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A93118 The touch-stone of common assurances. Or, A plain and familiar treatise, opening the learning of the common assurances or conveyances of the kingdome. By VVilliam Sheppard Esquire, sometimes of the Middle Temple. Sheppard, William, d. 1675? 1648 (1648) Wing S3214; Thomason E528_1; ESTC R203541 687,813 543

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the said lands and after the land held in Capite is recovered from him or aliened by him bonâ ●ide in these cases the Devise is good for all the land held in Socage And hence it is That if the King grant land to one in Fee Farm to hold in Socage at a rent and after grant this rent to another and his heires to hold in Capite and the Grantee of the rent doth grant it to him that hath the land in this case because the rent is extinct and he cannot be said to hold lands in Capite this shall not restraine the Devise of any of his lands And yet if a man hold some lands by Knights Service in Capite and other lands in Socage and bee disseised of the lands held in Capite he cannot devise all his Socage land but the Devise will be void for a third part for he is said to have that land still whereof hee hath the right And albeit the Statute say that he that hath lands held of the King in Capite and other lands in Socage may give two parts for the advancement of his wife paiment of his debts preferment of his children whereby he is restrained to devise any more And therefore if by act executed in his life time he convey two parts to any such uses or intents he cannot devise any more by his Will but the residue must discend yet this also is to be intended of the land he hath at the same time For if a man be seised of land held in Socage of the yearly value of 20l. per annum and he hath not any land held in Capite by Knights Service and he make his Will in writing and by it devise his Socage land to one in Fee and then purchase land of the value of 20 s. per annum held in Capite and die this will make the Devise void for a part of the land that is held in Socage But if a man seised of land in Fee of Socage Tenure assure it to the use of his wife for her ●ointure and after purchase lands held in Capite by Knights Service he may devise two parts in three of all this Capite land and the King shall not have any thing out of or for the Socage land If a man seised of lands part of which are Coo. 3. ●4 〈◊〉 ●4 held in Capite and part in Socage make a Feoffment of the lands held in Capite being two parts in three of the whole to the use of him and his wife for life with divers remainders over in this case he may not devise any of the Socage land And if a man have no Socage land but Capite land and convey it away i● Fee-simple keeping no Reversion to any such use and after purchase Socage land he may devise all the Socage land newly purchased 6. As Coo. 3. 32. the Testator enabled to devise by this Statute without restraint is and must be one that hath the land he doth devise at the time of the Devise made and no other land then to be an impediment to his Devise so he must have a sole estate as well in the land he doth leave to discend to the heir as in the land he doth Devise And therefore if lands held in Capite be conveyed to a man and his wife and the heirs of their two bodies and this man hath other lands whereof he is sole seised held of the King in Capite by Knights Service in this case he may not devise two parts of the whole supposing this may suffice for the Kings third part for he may devise but two parts of the residue i. e. of that whereof he is sole seised either at the time of making of the Will or at the least at the time of the death of the Testator 7. The estate of the land that is held must continue after Coo. 10. 8● the death of the Tenant otherwise it will be no restraint And therefore if Tenant in Taile be to him and the heirs males of his body the remainder in Fee to another of Lands held by Knights Service in Capite and he is seised of other lands in Socage in Fee and by his Will in writing devise all the Socage land and die without issue male in this case the Devise is good for all the Socage land And so also it is where the estate the Ancestor had of the land held is defeated by condition 8. That which a man cannot dispose by any act in his life time shall not be taken for any such Mannors c. Coo. 〈◊〉 32. whereof a man may devise two parts by authority of this Statute at his death And therefore in the case of an indevided estate of lands between husband and wife where the husband can make no disposition for longer time then during the Coverture these lands are not to bee esteemed such as are to be accounted amongst the lands whereof two parts in three are devisable 9. The Tenure by Coo. 10. 84. 3. 34. Knights Service must continue after the death of the Devisor otherwise the land so held will be no restraint And therefore if the King grant land to one and his heires to hold during his life by Knights Service in Capite and after in Socage or to hold during his life in Socage and after by Knights Service in these cases the Grantee may devise all his land notwithstanding the Tenure of this land 10. The King or other Lord must have a full and clear Coo. 3. 32. 31. super L. 〈◊〉 111. 10. 8● yearly value of the third part left to discend to him and the value is to be esteemed as it is and doth happen to be at the time of the death of the Testator for the King or other Lord must have the like and equall benefit for his third part as the Devisee hath for the two parts without diminution or substraction when therefore a man will have his Devise good for the resid●● he must take care that the third part be so left for if the third part be not valuable or be charged with any rent c. or be upon any incertainty as if it be upon a possibillity only as where a man and his wife be seised of a joint estate Taile made during the Coverture and he Devise other lands to her on condition that she shall wave her estate made during the Coverture and so intend that that part of his land shall be left for the Kings part this Devise will not be good for the residue and albei● the wife doe wave the estate after the husbands death yet this will not help the matter or make the Devise good for that part for which it was void before But it is not materiall by what Tenure the third part discending be held For it is holden by the better opi●ion That if a man be seised of 20 l. land held of the King in Capite and 10 l. land held
lands tenements or hereditaments manurable Co. 5. 3. or corporall which are necessary to be letten and whereout a rent by law may be issuing and reserved And therefore if a tenant in tail make a lease of such a thing as doth lie in grant as an Advowson Fair Market Franchise or the like out of which a rent cannot bee reserved especially if it be a lease for life this lease is Tallentines case Pasch 3 Jac. B. R. Co. 11. 60. void and that albeit the thing have been anciently and accustomably letten And a grant of a rent-charge therefore out of such lands is void * Trin. 2 Ja. B. R. Adjudg Doddingtons case And if tenant in tail make a lease for three lives of a portion of tithes rendring rent this lease is unquestionably void And so also it seems it is if it be a lease for twenty one years 7. They must be of such lands or tenements which have been most commonly letten to farm or occupied by the Farmors therof by the Co. 6. 37. Dier 271. space of twenty years next before the lease made so as if it have been letten for eleven years at one or severall times within twenty years before the new lease made it is sufficient And albeit the letting have been by copy of Court roll only yet such a letting in fee. for life or years is a sufficient letting and so also is a letting at will by the Common Law But these lettings to farm must be made by such as are seised of an estate of inheritance for if it have been only by Guardian in Chivalry tenant by the curtesie in dower or the like this will not serve to be a letting within the intent of the statute 8. There must be reserved upon such leases yearely during the Co. 5. 8. 6. 6. 37. same leases due and payable to the lessor and his heirs to whom the reversion shall appertain so much yearly farm or rent or more as hath beene most accustomably yeelded or paid for the lands c. within twenty years next before such lease made And therefore if the rent be reserved but for part of the time of the new lease this lease is void And if the tenant in taile have twenty acres of land that have been accustomably letten and hee make a lease of these twenty acres and of one acre more which hath not been accustomably letten reserving the usuall yearly rent and so much more as to exceed the value of the other acre this is not a good lease by the Statute So if the tenant in tail of two farms the one at twenty pound rent the other at ten pound rent and he make a lease of both these farms together at thirty pound rent this is not a good lease within the Statute But if besides the Co. 6. 37 38. Trin. 3 Jac. B. R. Adjudg annuall rent there have beene formerly reserved things not annuall as hariots fines or other profit upon the death of the Farmors or profit out of anothers soil as pasturage for a colt c. Adjudg Tr. 18 Jac. B. R. if upon the new lease the yearly rent be reserved albeit these collaterall reservations be omitted yet these leases are good And so Co. 5. 6. also if there be more rent reserved upon the new lease then the rent that hath been anciently paid the lease is good notwithstanding And yet if tenant in tail of land let a part of it that hath been accustomably letten and reserve the rent pro rata or more then after the rate this is not a good lease And yet if two coparcenours Co. 5. 5. And yet Co. super Lit. 44. b. is contra have twenty acres of land of equall value between them in tail and these have been usually letten and they make partition of these land so as each of them hath ten acres in this case they may make leases of their severall parts reserving the half of the accustomable rent And if upon the old lease the rent were payable at foure Trin. 3. Jac. B. R. Co●●wals case Co. 5. 5. days in the year and by the new lease it is reserved to be paid at one day this is not a good lease But if the rent upon the old lease be payable in gold and the new rent be payable in silver it seems the lease is not good And if a tenant in tail be of a Manor Co. 5. 6. that hath been usually demised for ten pound rent and after a tenancy escheat and then he doth make a lease of the Manor rendring ten pound rent by the year in this case this is a good lease but if the lessor purchase a tenancy then it seems otherwise 9. Such leases must not be without impeachment of wast And therefore if tenant in tail make a lease of his land intailed without impeachment of wast this lease is void And if a lease be Wast Co. 6. 37. Meers case Adjudge made for life the remainder for life c. this is not a good lease for in this case during the remainders the tenant for life cannot be punished for wast done But if such a tenant of land make a lease of it to I S for the lives of three others this is a good lease albeit it may afterwards become an occupancy 10. Such leases must not be against any speciall Act of Parliament Stat. 11 H. 7. 20. Co. 3. 51. And therefore if a woman that is tenant in tail of the gift of her deceased husband or any of his Auncestors whiles she is sole or after with another husband make any such lease warranted by this Statute yet this lease is not good 11. They must have all due ceremonies and circumstances for the perfection of them as other such like leases have as livery of seism and the like where they are needfull And then only when Co. 7. 7. 8. 34. Dier 7. 8. The twomans Lawyer ●73 Plow 435. leases have these conditions and are made according to these provisions are they said to be within this statute of 32 H. 8. and such only as doe binde the tenant in tail himself and the iss●e in tail for otherwise if it be not warranted by this statute albeit it will bind the tenant in tail himselfe that made it yet it will not binde his issue but as to him it will be void or voidable at the least● for if tenant in tail of land make a lease of it for an hundred yeares without any rent reserved thereupon this lease as to the issue in tail is void but if he make a lease of his land for an hundred years Plow 436 rendring rent and have issue and die in this case the lease is onely Acceptance voidable by the issue at his pleasure and therefore if the issue accept the rent after the death of the tenant in tail by this means the lease is affirmed and become good But
those two parts at his pleasure and no more for the third part must discend to the heir and come to satisfie the Lord his duties and therefore the Devise of the whole land in this case is void for the third part He that hath any such land held by Knights Service in Capite and other lands held by Socage Tenure may devise two parts of the whole and no more or any rent c. out of it at his pleasure He that doth hold land of the King by Knights Service only and not in Capite or if a meane Lord by Knights Service and hath also other lands held by Socage Tenu●e may devise two parts in three of all the land held by Knights Service or any rent c. out of it and all his Socage land at his pleasure So that now by these Statutes a man that hath lands in Fee-simple may devise them in Fee-simple Fee-taile for life or yeares absolutely or conditionall at his pleasure And therefore if one devise his land to one for life the remainder in Fee or Fee-taile to another or devise his land to B the remainder to the next heir male of B and the heires males of the body of such heire male or the like these are good Devises But for the more full understanding of these things it it to be known in the next place 2. That this Statute doth not enable men to devise land that are See the Statute Coo. super Litt. 111. Perk. Sect. 544. Lut. Sect. 287. Dve● 210. old N B 89. Perk Sect. 500 539 540. 496 497 498. disabled by Law in respect of their persons or minds as Infants women Covert men de non sane memory or the like nor such as are disabled in respect either of the nature of their land as Copi-holders for Copi-hold-land is not devisable or of the estate they have in the land as Tenants in Taile or pur autervie or Ioynt-tenants for these can no more devise the land they doe so hold then they could before the Statute But such as are seised of land in Common or Coparcenery may devise their land as well as those that are sole s●ised And if two be Ioint-tenants for life the Fee-simple to one of them he that hath the Fee-simple may devise his Fee-simple after the death of his companion Neither doth this Statute enable those that are seised of lands in Fee in the right of their houses and Churches to devise the same lands And therefore Bishops Deanes P●rsons Vicars Masters of Hospitals or the like can no more devise the lands belonging to their Bishopricks c. then they could before the Statute but the lands they are seised of in their own right they may devise like other men 3. Heridiments that are not of any yearly value are some of them devisable 〈◊〉 10. 81. 〈◊〉 32. super 〈◊〉 111. and some not for if the King grant to one and his heirs bona catalla felonum fugitivorum vel ut lagatorum Fines and Amercements within such a Manner or Village in this case the owner can neither devise these things to another as part of the two parts nor leave them to discend for a third part And yet if one have a Mannor unto which a Leet Waife Estray● or the like is appendant or appurtenant there by the Devise of the Mannor with the appurtenances these things may passe as incident to the Mannor But if a man have a Hundred with the goods of Felons Out-lawes Fines Amercements Retornabrevium and other such casuall Heriditaments within the same Hundred and these have been usually let to Farm for a rent in this case these things may be devised or left to discend for a third part 4. Such incertaine Franchises as before that are Heriditaments of no yearly value albeit Coo. 10. 8● 82. super Litt. 111. Coo. 3. 35. 30. 34. they are not devisable yet may rest●aine the devise of a mans lands and tenements and make it void for a third part if they be held in Capit● for if it is not requisite that the thing held by the Tenur● in Capite be deviseable and such things as may not bee left to discend to the Lord for a third part and to satisfie him his duties may notwithstanding be devisable or restraine the Devise of other lands and tenements and make it void for a third part And therefore a Reversion upon an estate ta●le which is dry and fruitlesse if it be holden of the King by Knights Service in Capit● will hinder the Devise of the third part of a mans lands and tenements Also an estate taile of lands held in Capite may restraine the Devise of a third part of other lands And therefore if such lands be conveyed to one and the heirs of his body the remainder to another and he have other lands in Socage if he have any issue he can devise but two parts of his Socage land And where the Statute speaks of a remainder it is to be intended of such a remainder only as may draw Ward and marriage by the Common-Law and this is that remainder only that doth hinder a Devise And therefore if A be seised of lands in Socage Tenure and B be seised of lands in Fee held in Capite by Knights Service and B make a Lease for life or gift in Taile to C the remainder to A in Taile or in Fee in this case A during the estate for life or in Taile may devise all his Socage land notwithstanding this remainder But if a man make a Lease for life or yeares and after grant the reversion for life or in Taile the remainder in Fee and after the Grantee for life dyeth or Donee in Taile dyeth without issue in this case this remainder which now is in point of reversion will restraine the Devise of other lands and make it void for a third part 5. In all Coo. 10 81. 11 24. 3. ●0 34 35. supe● L●●t ●●1 Dyer 158. cases where a man is restrained to devise any part of his lands held in Socage h● must have lands held in Capite at the same time and therefore the time of having of lands to devise and holding of other lands in Capite and disposing of the lands to be devised must concurre And therefore if a man be seised of an Acre of land in Fee held of the King in Chiefe by Knights Service and of other two Acres in Fee held in Socage and enfeoffee his younger sonne of the Acre held in Capite and of one of the other Acres or convey it to the use of his wife or for the paiment of his debts c. and after purchase land held in Socage in this case he may devise all the new purchased land held in Socage without restraint So if a man bee seised of lands held by Knights Service in Capite in possession reversion or remainder and of lands held in Socage and by his Will in writing doth devise all
of a Subject by Socage and he devise all the Capite land to a stranger that this is a good Devise for the whole and that the King shall be satisfied by the Socage land And if it be of the value of the third part albeit it be but of an estate Taile whereof the Ancestor was seised or it be new purchased land yet it is sufficient And therefore if some lands be given to a man and the heirs of his body of the value of 10 l. per annum and he be seised of other lands in Fee-simple to the value of 20 l. per annum and all or part of these are held in Capite by Knights Service in this case he may devise the lands in Fee-simple and leave the entailed land to discend for a third part And if a man be seised of such land and convey it to the uses within the Statute or any of them and after purchase new land and leave that to discend this is sufficient 11. The third part that is left to discend to satisfie the King or other Coo. 3. 34. Lord must discend immediately and he must not stay for it And therefore if a man be seised of three Acres of land held by Knights Service in Capite and make a Lease of one Acre for life and after devise the other two Acres this Devise is not good for the whole two Acres but for two parts in three thereof only and albeit the Tenant for life die afterwards yet this will not help the matter But if the Devisor leave a full third part immediately to discend in Fee-simple or in Fee-taile he may devise the other two parts at his pleasure And if he doe not leave a third part to the full it must be made up and supplyed out of the other two parts which in case of the King is done by Commission out of the Court of Wards and in case of a Subject by Commission out of the Chancery 12. As the Coo. super Litt. 111. 9. ●33 3. 32. 30. third part left to discend must bee of as good value as either of the other two parts is at the time of the death of the Testator or otherwise the Devise of all the residue will not be good so must it bee taken out of the lands of the Testator indifferently And therefore if a man be seised in Fee of land held in Chiefe by Knights Service and make a Feoffment of the one halfe of it to the use of himselfe for life and after to the use of one he doth intend to marry and after to the use of another in remainder or to any other such like uses within the Statute and after he doth marry the same woman and after he deviseth the other moity to his wife children or any other in this case albeit the wives estate have precedency yet the King shall have his third part out of both the moities equally So if one be seised of Gavelkind land held in Capite and his sonne being dead devise part of it to one of his grand-children and part of it to another and part to a third Taile in this case the Kings third part shall come out of all the three parts equally and accordingly the Devise will be void for so much to every one of them So if one hold three severall Mannors of three severall Lords he cannot devise two of these Mannors leaving a three to discend but he may devise two parts of every of the third Mannors and a third part of each Mannor must discend to each Lord for there must be an equallity in these things For further illustration of which things the examples following are to be heeded W B being seised of the Mannor of Thoby in Capite Coo. 3. ●ut ler Bake●s c●se and of lands in Fobbing held in Socage in Fee and he and his wife being seised of the Mannor of Hinton held in Capite to them and the hei●es of their two bodies begotten by an estate made to them during the Coverture for the joynture of the wise the reversion to W in Fee and Thoby doth amount to the value of two parts and Hinton and Fobbing to a third part and W B by his Will in writing doth devise Thoby to his wife for life upon condition that she shall not take her former Joynture with divers remainders over and die and shee refused her former Jointure in Hinton in this case it was adjudged that the Devise was not good for the whole Mannor of Thoby and that the Mannor of Hinton was not a sufficient third part to discend L L being seised of the Mannor of Affaland Coo. 10. 78. I ●onard Leoveis case Coo. 11. 24. Hea●ton Rillaton P●ngelley Willesworthy and Trivesquite the last only held in Capite in Fee and having issue Thomas his eldest sonne William Humfry and Richard younger sonnes which Richard had issue Leonard makes a Feoffment of these Mannors to divers uses viz. of the Mannors of R P W and A to the use of the Feoffor for life and after to the use of such person as he should appoint by his last Will and after to the use of W his second sonne in Taile and after to his other sonnes in Taile and after to the use of the Feoffor and his w●fe in Taile and after to the use of the Feoffor and his heirs for for ever And of the Mannor of H to such like uses and of the Mannor of T also to such like uses and the same uses were with power of Revocation And after the Feoffor purchased eight Acres of other land held in Socage and after did revoke the uses of the Mannors of R P W and A and after devised some of the said Mannors excepting some peeces and the said eight Acres of land to his eldest sonne and the heirs males of his body for 500 yeares on certain conditions and if he die without issue that it shall goe to William c. and afterwards he dyed seised of the said eight Acres of land and the lands devised by the Will at the time of the death of the ●estator were of the yearly value of 24 l. 14 s. 10 d. per annum non ultra and the lands whereof the Feoffment was made and not revoked were at the time of the death of the Testator of the value of 55 l. 6 s. 8 d. in this ca●e it was adjudged that the Devise of the eight Acres newly purchased was void at least for a third part and restrained by the reversion in Fee expectant upon the estate Taile made to the younger sonne of the Mannor held in Capite And it was resolved That if a man be seised of three Acres of equall yearly value one of them held of the King by Knights Service in Capite and have issue two sonnes and give the Acre so held and another of the Acres to his younger sonne whereby hee hath so executed his power by the Statute that hee
father excepting the land descended to him of the part of his mother these exceptions are void l Dier 97. 264. Co. super Lit. 47. Plow 153. 103 104. 14 H. 8. 1. Doct. Stud. 98. Or if the exception be such as it is repugnant to the grant and doth utterly subvert it and take away the fruit of it as if one grant a manor or land to another excepting the profits thereof or make a feoffement of a close of meadow or pasture reserving or excepting the grasse of it or grant a manor excepting the services these are void exceptions m Dier 59. 263. So if one grant his house chambers cellars and shops excepting his shops it is said this is no good exception And by the like reason if one grant his meadow and pasture grounds except his meadow grounds this exception is not good no more then if one grant two manors or two acres excepting one of them And of this opinion was the Chiefe Justice in B. R. Hil. 3. Car. in the case of Haward and Fulcher. n Plow 524. Dier 264. Br. grant 60 38 H. 6. 38. And yet if a man make a lease for yeares of a Mill excepting the profits thereof during the life of the lessor it is said this hath been adjudged a good exception But I doubt of this case for the exception of the profits of a thing is the exception of the thing it selfe And a man cannot grant an estate and reserve a part of the estate as make a feoffement in fee and reserve a lease for life or grant an Advowson and reserve the Presentation for his life o Co. super Lit. 150. Or if the exception be of an inseparable incident and a thing that cannot be granted by it selfe and from another as if a manor be granted excepting the Court Baron or land be granted excepting the common appendant thereunto belonging these exceptions are void But exceptions of severable incidents are good p Co. 5. 12. Hi● 9 Jac. B. R. per Curiam Or if the exception be of such a thing as the grantor cannot have nor doth belong to him by law as if a lessee for years assigne over all his terme in the land excepting the Timber trees earth or clay this exception is not good But if lessee for life make a lease for years or lessee for 21. years make a lease for This difference hath been agreed 20. years or tenant by the courtesie or in dower grant over their estate excepting the Timber trees these are good exceptions And if a lessee for life or years open a Cole-mine and then assigne over his estate excepting the mines or the profits thereof these are void exceptions q Co. super Lit. 47. Plow 53. Or if the exception be of a particular thing out of a particular thing as if one grant white acre and black acre excepting white acre or grant 20. acres of land by particular names excepting one acre of them these exceptions are void r Perk. Sect. 643. 641. Or if the exception be set downe incertainly as if one grant a house excepting one chamber or grant a manor excepting one acre but doth not set forth which ch●mber or which acre it shall be these exceptions are void A Tenendum is a clause of the deed whereby the tenure was heretoforce created And this doth most commonly and properly 8. Tenendum Quid. Co. super Lit. 6. Co. 9. 130. succeed the Habendum and was made by this word Tenendum per servicium c. But sithence the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum when the fee simple doth passe the tenure is alwaies of the chiefe Lord and is thus set forth Tenendum de capitalibus dominis c. And this clause at this day is for the most part omitted altogether A Reservation is a clause of a deed whereby the feoffor donor Co. 10. 107. Plow 132. Co. super Lit. 47. Perk. Sect. 625. lessor grantor c. doth reserve some new thing to himselfe out 9. Reservation or Reddendum Quid. of that which he granted before And this doth most commonly and properly succeed the Tenendum and is made by one or more of these words Reddend ' reservand ' solvend ' faciend ' inveniend ' or such like This doth differ from an exception which is ever of part of the thing granted and of a thing in esse at the time but this is of a thing newly created or reserved out of a thing demised that was not in esse before so that this doth alwaies reserve that which was not before or abridge the tenure of that which was before In every good reservation these things must alwaies concurre 1. 10. What shall be said a good reservation And what not a Plow 132. Perk. Sect. 626. Co. 8. 71. It must be by apt words 2. It must be of some other thing issuing or comming out of the thing granted and not a part of the thing it selfe nor of some thing issuing out of another thing 3. It must be of such a thing whereunto the grantor may have resort to distraine 4 It must be made to one of the grantors and not to a stranger to the deed As for examples b Plow 132. If a man grant land yeelding and paying money or some such like thing yearly this is a good reservation But if the grantee covenant to pay such a summe of money or to doe such a thing yearly this is no good reservation but a covenant to pay a summe of money in Covenant grosse and not as a rent c Co. 5. 111. 8. 71. super Lit. 214. 213. 99. If a lease be made for years rendering a rent to the lessor or his heires in the disjunctive or rendering a rent to the lessor without saying and his heirs c. or rendering a rent during the said terme and doth not say to whom or rendering 10 l. to the lessor and ●5 l. to his heires all these reservations are good But if a lease be made rendering rent to the heires of the lessor this reservation is void because the rent is not reserved to himselfe first d Co. super Lit. 142. If one grant land yeelding for rent money corne a horse spurres a rose or any such like thing this is a good reservation but if the reservation be of the grasse or of the vesture of the land or of a Common or other profit to be taken out of the land these reservations are void e Co. super Lit. 47. Co. 5. 3. Perk. Sect. 626. If one grant a manor mesuage land meadow or pasture or the vesture or herbage of of land meadow or pasture rendring a rent this is a good reservation But if one grant Tithes rents commons advowsons offices a corody mulcture of a Mill a Faire market priviledge or liberty reserving a rent this reservation is void And yet such a reservation also in case of the King
how long this shall be taken to be an exception during the estate The Habendum as all other parts of a deed for the most part shall be taken most strongly against the grantor and most in advantage of the grantee yet so as withall it shall be construed as neer the intent of the parties as may be as in al the cases following doth appear In the Habendum or limitation of the estate and how that shall be taken If land be given or granted to one habendum or to have and to hold to him and his heirs so long as he pay 20 yearly to I S and Plow 557. his heires or so long as such a tree doth stand or the like this is a kind of seesimple but it is limited and qualified and determinable upon this contingent And yet this may become a pure feesimple Feesimple for if land be granted to one and his heirs untill I S pay 100l and I S die before he pay it in this case the estate is become a pure fee-simple If lands be given or granted to a man to have and to hold to him and his heires this is a feesimple pure absolute and perpetuall Co. super Lit. 8 9. Lit. 1. 27 H. 8. 5. Perk. Sect. 239. 240 241. 39 H. 6. 38. Plow 28. Bro. Estates 4. 11 H. 7. 12. Co. super Lit. 15. and this is made by these words his heires for it is a generall rule that these words his heires only make an estate in fee-simple in all feoffments and grants But this rule hath many exceptions for if feoffment of land be made to I S heredibus without the word Suis this is a feesimple And yet if the grant be to I S and I D heredibus without this word Suis contrà for this is only an estate for their lives And if lands be given to a Bishop Parson or the like To have and to hold to him and his successors this is a feesimple And lands be given to a Maior and Communalty or other Corporation aggregate generally without the word Successors or any other word or if lands be given to such a Corporation for their lives this is a feesimple But if land be given to a Parson or the like To have and to hold to him without saying how long or to have and to hold to him for life by this he hath no more but an estate for life a Co. 6. 27. super Lit. 9. And if lands be given to the King generally without any other words this is a feesimple b 15 Ed. 4. 13. 9 H. 7. 11 12 H. 8 9. H. 4. 84. 33 H. 6. 20. Co. super Lit. 9. Ass Pl. 12. Plow 130. 14 H. 4. 13. So if one grant deo ecclesiae de D it is said this is a feesimple in the Parson of D. So also of a grant Ecclesiae de D. per Thirne Iust So if a grant had beene to the Monkes of such a house it had beene a fee-simple in the house And in like manner it is in other cases c As if one recite that B hath enfeoffed him of white acre To have and to hold to him and his heires and then he saith further that as fully as B hath given white acre to him and his heirs he doth grant the same to C by this C the grantee hath the feesimple of this acre And if one grant 2. acres to A and B To have and to hold the one to A his heires the other to B in forma predicta by this B hath a feesimple in this other acre for an estate in fee simple fee taile or for life may be made by such words of reference Also if a rent be granted betweene Parceners for to make an equalitie of partition and it bee granted generally and without any words of heires yet this is a feesimple So where lands are given in Frankalmoigne And so also it is in the cases of a release of right a fine and a recovery If one give or grant land to another To have and to hold to him 27 H. 8. 27. Lit. Sect. 31. Co. 11. 46. and his heires males or to him and his heires females in both these cases there is a feesimple made but otherwise it is when these words are in a Will for then it is but an estate in taile only If one grant land to one To have and to hold to him his right 33 H. 6. 5. heires by this he hath a feesimple And so it shall be taken if it be by fine So if one grant land to I S for life the remainder to Co. super Lit. 22. Co. 1. 95. 66. the heires or to the right heires of I S this is a feesimple so if one make a feoffment in fee to the use of himselfe for life and after his death to the use of his heires this is a feesimple If one grant land to I S. To have and to hold to him and the heires of I S this is a feesimple and all one with a grant to I S and his heires If one grant land to another to have and to hold to him for 20. 20 H. 6. 35. Co. super Lit. 217. yeares and that after the 20. years the grantee shall have it to him and his heires by 10l rent and give livery of seisin by this the grantee shall have the feesimple If one grant land to the Wife of I S to have and to hold to her Co. 2. 91. Dyer 156. Co. super Lit. 22. for life and after to I S in taile and after to the right heires of I S by this I S hath a feesimple And if one grant land to A for life the remainder to B for life the remainder to the right heirs of A by this A hath a feesimple If land be granted to a man and his wife to have and to hold Bro. Estates 86. to them and the heires issuing of them it seemes this is a feesimple and not a feetaile If land bee granted to one and his heires by the premisses of a Co. 2. 21. 24. super Lit. 21. 21 H. 6 7. deed to have and to hold to him for life by this he hath a feesimple So if by the premisses of a deed land bee granted to one and the heires of his body to have and to hold to him and his heires by this he hath an estate taile and a fee simple expectant And so via versa If by the premisses of the deed the grant be to him and his heires to have and to hold to him and the heires of his body by this also he hath an estate taile and a feesimple expectant If lands be given or granted to a man to have and to hold to him Termes of Law tit tail Lit. tit Fee toto in Co. super Lit. 26. ●ee taile and to the or his heires of his body or the or his heires males of his
use of B and his heires on condition that B shall pay to the feoffor twenty pound such a day this is a good condition So if one covenant to stand seised of lands to the use of B and his heirs on condition that if he pay him tenne pound the use shall be void or the like Also a condition may be Dier 1●6 348. annexed to an estate created by Will as if one devise land to I S for his life Provided that he pay ten pound yearly to I D this is a good condition Whereof see in Testament A rent or any such like thing may be granted on condition that Co. 8. 17. 24 ●d 3. 29. if such a thing bee or bee not done the rent shall cease for a time and then revive again and this condition is good But in case of land it is otherwise for that cannot bee granted after this manner Also a condition to make an estate void for a part of the time is not good And therefore if a feoffment bee on condition that upon Co. 1. 86. Perk. Sect. 718. Co. 4. 121. Dier 6 such a contingent the feoffor shall enter and have the land for a time or the estate shall be void for a part of the time or make a lease for ten years provided that upon such a contingent it shall be void for five years these conditions are not good And yet if a feoffment bee made of two acres provided that upon such a contingent the estate shall bee void as to one acre onely this is a good condition A condition that a stranger or the heir of the feoffor shall doe Co. super Litt. 214. Doct. Stud. 94. 159. 100. Co. super Litt. 379. Co. 1. 84. Dier 33. 21 H. 7. 11. Dier 4. Co. 8. 95. an act is good as if a feoffment be made to I S on condition that I D shall pay to the feoffor ten pound at Easter next or if a feoffment be made on condition that if the heir of the feoffor pay twenty shillings to the feoffee that the feoffor and his heirs shall reenter But a condition to give a stranger a reentry is void so farre forth And therefore if an estate bee made upon condition that upon such a contingent a stranger shall enter or the estate shall cease and another shall have it howsoever this may be so drawne as it may be a good condition to give him his heirs c. that doth make the estate an entry yet it cannot be good to give the estate or the entry to the stranger So if a feoffment be made on condition that upon such a contingent the feoffor and a stranger shall enter this is not good to give an entry to the stranger but it is good to give the feoffor a reentry And yet by will a man may devise a terme after this manner If a man enfeoffe another upon condition that he and his heires Co. super Litt. 213. shall render to a stranger and his heires a yearely rent of twenty shillings c. and if hee faile of payment thereof that the feoffor shall reenter albeit this as a reservation of rent is meerely void and the condition that doth call it a rent is meerly mistaken yet the condition is good and ut res valeat the words shall be taken contrary to their proper sense If I enfeoffe I S of land on condition that if I D give to him ten Perk. Sect. 798. pound or goe to Rome before such a day c. that then the feoffee shall pay to me ten pound c. this is a good condition If a feoffment be made to one and his heirs on condition that if Co. super Litt. 207. the feoffee pay to the feoffor ten pound hee shall have the fee of land this is not a good condition But if he say further And if he fail to pay that the feoffor shall reenter this is good If a gift in tail be made to a man and the heirs of his body and Co. super Litt. 224. if he die without heirs of his body that then the donor and his heirs shall reenter this is a void condition for when the issues fail the estate is at an end Conditions that are so penned as they are insensible and altogether Muddy Gardners case Adjudge pasche 14. Jac. B. R. Co. 6. 41. incertain are void as if one make a lease on condition that if the rent be behinde to restrain and if there bee not sufficient the ground to enter into the premisses this condition is void for insensibility and the estate is absolute Et sic de similibus A condition to enlarge or encrease an estate may be good as if Co. 8. 75. Plow 477. 481. Litt. Sect. 350. Perk. Sect. 710. Plow 135. 10 Ass pl. 15. Perk. Sect. 745. 707. Plow 25. Litt. Sect. 707. 350. Plow 272 482 483. 4 H. 7. 4. See more in the Lord Staffords case Co. 8. 73. To enlarge an estate a gift be made in tail or a lease be made for life or years on condition that if such an act be done or not done the lessee shall have the land to him and his heirs as if one make a lease for life to one and if the lessor die without heir of his body then he doth grant the land to the lessee and his heirs for ever Or if land be granted to a man for 5 years on condition that if the grantee pay to the grantor within the two first years ten pound then that he shall have the ●eesimple otherwise that he shall have the land but for five years and livery of seisin be made according to the deed this is a good condition and by this upon the performance of the condition the feesimple will passe So if one grant land for five years rendring rent and that if the lessee will hold it over to him and his heirs that he shall pay twenty pound rent this is a good condition and if be pay the rent he shall have the feesimple So if a man make a lease for years and at the same time for the surety of the terme to the lessee makes a feoffment to him upon condition that if he be disturbed in his term he shall have the feesimple of the land and deliver both these deeds at one time and give livery of seisin accordingly this is a good condition So if a lease for life be made upon condition that if the lessor or his heirs pay to B or his heirs ten pound at a certain day that then the lessor may reenter and if he doe not pay it at that time and the lessee pay to the lessor or his heirs ten pound at a certain day after the former day that then the lessee shall have the land to him and his heirs for ever this is a good condition But in all cases where these kind of conditions are good to make the increased estate good there
be done be a corporall service as to pay money or any such like thing the party that is to doe it must at his perill seek out the person to whom it is to be done if he be infra regnum Angliae but if he be not within the kingdome he is not bound to seek him and yet the condition is not broken And if the thing to be done be either locall i. such a thing as must be done in or at a place certain as the making of a feoffment of land payment of rent or the like in this case the To pay mony thing must be done at that very place and a tender of doing it in that place is a sufficient performance of the condition as for examples If a feoffment be made on condition that the feoffee shall pay to the feoffor twenty pound on Easter day at Dale and the feoffee tender the twenty pound the same day at Sale And albeit the feoffor be at Sale and he tender the twenty pound to his person there the same day yet this is no performance of the condition And if a feoffment be made in mortgage on condition for the payment of money at a day and no place is set for the payment thereof in this case the mortgagor must seek the mortgagee and tender it to his person at his perill and tender of the money upon the land mortgaged is not a sufficient performance of the condition And if a feoffment be made on condition that the feoffee shall infeoffe To infeoffe the feoffor of white acre in Dale in this case the feoffment or the tender of it must be in Dale and cannot be elsewhere and a tender of it there is sufficient to perform the condition So if the condition To acknowledge satisfaction be that the feoffee shall in Easter Terme next acknowledge satisfaction upon a Judgement in the Kings Bench this must be done there and cannot be done elsewhere So if a feoffment in fee bee made of white acre rendring rent to the feoffor and his heirs on condition that if the rent be not paid the feoffment to be void and no place is set for the payment of it in this case the feoffee is not To pay rent bound to tender his rent any where for the saving of the condition but upon the land and a tender there is sufficient And if a man make a feoffment in fee without any reservation of rent precedent in the deed on condition that the feoffee and his heirs shall render a yearly rent of twenty shillings a year to the feoffor and his heirs and if they fail that the feoffor shall reenter in this case also it seems the payment or tender must be upon the land But if the condition be that he shall ●ender twenty shillings a year to a stranger and his heirs this is no rent nor in the nature of a rent and therefore in this case the feoffee must tender it to the person of the stranger where he can find him at the day or else hee doth break the condition and tender upon the ground is not sufficient But in these cases if the nature of the thing to be done be such as will not admit of such a cariage from place to place to seek out the person of the feoffor c. there albeit the thing to be done be corporall or transient and not a locall thing yet that is to doe it shall not be bound to seek out the person of the other as for example If an estate be made on condition that the grantee shall To deliver wood or corn deliver twenty quarters of wheat or twenty load of wood to the grantor at such a time and no place is set for the doing thereof in this case the grantee is not bound to cary the same about to seek the feoffor or grantor as he is bound to cary money but before the day the grantee is to know of the grantor where he will appoint to receive it and there it must be tendred And the like law is for the most part in conditions of obligations It is best therefore in all these cases and herein he that is to be Obligation A Caveat the agent is to take care to have certainty of time and place set down in the condition for the doing of the thing that is to bee done and the more certain it is the better it is for him If a lease be made on condition that the lessee shall pay to the Per Just Bridgeman lessor all such sums of money as the lessor shall lay out in such a 4. In respect of other matters To pay mony businesse in this case the lessor must first tender to the lessee a note of the charges before the lessee is bound to pay and untill this be done the condition cannot bee broken And after a note is given also he shall have some reasonable time to provide the money And if he tender him a note of more then in truth he doth lay out the lessee if he know it may pay so much as is laid out and he may refuse to pay any more If lands be granted upon condition that A shall make an estate To make an estate Co. 5. 22. of lands at the charges of B in this case A must doe the first act viz. notifie to B what assurance he will make before B is bound to tender the charges If a feoffment be made on condition that the feoffee shall give so To deliver houshold stuffe or pay money Pasche 17. Jac. B. R. much houshold stuffe to the feoffor or so much mony for it as it shal be rated at by two indifferent persons to this end to be chosen it seems in this case the election of the two men must be by the feoffee but if the words be by two persons to be indifferently chosen then the election shall be by both parties for in the first case the word Indifferent doth goe to the praising not to the persons If a feoffement be made of a ground on condition that the feoffee To clense ditches 27 H. 8. 1. Plow Colthirsts case 21. shall ●ake the ditch●s in this case if the feoffee doe it once it is a sufficient performance of the condition And yet if a man grant a house for life on condition that the lessee shall dwell and be resident in the house during the said terme in this case it is not sufficient To dwell in the house that he dwell in it once during the terme but must doe so all the terme or else the condition is broken If an annuity be granted of tenne markes per Annum to a man on Perk. Sect. 804. condition or till he be promoted to a benefice by the grantor and it is not said of what value the benefice shall be in this case it shall be taken for a benefice of as great value and of as good an
for life years in present or future or for one yeare or by taking a wife whereby shee may be intitled to dower or by suffering a recovery of the land or by granting of any rent Common or the like or by entring into any Statute c. or by suffering any Judgement to be had against him or by doing any other such like act whereby he cannot convey the land according to the condition in the same plight quality and freedome it was at the time of the conveyance made in either of these cases the condition is ipso facto broken And albeit the land be afterward discharged and the party againe enabled before the day to performe the condition yet this will not salve the breach And so also it is of a limitation But when the condition is to be performed of the part of the feoffor or grantor there disability before the time will not hurt so as he be againe enabled at the time And so also it is when the condition is to be performed of the part of the feoffee and there is no certaine day set for the performance of the thing for in this case albeit he be once disabled yet if he be afterwards againe enabled and doe it within the time that the law doth give him to do it in this case the condition is not broken And so also it is if the feoffee be disseised and during the disseisin he doe any such act as before in this case before his entry this is no breach of the condition for till then the charge doth not binde the land And so likewise it is when the disability doth proceed from another cause as where one doth make a feoffement on condition that the feoffee shall reinfeoffe before such a day and before the day the feoffor disseise the feoffee and keepe him out till the day be past or one doth make a feoffement on condition the feoffee shall marry B before such a day and before the day the feoffor himselfe doth marry her so that the feoffee cannot performe the condition in these cases the condition is not broken If one make an estate of lands held in Capite on condition Trin. 13 Jac. Slade versus Tompson B. R. To imploy the profits to charitable uses that he to whom it is made shall imploy the profits thereof to divers charitable uses and he die his heire within age by reason whereof the King hath the land during the minority of the heire so that the profits cannot be employed this is no breach of the condition If one make a feoffement of land on condition to reinfeoffe To reinfeoffe Co. 1. in Porters case in convenient time and the feoffee doth not so but doth make a lease to another this is a double breach of the condition And the same Law is of a Devise by will in this manner If a feoffement be made upon condition that the feoffee shall To make an estate Perk. Sect. 796. Co. 8. 90 See the parable Mat. 21. 28. make some estate to the feoffor or some other by a day and the feoffee before the day say to him to whom the estate is to be made that he will never make the estate notwithstanding he doth make the estate before the day according to the condition in this case it is said the condition is broken Sed quere of this for it seemes if he really deny it before and actually performe it at the day that this is a good performance of the condition As if a lease be made of a house on condition that the lessee shall not disturbe the lessor in the taking a way of his goods out of the house and To suffer one to take his goods when the party doth come or send to fetch them the lessee doth only forbid them this in this case is no breach of the condition and it was agreed in this case that words without some deeds as shutting the dore against them forcible resistance or laying of hands upon them or the like are no breach of such a condition And if a lease be made on condition that the lessor shall be 3 H. 4. 8. foure times a yeare in the house demised without being ousted by the lessee and the lessee seeing him comming doth shut the dores To suffer one to come into a house or windowes against him this hath been thought to be no breach of this condition If a lease be made on condition that the lessee shall pay yearly Dier 33. To pay a yearly rent or sum to the lessor during the terme tenne pound in this case if he faile of payment once the condition is broken and estate forfeit So if one make a feoffement in fee of land on condition to pay tenne pound yearly to I S if he faile once the condition is broken If a lease be made of a Manor in which are divers Copyholders Not to molest Copiholders Penner versus Glover 37 38 El. Mich. B. R. per curiam on condition that the lessee shall not molest vex or put out any Copiholder paying his duties and services in this case if the lessee enter upon and put out any one Copiholder this is a breach of the condition But if he enter vi armis upon a Copiholders tenements and there beate him only or the like this is no breach of the condition If there be a condition to pay rent and the lessee let part of To pay rent Crompt Jur. 64 65. the land to other undertenants or let all the land to another for part of the time and he undertake the rent still and faile of payment in this case the condition is broken and estate forfeit But if there be any covin and practise in the case between the first lessor and the lessee the undertenants may perhaps have relief in equity Equity If one make a lease for years of land and then also make a feoffement Co. 8. 90. in fee of the lands on condition that if the lessee be disturbed Not to disturb bed in his terme that he shall have the fee simple and he is disturbed by the feoffor or by his meanes in this case the condition is broken and the lessee shall have the fee simple But if the disturbance be by a stranger and not by the feoffor or by his meanes or consent this is no breach of the condition If a lease be made on condition that the lessee shall not be out-lawed Not to be outlawed Per 2. Justices H. 7 Jac. B. R. and he is outlawed without proclamation it seemes this is no breach of the condition because the outlawry is not good If a condition possible at the time of creation become after impossible Lit. Sect. 352. Co. 2. 59. in part by the act of God and the party doe not performe that which is possible the condition is broken If a man make a lease for years
H 7. 1● 3 H 7. 4 27. H. 8. 1. 14. H. 8. 15. 10. H. 7. 14. of Dale and hee make a feoffment of the Mannor of Sale and I accept thereof it seemes this is no performance of the condition and that my acceptance in this case will not help So if the condition be to make me a feoffment of land and he give me mony a horse or the like in recompence of this and I accept thereof this is no good performance of the condition And the like Law is in all cases where the condition is to doe any collaterall thing as to account build a house enter into a Recognisance or the like and the obligor doth give and the obligee accept some other thing in liew thereof And so also it is where the condition is to make a feoffment to a stranger and the obligor give and the stranger take another thing in liew thereof But if the condition be to enfeoffe me of land such a day and he make and I take the feoffment before the day this is a good performance of the condition If the condition be to enfeoffe me or my heirs in the disjunctive 14 H. 8. 15. Coo. 5. 112. and the obligor enfeoffe me and my heires this is a good performance of the condition for it is impossible to enfeoffe my heirs whiles I live and when two things are to be done by a condition whereof the one is possible at the time of making the obligation and the other is not in this case it is sufficient if he doe the thing which is possible If the condition be to make me a feoffment or pay me 20 l. if the 21 Ed. 3. 9. obligor doe either of them it is sufficient But if the condition be to infeoffe me and pay me 20 l. in this case the obligor must do both or the condition will not be performed Et sic de similibus If the condition be that the obligor shall make me a sufficient Perk. Sect. ●●6 Kelw. 9● To make an Estate estate of land by the advise of W and S and they advise an insufficient estate and the obligor doe make the estate according to that advise this is a good performance of the condition But if the condition be that the obligor shall make a good and sure estate and he by advise of counsell make an estate that is not good and sure this is no good performance of the condition If the condition be that the obligor shall make me an estate of Fitz. Barre 55. land and make the estate to another by my appointment it seemes this is no performance of the condition If the condition be that the obligor or his feoffees in trust shall Trin. 17. ●a B. K. make an estate to the obligee such a day and the feoffees doe it without the consent of the obligor this is no performance of the condition If the condition be to make further assurance and the obligor Pasche 8. ●a Co. P. To make further assurance make further assurance upon condition without the agreement of the other party this is no good performance of the condition If the condition be to save me harmlesse from an Annuity wherewith To save harmlesse 37 H. 6. 18. Perk. Sect. 792. my land is charged and the obligor doth pay the same yearly and get me an Acquittance for the same from the party this is a good performance of the condition But if the condition bee to discharge me of such an Annuity in this case payment and procuring mee a Release is no good performance of the condition If the condition be that the Feoffees or Leassees of the Obligor To grant a rent or to procure a rent to be granted of such land which they have in trust shall grant me a rent-charge Pe●● Sect. 790. Fitz. Barre 7. or release their right to mee before such a day and there be three Feoffees or Leassees and two of them only doe grant this rent or make this Release this is no good performance of the condition If the condition be that the Obligor shall purchase and procure Dyer 15. to me and my heires a rent of 5 l. per annum and a stranger hath such a rent out of my land and he doth get him to release this to me this is a good performance of the condition And if one be bound Fitz. Barre 77. with condition to grant me the rent and farm of such a Mill before Michaelmasse to be had and perceived untill I be paid 10 l. and before that time he lease the Mill to me at a rent and then suffer me to detaine so much of the rent it seemes this is a good performance of the condition If the condition be to deliver me a horse and the Obligor tender To deliver a horse the horse unto me and I refuse him hereby the condition is performed Coo. super Lit. 207. and so in all such like cases where the Obligor is to doe Tender and Refusall any collaterall thing as stand to an award or the like if the Obligor offer to doe it and the Obligee refuse the condition is performed and the Obligation discharged forever If the condition be to pay money at a day certaine and the To pay mony Obligor pay a little before night time enough for the receiver to Dyer 17. super Lit. 202. Broo. Condition 145. see to number his money by day light this is a good performance of the condition And if the condition be to pay money by or before a day paiment the last instant of the day before is a sufficient performance of the condition If the condition be to pay me a summe of money at a day certaine Perk. Sect. 748. 34 H. 6. 17. 21 Ed. 3. 13 Coo. 5. 117. 9. 79. Broo. Oblig 64. Acceptance and the Obligor pay me lesse money before the day or all the money before or at the day or give me something else before or at the day of paiment in liew thereof or pay me all the money or a lesser summe at the day appointed but in another place and not the place mentioned in the condition and I accept thereof in all these cases the condition is well performed But if a stranger to the condition doe so and I accept thereof this is no good performance of the condition as hath been * Trin. 36 Eliz. adjudged And if the Obligor pay lesse then the whole money at the day of paiment and the Obligee accept thereof this is no good performance of the condition * Adiudge 17 Eli. And if the thing to be done be a collaterall thing as to account or the like and the Obligor give unto the Obligee money or a horse in liew thereof and the Obligee accept it this is no good performance of the condition And if the Obligor pay the money to the
purchase for these rights and duties were given by the Law from him that was owner of the land and none other which at this time was the Feoffee of trust and so the Feoffor the old owner of the land should take the profits and leave the power to dispose of the land at his discretion to the Feoffee and yet the Feoffee was not such a Tenant of the land as his wife might have Dower or the land bee extended for his debt or that he might forfeit it for Felony or Treason or that his heire should be in Ward for it or any duty of Tenure fall to the Lord by his death or that he could make any estates of it also lands were many times conveyed by last Wills by words only and sometimes by tokens only in time of great extremity of weaknesse and many perjuries for tryall of secret uses were daily committed All which having been espied have been laboured to be cured and holpen by divers particular Acts of Parliament in all succeeding ages Stat. 1. R. 2. c. 9. 4. H. 4. c 7. 11 H. 6. c. 3. 1. R. 3. c. 1. 4. H. 7. c. 17. 1 H. 7. c. 1. 19 H. 7. c. 15. 27 H. 8 c. 10. Vses and possessions united but the makers of these Lawes finding the continuances of these uses so mischievous that they did over-reach the policy of all Lawes for a generall remedy and a perfect cure of all the said mischiefes and abuses have at last provided That where any are or shall be seised of any lands to the use or trust of any other by reason of any bargain sale feoffment fine recovery contract agreement or otherwise by any meanes whatsoever cesty que use or trust that hath any such use in Fee-simple for terme of life or yeares or otherwise or any use in reversion or remainder c. shall have the possession of the land in such quallity manner and condition as hee had the use or trust And where any one is seised of lands to the use or intent that another shall have a yearly rent out of the same lands cestry que use of the rent shall bee deemed in possession thereof of like estate as he had the use By which Statute the use and possession of land is now at this day coupled conjoyned and marryed with an indissoluble knot so as they cannot now stand apart and devided but he that hath the one must have the other and the one doth ensue the other as the shaddow doth the body and therefore now upon Fines Recoveries and Feoffments the estate doth settle as the use and intent of the parties is declared by word or writing before the act done as for example If a writing bee made between two or more that one of them shall levie a fine make a Feoffment or suffer a Recovery to the other to the use and intent that one of them or another man shall have it for life and after another in Taile and after a third in Fee-simple in this case the Law setleth the estate a●cording to the use and intent declared so that now what estate a man hath in the use the same he hath in the possession But herein for the more full understanding of this Statute and the Law at this day it must bee To what uses the Statute of 27 H. 8. doth extend and to what not observed That this Statute doth not extend to all manner of uses neither are all uses executed and united to the possession hereby for to every execution of a use within this Statute foure things are requisite 1. That there be a person seised 2. That there be a cesty que use in esse 3. That there be a use in esse in possession reversion or remainder 4. That the estate out of which the uses doe arise be vested in cesty que use so that when these foure viz. Seisin in the Coo. 1. 126. 136. Plow 3●● Feoffees cestuy que use in rerum natura use in esse and that the estate of the Feoffees doth vest in cestuy que use then there is an execution of the use within this Statute but if any of these faile there is no execution of the use within this Statute And therefore it is agreed that this Statute doth not execute any use but only uses in esse so that the right of a present and a future or contingent use are excluded untill they come in esse and then the Statute doth execute them also if no alteration be of the estate of the land before And if cestuy que use in Taile with divers uses in remainder had made a Feoffment and dyed before the Statute no execution Coo. 1. 126. Dyer 58. 88. 33● should have been of this right of a use untill entry by the Feoffees So if cestuy que use in possession had made a Feoffment before the Statute no right of the use in possession or remainder shall be executed by the Statute untill the regresse by the Feoffees So if a Feoffment had been made before the Statute to the use of the Feoffee for life and after to the uses of others in remainder and the Feoffee had made a Feoffment in Fee to another this use shall not be recontinued or the repossession of the land executed unto it by this Statute so that the right of uses in esse and uses in contingency untill they happen to be in esse remaine at the Common-Law as they were before the Statute and therefore if the estate of the Feoffees be in such cases devested by disseisin or the King or a Corporation or an Alien or a person attaint c. be enfeoffed of the land before the use come in ●sse or if the land be aliened bonà fide upon consideration to one that hath not notice of the use this use can never be executed untill these possessions be removed by lawfull entrie or action of the Feoffees and if their entrie and action be barred the use is gone for ever and the party grieved thereby hath no remedy but in Chancery And therefore if cesty que use in Taile the remainder in Taile restrained with a clause of perpetuity be disseised no use in contingency can bee executed by this Statute And if before the Statute a feoffment had been made in Fee to the use of I S for life and after to the use of the right heires of I N and the Feoffees had been disseised and then the Statute had been made and after I N die and after his death I S die this use shall never be executed in the right heire of I N. And so also if a disseisin be after Coo. 1. 138. the Statute and before the death of I N no possession shall bee executed in the right heir of I N Also uses that need no Execution by the Statute as when a man doth convey land to I S and his heires to the use of I S and his heires this doth not
Seventhly in respect of the manner and ●rame of the words used in the raising of uses and what manner of uses may be made or not making and raising of uses wherein there is much regard to the minde and intention of parties For if one covenant in consideration Coo. 3. 91. of 20 l. paid him by I S to stand seised of land to the use of I S and his heires or if one covenant that I S and his heires shall have his land if this Deed be inrolled this is a good bargain and sale to raise the use and will doe it as well as when it is made by the words bargaine and sell So if one for good consideration by words Coo. 2. in Sir Rowland Hay wards case Wards versus Lambert Co. B. Pasche 37 Eliz. of Demise and Grant make a Lease of his land for a term of years hereby the use will rise to the Leassee as well as if the Lease were made by the words bargaine and sell Et sio de similibus And yet if one by words of bargaine and sell convey his land to his son Inrolment no use will arise by this except there be money paid and the Deed be inrolled And if one in consideration of money grant his land to his sonne or any other by the word enfeoffe no use will rise by this unlesse Livery of Seisin be made thereupon because the intent of the parties in these cases doth appeare to be to passe it in another manner And if in the last case Livery of Seisin bee made Resolved in Stiles case 3● Eliz. then the use shall be guyded by Law that is if nothing be given it shall be to the use of the Feoffor and not amount to a limitation of use to the sonne * 21 H. ● 18. Plow 308 301. Broo. Feost mental use 16. If one covenant with his sonne that his land shall remaine or that his land shall discend to him this is a good covenant to raise the use according to the limitation And yet if one covenant with his sonne upon his marriage that his land shall remaine revert or discend to his sonne in Fee or in Fee-Taile by this no use will be raised because it is so incertaine but perhaps this may amount to a covenant whereupon the sonne may have an Action of Covenant If I covenant for me and my heires that Covenant I and my heires and all others that are seised shall bee thereof seised to the use of c. this is a good covenant to raise the use albeit it be in words of the future tense If I covenant with my Dyer 374. eldest sonne and strangers to convey my land to the same strangers to the use of my selfe for life and after of my sonne in Taile c. and I grant by the Deed that the said persons seised of the said land shall be from thence seised to the said uses and none other use and no other conveyance is made it seemes this is sufficient to raise the use And yet if I be seised of land in Fee and Covenant with I S that A B and C D and their heires shall stand and be seised of this land to the use of c. it seemes this is not a good covenant to raise the uses If a Feoffment or other conveyance Coo. 1. 120. be made to the use of the Feoffor and the heires of his body on the body of M the wife of S T and for default of such issue to the use of him and the heirs of his body of S the now wife of W K and for default of such issue then to the use and performance of his last Will for 10 yeares immediatly after his death and after the term ended to the use of the Feoffees and their heirs during the life of W eldest sonne of the Feoffor and after his death to the use of the first issue male of the body of the Feoffor lawfully begotten and the heires of the body of such first issue male and for default of such first issue male to the second issue male c. in the same manner these are good limitations of uses So if a use be limited to I S for life without impeachment of waste and after to the use of Coo. 1. 90. B and C their Executors and Administrators for the term of twenty years and after to the use of C and the heires males of his body c. these are good uses So if a use be limited after this manner Coo. 6. 18. Lit. Sect. 462. 403. viz. to the use of a mans last Will and Testament or to the use of such person and persons and of such estate and estates as he shall limit and appoint by his last Will and Testament or to the use of such person and persons or to such uses and purposes as he shall by any writing under his hand and seale declare and appoint these are good limitations If I covenant with another in consideration of Coo. 1. 176. blood c. that I will stand seised of my land to the use of such of my sonnes or such of my cousins as the Covenantee shall name in this case after a nomination made the use will rise well enough But if I for and in consideration of 10l or the like good consideration Incertain●y covenant to stand seised of land to the use of such persons as the Covenantee shall name in this case albeit the Covenantee doe nominate some of my cousins or blood yet no use will rise by this for the incertainty of it If a Feoffment or other conveyance be to the use of I S and his heires provided that if the Foeffer pay 10l at such a day that then it shall be to the use of the Feoffer and his heirs this is a good limitation and the use will rise accordingly A use may be limitted to a woman durante viduitate sua and this Coo. 4. 3. is good If a man bee seised of two Manners and covenant to stand Coo. 11. 23. seised of the same to the uses following viz. of the one to the use of the Covenantor for his life and after to the use of his wife for life and after to the use of his eldest sonne in Taile c. And for the other Mannor to the use of his second son in Taile c. these are good limitations and the uses will rise accordingly If a man seised of land in Fee agree with another that a Fine Coo. 2. 69. 70. shall be levied of it and that the same shall be to the uses following viz. that I S the Conusor shall have one yearly ●ent of 50 l. during his life to be issuing out of the same land and as touching the land charged with the rent c. to the use of I D the Conusee untill default of payment of the said yearly rent and then to the use of I