Stawnf pl. cor fol. 186. See the new booke of Entries verbo Disclamer Discontinuance Discontinuatio commeth of the french Discontinuer i. cessare intermittere and signifieth in the common law nothing els but an interruption or breaking of as discontinuance of possession or discontinuance of proces And the large discourse that Litleton hath about this Discontinuance is rather to shew cases wherein it is or wherein it is not then to define the thing The effect of discontinuance of possession is this that a man may not enter vpon his owne land or tenement alienated whatsoeuer his right be vnto it of his owne selfe or by his owne authority but must bring his writ and seeke to recouer possession by law Examples you may haue store in his Terms of law verbo Discontinuance And in Litleton
See Fitzh nat br fol. 198. L. Exigendarie of the common banke Exigendarius de banco comuni is otherwise called Exigenter anno 10. H. 6. cap. 4. and is an officer belonging to that court for the which see Exigenter Exigent Exigenda is a writ that lyeth where the defendant in an action personall cannot be found nor any thing within the county whereby to be attached or distrained and is directed to the Shyreeue to proclaime and call fiue county daies one after another charging him to appeare vnder the paine of outlawrie Termes of the law This writ lyeth also in an indictment of felony where the party indicted cannot be found Smith de Rep. Angl. li. 2. ca. 19. It seemeth to be called an Exigent because it exacteth the party that is requireth his expearance or forth-comming to answer the lawe for if he come not at the last daies proclamation he is saide to be quinquies exactus and then is outlawed Crompton Iurisd fol. 188. and this M. Manwood also setteth downe for the law of the forest parte i. of his forest lawes pag. 71. See the new booke of Entries verbo Exigent Exigenter Exigendarius anno 18. H. 6. ca. 9. is an officer of the court of common plees of whom there be foure in number They make all Exigents and proclamations in all actions where proces of outlawrie doth lie and writs of supersedeas as well as the protonotaries vpon such exigents as were made in their offices Ex mero motu are words formally vsed in any charter of the Prince whereby he signifieth that he doth that which is cōtained in the charter of his owne will and motion without petition or suggestion made by any other And the effect of these words are to barre al exceptions that might be taken vnto the instrument wherein they be contained by alledging that the Prince in passing that charter was abused by any false suggestion Kitchin fol. 151. Exoneratione sectae is a writ that lyeth for the kings ward to be disburdened of all suite c. to the Countie Hundred Leet or court Baron during the time of his wardship Fitz. nat br fol. 158. Exparte latis is a writ that lyeth for a Bayliffe or Receiuer that hauing Auditours assigned to heare his accompt cannot obtaine of them reasonable allowance but is cast into prison by them Regist fol. 137. Fitzh nat br fol. 129. The maner in this case is to take this writ out of the Chauncerie directed to the Shyreeue to take foure mainperuours to bring his bodie before the Barons of the Echequer at a day certaine to warn the Lord to appeare at that time Newe Tearmes of the lawe verb. Accompt Expectant is vsed in the common lawe with this word fee and thus vsed it is opposite to Fee-simple For example lands are giuen to a man and his wife in franke mariage to haue and to hold to them and their heires In this case they haue Fee simple But if it be giuen to them and the heires of their body c. they haue tayle and see expectant Kitchin fol. 153. Mathaeus de afflictis vseth the Adiectiue expectativa substantiuely in the same signification Descis 292. num 2. pag. 412. Explees See Espleese Expeditate expeditare is a word vsuall in the Forest signifiing to cut out the balles of the great dogges feet for the preseruation of the Kings game Euery one that keepeth any great dogges not expeditated forfeiteth to the king 3. shillings 4. pence Crompt iurisd fol. 152. M. Manwood vseth the same word parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 205. and pag. 212. he setteth downe the manner of expeditating dogges heretofore viz. Quòd tres ortelli abscindantur sine pellota de pede anteriori i. that the three clawes of the sorefoot on the right side shall be cut off by the skinne whereunto he also addeth out of the same ordinance called the Assise of the Forest that the same maner of expeditating of dogges shall be still vsed and kept and none other Quaere whence it groweth that M. Crompton and hee differ the one saying that the ball of the foote it cut out the other that the three foreclawes are pared off by the skinne Expensis militum levandis is a writ directed to the shyrecue for levying the allowance for Knights of the Parlament Register original fol. 191. b. Expensis militum non levandis ab hominibus de antiquo dominico nec à natiuis is a writ whereby to prohibite the Shyreeue from levying any allowance for the Knights of the Shire vpon those that hold in auncient demesn c. Regist orig fol. 261. b. Extend extendere commeth of the French estendre i. dilatare dispandere distendere and signifieth in our common lawe to valew the lands or tenements of one bound by statute c. that hath forfeited his bond to such an indifferent rate as by the yearely rent the obligour may in time be paide his debt The course and circumstances of this see in Fitzh nat br fol. 131. Brief d'execution sur statut Merchant Extendi facias is a writ ordinarily called a writ of extent whereby the valew of lands c. is commaunded to be made and leavied in divers cases which see in the table of the Register originall Extent extenta hath two significations sometime signifiing a writ or commission to the shyreeue for the valuing of lands or tenements Register iudiciall in the Table of the booke sometime the act of the Shyreeue or other Commissioner vpon this writ Brooke titulo Extent fol. 313. Extinguishment in our common law signifieth an effect of consolidation For example if a man haue due vnto him a yearely rent out of any lands and afterward purchase the same lands now both the property and rent are consolidated or vnited in one possessour and therefore the rent is said to be extinguished In like maner it is where a man hath a lease for yeares and afterwards buyeth the property this is a consolidation of the property and the fruites and is an extinguishment of the lease See the terms of lawe Extirpatione is a writ Iudiciall that lyeth against him who after a verdict found against him for land c. doth maliciously ouerthrow any house vpon it c. and it is two-fold one ante iudicium the other post iudicium Register iudiciall fol. 13. 56. 58. Extortion Extortio signifieth in our common law an vnlawfull or violent wringing of mony or mony worth from any man For example if any officer by terrifiing any the kings subiects in his office take more then his ordinary duties he committeth and is inditeable of extortion To this by M. Wests iudgment may be referred the exaction of vnlawfull vsurie winning by vnlawfull games and in one word all taking of more then is due by colour or pretence of right as excessiue tolle in milners excessiue prices of ale bread victuals wares c. West parte 2. Simbol titulo Indictments sect 65. M
both in his commentaries and disputations And no man may graunt that our king or Crowne oweth fealty to any superior but God onely Yet it may be said that land c. with vs is termed fee in two respects one as it belongeth to vs and our heires for ever and so may the Crowne land be called Fee the other as it holdeth of another which is and must be farre from our Crowne Britton ca. 32. defineth fee to this effect Fee is a right consisting in the person of the true heire or of some other that by iust title hath purchased it Fleta saith that Feudum est quod quis tenet ex quacunque causa sibi haeredibus suis siue sit tenementum siue reditus qui non proveniunt ex camera alio modo dicitur feudum sicut eius quifeoffat quod quis tenet ab alio sicut dicitur talis tenet de tali tot feuda per servitium militare li. 5. ca. 5. § Feudum autem And all that write de feudis doe hold that Feudatarius hath not an entire propertie in his fee Nay it is held by right learned men that these fees were at the first invention or creation of them either all or some of them temporarie and not perpetuall and hereditarie Iacobutius de Franchis in praeludio fend ca. 2. nu 133. The diuisions of fee in diuers respects are many and those though little knowne to vs in England yet better worthie to known then we commonly thinke But for our present purpose it is sufficient to diuide Fee into two sorts Fee absolute otherwise called simple and Fee conditionall otherwise termed fee tayle Fee simple Feudum simplex is that whereof we are seised in these generall words to vs and our heires for ever Fee tayle Feudum talliatum is that whereof we are seized to vs and our heires with limitation that is the heires of our body c. And fee taile is either generall or speciall Generall is where land is giuen to a man and the heires of his body The reason whereof is giuen by Litleton ca. 2. li. 1. because a man seised of land by such a gift if he marie one or more wiues and haue no issue by them and at the length marie another by whome he hath issue this issue shall inherit the land Fee taile speciall is that where a man and his wife be seised of lands to them and the heires of their two bodies The reason is likewise giuen by Litleton in the same place because in this case the wife dying without issue and he marying another by whome he hath issue this issue cannot inherit the land being specially giuen to such heires c. this Fee taile hath the originall from the statute of Westm 2. cap. 1. which was made anno 13. Ed. 1. yet see Bracton li. 2. ca. 5. nu 3. hiis verbis Item quaedam absoluta larga quaedam stricta coarctata sicut certis haeredibus to whome adde Plowden casu Willion fo 235. a. b. seqq for before that statute all land giuen to a man and his heires either generall or speciall was accompted in the nature of fee and therefore held to be so firmely in him to whome it was giuen that any limitation notwithstanding he might alienate and fell it at his pleasure much like that which the Civilians call Nudum praeceptum binding rather by way of counsell and aduice then compulsion or restrainte And this thing seeming vnreasonable to the wisedome of our realme because so a man meaning well to this or that posterity of himselfe or his freinds might be forthwith deceiued of his intention the said statute was made for redresse of this inconvenience wereby it is ordained that if a man giue lands in fee limiting the heires to whome it shall descend with a reversion to himselfe or his heires for default c. that the forme and true meaning of his gift shal be obserued Wherefore in what conscience our lawyers haue invented meanes so easily to cut off this forme of gift it is to be considered He that hath fee then holdeth of another by some dutie or other which is called seruice and of this seruice and the diuersitie thereof See Chivalrie and Seruice He that will learne from what fountaine these feuds or fees did first spring let him read Antonius Contius his first chapter de methodo feudorum where he shal receiue great light for his guide into so obscure a dungeon See Liege This word Fee is sometime vsed with vs for the compas or circuit of a Lordship or maner Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. in these words In eadem villa de eodem feodo Thirdly it is vsed for a perpetuall right incorporeall as to haue the keeping of prisons in fee. old nat br fol. 41. Foster in fee eod fol 6. Rent granted in fee. eod fo 8 Shyreeue in fee. ann 28. Ed pri stat 3. ca. 8. Lastly fee signifieth a reward or ordinarie dutie that a man hath giuen him for the execution of his office or the performance of his industrie in his art or science as the lawyer or the phisitian is said to haue his fee when he hath the consideration of his paines taken the one with his client the other with his patient Fee expectant is by the feudists termed feudum expectativum or expectatiua substantiuely vsed Mathaeus de Afflictis decis 292. nu 2. pag. 417. See expectant Fee fcrm feudi firma is a compound of Fee whereof see Fee and ferm i. coloma villa praedium rusticum of Ferme commeth Fermier du prince i. manceps redemptor publicorum vectigalium Publicanus Feeferm signifieth in our common lawe land held of another in fee that is in perpetuitie to himselfe and his heires for so much yearely rent as it is reasonably worth more or lesse so it be the fourth part of the worth old tenurcs See exposition of the statute of Glocester anno 6. Ed. pri without homage fealtie or other seruices other then be especially comprised in the feofment but by Fitzh it seemeth that the third part of the value may be appointed for the rent or the finding of a chaplaine to sing diuine seruice c. nat br fol. 210. C. And the nature of it is this that if the rent be behind and vnpaid for the space of two yeares then the feoffour or his heires haue action to recouer the lands as their demesnes Britton ca. 66. nu 4. but obserue out of West symbol parte 1. lib. 2. sect 463. that the feofment may containe seruices and suite of court as well as rent and the author of the new terms of law saith that Feeferm oweth fealtie though not expressed in the feofment for that fealtie belongeth to all kind of tenures This is neere the nature of that which among the Civilians is called ager vectigalis qui in perpetuum licetur i. hac lege vt quam diu pro eo
vectigal pendatur tam diuneque ipsis qui conduxerunt neque iis qui in locum eorum successerunt auferri eum liceat l. 1. Π. siager vectigalis c. Feede Feida alias Faida signifieth in the German toung Guerram i. capitales inimicitias vel bellum Hotoman disputat de feudis ca. 2. B. Foemina dicitur faidam non facere gloss in § vlt. De lege Conradi lib. 2. de feudis by reason that women by the law are not subiect to warfare to battell or proclamatiō made for that cause Skene de verbo signif verbo Assidatio M. Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words writeth it Feeth and saith likewise that it signifieth capitales inimicitias and also that Feud vsed now in Scotland and the north parts of England is the same and that is a combination of kindred to reuenge the death of any of their blood against the killer and all his race Felonie Felonia seemeth to come of the french Felonnie ā impetuositas atrocitas immisericordia Felonia saith Hotomande verbis feudalibus non praescisè contumaciam vasalli in dominum huiusue in vasallum perfidiam significat verum quoduis capitale facinus And againe Felonia Gothis Longobardis dicitur quod Germanis hodie Schelmarey latinis Scelus S. Ed. Cooke saith thus Ideo dicta est felonia qua fieri debet felleo animo li. 4. fo 124. b. Hostiensis in sua summa titulo De feudis and others speak of this to this effect Felonia aliàs Fallonia est culpa vel iniuria propter quam vasallus amittit feudum Sedhec respicit dominum feudi Est alia fallonia quae non respicit dominum sc quando vasallus interficit fratrem vel filium suum vel filium fratris vel aliud crimen commisit quod parricidii appellatione continetur plures aliae falloniae tam respicientes dominum quàm alios propter quas feudum amittitur ibi not antur We account any offence felonie that is in degree next vnto petit treason and compriseth diuers particulars vnder it as murder theft killing of a mans selfe Sodometrie rape wilfull burning of houses and diuers such like which are to be gathered especially out of statutes whereby many offences are dayly made felonie that before were not Felonie is discerned from lightter offences by this that the punishment thereof is death How be it this is not perpetuall For petit larcenie which is the stealing of any thing vnder the valew of twelue pence is felony as appeareth by Broke titulo Coron num 2. his reason is because the indictment against such a one must runne with these words felonicè cepit and yet is this not punished by death though it be losse of goods Any other exception I know not but that a man may call that felony which is vnder petit treason and punished by death And of this there be two sorts one lighter that for the first time may be releeued by cleargie another that may not And these you must also learne to know by the statutes for Cleargie is allowed where it is not expressely taken away Of these maters reade Stawnfords first booke of his pl. cor from the end of the second Chapter to the 39. and the statutes whereby many offences be made felonie since he writ that learned booke See also Lamberds Iustice of peace lib. 2. cap. 7. in a Table drawne for the purpose As also lib. 4. cap. 4. pag. 404. and Crompton in his iustice of peace fol. 32. c. Felonie is also punished by losse of lands not entayled and goods or chatels as well real as personall and yet the statutes make difference in some cases touching lands as appeareth by the statute anno 37 H. 8. cap. 6. Felonie ordinarily worketh corruption of bloud though not where a statute ordaineth an offence to be felonie and yet withall saith that it shall not worke corruption of bloud As anno 39. Eliz. cap. 17. How many wayes felonie is comitted see Cromptons Iustice of peace pag. 32. c. Feyre See Fayre Felo de se is he that committeth felonie by murthering himselfe See Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 28. and Lamberds Eirenarcha lib. 2. cap. 7. pag. 243. Fencemoneth is a moneth wherein it is vnlawful to hunt in the Forest because in that moneth the female Deere do faune and this moneth beginneth 15. dayes before Midsomer and endeth 15. dayes after So that to this moneth there be 31. daies See Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 86. but more at large parte secunda cap. 13 per totum It is also called the defence moneth that is the forbidden moneth and the word defence is vsed in like sort West 2. cap. 47. anno 13. Ed. 1. in these words All waters where Salmons be taken shall be in defence for taking of Salmons from the Natiuitie c. Fennycricke or rather Fenegreeke Foenum Graecum is a medicinall plant or herbe so called because it groweth like hey and commeth out of Greece Of this you may reade more in Gerrards herball lib. 2. cap. 483. The seede therof is reckoned among drugs that are to be garbled an 1. Iacob cap. 19. Feofment feoffamentum by the opinion of Sir Thomas Smith de Repub. Anglor lib. 3. cap. 8. and M. West part prim symbol lib. 2. sect 280. is descended from the Gottish word feudum which you haue interpreted in fee and signifieth donationem feudi But as M. West also addeth it signifieth in our common lawe any gift or graunt of any honors castels maners mesuages lands or other corporall and immoueable things of like nature vnto another in see simple that is to him and his heires for euer by the deliuerie of seisin and possession of the thing giuen whether the gift be made by word or writing And when it is in writing it is called a deed of feofment and in euery feofment the giuer is called the Feaffour feoffator and he that receiueth by vertue thereof the Feoffee feoffatus and Litleton saith that the proper difference betweene a feoffour and a donour is that the feoffour giueth in fee-simple the donour in fee-taile lib. 1. cap. 6. Feodarie aliâs Feudarie aliâs feudatarie feudatarius is an officer authorized and made by the master of the Court of wards and liueries by leters patents vnder the seale of that office His function is to be present with the Escheater at the finding of any office and to giue euidence for the king as well cōcerning the valew as the tenure and also to suruey the land of the ward after the office found and to rate it He is also to assigne the kings widowes their dowers and to receiue all the rents of the wards lands with in his circuit and to answer them to the Receiuer of the court of wardes and liueries This officer is mentioned anno 32. H. 8. cap. 46. Ferdfare significat quietantiam eundi in exercitum Fleta libr. pri cap. 47. Ferdwit significat
falsi Falsi crimen propriè dicitur quod vtilitatis priuatae causa factum est Connanus li. 5. ca. 7. nu 4. Ad esse falsitatis tria requiruntur mutatio veritatis dolus quod alteri sit nocivum Quorum si alterum desit falsitas non est punibilis Hostiensis Azo in suis summis Forister See Forester Formdon Breve formatum donationis is a writ that lyeth for him that hath right to any lands or tenements by vertue of any entayle growing from the statute of Westm 2. cap. 1. It lyeth in three sorts and accordingly is called forma donationis or formdon in the descender formdon in the reverter or formdon in the remainder Formdon in the descender lyeth for the recouery of lands c. giuen to one and the heyres of his bodie or to a man and his wife and the heyres of their two bodies or to a man and his wife being cosin to the donour in franke mariage and afterward alienated by the Donee For after his decease his heyre shall haue this writ against the tenent or alience Fitz. nat br fol. 211. He maketh three sorts of this formdon in the descender The first is in the maner now expressed the second is for the heire of a coparcener that alienateth and dieth fol. 214 The third is called by him In simul tenuit fol. 216. which lyeth for a coparcener or heire in Gauelkind before partition against him to whome the other coparcener or heire hath alienated and is dead Formdon in the reuerter lyeth for the donour or his heires where land entayled to certaine and their issue with condition for want of such issue to reuert to the donour and his heires against him to whom the Donee alienateth after the issue extinct to which it was entayled Fitzh nat br fol. 219. Formdon in the remainder lyeth where a man giueth landes in tayle the remainder to another in tayle and afterward the former tenent in tayle dieth without issue of his bodie and a stranger abateth then he in the remainder shall haue this writ Fitz. nat br fol. 217. See the Register original fol. 238. 242. 243. of this see the new booke of Entries verb. Formdon Forsechoke seemeth to signifie originally as much as forsaken in our moderne language or derelictum with the Romaines It is especially vsed in one of our statutes for land or tenements seised by the Lord for want of seruices due from the tenent and so quietly held and possessed beyond the yeare and day As if we should say that the tenent which seeing his land or tenements taken into the Lords hand and possessed so long taketh not the course appointed by lawe to recouerthem doth in due presumption of lawe disavow or forsake whatsoeuer right he hath vnto them See the statute anno 10. Ed. 1. cap. vnico Forstall is to be quit of amerciaments and catels arrested within your land and the amerciaments thereof comming New termes of lawe Forstalling forstallatio is partly french for Estaller is in that tongue as much as merces exponere expedire explicare or to shew wares in a market or faire It signifieth in our common law the buying or bargaining for any victuals or wares comming to be sould toward any faire or market or from beyond the seas toward any city port hauen creeke or roade of this realme and before the same be there anno 51. H. 3. stat 6. West parte 2. Simbol titulo indictments sect 64. Forstaller in Cromptons Iurisdiction fol. 153. is vsed for stopping of a deere broken out of the forest from returning home againe or laying betweene him and the forest in the way that he is to returne See Regratours and Engrossers See Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 69. a. The author of the new terms of law defineth it thus Forstalling Forstallamentum is the buying of corne cattell or other merchandies by the way as it commeth toward the faire or market to be sould to the intent to sell the same againe at a more high and deere price Fleta saith thus of it significat obtrusionem vtae vel impedimentum transitus fugae aueriorum li. 1. cap. 47. Fortescue was a learned Lawyer Lord Chauncelor in Henry the 6. dayes who writ a booke in the commendation of our common lawes Fortlet forteletum commeth nete the french fortelet i. valenticulus forticulus and signifieth in our common lawe a place of some strength old nat br fol. 45. This in other countries is written fortalitium and signifieth castrum Scraderus select practabil quest § 12. nu 7. 8. Fother is a weight of twenty hundred which is a waine or cartloade Speight in his Annot. vpon Chawcer Fourche Assorciare seemeth to come of the french fourcher i. titubare liuguà and signifieth in our common lawe a putting off prolonging or delay of an action And it appeasieth no vnpleasant metaphor for as by stammering we draw out our speech not deliuering that we haue to say in ordinary time so by sourching we prolong a suite that might be ended in a shorter space To sourch by essoine Westm 1. cap. 24. anno 3. Ed. prim where you haue words to this effect Coparceners Ioint-tenants and Tenents in common may not sourch by essoine to essoine seuerally but haue only one essoine as one sole tenent may haue And anno 6. Ed. 1. ca. 10. you haue it vsed in like sort Foutgeld is a word compounded of these two German words fous i. pes and gyldan i. solvere and it signifieth an amercement for not cutting out the balles of great dogges feet in the forest See Expeditate And to be quit of footegeld is a priuiledge to keepe dogges within the forest vnlawed without punishment or controlment Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 197. Manwood parte pri of his forest lawes pag. 86. Fowles of warren See Warren Founder is he that melteth mettall and maketh any thing of it by casting it into a mold c. anno 17. Rich. 2. cap. 1. deriued of the verbe fundere to powre Franchise libertas franchesia commeth of the french franchise so signifiing it is taken with vs for a priuiledge or an exemption from ordinarie iurisdiction and sometime an immunitie from tribute It is either personall or reall Cromp. Iurisd fol. 141. that is belonging to a personimmediatly or else by meanes of this or that place or court of immunitie whereof he is either chiefe or a member In what particular things franchises commonly consist See Britton cap. 19. Franchise royall anno 15. R. 2. cap. 4. anno 2. H. 5. cap. 7. in fine seemeth to bee that where the kings writs runne not as Chester and Durham they are called Seignories royall an 28. H. 6. cap. 4. The authour of the new Termes of lawe saith that franches royall is where the King graunteth to one and his heires that they shall be quit of tolle or such like See franchise in the new booke of Entries See Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. See Sac.
cap. 11. is the sorting or culling out the good from the bad As garbling of spice is nothing but to purifie it from the drosse and dust that is mixed with it It may seeme to proceed from the Italian garbo that is finenesse neatnesse Gard Custodia commeth of the French garde being all of one signification It signifieth in our common lawe a custodie or care of defence but hath diuers applications sometimes to those that attend vpon the safetie of the Prince called Yeomen of the Guard somtime to such as haue the education of children vnder age or of an Idiot sometime to a writte touching wardshippe Which writs are of three sorts one called a right of guard or ward in French droit de gard Fitzh nat br fol. 139. the second is eiectment de gard Idem fol. 139. L. the third is rauishment de gard Idem fol. 140. F. G. See Gardem see Ward Gardein Custos commeth of the French gardien and yet the German Warden is neare vnto it It signifieth generally him that hath the charge or custodie of any person or thing but most notoriously him that hath the education or protection of such people as are not of sufficient discretion to guide themselues and their owne affaires as children and Idiots being indeede as largely extended as both Tutor and Curator among the Civilians For whereas Tutor is he that hath the gouernment of a youth vntill he come to 14. yeares of age and Curator he that hath the disposition and ordering of his substance afterward vntil he attaine to 25. yeares or that hath the charge of a franticke person during his lunacie the common Lawyers vse but onely Gardien or Gardian for both these And for the better vnderstanding of our English lawe in this thing you must know that as tutor is either testamentarius or à Praetore datus ex lege Atilia or lastly legitimus so we haue three sortes of Gardeines in England one ordained by the father in his last will another appointed by the Iudge afterward the third cast vpon the Minor by the lawe and custome of the land Touching the first a man hauing goods and chatels neuer so many may appoint a gardein to the bodie or person of his child by his last will and testament vntill he come to the age of fourteene yeares and so the disposing or ordering of his substance vntill what time he thinketh meet and that is most commonly to the age of 21. yeares The same may he do if he haue lands to neuer so great a valew so they hold not in capite of the king nor of any other Lord by knights seruice And in the former case if the father appoint no Gardein to his child the Ordinarie may appoint one to order his moueables and chatels vntill the age of 14. yeares at which time he may chuse his guardian accordingly as by the the ciuill lawe he may his Curator For we hold all one rule with the Civilians in this case and that is Invito curator non datur And for his lands if he hold any by copie of court rolle commonly the Lord of the fee appointeth him a guardian vntill he come to the age of 14. yeres and that is one next of kind to the Minor of that side that can hope for least profitby his death If he hold by charter in socage then the next of kind on that side by which the land commeth not is the guardian and hereupon called guardian in socage And that which is said here of socage seemeth to be true likewise in petit sergeantie anno vicesimo octauo Edvardi primi statuto primo And the reason of this Fortescue giueth in his booke intituled A commendation of the politique lawes of England cap. 44. viz. because there might be suspition if the next kinsman on that side by which the land descendeth should haue the custody and education of the child that for desire of his land he might be entised to worke him some mischiefe Lastly if a man dye seised of lands holding by knights seruice leauing his heire in minoritie that is vnder 21. yeares the Lord of the fee hath by law the custodie both of the heire and his land vntill he come to age See the statute anno 28. Ed. prim statut prim And the reason of this Fortescue likewise giueth for that hee to whom by his tenure he oweth knights seruice when he can performe it is likeliest to traine him vp in martiall and ingenious discipline vntill he be of abilitie But Polidore Virgil in his Chronicle lib. 16. saith that this was Movum vectigalis genus excogitatum to helpe Henry the third being oppressed much with pouertie by reason he receiued the kingdome much wasted by the wars of his aun cestours and therefore needing extraordinarie helpe to vphold his estate yet the 33. chapter of the Grand Custumary maketh mention of this to haue bene vsed by the Normans and I thinke this the truer opinion Here it is to be obserued whether land in knights seruice hold in capite or of another Lord or some of the King and some of another If of the king whether of the king alone or not all is one For the king in this case is guardian to the heires both person and land by his prerogatiue Stawnf praerog cap. 1. If he hould of a common Lord it is either of one alone or more if of one onely then is he guardian of both person and lands if of more then the Lord of whome he houldeth by the elder tenure is guardian of the person and euery one of the rest hath the custodie of the land holden of him selfe If the prioritie of the tenure cannot be discerned then is he guardian of the person that first happeth him Termes of the lawe Stawnf vbi supra whom you may reade more at large which Author fol. 19. maketh mention of gardeyn in feit and Gardeyn in droit that is in deed and in lawe I take the first to be him that hath purchased or otherwise obtained the ward of the Lord of whom the land holdeth the second him that hath the right by his inheritance and seignorie old nat br fol. 94 Then is there gardein per cause de gard which is he that hath the wardship of a Minor because he is guardian of his Lord being likewise in minoritie Stawnf vbi supra fol. 15. Of this you may reade Skene de verb. signif verbo Varda by whom you may learn great affinitie and yet some difference betweene the lawe of Scotland and ours in this point Guardia is a word vsed among the Feudists for the Latine custodia and guardianus seu guardio dicitur ille cui custodia commissa est lib. Feudo 1. titulo 2. tit 11. Gardeyn of the spiritualties Custos spiritualium vel spiritualitatis is he to whom the spirituall iurisdiction of any Diocesse is committed during the vacancy of the see anno 25. H. 8. cap. 21. And I take that the
is a breach of peace For Grith is a word of the old Angles signifiing peace Roger Hovedin parte poster suorum annal fo 346. b. See Greachbreach Grills anno 22. Ed. 4. ca. 2. Grocers be merchants that ingrosse all merchandize vendible anno 37. Ed. 3. ca. 5. Groome anno 33. H. 8. ca. 10. Valletus is the name of a seruant that serueth in some inferiour place M. Verslegan in his restitution of decayed intelligence saith that he findeth it to haue beene in times past a name for youths who albeit they serued yet were they inferiour to men seruants and were sometimes vsed to be sent on foote of errands seruing in such manner as lackies doe nowe Growme anno 43. E. ca. 10. seemeth to be an engine to stretch wollen cloth withall after it is wouen Guydage Guydāgium is that which is giuen for safe conduct through a strange territorie Cassan de consuet Bourg pag. 119. whose words be these Est Guidagiū quod datur alicui vt tutò conducatur per loca alterius Guylde See Gyld Guylhalda Teutonicorum See Gild. Gule of August Gula Augusti anno 27. Ed. 3. stat 3. cap. vnico Fitzh nat br fol. 62. I. aliâs Goule de August Plowd casu Mines fo 316. b. is the very day of Saint Peterad vincula which was wont and is still within the limits of the Roman church celebrated vpon the very Kalends of August Why it should be called the gule of August I cannot otherwise coniecture but that it commeth of the latine gula or the French gueule the throate The reason of my coniecture is in Durands rationali diuinorum li. 7. ca. de festo Sancti Petri ad vincula who saith that one Quirinus a tribune hauing a daughter that had a disease in her throat went to Alexander then Pope of Rome the sixt from Saint Peter and desired of him to borow or see the cheines that Saint Peter was cheined with vnder Nero which request obteined his said daughter kissing the said cheine was cured of her disease and Quirinus with his family was baptised Tunc dictus Alexander papa saith Durand hoc festum in Kalendis Augusti celebrandum instituit in honorem beali Petri ecclesiam in vrbe fabricavit vbi vincula ipsa reposuit ad vincula nominavit Kalendis Augusti dedicauit In qua festivitate populus illic ipsa vincula hodie osculatur So that this day being before called onely the Kalends of August was vpon this occasion afterward termed indifferently either of the instrument that wrought this miracle Saint Peters day ad vincula or of that part of the maiden wheron the miracle was wrought the Gule of August Gultwit seemeth to be compounded of Gult i. noxa and wit which is said by some skilfull men to be an auncient termination of the words in the Saxon tongue signifiing nothing in it selfe but as dom or hood and such like be in these english words Christendom and Manhood or such others others say and it is true that wit signifieth blame or reprehension Gultwit as Saxon in his description of England ca. 11. doth interpret it is an amends for trespas Gust Hospes is vsed by Bracton for a straunger or guest that lodgeth with vs the second night lib. 3. tracta 2. ca. 10. In the lawes of Saint Edward set forth by M. Lamberd num 27. it is written Gest of this see more in Vncothe Gumme gummi is a certaine clammie or tough liquor that in maner of a swetie excrement issueth out of trees and is hardened by the sunne Of these ther be diuers sorts brought ouer seas that be drugs to be garbled as appeareth by the statute anno 1. Iaco. ca. 19. Gutter tyle alias corner tyle is a tile made three cornerwise especially to be laid in gutters or at the corners of tyled houses which you shall often see vpon douehouses at the foure corners of their rofes anno 17. Eduardi 4. ca. 4. H A HAbeas corpus is a writ the which a man indited of some trespas before Iustices of peace or in a court of any franchise and vpon his apprehension being laid in prison for the same may haue out of the kings bench thereby to remooue himselfe thither at his owne costs and to answer the cause there c. Fitzh nat br fol. 250. H. And the order is in this case first to procure a Certiorari out of the Chaūcerie directed to the said Iustices for the remoouing of the Inditemēt into the kings bench and vpon that to procure this writ to the Shyreeue for the causing of his body to be brought at a day Register iudiciall fol. 81. where you shall finde diuers cases wherein this writ is vsed Habeas corpora is a writ that lieth for the bringing in of a Iurie or so many of them as refuse to come vpon the venire facias for the tryall of a cause brought to issue old nat br fol. 157. See great diuersitie of this writ in the table of the Register Iudiciall verbo habeas corpora the new booke of Entries verbo eodem Habendum is a word of forme in a deede of conueyance to the true vnderstanding whereof you must knowe that in euery deede of conueyance there be 2. principall parts the premisses and the habendum The office of the premisses is to expresse the name of the grauntour the grauntee and the thing graunted or to be graunted The office of the habendum is to limite the estate so that the generall implication of the estate which by construction of lawe passeth in the premisses is by the habendum controlled and qualified As in a lease to two persons the habendum to one for life the remainder to the other for life altereth the generall implication of the ioynt tenancie in the freehould which should passe by the premisses if the Habendum weare not Cooke vol. 2. Bucklers case fo 55. See Vse Habere facias seisinam is a writ Iudicial which lyeth where a man hath recouered lands in the kings court directed to the Shyreeue and commaunding him to giue him seisin of the land recouered old nat br fol. 154. Termes of the lawe whereof see great diuersity also in the table of the Register Iudiciall verb. Habere facias seisinā This writ is issuing sometime out of the Records of a fine executorie directed to the Shyreeue of the countie where the land lyeth commanding him to giue to the Cognizee or his heires seisin of the land whereof the fine is levied which writ lyeth within the yeare after the fine or Iudgemēt vpon a scire facias and may be made in diuers formes West parte 2. symb titulo Fines sect 136. There is also a writ called Habere facias seisinam vbi Rex habuit annum diem vastum which is for the redeliuery of lands to the Lord of the fee after the king hath taken his due of his lands that was conuicted of felonie Register orig fol. 165.
Habere facias visum is a writ that lyeth in diuers cases where view is to be taken of the lands or tenements in question See Fitzh nat br in Iudice verbo View See Bracton li. 5. tract 3. ca. 8. lib. 5. parte 2. ca. 11. See vi 〈…〉 See the Register Iudiciall fol. 1. 26 28. 45. 49. 52. Haberiects Hauberietus pannus magn chart ca. 25. pupilla oculi parte 5. ca. 22. Hables is the plurall of the French hable signifiing as much as a porte or hauen of the sea whence ships doe set forth into other countries and whether they doe arriue when they returne from their voyage This word is vsed anno 27. Hen. 6. cap. 3. Haerede deliberando alii qui habet custodiam terrae is a writ directed to the Shyreeue willing him to commande one hauing the body of him that is ward to another to deliuer him to him whose ward he is by reason of his land Register originall fol. 161. b. Haerede abducto is a writ that lyeth for the lord who hauing the wardship of his tenent vnder age by right cannot come by his body for that he is conueyed away by another old nat br fol. 93. See Ravishment de Gard and Haerede rapto in Regist orig fol. 163. Haeretico comburendo is a writ that lyeth against him that is an heretike viz. that hauing beene once conuinced of herisy by his Bishop and hauing abiured it afterward falleth into it againe or into some other and is therevpon committed to the secular power Fitzh nat br fol. 269. Haga is vsed as a kinde of latine word for a house I finde in an auncient booke sometime belonging to the abbey of Saint Augustines in Canterbury that king Stephen sent his writ to the Shyreeue and Iustices of Kent in this maner Stephanus Rex Anglorum vicecomiti Iusticiariis de Kent salutem praecipio quòd faciatis habere ecclesiae sancti Augustini monachis hagam suam quam Gosceoldus eis dedit it a bene in pace iustè quietè liberè sicut eam eis dedit in morte sua coram legalibus testibus c. Hagbut See Haque and Haquebut Haye boote seemeth to be compounded Haye i. Sepes and Bote. i. compensatio The former is french and the second is Saxon. And although it doe fall out sometime that our words be so compounded yet is it rare wherefore it may be thought peraduenture to come as well from Hag and boote which be bothe saxon words It is vsed in our common lawe for a permission to take thorns and freeth to make or repaire hedges Halfe haque See Haque Half merk dimidia merka seemeth to signifie a noble Fitzh nat br fol 5. where he saith that in case a writ of right be brought and the seisin of the Demaundant or his auncester alleaged the seisin is not traversable by the Defendant but he may tender or proferre the halfe merke for the inquirie of this seisin which is as much to say in plainer termes that the Defendant shall not be admitted to deny that the Demandant or his auncester was seised of the land in question and to proue his deniall but that hee shal be admitted to tender halfe a merke in money to haue an inquirie made whether the Demandant c. were so seised or not And in this signification I reade the same words in the old English natura breuium fol. 26. b. viz. Know ye that in a writ of right of Advouzen brought by the king the defendant shall not proferre the halfe merke ne iudgement finall shall be giuen against the king c. Wherof Fitz. vbi supra M. giueth the reason because in the kings case the defendant shall bee permitted to trauerse the seisin by licence obtained of the Kings Sergeant To this effect see Fitz. nat br fol. 31. C. D. E. Halfe seale is vsed in the Chauncerie for the sealing of Commissions vnto Delegates appointed vpon any appeale in ecclesiasticall or marine causes an 8. Elizab. cap. 5. Halfe tongue See Medietas linguae Halymote aliâs Healgemot is a Court Baron Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 111. and the etymologie is the meeting of the tenents of one hall or maner M. Gwins preface to his reading which for the esteeme thereof is by copies spred into many mens hands Hallage is a see due for cloths brought for sale to Blackwell hal in London Coke vol. 6. fol. 62. b. Hamlet Hameletum is a diminutiue of Ham which signifieth habitationem Camden Brit. pag. 149. 354. The French hameau i. viculus is also nere vnto it Kitchin hath Hamel in the same sence fol. 215. who also vseth hampsel for an ould house or cotage decayed fol. 103. Hamlet as Stowe vseth it in Ed. 3. seemeth to be the seate of a Free holder For there he saith that the said king bestowed two maners and nine hamlets of land vpon the monasterie of Westminster for the keeping of yearely obits for his wife Queene Eleanor deceased Hameling of dogges or hambling of dogges is all one with the expeditating of dogges Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 212. parte 2. cap. 16. num 5. where he saith that this is the auncient terme that Foristers vsed for that mater whence this word might be drawne I dare not resolue but it is not improbable that hameling is quasi hamhalding that is keeping at home which is done by paring their feete so as they cannot take any great delight in running abroade See Expeditate Hampsell See Hamlet Hamscken see Homesoken M. Skene de verb significa writeth it Haimsuken and deriueth it from Haim a German word signifiing a house or dwelling and Suchen that is to seeke search or persiew It is vsed in Scotland for the crime of him that violently and contrary to the kings peace assaulteth a man in his owne house which as he saith is punishable equally with rauishing of a woman significat quietantiam miser●●rdiae intrationis in alienam domum vi iniustè Fleta lib. pri cap. 47. See Homesoken Hand in and Hand out anno 17. Ed. 4. cap. 2. is the name of an vnlawful game Hand full is foure inches by the standard anno 33. H. 8. cap. Hankwit alias Hangwit or Hengwit commeth of the Saxon words Hangen i. pendêre and wit whereof reade in Gultwit Rastall in the title Exposition of words faith it is a liberty graunted vnto a man wherby he is quit of a felon or theese hanged without iudgement or escaped out of custodie I reade it interpreted mulcta pro homine iniustè suspenso Or whether it may be a libertie whereby a Lord chalengeth the forfeiture due for him that fordoeth himselfe within his fee or not let the Reader consider See Bloodwit Hanper haneperium haueper of the Chauncerie anno 10. R. 2. cap. prim seemeth to signifie as fiseus originally doth in Latine See Clerke of the Hanaper Hanse as Ortelius in the Index of
i. hospitio excipere It signifieth with vs an officer of the princes court that allotteth the noble men and those of the household their lodgings It signifieth also in Kitchin an Inkeeper fol. 176. Hereditaments hereditamenta seeme to signifie all such things immoueable be they corporeall or incorporeall as a man may haue to himselfe and his heires by way of inheritance v. anno 32. H. 8. ca. 2. or not being otherwise bequeathed doe naturally and of course descend to him which is our next heire of blood and fall not within the compas of an executour or administratour as chatels doe Heriot See Hariot Hide of land Hida terrae Saxonicè Hidelandes is a certaine measure or quantitie of land by some mens opinion that may be plowed with one plowe in a yeare as the author of the newe Termes saith verbo Hidage by other men it is an hundred acres By Beda who calleth it familiā it is as much as will maintaine a familie Crompton in his Iurisdict fol. 220. saith that it consisteth of an hundred acres euery acre in length 40. perches and in breadth 4. perches everie perch 16. foote and a halfe and againe fol. 222. A hide of land conteineth an hundred acres 8. hides or 800. acres conteine a knights fee. Of this reade more in M. Lamberds Explica of Saxon wordes verbo Hyda terrae See Carue Hide and gaine old nat br fol. 71. Coke lib. 4. Tirringhams case signifieth carable land See Gainage Hidage Hidagium is an extraordinarie taxe to be paide for euery hide of land Bracton li. 2. c. 6. writeth thus of it Sunt etiam quaedam communes praestationes quae seruitia non dicuntur nec de consuetudine veniunt nisi cum necessitas intervenerit vel cum Rex venerit sicut sunt Hidagia Coragia Carvagia alia plura de necessitate ex consensu communi totius Regni introducta quae ad Dominum feudi non pertinent c. of this reade the new expounder of lawe termes who saith that hidage is to be quit if the king shall taxe all the lands by hides and yet also graunteth it to be the taxe it selfe saying that it was wont to be an vsuall kind of taxing as well for prouision of armour as payments of money Hinefare See Heinfare Hidel i. H. 7. ca. 6. seeemeth to signifie a place of protection as a Sanctuarie Hierlome See Heirlome Hine seemeth to be vsed for a Seruant at husbandrie and the master hine a seruant that ouerseeth the rest anno 12. R. 2. ca. quarto Hoblers Hobellarii are certaine men that by their tenure are tyed to maintaine a little light nagge for the certifiing of any inuasion made by enemies or such like perill toward the Sea side as Porchmouth c. of these you shall reade anno 18. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 7. anno 25. eiusdem stat 5. ca. 8. Hoghenhine is he that commeth guestwise to a house and lieth there the third night After which time he is accounted of his familie in whose house he lieth and if he offend the kings peace his host must be answerable for him Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 10. In the lawes of King Edward set forth by M. Lamberd he is called agenhine wheare you may reade more of this mater Hithe Hitha is a petit hauen to land wares out of vessels or boates new booke of Entrise fol. 3. colum 3. Hoggeshead is a measure of wine or oyle containing the fourth parte of a tunne that is 63. gallons anno i. R. 3. ca. 13. Hoistings See Hustings Homage Homagium is a french word signifiing fidem clientularem for in the originall grants of land and tenements by way of fee the lord did not onely tie his tenents or feed men to certaine seruices but also tooke a submission with promis and oathe to be true and loyall to him as there lord benefactour This submission was and is called homage the forme wherof you haue in the second statute anni 17. Ed 2. in these words when a free man shall doe homage to his Lord of whome he holdeth in chiefe he shall hold his hands together betweene the hands of his lord and shall say thus I become your man from this day forthe for life for member for wordly honour and shall owe you my faith for the land I hold of you sauing the faith that I doe owe vnto our Soueraigne Lord the king and to mine other Lords And in this maner the Lord of the fee for which homage is due taketh homage of euery tenent as he commeth to the land or fee. Glanvile lib. 9. ca. 1. except they be women who performe not homage but by their husbands yet see Fitzherbert that saith the contrary in his natura br fol. 157. F. Reade Glanuile more at large in the said first chapter with the second third fourth The reason of this M. Skene giueth de verbo significatione verbo Homagium viz. because Homage especially concerneth seruice in warre He saith also that consecrated Bishops doe no homage but onely fidelitie the reason may be all one And yet I find in the Register orig fol. 296. a. that a woman taking liuerie of lands holden by knights seruice must doe homage but not being ioyntly infeoffed for then shee doth only fealtie And see Glanuile in the ende of the first chapter of his nineth booke touching Bishops consecrated whome he denieth to performe homage to the king for their Baronie but onely fealty Fulbeck reconeileth this fol. 20. a. in these words By our lawe a religious man may doe homage but may not say to his Lord. Egodevenio homo vester because he hath professed himselfe to be onely Gods man but he may say I doe vnto you homage and to you shall be faithfull loyall See of this Britton cap. 68. Homage is either new with the fee or auncestrell that is wheare a man and his auncesters time out of minde haue held their lands by homage to their Lord whereby the Lord is tied to warrant the land vnto his tenent newe Termes of the lawe This homage is vsed in other countries as well as ours was wont to be called Hominium See Hotom de verbis feudalibus verbo Homo Skene diuideth it into liegium non liegium de verb. signifi verbo Homage for the which see Leige and Hotoman disputatione de feudis tertia Homage is sometime vsed for the Iurie in the Courte Baron Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. 2. cap. 27. The reason is because it consisteth most commonly of such as owe homage vnto the Lord of the fee. And these of the Feudists are called pares curiae sive ourtis siue domus sic dicuntur enim conuassalli siue compares qui ab eodem patrono feudum receperunt vel qui in eodom territorio feudum habent Hotoman Of this homage you may read in the 29. c. of the Grand Custumarie of Normandie where you shall vnderstand of other
is made at large without inserting that or the like clause See Emperlaunce Impeachment of Waste impetitio vasti commeth of the french empeschement i. impedimentum and signifieth with vs a restraint from committing of waste vpon lands or tenements See Waste Implements commeth of the french emploier i. insumere in re aliqua it signifieth with vs things tending to the necessarie vse of any trade or furniture of househould Impost is a french word signifiing tribute comming of the verb imposer i iniungere irrogare it signifieth with vs the taxe receiued by the prince for such merchandise as are brought into any heauen from other nations anno 31. Elizabeth cap 5. and I thinke it may in some sort be distinguished from customs bicause custom is rather that profit which the prince maketh of wares shipped out of the land yet may they be confounded Improuement See Approue In casu consimili is a Writt See casu consimili In casu prouiso is a Writt See casu prouiso Incident incidens signifieth a thing necessarily depending vpon another as more principall for example a court Baron is soe incident to a maner and a court of piepowders to a faier that they cannot be seuered by graunt for if a maner or faire be graunted these coutts cannot be referued Kitchin fol 36. Incroche incrociare Se encrochments Admirals and their deputies doe incroche to themselues Iurisdictions c anno 15. Rich 2. ca 3. Indenture indentura is a writing comprising some contract betwene two and being indented in the toppe aunswerably to another that likewise conteineth the same contract this the Latines called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which among the ciuilians is defined to be scriptura inter creditorem debitorem indentata in cuius sciscura literis capitalibus haec dictio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or plurally 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 scribitur and it differeth from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quia hoc manu vnius tantùm puta debitoris scribitur penes debitorem relinquitur pruinc consttut de offic archidiaco cap pri verbo In scriptis vid. Gothosr in notis ad l. 27 § 3. Π. ad leg Corn. de fals Indicauit is a writ or prohibition that lieth for a patron of a church whose Clerk is defendant in court Christian in an action of tithes commenced by another clerke and extending to the fourth part of the church or of the tithes belonging vnto it for in this case the suite belongeth to the kings court by the statute Westm 2 cap 5. wherfore the patron of the defendant being like to be preiudiced in his church and aduowzen if the plaintife obteine in the court Christian hath this means to remoue it to the kings court the Register originall fol. 35. b. see ould nat br fol. 31. the register fol 35. and Britton cap 109. fol. ●60 A. Indictment Indictamentum see indightment Indiuisum is vsed in the common law for that which two houlde in common without particiō Kitchin fol. 241. in these words he houldeth pro indiuiso c Indorsment indorsamentum signifieth in the common law a condition writen vpon the other side of an obligation West part 2. simbol sect 157. Infang alias infeng significat quietantiam prioris prisae ratione conuiuij Fleta l i. cap 47. Infangthef or Hinfangthefe or Infangtheof is compounded of 3. Saxon words the preposition In fang or fong to take or catch thef it signifieth a priuiledge or libertie graunted vnto Lords of certaine maners to iudge any theeife taken within there fee. Bracton lib. 3. tracta 2. cap. 8. In the lawes of King Edward set out by M. Lambard nu 26 you haue it thus described Infangthefe Iustitia cognoscentis latronis sua est de homine suo si captus fuerit super terram suam Illiverò qui non habent has consuetudines coram insticia regia rectum faciant in Hundredis vel in Wapentachiis vel in Scyris The definition of this see also in Britton fol 90. b. and Roger Houeden parte poster suorū annalium fol. 345. b. M. Skene de verborum significatione verbo Infangthefe who writeth of it at large reciting diuersitie of opinions touching this and outfangthefe Fleta saith that infangtheef for soe he writeth it dicitur latro captus in terra alicuius seisitus aliquo latrocinio de suis propriis hominibus libro 1. cap 47 § Infangtheefe Information See Enditement See the new termes of lawe Informer informator in french informateur is an officer belonging to the exchequer or kings bench that denounceth or complaineth of those that offend against any penall statute They are otherwise called promotors but the men being bashfull of nature doe blush at this name these among the Ciuilians are called delatores Informatus non sum is a formall aunswer or of course made by an atturney that is commaunded by the court to say what he thinketh good in the defence of his client by the which he is deemed to leaue his client vndefended and so iudgement paseth for the aduerse party See the new booke of Entries titulo Non sum informatus and Iudgement 12. Ingressu is a writ of entrie that is whereby a man seeketh entry into lands or tenements it lyeth in many diuers cases wherit hath as many diuersities of formes See Entry this writ is also called in the particular praecipe quod reddat because those be formall words in all writs of entry The writs as they lye in diuers cases are these described in the old natura breu Ingressu ad terminum qui praetertit fol. 121. originall Regist sol 227. which lyeth where lands or tenements are let to a man for terme of yeares and the tenent houldeth ouer his terme Ingressu dum non fuit compos mentis fol. 223. original regist fol. 228. which lyeth where a man selleth land or tenement when he is out of his wits c. Ingressu dum fuit infra aetatem fol. 123. Register originall fol. 228. which lyeth where one vnder age selleth his lands c. Ingressu super deseisina in le quibus fol. 125. Regist orig fol. 229. which lyeth where a man is disseised and dyeth for his heire against the disseisour Ingressu in per fol. 126. original register fol. 229. Ingressu sur cui in vita fol. 128. originall Register fo 239. both which see in Enrry Ingressu cause matrimonii praelocuti fol. 130. original register fol. 233 which see causa matrimonii praelocuti Ingressu in casu proviso f. 132. Register original fo 235. which see casu pro viso Ingressu cui ante diuortium fol. 130. original register fol. 233. for which see cui ante diuorium Ingressu in consimili casu fol. 233. originall Register fol. 236. for which see Confimili casu Ingressu sine consensu capituli fol. 128. original register fol. 230 for which see Sine assensu capituli Ingressu ad communem legem fol. 132. originall
deliberandas quandoque ad vnicam vel duas non plures And by this meanes the Iustices of both benches being iustly to be accounted the fittest of all others and others their assistants as also the Sergeants at law may be imployed in these affaires who as grauest in yeares so are they ripest in iudgement and therefore likest to be voide of prociality for being called to this dignity they giue ouer practise anno 8. R. 2. cap. 3. but this alway to be remembred that neither Iustice of either bench nor any other may be Iustice of Assise in his owne country anno 8. Rich. 2. cap. 2. anno 33. H. 8. cap. 24. lastly note that in these daies though the selfe same men dispatch busines of so diuers natures and all at one time which were wont to be performed by diuers and at seuerall times yet they doe it by seuerall commissions Cromptons Iurisdictions fo 210. For those who be in one word called Iustices of circuit and twice euery yeare passe by two and two through all Englād haue one cōmission to take Assises another to deliuer Goales another of oyer and terminer That Iustices of Assise and Iustices in Eyre did aunciently differ it appeareth an 27. Ed. 3. cap. 5. and that Iustices of Assise Iustices of goale deliuery were diuerse it is euident by anno 4. Fd. 3. cap. 3. The oath taken by Iustices of assise is all one with the oath taken by the Iustices of the kings bench Ould abridgement of statutes titulo Sacramentum Iusticiariorum See Oath Iustices of oyer and terminer Iusticiarii ad audiendum terminandum were Iustices deputed vpon some especiall or extraordinary occasion to heare and determine some or more causes Fitzherberd in his natura beruium saith that the commission d' oyer and terminer is directed to certaine persons vpon any great assembly insurrection hainous demeanure or trespasse committed And because the occasion of granting this commission should be maturely wayed it is prouided by the statute anno 2. Ed. 3. cap. 2. that no such commission ought to be graunted but that they shal be dispatcheo before the Iustices of the one bench or other or Iustices errāts except for horrible trespasses that by the especial fauour of the King The forme of this cōmission see in Fitzh natura breu fol. 110. Iustices in Eyre Iusticiarii itinerantes are so termed of the French Erre i. iter which is an old word as a grand erre i. magnis iteneribus prouerbially spoken the vse of these in auncient time was to send them with commission into divers counties to heate such causes especially as were termed the plees of the crowne and therefore I must imagine they were so sent abroad for the ease of the subiects who must els haue beene hurried to the kings bench if the cause were too high for the countie court They differed from the Iustices of oyer and terminer because they as is aboue said were sent vpon some one or fewe speciall cases and to one place whereas the Iustices in Eyre were sent through the prouinces and counties of the land with more Indefinite and generall commission as appeareth by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 11. 12. 13. and Britton cap. 2. And againe they seeme to differ in this because the Iustices of oyer and terminer as it is before said were sent vncertainly vpon any vproare or other occasion in the country but these in Eyre as M. Gwin setteth downe in the preface to his reading were sent but euery seuen yeare once with whome Horn in his myrrour of Iustices seemeth to agree lib. 2. cap. queux poient estre actours c. and lib. 2. c. des peches criminels c. al suyte de Roy c. and lib. 3. c. de Iustices in Eyre where he also declareth what belonged to their office These were instituted by Henry the 2. as M. Camden in his Britannia witnesseth pag. 104. And Roger Hoveden parte posteri annalium fo 313. b. hath of them these wordes Iusticiarij itinerantes constituti per Henricum secundum i. qui diuisit regnum suumin sex partes per quarum singulas tres Iusticiarios itinerantes constituit quorum nomina haec sunt c. Iustices of Gaol deliuery Iusticiarii ad Gaolas deliberandas are such as are sent with commission to heare and determine all causes apperteining to such as for any offence are cast into the Gaol part of whose authoritie is to punish such as let to mainprise those prisoners that by lawe be not bayleable by the statute de finibus cap. 3. Fitzh nat br f. 251. I. These by likelyhoode in auncient time were sent to countries vpon this seuerall occasion But afterward Iustices of Assise were likewise authorised to this anno 4. Ed. 3. cap. 3. Their oath is all one with other of the kings Iustices of either bench Ould Abridgement of statutes titulo Sacramentum Iusticiariorum See Othe Iustices of labourers were Iustices appointed in those times to redresse the frowardnesse of labouring men that would either be idle or haue vnreasonable wages See anno 21. Eduardi 3. cap. primo anno 25. eiusd cap. 8. anno 31. eiusdem cap. 6. Iustices of Nisi prius are all one now a daies with Iustices of Assises for it is a common Adiournment of a cause in the common plees to put it off to such a day Nisi prius Iusticiarii venerint ad eas partes ad capiendas Assisas and vpon this clause of Adiournment they are called Iustices of Nisi prius as well as Iustices of Assises by reason of the writ or action that they haue to deale in their commission you may see in Cromptons Iurisdsctious fol. 204. yet M. Crompton maketh this difference betweene them because Iustices of Assise haue power to giue iudgement in a cause but Iustices of Nisi prius only to take the verdict But in the nature of both there functions this seemeth to be the greatest difference because Iustices of Nisi prius haue to deale in causes personall as well as reall wheras Iustices of Assise in strict acception deale only with the possessory writs called Assises Iustices of trial bastō alias of trayl baston were a kind of Iustices appointed by King Edward the first vpon occasion of great disorder growne in the Realme during his absence in the Scottishe and French warres they are called in the ould nat bre f. 52. Iustices of triall Baston but by Holynshed and Stow in Edw. pri of Traile baston of trailing or drawing the staffe as Holinshed saith Their office was to make inquisition through the Realme by the verdict of substantiall Iuries vpon all officers as Mayors Shyreeues Bailifes escheatours others touching extortion briberies and other such greeuances as intrusions into other mens lands and Barratours that vsed to take mony for beating of men and also of them whom they did beate by meanes of which inquisitions many were punished by death many by ransome and so the rest flying the
space of 200. yeares was farre spred in Christendome and namely here in England But at the last the cheife of them at Hierusalem being as some men say found to fall away to the Sazarens from Christianity and to abound in many vices the whole Order was suppressed by Clemens quintus which was about King Ed. the 1. daies and their substance giuen partly to the Knights of the Rhodes and partly to other Religious Cassan de gloria mnndi parte 9. Consid 5. and See anno prim Ed. 1. cap. 42. Others wright that in truth their destruction grewe from leaning to the Emperour against the Pope of Rome what soeuer was pretended Ioach. Stephanus De iurisdictione lib. 4. cap. 10. nu 18. See Templers Knights of the Shire Milites Comitatus otherwise be called Knights of the Parlament and be two Knights or other gentlemen of worth that are chosen in pleno Comitatu by the free holders of euery Countie that can dispend 40. shillings per annum and be Resient in the shire anno 10. H 6. cap. 2. anno 1. H. 5. cap. 1. vpon the Kings writ to be sent to the Parlament and there by their counsell to assist the common proceedings of the whole Realme These when euery man that had a Knights fee were custumarily constreined to be a Knight were of necessity to be milites gladio cincti for so runneth the tenour of the writ at this day Cromptons Iurisdict fol. pri But nowe there being but fewe Knights in comparison of former times many men of great liuing in euery county Custome beareth that Esquiers may be chosen to this office anno 23. H. 6. ca. 6. so that they be resient within the countie anno H. 6. cap. 7. anno 1. H. 5. cap. prim For the obseruations in choice of these knights see the statutes anno 7. H. 4. cap. 15. anno 11. eiusdem cap. 1. anno 6. H. 6. cap. 4. anno 23. H. 6. cap. 15. and the new booke of Entries verbo Parlament nu 1. Their expences during the Parlament are borne by the County anno 35. H. 8. cap. 11. Knight Marshiall Marescallus hospitii Regii is an officer in the kings house hauing iurisdiction and cognisance of any transgression within the kings house and verge as also of contracts made within the same house whereunto one of the house is a partie Register orig fo 185. a. b. fo 191. b. whereof you may there reade more at large Knights fee Feudum militare is so much inheritaunce as is sufficient yearely to maintaine a knight with conuenient reuenew which in Henry the. 3. daies was fifteene pounds Camdeni Britan. pag. ●11 or 680. acres of land or 800. acres eodem But S. Thomas Smith in his Repub. Angl. lib. pri cap. 18. rateth it at fourtie pound And I finde in the statute for knights anno pri Ed. 2. cap pri that such as had 20. pound in fee or for terme of life per annum might be compelled to be knights M. Stowe in his annals pag. 285. saith that there were found in England at the time of the Conqueror 60211. Knights fees others say 60215. whereof the religious houses before their suppression were possessed of 28015. Knights fee is sometime vsed for the rent that a knight payeth for his fee to his Lord of whom he houldeth And this is an vncertaine summe some houlding by fortie shillings the sheild some by twenty shillings as appeareth by Bracton lib. 5. tract pri cap. 2. Knighten Gylde was a Gylde in London consisting of 19. knights which king Edgar founded giuing vnto them a portion of void ground lying without the walls of the city now called Portesoken ward Stow. in his Annals pag. 151. L LAborariis is a writ that lieth against such as hauing not whereof to liue doe refuse to serue or for him that refuseth to serue in summer where he serued in winter orig Register fol. 189. b. Laches commeth of the French lascher i. laxare or lusche i. frigidus ignavus flaccidus it signifieth in our common law negligence as no laches shal be adiudged in the heire within age Litleton fol. 136. and old nat br fol. 110. where a man ought to make a thing and makes it not I of his laches cannot haue an Assise but I must take mine action vpon the case Lagon See Flotzon Laised listes anno i. R. 3. cap. 8. Land tenent anno 14. Ed. 〈◊〉 stat 1. cap. 3. anno 23. eiusdem cap. 1. 26. eiusdem stat 5. cap. 2. See Terre-tenent anno 12. R. 2. cap. 4. anno 4. H. 4. cap. 8. it is ioyned with this word Possessor as Synonymon v. anno 1. H. 6. cap. 5. See Terretenent Lanis de crescentia Walliae traducendis abque custuma c. is a writ that lyeth to the customer of a porte for the permitting one to passe ouer wolles without custome because he hath paid custome in Wales before Register fol. 279. Lapse Lapsus is a slippe or departure of a right of presēting to avoide benefice from the originall patron neglecting to present within six monethes vnto the Ordinary For we say that benefice is in lapse or lapsed wherevnto he that ought to present hath omitted or slipped his oportunitie anno 13. Eliz. cap. 12. This lapse groweth as well the Patron being ignorant of the auoydance as priuie except onely vpon the resignation of the former Incumbent or the depriuation vpon any cause comprehended in the statute anno 13. Eliz. cap. 12. Panor in cap. quia diuersitatem nu 7. de concess praebend Rebuffus de devolut in praxi beneficiorum Lancelotus de collation lib. 1. Institut canon § Tempus autem In which cases the Bishop ought to giue notice to the Patron Larceny Laricinium commeth of the French Larcen i. furtum detractio alicui It is defined by West parte 2. Symbol titulo Inditements to be theft of personall goods or chatels in the owners absence and in respect of the things stollen it is either great or small Great Larceny is wherin the things stolne though seuerally exceede the value of 12. pence and petit Larceny is when the goods stolne exceede not the value of 12. pence hitherto M. West But he differeth from Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. c. 32. n. 1. Of this see more in Stawnf pl. cor l. 1. cap. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. Laghslite is compounded of lah. i. lex and slite i. ruptum and signifieth mulctam ruptae vel violatae legis Lamb explicat of Saxon words verbo Mulcta Last is a Saxon word signifiing a burden in generall as also particularly a certaine weight for as we say a last of hering so they say Ein last corns last wines c. thence commeth lastage which see in Lestage A last of hering conteineth 10. thousand an 31. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 2. a last of pitch and tarre or of ashes conteineth 14. barrels anno 32. H. 8. cap. 14. a last of hides
to be very tenent to that Lord of whom he immediately holdeth So that if there be lord aboue lord mesn and tenent the lord aboue is not very lord to the tenent nor the tenent very tenent to the lord aboue Lord in grosse Fitz. nat br fol. 3. is he that is lord hauing noe maner as the king in respect of his crown idem f. 5. F. See him also fol. 8. A. B. where I finde a case wherein a priuate man is lord in grosse viz. a man maketh a gift in tayle of all the land hee hath to hold of him and dyeth his heire hath but a Seignorie in grosse Lorimers anno 1. R. 3. cap. 12. is one of the companies in London tha makeht bits for bridles of horses and such like The name seemeth to be taken from the latine lorum and is else where writen Lorinors Lotherwit aliâs Leyerwit is a libertie or priueledge to take amends of him that defileth your bondwoman without licence Rastall exposition of words It is an amends for lying with abondwoman Saxon in his description of England cap. 11. Some thinke it should be rather writen Legerwit For Leger is the Saxon word for a bedde or Logherwit of the old word Logher being of the same signification See Bloodwit and Lyerwit Lusernes See Furre Lushoborow is a base coine vsed in the daies of King Ed. the 3. coined beyōd Seas to the likenes of English money and brought in to deceiue the King and his subiects To auoide the which it was made treason for any man wittingly to bring in any such an 25. Ed. 3. stat 4. cap. secundo M MAcegriefs aliâs Macegrefs be such as willingly buie and sell stolen slesh Britton cap. 29. fo 71. b. Cromptons Iustice of peace fo 193. a. Magna assisa eligenda is a writ directed to the Shyreeue to summon foure lawful knights before the Iustices of Assise there vpon their oathes to chuse 12. knights of the vicenage c. to passe vpon the great assise betweene A. plaintife and B. defendant c. Register originall fol. 8. a. Magna Charta called in English the great charter is a charter conteining a number of lawes ordained the ninth yeare of Henry the third and confirmed by Edward the first The reason why it was tearmed Magna charta was either for that it conteined the summe of all the writen lawes in England or else that there was another Charter called the Charter of the Forest established with it which in quantitie was the lesser of the two I reade in Holinshed that King Iohn to appease his Barons yelded to lawes or articles of gouernment much like to this great Charter but wee nowe haue noe auncienter writen lawe then this which was thought to be so beneficall to the sublect and a lawe of so great equitie in comparison of those which were formerly in vse that K. Henry the third was thought but hardly to yeld vnto it and that to haue the fifteenth peny of all the moueable goods both of the spiritualtie and temporaltie throughout his realme Holinshed in Henry the third And though this Charter consist not of aboue 37. chapters or lawes yet is it of such extent as all the lawe wee haue is thought in some sort to depend of it Polydorus and Holinshed vbi supra Mahim Mahemium commeth of the old French Mehaigne as M. Skene saith de verbo signif verbo Machanium and signifieth a corporal hurt whereby a man looseth the vse of any member that is or might bee any defence vnto him in batel The Canonists call it membrimatilationem as the eye the hand the foote the scalpe of the head his foretooth or as some say of any finger of his hand Glanuile lib. 14. ca. 7. See Bracton at large lib. 3. tracta 2. cap. 24. nu 3. and Britton cap. 25. and Stawnf pl. cor lib. pri ca. 41. and the newe exposition of law Termes and the Mirrour of Iustices cap. d'homicid The grand Custumarie of Normandie cap. 6. calleth it Mahaignium and defineth it to be enormem laesionem All agree that it is the losse of a member or the vse thereof And membrum as Cassan de consuetu Burgund pag. 168. defineth it out of Baldus est pars corporis habens destinatam operationem in corpore where you may reade more of this point But if you will see it largely discussed look Vgolinus de irregularitatibus ca. 4. § 3. 4. 5. also read M. Skene vbi supra Mainour aliâs Manour aliâs Meinoure seemeth to come of the French Manier i. manu tractare attrectare or els of Ameuer i. abducere It signifieth in our common lawe the thing that a theefe taketh away or stealeth as to be taken with the mainor pl. cor fol. 179. is to be taken with the thing stolen about him and againe fol. 194. It was presented that a theefe was deliuered to the Vicount together with the Mainor thirdly fol. 186. If a man be indited that he feloniously stole the goods of another where in truth they bee his owne goods and the goods bee brought into the court as the manour and it be demaunded of him what hee saith to the goods and he disclaime them though he be quitted of the felonie he shall loose the goods and againe fol. 149. if the defendant were taken with the manour and the manour bee caried to the court they in auncient times would arraine him vpon the manour without any appeale or inditement I find this word vsed in the old nat br fol. 110. in this sort where a man maketh a thing by mainour or leuying or estopping in such case he shall haue Assise where it signifieth handie labour and is but an abbreviation of Mainovrey Mainovre see Minouerye Mainprise Manucaptio is compounded of two French words Main i. manus prins i. captus which is a participle of the verbe prendre i. capere excipere captare It signifieth in our common lawe the taking or receiuing a man into friendly custody that otherwise is or might bee committed to the mercie of the prison vpon securitie giuen for his forth comming at a day assigned as to let one to mainprise old nat br fol. 42. is to commit him to them that vndertake his apparence at the time appointed And they that do thus vndertake for any are called Mainpernouns because they do receiue him into their hands pl. cor fol. 178. Of this sort is the word Mainpernable which signifieth him that hath committed such an offence as by law he may be thus bayled For in many cases a man is not mainpernable whereof see Broke titulo Mainprise per totum and Fitz. nat br fol. 249. seqq M. Manwood in the first part of his Forest lawes pag. 167. maketh a great difference betweene Bayle and Mainprise For he that is mainprised quoth he is alwayes said to be at large and to goe at his owne libertie out of ward after the day is set to mainprise vntill the
tract 3. ca. 3. nu 3. and Cassan de consuet Burg pag. 335. and Tiraquel in his booke De Nobilitate cap. 20. pag. 68. nu 26. See the statute anno 31. H. 8. cap. 8. in prooemio and many excellent men more that handle this point That learned Hotoman in his Francogallia doth vehemently oppugne this ground as some other that write in corners but he is so cleane overborne by the pois of reason that not onely many meaner men for learning triumph ouer him in this case but himselfe as I haue credibly hard vpon the sight of his fault cried God and the world mercie for his offence in writing that erroneous and seditious booke The Emperours of Rome had their semestria consilia their praetorium or place of councell builded by Augustus in his palace and therevpon called palatium afterward termed consistorium where they as in their principall court did both determine the greatest sort of their causes and also made their constitutions And heere had they assisting them many of the wisest of their empire whome Augustus first called consiliarios Alexander Severus afterward scriniorum principes others after that palatinos and then comites consistorianos And these men in this respect were indued with great honour and enioyed many priuiledges Yet were they but assistants to the Emperour to aduise him not chalenging any power ouer him or equal with him More touching the course and order of this Parlament see in Cromptons Iurisdict fol. pri seqq and Vowell aliâs Hooker in his booke purposely writen of this mater See King Parole Loquela is a French word signifying as much as Dictio allocutio sermo vox It is vsed in Kitchin fol. 193. for a plee in court It is also sometime ioyned with lease as Lease parol that is Lease per parole a lease by word of mouth Parson Persona commeth of the French Personne It peculiarly signisieth with vs the Rector of a church the reason whereof seemeth to be bicause he for his time representeth the church and susteineth the person thereof as well in siewing as being siewed in any action touching the same See Fleta lib. 6. ca. 18. Parson impersonee persona impersonata is he that is in possession of a church whether appropriated or not appropriated for in the new booke of Entries verbo Ayde in Annuity you haue these words Et praedictus A dicit quod ipse est persona praedictae ecclesiae de S. impersonata in eadem ad praesentationem E. patronissae c. So I haue reason to thinke that persona is the patrō or he that hath right to giue the benefice by reason that before the Lateran councell he had right to the tithes in respect of his liberalitie vsed in the erection or endowment of the church quasi sustineret personam ecclesiae and he persona impersonata to whome the benefice is giuen in the patrons right For I reade in the Register Iudiciall personam impersonatam for the Rector of a benefice presentatiue and not appropriated fol. 34. b. and see Dyer fol. 40. nu 72. where he saith that a Deane and chapter be persons impersonees of a benefice appropriated vnto them who also fol. 221. num 19. plainly sheweth that persona impersonata is he that is inducted and in possession of a benefice So that persona seemeth to be termed impersonata onely in respect of the possession that he hath of the benefice or Rectorie be it appropriated or otherwise by the act of another And yet I haue talked with men of good opinion in the common lawe that hold onely the proprietarie of a benefice to be the person personee But if that weare true he should rather be called person parsonnier i. partiarius vel particeps fructuum because the Vicare hath some parte toward his paines in seruing the cure For parsonnier in the french tongue is partiarius or particeps Partes finis nihil habuerunt c. is an exception taken against a fine levied Cookes reports lib. 3. the case of Fines fol. 88. a. b. Parters of gold and siluer See Finours Partitione facienda is a writ that lieth for those which hould lands or tenements Pro Indiuiso and would seuer to euery one his part against him or them that refuse to ioyne in partition as Coparceners and Tenents in Gauel kind ould nat br fol 142. Fitzh nat br fol. 61. Register orig fol. 76. 316. and Register Iudiciall fol. 80. and the new booke of Entrise verbo Partition Part let seemeth to be some part of a mans attire as namely some loose collar of a dublet to be set on or taken of by it selfe without the bodies as mens bands or womens neckirchiefs be which are in some places or at least haue beene within memory called partlets This word is reade in the statute anno 24. H. 8. ca. 13. and seemeth to be a diminutine of the word part Paruo nocumen to is a writ See Nusance Passage Passagium is a French word signifying transitum transitionem meatum It signifieth in our common lawe the hire that a man payeth for being transported ouer sea anno 4. Ed. 3. cap. 7. or ouer any riuer Westm 2. cap. 25. anno 13. Ed. pri Passagio is a writ to the keepers of ports to let a man passe ouer that hath license of the king Register originall fol. 193. b. 194. a. Passeport is compounded of two French words Passer i. perambulare transire and port i. portus It signifieth with vs a license made by any that hath authoritie for the safe passage of any man from one place to another anno 2. Ed. 6. ca. 2. Pasuage pasuagium See Pawnage Patent literae patentes is different from a writ Cromptons Iurisd fol. 126. The Coroner is made by writ and not by patent See Leters patents See also Literae patentes in the table of the Register where you shall finde the forme of diuers patents Patron Patronus is vsed in the Ciule lawe for him that hath manumitted a seruant and thereby is both iustly accompted his great benefactor and challengeth certaine reverence and dutie of him during his life see the title De iure patranatus in the Digest with the Feudists it is vsed pro authore feudi Hotom verbo Patronus in his commentarie de verbis feudal In the canon lawe as also in the feuds and our common lawe it signifieth him that hath the gift of a benefice And the reason is because the gift of churches and benefices originally belonged vnto such good men as either builded them or els indowed them with some great part of the reuenew belonging vnto them De iure patronatus in the Decretals Such might well be called patrons as builded the Church or inriched it but these that now haue the gift of a benefice are more commonly patronized by the Church though against her will alway selling their presentations as deerely as they can and therefore may be called Patroni a patrocinando as
Policie of assurance is a course taken by those which do aduenture wares or merchandize by sea whereby they loche to hazard their whole aduenture do giue vnto some other a certaine rate or proportion as tenne in the hundred or such like to secure the safe arriuall of the ship and so much wares at the place agreed vpon So that if the ship and wares do miscarie the assrer maketh good to the venturer so much as he promiseth to secure as 20. 30. 100. more or lesse and if the ship do safely ariue he gaineth that clearely which the venturer compoundeth to pay him And for the more euen dealing betweene the venturer and the securer in this case there is a certaine Clerk or officer ordained to set downe in writing the summe of their agreement that they afterward differ not betweene themselues vpon the bargaine This is in course Latine elsewhere called assecuratio This terme you haue anno 43. Fliz. cap. 11. Pondage See Poundage Pone is a writ whereby a cause depending in the County court is remoued to the common Banke old nat br fol. 2. See in what diuersitie of cases it is vsed in the table of the Originall Register Pone per vadium is a writ commaunding the Shyreene to take suretie of one for his appearance at a day assigned of this see fiue sorts in the table of the Regists Iudic. verbo Pone per vadium Ponondis in Assisis is a writ founded vpon the statute of Westm 2. cap. 38. and vpon the statute Articuli super chartas cap. 9. which statutes do shew what persons Vicounts ought to impanell vpon Assises and Iuries and what not as also what number he should empanell vpon Iuries and Inquests which see in the Register orig fol. 178. a. and in Fitz. nat br fol. 165. Ponendo in ballum is a writ whereby to will a prisoner held in prison to be committed to baile in cases baylable Register orig fol. 133. b. Ponendo sigillum ad exceptionem is a writ whereby the king willeth Iustices according to the statute of Westm 2. to put their seales to exceptions laid in against the plaintiffes declaration by the defendant Pontage pontagium is a contribution toward the maintenance or reedifying of bridges Westm 2. cap. 25. anno 13. Ed. pri It may be also tolle taken to this purpose of those that passe ouer bridges anno 39. Eliz. cap. 24. anno 1. H. 8. cap. 9. and see the statute anno 22. H. 8. cap. 5. Pontibus reparandis is a writ directed to the Shyreeue c. willing him to charge one or more to repaire a bridge to whom it belongeth Regist orig fol. 153. b. Portgreue portgreuius is compounded of two words port greue or graue i. praefectus It signifieth with vs the chiefe magistrate in certaine coast townes and as M. Camden saith in his Britan. pag. 325. the chiefe magistrate of London was termed by this name in steed of whom Richard the first ordained two Bayliffes but presently after him King Iohn granted them a Maior for their yearely Magistrate Porter of the doore of the Parlament house is a necessary officer belonging to that high court enioyeth the priuiledges accordingly Cromptons Iurisd fol. 11. Porter in the circuit of Iustices is an officer that carieth a verge or white rodde before the Iustices in Eyre so called a portando virgam anno 13. Ed. 1 cap. 24. Porter bearing verge virgator before the Iustices of either benth anno 13. Ed. 1. cap. 41. See Vergers Portemote is a word compounded of port i. portus and the Saxon Gemettan i. conuenire or of the French mot i. dictio verbum It signifieth a Court kept in hauen townes as Swainmote in the Forest Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pa. 111. It is sometime called the Portmoote Court anno 43. Eliz. cap. 15. Portsale anno 35. H. 8. cap. 7. id est sale of fish presently vpon returne in the hauen Possession possessio is vsed two waies in our common lawe First for lands and inheritance as he is a man of large possessions In which signification it is also vsed among the Ciuilians sc for the thing possessed l. possessionum Cod. commun vtriusque Iudic. Next for the actuall enioying of that which either in truth or pretence is ours And in this signification there is possession indeed and possession in lawe pl. cor fol. 198. The example there is this Before or vntill an office to be found the king hath onely possession in law and not in deed speaking of the lands escheated by the attainder of the owner See praerog fol. 54. 55. In this signification also there is an vnitie of possessiō which the Ciuilians call Consolidationem Take an example out of Kitchin fol. 134. if the Lord purchase the tenancie held by Heriot seruice then the Heriot is extinct by vnity of possession that is because the seigneurie and the tenancie be now in one mans possession Many diuisions of possession you may reade in Bracton lib. 2. cap. 17. per totum Post See Per. Post diem is a returne of a writ after the day assigned for the returne for the which the Custos breuium hath foure pence whereas he hath nothing if it be returned at the day or it may be the fee taken for the same Post fine is a duty belonging to the king for a fine formerly acknowledged before him in his court which is paid by the cognizee after the fine is fully passed and all things touching the same wholly accomplished The rate thereof is so much and halfe so much as was payed to the king for the fine and is gathered by the Shyreeue of the Countie where the land c. lyeth whereof the fine was leuyed to be aunswered by him into the Exchequer Post terme is a returne of a writ not onely after the day assigned for the returne thereof but after the terme also which may not be receiued by the Custos brevium but by the consent of one of the Iudges it may be also the fee which the Custos breuium taketh for the returne thereof which is twenty pence Postea is a word vsed for a mater tried by Nisi prius and returned into the court of common pleas for Iudgement and there afterward recorded See Plowden casu Saunders fol. 211. a. See an example of this in Sir Edw. Cokes reports volum 6. Rowlands case fol. 41. b. 42. a. See Custos breuium Post disseisin post disseisina is a writ giuen by the statute of West 2. cap. 26. and lyeth for him that hauing recouered lands or tenements by praecipe quod reddat vpon default or reddition is againe disseised by the former diffeisour Fitz. nat br fol. 190. see the writ that lyeth for this in the Register originall fol. 208. a. Posteriority posterioritas is a word of comparison and relation in tenure the correlatiue whereof is prioritie For a man holding lands or tenements of two lords holdeth of
say what he can for the iustifiing of his right to this land before he so conveied it The third man commeth not wherevpon the land is recouered by him that brought the writ and the tenent of the land is left for his remedie to the third man that was called and came not in to defend the tenent And by this meanes the entayle which was made by the tenent or his auncester is cut of by iudgement herevpon giuen for that he is pretended to haue no power to entaile that land wherevnto he had no iust title as now it appeareth because it is evicted or recouered from him This kinde of recouery is by good opinion but a snare to deceiue the people Doctor Stud. ca. 32. dial pri fol. 56. a. This feigned Recouery is also called a common Recouery And the reason of that Epitheton is because it is a beaten and common path to that end for which it is ordeined viz. to cut of the estates aboue specified See the new booke of Entries verbo Recouery I saide before that a true recouery is as well of the value as of the thing for the beter vnderstanding whereof know that In valew signifieth as much as Illud quod interest with the Ciuilians For example if a man buy land of an other with warranty which land a third person afterward by suite of lawe recouereth against me I haue my remedie against him that sould it me to recouer in value that is to recouer so much in mony as the land is worth or so much other land by way of exchaunge Fitzh nat br fol. 134. K. To recouer a warranty old nat br fol. 146. is to proue by iudgement that a man was his warrant against all men for such a thing Recto is a writ called in English a writ of Right which is of so high a nature that whereas other writs in reall actions be onely to recouer the possession of the land or tenements in question which haue beene lost by our auncester or our selues this aimeth to recouer both the seisin which some of our Auncesters or wee had and also the propertie of the thing whereof our Auncester died not seised as of fee and whereby are pleaded and tried both the rights togither viz. as well of possession as property Insomuch as if a man once loose his cause vpon this writ either by Iudgement by Assise or batell he is without all remedie and shall be excluded per exceptionem Rei iudicatae Bracton lib. 5. tract 1. cap. 1. seqq where you may reade your fille of this writ It is diuided into two species Rectumpatens a writ of right patent and Rectum clausum a writ of right close This the Ciuilians call Iudicium petitorium The writ of right patent is so called because it is sent open and is in nature the highest writ of all other lying alwaies for him that hath fee simple in the lands or tenements siewed for and not for any other And when it lieth for him that chalengeth fee simple or in what cases See Fitzh nat br fol. pri C. whome see also fol. 6. of a speciall writ of right in London otherwise called a writ of right according to the Custome of London This writ is also called Breue magnum de Recto Register originall fol. 9 A. B. and Fleta li. 5. cap. 32. § 1. A writ of right close is a writ directed to a Lord of auncient Demesn and lieth for those which hould their lands and tenements by charter in fee simple or in fee taile or for terme of life or in dower if they be eiected out of such lands c. or disseised In this case a man or his heire may siew out this writ of Right close directed to the L. of the Auncient Demesn commanding him to doe him right c. in his court This is also called a small writ of right Breve parvum Register originall fol. 9. a. b. and Britton cap. 120. in fine Of this see Fitzh likewise at large nat br fol. 11. seqq Yet note that the writ of right patent seemeth farder to be extended in vse then the originall inuention serued for a writ of Right of Dower which lieth for the tenent in Dower and onely for terme of life is patent as appeareth by Fitzh nat br fol. 7. E. The like may be said of diuers others that doe hereafter followe Of these see also the table of the originall Register verbo Recto This writ is properly tried in the Lords court betweene kindsmen that claime by one title from their Auncester But how it may be thence remoued and brought either to the Countie or to the kings court see Fleta lib. 6. cap. 3. 4. 5. Glanvile seemeth to make euery writ whereby a man sieweth for any thing due vnto him a writ of right lib. 10. ca. 1 lib. 11. cap. 1. lib. 12. cap. 1. Recto de dote is a writ of Right of Dower which lieth for a woman that hath receiued part of her Dower and purposeth to demaund the Remanent in the same towne against the heire or his Gardian if he be ward Of this see more in the old nat br fol. 5. and Fitzh fol. 7. E. and the Register originall fol. 3. and the newe booke of Entries verbo Droyt Recto de dote vnde nihil habet is a writ of right which lieth in case where the husband hauing diuers lands or tenements hath assured no dower to his wife and she thereby is driuen to siew for her thirds against the heire or his Gardian old nat by folio 6. Register originall fol. 170. Recto de rationabili parte is a writ that lieth alway beweene priuies of bloud as brothers in Gauel-kind or sisters or other Coparceners as Nephewes or Neeces and for land in Fee simple For example if a man lease his land for tearme of life and afterward dyeth leauing issue two daughters and after that the tenent for terme of life likewise dyeth the one sister entring vpon all the land and so deforcing the other the sister so deforced shall haue this writ to recouer her part Fitz. nat br fo 9. Register origin fol. 3. Recto quando Dominus remisit is a writ of right which lyeth in case where lands or tenements that be in the Seigneurie of any Lord are in demaund by a writ of right For if the Lord hold no Court or otherwise at the prayer of the Demandant or Tenent shall send to the Court of the King his writ to put the cause thither for that time sauing to him another time the right of his Seigneurie then this writ issueth out for the other partie and hath this name from the words therein comprised being the true occasion thereof This writ is close and must be returned before the Iustices of the common Bancke old nat br fol. 16. Regist orig fol. 4. Recto de Advocatia Ecclesiae is a writ of right lying where a man hath right of Advouzen and
the Parson of the Church dying a straunger presenteth his Clerke to the Church he not hauing moued his action of Quare impedit nor darrein presentment within sixe monethes but suffered the straunger to vsurpe vpon him And this writ he only may haue that claimeth the Aduowzen to himselfe and to his heires in fee. And as it lyeth for the whole aduowzen so it lyeth also for the halfe the third the fourth part old nat br fol. 24. Register originall fol. 29. Recto de custodia terrae haeredis is a writ that lyeth for him whose Tenent houlding of him in Chiualry dyeth in his nonage against a straunger that entreth vpon the land and taketh the body of the heire The forme and farder vse whereof see in Fitzh nat br fol. 139. and the register originall fol. 161. Recto sur disclaimer is a writ that lyeth where the Lord in the kings court sc in the common plees doth avow vpon his tenent and the Tenent disclaimeth to hould of him vpon the disclaimer he shall haue this writ and if the Lord auerre and proue that the land is houlden of him he shall recouer the land for euer old nat br fo 150. which is grounded vpon the statute Westm 2. ca. 2. anno 13. Ed. pri which statute beginneth Quia Domini feudorum c. Rector is both Latine and English signifiing a Gouernour In the common law rector ecclesia parochialis is he that hath the charge or cure of a parish Church qui tantum ius in ecclesia parochiali habet quantum praelatus in ecclesia collegiata ca. vlt De locat Conduct in glos verbo Expelli potuissent In our common law I heare that it is lately ouer ruled that rector ecclesiae parochialis is he that hath a personage where there is a vicarage endowed and he that hath a personage without a vicarage is called persona But this distinction seemeth to be new and subtile praeter rationem I am sure Bracton vseth it otherwise lib 4. tracta 5. ca. pri in these words Et sciendum quod rectoribus ecclesiarum parochialium competit Assisa qui instituti sunt per Episcopos Ordinarios vt personae Where it is plaine that rector and persona be confounded Marke also these words there following Item dici possunt rectores Canonici de ecclesus praebendatis Item dici possunt rectores vel quasi Abbates Priores alii qui habent ecclesias ad proprios vsus Rectus in curia is he that standeth at the barre and hath no man to obiect any offence against him Smith de repub Angl li. 2. c. 3. see a. 6. R. 2. sta 1. c. 12. Reddendum is vsed many times substantiuely for the clause in a lease c. Whereby the rent is reserued to the leasour Coke lib. 2. Lord Cromwels case fol. 72. b. Redisseisin redisseisina is a disseisin made by him that once before was found and adiudged to haue disseised the same man of his lands or tenements For the which there lyeth a speciall writ called a writ of redisseisin old nat br fol. 106. Fitzh nat br fol. 188. See the new booke of Entries verb. Redisseisin Redisseisina is a writ lying for a redisseisin Reg. orig fo 206. 207. Reddicion is a iudiciall confession and acknowledgement that the land or thing in demaūd belongeth to the demaundant or at the least not to himselfe a. 34. 35. H. 8. ca. 24. Perkins Dower 379. 380. Redubbours be those that buy cloth which they know to be stollen and turne it into some other forme or fashion Britton cap. 29. Cromptobs Vicount fol. 193. a. Reentry cōmeth of the French r●●trer i. rursus intrare and signifieth in our common law the resuming or taking againe of possession which we had ●●●st forgone For example if I make a lease of land or tenement I doe thereby forgoe the possession and if I doe condition with the Leassee that for non payment of the rent at the day it shal be lawfull for me to reenter this is as much as if I conditioned to take againe the lands c. into mine owne hands and to recouer the possession by mine owne fact without the assistance of Iudge or proces Reere countie See Rier Cowntye Re extent is a a second extent made vpon lands or tenements vpon complaint made that the former extent was partially performed Brooke titulo Extent fol. 313. Regard regardum is borowed of the French Regard or Regardure i. aspectus conspectus respectus and though it haue a generall signification of any care or diligence yet it hath also a speciall acceptance and therein is vsed onely in maters of the Forest and there two waies one for the office of the Regarder the other for the compasse of ground belonging tothe Regarders office or charge Cromptons Iurisd fol. 175. 199. Touching the former thus saith M. Manwod parte pri of his Forest lawes pag. 198. The Eire generall sessions of the Forest or Iustices seat is to be houlden and kepte euery third yeare and of necessity before that any such sessions or Iustices seate can be houlden the Regarders of the Forest must make their Regard And this making of the Regard must be done by the kings writ And the Regard is as he afterward there saith to goe through the whole Forest and euery Bayliwicke of the same to see and enquire of the trespasses of the Forest which he compriseth in these 4. viz. ad videndendum ad inquirendum ad imbreviandum ad certificandum Of euery of which braunches you may reade there his exposition Touching the second signification the compas of the Regarders charge is the whole Forest that is all that ground which is parcell of the Forest For there may be woods within the limits of the Forest that be no parcell thereof and those be without the Regard as the same author plainely declareth parte pri pag. 194. and againe parte 2. cap. 7. nu 4. where he sheweth the difference between these words Infra Regardum or Rewardum Infra Forestam Regarder Regardator commeth of the French Regardeur i. spectator signifieth an officer of the Forest Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 153. where it is thus defined A Regarder is an officer of the Forest appointed to survew all other officers He saith there also that this officer was ordeined in the beginning of King Henry the seconds daies M. Manwood in his first part of Forest lawes pag. 188. thus defineth him A Regarder is an officer of the Kings Forest that is sworne to make the Regard of the Forest as the same hath been vsed to be made in auncient time And also to view and inquire of all offences of the Forest as well of vert as of venison and of all concealements of any offences or defaults of the Foresters and of all other officers of the Kings Forest concerning the execution of their offices He saith there also that a Regarder may be made either by the Kings
in the reuersion commeth in and prayeth to be receiued to defend the land and to plead with the Demandant Many more you may haue in Brooke titulo Resceite fol. 205. See Perkins Dower 448. ●eceit is also applied to an admittance of plee though the controuersie be but betweene two onely Brooke estoppell in many places Resceyt of homage is a relatiue to doing homage for as the Tenent who oweth homage doth it at his admission to the land so the Lord receiueth it Kitchin fol. 148. See Homage Rescous Rescussus commeth of the French Rescourre se Rescourre du danger i. asserere se ab iniuria It signifieth in our common law a resistance against a lawfull authoritie as for example if a Baylife or other officer vpon a writ doe arrest a man and another one or more by violence doe take him away or procure his escape this act is called a Rescus Cassanaeus in his booke de consuetud Burg. hath the same word coupled with resistentia fol. 294. whereby it appeareth that other nations do vse this word in the same signification that we doe or the very like It is also vsed for a writ which lyeth for this act called in our lawyers latine Breue de rescussu whereof you may see both the forme and vse in Fitzh nat br fol. 101. and the register originall fol 125. See the new booke of Entries verbo rescous This rescous in some cases is treason and in some felony Crompton Iustice fol 54. b. Reseiser reseisire is a taking againe of lands into the Kings hands whereof a generall liuery or ouster le main was formerly missued by any person or persons and not according to forme and order of law Of this see Stawnf praeroga 26. where it is handled at large See resumption Resiance resiantia seemeth to come of the French rasseoir see Rasseoir i. residere and signifieth a mans aboad or continuance in a place Old nat br fo 85. whence also commeth the participle resiant that is continually dwelling or abiding in a place Kitchin fol. 33. It is all one in truth with Residence but that custome of speach tyeth that onely to persons ecclesiasticall Reseruation signifieth that rent or seruice which the graunter in any graunt tyeth the grauntee to performe vnto him or them or the Lord Paramonte Perkins reseruations per totum Residence residentia commeth of the Latine residere and is peculiarly vsed both in the Canon and Common lawe for the continuance or abode of a Parson or Vicar vpon his benefice The default whereof except the partie be qualified and dispenced with is the losse of tenne pounds for euery moneth anno 28. Henr. 8. cap. 13. Resignation resignatio is vsed particularly for the giuing vp of a Benefice into the hands of the Ordinarie otherwise called of the Canonists renunciatio And though it signifie all one in nature with the word Surrender yet it is by vse more restreined to the yeelding vp of a spirituall liuing into the hands of the Ordinarie and Surrender to the giuing vp of temporall lands into the handes of the Lord. And a resignation may now be made into the hands of the King as well as of the Diocesan because he hath supremam authoritatem Ecclesiasticam as the Pope had in time past Plowden casu Grendon fol. 498. a. Resort is a word vsed properly in a writ of ayle or cousenage as discent is in a writ of right Ingham Respectu computi Vice-comitis habendo is a writ for the respiting of a Shyreeues accompt vpon iust occasion directed to the Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer Register fol. 139 279. Respight of homage respectus homagii is the forbearing of homage which ought first of all to be performed by the tenent that holdeth by homage Which respight may be occasioned vpon diuers good reasons but it hath the most frequent vse in such as hold by Knights seruice in capite who because the Prince cannot be at leasure to take their homage do pay into the Exchequer at certaine times in the yeare some small summe of money to be respighted vntill the Prince may be at leasure to take it in person Responsions responsiones seeme to be a word vsed properly and especially by the knights of S. Iohn of Ierusaiem for certaine accompts made vnto them by such as occupied their landes or stockes anno 32. H. 8. cap. 24. Responsalis is he that commeth for another at the day assigned for his appearance in Court Bracton Fleta seemeth to make a difference betweene atturn atum essoniatorem responsalem lib. 6. cap. 11. § Officium as if essoniator came onely to alledge the cause of the parties absence be he the demandant or tenent and responsalis came for the tenent not onely to excuse his absence but also to signifie what triall he meant to vndergoe viz. the combat or the countrie lib. 6. cap. 11. § Si autem A man in auncient time could not appoint an Atturney for him without warrant from the king Fleta eodem cap. 13. in fine See Atturney This word is vsed in the Canon lawe Et significat procuratorem vel eum qui absentem excusat cap. Cùm olim propter extra de rescript Restitution restitutio is a yeelding vp againe of any thing vnlawfully taken from another It is vsed in the common law most notoriously for the setting him in possession of lands or tenements that hath bene vnlawfully disseised of them which when it is to be done and when not see Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 144. b. c. vsque 149. Restitutione extracti ab Ecclesia is a writ to restore a man to the Church which he had recouered for his sanctuarie being suspected of felonie Register ori fol. 69. a. Restitutione temporalium is a writ that lyeth in case where a man being elected and confirmed Bishop of any Diocesse and hath the Princes royall assent thereunto for the recouery of the temporalities or Baronie of the said Bishopricke with the appurtenances And it is directed from the King to the Escheatour of the Countie the forme whereof you haue in the Regist origin fol. 294. and in Fitz. nat br fol. 169. Where you may read also that it lyeth for those Abbots and Priors newly elected and confirmed that were of the kings foundation Resummons resummonitio is compounded twice that is of re sub and Moneo and signifieth a second summons and calling of a man to answer an action where the first summons is defeated by any occasion as the death of the partie or such like Brook tit See Resummons fol. 214. See of these foure sorts according to the foure diuers cases in the Table of the Register Iudiciall fol. 1. See also the new booke of Entries verbo Reattachement Resummons Resumption resumptio is particularly vsed for the taking again into the Kings hands such land or tenements as before vpon false suggestion or other error he had deliuered to the heire or graunted by leters
this word is from the French Asseoir as signifiing a disposing or placing of any thing or as we say in English an assessing of any person toward the performance of a dutie Sexagesima See Septuagesima Shanckes See Furre Shares See Flotzon Shewing is to be quit of attachment in any court and before whom soeuer in plaints shewed and not avowed Newe exposition of law termes verbo Shewing See Scauage Shipper anno 1. Iac. ses 1. ca. 33. is a Dutch word signifying the Master of the ship Shire Comitatus Shira is a Saxon word signifying Satrapian of the verbe scyran 1. partiri Lamb. in his explication of Saxon words verbo Centuria The word is in vse so rife that euery child vnderstandeth it Who first thus diuided this land into shires appeareth by M. Camdens Britan. pa. 102. in these words Nee dum tamen florente Heptarchia Anglia ita in Comitatus diuisa sic enim vulgò vocant sed postea cum solus Aluredus rerum potiretur Vt enim Germani maiores nostri teste Tacito iura per pagos vicosque reddebant centeni ex plebe comites ad rem administrandam adiungebantur sic ille vt Ingulfi Croulandensis verbi vtar primus Angliam in Comitatus diuisit quod indigenae rapinas committerent exemplo colore Danorum Comitatus porrò in Centurias i. Hundreds Decimas i. Tythings distribus fecit praecepitque vt omnis indigena in aliqua esset Centuria Decima Praefectos etiam preuinciarum qui antea Vicedomini vocabantur in duo officia diuisit viz Iudices nunc Iusticiarios Vice-comites qui adhuc idem nomen retinent See the rest Shyreeue Vicecomes is compounded of these saxon words Scyre 〈◊〉 satrapia and Reue i. praefectus and accordingly he is the cheife officer vnder the King of his Shyre or County See Ferme in Lacies nobility pag. 12. M. Camden pag. 104. Thus describeth his office Singulis verò annis nobilis aliquis ex incolis praeficitur quem vicecomitem quasi vicarium comitis nostrâ linguá Shief i. comitatus praepositum vocamus qui etiam comitatus vel prouinciae Quaestor rectè dici potest Eius enim est publicas pecunias prouincia suae conquirere mulctas irrogatas vel pignoribus ablatis colligere aerario inferre Indicibus praesto adesse eorum mandata exequi duodecim viros cogere qui in causis de facto cognoscunt ad Iudices referunt Iudices enim apud nos iuris solùm non facti sunt Iudices condemnatos ad supplicium ducere in minoribus litibus cognoscere In matoribus autemius 〈◊〉 Iusticiarii quos itiner antes ad 〈◊〉 sas vos ant qui quotannis bos Comitatus bis adeunt vt de causis cognoscant de incarceratis fententiam ferant Henricus secundus hos it inerantes instituit vel poteùs restituit Ille vt inquit Mathaeus Parisiensis consilio filii sui Episcoporum constituit Iusticiar os per sex paries regni in qualibet parte tres qui iurare nt quod cuilibet ius suum conseruarent illaesum Of the antiquitie and authoritie of this officer reade Sir Edward Cookes Reports lib. 4. Mittons case The maner of appointing these Shyreeues in Henry the sixt his dayes see in Fortescue cap. 24. fol. 53. b. The name Vicecomes commeth from the Normans as Shyreeue commeth from the Saxons For in the fifth Chapter of the Grand Custumarie you haue viconte which the Latine Interpreter turneth vicecomitem whose office you shall find in that Chapter to be very like vnto ours The forme of the Shyreeues oath see in the Register origin fol. 301. b. Of this reade M. Skene de verbor signif verbo Shyreeue where he largely describeth the office of the Shyreeue in Scotland in a discourse woorth the reading Shyreeue weke of Winchester and of Essex anno 21. R. 2. cap. 10. 11. Shire Clerke seemeth to bee the Vnder shyreeue anno 11. H. 7. cap. 15. It is vsed sometime for a Clerk in the County court deputie to the Vndershyreeue See Sir Edward Cookes 4. booke of Reports in Mittons case Shire moote see Turne Shorling and Morling seeme to be words to distinguish fels of sheepe as if shorling should signifie the fels after the fleeces be shorne off the sheepes backe and morling the fels fleane off after they be killed or dye alone anno 3. Ed. 4. cap. prim anno 4. eiusdem cap. 3. anno 12. eius cap. 5. anno 14. eiusdem cap. 3. Shot commeth of the Saxon word sceate signifying pecuntam aut vectigal Lamberds explicatiō of saxon words verbo Primitiae Shrof metall Sicut aliâs is a writ sent out in the second place whereas the first sped not Coke libro quart folio 55. b. It is so called of these words expressed in it For example Iacobus dei gratia c. vicecomiti Kan salutem Praeciptmus tibi sicut aliâs praecepimus quod non omittas propter aliquam libertatem in Balliua tua quin eam ingrediaris capias A. B. de C. in comitatu tuo Labourer c. as in the first capias Lamb in his tractat of processes in the end of his Eiranarcha Sidemen aliâs Quest men be those that are yearely chosen according to the custome of euery parish to assist the church wardens in the inquiry and presenting such offenders to the Ordinary as are punishable in the Court Cristian Significauit is the writ de excommunicato capiendo which issueth out of the Chauncery vpon a certificate giuen by an Ordinary of a man that standeth obstinately excommunicate by the space of fourty daies for the laying him vp in prison without bayle or mainprise vntill he submit himselfe to the authority of the church And it is so called because of the word significauit mentioned in the writ De excōmunicato capiendo which haue relation to the certificate sent into the Chauncery by the Ecclesiasticall Iudge There is also another writ in the Register orig of this name fo 7. a. directed to the Iustices of the bench willing them to stay any suite depending betweene such and such by reason of any excommunication alledged against the plaintiffer because the sentence of the Ordinarie that did excommunicate him is appealed from and the appeale yet hangeth vnderided Which see and see Fitz. nut br De excommunicato capiendo fol. 62. N. but especially 66. A. where you may find writs of this name in other cases Sine asseusu capituli is a writ that lyeth in case where a Deane Bishop Prebendarie Abbot Prior or Master of Hospitall alieneth the land held in the right of his house without the consent of the Chapter Couent or Fraternitie For in this case his successor shall haue this writ Fitzh nat br fol. 195. Si non omnes is a writ of association whereby if all in cōmission cannot meete at the day assigned it is permitted that two or more of them may finish the
high way ouerflowne with water for default of scowring a ditch which he and they whose estate he hath in certain land there haue vsed to scower and cleanse A. may trauerse either the mater viz. that there is no high way there or that the ditch is sufficiently scowred or otherwise he may trauers the cause viz. that he hath not the land c. or that he and they whose estate c. haue not vsed to scoure the ditch Lamb. Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 13. pag. 521 522. Of Trauers see a whole chapter in Kitchin fol. 240. See the new booke of Entries verbo Trauers Treason traditio vel proditio commeth of the French trahison i. proditio and signifieth an offence committed against the amplitude and maiestie of the commonwealth West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditements sect 63. by whom it is there diuided into High treason which other call altam proditionem and petit treason High treason he defineth to be an offence done against the securitie of the common wealth or of the Kings most excellent Maiestie whether it be by imagination word or deed as to compasse or imagine treason or the death of the Prince or the Queene his wife or his sonne and heyre apparent or to deflowre the Kings wife or his eldest daughter vnmaried or his eldest sonnes wife or leuie war against the King in his Realme or to adhere to his enemies ayding them or to counterfeit the Kings great Seale priuie Seale or money or wittingly to bring false money into this Realme counterfeited like vnto the money of England and vtter the same or to kill the Kings Chaunceler Treasurer Iustice of the one bench or of the other Iustices in Eyre Iustices of Assise Iustices of oyer and terminer being in his place doing of his office anno 25. Ed. prim ca. 2. or forging of the Kings seale manuell or priuy signet priuy seale or forrein coine current within the Realme anno 2. Mar. cap. 6. or diminishing or impairing of money current an 5. Elizab. ca. 11. anno 14. El. ca. 3. 18. Elizab. ca. pri and many other actions which you may read there and in other places particularly expressed And in case of this treason a man forfeiteth his lands and goods to the King onely And it is also called treason Paramount anno 25. Ed. 3. cap. 2. The forme of Iudgement giuen vpon a man conuicted of high treason is this The Kings Sergeant after the verdict deliuered craueth Iudgement against the prisoner in the behalfe of the King Then the Lord Steward if the traitour haue bene noble or other Iudge if he be vnder a peere saith thus N. Earle of P. For so much as thou before this time hast bene of these treasons indited and this day arraigned for thee same and put thy selfe vpon God and thy peeres and the Lords thy peeres haue foūd thee guilty my Iudgement is that thou shalt from hence be conueied vnto the Tower of London whence thou camest and from thence drawne through the middest of London to Tiburne and there hanged and liuing thou shalt be cut downe thy bowels to be cut out and burnt before thy face thy head cut off and thy body to be diuided in foure quarters and disposed at the Kings Maiesties pleasure and God haue mercy vpon thee Petit treason is rather described by examples then any where logically defined as when a seruant killeth his master or a wife her husband or when a secular or religious man killeth his prelate to whom he oweth faith and obedience And in how many other cases petit treason is committed See Cromptons Iustice of peace And this maner of treason giueth forfeiture of Escheats to euery Lord within his owne fee anno 25. Ed. 3. cap. 2. Of treason see Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 3. nu pri 2. Treason compriseth both high and petit treason anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 3. cap. 4. Treasure troue The saurus inuentus is as much as in true French Tresor trouuè i. treasure found and signifieth in our common law as it doth in the Ciuile law idest veterem depositionem pecuniae cuius non extat memoria vt iam dominum non habeat l. 31 § prim Π. de acquir rerum Dom. Neere vnto which definition commeth Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 3. num 4. And this treasure found though the ciuill lawe do giue it to the finder according to the lawe of nature yet the lawe of England giueth it to the King by his prerogatiue as appeareth by Bracton vbi supra And therefore as he also saith in the sixth chapter it is the Coroners office to enquire therof by the countrie to the Kings vse And Stawn pl. cor lib. pr. cap. 42. saith that in auncient times it was doubtfull whether the concealing of treasure found were felonie yea or not and that Bracton calleth it grauem praesumptionem quasi crimen furti But the punishment of it at these dayes as he proueth out of Fitzh Abridgment pag. 187. is imprisonment and fine and not life and member And if the owner may any way be knowne then doth it not belong to the kings prerogatiue Of this you may reade Britton also cap. 17. who saith that it is euery subiects part as soone as he hath found any treasure in the earth to make it knowne to the Coroner of the countrie or to the Bayliffes c. See Kitchin also fol. 40. Treasurer thesaurarius commeth of the French tresorier i. quaestor praefectus fisci and signifieth an Officer to whom the treasure of another or others is committed to be kept and truly disposed of The chiefest of these with vs is the Treasurer of England who is a Lord by his office and one of the greatest men of the land vnder whose charge and gouernment is all the Princes wealth contained in the Exchequer as also the checke of all Officers any way employed in the collecting of the Imposts tributes or other reuenewes belonging to the Crowne Smith de Repub. Anglor lib. 2. cap. 14. more belonging to his office see ann 20 Ed. 3. cap. 6. anno 31. H. 6. cap. 5. anno 4. Ed. 4. cap. pri anno 17. eiusdom cap. 5. anno prim R. 2. cap. 8. anno 21. H. 8. cap. 20. anno prim Ed. 6. cap. 13. Ockams Lucubrations affirme that the Lord chiefe Iustice had this authoritie in times past and of him hath these words Iste excellens Sessor omnibus quae in inferrore vel superiore scacchio sunt prospicit Ad nutum ipsius quaelibet officia subiecta disponuntur sic tamen vt ad Domini Regis vtilitatem iuste perueniant Hic tamen inter caetera videtur excellens quod potest his sub testimonio suo breve Domini Regis facere fieri vt de thesauro quaelibet summa liberetur vel vt computetur quod sibi ex Domini Regis mandato praenouerit computandum vel si maluerit breve suum
patents to any man Brooke titulo Repellance Resumption fol. 298. Thus it is applyed anno 31. H. 6. cap. 7. See Reseiser Retainer commeth of the French retenir i. detinere retinere It signifieth in the cōmon law a seruant not meniall nor familiar that is not continually dwelling in the house of his Lord or Master but onely vsing or bearing his name or liuery This liuery was wont to consist of hats otherwise hoods badges and other suits of one garment by the yeare anno pri R. 2. cap. 7. These were taken by great Lords many times vpon purpose of maintenance and quarels and therefore they haue beene iustly for the better freedome of law forbidden by many statutes as namely by anno pri R. 2. cap. 7. vpon paine of imprisonment and greeuous forfeiture to the King and againe anno 16 eiusd cap. 4. anno 20. eiusedem cap. 1. 2. and anno pri H. 4. cap. 7. by the which the Lords offending herein should make ransome at the Kings will and any Knight or Esquire hereof duly attainted should loose his said Liuery and forfeit his see for euer and any yeoman wearing the Liuery of the King or other Lord should be imprisoned and make raunsome at the Kings will onely some fewe excepted in the said statute which statute is farder confirmed and explaned anno 2. H. 4. cap. 21. an 7. eiusd cap. 14. anno 13. eiusd cap. 3. anno 8. H. 6. ca. 4. And yet this offence was so deeply rooted that Edward the fourth was driuen to confirme the former statutes and farder to extend the meaning of them as appeareth by the statute made anno 8. Ed. 4. cap. 2. adding an especiall paine of fiue pounds to euery man that giueth such Liuery and as much to euery one so retained either by writing oath or promise for euery moneth Yet is not this fault so well looked vnto but that there is need of more pregnant lawes for the redresse thereof or at the least beter execution of those that be already made These be by the Feudists called affidati Sic enim dicuntur qui in alicuius fidem tutelam recepti sunt Neapol constitu li. 3. titulo 7. And as our retainers are here forbidden so are those affidati in other countries Retraxit is an exception against one that formerly commenced an action and withdrew it or was non-suit before triall Brooke titulo Departure in despight Retraxit fol. 216. See also the new booke of Entries verbo Deperter verbo retrar it Returne returna commeth of the French retour i. reditio reuersio recursus and in our common law hath two particular applycations as namely the return of a writ by Shyreeues and Bayliffs which is nothing but a certificate made to the Court whereunto the writ directeth him of that which he hath done touching the seruing of the same writ And this among the Ciuilians is called Certificatorium Of returnes in this signification speake the statutes of Westm 2. cap. 39. anno 13. Ed. prim and Tractatus contra Vice-comites Clericos with diuers other collected by Rastal titulo Returne of Shyreeues So is the returne of an office Stawnf prarog fol. 70. a certificate into the court of that which is done by vertue of his office See the Statutes of dayes in banke anno 51. H. 3. anno 32. H. 8. cap. 21. And in this signification Hilary terme is said to haue 4. returnes viz. Octabis Hilarii Quindena Hilarii crastino Purificationis Octabis Purificationis and Easter terme to haue 5. returnes viz. Quindena paschae Tres paschae mense paschae Quinque pasche crastino Ascensionis And Trinity terme 4. returnes i. Crastino Trinitatis Octabis Trinitatis Quindena Trinitatis Tres Trinitatis And Michaelmas Terme 8. returnes sc Octabis Michaelis Quindena Michaelis Tres Michaelis Mense Michaelis Crastino animarum Crastino Martini Octabis Martini Quindena Martini The other application of this word is in case of Repleuy For if a man distraine catell for rent c. And afterward iustifie or avowe his act that it be found lawfull the catell before deliuered vnto him that was distrained vpon security giuen to follow the action shall now be returned to him that distrained them Brooke titulo Returne d'auers hommes fol. 218. you shall finde this word often vsed in Fitzh nat br as appeareth in the word Returne in his table but in all those places it hath the one or the other of these two significations Returno habendo is a writ which lyeth for him that hath auowed a distresse made of catell and proued his distresse to be lawfully taken for the returne of the catell distrained vnto him which before were expleuied by the party distrained vpon suerty giuen to persiew the action Terms of law verbo Repleuin Returnum aueriorum is a writ Iudiciall graunted to one impleaded for taking the cattell of another vniust deteining of them contra vadium plegios and appearing vpon summons is dismissed without day by reaso● that the plaintife maketh default and it lyeth for the returne of the cattell vnto the Defendant whereby he was summoned or which were taken for the security of his apparence vpon the summons Register Iudiciall fol. 4. a. Returnum irreplegiabile is a writ iudiciall sent out of the common plees to the Shyreeue for the finall restitution or returne of catell to the owner vniustly taken by another as dammage seisant and so found by the Iury before Iustices of Assise in the County For which see the Register Iudiciall fo 27. a. b. Reue aliâs Greue Praefectus is made of Gerefa the Saxon word for a gouerner Lamb explica of Saxon words verb. Profectus and that by reiecting the first sillable which he saith among the Saxons is vsuall It signifieth in our common law the Bayliffe of a Fraunchis or maner and especially in the West parts Of this you may see Kitchin fol. 43. See Greue See Shyreeue See also of this word M. Verstigan in his restitution of decayed intelligence cap 10. speaking much to the same effect Reuels seemeth to be deriued from the French word Reueiller i. excitari vel expergefieri It signifieth with vs sports of daunsing masking comedies tragedies and such like vsed in the Kings house the houses of court or of other great personages The reason whereof is because they are most vsed by night when otherwise men commonly sleepe and be at rest In the Kings house there is an officer called the Master of these Reuils who hath the ordering and dispositions of these pastimes in the court Reuenewe is a French word signifiing as much as Reditio Reuersio Reditus It signifieth properly the yearely rent that groweth to euery man from his lands and possessions Reuersion Reversio signifieth in the comon lawe a possibility reserued to a mans selfe and his heires to haue againe lands or tenements made ouer conditionally vnto others vpon the defect or fayling of