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A33621 An abridgement of the Lord Coke's commentary on Littleton collected by an unknown author; yet by a late edition pretended to be Sir Humphrey Davenport, Kt. And in this second impression purged from very many gross errors committed in the said former edition. With a table of the most remarkable things therein.; Institutes of the laws of England. Abridgments. Coke, Edward, Sir, 1552-1634.; Littleton, Thomas, Sir, d. 1481. aut; Davenport, Humphrey, Sir, 1566-1645, attributed name. 1651 (1651) Wing C4906; ESTC R217258 305,227 456

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of the Corn altereth not the case for the regresse is a continuation of the Freehold in him in judgment of law from the beginning If the husband and wife make a lease at will of the wifes land reserving a rent and the husband dye yet the lease continueth So if a lease be made by two to two others at will and the one of the lessors or of the lessees dye the lease at will is not determined c. l. 5. 10. Hensteads case Dier 269. b. * Quando lex aliquid alicui concedit concedere videtur id fine quo res ipsa esse non p●test 14. H. 8. 2. If the lessee at will be disturbed of his free entry egresse and regress to carry away his Corn c. he shall have his action upon his case and recover his damages for whensoever the law giveth any thing it giveth also a remedy for the same fo 56. a. Any Inhabitant of Southwark having by custom a watring place for Cattel which being stopped may have an action c. Sect. 69. and Sect. 70 71 72. Messuagium containeth Buildings Curtelage Orchards and Garden A Praecipe lieth not de Domo but de Messuagio Nothing that is contrary to reason is consonant to Law Si home fait un ft. de feoffment de terre c. a un auter deliver a luy le fait mes nemy livery de seisin en ceo case le feoffee enter tener a volunt c. The lessor hath no remedy at all against tenant at will for permissive Waste fo 57. a. If tenant at will grant over his estate and the grantee enter he is a desseisor and the lessor may have an action of trespasse against him though the grant is void for the will is determined A Trespass or Transgression passeth that which is right Transgressio est cum modus non servatur nec mensura debet enim quilibet in suo facto modum habere mensuram Nota in the lowest offences there are no Accessaries but all are Principals as in Riots Routs Forcible entries c. and so in the highest offence which is Crimen laesa Majestatis there be no Accessaries but in Felonies there be Accessaries both before and after Si le lessor sur tiel leas a volunt reserve a luy un annuall rent il poit distr per se rent arere ou aver de ceo un action de debt Note he may distrain c. and yet it is no rent service for no Fealty belongeth thereunto but a rent distrainable of common right fo 57. b. Tenant at will is always by right and tenant at sufferance entreth by a lawfull lease and holdeth over by wrong Sic vide diversitatem Note a diversity between particular estates made by the terretenant and particular estates created by act in law as if a Guardian after the full age of the heir continueth in possession he is not tenant at sufferance but an Abator against whom an Assize of Mortdanc doth lie c. F.N.B. 196. CHHP. IX Tenant by Copy Sect. 73. TEnantes per Copie de Court-Roll out use daū terres c. a eux a lour heirs in fee fee taile ou a terme de vie c. a volunt le sur solonque le custome del Manor Eundum veteres aut ex scripto qui Bockland aut fine scripto qui Folkland dicebatur possidebant Curia Court is a place where Justice is judicially administred and is derived à cura quia in curiis publicis curas gerebant Court Baron so called of the Baron who is Lord of the Manor fo 58. a. or for that it hath relation to the Freeholders As there may be a Court Baron of Freeholders onely without Copiholders and then is the Steward the Register So there may be a customary Court of Copiholders only c. then is the Lord or his Steward the Judge And when the Court Baron is of this double nature the Court Roll containeth as well matters appertaining to the customary Court as to the Court Baron Manerium dicitur a manendo secundum excellentiam sedes magna fixa stabilis Et sciendum est quod Manerium poterit esse per se ex pluribus edificiis coadjuvatum five villis Hamletis adjacentibus Poterit etiam esse Manerium per se cum pluribus villis cum pluribus Hamletis adjacentibus quorum nullum dici poterit Manner perse sed villae suae Hamlettae poterit etiam esse per se Manerium Capitale plura continere sub se Maneria non Capitalia plures villas plures Hamlettas quasi sub uno Capite aut dominio suo Bract. l. 4. fo 212. Tenant for years Tenant by Statute Merch Staple Elegit Gardian in chivalry c. who are not properly seised but possessed are domini pro tempore not only to make admittance but to grant voluntary Copies of ancient Copihold Lands which come into their hands Fo. 58. b. And in some special Case an estate may be granted by Copy by one that is not dominus pro tempore c. As if the Lord of a Manor by his will in writing deviseth that his executor shall g●ant the Customary Tenements of the Mannor according to the custome of the Mannor for the payment of his debts and dieth the executor having nothing in the Mannor may make grants c. Consuetudo properly signifieth a custome as here c. But legally it signifieth also Tolles Murage Pontage c. Sect. 74. and 75. Et tiel Tenant ne poit alien sa terre per fait c. Fo. 59 a. But when a man hath but a right to a Copihold he may release it by Deed or by Copie to one that is admitted Tenant de facto l. 4. 24. b. Kite Queinton For is facere i.e. extra legem seu consuetudinem facere to do a thing against or without Law or Custome and that legally is called a forfeiture Si tiel tenant voit alien sa terre a un aut il covient c. de surrender les tenements en asc ' Court c. en le main le signior al use celuy que at avera le state Ils nont auter evidence concernant lour tenements forsque le Copies des Rolles de Court. Of Fines due to the Lord by the Copyholder some be by the change or alteration of the Lord and some by the change of the Tenant the change of the Lord ought to be by the Act of God otherwise no Fine can be due but by the change of the Tenant either by the act of God or by the Act of the party a Fine may be due Of Fines taken of Copyholders some be certain by custome and some be incertain but that Fine though it be incertus yet must it be rationabilis Fo. 59. b. Vide c. The Lord of a Manor is described by Fleta as he ought to be in these words Fleta lib. 2. ca.
3. 17. b. 41. As p. 10. l. 6. 26. These words secundum formam cartae are understood according to the quantity and quality of the effectuall estate contained in the Deed. 7. E. 4. 25. 29. Ass 40. If A. by Deed give land to B. to have and to hold after the death of A. to B. and his heires this is a void Deed because he cannot reserve to himself a particular estate and construction must be made upon the whole Deed c. Fo. 48. b. Vide c. M. 33. 34. El. B. R. Hog Xs. A livery in Law is when the Feoffor saith to the Feoffee being in view of the house or land I give you yonder Land to you and your heires and go enter c. and take possession thereof accordingly and the Feoffee doth accordingly in the life of the Feoffor enter this is a good Feoffment for signatio pro traditione habetur And livery within the view is good where there is no Deed of Feoffment 9. E. 4. 39. 38. E. 3. 11. And note a livery in law shall be perfected and executed by an entry in law 38. Ass p. 23. If a man be disseised and make a writing of a Lease for years and deliver the Deed and after deliver it upon the ground the second delivery is void for the first delivery made it a Deed and for that the Lease for years must take effect by the delivery of the Deed therefore the Deed delivered when he was out of possession was void But so it is not of a Charter of Feoffment for that takes effect by the livery and seisin But if the Lessor had delivered it as an escrowe to be delivered as his Deed upon the ground this had been good Vide libr. l. 3. 35. Jennings Brag. Of Freehold and inheritances some be corporeall as lands c. these are to passe by livery of seisin by Deed or without Deed some be incorporeall as Advowsons Rents Commons c. These cannot passe without Deed but without any livery Et est traditio de re corporali de una persona in personam de manu c. quia non possunt res incorporales possideri sed quasi ideo traditionem non patiuntur c. Bract. lib. 2. c. 18. In some cases a Freehold shall passe by the common law without livery of seisin as if a house or Land belong to an office by the grant of the office by Deed the house c. passeth as belonging thereunto Vide c. So if the house belong to a Corodie by the grant of the Cor. the house passeth 31. H. 6. 16. 8. H. 7. 4. Sect. 60. Lease est fait per ans le remainder ouster a un auter per vie en cest case livery de seisin est requisite ou auterment riens passa a celluy en remainder But livery cannot be made to the next in remainder because the possession belongs to the Lessee for years and for that the particular terme and all the remainders in law make but one estate and take effect at one time therefore the livery is to be made to the Lessee Remanere is a residue of an estate depending upon a particular estate and created together with the same A man being absent cannot take a Freehold by a livery but by his Attorney being lawfully authorized to receive livery by Deed unlesse the Feoffment be made by Deed and then livery to one Jointenant in name of both is good Fo. 49. b. If a man deliver a Deed without saying any thing it is a good delivery but to a livery of seisin of land words are necessary Vide c. A man makes a Lease for years to A. the remainder to B. in Fee and makes livery to A. within the view this livery is void for no man can take by force of a livery within view but he that taketh the freehold himselfe By the entry of the Lessee he is in actuall possession and then the livery cannot be made to him that is in possession for quod semel meum est amplius meum esse non potest Vide c. Affectio tua nomen imponit operi tuo Bract. lib. 1. But the dissōr infeoff the dissee and others albeit the disseisee came to take livery he is remitted to the whole Sect. 62. c. An exchange of Lands c. is good without livery of seisin And in case of a fine which is a Feoffment of Record of a devisor by a last will of a surrender of a Release or confirmation to a Lessee for years or at will In all these cases and some other a Freehold c. may passe without livery Fo. 50. a. In exchanges many things are to be observed First that the things exchanged need not to be in esse at the time of the exchange made I grant a rent newly created out of my Lands in exchange for the Mannor of D. this is a good exchange 2. There needeth no transmutation of possession and therefore a Release of a rent or estovers or right to Land in exchange for land is good 3. The things exchanged need not to be of one nature so they concerne Lands or Tenements As Land for rent or Common c. Vide c. Fo. 50. b. But annuities c. which charge the person onely cannot be exchanged c. Sect. 64 and 65. There be five things necessary to the perfection of an exchange 1. That the Estates given be equall viz. that there be equality of the quantity of the estate as if the one hath a Fee-simple c. the other shall have a like Estate c. But equality in value of Lands in an exchange is not requisite neither equality in the quality or manner of the estate 2. That this word excambium exchange be used which is so individually requisite as it cannot be supplied by any other word or described by any circumloquution 3. That there be an execution by entry or claime in the life of the parties 4. That if it be of things that lye in grant it must be by Deed. 5. If the L●nds be in severall Counties there ought to be a Deed indented or if the thing lie in grant as an Advowson c. albeit they be in one County fol. 51. a. b. The agreement of the parties cannot make that good which the law maketh void Sect. 66. The interest of the terme doth passe and vest in the Lessee for yeers before entry and therefore the death of the Lessor cannot devest that which was vested before Infants Feme coverts persons attainted outlawed excommunicated villains aliens c. may be private Attorneys to deliver seisin fo 52. a. vide quaere The authority of an Attorney is twofold expressed in his Warrant and implyed in law both which he must pursue and if he do lesse it is voyd 12. Ass p 24. There is a diversitie between an Authority coupled with an interest and a bare Authority fo 52. b.
Roy de rend al Roy annualment un arke ou un Espee c. petit choses touchant le guerre Et tiel service ne forsque Socage en effect If one holdeth Land of a common person in gross as of his person and not of any Manor c. and this Seigniory escheateth to the King yea though it be by Attainder of Treason he holdeth of the person of the King and not in Capite because the original Tenure was not created by the King And therefore it is directly said That a Tenure of the King in Capite is when the Land is not holden of the King as of any Manor Castle Honor c. but of his Crown Nota. A man may hold of the King in Capite or of his Crown as well in Socage as by Knights service fol. 191. 4. CHAP. X. Tenure en Burgage Sect. 162. ESt lou les tenants deins le Burgh sont tenus del seignieur del Burgh per cert ' rent c. tiel tenure ne forsque tenure en Socage Burgh is an ancient Town holden of the King or any other Lord which sendeth Burgesses to the Parliament fo 109. a. l. 10. 123. Major de Lynns C. A City is a Borough incorporate which hath or within time of memory have had a Bishop and though the Bishoprick be dissolved yet the City remaineth as Westminster Cambridge an ancient City Mich. 7. R. 1. Rot. 1. vide libr. fo 109. b. Cities were instituted for three purposes 1. For conservation of Laws whereby every man enjoyeth his own in peace 2. For tuition and defence of the Kings Subjects and for keeping the Kings peace in time of sudden uproar And 3. For defence of the Realm against outward and inward hostility There is lex consuetudo Parliamenti quae quidem lex quaerenda est ab omnibus ignorata à multis cognita à paucis Of the Members of this Court of Parliament some be by descent as ancient Noblemen some by creation as Nobles newly created some by succession as Bishops some by election as Knights Citizens and Burgesses fol. 110. a. ante Sect. 3. The Jurisdiction of this Court is so transcendent that it maketh enlargeth diminisheth abrogateth repealeth and reviveth Laws Statutes Acts and Ordinances concerning matters Ecclesiastical Capital Criminal Common Civil Martial Maritine c. None can begin continue or dissolve the Parliament but by the Kings Authority Of this Court it is said Que il enim de tresgrand honor justice de que nul doit imaginer chose dishonorable Habet Rex Cur ' suam in Concilio suo in Parliamentis suis praesentibus Praelatis Comitibus Baronibus Proceribus aliis viris peritis ubi terminatae sunt dubitationes judiciorum novis injuriis emersis nova constituuntur remedia unicuique justitia prout meruerit retribuetur Pl. c. 398. b. d. Pet. St. c. 55. fo 164. Flet. l. 2. c. 2. The King of England is armed with divers Counsels as first Commune Concilium and that is the Court of Parliament 2. Magnum Concilium and this is sometime applied to the Upper House of Parliament and sometime out of Parliament time to the Peers of the Realm 3. The Privy Councel And 4. the Kings Councel for Law matters and they are his Judges of the Law Sect. 165 c. Ascun Burghs ont tiel Custome que le puisne fits inherita c. Consuetudo quandoque pro lege servatur in partibus ubi fuerit more utentium approbata vicem legis obtinet longae vi enim temporis usus consuetudinis non vilis authoritas Longa possessio sicut jus parit jus possidendi tollit actionem vero domino Bracton Of every Custom there be two essential parts Time out of minde and Continuance and peaceable usage without lawfull interruption If Lands be within a Manor Fee or Seigniery the same by the Custom of the Manor c. May be devisable or of the nature of Gavelkinde or of Borough English 21. Ed. 4. 53. 54. otherwise is it In an upland Town c. Nota That in special Cases a Custome may be alleadged within a Hamlet a Town a Burgh a City a Manor an Honour an Hundred and a County but a Custom cannot be alleaged generally within the Realm c. For that is the Common Law Fo. 110. b. F.N.B. 122. Dyer 54. By some Customes the youngest brother shall inherit Sect. 166. and 167. Item en asc ' Burghs per le oustom feme avera pur sa Dower touts les tenement que feront a sa baron c. And this called Franke Banke Here is imployed by c. that in some places the Wife shall have the moity of her Husbands Lands so long as she lives unmarried as in Gavelkind And of Lands in Gavelkind a man shall be Tenant by the Curtesie without having of any issue In some places the Widdow shall have the whole or halfe Dum sola casta vixerit c. F.N.B. 150. Item home poit deviser ses terres qui il ad en Fee simple deins mesme le Burgh c. A devisor per son Testam is to speake by his Testament what his mind is to have done after his decease Testamentum est duplex 1. In Scriptis 2. Nuncupatinum seu fine scriptis The devisee cannot take goods c. without the assent of the Executors otherwise it is of Lands devised by Custome If a man hath Lands holden by Knights service in Capite and lands in Socage he can devise but two parts of the whole But if he hold lands by Knight-service of the King and not in Capite or of a meane Lord and hath also Lands in Socage he may devise two parts of his Land holden by Knights service and all his Socage Lands Vide lib. quaere Fo. 111. b. If a man make a Feoffment in Fee of his Lands holden by Knights service to the use of such person and persons and of such Estate and estates c. As he shall appoint by his Will in this case by operation of Law the use and State vests in the Feoffor and he is seised of a qualified Fee In this Case if the Feoffor limit Estates by his will by force and according to his power there the use and the Estates growing out of the Feoffment are good for the whole and the last will is but directory Vide Lib. c. If a gift in Taile or a Lease for life be made the remainder in Fee this remainder is not within the Statute Sect. 168. Fo. 112. By no conveyance at the Common Law a man could during the Coverture either in possession reversion or remainder limit an estate to his Wife But a man may by his Deed Covenant with others to stand seised to the use of his wife or make a Feoffment c. to the use of his Wife and now the state is executed to such uses by the Statute of 27 H. 8.
for an use is but a trust and confidence which by such a meane might be limited by the husband to the wife Omnia quae sunt uxoris sunt ipsius viri non habet uxor potestatem sui sed vir Bract. lib. 2. ca. 15. Vir uxor sunt quasi unica persona quia caro una sanguis unus res licet sit propria uxoris vir tamen ejus custos cum sit caput mulieris Bract. 5. tract 5. ca. 25. al. 2. Baron 10 H. 720. Extrix delcē que use poit vend terres devisi In contractibus benigna in testamentis benignior in restitutionibus benignissima interpretatio facienda est voluntas testatoris est ambulatoria usque ad mortem The first grant and the last will is of greatest force Cum duo inter se pugnantia reperiuntur in testamento ultimum ratum est If a feme covert be seised of Lands in Fee she cannot devise the same to her husband because she is sub potestate viri c. Sect. 169. of 113. Item per tiel custome home poit deviser per sen testamentum que les executors point aliewr les tenements in Fee c. pur cert sum de mony a distribut pur son alme issint poies veir icy un case ou home poit faire loial estate encore il navoit riens en les tenements al temps del estate ft. quia consuetudo ex certa causa rationabili usitata privat communem legem Here it appeareth that the Executors having but a power as Littl. putteth the Case to sell they must all join in the sale Fo. 112. b. Vide c. Dyer 177. But if a man deviseth Lands to his executors to be sold and maketh two Executors and the one dieth yet the survivor may sell the Land because as the state so the Trust shall survive and so note a diversity between a bare trust and a trust coupled with an interest 39. Ass p. 17. Dyer 210. and 371. By the Statute of 21 H. 8. it is provided that where Lands are willed to be sold by Executors that though part of them refuse yet the residue may sell Lib. 1. 173. Mine advise to them that make such devise by will is to make it as certaine as they can as that the sale be made by his Executors or the survivors or survivor of them if his meaning be so or by such or so many of them as take upon them the probate of his will c. And it is better to give them an authority then an estate unlesse his meaning be they should take the profits of his Lands in the mean time and then it is necessary that he deviseth that the mean profits till the sale shall be assets in their hands for otherwise they shall not be so Vide lib. fo 113. Stat. 32. H. 8. c. 2. 34. H. 8. cap. 5. Consuetudo prescripta legitima vincet legem But no Custome or prescription can take away the force of an Act of Parliament Praescriptio est titulus ex usu tempore substantiam capiens ab autoritate legis A title taking his substance of use and time allowed by the Law 12 E. 4. 1. 2 M. Br. pr. 100. 6 E. 6. Dy. 31. 45. Ass 8. Sect. 170. I. S. Seised of the Manor of D. in Fee prescribeth thus that I.S. his ancestors and all those whose estate he hath in the said Manor have time out of mind of man had and used to have common of pasture c. in such a place c. Being the Land of some other c. as pertaining to the said Manor A Custome is in this manner A. Copyholder of the Manor of D. doth plead c. that all the Copyholders c. have had and used to have common of pasture c. in such a wast of the Lord parcell of the said Manor But both to customes and prescriptions these two things are incident inseparable viz. possession or usage and time Possession must have 3 qualities it must be long continuall and peaceable S. 170. Note 1. To what things a man may make a title by prescription without Charter and 2. How it may be lost by interruption For the first as to Franchises and liberties as cannot be seised as forfeited before the cause of forfeiture appear of Record no man can make a title by prescription c. as to the goods and Chattels of Felons c. to make a Coroner c. l. 5. 109. l. 9. 29. But to treasure trove waifes estraies c. to hold Pleas c. A man may make a title by usage onely c. Without any matter of Record Fo. 114. 6. 9 H. 7. 11. 20. And for the second it is to be known that the title being once gained by prescription or custome cannot be lost by the interruption of the possession for 10 or 20 yeares but by interruption in the right as if a man have had a rent or common by prescription unity of possession of as high and perdurable estate is an interruption in the right Vide c. Fo. 114. b. A Modus decimandi was alledged Mich. 42. and 44 Eliz. in banco Reg. by prescription time out of minde for tythes of Lambes and thereupon issue joined and the Jury found that before 20 years then last past there was such a prescription and that for this 20 years he had paid the Lambes in specie and it was objected first that the issue was found against the plaintiff for the prescription was generall for all the time of prescription and 20 years fail thereof 2. That the party by paiment of tythes in specie had waived the praescription or custome But it was adjudged for the plaintiffe in the prohibition for albeit the modus decim had not been paid by the space of 20 years yet the prescription being found the substance of the issue is found for the plaintiffe Vide Lib. c. M. 43. and 44 Eliz. B.R. Nowell and Hicks Note all the prescriptions that were limited from a certaine time were by Act of Parliament as from the time of H. 1. After that from the time of H. 2. By the Statute of Merton and from the time of R. 2. By the Statute of Westm 1. But the prescription of time out of memory of man was at the Common Law and limited no time Memory or knowledge is twofold First by knowledge by proof as by Record or sufficient matter of writing 2. by his own proper knowledge 28. Ass 25. 11 H. 7. 21. Dy. 273. There is a diversity between an Act of Parliament in the Negative and in the Affirmative for an Affirmative Act doth not take away a custome as the Statute of Wills of 32. and 34 H. 8. Do not take away a custom to devise Lands c. Also there is a diversity between Statutes that be in the Negative for if a Statute in the Negative be declarative of the Ancient Law that is in
grantee shall not use one of them and leave the party to the other But where the grantee hath but one remedy that remedy cannot be barred by any proviso for such a proviso should be repugnant to the grant 28 H. 8. Dyer 9. b. And if a man by his Deed grant a rent Charge out of land provid that it shall not charge the Land albeit the grantee hath a double remedy yet the proviso is repugnant because the Land is expresly charged with the rent but the Writ of annuity is but implyed in the grant and therefore that may be restrained without any repugnant and sufficient remedy left for the grantee for which cause Littl. putteth his case of the restraint of bringing a writ of annuity Also our Author putteth his case of a rent charge continuing and of a rent charge issuing truly out of Land 9 H. 11. 53. 11. H. 8. c. mala grammatica non vitiat cartā For the Law that principally respecteth substance doth judge sometimes a double negative to be a negative according to the intent of the parties and not according to grammaticall construction Sect. 221. A. grants that B. shall distrein for such a yearly summe of money in his mannor of D. in judgemeet of Law the Mannor is charged with the rent but the person of the grantor cannot be charged because he expresly granteth no rent * for that would charge his person but that the grantee should distreine c. which onely chargeth the land Fo. 146. b. If a rent be granted out of the Manor of D. and the grantor grant over That if the rent be behind the grantee shall distrein c. in the Manor of S. this is but a penalty in the Manor of S. But both Manors are charged the one with the rent the other with the distresse for the rent the one issuing out of the land and the other to be taken upon the land lib. 7. fo 23 c. in Buts Case Quoties in verbis nulla est ambiguitas ibi nulla expositio contra verba expressa fienda est And if in this case this shall amount to the grant of a rent out of the Manor of S. then the grantor shall be twice charged and so the Law by construction against the words and the intention of the parties shall doe injury to the grantor c. fo 147. a. And there is no diversity in this case when the Manor of S. lyeth in the same county and when it lyeth in another county for the words in both cases are all one and there is no reason to say that he shall fail of a Recovery by Assize lib. 7. f. 3. Bulwars Case 1. Ass p. 10. Vide c. If a man grant a rent out of three acres and grant over that if the rent be behind that he shall destrain c. in one of the acres this rent is entire and cannot be a rent seck out of two acres and a rent charge out of the third acre and therefore it is a rent seck for the whole and yet he shall distrain for this in the third acre vide qu. A. doth bargain and sell land to B. by Indenture and before Inrolment they both grant a rent charge by Deed to C. and after the Indenture is inrolled by the operation of the Statute it shall be the grant of B. and the confimation of A. But if the Deed had not been inrolled it had been the grant of A. and the confirmation of B. and so quancunque via data the Grant is good Home seise de 20 acr grant rent 20 s hors de chesc acre c. le grantee aūa 20 l. 22. H. 6. 10. b. Sect. 222 c. Si home ad un rent charge a luy a ses heires issunt hors de cert ' terre sil purchase asc ' parcel de cel a luy a ses heires tout le rent charge est extinct l'annuity auxi pur ceo que rent charge ne port estr per tiel Manor apportion mes si tiel parcel discend c. S. 224. a le fits auterment est Auxi per purchase de parcel c. rent service point estre apportion A rent charge by the act of the party may in some case be apportioned As if a man hath a rent charge of 20 s. he may release to the tenant of the land 10 s. and reserve part for the grantee dealeth not with the land as in case of purchase Hill 14. Eliz. in Communi Banco F. N. B. 152. d. e. If tenant pur auter vie by his Deed grant a rent charge to one for 21 years Cesty que vie dyeth the rent charge is determined and yet the grantee may have during the years a Writ of annuity for the arrerages incurr after the death of Cesty que vie because the rent charge did determine by the act of God and by the course of Law Actus leg is nulli facit injuriam Wards cited in lib. 2. In Heywards case fo 36. There be divers kinds of rent services which are not within the Statute of Quia empt terrae and yet such rent services are apportionable by the common Law As if the lessor recover part of the land c. in an action of waste or enter for a forfeiture in part c. Lib. 6. f. 1. c. Bruerton c. Lib. 8. f. 105. c. Talbots case So likewise if the lessor grant part of the reversion to a stranger the rent shall be apportioned for the rent is incident to the reversion Lib. 8. fo 79. Wildes case A rent service may be extinct for part and apportioned for the rest but a rent service cannot be suspended in part by act of the party and in esse for other part For if the lessor desseise the lessee the rent is suspended for the whole and cannot be apportioned for any part But otherwise it is where the lessor enters lawfully as upon a surrender forfeiture c. Where the rent is lawfully extinct in part 21. E. 4. 29. And yet by act in Law a rent service may be suspended in part and in esse for part As if the tenant give a part of the tenancy to the Father of the Lord in taile the Father dieth and this discends to the Lord in this case by act in Law the Seigniory is suspended in part and in esse for part and the same Law is of a rent charge 30. Ass p. 12. And when the Guardian in chivalry entreth into the Land of his ward within age now is the Seigniory suspended but if the wife of the tenant be endowed c. Now shall she pay to the Lord the third part of the rent 33. E. 3. Dower 138 this case I should have put first Tho. More Item a Seigniory may be suspended in part by the act of a stranger as if two jointenants or corperceneis be of a Seigniory and one of them disseise the Tenant of the Land the other
entry of him that Right hath may be taken away 3. The Remedies and in what Cases the same may be prevented or avoided 4. How a man may be barted of his Right for ever and in what Cases the same may be prevented or avoided vide lib. Nota fol. 163. 2 ou● 3 parceners sont forsque un heire a lour Auncest ' for albeit where there be two parceners they have moities in the lands descended to them yet are they both but one heire vid. S. 8. vers fin Nota diversitat ' between a Descent which is an act of the Law and a Purchase which is an act of the party For if a man hath two daughters c. and one of them is attaint of Felony the father dye h● the one moity shall descend to the one daughter and the other shall escheat But if a man make a lease for life the remainder to the right heirs of A. being dead who hath issue two daughters and one is attainted c. the remainder is void for the whole for that both the daughters should have been but one heir Fleta l. 5. c 9. l. 6 c. 47. fo 164. a. vide qu. Sunt autem plures participes quasi unum corpus in eo quod unum jus habent oportet quod corpus sit integrum quod in nulla parte sit defectum If lands be given to a man and to the heires females of his body and he hath issue a Son and a Daughter and dyeth the Daughter shall have the land by descent but if a remainder be limited to the heirs females of the body of I. S. c. the daughter shall never take it by Purchase for that shee is not heir female of the body of I. S. because he hath a Son And when the right heir doth claim by purchase he must be a compleat heir in judgement of Law And as they be but one heir and yet severall persons so have they one Free-hold in the land so long as it remains undivided in respect of any strangers Praecipe But between themselves to many purposes they have in Judgment of Law severall Free-holds for the one of them may infeoff another of her part and make livery 10 E 4. 17. E. 3. 46. fol. 164. a. vide qu. Note a diversity inter descensum in capita in stirpes If a man hath issue two daughters and dyeth this descent is in capita viz. that every shall inherit alike But if a man hath issue two daughters and the eldest daughter hath issue three daughters and the yongest one daughter all these four shall inherit but the daughter of the yongest shall have as much as the three daughters of the eldest ratione stirpium and not ratione capitum for every daughter hath a severall root c. Men descending of daughters may bee Coparceners as well as women and shall joyntly implead and be impleaded Item est alia actio mixta quae dicitur actio Familiae hirciscundae locum habet inter eos qui communem habent haeredit ' c. Et locum habet ut videtur inter cohaeredes ubi agitur de proparte sororum vel inter alios ubi res inter partes cohaeredes dividi debeat sicut sunt plures forores quae sunt quasi unus haeres vel inter plures fratres qui sunt quasi unus haeres ratione rei quae divisibilis est inter plures masculos c. Bract. l. 2. fol. 66. 71 c. l. 5. fol 443. b. vide qu. Sunt aliae res haereditariae quae veniunt in partitionem quae ●um dividi non possunt conceduntur uni ita quod aliae cohaeheredes alibi de communi haereditate habeant ad valorem sicut sunt vivaria Piscariae parci vel saltem quod partem habeant pro defectu sicut secundum piscem tertium vel quartum vel secundum act●m tertium vel quartum retis Item in parcis secundam tertiam aut quartam damam Bract. l. 2. 76. fo 165. a. Regnum non est divisibile Praterea sceptrum Ilione quod gesserat olim Maxima natarum Priami Virg. 1. Aeneid If there be two Coparceners of certain lands with Warrant and they make partition c. the Warranty shal remain because they are compellable to make partition Tho. de Eberston in Foresta de Pickering had kept time our of minde a Woodward for keeping of the Woods parcel of that Manor and had the bark of all the Trees felled c. as belonging to his Manor and this was adjudged a good prescription Itin. Pickr 8 E. 3. Rot. 34. Sect. 243 244 245. If Coparceners make partition at full age and unmarried and of sanae memoriae of lands in fee simple it is good and firm for ever albeit the the values be unequall but if it be of lands intailed c. it shall binde the parties themselves but not their issues unless it be equall Or if any be Covert it shall binde the husband but not the wife or her heires It shall not binde the Infant c. Modus conventio vincunt legem Pacto aliquid licitum est quod sine pacto non admittitur Quilibet potest renunciare juri pro se introduct ' Conventio autem privatorum non potest publico juri derogare Aei●ne●ia semper est perfren da propter privilegium aetatis sed esto quod filia primogenita relicto nepote vel nepte in vita patris vel matris decesserit praeferenda erit soror antenata tali nepoti vel nepti quantū ad Ecisnetiam quia mortem parentum expectant If there be divers Coparceners of an Advowson and they cannot agree to present the Law doth give the first presentment to the eldest and this privilege shall descend to her issue nay her Assigns shall have it and so shall her husband that is tenant by the Courtesie c. But it is otherwise of a partition in Deed by the act of the party Sic vide diversit ' fol. 166. b. Cujus est divisio alterius est electio Dedi vobis possessionem quam dividetis sorte Numb c. 26. Sect. 247. If one Coparcener maketh a lease pur ans yet a Writ of Partition doth lie but otherwise is it if one or both make a lease for life because non in simul pro indiviso tenent and the writ of Partition must be against the Tenant of the Freehold 11 H. 4. 3. F.N.B. 62. g. And if one Coparcener disseise another a Writ of Partition doth not lie c. for that non pro indiviso tenent c. 4 H. 7. 9. 11 Ass 23. If two Coparcerners have two Manors by descent and they make partition that the one shall have one Manor for one year and the other the other Manor for this year and so alternis vicibus to them and their heirs this is a good partition Temps E. 1. partit 21. F.N.B. 62. 1. Of
of any debt due to the Testator he may make an Acquittance but in tha● case a Release without payment is voyd and generally what soever an Infant is bound to doe by Law the same shall binde him albeit he doth it without sute of Law 2 M. Dyer 104. An action of account doth lie against a Bayliff that hath administration and charge of lands goods c. for the profits which he hath raised or made or might by his industry or care have reasonably raised or made his reasonable charges and expences deducted Brit. fol. 62. 70. 41 E. 3. 39. An Account against a Receiver is when one receiveth money to the use of another to render an account but upon his account he shall not be allowed his expences and charges Except in some cases As if two joynt Merchants occupy their Stock c. in common one of them naming himself a Merchant shall have an account against the other naming him a Merchant and shall charge him as Recep ot denariorum ipsius B. ex quacunque causa contractu ad comm unem utilitatem ipsorum A. B. provenient sicut per legem mercatoriam rationabiliter monstrare potuit 43 E. 3. 31. 30 E. 1. Account 127. 10 H. 7. 16. lib. Intrat 17 18 19. F.N.B. 118. So as there be but three kindes of Writs of Account viz. 1. Against one as Guardian 2. Against one as Bayliff And 3. as Receiver F. N. B. 219. d. And to maintain an action of account there must be either a privity in deed by the consent of the party 2 Mar B. Account 89. F. N. B. 117. Pl. Com. 542. 2 H. 4. 12. 4 H. 7. 6 c. or a privity in law ex provisione legis as against a Guardian c. Minor surare no potest Bract. l. 5. f. 340. b. For an infant cannot make his Law of Non-Summons 13 E. 3. Ley 50. and therfore the default shall not prejudice him 2. Mar. Dyer 104. 105. But an infant of the age of 12 yeares shall take the oath of allegiance Vide Sect. 85. 91. An infant cannot upon his oath make his Law in an actio● of debt 1. H 7. 25. 15. E. 4. 2. and the husband and wife of full age for the debt of the wife before the converture shall make their Law 9. E. 4. 24. 15 E. 4. 2. Grant is a conveyance of a thing which cannot pass without Deed as advowsons rents c. Lib. 3 f. 63. Lincol. Coll. c. Sect. 260 261. The reversion expectant upon an estate taile is of no account in Law for that it may be cut off by the Tenant in Taile Tres. in fee S. and fee Taile discend al 2. files c. If the youngest daughter alien part of the Lands in Fee simple and dyeth so as a full recompence for the lands entailed descends not to her issue she may waive the taking of any profits thereof and enter into the Land entailed for the issue in taile shall never be barred without a full recompence though there be a warr in Deed or in Law descended Fo 173. a. If a man be seised of three Manors of equall value in Fee and taketh wife and chargeth one of the Manors with a re●● charge and dyeth she may by the provision of the Law take a third part of all the Manor and hold them discharged b● if she will accept the entire Manor charged it is holden that she shall hold it so 26. E. 3. Dower 133. 18. H. 6. 17. A partition of lands intailed between perceners if it be equall at the time of the partition shall bind the issues in taile for ever albeit the one doe alien her part Dyer 1. Mar. 98. Sect. 262. When the privity of the estate is destroyed by the Feoff of one parcener upon eviction of a moity by force of an entaile against the other she shall not enter upon the alienee But in the case that Littleton putteth of disseisin of an Infant c. when the privity of the estate remaineth and the part of one is evicted she shall enter and hold in Coparcenary with her other copercener and so it is in the case of an ex●hange 15. E. 4. 3. a. per. Littleton Lib. 4. 221 c. Bastards c. If the whole estate in part of the p●●p●●ty be evicted that shall avoid the partition in the whole be it of a Manor that is entire or of acres of ground c. that be severall for the partition in that case implyeth for this purpose both a warr and a condition in Law and either of them is entire and giveth an entry in this case into the whole 13. E. 4. 3. 42. Ass 22. Lib. 4. ante c. Also if any estate of freehold be evicted from the Coparcener in all or part of her p●●p●●ty it shall be avoided in the whole vide libr. nota Fo. 170. a ex grat If but part c. be evicted as an estate in taile or for life leaving a reversion in the Copercener Where one Copercener taketh benefit of the condition in Law she defeateth the partition in the whole But when she vouched by force of the warr in Law for prrt the partition shall not be defeated in the whole but she shall recompence for that part Sic nota diversit 5 E. 3. Tit. Voucher 249. Also there is another diversity between a recovery in value by force of the warranty upon the exchange upon the partition for upon the exchange he shall recover a full recompence for all that he loseth but upon the pahtition she shall recouer but the moity or halfe of that which is lost to the end that the losse may be equall There are more and greater privities in case of partition in persons bloud and estates than there is in exchanges 19. H. 6. 26. 18. E. 2. t. aid 171. When the whole Privity between Coparceners is destroyed there ceaseth any recompence to be expected either upon the condition in Law or warranty in Law by force of the partition Fo. 174. a. If one coparcener maketh a Feoffment in Fee and after her Feoffee is impleaded and voucheth the Feoffer she may have aid of her coparcener to deraign a Warrant Paramount but never to recover pro rata against her by force of the warrant in law upon the partition for by her alienation she hath dismissed her self to have any part of the land as Parcener And as parcener she must recover pro rata c. 31. E. 3. 24. 11. H. 4. 22 23. And yet in some case the Feoffee of one coparcener shall have aid c. and therefore if there be two coparceners and they make partition and the one of them infeoffs her Son and Heir apparent and dyeth the Son is impleaded he shall pray in aid c. for that the warranty between the Mother and the Son is by Law adnulled and therefore the Law giveth the Son albeit he be in by Feoffment to pray in aid
the land was devised to A. for that purpose otherwise B. should be remediless Et interest Reipublicae suprema hominum testamenta rata haberi and the lessee of B. upon an actual ejectment recovered the moity of the land against A M. 31. and 32 El. Ban. R. Crickmers case Dyer 6 E. 6. fo 74. 7 E. 6. 70. Judicium pro veritate accipitur Fo. 236. b. Sect. 384. Defaire i.e. to defeat or undo infectum reddere quod factum est There is a diversity between inheritances executed and inheritances executory as lands executed by livery c. cannot by Indenture of defeasance be defeated afterwards and so if a disseisee release a disseisor it cannot be defeated afterwards c. but at the time of the release c. the same may be defeated c. for Quae incontinenti fiunt inesse videntur Bract. l. 2. f. 16. 17 Ass p. 2. 30 Ass p. 1. 11. But rents annuities conditions warranty c. that be inheritances executory may be defeated by defeasances made either at that time or at any time after and so the Law is of Statute Recognizance Obligation and other things executory 20 Ass p. 7. 7 E. 4. 29. Brown and Bestons case Pl. 131. 28 H. 8. Dy. 6. 27 H. 8. 15. If a man seised of lands in fee and having issue divers sons by Deed indented covenanteth in consideration of fatherly love c. to stand seised of three acres of land to the use of himself for life and after to the use of Thomas his eldest Son in Tail and for default of such issue to the use of his second Son in Tail with divers like remainders over with a Proviso that it shall be lawful for the Covenantor at any time during his life to revoke any of the said uses c. This Proviso being coupled with an Use is allowed to be good but in case of a Feoffment or any other Conveyance whereby the feoffee or grantee c. is in by the Common Law such a Proviso were meerly repugnant and void 27 H. 8. cap. 10. And first in the case aforesaid if the Covenantor who had an estate for life do revoke the uses according to his power he is seised again in fee simple without entry or claim 2. He may revoke part at one time and part at another 3. If he make a Feoffment in fee or levy a Fine c. of any part this doth extinguish his power but for that part whereas in that case the whole condition is extinct but if it be made of the whole all the power is extinguished So as to some purposes it is of the nature of a condition and to other purposes in nature of a limitation Lib. 1. fo 173 174. Digges case l. 1. f. 107. Albainers case l 10. f. 143. Screops case Lib. 7. fo 12 13. Sir Francis Englefields case 4. If he that hath such a power of revocation hath no present interest in the land nor by the Leasor of the estate shall have nothing then his Feoffment or Fine c. of the Land is no extinguishment of his power because it is meer collaterall to the Land 5. By the same conveyances that the old uses be revoked may new be created and limited where the former cease ipso facto by the revocation without either entry or claim 6. That these revocations are favourably interpreted because many mens inheritances depend upon the same Ex paucis dictis intendere plurima possis CAP. VI. Discent que tollent entries Sect. 385. DEscendere i.e. ex loco superiore in inferiorem movere Brit. fo 115 215. Vide S. 5. The Civilians call him haeredem qui ex testamento succedit in universum jus testatoris But by the Common Law he is onely heir which succeedeth by right of bloud Haeres dicitur ab haerendo quia qui haeres ē haeret hoc est proximus est sanguine illi cujus est haeres So as he that is hares sanguinis est haeres he●us haereditatis Nota in ancient time if the disseisor had been in long possession the disseisee could not have entred upon him Brit. Fo. 115. Likewise the disseisee could not have entred upon the Feoffee of the disseisor if he had continued a year and a day in quiet possession But the law is changed in both these cases onely the dying seised being an act in Law doth hold at this day 1 Ass 13. 9. Ass 15. Lamb. explic fo 120. 70. Porro autem quam maritus sine lite controversia sedem incoluerit eam conjux proles sine controversia possidento siqua in illum lis fuerit illata viventem eam haeredes ad se perinde atque is vivus accipiunto And one of the reasons of this ancient Law may be that the heir cannot suddenly by intendment of Law know the true state of his title Vide lib. fo 237. b. To a discent that taketh away an entry a dying seised is necessary but a man to other purposes may have lands by discent though his Ancestour died not seised 11 H. 7. 12. 40 E. 3. 24. Discents of inheritance incorporeall which lies in grant as Advowsons Rents Commons in grosse c. doe not put him that right hath to an action otherwise it is of houses and lands 6 H. 4 4. 15 E. 4. 14. F.N.B. 143. 9. 7. H. 4. 12. 5. 2. Ass p. 9. A recovery is had against Tenant for life where the remainder is over in fee Tenant for life dieth he in remainder enters before execution and dieth seised the entry of the recoveror is lawfull because he is privy in estate otherwise it is if the discent had been after execution 3 E. 4. 6. 12 E. 4. 19. 3 H. 7. 3. 6 E. 4. 11. 7 H. 7. 15. 5 H. 7. 31. 10 H. 7. 5. b. 5 H. 7. 2. A. recovereth an Advowson against B. in a Writ of Right and hath judgement finall the incumbent dieth B. by usurpation presents to the Church and his clark is admitted and instituted B. dieth A. is out of possession and the heir of B. is not so bound by the judgement either in bloud or estate but that he shall present 45 E. 3. qu. imp 139. B. levies a fine to A. of an advowson to him and his heirs after the Church becomes void B. presents by usurpation and his Clark is admitted and instituted this shall put A. the Conusee out of possession 8 E. 2. Qu. imp 166. Albeit the usurpation were in both the said cases before execution yet it put the rightfull Patron out of possession So note a diversity between a recovery of Land and of an Advowson Now by the Statute made since Littleton wrote it is enacted that except the disseisor hath been in the peaceable possession of such Manors Lands c. whereof he shall dye seised by the space of five years next after such disseisin c. without entry or continual claim c. that there such dying seised
estate for yeares be granted in fee and the lessor confirme the estate of the lessee for life he cannot afterwards attorn And so it is if the grantor before Attornment confirm the estate of the lessee for life in Tail c. If a feme sole make a lease for life or yeares reserving a rent and grant the reversion in fee and taketh husband this is a Countermand of the Attornment 11 H. 7. 19. If in the case that our Author here putteth of severall grantees if the Tenant attorn to both of them the Attornment is void because it is not according to the grant If a reversion be granted for life and after it is granted to the same grantee for yeares and the lessee Attorn to both grants it is void for the uncertainty 11 H. 7. 12. A multo fortiori if the Lord by one Deed grant his Seigniory to I. Bishop of London and to his heirs and by another Deed to I. Bishop of London and to his successors and the Tenant Attorne to both grants the Attornment is void for albeit the grantee be but one yet he hath several capacities and the grants are several and the Attorment is not according to either of the grants But if A. grant the reversion of black acre or white acre the lessee attorn to the grant and after the grantee maketh his election this Attornment is good for albeit the state was incertaine yet he Attorneth to the grant in such sort as it was made And so note a diversity between one grant and several grants and observe an Attornment good in expectation which passed by the election subsequent Sect. 553. Fol. 301. a. Note that when a man maketh a feoffment of a Manor the services doe not pass but remain in the feoffor untill the Freeholders do attorn and then the Attornment shall have relation to some purpose and not to other for albeit the Attornment be made many years after this feoffment yet it shal have relation to make it passe out of the feoffor Ab initio even by the livery upon the feoffment but not to charge the Tenants with any mean arrerages or for Waste in the meane time c. Temps E. 2. Attorn 48 E. 3 15. If a reversion of land be granted to an alien by Deed who is made Denizen and then the Attornment is made the King upon Office found shall have the land for as to the state between the parties it passed by the Deed ab initio P. 5 E. 3. Coram Rege Sussex in Thesaur 21 E. 3. 47. If a man plead a feoffment of a Manor he need not plead an Attornment of the Tenants but if it be material it must be denied or pleaded of the other side 34 E. 3. Double Plea 24. 42. Ass p. 6. And upon consideration had of all the Bookes touching this point whether the services of the Freeholders do pass wherein there have been three several opinions viz. some have holden that the services do pass in the right by the livery as parcel of the Manor but not to avow before Attornment as in the case of the Fine And others have holden that they do passe in right and possession to distrain without Attornment 26 E. 3. per que servitia 21. 8 H. 4. 1. b. 12 H. 4. 20 H. 6 7. 35 H 6 9 E. 4. 33. 13 H. 7. 14. a. 1 H. 7. 31. 4 E. 4. Attorn Br. 30. And the third opinion is that in this case the said services passe neither in possession nor in right but until Attornment remaine in the Alienor as Littleton here holdeth and so it was resolved P 15 Eliz. betweene Brasbitch and Barwell vide H. 14. Eliz Rot. 508. in Com B. Sect. 590 591. Fo. 324. Si home fait done en tail ou lease pur terme de vie ou pur terme dans del parcell del demesne d'un Manor c. Savant le reversion a tiel donor ou lessor c. puis il soit disseise del Manor c. le disseisor mor. seise c. son heir evant eins pur discent uncore tiel donor c. distreina pur le rent arere tiel reversion apres tiel disseisin est sever del Manor en fait comit que ne soit sever en droit And so note a diversitie between rents and services parcell of a Manor and rents and Services incident to a reversion parcel of a Manor And the reason of this diversitie is for that as long as the donee in taile lessee for life or lessee for yeares are in possession they preserve the reversion in the donor or lessor and so long as the reversion continue in the donor or lessor so long do the rents and services which are incidents to the reversion belong to the donor or lessor Neither can the donor or lessor be put out of his reversion unlesse the donee or lessee be out of their possession c. But if the donee or lessee make a regresse and regain their estate and possession thereby they doe ipso facto revest the reversion in the donor or lessor And note when a man is seised of a Manor and maketh a gift in taile or Lease for life c. Of parcel of the demesne of the Manor the reversion is part of the Manor and by the grant of the Manor the reversion shall passe with the Attornment of the Donee or lessee But if the Lord make a gift or a Lease for life of the whole Manor except bl acre parcell of the demesne of the Manor and after he grant away his Manor B. acre shall not passe because during the estate taile or Lease for life it is severed from the Manor And so note a diversity that a reversion of part may be parcell of a Manor in possession but a part in possession cannot be parcell of the reversion of a Manor expectant upon any estate of freehold But if a man make a Lease for yeares of a Manor except B. acre and after grant away the Manor B. acre shall passe because the freehold being entire it remaineth parcell of the Manor and one praecipe of the whole Manor shall serve But otherwise it is in case of a gift in taile or Lease for life excepting any part there must be severall Writs of Praecipe because the freehold is severall 18. Ass p. 2. 38 H. 6. 33. Pl. Com. Fulmerstons case 103. lib. 5. 11. 22. 25. 19 E. 2. breve 845. 4 E. 3. briefe 713. Now let 's Attorne to the precedent Sections Sect. 554. Fol. 311. a. No man shall attorne to any grant of any Signiory rent service reversion or remainder but he that is immediately privy to the grantor Sect. 556. Fol. 311. b. Here observe a diversity betweene a rent service and a rent charge or a rent secke And therefore without respect of any privity the disseisor onely in case of a rent charge shall attorne because he is Tenant of the freehold but in case
If a man infeoff A. to have and to hold to him his Heires and Assignes A. infeoffeth B. and his heirs B. dyeth the heire of B. shall vouch as Assignee to A. so as heires of Assignees and Assignees of Assignes and Assignes of Heirs are within this word Assignes which seemed to be a Qu. in Bractons time and the Assignee shall not onely vouch but have a Warrantia Cartae 12. E. 2. vouch 263. 19 E. 2. gar 85. 13 E. 1. ib. 93. 36 E. 3. gar 1. 4 H. 8. Dyer 1. F. N. B. 135. If a man doth warrant Land to another without this word Heires his heirs shall not vouch and regularly if he warrant land to a man and his heirs without naming Assignes his Assignee shall not vouch But if the Father be infeoffed with Warranty to him and his heires the Father infeoffeth his eldest Son with Warranty and dyeth the Law giveth to the Son advantage of the Warranty made to his Father because by act in Law the Warranty between the Father and the Son is extinct 43 E. 3. 23. 24 E. 3. 3. 11 H. 4. 94. 5 E. 3. Age 19. Pl. Com. 418. But note a diversity between a Warranty that is a Covenant real which bindeth the party to yield Lands or Tenements in recompence and a Covenant annexed to the Land which is to yield but damage for that a Covenant in many cases extendeth further then the Warranty As for Example It hath been adjudged that where two Coparceners made partition of Land and the one made a Covenant with the other to acquit her and her heirs of a Suit that issued out of the Land the Covenantee aliened in that case the Assignee shall have an action of Covenant and yet he was a stranger to the Covenant because the acquitall did run with the land 42 E. 3. b. per Finchden fol. 385. a. A. seised of the Manor of D. whereof a Chappel was parcel a Prior with the assent of his Covent Covenants by Deed indented with A. and his heirs to celebrate divine Service in his Chappel weekly for the Lord of the Manor and his Servants c. In this case the assignees shall have an action of Covenant albeit they were not named for that remedy by covenant doth run with the Land to give damages to the party grieved and was in manner appurtenant to the Manor 42 E. 3. 3. a. Laurence Pakenhams case 6 H. 4. 1. Ralph Brabsons case But if the Covenant had been made with a stranger to celebrate divine Service in the Chappell of A. and his heirs there the Assignee shall not have an action of Covenant for the Covenant cannot be annexed to the Manor because the Covenantee was not seised of the Manor Vide lib. 5. fol. 17 18. Spencers case 2 H. 4. 6. H. Hornes case And note that an Assignee of part of the Land shal vouch as Assignee As if a man make a feoffment in fee of two acres to one with Warranty to him his Heirs Assignes if he make a feoffment of one acre that feoffee shall vouch as Assignee for there is a diversity between the whole estate in part and part of the estate in the whole or of any part As if a man hath a Warranty to him his Heires and Assignes and he make a lease for life or a gift in Tail the lessee or donee shall not vouch as Assignee because the whole estate is out of the lessor or donor and by this means he shall take advantage of the Warranty But if a lease for life or a gift in Tail be made the remainder over in fee such a lessee or donee shall vouch as Assignee because the whole estate is out of the lessor and the particular estate and the remainder do in Judgment of Law to this purpose make but one estate 18 E. 4. 52. 10 E. 3. 58. 5 E. 3. 40. Accord H. 14. 1. in Com. Banc. If a man infeoff three with Warranty to them and their heirs and one of them release to the other two they shall vouch but if he had released to one of the other the warranty had been extinct for that part for he is an Assignee 40 E. 3. 14. 40 Ass 5. 33 H. 6. 4. 37 H. 8. Alienation c. 31. 8 H. 4. 8. If a man doth warrant land to two men and their heirs and the one make a feoffment in fee yet the other shall vouch for his moity 11 R. 2. Detin 46. 7 E. 3. 35. 46 E. 3 4. If a man at this day be infeoffed with warranty to him his heirs and assignes and he make a gift in Tail the remainder in fee the donee make a feoffment in fee that feoffee shall not vouch as Assignee but * he that cometh in in privity of estate If the warranty be made to a man and his heirs without this word Assignes yet the Assignee or Tenant of the Land may rebutte and albeit no man shall vouch or have a Warrantia Cartae either as party heir or Assignee but in privity of estate yet any that is of another estate be it by Disseisin Abatement Intrusion Usurpation or otherwise shall rebut by force of the warranty as a thing annexed to the Land which sometimes was doubted in our Books 38 E. 3. 21. 26 E. 3. 56. l. 10. fo 96. b. Seymors Case 10 Ass 5. 35 Ass 9. 22 Ass 3. 988. 31 Ass 13. But herein note a diversity when he that rebutteth claimeth under the warranty and when he claimeth above the warranty for there he shall not rebut And therefore if Lands be given to two Brethren in fee simple with a warranty to the eldest and his heirs the eldest dyeth without issue the survivor albeit he be heir to him yet shall he neither vouch nor rebut nor have a Warrantia Cartae because his Title to the Land is by relation above the fall of the warranty and he cometh not under the estate of him to whom the warranty is made as the disseisor c. doth If a man make a gift in Tail at this day and warrant the land to him his heirs and assignes and after the donee make a feoffment and dyeth without issue the warranty is expired as to any Voucher or Rebutter for that the estate Taile whereunto it was knit is spent Otherwise it is if the gift and feoffment had been made before the Statute of Donis Cond for then both the donee and feoffee had a fee simple and so are our Books to be intended in this and the like cases Lib. 3. fo 63. Linc. Coll. case If A. be seised of Lands in fee and B. release unto him or confirmeth his estate in fee with warranty to him his heires and assignes All men agree this warranty to be good but some have holden That no warranty can be raised upon a bare Release or Confirmation without passing some estate or transmutation of possession 14 E. 3. garr 108. 12 H. 7. 1. But the Law as it appeareth