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A34797 The interpreter, or, Book containing the signification of words wherein is set forth the true meaning of all ... words and terms as are mentioned in the law-writers or statutes ... requiring any exposition or interpretation : a work not only profitable but necessary for such as desire thoroughly to be instructed in the knowledge of our laws, statutes, or other antiquities / collected by John Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1658 (1658) Wing C6644; ESTC R31653 487,806 288

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or fire Britton ca. 7. where you may see what it differeth from Miladventure See Misadventure Average averagium by M. Skenes opinion verbo arage de verborum significatione commeth of the word averia i. a beast and so consequently signifieth service which the Tenent oweth to the Lord by horse or carriage of horse I have heard others probably derive it from the French euvrage or euvre i. opus It seemeth with us to have two divers significations For the first Rastall titulo Exposition of words maketh mention of the Kings averages which I take to be the Kings cariages by horse or cart Then anno 32. H. 8. ca. 14. and anno 1. Jacobi ca. 32. it is used for a certain contribution that Merchants and others doe every man proportionably make toward their losses who have their goods cast into the sea for the safegard of the ship or of the goods and lives of them in the ship in time of a tempest And this contribution seemeth to be so called because it is proportioned after the rate of every mans average or goods caried Averiis captis in withernam is a writ for the taking of cattel to his use that hath his cattel taken unlawfully by another and driven out of the County where they were taken that hey cannot be replevied Register origin fol. 82. a. b. Averment verificatto commeth of the French averer i. testari as averer quelque meschancete i. extrahere scelus aliquod in lucem ex occultis tenebris It signifieth according to the Author of the terms of Law an offer of the Defendant to make good or to justifie an exception pleaded in abatement or barre of the Plaintiffs act But me thinketh it should rather signifie the act than the offer or justifying the exception by divers places where I find it used For example an 34. Ed. 1. stat 2. And the demandant will offer to aver by the assise or jury where to offer to aver and to aver must needs differ and again in the same statute and the demandant will offer to averr by the country c. thirdly in the English nat br fo 57. These errors shall be tried by averment c. Aver pennie quasi Average pennie is money contributed toward the Kings averages Rastal exposition of words See Average Augmentation augmentatio was the name of a Court erected the seven and twentieth year of Henry the 8. as appeareth by the 27. chapter of that years parliament And the end thereof was that the King might be justly dealt with touching the profit of such religious houses and their lands as were given unto him by act of Parliament the same year not printed For the dissolving of which court there was authority given to Queen Mary by the Parliament held the first year of her reign ses 2. cap. 10. which she afterward put in execution by her letters patents The name of the Court grew from this that the revenues of the Crown were augmented so much by the suppression of the said houses as the King reserved unto the Crown and neither gave nor sold away to others Aulne of Renesh wine a. 1. Ed. 6. cap. 13. alias Awme of Renish wine 1. Jaco ca. p 33. is a vessel that containeth forty gallons Aulnogeour See Alneger Ave is the name of a writ for the which see Ayle Awncell weight as I have been informed is a kind of weight with scoles hanging or hooks fastened at each end of a staff which a man lifteth up upon his fore-finger or hand and so discerneth the equality or difference between the weight and the thing weighed In which because there may and was wont to be great deceit it was forbidden anno 25 Edw. 3. stat 5. ca. 9. anno 34 ejusdem cap. 5. and the even ballance only commanded yet a man of good credit once certified mee that it is stil used in Leaden Hall at London among Butchers c. In the derivation of this word I dare not be over confident But it may probably be thought to be called awnsell weight quasi hand sale weight because it was and is performed by the hand as the other is by the beam And if I should draw i● from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. cubitus the part of the arm from the elbow to the fingers ends I might challenge a good warrant of this from the Romans who thence derived their ancile i. the luckie shield that was said to be sent from heaven in a tempest to Numa Pompilius together with a voice that the citie of Rome should be the mightiest of all others so long as that shield remained in it Auncient demeasne antiquum dominicum is called more at large auncient demeasne of the King or of the Crown Fitz. nat br fol. 14. d. It commeth of two French words auncieu i. veter vetus veteranus antiquus and of demain alias domain i. publicum vectigal It signifieth in our Common law a certain tenure whereby all the mannors belonging to the Crown in the dayes of Saint Edward the Saxon King or of William the Conquerour did hold The number and names of which mannors as all other belonging to common persons he caused to be written into a book after a survey made of them now remaining in the Exchequer and called Domes-day book And those which by that book do appear to have belonged to the Crown at that time and are contained under the title Terraregis be called auncient demeasn Kitchin fol. 98. and M. Gwin in the Preface to his readings Of these Tenents there were two sorts one that held their land frankly by Charter and another that held by copie of Court-roll or by verge at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the mannor Fitz. nat br fol. 14. d. of which opinion also Britton is ca. 66. nu 8. The benefit of this tenure consisteth in these poines first the Tenents of a mannor holding freely by Charter in this sort cannot be impleaded out of the same mannor and if they be they may abate the writ by pleading their tenure before or after answer made Secondly they be free of tolle for all things concerning their sustenance and husbandry Thirdly they may not be impanelled upon any enquest Terms of the Law But more at large by Fitz. nat br f. 14. d. whom read also fo 128. a. c. And as it appeareth by him codem fol. 3. b c these Tenents held by the service of prowing the Kings land by plashing his hedges or by such like toward the maintenance of the Kings houshold in which regard they had such Liberties given them wherein to avoid disturbance they may have writs to such as take the duties of Tolle in any market or fair as likewise for immunitie of portage passage and such like Fitzh natura brev fol. 228. a b c d. by which Authour also it appeareth That no lands be to be accounted Antient Demeasne but such as are holden in Socage fol. 13.
Jurisd fol. 105. Controller of Calis anno 21 Rich. 2. cap. 18. Controller of the Mint anno 2 H. 6. cap. 12. Controller of the Hamper Contrarotulator Hamperii which is an officer in the Chancerie attending on the Lord Chancellor or Keeper daily in the Term time and dayes appointed for sealing His office is to take all things sealed from the Clerk of the Hanaper inclosed in bags of Lether as is mentioned in the laid Clerks office and opening the bags to note the just number and especial effect of all things so received and to enter the same into a special book with all the duties appertaining to his Majestie and other officers for the same and so chargeth the Clerk of the Hanaper with the same Controller of the Pipe contrarotulator Pipae who is an officer of the Exchequer that writeth out summons twice every year to the Sheriffs to levie the ferms and debts of the Pipe and also keepeth a contrarolment of the Pipe Controller of the Pell is also an officer of the Exchequer of which sort there be two vtz the two Chamberlains Clerks that do or should keep a controlment of the Pell of receipts and goings out And in one word this officer was originally one that took notes of any other officers accounts or receipts to the intent to discover him if he dealt amisse and was ordained for the Princes better security howsoever the name sithence may be in somethings otherwise applyed To the proof whereof you may take these few words out of Fleta lib. 1. cap. 18. in prim Qui cùm fuerint ad hoc vocati Electi speaking of the Coroners attachiari praecipiant appella qui capitula coronae in comitatu praesentent contra quos vicecomes loci habeat contrarotulum tam de appellis inquisitionibus quàm aliis officium illudtangentibus c. Which contrarollum is nothing else but a parallel of the same quality and contents with the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or original This also appeareth by anno 12 Ed. 3. cap. 3. And this signification it seemeth to have also in France For there the King hath his Receivers of Tailes in every Province Controllers qui ad majorem fidem susceptoribus accedunt describu●tque in tabulis quae colliguntur Gregorii syntag lib. 3. cap. 6. num 6. Conventione is a Writ that lyeth for the breach of any covenant in writing Register orig fol. 185. Old nat br fol. 101. Fitzh calleth a Writ of Covenant nat br fol. 145. who divideth covenants into personal and real making a sufficient discourse of them both as also how this Wtit lyeth for both Convict convictus is he that is found guilty of an offence by the verdict of the Jurie Stawnf pl. cor fol. 186. Jet Master Crompton out of Judge Dyers Commentaries 275 saith that conviction is either when a man is out-lawed o● appeareth and confesseth or else is found guilty by the Inquest Crompt Just of Peace fol. 9. a. Conviction and attainder are often confound ed lib. 4. fol. 46. a. b. See Attaint Coparceners participes be otherwise called Parceners and in Common Law are such as have equal portion in the Inheritance of their Ancestour and as Litleton in the beginning of his third Book saith Parceners be either b● Law or by custome Parceners by Law are the issue Female which no heir Male being come in equality to the Lands of their Ancestours Bract. lib. 2. cap. 30. Parceners by custom are those that by Custome of the Countrey challenge equal part in such Lands as in Kent by the Custome called Gavel Kind This is called Adaequatio among the Feudists Hot. in verbis feuda verbo Adaequatio And among the Civilians it is termed familiae erciscundae judicium quod inter cohaeredes ideo redditur ut haereditas dividatur quod alterum alteri dare facere oport●bit praestetur Hotoman Of these two you may see Litleton at large in the first and second Chapters of his third Book and Britton cap. 27. intituled De heritage divisable The Crown of England is not subject to Coparcinory anno 25 H. 8. cap. 22. Copie copia cometh from the French copia i. le double de quelque escripture latinè descriptio graecè 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signifieth in our common language the example of an original writing as the copie of a Charter the copie of a Court-roll Copia libelli deliberanda is a Writ that lyeth in case where a man cannot get the copie of a Libel at the hands of the Judge Ecclesiastical Reg. orig fol. 51. Copie-hold tenura per copiam rotuli curiae is a tenure for the which the Tenent hath nothing to shew but the copie of the Rolls made by the Steward of his Lords Court For the Steward as he inrolleth and maketh remembrances of all other things done in the Lords Court so he doth also of such Tenents as be admitted in the Court to any parcel of Land or Tenement belonging to the Mannor and the transcript of this is called the Court-roll the copie whereof the Tenent taketh from him and keepeth as his only Evidence Coke lib. 4. fol. 25. b. This Tenure is called a Base-tenure because it holdeth at the will of the Lord. Kitchin fol. 80. cap. Copy-holds Fitzh nat br fol. 12. B. C. who there saith that it was wont to be called Tenure in villenage and that this Copie-hold is but a new name Yet it is not simply at the will of the Lord but according to the custome of the Manor So that if a Cople-holder break not the custome of the Manor and thereby forfeit his Tenure he seemeth not so much to stand at the Lords courtesie for his right that he may be displaced hand over head at his pleasure These customes of Manor be infinite varying in one point or other almost in every several Manor First some Copy-hold is fineable and some certain that which is fineable the Lord rateth at what fine or income he pleaseth when the Tenent is admitted unto it that which is certain is a kind of inheritance and called in many places Custumarie because the Tenent dying and the hold being void the next of the blood paying the custumarie fine as two shillings for an Acre or such like may not be denyed his admission Secondly some Copy-holders have by custome the wood growing upon their own land which by Law they could not have Kitchin ubi supra Thirdly Copy-holders some be such as hold by the verge in ancient Demesn and although they hold by Copy yet are they in account a kind of Free-holder For if such a one commit Felonie the King hath annum diem vastum as in case of Freehold Some other hold by common Tenure called meer Copy-hold and they committing Felony their land escheateth to the Lord of the Manor forthwith Kitchin fol. 81. chap. Tenents per verge in ancient Demesn What ancient Demesn is see in the right place See Tenent by Copie
writing against Marsin Luther in the behalf of the Church of Rome then accounted Domicilium fidei Catholicae Stows annals pag. 863. Deforsour deforciator cometh of the French Forceur i. expugnator It is used in our Common law for one that overcometh and casteth out by force and differeth from disseisour first in this because a man may disseise another without force which act is called simple disseisin Britton cap. 53. next because a man may deforce another that never was in possession as for example if more have right to lands as Common heirs and one entring keepeth out the rest the Law saith that he deforceth them though he do not disseise them Old nat br fol. 118. and Litleton in his Chapter Disconti nuance fol. 117. saith that he which is enfeoffed by the Tenant in Tail and put in possession by keeping out the Heir of him in reversion being dead doth deforce him though he did not disseise him because he entred when the Tenant in tail was living and the Heir had no present right And a Deforsor differeth from an intrudour because a man is made an Intrudour by a wrongful entry onely into Land or Tenement void of a possessour Bracton lib. 4. cap. pri and a Deforsour is also by holding out the right He iras is above said Deliverances See Repligiare Demand demanda vel demandum cometh of the French Demande i. postulatio postulatus and signifieth a calling upon a man for any thing due It hath likewise a proper significatiō with the Common Lawyers opposite to plaint For the pursute of all civil actions are either demands or plaints and the persuer is called Demandant or Plaintiff viz. Demandant in actions real and Plaintiff in personal And where the party perfuing is called Demandant there the party persued is called Tenant where Plaintiff there Defendant See Terms of Law verbo Demandant Demy haque See Haque and Haquebut Demain Dominicum is a French word otherwise written Domaine and signifieth Patrimonium Domini as Hotoman saith in verbis feudalibus verbo Dominicum where by divers authorities he proveth those Lands to be dominicum which a man holdeth originally of himself and those to be feodum which he holdeth by the benefit of a superiour Lord. And I find in the Civil Law Rem dominicam for that which is proper to the Emperor Cod. Ne rei dominicae vel templorum vindicatio temporis praescriptione submoveatur being the 38 title of the 7 book And Res dominici juris i. reipub in the same place And by the word Domanium or Demanium are properly signified the Kings Lands in France appertaining to him in property Quia Domanium definitur illud quod nominatim consecratum est unitum incorporatum Regiae coronae ut scripsit Chopinus de doman●o Franciae tit 2. per legem Si quando 3. Cod. de bon vacan lib. 10. Mathaeut de Afflictis in consti Siciliae lib. 1. tit De locatione Demanii 82. which may be called Bona incorporata in corpus fisci redacta Skene de verborum signif verb. Terrae Dominicales In like manner co we use it in England howbeit we here have no land the Crown-land onely excepted which holdeth not of a Superior For all dependeth either mediatly or immediately of the Crown that is of some honour or other belonging to the Crown and not graunted in fee to any inferiour person Wherefore no common person hath any Demaines simply understood For when a man in pleading would signifie his land to be his own he saith that he is or was seised therof in his demain as of Fee Litleton l. 1. c. 1. Whereby he signifieth that though his land be to him and his Heirs for ever yet it is not true Demain but depending upon a superior Lord and holding by service or rent in lieu of service or by both service and rent Yet I find these words used in the Kings right anno 37 H. 8. cap. 16. and 39 Eliz. cap. 22. But the application of this speech to the King and crown land is crept in by errour and ignorance of the word Fee or at least by understanding it otherwise than of the Feudists it is taken But Britton cap. 78. sheweth that this word demeyn is diversly taken sometime more largely as of Lands or Tenements held for life c. and sometime more strictly as for such onely as are generally held in see This word sometime is used for a distinction between those lands that the Lord of a Mannor hath in his own hands or in the hands of his Leassee dimised upon a rent for tearm of years or life and such other land appertaining to the said Mannor which belongeth to free or copy-holders Howbeit the copy-hold belonging to any Manor is also in the opinion of many good Law yers accounted Demeines Bracton in his fourth Book tract 3. cap. 9. num 5. hath these words Item dominicum accipitur multipliciter Est autem dominicum quod quis habet ad mensam suam propriè sicut sunt Bordlands anglicè Itèm dicitur dominicum villenagium quod traditur villanis quod quis tēpestivè intempestive sumere possit pro voluntare sua revocare Of this Fleta likewise thus writeth Dominicū est multiplex Est autē Dominicū propriè terra ad mensā assignata villenagium quod traditur villanis ad excolendum terra precariò dimissa quae tempestiviè pro voluntate domini poterit revocari sicut est de terra commissa tenenda quàm diu commissori placuerit poterit dici Dominicum de quo quis babet liberū tenementū alius usufructum etiā ubi quis habet liberū tenementū alius curā sicut de custode dici poterit curatore unde urus dicitur à jure alius quoque ab homine Dominicum etiam dicitur ad differentiam ejus quod tenetur in servitio Dominicum est omne illud tenementum de quo antecessor oblit se●situs ut de feudo nec refert cum usufructu vel sine de quo sie ectus esset si viveret recuperare posset per assisam nomine disseisinae licet alius haberet usum fructum sicut dici poterit de illis qui tenent in villenagio qui utuntur fruuntur non nomine proprio sed omine Domin● sui Flet. lib. 5. cap. 5. sect Dominicum autem And the reason why Copy-hold is accounted Demeans is because they that be Tenents unto it are judged in law to have no other right but at the will of the Lord. So that it is reputed still after a sort to be in the Lords hands And yet in common speech that is called ordinarily Demeans which is neither free nor copy It is farther to be noted that Demain is sometime used in a more special signification and is opposite to Frank-fee For example those lands which were in the possession of King Edward the Confessour
travers Stawnf praerog fo 96. to tend an averment Brit. cap. 76. Tender seemeth to come of the French Tendre i. tener delicatus and being used adjectively signifieth in English speech as much as it doth in French But in our Common law it is used as a verb and betokeneth as much as carefully to offer or circumspectly to endeavour the performance of any thing belongingunto us to tender As rent is to offer it at the time and place where and when it ought to be paid To tender his law of non summons Kitchin fo 197. is to offer himself ready to make his Law whereby to prove that he was not summoned See law See make Tenementis legatis is a Writ that lyeth to London or other corporation where the custome is that men may demise tenements by their last will as well as their goods and chatels to whom they list for the hearing of any controversie touching this matter and for the rectifying of the wrong Reg. orig f. 244. b. Tenant alias tenent tenens commeth either of the Latine tenere or of the French tenir and signifieth in our Common law him that possesseth Lands or tenements by any kind of right be it in fee for life or for years This word is used with great diversity of Epithits in the Law sometime signifying or importing the efficient cause of possession as Tenent in Dower which is she that possesseth land c. by vertue of her Dower Kitchin fol. 160. Tenent per statute Merchant Idem fol. 172. that is he that holdeth land by vertue of a Statute forfeited unto him Tenent in frank mariage Kitchin fol. 158. viz. he that holdeth land or tenement by reason of a gift thereof made unto him upon mariage between him and his wife Tenent by the courtesie Idem fol. 159. i. he that holdeth for his life by reason of a child begotten by him of his wife being an Inheritrix and born alive Tenent per elegit Idem fol. 172. i. he that holdeth by vertue of the writ termed Elegit Tenent in Mortgage Idem fol. 38. is he that holdeth by vertue of a mortgage or upon condition that if the lessor pay so much mony at such a day that he may enter and if not that the seassee shall have a fee simple fee tayl or freehold Sometime these Epithites import the manner of admittance as Tenent by the Verge in antient deme●n Idem fol. 81. is he that is admitted by the Rod in a Court of antient demesn Sometime the evidence that he hath to shew for his estate as Tenent by copy of Court roll which is one admitted Tenant of any Lands c. within a Manor that time out of the memory of man by the use and custome of the said Manour have been demisable and demised to such as will take the same in fee fee tayl for life years or at will according to the custome of the said manor West parte prim symb li. 2 sect 646 whom read more at large Again Tenent by charter is he that holdeth by feoffment in writing or other deed Kitchin fol. 57. Sometime these Epithites signifie that duty which the Tenent is to perform by reason of his tenure As Tenent by Knight service Tenents in burgage Tenent in soccage Tenent in frank fee tenent in villenage Sometime they import the estate of the Tenent or his continuance in the Land as Tenent in fee simple Kitchin fol. 150. Tenent in fee tayl Idem fol. 153. Tenent at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the manner Idem fo 132 165. Tenent at will by the Common law Idem eodem Tenent upon sufferance Idem fol. 165. Tenent of state of Inheritance Stawnford praeroge fol. 6. Sometime they contain a relation toward the Lord of whom he holdeth as tenent in chief i. he that holdeth of the King in the right of his Crown Fitzher nat br fol. 5. F. Tenent of the King as of the person of the King Idem eodem or as of some honor eodem Very tenent i. he that holdeth immediately of his Lord Kitchin fol. 99. For if there be Lord Mesn and tenent the tenent is very tenent to the Mesn but not to the Lord above Tenent paravailes pl. cor 197. Fitzh nat br fo 136. D. is the lowest Tenent and farthest distant from the Lord Paramount It seemeth to be Tenent Per availe See Dyers Commentaries fol. 25. nu 156. No tenent in right to the Lord but Tenent for the avowry to be made Littleton fol. 96. Sometime they have a relation between Tenents and Tenents in several kinds as Joynt tenents i. they that have equal right in lands and tenements and all by vertue of one title Litleton lib. 3. cap. 3. Tenents in Common be they that have equal right but hold by divers titles as one or more by gift or descent and others by purchase Idem eodem cap. 4. Particular tenent Stawnf Praerog fol. 13 that is he which holdeth only for his term as tenent in dower tenent by the courtesie or otherwise for life West parte 2. Symbol titulo Fines Sect. 13. G. See anno 32 H. 8. cap. 31. and Coke in Sir William Pellams case lib. 1. fo 15. a. they be termors for years or life See Plowden casu Colthirst fol. 22. b. Sole tenent Kitchin 134. i. he that hath none other joyned with him If a man and his wife hold for both their lives and the man dyeth he dyeth not sole tenent Idem eodem Several tenent is opposite to joynt tenents or tenents in common See Several tenenoy Tenent al praecip is he against whom the writ Praecipe is to be brought Cokes Reports lib. 3. The case of Fines fo 88. a. Tenent in demesn anno 13 Ed. 1. cap. 9. anno 32 H. 8. ca. 37. is he that holdeth the demeans of a manor for a rent without fervice Tenent in service anno 20 Ed. 1. stat 1 is he that holdeth by service v. Britton cap. 79. in principio cap. 96 Car fealtic c. ●●el quaere whether he may be termed tenent in Demein that holdeth some of the demeans howsoever and he tenent in service which is a Free-holder to a Manor holding by service for the Free-holds of a Manor are not accounted of the demesn but only that which the Lord keepeth in his own hand or letteth out by copy according to the custome of the Manor Tenent by execution anno 32 Henry 8. cap. 5. is he that holdeth Land by vertue of an execution upon any Statute Recogn zance c. Tendeheved decanus vedcaput decem familiarum of this see Rogen Hovedon parte poster suorum annalium fol. 346 a. See Frank pledge Tenement tenementum is diversly used in the Common law most properly it signieth a house or home Stall but in a larger sig nfication it is taken either for house or land that a man holdeth of another And joyned with the Adjective Frank in our Lawyers French it
possession Conspiracie conspiratio though both in Latine and French it be used for an agreement of men to do any thing either good or bad yet in our Lawyers books it is alway taken in the evil part It is defined anno 34 Ed. pri stat 2. to be an agreement of such as do confeder and bind themselves by oath covenant or other aliance that every of them shall bear and ayde the other falsly and maliciously to indite or falsly to move or maintain Plees and also such as cause children within age to appeal men of Felonie whereby they are imprisoned and fore grieved and such as retain men in the Countries with liveries or fees to maintain their malicious enterprises And this extendeth as well to the takets as to the givers And Stewards and Bayliffes of great Lords which by their seignorie office or power undertake to bear or maintain quarrels plees or debates that concern other parties than such as touch the estate of their Lords or themselves anno 4 Ed. 3. cap. 11. anno 3 H. 7. cap. 13. and of this see more anno 1 H. 5. cap. 3. an 18 H. 6. cap. 12. as also in the new book of Entries ver Conspiraey Conspiracie in the places before mentioned is taken more generally is confounded with maintenance and champerty But in a more special signification it is taken for a confederacie of two at the least falsely to endict one or to procure one to be endicted of Felony And the punishment of Conspiracy upon an Indictment of Felony at the Kings sute is that the party attainted leese his frank law to the intent that he be not empaneld upon Juries or Assises or such like éploiments for the testifying of truth And if he have to do in the Kings Court that he make his Atturney and that his lands goods and chattels be seised into the Kings hands his Lands estreaped if he find no better favour his trees raced and his body committed to prison 27 lib. assis 59. Cromptons Justice of Peace fol. 156. b. This is called villanous judgement or punishment See Villanous judgement But if the partie grieved sue upon the Writ of conspiracy then see Fitzh nat br fol. 114. D. 115. I. Conspiracie may be also in cases of lesse weight Idem fol. 116. A. c. See Frank Law Conspiratione is a Writ that lyeth against conspiratours Fitz. nat br fol. 114. d. Cromptons Jurisd fol. 209. See also the Register fol. 134. Constable constabularius vel Conestabulis is a Saxon word compounded of cuning or cyng and staple which do signiffe the stay and hold of the King Lamb. duties of Constables num 4. But I have heard it made heretofore of these two words comes stabuli which seemeth to me the more probable because we have this Officer from France as most others and not from the Saxons And Tilius in his Commentaries de rebus Gallicis li. 2. c. de conistabili hath the same etymologie giving the reason thereof quia praeest stabulo i. equili regis which office is ancient here in England and mentioned by Bracton seeming to answer him that was called tribunus celerum under the first Kings of Rome and Magister equitum afterward The Germans that inhabite the side of the river Rhene note him by this title die constofler and in counterfeit Latine constofelerus and in older time constafolarius that the Romans were wont to tearm assessorem judicii And as Spiegelius in his Lexicon noreth derive the word à stafolo comitis i. gradu Judicis fiscalis For staffel in their language as he saith signifieth a grees or step of a pair of stairs And thereupon stafelstein being a word used in their very ancient writings signifieth as much as Praetorium But a man many times may shew in this kind more curiosity than discretion as perhaps some will judge me here to have done And therefore enough of this This word is diversly used in our Common law first for the Constable of England who is also called Marshall Stawn●● pl. cor fol. 65. Of whose great dignity and authority a man may find many arguments and signes both in the Statutes and Chronicles of this Realm His sway consisteth in the care of the common peace of the Land in deeds of arms and matters of wars Lamb. ubi supra with whom agreeth the statut anno 13 R. 2. cap. 2. statut 1. Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. 2. cap. 25. Of this Officer or Magistrate M. Gwin in the Preface to his Reading saith to this effect The Court of the Constable and Marshal determineth contracts touching deeds of arms tout of the Realm and handleth things concerning warrs within the Realm as Combats blasons of armory c. But it may not deal with battel in appeals nor generally with any other thing that may be tryed by the Law of the Land And read Fortescue c. 32. This office was belonging heretofore to the Lords of certain mannors jure feudi why it is discontinued see Dyer f. 258. nu 39. Out of this high magistracie saith M. Lamberd were drawn these lower Constables which we cal●ōstables of Hundreds and franchises and first ordained by the Statute of Winchester anno 13 Ed. 1. which appointeth for the conservation of the peace and view of armour two Constables in every Hundred and franchise which in Latine are called constabularii capitales And these be now a dayes called high Constables because continuance of time and increase both of people and offences hath again under these made others in every Town called petit Constables in Latine subconstabularios which are of like nature but of inferiour authority to the other as you may read at large in that learned mans Treatise before named Of these also read S. Thomas Smith lib. 2. cap. 22. Beside these there be officers of particular places called by this name as Constable of the Tower Stawnf pl. cor fol. 152. anno 1 H. 4. cap. 13. Stows annals pa. 812. jurisdict fol. 132. Constable of the Exchequer anno 51 H. 3. statute 5. Constable of Dover Castle Camdeni Britan. pag. 239. Fitzh nat br fol. 240. otherwise called castellane West i. cap. 7. anno 3 Ed. 1. But these be castellani properly as Master Lamberd noteth though conjoyned in name with the others See the Statute anno 32 H. 8. cap. 38. M. Manwood parte prima c. 13. of his Forest laws maketh mention of a Constable of the Forest Consuetudinibus servitiis is a Writ of right close which lyeth against the Tenant that deforceth his Lord of the rent or service due unto him Of this see more at large the Old nat br fol. 77. Fitzh eodem fol. 151. and the Register orig fol. 159. Consultation consultatio is a Writ whereby a cause being formerly removed by prohibition from the Ecclesiastical Court or Court Christian to the Kings Court is returned thither again For the Judges of the Kings Court if upon comparing the libel with
of Court-roll This is the land that in the Saxons time was called folk-Folk-land Lamberd explicat of Saxon words verbo Terra ex scripto West part prim symb l. 2. Sect. 646. defineth a Copy-holder thus Tenent by copie of Court-roll is he which is admitted Tenent of any lands or tenements within a Manor that time out of memory of man by use and custome of the said Manor have been demisable and demised to such as will take the same in Fee in Fee-tail for life years or at will according to the custome of the said Manor by copy of Court-roll of the same Manor where you may read more of these things Coraage coraagium is a kind of imposition extraordinary and growing upon some unusual occasion and it seemeth to be of certain measures of corn For corus tritici is a certain measure of corn Bracton libro 2. cap. 116. nu 6. who in the same Chapter num 8. hath of this matter these words Sunt etiam quaedam communes praestationes quae servitia non dicuntur nec de consuetisdine veniunt nisi cum necessitas intervenerit vel cùm rex venerit sicut sunt hidagia coraagia carvagia alia plura de necessitate ex consensu communi totius regni introducta quae ad dominum feudi non pertinent de quibus nullus tenetur tenentem suum acquietare nisi se ad hoc specialiter obligaverit in charta sua c. Cordiner cometh of the French Cordovannier i. sutor calcearius a Shoo-maker and is so used in divers Statutes as anno 3 H. 8. cap. 10. anno 5 ejusdem cap. 7. and others Cornage cornagium cometh of the French cor i. cornu and in our Common law signifieth a kind of grand seargancy the service of which tenure is to blow a horn when any invasion of the Northern enemy is perceived And by this many men hold their land Northward about the wall commonly called the Picts-wall Cambden Britan. pag. 609. hence cometh the word cornuare to blow a horn pupil oculi parte 5. cap. 22. in charta de Foresta This service seemeth to have proceeded from the Romans For I find cornicularios mentioned in the Civil law viz. lib. 1. Cod. de officio diverso Jud. 48. lege 3. lib. 12. tit de apparitoribus praefectorum praetorio 53. lege 1. 3. where Lucas de Penna defineth them eos qui cornu faciunt excubias militares And Brissonius lib. 3. de verbo significat faith thus of them hi militum quoddam genus fuere quicorniculo merebant unde nomen habent Where it appeareth by him out of Suetonius Plinie and Livie that the horn was an honour and reward given for service in war Corner-tile See Gutter-tile Corody corodium cometh of the Latine verb corrodo and signifieth in our Common Law a summe of money or allowance of meat and drink due to the King from an Abbey or other house of Religion whereof he is the founder toward the reasonable sustenance of such a one of his servants being put to his pensior as he thinketh good to bestow it on And the difference between a corrodie and a pension seemeth to be that a Corrody is allowed toward the main enauce of any the Kings servants that liveth in the Abbey a pension is given to one of the Kings Chaplains for his better maintenance in the Kings service until he may be provided of a benefice Of both these read Fitzh nat br fol. 230 231 233. who there setteth down all the Corrodies and pensions certain that any Abbey when they stood was bound to perform unto the King There is mention also of a Corrody in Stawn praerogative 44. And this seemeth to be an ancient law For in Westm 2. cap. 25. it is ordained that an Assise shall lie for a Corrody It is also apparent by the Statute anno 34. 35 H. 8. c. 16. that Corrodies belonged some time to Bishops from Monasteries and by the new Terms of law that a Corrody may be due to a common person by graunt from one to another or of common right to him that is founder of a Religious house not holden in frank almoyn For that Tenure was a discharge of all Corrodies in it self By which book it appeareth also that a Corrody is either certain or uncertain and that it may be for life years in Tail or in Fee Corodio habendo it is a Writ whereby to exact a Corrody of any Abbey or Religious house See Corodie see the Regist. orig fol. 264. Coronatore eligendo is a Writ which after the death or discharge of any Coroner is directed to the Shyreeve out of the Chancery to call together the Free-holders of the County for the choice of a new Coroner to certifie into the Chancerie both the election and the name of the party elected and to give him his oath See Westm 1. cap. 10. and Fitzh nat br fol. 163. and the Register orig fol. 177. Coroner coronator is an ancient Officer of this land so called because he dealeth wholly for the King and Crown There be four of them commonly in every County and they are chosen by the Free-holders of the same upon Writ and not made by Letters Patents Crompt Jurisd fol. 126. This Officer though now he be some inferiour Gentleman that hath some smattering in the Law yet if we look to the statute of Westm 1. cap. 10. we shall finde that he was wont and ought to be a sufficient man that is the most wise and discreet Knight that best will and may attend upon such an office Yea there is a Writ in the Register Nisi sit miles fol. 177. b. whereby it appeareth that it was sufficient cause to remove a Coroner chosen if he were not a Knight and had not a hundred shillings rent of Free-hold And the Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench is the Soveraign Coroner of the whole Realm in person i. wheresoever he remaineth libro assissarum fol. 49.5 coron Coke lib. 4. casu de Wardens c. of the Sadlers fol. 57. b. His office especially concerneth the Plees of the Crown But if you will read at large what anciently belonged unto him read Bract. lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 5. de officio coronatorum circa homicidium and cap. 6. de of sicio coronatoris in thesauris inventis and cap. 6. de officio coronatorum in raptu virginum and cap. 8. de officio coronatorum de pace plagis And Britton in his first Chapter where he handleth it at large Fleta also in his first book cap. 18. and A●drew Horns mirrour of Justices lib. 1. cap. del office del coroners But more aptly for the present times Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 51. Note there be certain Coroners special within divers liberties as well as these ordinary officers in every Countie as the Coroner of the Verge which is a certain compasse about the Kings Court whom Crompton in his Jurisd
permitteth it is by Law guilty of the fault committed by him that escapeth be it Felony Treason or Trespass Negligent escape is when one arrested and afterwards escapeth against his will that arrested him and is not pursued by fresh sute and taken again before the party pursuing hath lost the sight of him Idem cap. 27. But there read more of this matter for there be doubts worth the consideration And of the course of punishment by the Civil Law in this point read in Practica criminali Claudii de Battandier reg 143. read also Cromptons Justice fol. 35. b. fol. 36. 37. and read the new Terms of Law There is an escape of beasts likewise and therefore he that by charter is quietus de escapio in the forrest is delivered of that punishment which by order of the forrest lyeth upon those whose beasts be found within the land forbidden Cromptons Jurisdict fol. 196. Eschequer Scaccarium cometh of the French Eschequier i. abacus tabula lusoria and signifieth the place or Court of all receipts belonging to the Crown and is so termed as I take it by reason that in ancient times the accomptants in that Office used such Tables as Arithmetitians use for their calculations for that is one signification of Abacus amonst others Polydor. Virgil. lib. 9. hist Anglc. saith that the true word in Latine is Statarium and by abuse called Scaccarium In mine opinion it may well seem to be taken from the German word Schatz signifying as much as Thesaurus or Fiscus And from this fountain no doubt springeth the Italian word Zecch●● signifying a mint and Zecherit aliâs Zechieri the Officers thereunto belonging Descis Ge●uen 134. M. Cam. in his Britan. pag. 113. saith that this Court or office took the name à tabula ad quam assidebant proving it out of Gervasius Tilburiensis whose words you may read in him This Court is taken from the Normans as appeareth by the Grand Custumarie cap. 56. where you may find the Eschequier thus described The Eschequier is called an assembly of High Justiciers to whom it appertaineth to amend that which the Bailiffes and other meaner Justiciers have evil done and unadvisedly judged and to do right to all men without delay as from the Princes mouth Skene de verbo Significatione verbo Scaccarium hath out of Paulus Aemilius these words Saccarium dicitur quasi S. at arium quòd homines ib● in jure sistantur vel quòd sit stataria perennis curia cum caeterae curiae essent indictivae nec loco nec tempore state where he saith also of himself that in Scotland the Eschequer was stable but the other Session was deambulatorie before James the fist qui instituit Statariam curiam cum antea esset indictiva he addeth farther Others think that Scaccarium is so called à similitudine ludi Scaccorum that is the play of the Chests because many persons meet in the Chequer pleading their causes one against the other as if they were fighting in arraied battel Others think that it cometh from an old Saxon word Scata as writeth S. Thomas Smith which signifieth Treasure taxation or Imposts whereof account is made in the Chequer This Court consisteth as it were of two parts whereof one is conversant especially in the judicial hearing and deciding of all causes appertaining to the Princes Cofers anciently called Scaccarium computorum as Ockam testifieth in his lucubrations the other is called the receipt of the Exchequer which is properly imployed in the receiving and payment of money Crompton in his Jurisdictions fol. 105. defineth it to be a Court of Record wherein all causes touching the revenues of the Crown are handled The officers belonging to both these you may find named in M. Camddens Britannia cap. Tribunalia Angliae to whom I refer you The Kings Exchequer which now is setled in Westminster was in divers Counties of Wales anno 27 H. 8. cap. 5. but especially cap. 26. Escheate Eschaeta cometh of the French escheoir i. cadere accidere excidere and signifieth in our Common law any lands or other profits that fall to a Lord within his Manor by way of forfeiture or the death of his Tenent dying without Heir general or especial or leaving his Heir within age or unmarried Magna Charta c. 31. Fitzh nat br f. 143. T c. Escheat is also used sometime for the place circuit within the which the King or other Lord hath escheats of his Tenents Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 2. pupilla oculi parte 2. cap. 22. Escheat thirdly is used for a VVrit which lieth where the Tenent having estate of Fee-simple in any Lands or Tenements holden of a superior Lord dyeth seised without Heir general or especial For in this case the Lord bringeth this VVrit against him that possesseth these Lands after the death of his Tenent● and shall there by recover the same in lieu of his services Fitzh nat br fol. 144. These that we call Escheats are in the Kingdom of Naples called Excadentia or bona excadentiala as Baro locat excadentias eo modo quo locatae fuerunt ab antiquo it a quod in nullo debita servitia minuantur non remittit Gallinam debitam Jacobutius de Franchis in praeludiis ad feudorum usum tit 1. num 29. num 23. v. Maramae singularia verbo Excademia And in the same signification as we say the Fee is escheated the Feudists use feudum aperitur lib. 1. feudal titulo 18. § 2. titul 15. titul 26. § 4. Escheatour Escaetor cometh of Escheat and signifieth an officer that observeth the Escheats of the King in the County whereof he is Eseheatour and certifieth them into the Exchequer This officer is appointed by the L. Treasurer and by Letters Patents from him and contineth in his office but one year neither can any be Escheatour above once in three years anno 1 H. 8. cap. 8. anno 3. ejusdem cap. 2. See more of this officer and his authority in Cromptons Justice of peace See anno 29 Ed. 1. The form of the Escheatours oath see in the Register original fol. 301. b. Fitzh calleth him an officer of record nat br fol. 100. C. because that which he certifieth by vertue of his office hath the credit of a Record Officium escaetriae is the Escheatourship Regist orig fol. 259. b. Escuage Scutagium cometh of the French escu i. clypeus a buckler or shield In our Common law it signifieth a kind of Knights service called service of the Shield whereby the Tenent holding is bound to follow his Lord into the Scotish or Welsh wars at his own charge for the which see Chivalrie But note that Escuage is either uncertain or certain Escuage uncertain is properly Escuage and Knights service being subject to homage fealty ward and marriage so called because it is uncertain how often a man shall be called to follow his Lord into those wars and again what his charge will be in
the least in law unto the Cognizee so that he needeth no writ of Habere facias seisinam for the execution of the same but may enter of which sort is a fine sur cognizance de droit come ceo que il ad de son done that is upon acknowledgement that the thing mentioned in the concord be jus ipsius cognizati ut illa quae idem habet de dono Cognitoris West Sect. 51. K. and the reason of this seemeth to be because this fine passeth by way of release of that thing which the cognizee hath already at the least by supposition by vertue of a former gift of the Cognizor Cokes Reports lib. 3. the case of sines fol. 89. b. which is in very deed the surest fine of all Fines executorie be such as of their own force do not execute the possession in the Cognizees as fines sur cognizance de droit tantùm fines sur done grant release confirmation or render For if such fines be not levied or such render made unto them that be in possession at the time of the fines levied the cognizees must needs sue Writs of Habere facias seisinam according to their several cases for the obtaining of their possessions except at the levying of such executory fines the parties unto whom the estate is by them limited be in possession of the lan is passed thereby for in this case such fines do inure by way of extinguishment of right nor altering the estate of possession of the Cognizee but perchance bettering it West ubi supra sect 20. Touching the form of these Fines it is to be considered upon what Writ or Action the concord is to be made and that is most commonly upon a Writ of Covenant and then first there must passe a payr of Indentures between the Cognizour and Cognizee whereby the Cognizour covenanteth with the Cognizee to passe a Fine unto him of such or such things by a day set down And these Indentures as they are first in this proceeding so are they said to lead the Fine upon this Covenant the Writ of Covenant is brought by the Cognizee against the Cognizour who thereupon yeeldeth to passe the Fine before the Judge and so the acknowledgement being recorded the Cognizour and his Heirs are presently concluded and all strangers not excepted after five years once passed If the Writ whereupon the Fine is grounded be not a Writ of Covenant but of Warrantia chartae or a Writ of right or a Writ of mesn or a Writ of Custome and Services for all these Fines may also be founded West ubi supra sect 23. then this form is observed the Writ is served upon the party that is to acknowledge the Fine and then he appearing doth accordingly See Dyer fol. 179. num 46. This word Fine sometime signifieth a sum of money payd for an In-come to Lands or Tenements let by Lease sometime an amends pecuniary punishment or recompense upon an offence committed against the King and his Laws or a Lord of a Mannor In which case a man is said facere finem de transgressione cum Rege c. Register Jud. fol. 25. a. and of the diversity of these Fines with other ma●ter worth the learning see Cromptons Justice of peace fol. 141. b. 143.144 and Lamberds Eirenarcha libr. 4. cap. 16. pag. 555. But in all these diversity of uses it hath but one signification and that is a final conclusion or end of differences between parties And in this last sense wherein it is used for the ending and remission of an offence Bracton hath it lib. 2. cap. 15. num 8. speaking of a Common fine that the County payeth to the King for false judgements or other trespasses which is to be assessed by the Justices in Eyr before their departure by the oath of Knights and other good men upon such as ought to pay it with whom agreeth the Statute anno 3 Ed. pri cap. 18. There is also a Common fine in Leets See Kitchin fol. 13. a. v. Common Fine See Fleta lib. 1. cap. 48. Fines pro licentia concordandi anno 21 H. 8. cap. 1. See Fine Fine force seemeth to come of the French Adjective fin and the substantive force i. vis The adjective fin signifieth sometime as much as crafty wily or subtil sometime as much as artificial curious singular exact or perfect as Rien contrefa●ct fin i. nihil simulatum aut ad imitationem alterius expressum potest esse exactum vel ita absolutum quin reprehensionem vel offensionem incurrat as it is set down in that work truly regal intituled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pag. 115. so that this fine force with us seemeth to signifie an absolute necessity or constraint not avoidable and in this sense it is used Old nat br fol. 78. and in the statute anno 35 H. 8. cap. 12. in Perkins Dower fol. 321. and Plowden fol. 94. Coke vol. 6. fol. 111. a. Fine adnullando levato de tenemento quod fuit de antiquo dominico is a Writ to Justices for the disanulling of a fine levied of lands holden in ancient demesn to the prejudice of the Lord Regist orig fol. 15. b. Fine capiendo pro terris c. is a Writ lying for one that upon conviction by a Jury having his lands and goods taken into the Kings hand and his body committed to prison obtaineth favour for a sum of money c. to be remitted his imprisonment and his lands and goods to be re-delivered unto him Reg. orig fol. 142. a. Fine levando de tenementis tentis de Rege in capite c. is a Writ directed to the Justices of the common plees whereby to license them to admit of a fine for the sale land holding in capite Reg. orig fol. 167. a. Fine non capiendo pro pulchre placitando is a Writ to inhibit officers of Courts to take fines for fair pleading Reg. orig fol. 179. See pleder Fine pro redisseisina capienda c. is a Writ that lieth for the release of one laid in prison for a re-disseisin upon a reasonable fine Reg. original fol. 222. Finarie See Blomarie Finours of gold and silver be those that purifie and part those Merals from other coar●er by fire and water anno 4 H. 7. cap. 2. They be also called Patters in the same place sometime Departers Fire-bote for the composition look Hay-boot It signifieth allowance or Estovers of Woods to maintain competent fire for the use of the Tenent First fruits primitiae are the profits of every Spiritual living for one year given in ancient time to the Pope throughout all Christendom but by the statute an 26 H. 8. cap. 3. translated to the Prince for the ordering whereof there was a Court erected anno 32 H. 8. cap. 45. but this Court was dissolved anno pri Mar. sess 2. cap. 10. and sithence that time though those profits be reduced again to the Crown by the Statute anno 1 Eliz. cap. 4. yet
The rest touching this writ see in Fitzh nat brev fol. 75. See Misericordia Modo forma are words of Art in a Process and namely in the answer of the Defendant whereby he denyeth himself to have done the thing laid to his charge modo forma declarata Kitchin fol. 232. It signifieth as much as that clause in the Civil law Negat allegata prout allegantur esse vera Moitie commeth of the French moitiè id est coaequa vel media pars and signifieth the half of any thing Littleton folio 125. Monks Cloths anno 20 Hen. 6. cap. 20. Moniers monetarii Regist orig fol. 262. b. anno 1 Edw. 6. ca. 15. be ministers of the Mint which make and coyn the Kings mony It appeareth by some Antiquity which I have seen that in antient times our Kings of England had Mints in most of the Countries of this Realm And in the Tractate of the Exchequer written by Ockham I find that whereas Sheriffs ordinarily were tyed to pay into the Exchequer the Kings Sterling for such debts as they were to answer they of Northumberland and Cumberland were at liberty to pay in any sort of mony so it were silver And the reason is there given because those two Shires monetarios de antiqua institutione non habent Monstrance de droyt is as much as to say as shewing of his right It signifieth in our Common law a sute in Chancery to be restored to Lands or Tenements that indeed be mine in right though they were by some office found to be in possession of another lately dead See Stawnf praerog cap. 21. at large and Broke titulo Petition Of this also read Sir Edward Cokes Reports lib. 4. fo 54. b. c. The Wardens of the Sadlers Case Monstraverunt is a writ that lieth for tenents that hold freely by Charter in antient Demean being destreined for the payment of any toll or imposition contrary to their liberty which they do or should enjoy which se in Fitzh na br f. 14. Moriam is all one in signification with the French morion i. cassis a head-piece which word the Frenchman borroweth from the Italian morione anno 4 5 Phil. Mar. cap. 2. Morling aliâs mortling seemeth to be that wool which is taken from the skin of a dead sheep whether dying of the rot or being killed anno 27 H. 6. c. 2. This is written Morkin an 3 Jac. c. 18. Mort d'ancester See Assise Mortgage mortuum vadium vel mortgagium is compounded of two French words mort id est mors and gage id est pignus merces It signifieth in our Common law a pawn of land or tenement or any thing moveable laid or bound for mony borrowed peremptorily to be the Creditours for ever if the mony be not paid at the day agreed upon And the Creditour holding land or tenement upon this bargain is in the mean time called Tenent in mortgage Of this we read in the grand Customary of Normandy ca. 113. in these words Notandum insuper est quod vadiorum quoddam vivumqu oddam mortuum nuncupatur Mortuum autem dicitur vadium quod se de nihilo redimit acquietat ut terra tradita in vadium pro centum solidis quam cum obligator retrahere voluerit acceptam pecuniam restituet in solidum Vivum autem dicitur vadium quod ex suis proventibus acquiratur ut terra tradita in vadium pro centum solidis usque tres annos quae elapso tertio anno reddenda est obligatori vel tradita in vadium quousque pecunia recepta de ejusdem proventibus fuerit persoluta Glanvile likewise lib. 10. cap. 6. defineth it thus Mortuum vadium dicitur illud cujus fructus vel reditus interim percepti in nullo se acquietant So you see by both these Books that it is called a dead gage because whatsoever profit it yieldeth yet it redeemeth not it self by yielding such profit except the whole sum borrowed be likewise paid at the day See Skene de verb. significat eodem He that layeth this pawn or gage is called the Mortgager and he that taketh it the Mortgagee West parte 2. symb titulo Fines Sect. 145. This if it contain excessive usury is prohibited anno 37 H. 8. c. 9. Morimain manus mortua is compounded of two French words mort i. mors and main i. manus It signifieth in the Common law an alienation of Lands or Tenements to any Corporation Guild or Fratemity and their Successors as Bishops Parsons Vicars c. which may not be done without licence of the King and the Lord of the Manor The reason of the name proceedeth from this as I conceive it because the services and other profits due for such lands as Escheats c. commeth into a dead hand or into such a hand as holdeth them and is not of power to deliver them or any thing for them back again Magna Charta cap. 36. anno 7 Ed. pri commonly called the Statute of Mortmain and anno 18 Edw. 3. statut 3. cap. 3. anno 15 Rich. 2. cap. 5. Polydor. Virgil in the seventeenth Book of his Chronicles maketh mention of this Law and giveth this reason of the name Et legem hanc manum mortuam vocarunt quòdres semel datae collegiis sacerdotum non utique rursus venderentur velut mortuae hoc est usui aliorum mortalium in perpetuum ademptae essent Lex diligenter servatur sic ut nihil possessionum ordini sacerdotali à quoquam detur nisi Regio permissu But the former Statutes be something abridged by anno 39 Elizabeth cap. 5. by which the gift of land c. to Hospitals is permitted without obtaining of Mortmain Hotoman in his Commentaries de verbis feudal verbo Manus mortua hath these words Manus mortua locutio est quae usurpatur de iis quorum possessio ut ita dicam immortalis est quia nunquam haeredem habere desinunt Quâ de causâ res nunquam ad priorem dominum revertitur Nam manus pro possessione dicitur mortua pro immortali Sic municipium dicitur non mori l. An usus fructus 56. D. de usufr ligat quoniam hominibus aliis succrescentibus idem populi corpus videtur l. proponebatur 76. D. de Judiciis Haec Hotomanus and read the rest Amortizatio est in manum mortuam trar slatio Principis jussu Petrus Belluga in speculo principum fol. 76. Jus amortizationis est licentia capiendi ad manum mortuam Idem eodem where you may read a learned Tractate both of the beginning and nature of this Doctrine To the same effect you may read Cass de consuet Burg. pag. 348 387 1183 1185 1201 1225 1285 1218 1274. M. Skene de verbo signif saith that Dimittere terras ad manum mortuam est idem atque dimittere ad multitudinem sive univer sitatem quae nunquam moritur idque per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seu à
Remembrancers of the Exchequer Rememoratores be three Officers or Clerks one called the Kings Remembrancer anno 35 El. cap. 5. The other the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer upon whose charge it seemeth to lye that they put all Justices of that Court as the Lord Treasurer and the rest in remembrance of such things as are to be called on and dealt in for the Princes behoof The third is called the Remembrancer of the first-fruits Of these you may read something anno quinto Rich. 2. stat pri cap. 14. 15. to the effect above specified These anno 37 Ed. 3. cap. 4. be called Clerks of the Remembrance It seemeth that the name of this Officer is borrowed from the Civilians who have their Memorales qui sunt notarii Cancell●riae in regnò subjecti officio Quaestoris Lucas de penna C. lib. 10. tit 12. nu 7. The Kings Remembrancer entreth in his Office all recognisances taken before the Barons for any the Kings Debts for apparences or for observing of Orders He takes all bonds for any of the Kings debts or for appearance or for observing of Orders and maketh Proces upon them for the breach of them He writeth Proces against the Collectors of customs and subsidies and fifteenths for their accounts All informations upon penal Statutes are entred in his Office And all matters upon English-Bills in the Exchequer-chamber are remaining in his Office He maketh the Bills of compositions upon penal Laws taketh the stallments of debts maketh a Record of a Certificate delivered unto him by the Clerk of the Star-chamber of the fines there set and sendeth them to the Pipe He hath delivered unto his Office all manner of indentures fines and other evidences whatsoever that concern the assuring of any lands to the Crown He yearly in crastino animarum readeth in open Court the Statute for the election of Shyreeves and giveth those that chuse them their oath he readeth in open Court the Oath of all the Officers of the Court when they are admitted The Treasurers remembrancer maketh process against all Shyreeves Escheators Receivers and Bayliffs for their accompts He maketh process of Fierifacias and Extent for any debts due to the King either in the Pipe or with the Auditors He maketh process for all such Revenew as is due to the King by reason of his Tenures He maketh Record whereby it appeareth whether Shyreeves and other accountants pay their profers due at Easter and Michaelmas He maketh another Record whereby it appeareth whether Shyreeves and other Accountants keep their daies of prefixion All Extreats of Fines Issues and Amerciaments set in any Courts of Westminster or at the Assises or Sessions are certified into his Office and are by him delivered to the Clerk of Extreats to write Proces upon them He hath also brought into his Office all the accompts of Customers Controllers and other accomptants to make thereof an entry of Record The Remembrancer of the first fruits taketh all compositions for first Fruits and Tenths and maketh Process against such as pay not the same Remitter commeth of the French remettre i. restituere reponere and signifieth in our Common law a restitution of one that hath two Titles to Lands or Tenements and is seised of them by his latter Title unto his Title that is more antient in case where the latter is defective Fitzherber● natura brev fol. 149. F. Dyer folio 68. num 22. This in what Case it may be granted to any man see in Brook titulo Remitter and the Terms of Law The Doctor and Student of this matter hath these words If land descend to him that hath right to that Land before he shall be remitted to his better Title if he will Ca. nono fo 19. b. See the new Book of Entries verbo Remitter Render commeth of the French Rendre i. reddere retribuere restituere and signifieth in our Common law the self-same thing For example this word is used in levying of a fine For a Fine is either single by which nothing is granted or rendred back again by the Cognizee to the Cognizour or double which containeth a grant or render back again of some Rent common or other thing out of the Land it self to the Cognisor c. West parte 2. Symbol titulo Fines Sect. 21 30. F. Also there be certain things in a Manor that lie in Prender that is which may be taken by the Lord or his Officer when they chance without any offer made by the Tenant as the Ward of the body of the Heir and of the Land Escheats c. and certain that lye in Render that is must be delivered or answered by the Tenant as Rents Reliefs Heriots and other services Idem codem Sect. 126. C. Also some service consisteth in seisance some in Render Perkins Reservations 696. Rent reditus commeth of the French Rent i. vectigal pensitatio annua and signifieth with us a sum of mony or other consideration issuing yearly out of Land or Tenements Plowden casu Browning fol. 132. b. fol. 138. a. 141. b. There be three sorts of Rents observed by our Common Lawyers that is Rent service Rent charge and Rent seck Rent service is where a man holdeth his Land of his Lord by Fealty and certain Rent or by Fealty Service and certain Rents Littleton lib. 2. cap. 12. fol. 44. or that which a man making a Lease to another for term of years reserveth yearly to be paid him for the same Terms of Law verbo Rents who giveth this Reason thereof because it is in his liberty whether he will distrein or bring an action of Debt A Rent charge is that which a man making over an estate of his Land or Tenements to another by deed indented either in fee or fee tail or lease for term of life reserveth to himself by the said Indenture a sum of Mony yearly to be paid unto him with clause of distress or to him and his heirs See Littleton ubi supra A Rent seck otherwise a dry Rent is that which a man making over an Estate of his Land or Tenement by Deed indented reserveth yearly to be paid him without clause of Distresse mentioned in the Indenture Littleton ubi supra And Terms of the Law verbo Rents See the new Expositor of Law Terms See Plowden casu Browning fol. 132. b. See the differences between a Rent and an Annuity Doctor and Student cap. 30. Dialog primo Reparatione facienda is a writ which lyeth in divers cases whereof one is where three be Tenants in Common or Joynt tenents or pro indiviso of a Mill or house which is fallen into decay and the one being willing to repair it the other two will not In this Case the party willing shall have this writ against the other two Fitz. nat br fol. 127. where read at large the form and many uses of this writ as also in the Regi orig fol. 153. b. Repeal commeth of the French Rappel i. Revocatio and
proferre est testimonium legalium hominum qui contractui inter eos habito interfuerint praesentes producere Fleta lib. 2. cap. 63. § Nullus And secta is used for a witnesse Idem lib. 4. cap. 16. § final Habes tamen sectam unam vel plures c. Secta ad justiciam faciendam is a service due for a mans fee to be persormed being by his fee bound thereunto Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 6. Secta unica tantum facienda propluribus haereditatibus is a Writ that lyeth for that Heir that is distreined by the Lord to more sutes than one in respect of the Land of divers Heirs descended unto him Register original folio 177. a. Sectis non faciendis is a VVrit that lyeth for one in wardship to be delivered of all sutes of Court during his wardship Register origin fol. 173. b. See other use of this writ eodem fol. 174. touching women that for their Dower ought not to perform sure of Court Secunda superoneratione pasturae is a writ that lyeth where measurement of pasture hath been made and he that first surcharged the common doth again furcharge it the measurement notwithstanding Register original fo 157. Old nat br fol. 73. Secundarie secundarius is the name of an Officer next unto the chief Officer as the Secundary of the fine Office the Secundary of the Counter which is as I take it next to the Shyreeve in London in each of the two Counters Secundary of the Office of the privy seal anno 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. Secundaries of the Pipe two Secundary to the remembrancers two which be Officers in the Exchequer Camden pag. 113. Securitatem inveniendi quòd se non divertat ad partes exteras sine licentia Regis is a writ that lyeth for the King against any of his subjects to stay them from going out of his Kingdom The ground whereof is this that every man is bound to serve and defend the Common-wealth as the King shall think meet Fitz. nat br fol. 85. Securitate pacis is a writ that lyeth for one who is threatened death or danger against him that threateneth taken out of the Chancery to the Shyreeve whereof the form and farder use you may see in the Register orig fo 88. b. and Fitz. nat brev fo 79. Se defendendo is a plee for him that is charged with the death of another saying that he was driven unto that which he did in his own defence the other so assaulting him that if he had not done as he did he must have been in peril of his own life Which danger ought to be so great as that it appear inevitable As Stawnford saith in his plees of the Crown lib. 1. cap. 7. And if he do justifie it to be done in his own defence yet is he driven to procure his pardon of course from the Lord Chanceller and forfeiteth his goods to the King As the said Author saith in the same place Seignior Dominus is borrowed of the French seigneur It signifieth in the general signification as much as Lord but particularly it is used for the Lord of the see or of a Mannor even as Dominus or senior among the Feudists is he who granteth a fee or benefit out of the Land to another And the reason is as Hotoman saith because having granted the use and profit of the land to another yet the property i. Dominium he still reteineth in himself See Hotoman in verbis Feudal verbo Dominus Senior Seignior in grosse seemeth to be he that is Lord but of no mannor and therefore can keep no Court. Fitz. nat br fol. 3. b. See Signorie Seignourage anno 9 H. 5. stat 2. cap. 1. seemeth to be a regality or Prerogative of the King whereby he challengeth allowance of gold and silver brought in the Masse to his Exchange for coyn Seignorie Dominium is borrowed of the French seigneury i. ditio dominatus Imperium principatus potentatus It signifieth peculiarly with us a Manor or Lordship Seignorie de soke mans Kitchin fol. 80. Seignorie in grosse seemeth to be the Title of him that is not Lord by means of any Manor but immediately in his own person as Tenure in capite whereby one holdeth of the King as of his Crown is seignorie in grosse because it is held of the King for the time being and not of the King as of any honour manor c. Kitchtn fol. 206. See Seignior Seisin seisina is borrowed of the French seisine i. possessio and so it signifieth in our Common law and to seise is to take possession Primier seisin prima seisina is the first possession See Primier seisin Of the French word seisir is made a Latine seisire used by the Canonists cap. Clericis § Nos igitur non semel de immunitate Ecclesiae num 6. as also the Civilians Guido Pap. singulo 865. Seisire est etiam possessionem tradere Tiraquellas in Tractatu Le mort saisit le vif pag. 53. num 3. Seisin with our Common Lawyers is two fold seisin in fact and seisin in Law Perkins Dower 369.370 Seisin in fact is when a corporal possession is taken seisin in Law is when something is done which the Law accounteth a seisin as an Inrollment Seisin in Law is as much as a right to Lands and Tenements though the Owner be by wrong disseised of them Perkins Tenent per le courtesie 457.478 And it seemeth by Ingham that he who hath had an hours possession quietly taken hath seisin de droit de claim whereof no man may disseise him by his own force or subtilty but must be driven to his action § Bref de novel disseisin Sir Edward Cook lib. 4. calleth it seisin in Law or seisin actual fol. 9. a. The Civilians call the one civilem possessionem the other naturalem Seisiua habenda quia Rex habuit annum diem vastum is a Writ that lyeth for delivety of seisin to the Lord of his Land or Tenements that formerly was couvicted of felony after the King in the right of his Prerogative hath had the year day and waste Reg. orig fol. 165. a. Selion selio is borowed of the French sello i. terra elata inter duos sulcos in Latine Porca in English a Ridge or land It signifieth even so with us also and is of no certain quantity but sometime containeth half an Acre sometime more and sometime less West parte 2. symbol titulo Recovery sect 3. Therefore Crompton in his jurisdictions fol. 221. saith that a selion of Land cannot be in demand because it is a thing uncertain Seneshall senescallus is a French word but borrowed from Germany being as Tilius saith compounded of Scal i. servus aut officialis and Gesnid i. familia we English it a Steward As the high Seneshall or Steward of England pl. cor fo 152. High Seneshall or steward and South Seneshall or Understeward Kitchin fol. 83. is understood for a steward or understeward
contained generally lands or houses yea or offices wherein we have estate for term of life or in fee. And in this signification Kitchin so 41. maketh frank tenement and base estate opposite the one to the other In the same sort doth Britton use it through his whole 27 Chapter as also Bracton doth the Latin libernm tenementum li. pri ca. 5. 6. and many other places Tenentibus in assist non onerandis c. is is a writ that lyeth for him to whom a disseisor hath alienated the Land whereof he disseised another that he be not molested for the dammages awarded if the Disseisour have wherewith to satisfie them himself Reg. orig fol. 214. b. Tenths Decimae it that yearly portion or tribute which all Livings Ecclesiastical do yeeld to the King For though the Bishop of Rome do originally pretend right unto this revenue by example of the High Priest among the lews who had tenths from the Levites Numb cap. 8. Hieronimus in Ezechielem Yet I read in our Chronicles that these were of en granted to the King by the Pope upon divers occasions sometime for one year som time for more until by the Statute an 26 Hen. 8. ca. 3. they were annexed perpetually to the Crown See Disms It signifieth also a task levyed of the temporalty Holinshed H. 2. fol. 111. Tenore indictamenti mittendo is a writ wherehy the Record of an indictment and the processe thereupon is called out of another Court into the Chancery Regist orig fol. 169. a. Tenure Tenura commeth of the Norman Tendure as appeareth by the Grand Custumary cap. 28. where it is defined to this effect Tenure is the manner whereby Tenements are holden of their Lords What may make a Tenure and what not see Perkins Reservations 70. And in that Chapter shall you find the most of those Tenures recited that be now usually ●o England In Scotland I find that there be four manner of Tennres which they call holding of land the first is ura eleemo●yna which is proper to spiritual men paying nothing for it but devota animarnm suffragia the second they call Few or Few ferm which holdeth of the King Church Barons or others paying a certain duty called Feuda firma The chird is a hold in Blench as they term it by payment of a peny rose pair of guilt Spurs or some such like thing if it be asked in name of Blench id est nomine albae firmae The fourth is by service of ward and releeve where the Heir being minor is in regad or custody of his Lord together with his lands c. And land holden in this fourth maner is called there feudum de Hauberk or Haubert or seudum militare or feudum Hauberticum or fendum loricatum because it is given upon condition that the vassal possessor thereof shall come to the Host with a Jack or Haubert which is a coat of Mail. M. Skene de verb. signif verbo Haubert Tenure in grosse is the Tenure in Capite For the Crown is called a Seignory in grosse because it consisteth of a corporation of and by it self not tyed to any honor or manor See Cromptons Iurisdict f. 206. See the new book of Entries verbo Tenure Term Termiuus fignifieth with us commonly the bounds and limitation of time as a lease for term of life or term of years Bracton lib. 2. cap. 6. nu 4. But most notoriously it is used for that time wherein the Tribunals or places of Iudgement are open to all that list to complain of wrong or to seek their right by course of Law or action The rest of the year is called vacation Of these Terms there be 4 in every year during which matters of Iustice for the most part are dispatched And this Sir Thomas Smith lib. 3. de Rep. Ang. cap. 2. reckoneth as miraculous that in lesse time than the third part of the year three Tribunals all in one City should rectifie the wrongs of so large and populous a Nation as England is Of these Terms one is called Hilarie Term which beginneth the 23 of Ianuary or if that be Sunday the next day following and endeth the 21 of February Another is called Easter term which beginneth 18 dayes after Easter and endeth the Monday next after Ascension day The third is Trinity Term beginning the Friday next after Trinity Sunday and ending the Wednesday fort night after The fourth is Michaelmas Term beginning the 9th of October or if that be Sunday the next day after and ending the 18 of November Termor Tenens ex termino is he that holdeth for term of years or life Kitchin fol. 151. Littleton fol. 100. Tenra extendendae is a writ directed to the Escheator c willing him to inquire and find the true yearly value of any land c. by the oath of twelve men and to certifie the extent into the Chancery c. Register orig fol 293. b. Terris bonts caiallis rehabendis post purgationem is a writ that lye th for a Clerk to recover his lands goods or chatels formerly soised on after he hath cleared himself of that seiony upon suspition whereof he was formerly convicted and delivered to his Ordinary to be purged Register orig fol. 68. b. Terris liberandis is a writ that lyeth for a man convicted by attaint to bring the Record and Processe before the King and to take a fine for his imprisonment and to deliver him his lands and tenements again and to release him of the Scrip and Waste Regist. orig fol. 232. a. It is also a writ for delivery of lands to the heir after homage and relief performed eodem fol. 293. b. or upon security taken that he shall perform them eodem fol. 313. b. Terris catallis tentis ulera debitum levatum is a writ Iudicial for the restoring of lands or goods to a debtour that is distreined above the quantity of the debt Register Iudicial fol. 38. b. Terretenent terratenens is he which hath the natural and actual possesssion of the land which we otherwise call the occupation anno 39 Eliz. ca. 7. For example a Lord of a manour hath a Free-holder who letteth out his free land to another to be occupied this Occupier is called the Terretenent Wist parte 2. symb tit Fines Sect. 137. Cromptons Inrisd fol. 194. Britton cap. 29. Porkins feoffments 231. And Petrus Belluga in sprenlo Principum Repub. 46. versic Restut vidert nu 9. useth this word Terrae tenentee in the same signification See Land tenents Yet I have heard some lear●ed in the Law say that the Terienent is the tenent in free or copyhold according to the custom of the Manor and opposite to tenent for term of years Quaere Ters is a certain measure of liquid things as wine oyl c. containing the 6th part of a tun an 32. H. 8. c. 14. or the 3d. part of a Pipe Testament Testamentum See Will. Testatum is a writ that seemeth especially to lye
which doctrine Fitzherbert in his Natura brevium fol. 112. E. extendeth thus far that if any of the goods be cast upon the dry Land by any in the ship it is no wreck subject to the Prerogative for by this some of the Ship are presumed to come to land and still to have a custody of the goods Cook ubi supra This in the Grand Customary of Normanny cap. 17. is called varech and latined veriscum where it appeareth that the like law to ours was in Normandy almost in all points But some sorts of their precious Merchandise do by their law appertain to the Duke by his Prerogative though a just challenge of the goods be made within the year and day The Emperors of Rome made no advantage of this pitifull event as appeareth titulo De Naufragiis 11. Cod. And it appeareth that Richard the first had some remorse of poor sea-mens miseries in this case For he quietum clam evit wreck suis subditis Rog. Hoveden parte poster suerum ann●l fol. 386. Of this M. Skene de verb. siguif speaketh to this effect wreck signifieth a power liberty and prerogative appertaining to the King or to any person to whom the same is granted by him by feoffment or any other disposition to take up and gain such goods as are ship-broken or fall to him by escheat of the sea Writ breve is that with our Common Lawyers in Sir Thomas Smiths judgement lib. 2. de Repub. Anglorum ca. 9. which the Civilians call Actionem sive formulam But I am rather of his judgement that hath added the marginal note unto him saying that Actio is the parties whole sute and that Breve is the Kings precept whereby any thing is commanded to be done touching the sute or action as the Defendant or Tenent to be summoned a distresse to be taken a disseisin to be redressed c. And these writs are diversly divided in divers respects Some in respect of their order or manner of granting are termed original and some judicial Original writs be those that are sent out for the summoning of the Defendant in a personal or Tenent in a real action or other like purpose before the sute beginneth or to begin the sute thereby Those be judicial that be sent out by order of the Court where the cause dependeth upon occasion growing after sute begun Old nat brev fol. 51. And Iudicial is thus by one sign known from the Original because the Teste beareth the name of the Chief Iustice of that Court whence it commeth where the Original beareth in the Teste the name of the Prince Then according to the nature of the action they be personal or real and real be either touching the possession called writs of Entry or the property called writs of right Fitz. nat br sparsim per totum Some writs be at the sute of a party some of office Old nat br fol. 147. Some ordinary some of privilege A writ of privilege is that which a privileged person bringeth to the Court for his exemption by reason of some privilege See Procedendo See the new book of Entries verbo Privilegt See Brief Writ of Rebellton See Commission of Rebellion Writer of the Tallies Scriptor talliarum is an Officer in the Exchequer being Clerk to the Auditor of the Receipt who writeth upon the Tallies the whole letfers of the Tellers bills Y. YA YArd lands Virgata terrae is a quantity of land called by this name of the Saxon Gyrdlander but not so certain a quantity as that it is all one in all places For in some Countries it containeth 20 acres in some 24. in some 30. as M. Lamberd saith in his explication of Saxon words verbo virgata terrae This Yard land Bracton calleth virgatam terrae lib. 2. cap. 10. et 37. but he expresseth no certainty what it containeth YE Year and day annus et dies is a time thought in construction of our Common law fit in many cases to determine a right in one and to work an usucapion or prescrition in another As in a case of an estray if the owner Proclamations being made chalenge it not within that time it is forfeit So is the year and day given in case of appeal in case of descent after entry or claim of no claim upon a fine or writ of right at the Common law so of a villein remaining in antient demean of the death of a man sore bruised or wounded of Protections Essoins in respect of the Kings service of a wreck and divers other cases Coke vol. 6. fol. 107. b. And that touching the death of a man seemeth an imitation of the Civil Law Nam si mortiferè fuerit vulneratus et posteà post longum intervallum mortuus fit inde annum numerabimus secundum Iulianum l. ait lex n. ad legem Aqui● Year day and wasto annus dies et vastum is a part of the Kings Prerogative whereby he challengeth the profits of their lands and tenements for a year and a day that are attainted of petit treason or felony whosoever be Lord of the Manor whereunto the lands or tenements do belong and not only so but in the end wasteth the tenement destroyeth the houses rooteth up the woods gardens pasture and ploweth up meadows except the Lord of the fee agree with him for the redemption of such waste afterward restoring it to the Lord of the fee wherof you may read at large Siawnf prarog cap. 16. fol. 44. et seq YO Yoman seemeth to be one word made by contraction of two Danish words young men which I gather out of Canutus Charter of the Forest set out out by M. Manwood parte prim fol. prim num 2. in these words Sunt sub quolibet horum quatuor ex mediocribus hominibus quos Angli Legespend ●uncupant Dani vero yong men vecaut locati qui curam et onus tum vi●id●s tum veneris suscipiant These M. Cambden in his Britan. pag. 105. placeth next in order to Gentlemen calling them Iugenuos whose opinion the Statute affirmeth anno 6 R. 2. cap. 4 Whereunto adde the Statute anno 20. ejusdem Regis cap. 2. Sir Thomas Smith in his Repub. Anglor lib. prim cap. 23. calleth him a Yoman whom our Laws call legalem hominem which as he saith is in English a ●ee man born that may dispend of his own free land in yearly revenue to the sum of 40 shillings sterling Of these he writeth a good large discourse touching their estate and use in this Common wealth The former etymologie of the name he liketh not making question whether it come of the Dutch Yonger yea or not which in the Low-countries signifieth a mean Gentleman or a gay fellow but he that hath added the marginal notes to that book seemeth to draw it from the Saxons Geman which signifieth a maried man M. Verstegan in his restitution of decayed intelligence cap. 10. writeth that Gemen among the antient Teutonicks and Germein among the modern signifieth as much as common and that the first Letter G. is in this word as in many others turned into Y. and so writeth Yemen and that therefore Yemen or Yeomen signifieth so much as Commoner Yoman signifieth an Officer in the Kings house which is in the middle place between the Sergeant and the Groom as Yoman of the Chaundry and Yoman of the Scullery an 33 Hen. 8. cap. 12. Yoman of the Crown anno 3 Ed. 4. cap. 5. anno 22 ejusdem cap. 1. anno 4 H. 7. cap. 7. This word Yongmen is used for Yomen in the Statute anno 33 H. 8. cap. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FINIS
until he content the King for his fine Coke lib. 3. fol. 12. a. Capias utlagatum is a word of execution or after judgement which lyeth against him that is outlawed upon any sure by the which the Sheriff upon the receipt thereof apprehendeth the party outlawed for not appearing upon the exigend and keepeth him in safe custodie until the day of return assigned in the writ and then presenteth him unto the Court there farther to be ordered for his contempt Capias utlagatum inquir as de bonis catallis is a writ all one with the former but that it it giveth a farther power to the Shyreeve over and beside the apprehension of the body to inquire of his goods and cattels The form of all these writs see in the Old nat br fol. 154. and see the Terms of law verbo Proces Lastly you may find great variety of this kind in the table of the Register judiciall verbo Capias Capias in Wi●hernamium de averiis is a Writ lying for Cattel in Withernam Register orig f. 82. 83. see Withernam Capias in Withernamium de bemine is a writ that lieth for a servant in Withernam Register onig f. 79. 80. see Withernam Capias conductos ad proficiscendum is a writ that lieth for the taking up of such as having received prest money to serve the King slink away and come not in at their time assigned Register orig fo 191. Captain aliâs capitayne capitaneus commeth of the French capitaine and signifieth with us him that leadeth or hath charge of a company of Souldiers and is either generall as he that hath the governance of the whole host or speciall as he that leadeth one only band The word capitanei in other nations signifieth more generally those that are in Latine called principes or proceres because as Hotteman saith in verbis feudalibus tanquam caput reliquo corpori sic hii reliquis civibus praesunt He divideth them into two sorts and to use his words alii sunt capitanei regni quo verbo Duces Comites Marchiones intelliguntur l. 1. feud tit 1. § 1. ti 7. Alii impropriè qui urbium praefecti sunt quibus plebs ab liquo superiorum gubernanda committitur qui vallaso●es rigit majores appellantur l. feud tit 1. § 1. tit 7. et tit 17. So we have captaines of Castles here in England and other places as of the Isles of Gersay and Gernsey of the Isle of Wight c. Capite is a tenute which holdeth im● ediately of the King as of his crown be it by Knights service or socage Broke tet tenures 46. 94. Dyer fo 123. nu 38. et fo 363. nu 18. and not as of any Honour Castle or Mannor therefore it is otherwise called a tenure that holdeth meerely of the King because as the crown is a corporation and seigneurie in grosse as the Common lawyers term it so the King that possesseth the crown is in account of law perpetually King and never in his minority nor never dieth no more than populus doth whose authoritie he beareth See Fitzh nat br f. 5. F. Note by the way that a man may hold of the King and not in Capite that is not immediately of the crown in grosse but by means of some Honour Castle or Mannor belonging to the Crown whereof I hold my land Wherof Kitchin saith wel that a man may hold of the King by Knights service and yet not in capite because he holdeth happily of some honour by Knights service which is in the Kings hands as by descent from his ancestors not immediatly of the King as of his crown f. 129. with whom agreeth Fitzh nat or f. 5. K. whose words are to this effect So that it plainly appeareth that lands which be held of the King as of an Honour Castle or Mannor are not held in capite of the King because that a writ of right in that case shall be directed to the Bailiff of the Honour Castle or manor c. but when the lands be held of the King as of his Crown then they be not held of Honour Castle or Mannor but meerly of the King as King and of the Kings Crown as of a seigneury of it self in gross the chief above all other seigneuries c. And this tenure in capite is otherwise called tenure holding of the person of the King Dyer fo 44. nu 37. Author of the new Terms ver Tenure in capite Broke titulo Tenures nu 65. 99. And yet M. Kitchin fo 208. saith that a man may hold of the person of the King and not in capite His example is this If the King purchase a mannor that I. S. holdeth the Tenent shall hold as he held before and shall not render livery or primei● seisin nor hold in capite And if the King grant that mannor to W. N. in fee excepting the services of I. S. then I. S. holdeth of the King as of the person of the King and yet holdeth not in capite but as he held before So that by this Book tenure holding of the person of the King and tenure in capite are two divers tenures To take away this difficulty I think M. Kitchin is in that place to be taken as if he said not in capite by Knights service but by socage following 〈◊〉 usuall speech because most commonly where wee talk of tenure in capite wee mean tenure by knights service Carno Cromptons jurisd fol. 191. is an immunitie Carke seemeth to be a quantity of Wool whereof thirty make a Sarpler anno 27 H. 6. ca. 2. See Sarpler Carrack aliàs Carrick seemeth to be a ship of burthen so called of this Italian carrico or carco a burthen or charge or the Spanish cargo you have this word anno 2 R. 2. ca. 4. anno 1 Ja. ca. 33. Carroway seeds aliàs Carruway seeds semen cari vel carei is a Seed springing of the herb so called of whose operation you may read in Gerards Herball li. 2. cap. 396. It is reckoned among the Merchandise that ought to be garbled anno 1 Jaco ca. 19. Carue of land carrucata terrae commeth of the French charue i. aratrum and with us is a certain quantity of land by the which the Subjects have sometime been taxed whereupon the tribute so levied is called Caruago Caruagium Bracton li. 2. cap. 16. nu 8. It is all one with that which the same Author lib. 2. cap. 17. calleth carucatam terrae For Littleton ca. Teuure in socage saith that haec soca socae idem est quod caruca sc one soke or one plow land Yet one place I find in Stowes annals that maketh me doubt pag. 271. where he hath these words The same time King Henry took caruage that is to say two marks of silver of every Knights fee toward the marriage of his sister Izabell to the Emperour where caruage cannot be taken for a Plow land
false and hath this end to draw the triall of the cause from the Jury to the Judges Of this see twò apt examples in the Authour of the new Terms verbo Colour who also referreth you to the Doctor and Student fol. 158. c. See Brook tit Colour in Assise trespas c. fol. 104. Collusion collusio is in our Common law a deceitfull agreement or compact between two or more for the one party to bring an action against the other to some evill purpose as to defraud a third of his right c. See the new Terms and Brook tit Collusion See also one Case of Collusion in the Register orig fol. 179 a. Combat duellum is a French word signifying as much as certamen decertatio dimicatio discrimen praelium pugna but in our Common law it is taken for a formall tryall of a doubtfull cause or quarrell by the Sword or Bastons of two Champions Of this you may read at large both in divers Civilians as Paris de Puteo de re militari duello Alciat de Duello Hottoman disputatio feudalium cap. 42. and others As also in our Common Lawiers of England namely Glandvile l. 14. cap. 1. Bracton l. 3. tract 2. cap. 3. Britton cap. 22. Horns Myrrhor of Justices l. 3. cap. des exceptions in fine proxime and c. Juramentum duelli Dyer fo 301. nu 41. 42. That this also was antiently the Law of the Lombards before they invaded Italy which was about the year of our Lord 571 appeareth by Sigonius in his History de regno Italiae l. 2. de Aricaldo rege who there reporteth that the said king having put away his wife Gundeberga upon a surmise of Adulterie with Tato Duke of Etruria at the private suggestion of Adalulphus a great man among the Lombards being charged by Clotharius the King of France his Ambassadour of whose blood shee wa●that he had done her wrong he answered that he had done her no wrong Wherupon Ansoaldus one of the Ambassadour replyed That they would easily beleeve him if he would suffer the truth to be tryed by combat between some one of the Quenes friends and her accuser according to the custome of the Lombards And the king yielding unto this Adulphus was vanquished by one Pitto otherwise called Charles set forth for the Queenes Champion and shee restored to her former place and honour Comin seed aliàs Cumin seed Semen cumini is a seed brought forth by an Herb so called which you may see described in Gerards Herball lib. 2. cap. 416. this is placed among the garbleable drugs anno 1. Jacob. cap. 19. Commitatu commisso is a writ or a Commission whereby the Sheriff is authorized to take upon him the sway of the Countie Reg. orig fol. 295. a. b. and Cokes Reports l. 3. fol. 72. a. Comitatu castro commisso is a writ whereby the charge of a County together with the keeping of a Castle is committed to the Sheriff Reg. orig fol. 295. a. Commandrie praeceptoria was by some mens opinion a Manor or chief messuage with which lands or tenements were occupied belonging to the Priorie of S. Johns in Hierusalem in England and he which had the Government of any such Manor or house was called the Commander who had nothing to dispose of it but to the use of the Priory taking only his sustenance thence according to his degree and was usually a brother of the same Priorie Author of the new Terms of law verbo Commandrie By some other Books it appeareth that the chief Prior of S. Johns was a commander of a Nunnerie and constituted the Prioress of the said Nunnery who was under his obedience and removeable at his will notwithstanding that she had covent comon seal and had her possessions severall and was wont to lease the land for Term of years Fulbecks Paralels fol. 2. a. Of these commandries also Petrus Gregorius lib. de beneficiis cap. 11. num 11. hath these words Praeceptoriae dictae commendae satrorum militum veluti ordinis hospitalis Sancti Johannis Hierosolymitani beneficia quidem secundum quid ecclesiastica dicuntur à Barbatia ad Clement causam col 51. de Electione Tamen non prop iè dicuntur ex genere communium beneficiorum eo quòd personae conferentes quibus conferuntur non sunt laicae vel ecclesiasticae sed tertii ordinis De his benefici●s fit mentio cap. exhibita de privilegiis in extravag com in cap. Dudum de decimis These in many places of our Realm are tearmed by the name of Temples because they sometime belonged to the Templers Of these you read anno 26 H. 8. cap. 2. anno 32 ejusd cap. 24 And of these the said Gregorius Tolosanus l. 15 sui syntagmatis cap. 34. hath these words Monuimus superiori capite crescente numero peregrinorum juxta templum Hierosolymitanum Xendochium edificatum tit Divi Johannis quo exciperentur peregrini quos coenobia caepere non possent Hujus ergo ministerio quoque viri p●i nobiles se devoverunt qui peregrinos tutarentur â latronum seu Agarenorum incursu defen dere nt Horum professio est votum solenne paupertatis abdicationis propriorum castuatis et obedientiae Proinde propter primum votum nihil proprii habent vel habere debent sed accipiunt annonam quàm diu vivunt vel praeceptorias quas vocant Commandries administrant quàm diu eas possident et optione mutant vel en magistri licentia permutant reddituri morientes quae apud eos reperientur societati Of these Corasius in his para phrase ad sacerd nat part 1. ca. 3. saith thus Praeceptoriae Rhodienses cum non nisi fratribus Hierosolymitanis atque ita personis ecclesiasticis confer antur beneficiis ecclesiasticis annumer ari merit ò debent Commandement praeceptum is used diversly in the Common law sometime for the commandement of the King when upon his meer motion and from his own mouth he casteth any man into prison Stawnf pl. Coron fol. 72. or of the Justices And this commandement of the Justices is either absolute or ordinary Absolute as when upon their own authority in their wisdome and descretion they commit a man to prison for a punishment ordinary is when they commit one rather for safe custody than punishment And ● man committed upon an ordinary commandement is replevisable Pl. cor fol. 73. Commandement is again used for the offence of him that willeth another man to transgresse the law or to do any such thing as is contrary to the law as Murther Theft or such like Bract. l. 3. tract 2. ca. 19. And this the Civilians call mandatum Angelus de maleficiis Commen communiae commeth from the French cummun i. quod ad omnes pertinet and signifieth in our Common law that soyl or water whereof the use is common to this or that town or Lordship as Commen of pasture communia pasturae Bract. lib. 4. ca. 19.
Sacramentales à Sacramento id est juramento diceb antur ii qui quamvis rei de qua ambigebatur testes non fuissent tamen ex ejus cujus res agebatur animi sententia in eadem quae ille verba jurabant illius videlicet probitate innocentia confisi Nam tuum demum adhibebantur cum testes nulli extarent See the rest The formal words used by him that maketh his Law are commonly these Hear O ye Justices that I do not owe this sum of mony demanded neither all nor any part thereof in manner and form declared so help me God and the contents of this Book To make services or custom is nothing else but to perform them Old nat brev folio 14. To make Oath is to take Oath Maletent in the Statute called the confirmation of the liberties of c. anno 29 E. 1. cap. 7. is interpreted to be a toll of forty shillings for every sack of Wool Srow in his Annals calleth it a Maletot pag. 461. See also the Statute de Tallagio non concedendo an 35 ejusdem stat Malin see Marle Manbote signifieth a pecuniary compensation for killing of a man Lambert in his Exposition of Saxon words verbo Aestimatis Of which read Roger Hoveden also in parte poster suorum annal f. 344. a b. Mandamus is a writ that lyeth after the year and day whereas in the mean time the writ called Diem clausit extremum hath not been sent out to the Escheatour for the same purpose for the which it should formerly have been sent forth Fitzh nat brev fol. 253. B. See Diem clausit extremum Mandamus is also a charge to the Sheriff to take into the Kings hands all the lands and tenements of the Kings widow that against her oath formerly given marieth without the Kings consent Register fol. 295. b. See widow Mandatum is a commandment judicial of the King or his Justices to have any thing done for the dispatch of Justice where of you shall see diversity in the Table of the Register judicial verbo Mandatum Manor Manerium see meth to come of the French manoir i. domicilium habitatio M. Skene de verb. signif verb. Manerium saith it is called mane ium quasi manurium because it is laboured with handy work by the Lord himself It signifieth in our Common law a rule or government which a man hath over such as hold Land within his fee. Touching the original of these Manors it seemeth that in the beginning there was a certain compasse or circuit of ground granted by the King unto some man of worth as a Baron or such like for him and his Heirs to dwell upon and to exercise some Jurisdiction more or lesse within that compass as he thought good to grant Performing him such services and paying such yearly rent for the same as he by his grant required and that afterward this great man parcelled his Land to other meaner men injoining them again such services and rents as he thought good and by that means as he became Tenent to the King so the inferiours became Tenents unto him See Perkins Reservations 670. and Andrew Horns Book intituled the Mirrour of Justices l. 1. cap. du Roy Alfred See the definition of a Manor Fulb. fol. 18. And this course of benefiting or rewarding their Nobles for good service have our Kings borrowed from the Emperors of Rome or the Lombard Kings after they had setled themselves in Italy as may well appear by Antonius Contius in methodo feudorum c. 1. de origin libris Feudorum And I find that according to this our custom all lands holden in fee throughout France are divided into Fiefz and arrierifiefz where of the former are such as are imediatly granted by the K. the second such as the Kings feudataries do again grant to others Gregorti Syntagm lib. 6. ca. 5. nu 3. But the inconstancie of mans estate and the mutability of time hath brought to passe that those great men or their posterity have alienated these Mansions and lands so given them by their Prince and others that had none have by their wealth purchased many of them And again that many for capital offences have forfeited them to the King and that thereby they still remain in the Crown or are bestowed again upon others so that at these dayes many be in the hands of mean men such as by their skill in Law or Physick by Merchandize Grazing or such other good husbandry have gathered wealth and inabled themselves to purchase them of those that by descent received them from their ancestors in greater abundance than wit to keep them But whosoever possesseth these Maners the liberty belonging unto them is real and predial and therefore remaineth still though the owners be changed In these dayes a Maner rather signifieth the Jurisdiction and royaltie incorporeal than the land or site For a man may have a Maner in grosse as the law termeth it that is the right and interest of a Court Baron with the perquisites thereunto belonging and another or others have every foot of the land thereunto belonging Kitchin fol. 4. Broke hoc titulo per totum Bracton lib. 4. ca. 31. num 3. divideth manerium in capitale non capitale See Bracton lib. 5. tractat 5. ca. 28. nu pri See Fee The new ex● ositor of Law terms faith that Maner is a thing compounded of divers things as of a house land earable pasture meadow wood rent advonzen Court Baron and such like And this ought to be by long continuance of time to the contrary whereof mans memory cannot discern c. Mansio Mansio as Bracton defineth it lib. 5. cap. 28. nu pri is a dwelling consisting of one or more houses without any neighbour And yet he granteth forthwith that Mansio Mansioni pessit esse vicinata I find it most commonly used for the Lords chief dwelling house within his fee whether it have neighbours adjoyning or not otherwise called the capital mesuage Bracton lib. 2. ca. 26. or the chief Maner place Mansio amongst the antient Romans was a place appointed for the lodging of the Prince or Souldiers in their journey furnished with convenient entertainment by the neighbours adjoyning And in this sense we read primam mansionem for the first nights lodging and so in order It is probable that this word Mansion doth in some construction signifie so much land as Beda calleth Familiam in his Ecclesiastial History For Master Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verb. Hida terrae saith that that which he calleth familiam others ●ince call Manentem vel mansam Mansus and Mansum I read of in the Feudists which as Hotoman saith in verbis feudalibus est neque domus neque area neque hortus sed ager certi modi ac mensurae And again in Commentariis Feudorum lib. p. tit 4. vers de Manso Agri deserti et inculti certa mensura dabantur cultoribus quasi in
Mese See Mease Measn med us seemeth to come from the French maisnè i. minor natu it signifieth in our Common law him that is Lord of a manour and thereby hath Tenents holding of him yet holding himself of a Superiour Lord. And therefore it seemeth not absurdly to be drawn from the French mainsnè because the Lordship is created after the higher whereof he holdeth Mesn also signifieth a writ which lyeth where there is Lord mesn and Tenent the Tenent holding of the mesn by the same services whereby the mesn holdeth of the Lord and the Tenent of the mesn is distrained by the superiour Lord for that his service or rent which is due to the Mesn Fitzherbert nat brev fol. 135. See Mesnaltie Mesnaltie medietas cometh of Mesn and signifieth nothing but the right of the Mesntas the Mesnaltie is extinct Old nat br fol. 44. if the Mesnaltie descend of the Tenent Kitchin fol. 147. For farther understanding whereof take these words out of the Custumary of Norm Medietate tenentur feuda quando aliqua persona intervenerit inter Donimum tenentes Et hoc modo tenent omnes postnati mediante ante nato Messenger of the Exchequer is an officer there of which sort there be four in that Court that be Pursuivants attending the lord Treasurer to carry his Letters and Precepts See Pursuivant Mesuage mesuagium is a dwelling house West parte 2. symb titulo Fines Sect. 26. But by the name of a mesuage may passe also a Curtilage a Garden an Orchard a Dove-house a Shop a Mill as parcel of an house as he himself confirmeth out of Bracton lib. 5. cap. 28. Sect. prim and Plowden fol. 199. 170 171. and of himself he avoncheth the like of a Cottage a Tost a Chamber a Celler c. yet may they be demanded by their single names Mesuagium in Scotland signifieth the principal dwelling place or house within a Baronie which in our land is called a Manor house Skene de verb. signific verbo Mesuagium where he citeth Valentine Leigh that in his Book of Survey he affirmeth Mesuagium to be the tenement or land earable and the dwelling house or place or Court Hall thereof to be called Site in Latin called Situs MI Mile miliare is a quantity of a thousand paces otherwise described to contain eight Furlongs and every furlong to contain Forty lugs or poles and every lug or pole to contain 16. foot and a half anno 35 Eliz. cap. 6. Mildervix anno 1 Jacob. cap. 24. Mindbruch is hunting of honour and worship Saxon in his description of England ca. 71. Miniver See Furre Minoverie anno 7 R. 2. ca. 4. seemeth to be compounded of two French words main i. manus and ouvrer i. operari and to signifie some trespasse or offence committed by a mans handie-work in the Forest as an engine to catch Deer Briton useth the verb meinoverer for to occupie and manure land cap. 40. and cap. 62. main-ovre for handie-work It is not unlike that our English manure is abbreviated of the French Mint cometh of the German word meunk i. pecunia moneta and it signifieth with us the place where the Kings Coin is formed be it Gold or Silver which is at this present and long hath been the Tower of London though it appear by divers Stories and other Antiquities that in antient times the Mint hath been also at Caleis an 21 R. 2. cap. 16. an 9 H. 5. stat 5. cap. 5. The Officers belonging to the Mint have not been alwayes alike At this present they seem to be these The Warden who is the chief of the rest and is by his office to receive the Silver of the Goldsmiths and to pay them for it and to oversee all the rest belonging to this function His fee is an hundred pounds per annum The Master-worker who receiveth the Silver from the Warden causeth it to be melted and delivereth it to the moniers and taketh it from them again when it is made His allowance is not any set fee but according to the pound weight The third is the Controller who is to fee that the money be made to the just assise to over-see the officers and controll them if the money be not as it ought to be his fee is one hundred markes per annum Then is the Master of Assay who weigheth the Silver and seeth whether it be according to standard his yeerly fee is also an hundred markes Then is the Auditor to take the accompts and make them up Auditor-like Then is the Surveyor of the melting who is to see the Silver cast out and not to be altered after it is delivered to the Melter which is after the Assay master hath made trial of it Then is the Clerk of the Irons who seeth that the Irons be clean and fit to work with Then the Graver who graveth the stamps for the moneys Then the Smiters of Irons who after they be graven smiteth them upon the money Then the Melters that melt the Bullion before it come to the coyning Then the Blanchers who do aneal boyl and cleanse the money The Porter who keepeth the gate of the mint The Provost of the mint who is to provide for all the moniers and to over-see them Lastly the moniers who are some to sheer the money some to forge it some to beat it abroad some to round it some to stamp or coin it Their wages is not by the day or year but uncertain according to the weight of the money icoyned by them Other officers that have been n former time are said now to be out of use Misaventure or misadventure cometh neer the French mesadventure i. infortunium In out Common law it hath an especial signification for the killing of a man partly by negligence and partly by chance As if one thinking no harm dissolutely throweth a stone wherewith he killeth another or shooreth an arrow c. For in this case he committeth not felony but only loseth his goods and hath pardon of course for his life Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. ca. 8. Britton ca. 7. distinguisheth between Aventure and misaventure Aventure he maketh to be meere chance as if a man being upon or neer the water be taken with some sodain sicknesse and so fall in and is drowned or into the fire and be burned to death Misaventure hee maketh where a man cometh to his death by some outward violence as the fall of a tree or of a gate the running of a cart-wheel the stroke of a horse or such like So that misaventure in Stawnfords opinion is construed somewhat more largely than Britton understandeth it West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditement sect 48. maketh homicide casual to be meerly casual or mixt Homicide by meer chance he defineth sect 49. to be when a man is slain by meer fortune a gainst the mind of the killer as if one hewing the Axe flieth oft the haft and killeth a man And this is all
fol 173. Super praerogativa Regis cap. 3. is a writ lying against the Kings widow for marying without his license Fitzherbert nat brev fol. 174. Supplicavit is a writ issuing out of the Chancery for taking the surety of peace against a man It is directed to the Iustices of peace of the County and the Sheriff and is grounded upon the Statue anno pri Edw. 3. cap. 16. which ordaineth that certain persons in Chancery shall be assigned to take care of the peace See Fitzh nat bre fol. 80. This writ was of old called Breve de minis as Master Lamberd in his Eirenarcha noteth out of the Regist orig fol. 88. Sur cui in vita is a writ that lyeth for the heir of that woman whose fiusband having alienated her Land in fee she bringeth not the writ Cui in vita for the recovery of her own Land for in this case her heir may take this writ against the Tenent after her decease Fitzherbert natura brev folio 193. B. Surgeon commeth of the French Chirurgeon i. Chirurgus vulnerarius signifying him that dealeth in the mechanical part of Physick and the outward cures performed with the hand The French word is compounded of two Greek words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. manus and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. opus And therefore are they not allowed to minister inward medicine See Statute 32 Hen. 8. cap. 4. and Master Powltons new Abridgement titulo Surgeons Surcharger of the Forest is he that doth common with more Beasts in the Forest than he hath right to common withall Manwood parte 2. of his Forest Laws cap. 14. nu 7. Surplusage surplusagium commeth of the French surplus i. corollarium additamentum It signifieth in the Common law a superfluity or addition more than needeth which sometime is a cause that a Writ abateth Brook titulo Nugation and Supersluity fol. 100 Plowdens casu Dives contra Maningham fol. 63. b. It is sometime also applyed to matter of account and signifieth a greater disbursement than the charge of the Accomptant amounteth unto Surrcjoynder is thus defined by West parte 2. symb titulo Supplications sect 57. A Surrejoynder is a second defence of the Plaintiff action opposite to the Defendants Rejoynder And therefore as he saith Hotoman calleth it Triplicationem quae est secunda actoris defensio contra Rei duplicationem opposita Not Hotoman only calleth this triplicationem but the Emperor himsel De Replicationibus libro 4. Institut titulo 14. Surrender sursum redditio is an Instrument testifying with apt words that the particular Tenent of Lands or Tenements for life or years doth sufficiently consent and agree that he which hath the next or immediate Remainder or Reversion thereof shall also have the particular estate of the same in possession and that he yeeldeth and giveth up the same unto him For every surrender ought forhwith to give a possession of the things surrendred West parte 1. lib. 2. Sect. 503. where you may see divers presidents But there may be a surrender without writing And therefore there is said to be a surrender in deed and a su●render in Law A surrender in deed is that which is really and sensibly performed Surrender in Law is in intendment of Law by way of consequent and not actual Perkins Surrender fol. 606. seq as if a man have a lease of a farm and during the term he accept of a new lease this act is in Law a surrender of the former Coke vol. 6. fol. 11. b. Sursise supersisae anno 32 H. 8. cap. 48. seemeth to be an especial name used in the Castle of Daver for such penalties and forfeitures as are laid upon those that pay not their duties or rent for Castleward at their dayes an 32 H. 8. cap. 48. Bracton hath it in a general signification lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 1. nu 8. and Fleta lib. 6. c. 3. in prin Surveiour supervisor is compounded of two French words sur i. super and veior i. cernere intueri despicere prospicere videre It signifieth in our Common law one that hath the overseeing or care of some great personages lands or works As the Surveiour general of the Kings mannors Cromptons Jurisd fol. 106. And in this signification it is taken anno 33 H. 8. cap. 39. where there is a Court of Surveyours crected And the Surveyour of the Wards and Liveries West parte 2. symbologr titulo Chancerie Sect. 136. which Officer is erected anno 33 H. 8. cap. 22. who is the second Officer by his place in the Court of Wards and Liveries assigned and appointed by the King His Office seemeth especially to consist in the true examination of the Lands belonging to the Kings wards that the King be not deceived At the entrance into his Office he taketh an Oath ministred unto him by the Master of that Court which see anno 33 H. 8. ca. 39. Surveior of the Kings Exchange anno 9 H. 5. stat 2. cap. 4. was an Officer whose name seemeth in these daies to be changed into some other For I cannot learn that there is any such now Survivour is compounded of two French words sur i. super and viure i. aetatem agere vivere whence also commeth the compound surviure i. superesse It signifieth in our Common law the longer liver of two joynt Tenents See Brook titulo Joynt-tenents fol. 33. or of any two joyned in the right of any thing Suspension suspensio is used for a temporal stop of a mans right and differeth from extinguishment in this that a right of estate suspended reviveth again but extinguished it dyeth for ever Boook titulo Extinguishment and Suspension fol. 314. Suspension is also used in our Common law sometimes as it is used in the Canon law pro minori Excommunicatione As anno 24 H. 8. ca. 12. See Excommunication Suspirall seemeth to be a Spring of water passing under the ground toward a Conduit or Cestern anno 35 H. 8. cap. 10. and to be derived from the Latin suspirare or the French souspirer i. ducere suspiria And indeed the word it self is French for suspiral in that Tongue signifieth spiramentum cavernae the mouth of a Cave or Den or the tunnel of a Chimney Swainmot aliâs Swainmote Swainmotum signifieth a Court touching matters of the Forest kept by the Charter of the Forest thrice in the year anno 3 Hen. octav cap. 18. it is called also a Swainmote what things be inquirable in the same you may read in Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 180. who saith that this Court of Swainmote is as incident to a Forest as the Court of a Pie-powder to a Fair with whom agreeeth M. Manwood parte pri of his Forest-laws pag. 144. The word seemeth to be compounded of Swain and mot or Gemot For Swain as M. Manwood saith ubisupra pag. 111. in the Saxons tongue signifieth a Bookland man which at this day is taken for a Charterer or Freeholder and Gemot as Mr. Lamberd