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A40473 The touchstone of precedents, relating to judicial proceedings at common law by G.F. of Grayes-Inn, Esquire. G. F., of Gray's-Inn. 1682 (1682) Wing F22; ESTC R14229 160,878 378

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2. A Prescription by Que Estate ought not to be of things which lye in Grant as Rents Villein c. but ought to be made only in him who prescribes and his Ancestors or otherwise he ought to shew the Deed and Grant by which he claims But a man may alledg a Que Estate of a thing which lyes in Grant when it is but a Conveyance to another thing as to say that he and all those whose Estates he hath in an Hundred have used alwayes to have a Leet So a man may alledge a Que Estate in another of a thing which lyes in Grant although not privy to the Conveyance as the Plaintiff in Replevin may alledg a Que Estate in the Seigniory in the Avowant Co. Lit. 121. Such things as cannot be forfeited or seised before the Encheson of the forfeiture be found by Record cannot be claimed by Prescription as Bona et Catalla Felonum c. Co. Lit. 113. Lib. 9. Abbot de Strata Marcella's Case When one hath Common by Prescription paying for it such a Summ of money he may prescribe generally and if the Money be not paid it may be shewn of the other side and also is a Condition subsequent but when a Custom is for one to have Pot-water c. paying a peny for it Quaere if it may be claim'd generally because that the other part hath not any Remedy for the peny Co 5. Rep. Grayes Case In Replevin the Avowant said That the Plaintiff and his Ancestors and those whose Estate he hath in such Lands c. have Common in locus in quo c. being the Land of the Avowant and that he and his Ancestors c. have paid 10 s. per annum for the same and so avowes and good per curiam 26 H. 6. 5. When a Corporation which hath any thing by Prescription be changed and incorporated by an other name c. how they ought to prescribe see Co. Lib. 6. fo 66. 7 E. 4. 32. Co. Lib. 8. fo 64. Inhabitants of a Town cannot prescribe but they may alledg a Custom 18 E. 4. 3. A man prescribes that he and his Ancestors and all their Tenants at Will have Common of Turbary it is not good See the Prescription in the Bishop of Winchesters Case 2 Rep. 1. That he and his Predecessors Bishops there have used time out of mind for himself and their Tenants to hold the Demesnes of the Mannor discharged from Tithes 9 H. 6. 62. A Benefit or Profit apprendre cannot be claimed by Custom in the Lands of another except in Cases of necessity as in the Case of a Copy-holder when he claims Common or other profit in the wasts of the Mannor or in other Lands of the Lord with the Mannor But when he claims it in the Lands of any other within or out of the Mannor he must prescribe in the Lord and the thing where c. be it aliened and severed from the Mannor or comes again to the Lord although the Copy-holder in such Cases may alledg the Custom Co. 6. Gatewards Case Lib. 4. 31. Co. 8. 64. Swains Case An Action upon the Case for stopping a Water-course que currere consuevit was brought against one and held good But if it be against a Terretenant or when a Quod permittat or an Assise is brought there he must prescribe and shew his Title A Custom pro bono privato cannot be alledged in an Upland Town which is neither City or Burrough But Customs which are pro bono publico as to have a Way to the Church to make By-Laws for Reparations of a Church Highways or Bridges or for the good ordering of a Common may be alledged in an Upland Town or Hamlet Co. Lit. 110. A Copy-holder ought not to alledge a Custom to make a Surrender because it is the Custom throughout England so of a Lease for a year for by the general Custom of England Copy-holders may make Leases for a year Co. 9. 751. Combes Case Co. Entr. 576. But particular Customs of particular places may be alledged as the Custom of Gavelkind and of Burrough-English which Customs must be precisely pleaded and alledged 28 H. 8. Dyer 27 b. Rast Entr. 143. Co. Entr. 602. But the Lord Coke in his Commentary upon Littleton fo 175. b. is of Opinion that it is sufficient to say that the Land is of the Custom of Gavelkind or of Burrough-English for that the Law takes notice of the Quality of the Customs How and in what manner a Custom may be pleaded and when it shall be a good plea and when not SEE James Bags Case in the Lord Cokes Reports lib 11. fo 94. where in the Margin of the Pleading in Action upon the Case against the Major and Burgesses of Plimouth it is said that in the Plea of the Major and Burgesses they ought to have first prescribed that they were a Corporation of a Major and Burgesses time out of mind c. Co. 11. 94. Note The Parishoners may prescribe to Choose two Church-Wardens and may put them out of their Office if they see cause The Parishioners may not bring an Action of Account against the Church-Wardens But they may choose other Church-Wardens and they may have an Action of Account against the former No man can prescribe to have a Pew or Seat in a Church but in an Isle adjoyning to the Church which he hath used to repair at his own Charge If a man dwell in one Parish and hold Lands in another Parish he shall be Taxed towards the repair of that Church where the Lands lye For he is accounted a Parishioner there in respect of the Land and the person and not the Land is chargeable But if a man lets Land to another the Lessor is not chargeable in respect of the Rent he receives If a man comes to a Common Inn and delivers his Horse to the Hostler and requires him to put him out to Grass and he doth it accordingly and the Horse is stolen the Inn-holder shall not answer for it Tythes shall be paid for the second mowing of Grass unless there be a prescription to be discharged by payment for the Tythes of the first Mowing But after Tithes are paid for the first Mowing it is thereby discharged for that year for all after pasture for Tythes shall not be paid two ways in one year for the same thing No prescription in Lands maketh a Right Therefore a man must shew some other matter to prove his Right but a prescription of Rents or Profits out of Lands makes a Right A Woman may prescribe that all the Women within such a Town have been endowed of the moiety of all the Lands of their Husbands of which they were seized as of Fee yet she shall not be endowed of the Moiety of the Rent Where there is a Custom That if the Father be hanged for Felony his Son shall Inherit and the Land shall not escheat to the Lord yet if the Father shall
deux Guards nor Quare impedit of two Churches Yet by the Judges it was held good eonugh as of Trespa●s for a man may joyn Lands of twenty Titles in Trespass and Trespass lyes f Wood Pasture and the like and 4 E. 2. if a man hold Lands in Capite and dye having issue only two Daughters within age and they are ravished the Lord shall have but one Ravishment de Gard. and 31 H. 6. 14. if a stranger enters upon two Parceners they shall have but one Formedon and if the Lessor shall have one Writ of Covenant for those Houses the Assignce shall have the same For the Statute of 32 H. 8. ca. 14. gives the Assignee the power of the Lessor And the Lord Chief Justice Coke said If a man seised of Lands in Fee enfeoffs an other to the use of himself for Life the Remainder of part to one of his Daughters and ●he Heirs of her Body issuing the Remainder of the Residue to the other Daughter and the Heirs of her body issuing the Eldest Daughter dyes without Issue a Stranger enters upon the whole the other Sister shall have but one Writ Mich. 8. Jacobi in Communi Banco inter Pyot dominam St. John If an Infant Lets Lands for a Term of years rendring Rent he may at his Election have an Action of Debt for the Rent reserved upon the Lease or bring Trespass for occupying of the Land and so he may have an Action of Trespass for the use of of a thing sold by him And if an infant do give an Horse to one without actual delivery of the Horse into his hands at the time of the gift and the Donee taketh the Horse by reason of the gift the Infant may have an Action of Trespass against him 18 E. 4. 2. If an Infant makes a Lease for years or a Lease per dures if the Lessee enter the Infant may have an Assise but if the Infant makes a Feoffment and deliver seisin accordingly he shall have no Assise for by the Livery of seisin the Feoffee had a possession at Will at least but if he makes a Letter of Attorney to deliver seisin he may have an Assise 9 H. 7. 24. 8. 2. Mar. 109. Dyer Rug. Case If an Obligation be made to Husband and Wife the writ may be brought in the Husbands name only 12 R. 2. Breif 639. And so Where a Lease for years is made by Husband and Wife of the Lands of the Wife rendring Rent the Action of Debt must be brought in the name of the Husband only 7 E. 4. 5. But by 2 R. 2. in a Writ concerning a Chattel real they may joyn 2 R. 2. Breif 37. As to such things which concern the person of the Wife immediately there the Writ must be brought in both their names And therefore The Husband cannot sue a Writ of Appeal for the Rape of his Wife without naming the Wife 8 H. 4. 21. 1 H. 6. 10 H. 4. Brook Baron Feme 34. Husband and Wife brought an Action of Battery for the beating of them both the Writ was adjudged good for the Battery of the Wife but not as to the Husband 9 E. 4. 54. The Husband and the Wife shall both bring an Action of Trespass for the taking away the Goods of the Wife before Marriage 21 H. 33. In a Writ of Detinue of Chartres against Husband and Wife Declaration was upon a Trover and the Writ was abated 13 R. 2. Breif 644. A Writ of Covenant was brought by the Husband and Wife for that the Defendant had Leased to them Lands by Deed for Term of years and afterwards ousted them and the Writ was adjudged to be good for if the Husband dyes the Wife shall have the Term and in this Case they were both parties to the Covenant 47 E. 3. 12. An Action of Debt for the arrearages of Rent reserved upon a Lease for years made unto the Husband and the Wife shall be brought against them both and so shall a Writ of Wast for the Wife cannot waive the Lease during the life of the Husband 6 E. 4. 10 17 E. 4. 7. An Action upon the Statute of Laborers was brought against Husband and Wife supposing that the Wife had Covenanted with the Plaintiff to be waiting-woman to his Wife for a year and that she departed out of service within the year and the writ was adjudged to be good being brought against them both 8 R. 2. Laborers 59. A man may have a writ of Detinue of Charters and of Chattels joyntly because there one thing is the ground of the Action viz. the Deteyner 44 E. 3. 41 Breif 583. Likewise a man may have a writ of Debt where part of the Debt is due by Obligation and part by Contract because there the Debt is only occasion of the suit 41 E. 3 damage 75. 1 H. 5. 4. So in things of the like nature one writ may comprehend many wrongs and therefore an Action of the Case was brought for hindring the Plaintiff to hold his Leet 2. for the disturbance of his Servants and Tenants in the gathering his Tithe 3. for Threatning so that the people c. durst not come to a certain Chappel to do their Devotion and present their Offerings 4. for the taking of his Servants and Chattels 19 R. 2. Action sur le Case 52. When an Action is given by the Statute and the Statute doth not prescribe any certain form of the writ the writ framed at the Common Law shall serve for that purpose and the special matter shall be set forth in the Declaration Dyer 37. a. 83. Where a man shall have an Action against his own Deed. A man shall have an Action against his own Deed as if I disseise an Abbot and make Feoffment in Fee with waranty and afterwards I am made Abbot of the same House my Feoffment shall not be a Barr to me notwithstanding it was with warranty I shall have an Action against my Alienee because that I recover to the use of the House and not to my own use The same Law if I disseise Major and Commonalty c. The same Law of the Parson of a Church The same Law if I take a Horse of a Feme sole and Sell it and afterwards marry her I shall have an Action of Debt against my Alienee because that I recover to the use of my Wife tamen quaere A Monk shall have a Quo minus debitum Domini Regis solvere non potest for the advantage upon a Lease made by the King reserving Rent 14 H. 4. The same Law if a Villein be made executor to a man to whom the Lord is bound the Villein shall have an Action against his Lord. The same Law if a Monk be made Executor c. The same Law if an Abbot hath been disseised and afterwards the disseisor is desseised the Disseisor releaseth with warranty and after that is made Abbot he shall find against his own Deed
where not Further if the Award be that he shall go to Pauls with an Estranger this is void and vet it is possible but peradventure the Stranger will not go with him Note if the Award be that one of the parties shall deliver to the other the Goods that is in the house of I. S. this is void and yet it is not impossible but because that he might do wrong to I. S. to enter into his house and to convey his Goods from thence But if the Property of the Goods be in the party that is to perform the Arbitrement peradventure it may be otherwise forasmuch as his Entry is lawful Audita Quaerela A Statute is Acknowledged before the Major of Westminster and Recordor of London according to the Statute The Cognizor being within the age of one and twenty viz. 20 years and upwards And after his full age to the 23 d he brings his Audita Quaerela upon this matter and Judgment that he take nothing by the Writ because it could not then be tryed by inspection whether he were within age or not And the form of the Writ in the Registors is to alleadge that he still is within age Audita Quaerela lyes upon Nihil facias but not upon Sc●re facias 21 E. 3. For vigilantibus et don dormientibus subvenient Leges per Hutton Mich. 11 Jacobi in C. B. The Executor of the Conusee releaseth to the Conusor in a Statute Merchant and afterwards dyes and one takes Administration of the Goods of the Conusee not Administred and hath Execution of the Statute and against him the Conusor brings an Audita Quaerela Trin. 28 Eliz. rotulo 2136 in C. B. Avowry vide Replevin AVowry for an Amerciament in a Court Baron quia presentatum fuit that he was Summoned and came not and alleadges in fact that he was resident c. as he must c. for when t is only presentatum c. and not alledged in fact 't is ill Mo. Pl. 221. In Avowry it was set forth that a Dean and Chapter were seised in Jure Ecclesie and not said seized in Fee and held ill for they might be seized per auter vie and their Title ought to be certainly set forth and this is but that they made a Lease for 99 years per dodrige if it had been that they made a Lease for 200 years it had implyed a Feoffment in Fee Pop. 163. Latch 121. Avowry Avowry for damage feasant and shews a Lease from I. S. seized in Fee the Plaintiff says I. S. was seized in Tayl and conceives the Estate to himself as Heir the Avowal seizes the Land rendring Rent and that he had accepted it Qu. If it be not a departure 1 Jnst 304. It seems a fortifying of the Avowry and so not Sti. 41. Taylors Case Yelv. 134. Wood versus Haukshind i. Cro. 156. 2 Cro. 121. 3 Cro. 404 Dy. 956. 1 Jnst 304 Hob. 271 Dy. 103. 253 b. Yelv. 96 Leon. 32. 156. Avowry on a New Grant of a new Rent-Charge in Fee the Plaintiff pleads that nothing passes by the Deed 't is an ill Plea he should have said that he did not grant by the Deed for a thing not in Esse could not pass though it was raised by the Deed Stewards Case 2 Leond. 13. Avowry by an Executor for Rent reserved by her and her Husband upon a Lease for years derived out of a Lease Exception taken because not shewed when the Husband dyed so it appeared not due in his time but because all belongs to her one way or other Wellwood in Newman Latch 121 Pop. 163. Costs to the Avowant upon 7 H. 8. c. 4 vide Common et Commoners Sect 4. Costs given to the Avowant for Damage-Fesant by 21 H. 8. c. 19. Cro. 1. James vers Tutneg 532. Replevin against 3 the one Avowes and the other 2 makes Conusance and Judgment against the Plaintiff but reversed because that those two did not make Conusance as Bailiffs to another Yelv. Owen vers Williams 108. The Lord hath still his choice to avow as at the Common-Law but if he will take the Benefit of the Statute then the Privity on both sides is removed and the Tenant shall Plead any discharge though he be a meer Stranger for the Charge of the Land is only in question though in that Statute 21 H. 8. there be no literal Provision so to be Hob. Brown vers Goldsmith 108. Avowry for 5 l. and 80 l. nomine poenae no demand of the Rent was alledged which made it unsufficient for the penalty but Retorne adjudged to him for they appeared to the Court to be several Hob. 133 Howel vers Samback If the Donee Alien the Donor cannot Avow upon the Alienee Keilway 130. b. Prescription that if one be chosen Constable at the Leet he must serve himself or find a sufficient man to do it and the Avowant saies that the Plaintiff was chosen and did not find a sufficient man to serve upon which it was demurred and Adjudged That the Avowry was ill Escot vers Stokes 14 Car 2. in B. One who is a Stranger to the Avowry shall not Plead any Plea but hors de son Fee or some other which is Tantamount As Lord and Tenant the Tenant makes a Lease the Termor shall plead no Plea but hors de son Fee because that he is a Stranger to the Avowry and he cannot have a Writ of Mesne because it is a Maxime Where a man cannot be helped by way of Action he shall be aided by way of Reversion He that is a Stranger to the Avowry cannot disclaim for a man cannot disclaim in auter droit An Abbot cannot disclaim nor Tenant in Tail Mich. 9 E. 4. fo 34. Hill 8 H. 5. Disclaimer 11. 26. If a man hath common by Especialty as in Land held of me the Rent is not arrear if I take the Beasts of the Commoner I do him wrong and he shall recover damages for he may Plead rien arrere although that he be a Stranger to the Avowry If the Tenant be in arrearages with his Lord and the Tenant makes a Feoffment in Fee which was notice to the Lord in this case the Lord may choose whether he will take him for his Tenant or not if he will not tender him his arrearages and the reason is if he will accept him for his Tenant generally he shall never be received to avow for the arrearages afterwards But if the Tenant dye so that the Tenancy discends to his Son or that the Tenancy is recover'd or that the Tenant hath forjudg'd the Mesne so that he is become Tenant to the Lord Paramount in all these Cases he shall accept them for his Tenants and make Avowry upon them for all the arrearages and the reason is because they are become Tenants to him against his Will As to Avowries 5 things are to be known 1. AVowry upon my very Tenant where the Lord hath the Rent in Fee simple and the
Tenant the Tenancy in Fee 2. Avowry upon my very Tenant by the manner as I make a Gift in Tail remainder over reserving Rent Also if Tenant by the Courtesy I avow upon him as before Also where a man dyes seised of three intire Mannors and if his Wife be endowed of one Mannor intire 3. Avowry upon my Tenant by the manner as Lessee for life rendring Rent Also if à Woman be endowed of the third part of a Mannor the Heir distrains her and avowes 4. Avowry upon the Land as a Rent-Charge is granted the Grantee avowes in the Lands charged with his distress 5. Avowry upon my matter as I am seised in Fee and let for years for certain Rent and so shew the whole matter Avowry for Homage or for Rent-service although that the Avowry be made upon the person incertain yet in this case he that is a Stranger cannot plead any thing but hors de son Fee or that which is Tantamount as a Release c. which prove the Land to be out of the Fee of the Lord. A Man cannot avow the taking of Beast for Rent arrear if those Beasts were taken by Night but for damage Fesant he may Pasch 10 E. 3. Where the Avowant shall justifie and where he shall make Avowry Where the Avowant is of right to have the thing for which he distrains he shall make Avowry although that the Estate of him upon whom he avows be determined as if I let Lands for term d'auter vie and I distrain for the Rent cestuy que vie dies the other sues Replevin I make Avowry for homage he that ought to do homage dyes his Executors sue Replevin now I ought to justifie because the thing for which the the distress was made by his death is gone and extinct As two Jointenants the one enfeoffs a Stranger of all that c. upon Condition the Feoffee gives notice to the Lord here he holds of the Lord pro particula illa and the Lord shall have several Rents of the Tenants And yet if the Lord grant the services of the Feoffee to a Stranger and he attorne and afterwards the Condition is broken by which the Feoffor who was jointenant enters again here the Jointure is reviv'd and they hold the grant of Services of his part and the other Jointenant holds of the Lord as he held before and yet they are Jointenants Avowry by the Lord for homage and alledgeth seisin by the Husband of Lands which he hath in Right of his Wife The Plaintiff alledgeth that the Husband hath nothing but in right of his Wife and although he alleadgeth seisin by the Husband c. yet he sheweth that the Husband was seized in his demesne as of Fee without that that the Wife hath any thing c. 11 H. 4. If a man makes Avowry upon one as Son and Heir of his Mother where he is in as Heir to his Father the Avowry is abated In Avowry for Rent Service or any other Rent except that he shews the Commencement of the Rent as a Gift in tail or a Grant of a Rent-Charge he ought to alledg no seisin of the Rent in his Avowry because he shews the Commencement of the Rent In Avowry for Homage or Escuage if he shew not the Commencement of the Tenure he ought to shew seisin of the Homage or otherwise it is not good Avowry for Releif or aid pur file marrier he ought not to alledg seisin of the Releif nor of the Aid because that they are no parcel of the Tenure as Homage or Escuage be but incident to the Seigniory Where in Avowry the Defendant shall answer to the seisin and where he shall traverse IN Avowry the Lord alledgeth seisin of the services the Tenant cannot traverse the Tenure in part but he shall answer to the seisin For in Avowry the Tenant shall not avoid encroachment of Services but in a Writ of Rescous or in Assife he may avoid the encrochment and not answer to the Tenure If the Lord encroch an other thing which was not part of the Tenure before the encrochment it is void and the party shall avoid it and Travers it notwithstanding seisin alledged as where the Tenant holds by Homage and Ten shillings the Lord encroches a Horse this encrochment is void because it is an other thing and other then the Tenure was before Also where the Lord avowes for Homage and Ten shillings Rent the Tenant may say that he holds of him by Homage Ancestrel without that that he holds of him by Homage and ten shillings in this case he shall not answer to the seisin because that he may traverse the entire Tenure of the same thing quod nota Where the Effect of the Plea shall be Traversed THe Avowant avows that I. S. was seised of an Acre of Land and so seised grants him Twenty shillings Rent in Fee The Plaintiff saith that the said I. S. had nothing but for Term of Life of the Lease of the Plaintiff the which I. S. is dead this is a good Plea and the Plaintiff shall not say without that that I. S. was seised in Fee and yet the Avowant alledgeth that he was seised in Fee and the Plaintiff saith that he had nothing but for Term of Life which is in a manner contrary and yet the plea is good and he shall not be compell'd to say without that that he was seised in Fee and the reason is because that seisin in Fee was not the effect of the Avowry but the Grant which is confessed and avoided and because Seisin in Fee is not the effect the Plaintiff may answer it by an Affirmative and shall not be compelled to travers with a without that The same Law is in Avowries when the Avowant saith that he was seised of an Acre in Fee and let the same to the Plaintiff for Life or for years reserving Rent and for Rent arrear he avows The Plaintiff saith that one I. S. was seised in his demesne as of Fee and let to the Avowant for the life of I. N. the which I. N. dyed and the said I. S. entred before whose Entry there was nothing arrear this is a good Plea and he shall not need to say without that that the Avowant was seised in Fee at the time of the Lease for if the Seisin had been the Effect of his Avowry he ought to have Traversed or Confessed and Avoided and this he hath notdone for the Avowant saith that he was seised in Fee and the Plaintiff saith that he was seised but for Term of Life the which is no direct Travers but Argumentative but the Plea is good enough because that the seisin is not the Effect of the Barr but the Lease quod nota Bail ALattitat is sued out against two in a Joint Action and both taken one puts in Bail as of Michaelmas and the other of Hillary Term The Court was moved That the Bail of Michaelmas Term might be taken
Copy-holders ought to alledge Customs ibid. Of alledging Customs in particular places p. 79. In what manner Customs shall be pleaded ib. Of Prescription by Parishoners ib. 80. Custom of England concerning Inn-keepers ib. Of Tithes ibid. No Prescription of Lands makes a Right but of Rents or Profits it doth p. 81. Women may prescribe to be endowed of a moiety of the Lands of her Husband but not of the Rent ibid. Gavelkind Lands shall escheat if the Father abjure or be outlawed for Felony ibid. Every Custom against Common Law shall be taken strickly ibid. Debt SEE variety of Pleading in Debt from 81. to 104. Detinue Inter-pleader in Detinue p. 104. Vpon general Issue in Detinue that which would make a special Barr cannot be given in Evidence or if found by the Jury is it material p. 105. Detinue will lye of Chartres not specially and particularly named what they are ibid. Improper words in Detinue adjudged good enough after Verdict Disclaimers and Discontinuances of Actions Action of Covenant discontinued after Judgment and Writ of Inquiry by Rule of Court p. 106. Action of Tresp in three Towns and mentions but two Towns where it was committed the whole is discontinued ibid. So in Debt for that the Writ was 10. l. 6. s. 8. d. and the Declaration but 10. l. ib. So if the Declaration be of several things and it be discontinued as to one it shall be discontinued as to all ibid. Debt brought against two Joyntly and Severally bound it being discontinued against one did abate against both ibid. In what Cases where two Persons bring their Action the Non-suit of one shall not be the Non-suit of them both è contra p. 107. If after Verdict for the Avowant in Replevin the Plea be discontinued and he sues a Scire Facias the Plaintiff may plead a Release of the Avowant after Verdict of all Actions or other matter to discharge himself ibid. Trespass Defendant pleads two Pleas Plt ' demurrs to one and doth not plead over to the other it is a discontinuance ibid. In Pr. quod reddat if the Tenant disclaims the Judgment shall be that the Demandant nihil capiat per breve p. 108. Writ of Inquiry awarded upon Disclaimer in Replevin ibid. No man can disclaim against a Termor ib. Husband and Wife cannot disclaim in Avowry ibid. In Replevin the Defendant avows upon the Plaintiff and he disclaims to it he shall not be received 109. He that is in of his own Wrong shall not disclaim in a Writ of Entry in le quibus ib. Distress If Houshold Goods be Distrained they ought to be preserved in an House from the Injury of the Weather but if put in an open place where they are spoiled the Distrainor shall not answer for them ibid. If an Horse Distrain'd happen to strangle himself the Distrainor shall be punished in an Action of Trespass ibid. A man shall not milk a Cow he hath distrained without the Owners Consent and if the Cow perish for want of Milking he may distrain again and so be at no Damage ibid. 110 112. Sheriffs Officer cannot justifie breaking open Doors to distrain for the King 's Rent much less a Landlord's ibid. Things distrained shall not be used because but Pledges in Law ibid. Distress not to be driven out of the Hundred or to a Pound above three Miles or to several Pounds or out of the County No Man shall distrain in the High-way nor drive Distress into a Castle or Hold ib. The Tenant shall not disturb the Landlord in taking his Distress or hinder him of the Lawful Means to come by his Rent ib. Distress of a Strangers Goods for the Tenants Rent unlawful ibid. Owner must bring Replevin not break the Pound tho' the Distress be unlawful p. 112. Where Limitation of Distress void ibid. Error WHere the Plaintiff in the Action may sue out a Scire Facias against the Executors or Administrators of the Plaintiff in the Writ of Error p. 113. After Writ of Error allowed Execution upon the former Judgment shall not be awarded and why ibid. Where there is Fine and Recovery of Lands and Error in them both a Writ of Error cannot be brought first upon the Fine but upon the Recovery ibid. In what case a Fine shall barr a Writt of Error brought of a Recovery p. 114. Execution Action lies not against the Sheriff for Escape of a Prisoner in Execution in the time of his Predecessor ibid. Sheriff may not break open Doors to execute Fieri Facias p. 115. Ca. sa against Principal return'd non est invent ' then Sci. Fa. against Sureties before the Return whereof the Principal Surrenders his Body in Execution allowed per Cur ' ibid. Execution granted by the Court upon Motion after a Writ of Error brought because the Retorn was too long ibid. Estoppels and Conclusions He who claims nothing by him that was estopped shall not be estopped by his Act. Where he no Reversion or Remainder p. 115. claims nothing by Tenant for Life he shall not be estopped p. 116. If a Man pleads a Plea in which he confesseth a thing that is not material it shall not be an Estoppel p. 117. If a man plead a Record to Estop him that was privy he ought to shew what end the Action had p. 118. Where a Man hath Judgment to recover Land by that Judgment he shall be Estopped to claim any other Title than he hath by the Recovery ibid. Of some Estoppels none shall have Advantage but Parties or Privies 120. And of some every one shall have advantage ibid. Vser of Action no Estoppel to prejudice another ibid. In what case one shall estop another ibid. Where I am barred of Land the Estoppel shall pass with it but of other Lands it shall be no Estoppel against me ibid. None shall be received to plead an Estoppel against another but may be estopped by the same Plea and both must be Parties to the Record otherwise not p. 122. In what cases a Stranger shall take Advantage by an Estoppel p. 123. Fines and Recoveries SEveral Cases of Fines and Recoveries p. 125 126. Heir The manner of Suing an Heir upon a Bond entred into by his Ancestor p. 159. Outlawries PLeaded in Bar and Disability p. 161 163 165 175 177 181 196 197. Reversed for several causes p. 161 162 163 164 165 168 170 171 172 173 178 179 181. Partition TWo Tenants in Common of a Mannor before Partition one of them is said to have dimidium Manerii but after Partition medietatem Manerii and an Indictment of forceable Entry after Partition it shall be Medietas not Dimidium Manerii p. 183 Priviledge Lost by Chancery Clerk by suing out Supers ' in C. B. Parson Parsonage becomes void by Acceptance of a Bishoprick p. 183. And Acceptance of a second Benefice makes the first void p. 184. Tith of things proceeding from the Earth as Corn Hay c. shall be severed upon the Ground but secus of Sheep
Plea in Abatement of the Writ before the default saved 40 E. 3. 2. In a Writ of Aiel Besaiel and Cosinage one shall not plead to the points of the Writ after he hath pleaded in Barr but it is otherwise in an Assise of Mortd ' ancestor as it seems 40 E. 3. 19. Where the Writ abates in part by the Act of the Court and where it is abated by the Parties own Confession As if an Executor brings an Action de clauso fracto de bonis asportatis in this case the Writ shall abate for part and as to the rest it shall be effectual But where the Writ is abated by the Plaintiff it is reason although that it be of his own Conusans that if it abate that the whole shall abate In Assise against two the one pleads in Barr as to a moiety the other pleads jointenancy with a third person the Plaintiff may choose him who pleads in Barr for his Tenant and confess that his writ is false for the other part In Assise against two the one is Tenant the other is Disseisor which Disseisor makes default the other accepts his Companion Tenant with him and pleads in Barr the Plaintiff dissables the Tenant and doth not answer to the Barr for in this case he hath accepted a Tenant which is not Tenant As if Praecipe quòd reddat be brought by two where one is a Bastard or by two persons as Heirs where one of them in truth is not Heir in these cases the whole Writ shallabate because that that is meerly false whichis supposed to be true Two Executors bring an Action of Trespass of Goods carried away in the life-time of the Testator and also of Trees cut down here the Writ is good notwithstanding that the Executors cannot have the Writ for the Trees cut down and if they pray to have an other Writ for the Trees cut down then the whole Writ shall abate quod nota A Defendant or Tenant cannot abate a Writ by his Act but the Act of the Plaintiff or Demandant and the Act of God and also the Act of an Estranger may abate the Writ In a writ of Ravishment de gard by the death of the Infant the writ shall not abate Tenant by Statute-Merchant is disseised the disseisor lets for life the Tenant by the Statute brings an Assise the Lessee dyes the writ shall not abate because he shall recover all in damages But it is otherwise where he is to recover the Freehold because in that case he cannot have the effect of his Judgment A Writ of Admesurement of Common is brought by one against three depending the writ the Plaintiff and one of the Defendants exchange their Lands to which the common is appendant if the writ shall abate it seems not because that notwithstanding the exchange the Plaintiff may have the effect of his Suit which is that the Common may be admesured and at all times pending the writ the Plaintiff and the Defendant who made the exchange were Tenants and the Writ of Admesurement granted between them by reason of their Tenure for there was no mean-time between the parting from the Free-hold in one Acre and the taking the Free-hold in the other Acre and that very instant that the Freehold of the one Acre was parted from the other was vested so that there was cause of Admesurement between them as well after the exchange as there was before A Writ of Admesurement is brought against three one hath nothing in the Common so that the Writ ought to abate because that non-tenure is a good Plea in this Action yet if he that hath nothing before any exception be taken to the Writ purchaseth an Acre of Land by which he ought to have Common in the same Land the Writ is made good As in Praecipe quod reddat brought against him that hath nothing and pending the Writ he purchaseth the same Lands the writ is good So it seems the writ is good notwithstanding no time between the exchange ergo à forciori when there is no mean instant But by the better opinion it seems that the writ shall abate notwithstanding that the party may have the effect of his Suit for that ground is not obsolutely general as Praecipe quòd reddat is brought against me and I have nothing in the Land and pending the writ the Land descends the writ shall abate I bring an Action of wast by reason of the reversion or a Quid juris clamat depending the writ I alien the same Reversion and after purchase the Reversion again yet the writ is abated If a writ of Partition or Nuper obiit be brought and pending the writ the demandant aliens and retakes the Estate to him yet the writ shall abate And yet in all these cases the Plaintiff may have the effect of his Suit But that which causeth the writ to abate is the Act of the Plaintiff for the writ depending he hath aliened that which gives him his cause of Action and therefore the writ shall abate as in the cases aforesaid for as to the Plaintaiff's part his own Act shall abate the writ and not the Act of God nor of the Law except in some cases and as for the Defendants or the Tenants part his own Act shall not abate the writ but the Act of God or of the Law may for if the Tenant aliens depending the writ yet the writ shall not abate but the Demandant shall recover and he that comes in by the Tenant shall be bound by that Recovery And if an exchange had been made by the Plaintiff with a stranger who had nothing in the Common the writ should have been abated without question So for that Acr● which he had when the writ was brought he cannot maintain his writ for put the case that the day the writ was purchas'd the Plaintiff had not any Land by which he ought to have common and afterwards pending the writ he purchas'd an Acre of Land to which the Common is appendant this shall not make the writ good which was nought from the beginning When the writ is made abatable by the Act of the Plaintiff or Demandant Videlicet by his aliening of that thing which gives to him the cause of Action if he pending the writ doth purchase the same again it shall not revive the writ nor make it good WHere the Grant shall be good ab initio although it was incertainat the commencement Note If a Parson will Grant to me all the Wooll which he shall have for Tithe the next year to come this Grant is good and yet the quantity of the Wool is incertain at the time of the Grant But because it may be reduced to a certainty after the Grant it was held good enough 21 H. 6. 43. And so if a man will Grant to me the Perquisits of his Court this incertain Grant is good causâ quâ suprà 21 H. 6. 43. The same Law is where a Feoffment is
made of two Acres the one for Life the other in Fee without determining in certain in which he shall have Fee this incertain Feoffment may be reduced to certainty as if the Feoffee loose both the Acres by default he may have a quod ei deforceat for the one and a Writ of Right for the other Acre and thereby the certainty of the gift shall be determined and known Lit. Fo. 13. a. And so if one Grant a Rent-charge to one now the Grantee may avow or have a writ of Annuity and which of them he will use shall be maintainable and yet at the Commencement it was incertain and yet notwithstanding this incertainty the Grant was good Lit. Tit. Rents Fo. 13. a. In like manner if a man Grant to one 20s or a Robe yearly the Grantee there cannot know the certainty of the Grant for peradventure he shall have alwayes the 20s or perhaps alwayes the Robe and yet the Grant there shall be held good because that it is reducible to a certainty by the Will of the Grantor 9 E. 4. 37 en Dett per Lit. Fo. 13. a. And so a Lease for so many years as I. S. shall name is good and yet it is incertain but if I. S. name a certain number then it is good ab initio Lit. ib. So If I haue two Horses in my Stable a black and a white and I give to I. S. one of these Horses now this gift is good notwithstanding the incertainty because that by the circumstances Viz. by his Election the certainty may be known Lit. ib. Also if a man Let all the Acres of Land which he hath in Dale to I. S. for years rendring for every acre 12d although that the number of the Acres were not known by the Lessor nor by the Lessee and because the Rent is at the commencement incertain yet upon mensuration or other Triall had the Rent reserv'd may be known certainly and then the Lessor may have a writ of Debt for the Rent and so by this possibility of Tryall the reservation is made good which at the commencement was void for the incertainty So if a man Lett Black-Acre and White-Acre for Life the remainder of one of the two Acres in Fee now it is incertain which of the two Acres he in the remainder shall have but if he License the Lessee to cut down Trees in White-Acre then he s●all be adjudged to have had the remainder of that Acre ab initio and so thereby that which at the commencement was incertain is afterwards made certain And so was Wheelers case sc one Grants his Term to another upon condition that 〈◊〉 the Grantee shall obtain the Favour of the Lessor and also pay so much as I. S. shall award this was taken for a good Grant after the condition was performed 14 H. 8. 17. 6. b. In Trespass the case was That the Defendant and the Plaintiff had bargained together that the Defendant should go to a place where certain Wheat grew and to see the Wheat and if he lik'd it upon the view that then he should take it from thence paying 40d for every Acre this there was held a good contract notwithstanding the incertainty of the quantity of the Wheat and of the gross Sum which should be paid for it because that upon the circumstance the certainty may appear for although it was a conditional agreement between the parties yet it is held a good Justification if he presently paid for it at the time of his carrying it away P. 17 E 4. Fo. 1. Fo 6 b. Able and Disable SFe the diversity 17 H. 7. where Reg. 1. one sc the Obligee was able at the time of the making of the Obligation and afterwards he is disabled by his own Act and where he was not able at the time of the making of the Obligation For in the first case the Defendant shall be discharged and if a man be bound to another by Obligation upon Condition that if he pay to the Obligee an Annuity of 10 l. at the Feast c. Til he promotes him to a convenable Benefice and afterwards the Obligee takes a Wife or enters into Religion the Obligor shall be discharged of the Annuity because he hath disabled himself from receiving a Benefice But if he be disabled at first when the Obligation is made it is otherwise Acceptance A Man is bound to make a Feoffment of a Mannor to the Value of 20 l. per annum the Obligee accepts a Mannor to the Value of 10 l. he shall have advantage notwithstanding the Acceptance 32 H. 7 Action WHere the principal thing is devested Reg. 1. yet the Plaintiff shall have an Action which is acrued to him by reason thereof If I disseise one and a stranger does Trespass to me the disseisee reenters I shall have an Action of Trespass for the Trespass before And so if a Lord does Trespass and afterwards recovers by Cessavit WHere the Husband shall have Reg. 2. an Action without naming his Wife and where not IF a man be disseised of Lands in right of his Wife he shall have an Assise in his own name Also he shall have a writ of Droit de gard in his own name without his Wife Trin. 8 E. 3. The same Law upon an Obligation to Husband and Wife the Husband shall have the Action without the Wife Trin. 12 R. 2. And in 3 H. 6. adjudged that he might name his Wife if he would The same Law if the Cattle of the woman be taken in the name of distress and I Marry her I shall have Replevin in my own name Mich. 32 E. 2. Also of the disturbance of Advowson which a man hath in the right of his Wife he shall have a Quare impedit in his own name Pasch 7 E. 4. If a man be bound to a woman and afterwards she takes Husband both shall have Action 11 H. 6. The same Law if a man be Receiver to a Feme sole and afterwards she takes Husband both shall have an Action of Account Trin. 9 R. 2. Where the Husband and Wife recover seisin of the Land and damages for the damages they shall join in the Action The same Law if a Feme sole makes a Lease reserving Rent and afterwards takes Husband they shall joyn in an Action for the recovery of the Rent 7 E. 4. A writ of Droit de gard as of the right of the Wife ought to be brought in both their names because it concerns the right and not the possession by Choke Anno predicto If the Beasts of a Feme sole be distrained and she takes Husband the Husband Sues a Replevin in his own name it seems the Action does not lye for in every case where the cause of Action is given to a Feme sole and not to the Husband the Husband ought to joyn his Wife with him as if a contract be made with a Feme sole and she takes Husband c.
So it is of a Lease for years made by a Feme sole reserving Rent and She takes Husband So of an Obligation made to a Feme sole and she takes Husband for otherwise the words of the writ are false But if a Feme sole make a Bailiff of her Mannor of Dale and takes Husband of all the Rent received by the Bailiff after Coverture the Husband shall have an Action of Account in his own name for there the words of the writ are true And when an Action personal is given to the Husband and also to his Wife during the Coverture it is at the Liberty of the Husband to bring the Action in both their names or in his own name if it be so that the Wife may have advantage of it When a thing is given to Husband and Wife by matter of Record then he ought to joyn with her But there is a Diversity when it is of the part of the Plaintiff and when it is on the Defendants part as a Feme sole disseiseth me and takes Husband the Assise lyes against both supposing that they both disseised me So it is of Trespass Note It is at the Election of the Plaintiff to bring his Action of Debt against the Heir or against the Executors A Man marrieth a Wife That hath a Rent Charge out of the Lands of another Rent is arrear before and after marriage The Plaintiff shall recover by Action of Debt against the Grantor or his Heirs Action of Covenant shall not go to the Heir but to the Executors As Action of Debt upon a Bond or a Lease for years the Term goes to the Executors and not the Heir or any thing where damages shall be only recovered for that every Heir may not have Chattels descend and so not this Action A man seized of a House and Goods makes a Lease thereof and after enters and enfeoffs I. S. the Lessee reenters Rent is in arrear I. S. brings his Action of Debt and hath Judgment because the Rent issues out of the House and not out of the goods A man was bound in a Bill Me teneri firmiter obligari in viginti libris solvendum in watches It was questioned whether the Action should be brought for the Watches or the Money But Resolved for the Money Otherwise if the number of Watches had been in the Bill For then it had been for so many Watches to the Value of 20 l. If a man had been indebted to me in a single contract and dyed I could have had no remedy at the Common-Law against his Executors For he might have waged his Law in his Life-time but his Executors could not But now I may have an Action upon the Case against his Executors Assault and Battery and Ejectment will lye both in one Declaration Where two Men are beaten together yet they ought to have several Actions because the Trespass is personal but otherwise it is in real trespasses If you bring your Action for live Cattle it must be Cepit abduxit But if it be dead Goods or Chattels then you must say cepit et asportavit so likewise you say for live Cattle pretii for dead things ad valentiam Divers persons may have an Action of Trespass joyntly for Goods taken or the like But of Battery or such personal Trespass the Action ought to be single unless it be a man and wife And if the man and wife bring an Action of Battery or for Goods taken The writ shall say the Goods of the Husband only For the Wife cannot have property in the Goods during the Coverture An Action lyes against an Executor upon a promise of the Testators upon consideration of forbearing to prosecute but altered since by the late Act to prevent Frauds and Perjuries If there be Three Executors named in the Testament and Two of them refuse the Third may prove the Will alone And yet the other Two may meddle with the Goods when they will and either of them when they will And if an Action be brought it ought to be in all their names notwithstanding such refusal Executors of Executors shall not have an Action of Debt or other Action for any thing due to the first Testator For that they are not Executors to the first Testator or privies to his Will but were Strangers by the Course of the Common-Law But by the Statute of 25 E. 3. Cap. 5. they may Sue and be Sued and shall answer for whatsoever comes to their hands of the first Testator Sr. O. C. seized of an House in Fee and possessed of an other House as Administrator for years Le ts them both for 10 years to the Lady S. who Covenants to keep them in Repair and so Leave them at the end of the Term. Afterwards Sr. O. grants the Reversion of both Houses by several Indentures to I. P. The Lease made to the Lady S. expires and the Houses are left Ruinous Whereupon I. P. brings his Action Nicholls for the Defendant said that the Plaintiff ought to have brought two Writs of Covenant for that the Houses are several and if the Case had been that the Lessor had Covenanted to repair them and had dyed yet the Lessee should have had one Writ against the Heir aad an other Writ against the Executor and when an Action is once severed it can never be joyned again and when Sr. O. hath granted the House of which he was seised in Fee by Deed to P. now the Action is severed and Sr. O. shall have an Action of Covenant for one House and P. for the other And for these Reasons he held the Action not to be well brought Doderidge è contra And first he agreed with the other that two Actions upon this Covenant are maintainable and that if Sr. O. had lett his House the Lessee shall have one Action upon this Covenant and the Lessor another But yet he said this Action will well lye for the Law is excellent in this Point for when the Ground upon which the Action is founded in one notwithstanding the things are several yet all shall be comprised in one Action for frustra fiunt per plura quae fieri possunt per pauciora and with this agrees 14 E. 3. If a man grant a Rent out of his Land to one and sells the same Land and afterwards the vendee grants another Rent-charge out of the same Land to the same person and he is disseised He shall have one Assise for both the Rents So if one distreyn for two Rents and the Tenant rescuos them He shall have but one Writ of Rescous 3 H. 6. 17. 13 H. 7. 12. b. There exception was taken because it supposed a Chasing in two Parks the which ought to have several Punishments Viz. for either Park Imprisonment for 3 years as it is given by the Statute W. 1. and because he joyns the chasing in two Parks together it is not good For a man cannot have a Writ of Ravishment de
c. The same law if an Abbot make a Feoffment in Fee and afterwards is deposed and sometime after is made Abbot now he shall have an Action against his Deed which he himself made when he was Abbot because that now he comes in as Successor and not in the place as he was before The same Law of Warden and Schollars But it would have been otherwise if he had disseised a Parson and made Feoffment in Fee with warranty or without warranty and afterwards is made Parson now if he will use an Action his own Feoffment shall be a Barr against him because that all that he shall recover by this Action is to his own use The same Law if a man disseise a woman and makes a Feoffment in Fee and afterwards he takes the woman to Wife in this case the Husband shall be Barred because that he will have advantage of this Recovery to his own use If a man hath right to have Land where his Entry is tolle and releaseth to the Tenant all manner of Actions and dye his Heir shall have his Action and recover the Land because that by such release no right is extinguished and if the Tenant makes Feoffment in Fee or dyes seised he that made the release shall have his Action against the Heir of the Tenant or his Feoffee against his own release and the cause is because that nothing is released but his Action against the same person and not any right If the Son disseise his Father and make a Feoffment with warranty or without warranty and after his Father dyes he cannot ouste his Feoffee because that it was his own Deed. A man hath good cause of Action sometimes and yet by matter ex post facto and by the Act of a Stranger his Action is destroyed As I am disseisee and he is disseisor and I release to the disseisor Also I bail or lend Goods to one a Stranger takes them the bailor sells them to a Stranger c. Action of Debt upon an obligation brought by an Executor the writ shall be detinet and not debet and for this cause they joyn in the same Action for an Horse delivered by themselves to the same Obligor The same Law if a man recover Lands by default in which I have an Estate for life and he recovers by another writ by default Lands wherein I have an Estate Tail I shall have a Quod ei deforceat because the conclusion of the writ serves me And so a man may joyn two or three things in his Action where the conclusion of his Action is pertinent to the several matters and doth not vary If two or three Acres are given severally in tail and the party discontinue the whole his Heir shall have Formedon for the whole because that the writ is le quel un I. dit S. dona and although the Acres are given severally that is not material forasmuch as the common Writ will serve in this case But if the Acres are given by divers or several men or that the one shall be given to the Heirs Males and the other to the Heirs Females and the third to the Heirs General in this case the Heir shall have several writs and not one writ because that one writ cannot serve for such several Gifts If I deliver Goods to one who is indebted to me and he dyes against his Executors I may have a writ for the Goods and for the Debt because that the writ is against the Executors for the Debt in the Detinet and for the detinue it is in the Detinet and therefore the writ well warrants the count to declare partly for debt and partly for Detinue but such an Action he could not have had against the Testator because that for the debt against him the writ ought to have been in the debet and detinet A Feoffment is made upon condition of payment by the Feoffor he commits Trespass and afterwards enters by force of payment c. yet the Feoffee shall have Trespass because his possession is affirm'd 43 E. 3. Assumpsit If he would relinquish such a debt to pay him 30 l. and sayes he did relinquish it c. and after Verdict for the Plaintiff Judgment stayed because he shews not how he relinquished it and it may be by parol which were void Gregory versus Lovell 3 Cro. 292. Assumpsit in Consideration he would discharge him from an Arrest and sayes that exoneravit ipsum moved in Arrest c. he shews not how he discharged him sed non allocatur for they might be per parol or for a time but in Pleading a discharge of a Rent or bond which must be by Deed and perpetual it must be shewed how King versus Hobs. 2. Cro. 930. 960. Assumpsit the Defendant pleads the discharge of the promise whereof Issue taken and found for the Plaintiff and divers defects in the Declaration moved in Arrest of Judgment but by Wr●y all these defects tending to the Assumpsit are cured by the collateral Plea Manwood v. Buston 2. Leond. 203 204. Assumpsit If he would make it appear c. and sayes he made it appear by the Court-Roll Good without saying what the Court Rolls were for the Infinitly So a Bond to save harmless from all Estreates good without shewing what for the same reason Vide 9 E. 4. 15. a. 22 E. 4. 41. a Mo. Pl. 1175. 3 Cro. 149 Pl 3. 919. Pl. 3. 3 Bulst 31. Latch 130. H. 2. H. 7. Pl 22. H. 6. H. 7. Pl. 8. 8. 22 E. 4. 15. ab 28. b. 29. a. Assumed he would assign Goods to pay c. and sayes he assigned and shews not how but per scriptum yet good Note after verdict Forth v. Yates Tr. 30 Car. 2. B R. Assumpsit against an Executor who Pleads solvit to such a one on a Bond of 100 l. and to another 100 l. on a Bond and so to divers others which he was forced to do the Payment being post exhibitionem Bille and Pleads a Recognizance in force not satisfied the Plaintiff Pleads non solvit to such a one 100 l. nor to such a one 100 l. Et si de ceteris hoc petit c. and to the Recognizance that it was satisfied and kept in force of Fraud the Defendant demurred quià replicatio multiplyed and double consisting of two matters where one goes to the whole but Judgment for the Plaintiff for the first objection to one 100 l. to another 100 l. make several Issues though que de hoc And in case of an Executor one may answer to every thing alledged by him H. 21 22. Car. 2. B. R. Jeffreys v. Dod. Assumpsit to permit Land to descend breach laid quod non permisit well being in the negative but in the affirmative it ought to be shewed how disposed though they could not descend H. 9. Jac. B. R. rot 3 Bulstr 18. Assumpsit to perform an Award and sets it forth the Defendant pleads
any other Title or to have any other Action to recover the Land than that by which he hath recovered and by the same reason that he shall not have a Cessavit he shall not have Eschete If a man hath Rent in Fee he may distrain or have a Writ of Annuity and if he brings a Writ of Annuity and hath Judgment to recover although that he sues not out Execution yet he shall never distrain for the Rent afterwards Tenant in Tail discontinues for Life and dyes and the Tenant for Life aliens in Fee and the Heir bring in consimili casu and recovers now by this Judgment he shall never have a Formedon of the same Land c. The disseisor enfeoffs the disseisee by deed indented upon Condition or makes a Lease for Life by Deed indented this is a good Conclusion to the disseisee to demand his Right and the Reason is that by the Deed indented the disseisee hath affirmed the Estate of the Disseisor which is as much as if he had confirmed his Estate before the Feoffment In Debt upon an Obligation the Defendant pleads a Release upon which the Plaintiff is Nonsuit afterwards the Plaintiff brings a new Action of Debt the Defendant shall be estopped to say that he was deins age or that the Obligation was made per minas But it is otherwise if the Plea be discontinued An Essoin is cast for the Tenant in a Writ of Dower yet the Tenant shall be received to say that he hath been allways ready to render Dower and because that an Essoin may be cast for a Stranger this Essoin is no Estoppel for an Estoppel shall be good to every intent but because an Essoin may be cast for a Stranger as well as for the Tenant himself it shall be said an Estoppel I bring an Assise of Mortdancestor and recover when in Truth I have no Right c. yet the Wife of the same Father shall be endowed c. Also in Avowry Tenant for life Aliens in Fee the Wife of Tenant for Life shall be endowed against the Feoffee Also Tenant in Tail is bound by Statute and makes Feoffment Execution against the Feoffee Of some Estoppels none shall have advantage but those who are parties or privies AS if I loose Land by Erroneous Judgment or false Verdict those that are Strangers shall have no advantage But of some Estoppels every one shall have advantage As Bastardy certified by the Bishop User of Action is no Estoppel to prejudice an other viz. Heir c. AS a man grants a Rent Charge in Fee to an Abbot and his Successors or to a Feme-Covert and her Heirs if the Abbot or Husband brings an Action it shall not prejudice the Successor or the Wife In no Case one person shall estopp another but in Dower AS where a Woman demands Dower and she hath Writings touching the Inheritance of the Heir for in debt it is no Plea to say that the Plaintiff is indebted to the Defendant in ten pounds because that it cannot be tryed by the Original 3 H. 6. In every Case where I am Barred of Land as if it be found that I am not next Heir this Estoppel shall pass with the Land and every one that claims the Land by me shall be Estopped but of other Lands it shall be no Estoppel against me 33 H. 6. IF I bring a Praecipe quod reddat by the name of Richard when my name is John and recover by default against the Tenant and afterwards I bring another Writ by my right name against the same Tenant he shall not estopp himself by that Recovery So if I have misnamed the Tenant in the first Record because he shall not be grieved by it Mich. 33 H. 6. contra per Prisot contra per Fortescue 34. By Prisot none shall be received to plead an Estoppel against another but he that pleads may be estopped by the same plea and this is where both parties are parties to the Record otherwise not For if I bring an Action by the name of Robert when my name is John against one that pleads with me if afterwards I sue him by the name of John he shall estopp me by that Record but against a Stranger I shall not be estopped by it by Prisott and by Fortescue 30 H. 6. 26 H. 6. 14 E. 4. contra Bastardy certified against me or found against me every Stranger shall estopp me because that every Stranger is estopped to say that I am mulier But if I am certified mulier a Stranger shall not be estopped by it to plead special Bastardy because that it may be that I am a Bastard in our Law and a mulier in the spiritual Law but not è contra No Stranger shall take advantage by an Estoppel but where the Estoppel extinguisheth the Right AS if a Man makes a Lease to me for Term of years of my own Land and the Term passeth and he enters and grants a Rent Charge in Fee and afterwards I recover against the Grantor the Land by default the Grantee shall not falsify the Recovery by Estoppel A Stranger shall not take advantage of an Estoppel in fait if it be in the Realty but by matter of Record it is otherwise A Man takes a Lease of Lands for years or for Life of which Lands he himself ●s se●sed in Fee or in Tail at the time of the Lease made if it be by Deed indented he is estopped to say that he had any Estate or Right in those Lands at the time of the Lease The same Law if a man be disseised and takes a Lease of the disseisor for a term of years of the same Lands by Deed indented But if a man takes a Lease for term of life of his disseisor he shall not be thereby estopped notwithstanding it be by Deed indented because that by the Livery he is remitted and the Lease is void ut dicitur quaere tamen for the Indenture is strong against him but if it be indented it is cleer Law but if it be by Fine it shall be an Estoppel because that the Estoppel takes effect before his Entry Or if Livery be made out of the Lands within View c. If a man makes a Lease by Deed indented to one of his own Lands now he is concluded after the Lease determines the Lessor enters by force of the conclusion and a stranger comes in aid of him the Lessee shall punish the stranger for this Trespass and he shall not conclude him by force of the Lease because he is wholly a stranger to the Judgment per totam Curiam 14 H. 6. But quaere if he justify as servant if he shall conclude himself Fines and Recoveries A Fine was Levied of Lands in two Counties and but one County mentioned in the Fine yet because it was for the uses declared in an Indenture which did mention the Lands in the other County all the Lands mentioned in the Indenture did pass If
after Judgment where the Plaintiff hath not over-stayed his Time viz. the Year but many have Habeas Corpus or Fieri Facias without Scire Facias If the Prisoner be taken by Capias utlegatum he shall be in Execution for the Party without the Prayer of the Party or Accord of the Court if he will but if it be after the Year not without Prayer 't is the Course upon Outlawry after Judgment if Error be brought to award a Capias utlegatum if he does not assign Error but if it be before Judgment and the Defendant brought in the Plaintiff must declare against him de Novo and if one Outlawed after Judgment bring Error and comes to assign Error he shall be committed to the Marshalsey and find Security to reverse the Outlawry and answer the party Lishton against Garpores 3 Cro. 706 707 850. Co. 5. rep 88. 89. vid. 1 Leon. 51. 263. stat 1 H. 7. pl. 6. Mo● pl. 772. 817. One recovers in Quare impedit against the Kings Presentee and is Outlawed the King shall have a Scire Facias to have the Presentment for the Church was immediately revested in him before any Writ to the Bishop and though the King be not Party to the Judgment he shall maintain the Scire Facias being Intitled by Act in Law but the Scire Facias must mention the whole Record of the Outlawry And so in Debt on a Bond and Judgment to recover the King shall have a Scire Facias Beverley against Cornwall 1 Leo. 63 64. In Debt on a Bond the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff was Outlawed by the name of J. S. of D. the Plaintiff replied that at that time he dwelt at S. absque hoc that he dwelt at D. he avoids the Plea of Outlawry for he shall be intended another Person 1 Leo. 87. Upon an Exigent to Lond. it was return'd that he had proclaimed the party de Com' in Com' and for that the Outlawry on Felony was reversed For it should have been de Hustingo in Hustingum Marshes Case 1 Leo. 326. Outlawry of Murder the King seizes Lands and because the Outlawry was ill for the quinto Exact ' and was ad comitat ' omitting meum Wherefore to affirm the King's Title the Attorney General prayed a Certiorari to the Coroner to certifie what County and on such a President shewed granted Fumes Case Latch 210. Where one is Outlawed before the Justices of Assize or Justices of Peace on an Indictment of Felony the same Justice may award a Capias utlegatum For they that have Process of Outlawry have power also to award a Capias utlegat ' per omnes Justic ' Co. 1● rep 103. Appeal of the Death of her Husband and because some of the Defendants lived in another County a Capias with a Proclamation issued to that County The King dies and Reattachment sued If it be General then a new Capias and Proclamation must go into the Foreign County if Special not for the Statute has been once satisfied Vid. Co. 7. rep 30. a. b. 1 E. 5. 43. a. In Appeal of Robbery the Defendant was Outlawed and Sued a Pardon and Scire Facias thereupon Dicitur he ought to shew a Release of the Appeal before the Scire Facias be granted then the Pardon to he Special not General but the Appellor not appearing at the day of the Scire Facias returned the Pardon was allowed but at another day came the Appellor and prayed Execution but his Default being Recorded could not have it Note sometimes the Pardon is General sometimes Ita quod stet rectus c. M. 2. R. 3. fol. 8. pl. 17. M. 9 H. 7. pl. 1. One Outlawed of Felony ductus ad Barram to say why Execution c. pleaded that he was in Oxford Castle all the time and because he did not say in what County Oxford is nor did not say he was in any Bodies Custody there the Plea adjudged ill H. 11. H. 7. fo 13. pl. 27. Baron and Feme Outlawed in Debt he brought Error and after a special Pardon Ita quod stet rectus a Scire Facias and prays it may be allowed but the Court would not till his Wife came in also that the Plaintiff may declare against both and then it seems he may declare against them in the Kings Bench within the Equity of the Statute of 5 Ed. 3. tho' it say rendre al Court donec le Exigent fiat sher ' it went out of the Co. B. but now 't is in the Kings Bench by Writ of Error P. 1 H. 7. pl. 7. H. 1. H. 7. pl. 19. One taken by Cap ' utleg ' an Appellee of Felony came in and pleaded that it was against J. S. Gentleman and he is but a Yeoman and the plea allowed and a Scire Facias against the Appellor who not coming in he was discharged so 21 H. 7. pl. 16. Outlawry against J. S. de D. he pleaded that he lived at S. good without Error Vide 21 H. 6. 20 and 23 H. 6. 4. a. Outlawry when reversed by plea when by Writ of Error 37 H. 6. 16. vide M. 21. E. 4. pl. 61. 21 E. 4. 37. H. 5. H. 7. pl. 7. M. 6 H. 7. pl. 2. M. 21 H. 7. pl. 27. Co. Ent. 689. 4 E. 4. pl. 15. A. takes the Goods of B. who was Outlawed if the King may seize the Goods of B. vide M 6 H. 7. pl. 4. vers finem and pl. 5. One that reversed an Outlawry had a Writ de bonis restituend ' to the Bayliff of Westminster who returned that he was not Bayliff not good he must answer to the having the Goods and must deliver them tho' gone out of his Possession or shew Cause M. 6 H. 7. pl. 5. b. H. 4. E. 4. pl. 3. An Outlawry was reversed because the Sheriff said ad Comitat ' tent ' such a day in Comitat ' Midd ' and said not Comitat ' meum seems Error of Outlawry because the Exigent was in R. 3. Time and two Proclamations then and the other three in H. 7. So the Exigent abated but being in Felony he must have Scire Facias against all the Lands tho' dicitur he had no Lands For that must appear Judicially and upon Scire Facias though the Outlawry were reversed for the Default of the Exigent he must answer for the Felony otherwise if at Suit of the party he were discharged against him H. 6. H. 7. pl. 7. M. 11. H. 7. pl. 33. M. 7. H. 7. pl. 7. Writ of Error delivered before the Exigent awarded and the Plaintiff Outlawed yet it is not void but voidable by Error and Issue shall be joyned to try Delivery before the Exigent but not by Jury P. 10. H. 7. pl. 25 31. One may avoid an Outlawry as well by saying he was beyond Sea by the King's Command as that he was a Souldier at Calais under such a Captain and shall not shew the Patent if the party appear upon
because he cannot have the next Avoidance and so is the second part of Croke 691. Shelley's Case and that if one grants a third Avoidance and the Woman recovers that in Dower the Grantee shall have the fourth Co. 1. Inst agrees with three Cro. grantee of proximam Advocationem cannot have the second where one is granted before Dy. 35. a. b. 1 Inst 378. b. 379. a. 3. Cro. 790. 791. One had the Nomination of a Church to an Abbot and the Abbot to present the Church being in the King's hands he presented without nominating the Party may have a Quare Impedit against the Incumbent without naming the King for it lies not against the King and he that had the Nomination had the Patronage Vide Mo. pl. 147. Vide 14. H. 4. 11. He that has the Nomination brings the Writ Quod permittat nominari the Writ abated for it should have been nominare 1 H. 5. 1. b. Dy. 48. a. 1 Cro. Daviston against Yates F. N. B. 33. b. 14 H. 4. 11. Two Parceners the younger in Ward the Guardian marries the eldest and presents in both their Names the Church voids again and whether the elder Sister shall present as in her Turn for the younger quaere Dy. 55. a. The Jury finds the Church full of a Stranger presented by one not party to the Writ and that ex officio yet good Dy. 77. a. Co. 6. rep 52. a. In Quare Impedit one made Title to a fourth part of the Church in Grosle and that he presented and shewed that others were seised of the other three parts as appendant to certain Mannors and they presented and their Clerk dyed and so it belongs to him to present Dy. 78. b. Quare Impedit by the King the Bishop makes Title to a Stranger and he permitted a Lapse then the ordinary presented the Clerk pleads that he is Parson Imparsonee of the Presentment in causa forma preallegata It seems that the Plea by the Bishop that he presented c. is good enough though indeed he collated but the Clerk's Plea is per totam Curiam uncertain and void for in causa preallegata cannot refer to any thing in his own Plea because nothing alledged and to the Ordinary in cannot because to the Ordinary he is a Stranger not a Servant p. 14. H. 7. Pl. 4. Tr. 15. H. 7. Pl. 12. Quare Impedit by a Corporation the Defendant pleads that they are incorporated by another name and demands Judgment so where the Plaintiff goes but to the Right by Fitzherbert 't is ill sans doubt p. 26. H. 8. Pl. 3. a. In Quare Impedit he counts of an Avoidance by Deprivation and shews not how it became void or for what cause and that assigned for Error for it might be for Simmony or some such Cause that gives a Title to the King sed non alloc ' and Judgment was affirmed Episcopus Glouc ' against Veake 3 Cro. 678. Quare Impedit the Bishop claims nothing but as Ordinary the Writ good if a Writ against him immediate quaere the Plaintiff says he presented A. whom he refused he says he presented to the Church because litig ' if a Departure semble 't is for he intended to have pleaded it at first Tr. 5. H. 7. Pl. 3. In a Quare Impedit the Plaintiff claims by a grant of a next Avoidance by A. the Defendant says that A. was Tenant in Tail held of D. by Knights Service and describes the manner whereto c. and then usurped upon the Description and dyed his Heir within Age and the Lord granted the Ward to him adjudged the Plea not double tho the Usurper had Writ Remitter which was one thing and though the Grantee of the Ward should have the first present against the Grantor of the next Avoidance which is no more than a Lease for years which the Guardian shall avoid for his time and he have it after the Ward comes of Age for with pleading both he could not shew his Title Tr. 5. H. 7. pl. 3. Quare impedit and makes Title as appendant and that A. as Ancestor presents B. c. the Defendant protests 't is not appendant says that he presented D. c. The Plaintiff says that at the time he presented D. it was in Lease to E. the Defendant rejoyns that before the Lease his Ancestor presented I. 't is a Departure for he might at first have laid the Presentment in I. p. 10. H. 7. pl. 6. Tr. 11. H. 7. pl. 15. p. 27. H. 8. pl. 11. Quare Impedit for the King the Defendant pleads the Statute 25 E. 3. 1. That the King shall not present to any living in Auter droit but such as fall in his own time and if he do the Court is not to hold plea Judgment Si Curia cognoscere vult per Thurning This is a plea to the Action not merely to the Jurisdiction For pleas for the Jurisdiction of one Court give Jurisdiction to another which this does not 11 H. 4. 8. a. Quare Impedit and Counts of an Advowson appendant and makes Title to a Gift in Tayl the Defendant pleads the Donee in Tayl was seized of it in Gross and granted per Curiam illam admit it once Appendant and not shew how it after came to be in Gross 44 E. 3. 15. b. Quare Impedit to present to a Church in Somersetshire the Defendant pleads that the Land whereto the Plaintiff supposed it to be reputed parcel of the Mannor of S. in Devonshire Issue of both Counties tryed it Bend ' 26. Release IF Money be due upon Recognizance and the Counsor pay part and the Counsee give him a Release if the Release mentions not the Recognizance it shall release so much as paid only For the Recognizance is entire and being destroyed in part is destroyed in the whole If a man be bound to pay an 100 l. to another on such a day and he tender the same at the day he is not bound to pay the same on any other day unless the Obligee will give him an Acquittance or Release Replevin IN a Replevin the Defendant avoyed to distrein for Rent Charge granted in Tayl the Plaintiff says that an Ancestor of the Defendant whose Heir he is was seized of the Lands discharged of the Rent and gave to him with Warranty No Assetts descended adjudged an illlegal plea First because he pleads Warranty from an Ancestor and shewed not what whether lineal or collateral Nor Secondly because he pleads that he was seized of the Lands discharged of c. and shewed not how viz. by Union or otherwise H. 21 H. 7. pl. 11. Replevin avows Damage feasant barr that the place where his Acre called A. whereof he is seized of 100 l. and has Common in the Residue after Verdict moved the Blank in the Declaration makes all uncertain quid resid ' est sed non alloc ' 't is found there is a Residue and be it what it will he
Frauds and Perjuries 1. BY this Act it appears That if a Feoffment be made and Livery and Seisin duly executed although it were before many credible Witness as formerly the Law was yet unless it be put into Writing nothing shall pass thereby but an Estate at Will and in like manner all leases made by word for any longer time than three years or other Estates made or created without Writing are subject to the same Rule that is shall be only Estate at Will that are so made by Words without Writing after the 24 th of June 1677. 2. After the said 24 th of June 1677. No Executor or Administrator shall be charged with any special Promise to answer Damages out of their own Estates but only in Relation to the Testator having Assetts in their hands and that no other person shall be charged with any special promise to pay the Debt of another man or answer for the Default of any other or upon any Agreement of Marriage or for any Agreement for Lands or for any other commodity or thing not to be performed within one Year after the making of any such Agreement unless the same Promise Bargain or Agreement be set down in Writing and signed by the party to be charged therewith or by some other person lawfully authorised by him so to do 3. All Wills and Bequests of Lands Tenements c. after the said 24 th day of June 1677. shall be put into writing and subscribed by the Testator or some person else in his Presence and by his express Directions and attested and subscribed in the presence of three or four Witnesses other wise all such Gifts to be void all such Devises so made and subscribed by the Testatoror his Directions as aforesaid shall be good and stand eff●ctual in the Law unless the Testator shall at any time cancell the Will or alter it by a subsequent Will 4. All Trusts shall be in Writing and signed by the Party declaring the Trust else to be void except such Trusts as arise by Implication of Law and Lands in Trust for the use of others shall be chargeable with the Judgment and lyable to the Execution sued out against Cestuque use 5. Aman seized of one Estate pur autre vie may devise the same by Will in manner afo●esaid and no such devise shall descend to the Heir that so died seized as Lands in Fee-simple should do and such Heir shall be chargeable therewith as a special Occupant and in case of no such special Occupancy then shall the Land descend to the Executors and Administrators 6. From and after the said day every Judgment shall be signed with the day of the Month and the Year in which such Judgment was Signed and the day of the Month and Year are to be entred on the Margin of the Plea-Role and they shall be accounted Judgments but from that day wherein they were so signed and not from the first day of the Term as formerly was used the like Rule for Recognizances 7. No Writ of Fieri facias or Writ of Execution shall after the property of Goods but from the day the Writ was delivered to the Sheriss to execute which day and year the Sheriff is to endo●se on the back-side of the Writ 8. No Bargain of Goods above the value of ten pounds shall stand good unless the Buyer take part of the Goods so sold into his Possession or give something in Earnest or that some Note or Memorandum be made thereof in Writing 9. No nuncupative Will whereby an Estate is bequeathed above the value of thirty pounds shall be good unless it shall be proved by three Witnesses at the least nor unless the Testator did bid the parties present bear witness that so was his Will or to such like effect nor unless such a Will was made in the time of the Testator's last Sickness and in his place of Habitation and unless he was surprised and taken sick from Home and that no Testimony shall be received to prove such Will after six Months unless the Testamentory Words were committed to Writing within six Days after the making of such Will 10. No words unless they are committed to Writing and read to the Testator and allowed by him and proved by three Witnesses to be his Will shall alter any Will in Writing concerning any Goods or Chattels or any Device or Bequest therein Trespass IF my Servant without my knowledge puts Beasts into another mans Ground the Servant is Trespasser and not the Master If a man beat my Servant I may have Trespass and my Servant another Action of Trespass diversis respectibus It is good to lay the Action some day after the Trespass committed yet it is not material or traversable if be laid before For it 's but a Circumstance As Trespass done the Fourth of May the Plaintiff alledgeth the First of May it 's sufficient if upon Evidence it be proved that the Trespass was done before the Action brought A Master is punishable for his Servant if he be about his Masters Business An Abbot for his Monk a Captain for his Souldier an Host for his Guess So a Sheriff for his Under-Sheriff and Bayliffs But a Master shall not be Punnished for Trespass of Battery or Entry into Lands or Felony or Murder or such like done by the Servant unless done by his Command If a Servant keeps his Master's Fire so negligent that it burns his Master's and the Neigbours House the Master is chargeable therewith A man is chargable with the Faults of his Family or of his Beasts If a Ship is perishing and the Marriners cast the Goods to save them on the Land next adjoyning yet this is Trespass and punishable by him that holds the Land A Servant may justifie the beating of another in Defence of his Master A Man shall not have his Action of Trespass for Threatning and recover Damage as well as in Assault and Battery The Law does not allow any man to strike in Revenge of Ill words and the reason is because there is no proportion between Words and Blows but he that is struck may strike again In Trespass he that consents and gives aid to the committing of Trespass is a Principal and no Accessary to the same Trespass If Tenant at Will commits voluntarily Waste Trespass lies against him notwithstanding his Possession so that if I deliver my Sheep to another to Fold or Dung his Land or a Horse to Ride or Oxen to Plow his Land If the Bailiff spoil or kill them I have an Action of Trespass against him notwithstanding the Delivery of them or Trover at his Election If a Man desseize me of my Land or dispossess me of my Goods yet I may enter upon the Land or take my Goods although I release to the party Disseizer or Trespasser all Actions yet this Release shall not Bar my Right No Trespass can be excused by Law but it may be justified as upon son assault demesne or
abated Et quer ' nil capiat against both entred where by the Acceptance of the Law quoad one the whole Writ is abated Vide 41. E. 3. 26. or 2. b. Precipe quod reddat against two one makes default after Joynt-wager the other joyns and makes the Law And it is accepted though the defendant opposed it the defendant recovered some of the other Moyety Note here both waged joyntly at first vide 48 E. 3. 13. b. Cessavit against two who waged law one comes to make it Seizin is prayed of the others Moyety that made default for if the Law of the one be accepted at first per Wishingham all the Writ abates But here when he prays Seizin of the entire for the default of one it was denyed and upon the whole it seems if one make default Seizin of his part must be pr. first else by acceptance of the others Law the Writ abates And if Seizin be granted of the Moyety it seems it is conditional for if the other makes his Law the whole Writ abates tamen quere and vide 3 E. 4. 21. a. 12. E. 4. 1. b. 5 E. 3. 9 B. and quere in personal Actions not to be done in such case for there no Seizin of part can be prayed 40 E. 3. 35. b. vid. 40 E. 3. 40. 41. Debt against a Bailiff for Arrearages on Account obj He cannot wage c. because in the Realty but resolved he may and so may he by 13 H. 7. 3. 6. If he had accounted and was found in Arrearages before one Auditor 43 E. 3. 1. 6. Attaint on a Prohibition Plea that he sued out Sugg ' to Prohibition and therefore he wages Law doubted if Ley gager lyes by Belknap it does because the first Suit but for debt in which Ley gager lyes 44 E. 3. 32. a. The Servant retains one as Attorney for his Master the Master makes the Servant Executor and dyes In debt by the Attorney against the Executor he cannot wage Law though the Master might for the Servant is bound by his own deed of Retainer though he be sued as Executor c. And per Finchden Baron may wage Law if a Feme contract and an Abbot if his Monks And so Bro. Tit. Ley gager 46 E. 3. 10. Debt against a Bailiff for Arrearages found before Auditors assigned in pais by the Master the defendant wages his Law Et bene per Cur ' though Brookes and Bridges say the Law is otherwise at this day quere since 't is not before Auditors assigned by Court Et hic dicitur quod one may wage Law for a Sum recovered in a a Court-Baron because no Court of Record yet 't is found by the Suiter and so 't is said 13 H. 7. 3. 6. Per Cousby 'T is also here said one may wage Law in debt for a Sum recovered in Trespass but in Trespass Ley gager lyes not 49 E. 3. 2. 3. Debt in the detinue only for rent Corn as 't is agreed it must be not being Money and though 't was upon a Lease ●o years yet being in the Detinet only the desendant is admitted to wage Law 50 E. 3. 16. a. b. Debt against J. D. who appeared by Attorney and ley gaged and at the day J. D. Junior comes to make the Law Plaintiss says his Suit is against J. D. the elder per optimam opinionem J. D. Junior shall be discharged and the Plaintiff shall have Judgment against the elder by default and the Plaintiff be no longer delay'd And so 't is adjudged 9 E. 3. 20. b. 5. E. 4. 23. 26. 114. Annuity defendant pleads a Refusal to give him advise upon Request plaintiff offers to wage his Law that he did not request him denyed because he cannot wage Law de alieno from then he offers to wage Law that he did not refuse then per Herle that admits that he did request and shews no performance on request and if he requested he did or did not perform and when he sued not if he did perform it must be intended he did not qu. of law gager in such cases if it lye at all 5 E. 3. 55. b. In a Plea of Land the defendant defendant wages law of Non-summons and offers to make it instanter and per Herle and not denyed he may Ley gager and make it instant 7 E. 3. 24. a. Account by an Executor and counts of a Receipt per manus Testatoris was per auter maines then his that sues tamen quaere In Debt and Account by Executor 't is said defendant may wage his Law Et sic semble hic 7 E. 3. 61. An Abbot is permitted to wage law of Non Sum ' per Attornatum quere If a common person may do so also though he must make it in person 8 E. 3. 20. a. Prohibition of a Suit in Trespass contra pacem the Sheriff comes and says he is sued not contra prohibitionem on the attachment and tenders Law denyed for in Trespass contra pacem it lyes not no more than in Count of a Receipt per auter maines non allocatur and that Law was received and in 29. E. 3. 47. b. Debt lyes and grant of a delivery of goods by the Testator per auter maines defendant wages Law So 30. E. 3. 24. 29. E. 3. 34. b. In account the defendant before Auditors says he paid the Money to the plaintiff the plaintiff would have waged law That he did not receive it but the other alledging that he had pass'd it per auter maines non allocatur Vide 30 E. 3. b. a. Ley gaged that he did not receive a Statute Wine and Cloath in Satisfaction of a Debt and doubted if it lye quoad the Statute but the Clark said it is usual 29 E. 3. 46. b. Debt against two who wage Law one makes default the other his Law Nil capiat per breve and the re●son seems that he having charged the two joyntly and the debt disproved quoad one the Writ is satisfied in toto yet eodem folio 6. in a Precipe of Land against two one makes Ley of non sum the Writ abates quoad him and Seizin of Land against the other that makes default Note the first Action is in the personal and entire the last in the realty and several 38 E. 3. 33. a. One wages Law and at the day failed and the Roll marked and Costs taxed yet on motion sedente Curia the same day he was admitted and made his Law eodem in libro Pa. 44. Ley gager lyes not in debt for Releif Noy 42. Defendant had day to make his Law and at the day made Affidavit that he was pressed to serve the King and could not come and they prayed farther and denyed for peremptory but the defendant pleaded al pais per advisamentum Curiae and consent Ashford against Greenvile M. 1. Ca. 1. sed vide in Bulstr 186. He cannot wave his Law and plead al pais without consent 3 Bulstr 263.
to cut Beeches is wast Lopping Oak Ash or Elme or any thing to prejudice Trees is wast Making Charcoal of wood is wast Felling Timber to repair voluntary wast is double wast To dig for Gravel Stone c. is wast unless for Reparation of the house To suffer a Sea-wall or against a River to decay is wast To take Timber c. to make new Fences is wast Tenant cuts Trees for Repair and sells them though he buyes them again and employs them 't is wast Burning a house by Negligence or Mischance is wast 1 Inst 53. 40. E. 3. 15. b. Willows cut in view of the House is wast 40 E. 3. 25. b. So to cut Hasels in a Wood where there is no other Timber If one grants in his Leafe that Wast shall be redressed by Neihgbours and not by Plea yet he may bring an Action of Wast for the place wasted is not otherwise recoverable 1 Inst 53. a. If the Tenant repair houses before any Action of Wast be brought the Action of Wast is not maintainable but he must not plead Quòd non fecit vastum but the special matter 38 Ass 1 Reparation after the Writ brought not pending the Action seems no Plea 1 Inst 55. D. None shall have wast unless he had the immediate Inheritance yet an other may joyn with him against Tenant by the Curtesie with the surviving Partner Joyntenant for life with him that hath the Fee Where the Estate is determinable the Wast is general as Tail becomes Tail after possibility c. The Heir cannot have it of Wast in his Ancestors time nor a Bishop of his Predecessor nor shall Executors be punished for Testators wast Aunt and Neece may joyn 45 E. 3. 8. b. Gift to two and the Heirs of one he that hath Fee cannot have Wast against his Joyntenant but his heir may if wast after if the other survive if the Reversion be not continued in the same it was at the time of the wast done the Action is gone though taken back again 1 Inst 53. D. Wast lyes against Tenant by the Curtesie and in Dower though they have assigned unless the Reversioner have assigned also All others shall answer for their own wast unless Guardians And if the Guardian assign it lyes against the Assignee Guardian shall not answer wast by an other because 't is poenal unless he is Joynt-Guardian If one recovers against him under Age he recovers the Land else only Damages Infants Feme coverts c. shall answer Wast c. done by Strangers and she for her Husband Co. 1. Inst 53 b. 54. a. Husband Tenant for Life in his Wives Right does wast she dyes 't is dispunishable but if tenant for years in her Right not because the marriage is a Gift of it to him Tenant for Life grants his Estate on Condition Grantee does wast Grantor ent●rs Wast lyes against the Grantee and the place shall be recovered Lord not punishable for wast done by his Villein before Entry Occupant punishable generally or specially Tenant afsigns and takes the Profits wast lyes against the Tenant Wast done sparsim in Woods or Houses all is to be recovered No Action of wast lyes against Guardian in Socage but Trespass or Account 3 Cro. 357. If Lessee take Trees c. to repair houses 't is not wast though he was not bound to repair them as his Lessor covenanted to repair them for if it was sans Impeachment of wast for the houses as the house was ruinous at his Entry and this for that Favour the Law gives to houses of Habitation Co. 1. Inst 54. b. a. Dyer 194. 198. b. Brook 463. Tit. Wast Lease of lands he may dig in open Mines and if it were of lands and mines if any were not open he can open none new but if none were then open he may open new ones Co. 1. Inst 54. b. 5 R. 1. 2. Tenant for Life makes Feoffment wast is done 't was upon Condition Lessee enters for Condition broken Lessor shall have wast So Successor of a Bishop shall have Wast on his Predecessors Lease for wast done in time of Vacation So if Lessee for Life be disseised and wast done if he enters he shall be charge able for the rest yet in none of these cases had the Lessor any Reversion in him at the time of the wast as regularly he ought but these cases stand upon their particular Reasons 1 Inst 13. b. The Aunt and Neece joyn in Action of Wast done in the old Sisters Life the Aunt alone recovers the damages Co. 1. Inst 233. b. Tenant for Life makes a Lease for years and enters upon his Lessee and consents to a Recovery in Wast against him the Lessee for years shall be for ever excluded for of necessity the place wasted must be recovered but if he had granted a Rent charge and committed Wast and the land recovered the Rent had continued Co. 1. Inst 233. b. Perkins 844. Tenant for Life does wast and grants over his Estate Lessor releaseth all wast to the Grantee it shall discharge the Lessee Idem of Tenant in Dower or by the Curtesie for besides the Privity that endures if the Lessor should maintain his Action he should recover Locum vastatum against the Grantee contrary to his own Release Co. 1. Inst 269. b. Lessee does wast and then surrenders 't is said the Lessor shall maitain wast but the Book seems to be misprinted and that it should be shall not maintain c. for by his own Act he hath determined his Action in part Co. 1. Inst 285. 5 Rep. 12. b. Wast brought against Tenant pur auter vie in Ass he dyes pending the Writ it shall not abate but proceed for the damages because altered by Act in Law but if Baron and Feme Tenants in Tail special bring Wast and she dies without Issue pendente brevi so as the Husband becomes Tenant in Tail apres possibility d'issue extinct it shall abate because all wast must be ad exheredationem And note that Release of actions real bar wast and so doth Actions personal for he shall not apportion his own Action Co. 1. Inst 285. a. One devises Lands by the general words Bosc ' Maherem ' Miner ' Carbon ' in tam amplis modo forma as the Lessee habuit or habere potuit the Lessee opens a Mine and cuts Trees to use about it the cutting is wast for the Trees were not granted it being a Lease nor do they pass as incident to the Mine it not being open And Hobard holds that if the Mine had been open at the time of the Lease it had been wast Hobard 234. Darcy against Ashwich Hutton 190. 191. Lessee cannot change the nature of the thing devised and therefore not turn Meadow into Arrable or Wood into Pasture dry up an ancient Poole suffer a Park pale to decay destroy a stock of Deer Fish c. but may better a thing in the same kind and therefore may
a Chest By which he lost his Marriage with A. D. c. I. S. shall have an Action for these words 2 Cro. 323. Mathews Case Mich. 12. Jac. B. R. Sell against Fairee per Cur. To say to a Woman Thou art a Whore I will marr thy Marriage by which she loseth her Marriage an Action lyes Trin. 22 Jac. B. R. Tonson against Spring adjudged upon Arrest of Judgment In Action upon the Case if the Plaintiff declare that she hath many Wooers to marry her and that the Defendant said of her She is with Child and hath taken Physick for it whereby she came into Disgrace Et perdidit consortium vicinorum suorum c. Although that it be not alledged that she lost any Marriage thereby yet the Action lyes Mich. 21. Jac. B. R. Medhurst against Balam adjudged in Arrest of Judgment If a man saith to an other Thou wast found in Bed with J. S. his Wife by reason of the speaking of which words he lost his Marriage with A. S. c. Although that he might be in Bed with her without any ill done yet because that it sounds in Disgrace and he hath lost his Marriage by it the Action lyes Mich. 8. Car. B. R. Southal against Dawson adjudg'd in Arrest of Judgment If the Plaintiff in an Action of the Case for words declare that the Defendant said of him He had the use of my Wife's Body by Force by reason of which words he was brought before certain Justices c. and examined by them for a Rape committed by him upon the said Woman whereupon to purge himself thereof he expended divers Sums of Money an Action lyes upon this Deelaration for the temporal Dimage he had thereby Mich. 9. Car. B. R. Harris against Smith adjudged upon Writ of Error In Action upon the Case if the plaintiff declares that in London by the Custom a Common Whore ought to be carted and a Bason rung before her And that the Defendant spoke these words of the Plaintiff Thou art a Whore and a common Whore and art a Bawd to thy Mistress and I will have a Bason tinged before thee the Action well lyes upon this Declaration for these Words Trin. 15. Car. B. R. Hassell against Capcot adjudged in Arrest of Judgment In Action upon the Case if the Plaintiff declare that in London there is a Custom that a Bawd ought to be carted and the Defendant said these words of the Plaintiff She is a Bawd and I will have her carted Hill 15 Car. B. R. Riley against Lewes adjudged in Arrest of Judgment If the Plaintiff declares in an Action upon the Case that whereas he was a Parishoner of S. the Defendant being Vicar there to the intent to scandalize the plaintiff and to create an evil opinion of the plaintiff among his Neighbours so that they Abstraherent seipsos à consortio of the plaintiff tanquam ab homine excommunicato nulla fide aut credentia digno and to exclude the Plaintiff injustly from the Church and for a long time to deprive him of the benefit of hearing divine Service in the said Church the Defendant in time of divine Service in the Church in the hearing of the parishioners maliciously pronounced the plaintiff excommunicated Praetextu cujusdam Instrumenti by him received from the Ordinary whereas he never had any such Instrument of Excommunication nor was he excommunicated And also at another time to the same Intent aforesaid in time of Divine Service in the hearing of the parishoners maliciously pronounced the plaintiff excommunicated and refused farther to celebrate divine Service until the plaintiff departed out of the Church whereupon the plaintiff was compelled to go out of the Church whereas the plaintiff was not excommunicated whereby the plaintiff was scandalized and hindred from hearing Divine Service for a long time and for the clearing of this Scandal and of his Innocency therein Diversos corporis sui grandes labores capere diversas ingentes denariorum summas errogare exponere coactus fuit in extremam depauperationem ignominium maximum of the plaintiff This Action lyes notwithstanding he doth not shew that any person did avoid his Company or refused to trade or deal with him and notwithstanding he doth not set forth any temporal or spiritual loss for it is a great Scandal and malicious tho to his Soul and spiritual Mich. Car. B. R. Barnabas against Traunter Adjudged in Arrest of Judgment If a man saith of another who hath lands by discent That he is a Bastard an Action upon the Case lyes for it tends to his Disinheritance and disturbance by Suit Mich. 3. Jac. B. R. per Curiam In an Action upon the Case if the plaintiff declare that he was Heir apparent to his Father and B. his Brother and that either of them hath Lands in Fee to the value of 40 l. per annum and that they did intend to suffer the said Lands to descend to him or to convey the same to him yet the defendant intending to disinherit the plaintiff said to the plaintiff Thou art a Bastard whereby his Father and Brother intended to disinherit him and to convey their Lands to another The Action lyes upon this Declaration for the temporal damage which might come to him thereby Pasch 13. Car. B. R. Humfries against Stutfield Adjudged in Arrest of Judgment Where there was Grand-father Father and Son and the Son brought an Action upon the Case and declared that the Grand-father whose heir he is entailed certain Lands upon him and the Heirs males of his Body and the Defendant intending to scandalize his possibility that he hath to inherit this Land as Heir of the body of his Grand-father said that he was a Bastard notwithstanding that the Grand-father and Father were alive yet the Action brought as above by the Son did lye Humfries Case ubi supra In an Action upon the Case if the Plaintiff declare that he exhibited Articles in the Kings Bench against the defendant for the good abearing and swear the Articles to be true before Justice W. Innuendo the said Oath taken upon the said Articles although it be not averr'd that the Oath was taken of Record yet the Action lyes for it shall be intended the Articles exhibited in Court and sworn before a Justice of the Court Mich. 10. Car. B. R. Yolden against Wannel Adjudged in Arrest of Judgment If a man saith of an other He hath written a forged Will wherein I will prove him salse forsworn and perjur'd in a Will that he made of John Hunt an Action lyes for these words for it shall be intended that he was perjur'd in his Oath taken touching the said Will. Hil. 12. Car. in B. R. Cowley against Clough In an Action upon the Case if the plaintiff declare that there was a Writ to inquire of Damages between A. and B. in a Court of C. at the Sessions-house where he was sworn to give Evidence according to his Knowledge
of God or of an Estranger may abate the Writ p. 17 18 19 20. Ab Initio Where the Grant shall be good Ab Initio although it was incertain at the Commencement p. 20 21 22 23. Able and Disable Where an Obligee was able at the time of the making the Obligation and afterwards disabled by his own Act è contra p. 23 24. Acceptance Where it shall be no Prejudice to the Acceptor p. 24. Action Where the principal thing is devested yet the Plaintiff shall have an Action which is accrued to him by reason thereof ibid. Where the Husband shall have an Action without naming his Wife and where not p. 25 26 27 29 33 34. Where the Plaintiff hath Election to bring his Action against the Heir or Executor p. 27. Bill teneri c. in 20. l. solvend in Watches Action shall be brought for the Money not the Watches but if the number had been express'd contra p. 28. Assault and Battery and Ejectment will both lye in one Declaration ib. Of bringing Actions of Trespass and what words are most proper to be used therein upon several occasions p. 28 29. How Executors and Executors of Executors shall sue and be sued p. 29. Of bringing Actions of Covenant p. 30 31 32. Of Infants bringing their Actions p. 32 33. Where several things may be put into one Declaration p. 35. Of bringing Actions upon the Statute ib. Where a man shall have an Action against his own Deed. p. 36 37 38. Where a man hath good cause of Action sometimes and yet by matter ex post facto and by the Action of a Stranger his Action is destroyed p. 38 39. Of bringing Actions upon the Case Sur assumpsit p. 40 41. Amendment In what Cases the Court will suffer an Original Writ Venire Facias Quare Impedit Habeas Corpora or Writ of Nisi prius c. to be amended p. 43. to 51. Misprisions of the Clerk no Errors shall be amended p. 45 46. Appearance The Defendant having given Bond to the Sheriff to appear if supersedeas comes to the Sheriff before day of Appearance yet he must appear to save his Bond. p. 51. By W. 2. a man of 70 not bound to appear upon Juries ibid. Annuity Grantee in Annuity pro Consilio c. not bound to give Counsel to the Grantor unless required p. 51. How to declare in Annuity p. 52. Arbitrement Where good where not p. 52 53. Audita Querela Brought by an Infant who was non-pros'd and why p. 53 54. It lies upon Nihil Facias not Scire Facias ibid. Brought by Conusor in Stat. Merch. against Administrator of Executor of the Conusee after Release p. 54. Avowry Avowry for Amercement in Court Baron ill and why ibid. Set forth in Avowry that Dean and Chapter were seised in Jure Ecclesiae not saying in Fee ill and why ibid. Pleading in Avowry Damage fesant and on a new grant p. 55. Exceptions to an Avowry by an Executor ibid. Costs to Avowant ibid. Judgment for Avowant revers'd and why p. 56. The Lord hath Election to avow at Common Law or upon the Statute and which most beneficial ibid. Avowry for two Sums nomine penae without alledging Demand of Rent insufficient c. ibid. Donee aliens Donor cannot avow upon Alienee ibid. Avowry adjudged ill upon Demurrer and why ibid. Stranger to Avowry shall plead nothing but hors de son fee or matter tantamount p. 57. Stranger to Avowry cannot disclaim nor any person in auter droit ibid. Five things to be known in Avowries p. 58 59. Where in Avowries the Defendant shall answer to the Seisin and where he shall traverse p. 61. Where the Effect of the Fee shall be traversed p. 62. Bail UPON Latitat 64. Vpon Capias ib. for Husband and Wife ib. Vpon Writ of Error p. 65. Difference of being Bail in King's Bench and Common Pleas. ibid. Bail sells his Lands if chargeable p. 66. If one puts in Bail to a Debt in C. B. and be afterwards arrested in London for the same Debt he shall have an Attachment ib. Bankrupt Creditors after refusal may upon Tener of their Proportions towards the Charge of the Commission be received to have their parts as other Creditors if no Distribution hath been made of the Bankrupt's Estate before ibid. Commissioners may sell Bankrupt's Goods if by him before disposed to his Creditors after he became Bankrupt ibid. They may sell his Copy-hold Lands p. 67. Two brought Debt joyntly as assigned to them by Commissioners per Cur. they ought to have assigned pro rata to every Creditor ibid. A Bankrupt cannot sell his own Goods after he becomes Bankrupt but Goods which he hath as Executor or a Legacy before it be invested in him or a Grant of a Reversion before Entry he may ibid. Barr. A man may be barred pro tempore and yet afterwards he shall have his Action p. 68. To plead a thing by way of Barr or Estoppel which the Demandant or Plaintiff is to defeat or destroy by the Vsage of his Action is no good Plea ibid. Of pleading Recoveries in Barr. p. 69. Where a man demands a Debt or any thing by Deed he shall not be barred but by Deed or something of as high Nature p. 70. Where a man shall plead a Barr which shall comprehend one matter in Fact and where it shall comprehend more p. 71. Of Barrs perpetual ibid. Cinque-Ports HOW Lands shall be extended in the Cinque-Ports p. 72. Customs and Prescriptions Customs against Canon Law how to be tryed p. 72. Customs payable to the King by the Common Law and why ibid. Difference between malum in se and malum prohibitum ibid. Bailiff ought not to sell Goods taken in Execution for Debt or Damages in a Court Baron but impound and keep them as Pledges till the Defendant makes his Agreement but where the Court hath used to award a Levari Facias 't is good by Custom p. 73. Custom of Burrough English ibid. Custom for the Court of King's Bench every Term to send the Coroner to the Marshal to view the Prisoners that the Coroner might mark the Names of those were wanting in his Book and inform the Court thereof who would record their Escape against the Marshal as an Abuse of his Office and cause of Forfeiture ibid. The Law and Vsage of the Realm concerning Aliens and their Issue p. 74. Custom of London concerning Feme sole Merchant ibid. Custom and Vsage binding to particular places ibid. In what Cases the Custom of the Realm is the Common Law ibid. Prescription what and how to be alledged p. 75 76 77. Profit Apprendre cannot be claimed by Custom in the Lands of another except in Cases of Necessity p. 77. Where a man may have an Action upon the Case for a Tort and where he must prescribe and shew his Title p. 78. How and where Customs pro bono privato and pro bono publico are to be alledged ibid How