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A86112 The grounds of the lawes of England; extracted from the fountaines of all other learning: and digested methodically into cases, for the use and benefit of all practicers, and students. With a commixtion of divers scattered grounds concerning the reasonable construction of the law. / By M.H. of the Middle-Temple. Hawke, Michael. 1657 (1657) Wing H1169; Thomason E1569_1; ESTC R209197; ESTC R209200 362,003 535

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Ed. 1. before the Statute de prerogativa regis which was made in the seventeenth year of E. 2. a long time after Britton writ which was but a declaration of the common Law Coke l. 4. f. 126. a. Neither doth this impugne the Maxime of the common Law for in this case he that is non compos mentis in no Plea that he pleadeth shall stultify or disable himselfe but all this shall be found by office by the inquisition and verdict of twelve men at the suite of the King who are not concluded to say the truth and such and office when it is found shall have relation a tempore nativitatis to avoid all mesne Acts made by one who is non compos mentis as Feoffments Gifts Leases Releases c. And after such office found if he be sued in an Action upon an obligation or writing which he hath made the King by his writ so long as the office be in force reciting the office shall command a Supersedeas to the Justices where the suite is commenced but if one of non compos mentis dye before office found after his death no office may be found and in this sense is the rule of Bracton true furiosus stipulari non potest nec aliquid negotium agere quia non intelligit quod agit A mad man cannot promise or contract for any thing or doe any businesse because he understandeth not what he doth but all such Acts may be avoided either by the King or his Heires Coke ibidem f. 126. a. b. With which the civilian rule accords furiosus nullum negotium contrahere potest But in case of non compos mentis the King hath not any interest in the Lunatick as he hath in the Idiot for that the Lunatick may recover the memory which he hath lost and therefore in the case of an Idiot the Law saith Rex habebit custodiom the King shall have the custody but in the case of non compos mentis Rex providebit the King shall provide one to have a care and charge that he that is non compos mentis and his family shall be maintained and that nothing shall be spoiled without taking any thing to his owne use but all to the use of the non compos mentis and his family and that he shall not cut down trees but for necessary House-boot Plow-boot and Cart-boote and to repaire ancient Pales as appeareth in the case of Dyer 25. b. In Trespasse against Homes quare clausuum fregit and did cut down Trees in Padington c. of one John Francis c. the Defendant pleaded that the said John Francis was a Lunatick by which the King seised his Lands by commission c. and by his Letters Patents granted custodiam gubernationem praedict Fr. sine computo reddendo the custody and government of the said Francis without rendring an account c. and he prayed aid of the King and upon demurrer it was denied and the diversity taken between the seiser of the Lands of a Lunatick and an Idiot for in the first case the King nor the Grantee shall not have any profit but they are bound to finde necessaries for him c. by the prerogative of the King but in the other case the King and his Grantee shall have the Lands to his own profit and Fitzberbert held that the Lunatick should have an account when he came to his good memory sed fuit negatum Ibid. f. 26. Pl. 164. But it seemeth by Coke lib. 4. f. 127. that he shal be accountable as a Bayly to him that is not compos mentis or to his Executors or Administrators And the King shal have the protection of an infant as well as of his Land F. n. b. 232. b. But the King shal not have the lands that the Idiot holdeth by copy for that is but an estate at wil by the common law and if the King should have the custody of it it should be a grand prejudice to the Lord of the Mannor and yet notwithstanding an alienation made by the Idiot of the copy-hold after Office found shall be avoided Dyer 302. Coke ibidem f. 126. b. But there are some acts done by a man of non compos mentis that shall not onely bind himselfe but his Heires and Executors also and therefore if he levy a fine or suffer a common recovery or acknowledge a Statute or Recognisance neither his Heire nor Executor shall avoid it for those are matters of record and cannot be avoided by a nude averrement of non sanae memoriae for the inconvenience that thereupon may ensue also such an averrement is against the office and dignity of a Judge for he ought not to take any cognisance of a fine or recognisance of him that is non compos mentis and therefore all acts that he maketh in Court of record shall bind himselfe and all others for ever and shall not have a releife in equity because it is against a ground and principle in Law that no man shall disable himselfe and if the Judge were not compos mentis yet all the Fines Judgements and all other Records which are before him shall be good because they are matters of Records Cbichell Copy-holds Vim vi repellere licet Coke com f. 162. It is lawfull to repell force by force and that by the Law of nature according to the civil rule adversus periculum naturalis ratio permittit se defendere naturall r●●son permitteth to defend himself against danger which is manifest in Beasts which though they have not the substance and reason of the Law yet have they a certaine shadow of it and which is not onely observed in Beasts but also in infants and children But yet as Coke in the same place saith must it be done with this caution moderamine inculpatae tutelae non ad sumendam vindictam sed ad propulsandam in juriam with the moderation of an unblameable defence not thereby to take revenge but to repulse the injury In trespasse of an assault and battery for Beasts taken the Defendant said that to all but the assault he was not guilty and for the assault he said that before the trespasse the Defendant was possessessed of an horse as of his proper Goods and of it was possessed till the Plaintiff took it out of his possession and the Defendant the same day and year requested it of the Plaintiff but the Plaintiff said that he would not deliver it and the Defendant said if he would not deliver the horse to him he would retake it in spite of him and presently took a staff which was lying on the ground and went towards the Plaintiff with it which is the same assault of which the Plaintiff hath conceived his Action Judgment if Action and the opinion of the Judges was that the assault was justifiable Kelloway 22. H. 7. f. 92. If two fight together on a suddaine and before a mortall wound be on either party the one
f. 13. a. If two four or more men being severally seised of land joyne in a recognizance all their lands must be equally extended because they are in an equall condition and case 26 Assi Pl. 37. Now custome hath created inheretances in copy-holds and that the lands shall be descendable the law doth direct the descent according to the Maxims and rules of the common law as incident to every estate descendable Coke l. 4. f. 22. So now uses have the reputation of inheritances descendable the common law shall direct the descent of those and that there shall be possessio fratris of an use as of other inheritances at the common law 5. E. 4. 7. And of lands in Burrough English the use shall descend to the puisne and now also these uses being turned into estates shall be determined in all respects as estates in possession 23. H. 8. Finch Nomot But this difference is put between inheritances in copy hold lands and inheritances in uses in that such c●stomary inheritaners shall not have by the Law any other collaterall quallities which concerne not the descent of inheritance which uses and other inheritances at the common law have as tenancy by courtesie or asse●s to charge the heire in an Action of debt upon an obligation made by his Ancestor for him and his heirs Coke l. 4. f. 22. a. or descent to take away entry as if a copyholder in right of his wife surrender it to the use of another in see and dieth that shall not be any discontinuance to the feme but that she and her heires may enter Ib. f. 23. Neither shall the feme of customary tenant be endowed unless it be by speciall custome Ib. f. 30. b. and generally copy-hold estates shall not have such qualities which estates at the common Law have without speciall custome Ib. f. 23. a. A Simili from the like NVllum simile currit quatuor pedibus Coke l. 7 f. 34 no like thing runs upon four feet and Coke l. 4. f. 18. b. Nullum simile est idem nothing that is like is the same Sir Gilbert Gerrards case upon an action of slander the Plaintiffe counteth that he was seised of a Mannor c. in fee and that he was in communication to demise the said land to R. E. and that the Defendant not ignorant thereof said I have a Lease of the said Mannor for ninety yeares and that by reason of the said words the said R. E. did not accept of the said Lease to the damage c. The Defendant pleaded that t●lis indentura qualis in the Count was alledged came to the hands of the Defendant by finding and it was resolved that that manner of pleading was not a direct answer to the indenture mentioned in the Count for talis indentura is not eadem indentura for no like is the same Eadem simili ratione suadente idem jus statuendum est Reg. I. C. Vbi eadem est ratio ib● est idemjus Coke com f. 191. a. It is one of the Maximes of the common Law cited by Littleton that in all cases where there is the like reason there is the like law for reason is the soule of the law and ratio potest allegari deficiente lege and reason may be alledged where the Law is wanting and then as B●act●n De similibus ad similia eadem ratione p●o●●dendum est From the like unto the like by the same reason we are to proceed and so argumentum a simili i● good in law Et quod in uno similium valet valebit in altero what availeth in one of the likes shall availe in the other as one shall recover in value against the heire upon the Ancestors warranty Lands which the heire tooke in exchange for Lands descended 1● H. 3. rec va 26. for the similitude of the same reason A Mannor is given by Fine A Sc●●e facias lyeth of a tenancy that after escheated to the said Mannor 48. E. 3. 11. If a Mannor descend to an heire within age and after a tenancy escheateth he shall have his age of it in a praecipe of the mannor it shall be assets by descent and he may vouch of this tenancy by reason of a warranty made of the Mannor for the same reason 6. H. 4 1. And for the same reason a Lease for a thousand daies is a Lease for yeares 14. H. 8. 13. And a Lease for years and a release amounteth to a feoffment Brook The Maxime of a Bastard is eigne that the mulier puisne must make an entry upon him or else he gaineth the right yet a continuall claime made by the mulier puisne destroyeth his right for it is all one as if he had entred 14. H. 4. 9. If a man licenceth one to occupy his Land for a yeare this is a Lease for a yeare 5. H. 7. 1. And this is also according to the rule of the civill law ubi est eadem ratio eadem equitas ibi debet esse eadem juris dispositio where there is the same reason and the same equity there ought to be the same disposition of right Coke com f. 10. a. As in Feoffments and grants the word heires maketh an inheritance so doth it in exchanges releases and confirmations which enure by way of enlargement of an estate as also in warranties bargaine and sales by deed indented and enrolled and the like in which the word heires is also necessary because they stand upon the same reason that feoffements and grants doe for where there is the same reason there is the same law Coke com f. 55. 56. If Lessee at will soweth the Land and the Lessor after it is sown before the corne is ripe put him out yet the Lessee shall have the corne and shall have ingresse egresse and regresse to cut and carry away the Corne and if the corne be ripe and ready to cut downe and the Lessor before the Lessee reapeth it enter and putteth out the Lessee without all question the Lessee shall have the corn for by the same reason that he shall have it where he is put out before it is ripe he shall have it where he is put out after it is ripe for where there is the same reason there is the same law A majori minori From the greater and the Lesser IN eo quod plus est semper inest minus Reg. I. C. Omne majus continet in se minus Coke l. 4. f. 46. a. The greater alwaies containeth in it the lesse as whereas by the statute of 3. H. 7. c. 1. It is provided that if Murderers and accessaries or any of them be acquitted upon inditement or the principall is attainted c. the wife or heire to him slaine may have their appeale against the persons so ac●uitted or against the principall so attainted and that the benefit of his Clergy thereof before be not had It was resolved that the word Attaint of murther in that act
and his Heires shall not alien the bond is good yet he may notwithstanding alien if he will forfeit his bond that he himselfe hath made So a bond with condition that the Feoffee shall not take the profits is good so a bond upon condition to enfeoff his wife is good though it be against a maxime in Law Coke com f. 206. And if the husband be bound to pay his wife mony the bond is good Non valet impedimentum quod de jure non sertitur effectuum Reg. I. C. Coke l. 4. 31. a. The let or impediment availeth not which taketh not his effect from the Law as if the Lord be disseised and the disseisor dyeth seised or if the Land be recovered from him by verdict or erronious judgement in these cases untill the Land is recovered or the judgment annihilated by the Law the land is not demisable and yet after the land be re-continued it is grantable againe by copy but if copy-hold lands be forfeited to the Lord or escheate and before any new grant made those lands be extended upon a Statute or Recognisance acknowledged by the Lord or if the wife of the Lord in a writ of dower hath that land assigned to her though those impediments be acts in law yet for that that those interruptions are legall the lands shall never after be granted by copy ibidem The words of an Act of Parliament must be taken in a lawfull and rightfull sense as where by the Statute of Gloucester it is forbidden that the husband shal not alien the lands he hath in right of his wife whereof no fine is levied in the Kings court those words are to be understood where no fine is lawfully levied in the Kings Court and therefore a fine levied by the husband alone is not within the meaning of that Statute for that fine should worke a wrong to the wife but a fine levied by the husband and wife is intended by the Statute and that is lawfull and worketh no wrong for generally the rule is non praestat impedimentum quod de jure non sortitur effectum so the Statute of W. 2. c. 5. Ita quod episcopus ecclesiam conferat is construed ita quod episcopus ecclesiam legitime conferat Coke com f. 361. b. Nullam iniquam in jure praesumendum Coke l. 4. f. 71. No injurious thing is to be presumed in the law for the law so abhorreth injury that it granteth writs of anticipation to prevent them quia timet because a man feareth them and that before any molestation distresse or impleading and there are six sorts of such writs first a man may have his writ of Mesne before he be distrained 2. a Warrantia Cartae before he be impleaded 3. a Monstraverunt before any distresse or vexation 4. an Audita quereta before any execution sued 5. a Curia claudenda before any default of inclosure and is a ne Injuste vexes before any distresse or molestation Coke com f. 100. a. And such an Antipathy there is between the Law and injury that no injury is to be presumed in the law and as Coke l. 10 f. 56. a. Odiosa in honesta non sunt in lege praesumenda in facto quod se habet ad bonum ad malum magis de bono quam de malo praesumendum est odious and dishonest things are not presumed to be in the law and in a deed or action which hath in it both good and evil it ought to be more presumed of the good then of the evill as there in the case of the Chancellor of Oxford it was resolved that covin and fraud shall never be intended or presumed in the law unlesse it be expresly averred and in the case of Tier and Meriell Trin. 10. Jacob. That if no fraude be found by the Jurors the Judges shall not adjudge a Feoffment fraudulent and that though the Jurors have found circumstances and presumptions to intitle the Jurors to find fraude it is but evidence to the Jury and not any matter upon which the Court may adjudge fraude and the office of the Jurors is to adjudge upon the evidence concerning matter of fact and upon it to give their verdict and not to leave matter of evidence to the Court to judge which doth not appeare to them as if A. bring an action of the case against B. upon trover and conversion of Plate and Jewells and the Defendant pleadeth not guilty now it is good evidence to prove the conversion that the Plaintiff requested the Defendant to deliver them and he refused it and by it it shall be presumed that he hath converted them to his use yet notwithstanding that is but evidence and if it be found by a speciall verdict that the Plaintiff requested them of the Defendant and he refused it that is not matter upon which the Court can adjudge any conversion for the conversion ought to alter the action of detinue into a trespasse upon the case which a denier cannot in law make for in every action of Detinue there is alledged in the count a request and a refusall yet it is good evidence and hath allwayes been allowed to prove a conversion that the Plaintiff demanded the goods and the Defendant refused to deliver them Coke l. 10. In the case of the Chancellor of Oxford vide ibidem plura Nomen non sufficit si res non sit de jure aut de facto the name of a thing is not sufficient if the matter and substance be not of right or deed Coke l. 4. f. 107. b. Pope Vrbane at the request of Ralph Baron of Greystack founded a Colledge of a Master and six Preists resident at Greystock and assigned to every one of his Preists five markes by the year besides his Bed and Chamber and the Master forty pounds by the yeare and this certified in the Book of first fruits and tenths Rectoriam Collegium of Greystock and the said Colledge was in being five years before the Act of 1. E. 6. And it was resolved by all the Judges that such a reputative Colledge was not given to the King by the Act of 1. E. 6. because it had no lawfull beginning nor the countenance of a lawfull beginning for the Pope cannot found or incorporate a Colledge within this Realme nor to assigne or license others to assigne temporall livings to it for it ought to be done by the King and no other for the name doth suffice if the matter be not of right or deed Dier 81. Quando duo jura in una persona concurrunt aequum est ac si essent in diversis Reg. I. C. Ployd f. 368. a. when two rights concur meet together in one person it is all one as if they were in severall persons As if one hath an estate for the life of A. the remainder to him for the life of B. the remainder to him for the life of C. and he is disseised and the disseisor levieth
Dower and distraineth the tenant albeit the grant of Mesne was to acquit him against the Lord and his heires onely yet because she continued the State of her husband and the reversion remained in the heire this grant of the acquittall did extend to his wife for Qui haeret Quoties in verbis nulla est ambiguitas ibi nulla expositio contra verba ipsa fienda est Coke l. 7. f. 24. a. So often as there is no ambiguity nor doubt in the words there no exposition against the expresse words is to be made If A. by Deed granteth rent out of the Mannor of D. to have and receive it to him and his heires and further granteth by the same Deed that if the rent be behind that the grant shall distraine in the Mannor of S. both the Mannors are charged the one with the rent the other with the distresse for the rent the one issueth out of the Land and the other is to be taken upon the Land for here a rent is granted expresly to be issuing out of the Mannor of D. and the parties have expresly limited out of which Land the rent shall issue and in which the distresse shall be taken and the Law shall not make any exposition against the expresse words and intention of the parties when it can stand with the rule of Law for where there is no ambiguity in the words there is no exposition to be made contrary to the expresse words ibidem in Calvins case Exception Yet as Mr. Ploydon saith f. 18. b. The words of the Law of nature of the Law of the Realme and the Law of God will yeild and give place to some acts and things done against the words of the same Laws and that is when they are infringed to avoid greater inconveniences or for necessity or by conpulsion For inconvenience It is a rule in the Law that factum unius alteri nocere non debet no mans deed ought to hurt another but there is another maxime that it is better to suffer a mischeife then an inconvenience which is to be preferred before it Coke com 152. b. As if there be Lord Mesne and Tenant and the Tenant holdeth of the Mesne by five shillings and the Mesne holdeth over by the service of twelve pence if the Lord purchaseth the Tenancy the Mesnalty is extinct because when the Lord hath the Tenancy he holdeth of the Lord next parament to him and if he should hold of him that was Mesne then he should hold the same Tenancy immediately of two Lords which should be inconvenient and the Law will that we rather suffer a mischeife then an inconvenience Littleton so as the rule is regularly true res inter alios acta alteri nocere non debet what thing is acted among some must not hurt an other but with this exception unlesse an inconvenience should follow Coke ibidem So it is a Maxime in the Law that a warranty of a collaterall Ancestor if it descend upon him shall bar the heire as if A. disseise B. of Land and selleth the Land and the Alienee obtaineth a warranty of the Ancestor collaterall to the Disseissee after whose death the warranty discendeth upon the Disseissee the Disseissee by descent of the warranty upon him is barred for ever in Law Doctor and Student l. 2. c. 501. but though they all offended in obtaining of the said collaterall warranty yet such an offence is not to be considered in the Law for the inconvenience that thereupon might ensue for it is holden for an inconvenience as Coke saith Com. 152 b. That any of the Maximes of the Law should be broken though a private man suffer losse for that by infringing of a Maxime not onely a generall prejudice to many but in the end a publick incertainty and confusion would follow lex citius tolerar● vult privatum damnum quam publicum malum and Law will sooner suffer a private injury then a publick evil neither in such cases is there any remedy to be had in the Chancery or in conscience for it was resolved in Beverlys case Coke l. 4. f. 124. a. That against an expresse maxime of the common Law no man shall have releife in Chancery for it should be in subversion of a principle or ground of Law Doctor and Student ibidem vide ibidem plura So Ployd 18. b. It is against the Law of nature and the Law of reason to beate the person of any man in any cases yet when a man is mad and of non sanae memoriae and doth much evill a man and his Parents also may take him binde him and beate him with rods and may justify it 22. Ass Pl. 56. And by the Statute of Mar. it is generally prohibited that none shall drive any distresse out of one County into another and yet it is adjudged that if one hold Land of a Mannor in another County that the Lord may distraine and drive the distresse of the Land holden of the Mannor in the County where the Mannor is and that is in avoidance of the inconvenience for it should be a great damage to the Lord if he should not drive the distresse to his owne mannor for the avoidance of which the Law is not offended although the words of the Law be broken M. 1. H. 6. Pl. f. 3. A man priviledged in some Court is sued in London and the Action is actionable no where else yet upon a supersedeas the Court shall surcease Finch Nomot And wee see also that necessity in all Lawes shall be a good excuse and that all Lawes give place to necessity according to the common proverbe necessitas non habet legem necessity hath no Law And therefore in a precipe quod reddat the tenant shall excuse his default by a flood of water and yet every default is abhorred in our Law because it is a contempt of the Court but because by perill of death he could not come the necessity of the chance in such case in regard there was no default in him shall excuse him M. 38. H. 6. 11. So the words of the Law of God may be infringed by necessity without offence to God and therefore in the old Law by the Law of God it was prohibited that none should eate of the shew bread and yet it appeareth that David for necessity of famine did eate the said bread and yet he did not breake the Law as our Saviour Christ declareth in the Gospell so the Apostles of our Saviour did pull the eares of Corne of other persons and did eate them and that for necessity of famine Ploydon f. 19 a. So if a man steale victualls to satisfie his present hunger this is no Felony nor Larceny Stanford because it is for the conservation of life And if diverse be in danger of drowning by the casting away of some Boats or Barge and one of them get to some Planke or on the Beats side to keep him above water and
generall words imply no certainty and with that accordeth 21. E. 4. If a man be bound to be nonsued in all Actions that he hath against him in the Common Bench he may say that he hath no action therein otherwise if the condition be particular to wit that he shall be non-sued in a Formedon c. so as that it appeareth that generall words imply no certainty neither do they conclude any person to say that he hath nothing there vide ibidem plura Cok. lib. 8.78 a. Bospols Case In an arbitrament when the submission is generall of all Actions and Demands c. that may well stand with the generality of the words that there was but one cause depending in controversy between them For generall speeches imply no certainty and the awa●d for one is good notwithstanding the generality of the words for though there were many matters in controversy yet if one onely was made known to the Arbitrator he may make an award of it For the Arbitrator is in place of a Judge and his office is to determine secundum alligata probata the duty of the parties which are greived and know their particular greifes is to make known the causes of controversy to the Arbitrator for they are privy to them and the Arbitrator is a stranger and every one is to do that which lyeth in his knowledge but when the condition is in speciall and with a proviso and condition that an award shall be made of the premises or words which amount to so much there the Arbitrator ought to make Arbitrement of all or else the award is void Generalibus semper specialia derogant Reg. f. c. Derg 180. Quando charta continet generalem clausulam posteaque descen●it ad verba specialia quae clausulae generali sunt consentanea interpretanda est charta secundum verba specialia f. 134. b. in Edward Althams Case Which rule is almost word for word put and agreed of by both parties In. 7. E. 3. f. 10. Margery Mortimers Case to wit where a Deede speaketh by general words and then descendeth to special words if the words special agree with the words general the deed shall be understood according to the words speciall As if a man grant a rent in the mannor of P. to be taken in an hundred Acres of Land parcell of that Mannor with a clause of distresse in those hundred Acres the Rent shall issue out of the hundred Acres onely and the generall words shall be construed according to the words speciall so if a man grant a Rent and go no further those generall words shall create an estate for life but if the Hab●ndum be for years that shall qualify the words generall 7. E. 3. So if a man give Lands to one and his Heirs Habendum to him and the Heirs of his body He shall have onely an estate tayle and no fee expectant for the Habendum qualifieth the generall words precedent Ployd f. 541. a. A man maketh a Feoffment by Deede to one to have and to hold to him and his Heirs and if it happen that the feoffee dyeth without heire of his body that then the Land shall revert The generality of that gift to him and his Heires shall be corrected by the speciall branch after so as the Donee shall have but an estate tayle 13. R. 2. in Formedon Dyer 261. b. A man seised in fee deviseth all his Lands in one village and in one of the two Hamlets by name and there were two Hamlets in the said Village The opinion of divers Justices was that none of the Lands in the other Hamlet should passe for it is intendable that the intent and meaning of the devisor was that nothing more should passe then what he had expressed A. acknowledgeth a fine of the mannor of P. with an advowson and regrants the mannor with the Appurtenances the advowson shall not passe Temp. E. 1. F. title grants Ployd 173. b. If I give or lease all my Lands to one and stay there he shall have all my Lands in England but if I say further in the manner of Dale there it is now restrained but if the specialty limiteth a thing which is void and so appeareth it is otherwise as if I lease to one all my Lands in Dale which I have by descent of the part of my mother and in truth I have no Lands in Dale which I have by descent of the part of my mother if the Lessor have other Lands in Dale he shall not have those Ployd 160. a. A man giveth Lands to two Habendum to one for life and after his decease to the other and his Heirs the one shall have the entierly for his life onely notwithstanding the Joynture given in the Premisses by the better opinion in terme M. 8. E 3.427 Generalibus semp●r specialia insunt Reg. f. c. Specialls are alwayes contained in the generals and the universalls allwayes comprehend the particular● Ployd f. 68. a. The plurall number containeth the singular and more and therefore was it resolved by all the Judges That a pretensed right and title was within the penalty of the Statute of 32. H. 8. for the buying of pretensed rights and titles for pretensed rights and titles in the plurall number did containe a pretensed right and title in the singular number And whereas the Statute of 5 R. 2. c. 5. forbiddeth that none make entry into any Lands or Tenements unlesse in case where entry is given by the Law yet if one enter into a Tenement he shall be punished though the Statute speaketh in the plurall number and likewise whereas the Statute of 1. H. 5. speaketh of false Deeds in the plural number yet if one bring but one false Deed he shall be punished by the Statute as it is holden in many Bookes Ployd f. 467. b. The Statute of Gloucester giveth an Action of Waste against him which holdeth for years which is spoken in the plural number yet may it be taken for him which holdeth for a year or half a yeare vide ibidem plura Generalis clausula non porrigitur ad ea quae sunt specialiter comprehenfa Coke l. 8. 118. b. It is a ground and maxime in the Law that a generall clause is not extended to those things which are specially comprehended Doctor Bonhams Case by the Statutes of 10 14. H. 8. it was enactd that no man should exercise the faculty of Physike within the City of London or within seven miles of the said City unlesse he be admitted thereunto by the President and Colledge of the faculty of Physike and there is another speciall clause contained in the said Acts that any who evilly and not well exercise the said faculty c. shall be punished by Fine and imprisonment c. and it was adjudged that the said generall clause that none should exercise the said faculty of Physike unlesse he be admitted c shall not be extended to the speciall clause
for the punishment of fine and imprisonment c. but that it specially shall be limitted to such onely as did offend only in not well executing and using the said faculty of Physike for a generall cl●●●● is not to bee extended to those things are specially comprehended so 34. Eliz. f. 120. ubi A. seised of the mannor of Stable in O. in the county of S in fee and also of other lands in the said O. in fee suffereth a common recovery of all and declareth the uses by Indenture that the recoveror shall stand seised of all the lands and tenements in O. to the use of him and his wife and the heires of his body and dieth and after his death the wife entreth into the said Mannor by form of the said generall wordes but it was adjudged that those generall word● did not extend to the Mannor which was specially named Coke l. 4. f. 8● b. Nokes case clausula generalis non refertur ad expressa a generall clause is not referred to those things are expressed as where the Assignee of a Lease shall have a Writ of Covenant upon those wordes demise and grant yet if there be an expresse covenant that the Lessee shall enjoy it without eviction of the Lessor or any claiming under him this expresse Covenant qualifieth the generallity of the covenant in Law and restraineth it by mutuall consent of both parties that it shall not extend to the assignee Clausula generalis non porrigitur ad ea quae antea sunt specialiter comprehensa Coke l. 4 131. l. 4. when the deed at the first containeth speciall wordes and then concludeth in words generall both the wordes as well generall as speciall shall stand as Lands given to one and the heires of his body Habendum to him and his heires hee hath an estate taile and a fee simple expectant for as Dier f. 56. b A deed by wordes subsequent may bee qualified and abridged but not destroyed Dolosus versatur in universalibus generalibus Coke l. 3. f. 8. a. Twins case it is one of the Ensignes of fraude in a Deed of gift if the gift is generall without the exceptions of his apparell or any thing of necessity for it is commonly said that the fraudulent is conversant in generalls Coke l. 3. f. 57. b. Specots case A Bishop ought not to shew a generall cause for the refusall of a Clark as that he is criminosus or non idoneus for they are too generall and the fraudulent is exercised in generalls and therefore so incertaine that no issue can be taken of them as 2. E. 3. f. 6. The heire ought to alledge some certaine cause of refusall whence issue may be taken Generalia sunt praeponenda singularibus it is a rule in the Register that in a Writ the generall shall bee put in demand or plaint before the speciall as the Mesuage before lands the Land before Meadow Meadow before Pasture and Pasture before Wood and Wood before Juncary F. a. b. f. 2. E. Ex verbo generali aliquid excipitur Coke com f. 47. a. An exception is part of the thing granted and in esse as exceptis salvo praeter and out of a generall a part may be excepted as out of a Mannor an acre but not a part out of a certainty as out of 20 Acres one Ployd f. 361. a. A Lease of all my Lands in D. except white acre is void for white acre and a gift of all my horses except my black horse is void for my black horse Coke l. 10. f. 101. b. quando verba statuti sunt specialia ratio autem generalis generaliter flatutum est intelligendum where the words of a statute are speciall and the reason generall the statute is generally to be understood as the reason of the statute of 23 H. 6. whereby it was ordeined that no Sheriff should take any obligation by colour of their office but onely to themselves and upon condition that the Prisoners appeare at the day contained in the writ was for the avoyding of extortion and oppression and therefore is to receive a benigne and favourable construction and that in equity not only a bond but an assumpsit is within the reason of that statute and so was it adjudged 27. Eliz. Trin. in the Kings Bench betweene Danhigh and Hothcot that if a Sheriff or Goaler for ease or enlargement of any who is in his custody doth take a promise of him to save him harmelesse that though the statute doth onely speake of an obligation yet it is in equall mischiefe otherwise as Wray chiefe Justice said the statute should serve for little or nothing Multa transeunt cum universitate quae per se non transeunt Coke com f. 142. a. If a man seised of land as heire of the part of his mother make a gift in taile or a Lease for life reserving a rent the heire of the part of the Mother shall have the reversion and the rent also as incident thereunto for many things passe with the generallity which by themselves doe not pass so if a man hath a rent-seck of the part of his mother and the Tenant of the Land grant a distresse to him and his heires and the Grantee dieth the distresse shall goe with the rent to the heire of part of the Mother as incident and appertenant to the rent for now is the rent-seck become a rent charge Singulare distributive sumptum e aquat plurali Dier 328. b. a singular distributively taken equalleth a plurall as in an assise the Plaint is of two Acres of Land the Tenant pleads two barrs severall for the two Acres at large and the Plaintiffe makes two severall titles at large to wit for every acre one the Tenant pleades let the assise come upon the title in the singular number and the assise found one title for the Plaintiff and the other for the Defendant against the Plaintiff and judgement was given that the Plaintiffe should recover for one Acre and be barred for the other Coke l. 10. Br. Lifiels case A Lease is for one yeare and that if they agree the Lessee shall have the Land for three yeares rendring during the said terme ten pounds yearely this reservation goeth to both termes Propria res est quae solius est sive uni soli convenit Tholoss Syntag. lib. 5. c. 1. A propriety is that which is one mans onely and appertaineth onely to one man Ploid f. 308. b God made man the Soveraigne over all living creatures and gave the rule of them all to man Terram d●dit filiis hominum and so men by the endowment of God were made Lords of the earth and possessors of all things in the earth but how much land or things upon the earth one man shall have and how much another God hath leased to man by lawes by them to bee made and provided and by such lawes in every Realme and Country they are provided and divided and every man
the rule given by Bracton incertae rei nulla est donatio l. 5. c. 4. Ployd f. 273. b. If a Lease bee made untill I. S. who hath execution of a Statute Marchant is satisfied of the duty for which hee hath sued execution this is not a good Lease and shall not bee called a terme for yeares for it is not certaine how long the Lease shall endure either for six years or for twelve yeares so there is an incertainty of time at the end of the Lease for a terme containeth certainty So if a Lease bee made from three yeares to three yeares and so from three yeares to three yeares duering the life of I. S. it shall bee but a Lease for six yeares for for six yeares there is certainty and when he saith and so from three yeares to three yeares it is all one as if hee had said the first three yeares during the other three yeares which containeth certainty but when hee goeth further and saith and so from three yeares to three yeares for the life of I. S. that containeth no certainty in it for it is incertaine how many three yeares I. S. shall live so that in the beginning the end is not knowne of the number of yeares intended which is contrary to the nature of a Lease for yeares Coke comm f. 45. b. and Browne and Dier said it had beene so adjudged vid. ibid. Ployd saies and Fullers case So if a parson maketh a lease of his glebe for so many yeares as he shall be parson there this cannot be made certaine by any meanes for nothing is more uncertain then the time of his death terminus vitae incertus est quanquam nihil est certius ipsa morte nihil tamen incertius est hora mortis Coke com 45. b. A grant to I. S or I. N is void for the incertainty and if it bee delivered to I. S. the delivery of the deed will not make a voide grant good 11. H. 7. 13. Noy Max. f. 67. Coke com f. 310. b. If a reversion be granted for life and after it is granted to the same grantee for yeares a●●●he Lessee attorne to both grants they are void for the incertainty So if the Lord by Deed granteth his signiory to I. Bishop of London and his heires and by another Deed to I. Bishop of London and his Successors and the Tenant attorneth to both grants the attornment is void for both grants for albeit the grant bee but to one yet hee hath severall capatities and the grants are severall and the attornment is not according to either of the grants ibidem A gift made to one of the Infants of I. S. is void for the incertainty 11. E. 41. and Dier f. 91. A grant is made for so many trees as may bee reasonably spared it is void for the incertainty for who shall bee judge of the sparing the Vendor or the Vendee and it seemeth that neither of them yet by common intendment the Vendor hath most knowledge which may bee spared So if I bargaine with you that I give you for your Land so much as it is reasonably worth it is voide for default of certainty So a grant seniori dignissimo filio is void for the incertainty for some will say that he who is most learned and knowing is the most worthy man and some will say the most valiant man and some the most liberall man and so the multitude can never agree Scinditur incertum studia ●●ontraria vulgus And by that the most potent man was alwaies preferred which is contrary to all Lawes inde datae leges ne fortior omnia possit Dav. l. 33.36 case of Tanistry vide Coke com So a release doth not discharge Bayle before judgement because it is contingent and incertaine Coke l. 5. Samons case B. in consideration of six l. assumes to pay twenty pound to A. If hee doe not performe the award of I. S. which was that hee should enter in obligation to A. that A. and his wife should enjoy the Lands were in controversie between them B. would not enter into obligation and it was adjudged the award was voide for the incertainty because it doth not appeare of what summe the obligation should be for the Arbitrators are Judges and their award must be certaine to decide the controversie Certum est quod certum reddi potest Coke com f. 43. b. Though it be Bractons rule Terminus annorum debet esse certus determinatus as in every lease for years the terme must have a certaine beginning and a certaine ending yet allbeit there appeare no certainty of yeares in the Lease if by reference to a certainty it may be made certaine it sufficeth for that is certaine which may be made certaine As if A. leaseth his Lands to B. for so many yeares as B. hath in the Mannor of Dale and B. hath then in the said Mannor a terme for ten yeares this is a good Lease to B. for ten yeares If a man make a Lease to I. N. for so many yeares as I. N. shall name this at the beginning is incertaine but when I. N. hath named yeares then is it a good Lease for so many yeares Ployd f. 273. b. For it is my demise and my contentment that hee name the yeares which by my reference to his nomination is as much as if I my selfe had named But if a Lease bee made for so many yeares as my Executors shall name and then I die and my Ex●●●●s name the yeares the Lease shall not bee good because they neither did nor could name the yeares during my life ibidem So if I make a Lease untill I. S. who is in Prison for hunting shall be in Prison for it by order of Law that is all one as if hee had made the Lease for two yeares for by the statute of W. 1. c. 10. hee shall bee imprisoned so long so if I make a Lease for yeares rendring five pound rent by the yeare and then I grant the rent and reversion to another untill hee hath received of the rent twenty pound that is all one as if I had granted the reversion for four yeares and therefore the Lease containeth such certainty of time by the reference So if a Lease bee made during the nonage of I. S. who is of the age of fifteen yeares it is a Lease for six yeares if I. S. live so long for the reference to the time certaine is as much as if hee had expressed the nomination of the time contained in the reference So if I make a Lease for ten yeares and so from ten yeares to ten yeares during a 100. yeares it is a good Lease Ployd ib. E. Coke l. 6. f. 20. The Bishop of Bathes case So a Lease for years after the Lessee shall make such an act is good so a Lease for twenty yeares if the coverture betweene I. S. and his wife continue so long although in one case it
but supposalls As in a Pormedon one claimeth by descent from I. S. or a Mortdancester as sonne and Heir of I. S. yet in another Formedon he may claime from I. D. and shall not be estopped No more shall a recitall make an Estopple for they are not materiall as 33. H. 6. 10. b. where A. reciting that he is seised in fee of the Manner of D. granteth a rent out of it to B. this shall not estoppe A. to say that he had nothing in that Mannor Finch nomotec f. 32. Neither shall counts and declarations abate so long as the matter of Action is fully shewed in the Declaration and the writ as by the Statute of 36. E. 3. c. 15. it is provided And therfore in Demurrers it is alledged that the matter contained in the count is insufficient in Law and so of a plea and accordingly in the raigne of Queen Eliz. provision is made that after demurrers the Judges shall give Judgement according to the right of the cause and matter in Law without regarding any imperfection defect or want of forme in any Writ Retorne Plaint Declaration or other pleadings or course of proceedings whatsoever which Sir Edward Coke stiles an excellent and profitable Law Coke Com. 304. b. All which are more fully contained in the late Act of 11. Mar. 1649. by which it is enacted that no judgement shall at any time or times be arrested or stayed in any Court of Record for want of any matter of forme or defect whatsoever except only for matter of substance which shall be found or shewed pulickly to the Jude or Judges sitting in the said Courts of Record to be in the declaration Plea replication or other proceedings after apparance And besides in common recoveries no formall errors shall be allowed to reverse them unlesse they be substantiall and materiall as by the statute of 23. Eliz c. 4. it is provided that for the avoiding of the danger of assurance of Land and for the advancement of common recoveryes that not any common recovery shall be avoided for any want of forme in wordes and not in matter of substance so much doth the Law respect matter of substance before matter of form circumstance Coke c. f. 40.2 From the predicaments of action and passion Idem non potest esse agens paciens 14 H. 8. 31. b. nihil agit in seipsum Arist 1. de gener no man can do an act to himselfe No man can sue himself and therfore when a man having right to Land hath the freehold cast upon him by a latter title he shal be said to be in of his ancient title because there is no body against whom he may sue but himselfe and he cannot sue himself Lit. A man cannot present himselfe to a benefice or make himselfe an Officer 13. H. 8. 32. No man can summon himsele 8 H. 6.29 And therefore if a Sheriff suffer a common recovery it is error because he cannot summon himselfe Dier 188. But when two Sheriffs are the one may summon the other with speciall direction in the Writ that the other shall summon him 14 and 15. Eliz. If a Sheriff be Conusee of a Statute he cannot execute a liberate himselfe 9 E. 4. 33. Plaintiffe and Defendant Exception and Actor and Reus are relative opposites and cannot be properly in one and the selfe same action except in some speciall cases as in a writ of detinue where garnishment is required there the Defendant is to become actor against the garnishee 3 H. 6. 18. so in a quare im●edit where the Defendant maketh title to have a Writ to the Bishop the defendant is become actor 20 H. 6. 29. In a Replevin upon an avowry made the avowant is become actor 3 H. 6. 19. a. 23. H. 6. 45. a. 12. E. 4. 10. a. So in a Quod deforceat the demandant or Plaintiff shall defend his estate against such recovery as shall be pleaded against him and become defendant and may vouch ac si tenens esset in priori brevi by the statute of W. 1. A Sheriff who is demandant may execute all processe till it come to the Venire facias otherwise if he be Tenant 20. E. 4. 7. A Sheriff is Plaintiffe for he may take pledges himselfe and execute a Replevin against himselfe 5. H. 7. 2. The Sheriff is in seisin of a Baly-wick of a liberty he shall command himselfe as Bayliff of that liberty to execute that processe 8 E. 3. 21. F. B. N. f. 4. E. There is a Writ of prohibition in the Register directed to the Sheriff to inhibit himselfe that he hold not plea in the county upon a sorreine Plea pleaded or the Mise joyned to be tried by grand assise Actori incumbit onus probandi stabilitur praesumptio donec probetur in contrarium the burden of proving lieth on the Plaintiff and the presumption is confirmed untill it be proved to the contrary Cok. l. 4. f. 70. There is a bargainor and a bargaince if this bargainor contend to avoid the bargaine by reason of the non enrolement within six months he must make manifest proofe thereof or else it will be presumed that it was inroled within the six months omnia praesumantur legitime facta donec probentur in contrarium Coke com f. 233. b. As whereas the feoffee giveth or granteth to the feoffor the deed pol such grant is good and the property of the deed shall appertaine to the Feoffor and when the feoffor hath the deed in his hands and pleadeth it in Court it shall be rather intended that the feoffor commeth unto it by lawfull meanes then by a tortious meane For all things are presumed to be lawfully done untill they may be proved to the contrary A. and B. Tenents in common of a Mannor A. purchaseth a frank tenement mixt with the demesne Lands which were not certainly knowne B. brings a writ de partitione facienda of the Mannor onely and judgement given that partitio fieret and a Writ to the Sheriff accordingly It is held by the Justices that A. must shew the bounds of the franktenement purchased for the Jury shall be discharged if in conscience they make partition de tanto quanto praesumitur dignoscitur per praesumptiones verisimilia of so much as shall be presumed and knowne by presumptions and likelihoods Dier f. 266. Pendente lite nihil innovetur Let nothing be innovated hanging the suit Coke com 344. b. if hanging the quare impedit against the Ordinary for refusing his Clark and before the Church was full the Plaintiff brought a quare impedit against the Bishop and hanging the suit the Bishop admitted and instituted a Clark at the presentation of another if judgement be given for the patron against the Bishop the patron shall have a writ to the Bishop and remove the incumbent that came in pendente lite by usurpation for hanging the sute nothing is to be innovated Qui semel actionem
renunciaverit amplius repetere non potest n. f. 139. a. As a Retraxit is a bar of all other actions of the like or inferior nature for he which once renounceth his action can no more renew it It is a generall rule that non-suite before appearance is not peremptory in any case for that a stranger may purchase a writ in the name of him who hath cause of action and regularly a non suit after appearance is not peremptory but that he may commence an action of like nature againe for it may be he hath mistaken something in that action or was not provided of his proofes or mistaken the day or the like But yet for some speciall reasons non-suit in some actions is peremptory as in a quare impedit if the Plaintiff bee non-suit after apparance the Defendant shall make a title and have a Writ to the Bishop and this is peremptory to the Plaintiff and is a good bar in another quare impedit and the reason is because the Defendant had by the judgement of the Court a writ to the Bishop and the incumbent which commeth in by that writ shall never be removed which is a flat barre as to that presentation and for the same law and upon the same reason so it is in the case upon a discontinuance Coke com f. 139. a. vide ibidem plura Actio personalis moritur cum persona a personall action dieth with the person Went. off of executors f. 1. 97. As if a keeper of a Prison suffereth one in execution to escape and dieth no action lyeth against his Executors If Lessee for yeares doth wast and dieth an Action of wast lyeth not against his Executor or Administrator for wast done before that time Coke com f. 53. b. so if the tenant doth wast and he in the reversion dieth the heire shall not have an Action of wast for the wast done in the life of his Ancestor nor the master of an Hospitall or a parson for w●st done in the life of the predecessor ibidem The Lessor covenants to pay quit rent during the terme and dieth his Executors shall not pay it because it is a personall covenant in the Lessor onely Dier 114. Yet if there be three copartners and they Lease the land and one of them die and hath issue and the Lessee commit wast and one of them die and hath issue the Aunt and the issue shall joyne in an Action of wast and the issue shall recover one moyety of the Land wasted and the Aunt the other notwithstanding that actio injuriarum moritur cum persona But in favorabilibus magis attenditur quod prodest quam quod nocet in indifferent and favourable things that which profiteth is more respected then that which hurteth Relatio tunc fieri non debet si per eam actus destruatur Reg. I. c. Decius 363. Quando dispositio referri potest ad duas res ita quod secundum relationē una vitiatur secundū aliā utilis sit tunc facienda est relatio ad illam ut valeatdispositio semper ita fiat relatio ut valeat dispositio C. l. 6. f. 76. b. a. A relation then ought not to be when by it an Act is destroyed As in the statutes of 32. and 34. H. 8. concerning Wills whereof is provided that every person having any Mannors Lands c. holden in capite shall have full power c. to dispose by his last will in writing or otherwise by any Act or Acts lawfully executed in his life two parts of the same Mannor c. for the advancement of his wife preferment of his children and payment of his debt or otherwise at his will and pleasure any Law statute c. those words or otherwise at his wil pleasure have reference relation only to the last wil not to the acts executed for otherwise none might have devised two parts but onely for the advancement of his wife and preferment of his children or payment of his debts which is not the intention of the Act but that he may devise two parts to whom he will so that the third descend and it was in vaine to referre those words or otherwise at his will and pleasure to Acts executed for he can do that without any authority given to him by that act And therefore when the disposition may be referred to two things so as according to the relation one of them may be destroyed and according to the other shall be commodious then the relation is to be made to that that the disposition may be of force and alwayes the relation is so to be that the disposition may availe in Sir G. Cursons case So Coke l. 3. f. 28. b. Butler and Bakers case relation is a fiction in law to make a nullity of a thing from the beginning to a certaine intent which in truth had being and the rather for necessities sake ut res magis valeat quam pareat As if a man make a gift in taile to Baron and feme and afterwards grants the reversion of those Lands and since the Baron dies and the feme to have her dower waiveth and disagreeth to the estate taile now in regard of her it is a nullity of the estate from the beginning and to such an intent the Law faineth that the estate was onely made to the baron but as to the grant of the reversion that is a collaterall Act and her refusall shall not have such relation for she may be endowed though that estate stand and so no necessity and therefore without necessity ut res magis valeat the Law will not faine any nullity but in a destruction of a loyall estate vested the law will never make any fiction vide ibidem plura So relation shall make things have been as if as if they never had been 1. H. 7. 16 The husband disagreeth to a Feoffement made by his wife it is void from the beginning so that he may plead ne infeosse pas so 14. H. 8. 10. A devise is that the Executors may sell land c. when they sell all meane charges made by the heire in the interim shall be avoided by relation to the time of the death of the Testator so 14. H. 8 18. I disseise A. to the use of B. the dissiesee releaseth to mee and then B. agreeth with the disseisee this agreement by relation shall be as if he had agreed before the release and so shall defeat it Jurors alien their Lands away between the teste of the Writ of attaint and judgement yet they shall be charged to the King for the estreptment by relation 22. E. 3. 16. Caufe of Assise brought for rescuing a distresse taken for rent and then an Office is found which entitleth the King who seiseth the Land and then an Ouster le maine is sued the Assise is gone for ever because the King shall be said to be in possession at the time of the rescous
shall not be intended onely of a person who hath judgement of life but also shall be extended to a person convict by confession or verdict for a person attainted is a person convict and more and every greater containeth the lesser Coke l. 5. f. 115. a. It was resolved in Woods case that if a man tendreth more then he ought to pay it is good enough for every greater containeth in it self the lesser and the other ought to accept so much of it as is due unto him Quando plus fit quam fieri debet v●detur etiam illud fieri quod faciendum est in m●j●ri summa continetur minor when more is done then ought to be done that seemes to be done which was to be done and the lesser sum is contained in the greater Ployd f 349. b. The disseisor maketh a Lease for life and the Disseisee confirmeth the estate of the Disseisor the Disseisee cannot enter upon the tenant for life for his right was to all the estate of the Land and if he be barred of the Fee simple he is barred from the estate for life for every greater containeth in it selfe the lesser An action of battery is brought and the evidence proveth it a maime and well because it is battery and more 31. Ass pl. 1. Omne majus continet in se suum minus 28. H. 8. b. By a pardon of Murder Manslaughter is pardoned and and an attaint supposing a verdict to have passed between two Justices whereas it passed before three good enough A recovery pleaded of three acres where it was of six is good enough Finch Nomot f. 31. Where the Custome is that a man shall not devise his Lands for any higher estate then for life yet if the devise be in fee and the Devisee claimeth but for life the devise is good Dyer 150. b. Vpton by his last will in writing deviseth an entire mannor holden by Knights service in fee and it was adjudged a good will for two parts and not void for all A Qu●re impedit in the Register is praesentare ad Ecclesiam by this he may count pro tertia parte Coke l. 10. f. 136. b. in Richard Smiths case A Procedendo supposeth an Assize before Stouse and Burton Justices and it was also before Shard and good because three containeth two Ployd Where by the Custome of a mannor a man may demise for life he also may demise to his Wife durante viduitate because the greater containeth the lesser Coke l. 4. Non debet cui plus licet quod minus est non licere Regula I. C. Cui licet quod majus non debet quod minus est non licere Coke l. 4. f 23. a. To whom it is lawfull to doe the greater thing to him it is not unlawfull to doe the lesser As where the Custome of the mannor is that Copy-hold Lands may be granted to any one in Fee-simple there the grant to one and his Heirs of his body is within the Custome for he that may lawfully doe the greater it ought not to be unlawfull but that he may doe the lesser Coke l. 9. f. 48. b. There is a great diversity between an Assignee and a Deputy of an Office the Assignee hath an interest in the Office and maketh all things in his owne name and for whom his Grantor shall not answer unlesse it be in some speciall cases but a Deputy hath no interest in the Office but is but a shadow of an Officer and doth all things in the name of the Officer and for whom his Grantor shall answer and when an Officer hath power to make Assignes he may implicitely make a Deputy for to whom that which is greater is lawfull to him that which is lesse is not unlawfull and by consequence when an office is granted to him and his Heirs by it he may make an assignee and by consequence a Deputy Sicut beatius ita majus est dare quam accipere Coke l. ● f. 57. b. There is a manifest diversity between a receiver and giver of seisin for he that hath a terme for years may receive seisin to the benefit of him which hath the Frank-tenement and all our Bookes are that the possession of a Lessee for years or guardian is a sufficient seisin for him in the reversion but he that giveth seisin is tenant of the Frank-tenement and therefore greater then Tenant for years that receiveth for it is a greater thing to give then to receive and therefore Tenant for years by his payment cannot give seisin to binde him which hath the Franke-tenement vide ibidem plura in Bredimans case Omne magis dignum trahit ad se minus dignum Coke Com. f. 44. a. b. The more worthier thing draw●th unto it the lesse worthy the Charter granted by H. 3. in the ninth yeare of his reigne was of force and validity notwithstanding his nonage for that in judgement of Law the King as a King cannot be said to be a minor for when the royall politick body of the King doth meete with the naturall capacity in one person the whole body shall have the capacity of the royall politick which is the greater and the more worthy and wherin there is no minority for the more worthier thing draweth unto it the lesse worthy vid. Coke l. 2. f. 68. in Tooker's case ibidem f. 285 a. Three Joynt-tenants are disseised and they arraigne an assize and one of them releaseth to the disseisor all actions personall this shall bar him but not the other for having regard to him the realty as the more worthy shall be preferred and the greater worthy draweth to it the lesse worthy ibidem 355. b. It was said that upon a recovery had by default in an action of Wast against Tenant in Dower a quod ei de forceat did not lye because in an action of Wast Damages were the principall as most antient and that therefore cleerely no quod ei deforceat did lye but it was answered that the place wasted was the worthier being in the realty then Damages that be in the personalty though more antient omne magis dignum trahit ad se minus dignum quanquam minus dignum sit antiquius a digniori debet fieri denominatio and every more worthy draweth unto it the lesse worthy though the lesse worthy is more antient and a denomination ought to be from the more worthy vide ibidem plura Coke l. 6. f. 43 b When an action is in the realty or mixt with the realty accord with satisfaction is no Plea for accord with satisfaction is a bar for the personalty but not for the realty and when the personall is mixed with the realty it is no bar for the personalty for allwayes the greater draweth unto it the lesse vide ibidem plura in Bl●kes case Charters are put into a box this alters the nature of the box from being a Chattel and shal go to the heire and as
words contrary to the simple intent as Tully saith in his Offices is calumnia quaedam ninis callida malitiosa Juris interpretatio ex quo illud summum jus summa injuria a kind of a calumny and malitious interpretation of the law from whence that saying proceeded the rigor of right is the extremity of injury As he putteth the example of one had made a truce for 130. daies with his enemy and in the night he plundered and depopulated his possessions because he said the truce was for daies and not for the nights which Cicero accounteth meere injury and injustice and admonisheth men to avoid the like interpretation of the law and to observe the intent of the words and certainly words are but testimonialls of the intent and therefore Ployd f. 107. b. It is said it is the offices of Judges to take and expound the words as the common people doe use them to express their intent according to their intent As a Lease was made for life and that after his decease the tenements redibunt to a stranger it shall be taken as a remanebunt because to that purpose it was there used and therefore by 18. E. 3. f. 28. It shall be taken by way of remainder So a lease for life the reversion to a stranger shall be taken as a remainder for the reason abovesaid 30. M. 1. ante 157. vide ibidem plura in Hills case And so Ployd f. 291. a. Where a covenant cannot be performed according to the words it shall be performed according to the intent as neere as may bee as in the case of Littleton where a man maketh a feoffment upon condition that the feoffee shall make an estate in speciall taile to the Feoffor and his wife and the heires of their bodies if the Baron dieth before the estate made the estate shall be made as neere to the condition as may be to wit to the feme for life without impeachment of wast the remainder to the issues in taile according to the first limitation and if the feme be dead then the feoffee ought to give the lands to the issues and the heires of the bodie of his father and his mother engendred If the words be performed and not the intent the agreement is not performed Ployd f. 291. b. according to the rule of the civill law leges non ex verbis sed ex mente sunt intelligendae lawes are not to be understood and construed by the words but by sense and meaning of the parties as where the Defendant was obliged upon condition that if his feoffees of his Mannor of W. should grant to the Plaintiff an annuall rent of forty shillings out of the said Mannor that then c. and he had three feoffees and two of them granted to the Plaintiff the rent There the words of the condition were performed for the feoffees had granted the rent and yet he had not performed the condition for all the Justices there held that all the feoffees ought to have granted the rent and so it should be sure for there the third might have the land by survivor and he might avoid the rent and also more then two parts of the Mannor were not charged with the rent and so the intent is not performed though the words be M. 22. H. 6. f. 10. So if a man be bound to enfeoff me of the Mannor of D. and he maketh a feoffment ro another of parcell of it and then enfeoffeth me of the Mannor he hath performed the words but yet he hath not performed the intent which was that I should have had all the Mannor as it then was H. 3. H. 7. 4. So a remainder was limited to B. Si ipse vellet in-habitare residens esse if he would dwell and bee resident on the land during the terme there it is taken that if he was resident one week during the terme he had performed the words of the condition but not the intent for the intent was that hee should be resident all the terme 4. E. 6. ante 23. So an Abbot was Parson Emparsonee of a time c. and he had annuity for the time of which no memory runneth in right of the Parsonage and he as Abbot without naming himselfe Parson brought a Writ of annuity and counteth upon a prescription in him and his predecessors Abbots and the prescription traversed and found for the Plaintiff there every word of the Verdict is true and yet attaint lay against the Jury because he brought the Writ in the name of the Abbey and so claimed the annuity whereas he was not seised by that forme but as Parson and for that he did not claime as Parson they ought not to have found the issue with him and so the words of the Verdict and the intent of the Verdict did not agree in one M. 10. E. 4. f. 16. Ibidem in Chapmans case It is not requisite alwaies that the agreement shall be performed according to words because the intent is performed which is the principall point of the agreement Ployd f. 295. a. b As if a man be bound to pay a lesser summe upon a day certaine if I pay the summe before the day the condition is performed H. 10. H. 7. 24. So if the condition be in a Mortgage that I pay the money at such a place if I shall pay it at another place and the Mortgage accept of it it is well enough for the value is the effect So if a feoffment be made upon condition that if the feoffee doe not pay the Feoffor such a summe at such a day that then the feoffor shall enter If the feoffee before the day make a feoffment over and at the day doth not pay the summe there the second feoffee at the day may tender and pay the summe though the agreement was no other but that the first feoffee shall pay the summe Litt. vide ib. plura If a man make a feoffment on condition to enfeoff two in fee at such a time and before the time one dieth the feoffment ought to be made to the survivor and his heires onely for the intent which appeareth in the condition Ployd f. 345. 4. H. 7. f. 127. Every one who groundeth an Act with discretion hath an intention in the inception and neither beginneth any thing but to some end and in the progression hath the same intent and so in the consummation so as the same intention is the cause of every part and therefore the intention is principally respected in all humane acts and especially in those which concerne the disposition of our estates and in feoffments and grants A feoffment by deed of a Mannor with an advowson appendant and no livery made the advowson passeth not yet an advowson may pass without livery but the intention and the meaning was that the Mannor and it should pass together Finch Nomot 58. A bargaine and sale of Land and a reversion by deed not enrolled the reversion passeth
stranger tendreth them mony for the Land and they intending to sell it more deere defer the sale for two yeares and take the profits themselves the heire for the laches and long delay may enter and put them out of the Land 38. Ass Pl. 3. 39. Ass Pl. 3. A man indebted by specialty or upon an account determined tendreth the mony to the Debtee after the day in which it was due and payable and it is refused and after mony is embased it seemeth to many that the debtor shall beare the losse although he had made tender at the very day of payment because he must say vncor prist Dyer f. 83. Pl. 76. Caveat Emptor Coke Com. f. 102. a. Let the the buyer be vigilant and wary what he buyeth for though by the Civill Law every man is bound to warrant the thing that he selleth and conveyeth yet the Common Law bindeth him nor unlesse there be a warranty either in Deed or in Law Ibi. Coke l. 4. f. 26. a. A Copy-holder who is out of possession ought not to sell his Land untill he hath gained the possession and if any one will purchase any title he is not to be favored but in such case Caveat Emptor let the buyer take heed for if any one hath a pretended right and title to Copy-hold Land bargaine and sell it to another it is within the Statute of 32. H. 8. c. 5. vide ibidem plura If I take an horse of another mans and sell him and the owner taketh him againe I may have an action of debt for the mony for the bargaine was perfect by the delivery of the horse Caveat Emptor Nay Max f. 94. If I sell my Horse to another man for ten hundred pounds who taketh his horse againe I shall have all the mony Ibidem f. 95. Qui timent caveant vitent Offi. of Exe. 251. They who feare are wary to shun dangers as an Executors office is dangerous and therefore ought to feare what encombrances fall on him and to keep goods to pay all debts if any should be concealed Non temere credere nervus est sapientiae Coke l. 5. f. 114. b. Not hastely to beleive is the sinew of wisdome and therefore the Law hath appointed the last time in the day to pay mony upon a condition that both parties may certainly meet together which is founded on the experience of the sages least any of the parties should be constrained to make a Letter of Attorny or repose confidence or trust in any other to pay it for him when he will doe it for himselfe And it is wisdome not rashly to trust any Caveat actor Reg. I. C. Let the actor beware what he doth One entreth into Bond to A. that he and A. shall stand to the Arbitrement of I. S. If A. refuse he him-himselfe shall take the forfeiture of the Bond. If a man have a Chappell which is his donation by Letters Patents and he presenteth me his clerk to the Ordinary he shal not make collation afterwards If a Parson impropriate presenteth one to a Church it maketh it disappropriate If he who holdeth his Land by homage and fealty taketh his Land of the King by office found that he holdeth it by forty shillings per annum he shall pay the rent hereafter Abundans cautela non nocet Coke l. 11 f. 6. b. An abundance of circumspection doth not hurt vide ibi Qui sentit onus sentire debet commodum Coke l. 1. f. 99. a. He who beareth the burden and taketh the paines ought to receive the profit as if a Feoffment be upon condition that if the Feoffor or his Heirs pay the sum of 20 l. or to doe any act before a certain day that they shall re-enter in this case if the father dye before the day of paymenr and the daughter for the safe-gard of the inheritance pay the mony or satisfieth the condition in this case the Son after borne shall not devest it for if the daughter had not performed the condition the Land had been utterly lost and therefore in this case a good argument may be made that the daughter shall detaine the Land for Qui sentit onus sentire debet Commodum ibidem vide Hobart Rrep fo 4. in Youngs and Radfords case Ployd f. 514. Trevilian was Tenant in tail of Tenements and he being only seised of such an estate a common recovery was had against him and Avice his wife who vouched over according to the course of common recoveries and it was found that the wife had nothing in the Tenements the husband dyeth the wife shall have nothing of the intended recompence in the case because she had nothing in the Tenements and so could lose nothing If Tenant for life or in Dower do devise the Corn growing on the ground upon the land at the time of their death this is a good Devise and he in the reversion shall not have it 4 H. 3. Devise 26. And the Statute of Merton which saith Omnes viduae possunt legare sua blada is but an affirmation of the common Law which was used in the time of H. 3. 19 H. 6. 6. A man seised of land in see in right of his wife leaseth the land to a stranger and the Lessee soweth the land and after the wife dyeth the Corn being not ripe the Lessee may devise the corn and yet his estate is determined 7 E. 3. 67. A man seised of land in the right of his wife and soweth it and deviseth the Corn growing on the ground and dyeth before it is severed the Devisee shall have it and not the wife 7. Ass pl. 19. One seised of lands in fee hath Issue a Daughter and dyeth his wife Privement Ensaint with a Son the Daughter entereth and soweth the land and before the severance a Son is born and his next friend entereth yet the Daughter may devise the Corn growing on the land If a Mannor be put in execution upon a Statute-merchant and the Conusee sow the land he may well devise the Corn growing on the ground Perkins f. 100. vide ibidem plura Qui sentit commodum sentire debet onus Cok. l. 5. f. 24. He that feeleth or reapeth the profit must bear the burthen and the charges A man leaseth an house by Indenture for years and the Lessee covenanteth for him and his Executors to repaire the house at all times necessary The Lessee assigneth it over to H. who suffereth it to decay the Lessee bringeth an action of Covenant against the Assignee and it was adjudged the action did lye in that the Lessee had taken upon him to bear the charges of reparation the annuall rent was the less which trenched to the benefit of the Assignee and he that enjoyeth the profit must bear the burthen and charges vide ibidem plura Co. l. 5. f. 100. a. The Statutes will have all those which are in perill and which are to take comodity by the
of false imprisonment because that he is Iudge of the Cause 14 H. 8. 16. Factum a Judice quod ad ejus officium non pertinet ratum non est Reg. I. C. Coke l. 10. f. 76. b. Judicium a non suo Judice datum nullius est momenti An act done by a Iudge which doth not appertain to his Office is not allowed and a Judgment given by him is not his proper Iudge is of no weight nor moment As if the Sheriff who is prescribed by the Law to hold his Turn within a month after Michaelmas holdeth his Turn after the moneth and taketh an Indictment of robbery at the same Turn and the Indictment is by a Certiorari removed into the Kings Bench by advice of all the Iustices the party so indicted was discharged because the Indictment was utterly void coram non judice because at that time the Sheriff had no authority to hold it And if a man have a Leet which is holden at a day certain if he hold it another day such Court so holden is void and without Warrant but it is otherwise of a Court Baron Coke ibidem but if the Court of Common Bench holdeth plea without an Originall it is not void for they are Iudges of those pleas and it cannot be said that the proceeding is coram non judice 19 E. 4. 8. Iudgment in the Marshalsey when none of the parties be of the houshold of the King may be avoided by plea without any Writ of Error which proveth that it is void 6 N. 2. So in Trespass before the Marshall if none of the parties be of the houshold of the King it is coram non judice because they passe their power 29 E. 4. 16. If one of the Queens houshold sue another of the same houshold and the Plaintiff is put out of service the plea depending the other may shew this and abate the Writ but otherwise it is if the Defendant be put out of service Lib. de divers des Courts f. 102. b. And if a man be impleaded in the common place for lands within the Cinque-ports the Tenant may shew to the Court that the land is within the Cinque-ports and by this plea the Court shall be outed of iurisdiction but if the Tenant doth plead in bar which is found against him and the Demandant haue judgment to recover the land t● is judgment shall bind the Tenant for ever Ib. 107. b And so it is of land in ancient Demesne if a Writ be brought for them in the common place if the Tenant appear and plead the bar and taketh no exception to the jurisdiction and the plea is found against him so that the Demandant recovereth he shall not reverse this by a Writ of Error because he might have taken exception to the jurisdiction of the Court and that should have been allowed ibidem But the Lord may reverse this judgment by a Writ of Deceit and make the land ancient Demesne as it was before If a man devise to one lands devisable the Devisee cannot sue for these lands in the Ecclesiasticall Court but if he make a devise of goods and chattles reall as a terme of years or of a ward he may for such sue in that Court F. N. B. f. 43. b. Jurisdictio est potestas de publico introducta cum necessitate juris dicendi Coke l. 10 f. 73. Iurisdiction is a power introduced by the publick for the necessity of decreeing and doing right The Iurisdiction of the Court of the Marshally was first instituted for the necessity of the rule and governance of the Servants of the Kings house-hold and therefore was it anciently stiled placita corona aulae hospiti● domini regis the Pleas of the Court of the house-hold of the Lord the King by which words it is proved that the one or the other party ought at the least to be of the house-hold of the King for how can these words stand when neither of the parties be of the house-hold of the King and that is the reason that it is not necessary in suites before the Steward and Marshall to alledge that the Plaintiff or Defendant were of the house-hold of of the King for the stile of the Court doth the same imply ibidem So the jurisdiction of the Court of Py-powders was introduced for the necessity of doing right in suits and matters concerning Markets and as that Court hath not jurisdiction but for things concerning the Market so hath it not Iurisdiction for matters concerning the Market unlesse they be done in the same Market M. 42. 42. Eliz in B. R. Hall brought a Writ of Error against Jones of a judgement given in the Court of Py-powders of the Market c. for Jones one of the Registers of the Bishop of Gloucester because Hall had published slanderous words of him c. and the judgement was reversed for two errors because those words did not concerne any matter concerning the Market and therefore the Court had no jurisdiction of it but if one slander any that shall come into the Market in any thing which concerneth his trade an Action well lyeth against hims and 2. it appeareth in the count that the words were spoken before the Market and not in it for the Court hath onely jurisdiction of those things which are done and said in the Market ibidem a. b. Where there is no colour to hold Plea as in a Court Baron of Land not holden of a mannor all is void but where there is colour to hold Plea though it be by plaint where it should be by originall yet the Iudgement rendred is onely voidable by a Writ of Error ibidem Non pertinet ad judicem secularem cognoscere de ijs quae sunt spiritualibus annexa Bract. l. 5. c. 2. It doth not appertaine to the secular Iudge to take cognizance of those things which are annexed to spirituall things And therefore the branches of Trees which are priviledged from Tithes shall be also priviledged but the suite for the Tithe branches of Trees which are not priviledged shall be in the spirituall Court as well as the suite for the Tithe of Trees themselves Res judicata pro veritate accipitur Coke com 103. a. The thing adjudged is taken for truth As in an Action of debt upon an Obligation against an Abbot the Abbot acknowledgeth the Action and dyeth the successor shall not avoid execution though the Obligation was made without the assent of the Covent for he cannot falsify the recovery in an higher Action and the thing judged is taken for truth and this is but a Chattle and so is it of a Statute or Recognizance acknowledged by an Abbot and Prior ibidem And therefore doth the Law so much respect the certainty of Iudgement and the credit and authority of Iudges as it will not permit any error to be assigned that impeacheth them in their trust and office and in wilfull abuse of the same but onely
within a Mannor time out of minde of man used was to grant parcell of the said Mannar in Fee-simple and never any grant was made to the heir of his body for life or for yeares and the Lord of the said Mannor did grant to one by copy for life the remainder over to another and the heires of his body and was adjudged that the grant and remainder over was good because the Lord having a custome and interest withal might grant a lesser estate for in this custome which enableth him to doe the greater enableth him to doe the lesse Coke com f. 52. b. for omne majus continet in se minns and regularly it is true that where a man doth that which he ought to doe and more there it is good for that which is warranted and void for the rest Coke com 258. a. As if a Letter of Attorney be made to I. S. to make livery of seisin in white acre and he maketh livery in white acre and black acre there he doth idem aliud and therefore it is good for white acre that is according to his authority and void for black acre which is aliud from his authority Perk. 38. But otherwise it had been if the Letter of Attorny were to make livery of one acre and he maketh livery of two acres there it is void for both because it is not named in certaine in the Feoffment of which acre livery shall be made according to 4. H. 7. And so regularly it is true that where a man doth the same thing he is authorized to doe alio modo in another manner then the authority doth warrant there it is void for the whole Davis in case of tenures f. 21. As if I command a man to make a Feoffment in my name according to a copy shewed in Latine and he maketh a Feoffment to the same effect in English it is without warrant because he doth not pursue the authority in the same Mannor 10. H. 7. 9. So a Letter of Attorney is made to deliver seisin after the death of I. S. and the Attorney maketh seisin during the life of I. S. all is void 40. Ass 38. Authorities by Deed are to be pursued strictly and precisely both for matter and manner Davis ibidem f. 17. The Plaintiff did make a charter of Feoffment to the tenant and a Letter of Attorny to deliver livery of seisin the Attorney delivereth seisin upon condition this livery is void for the authority is not pursued in the same manner 12. Ass 24. 26. So on the contrary if the Letter of Attorney had been to deliver seisin upon condition and the Attorney maketh livery without condition this is void Co. Just 258. 11. H. 4. 3. So where an authority is given to enfeoff and he levieth a fine 10. H 7. 15. It is void Omne mandatum est temporaneum Reg. I. C. all commands are temporary and are extinguished by death which is the difference that the Civilians put between an authority and a command and that the commande is determined by the death of him that commandeth but not the authority as by these verses is signified Praeceptum non pracipitat mors praecipientis Mandatum mandatore cadente cadit But some hold opinion that they both expire by the death of him that commandeth or giveth authority which Fulbech saith is more agreeable to our Law especially in matters of Bailship of which notwithstanding these diversities may be observed A man deviseth all his lands to his Sister except one Mannor which he appointeth to pay his debts and he made two Executors and dieth the one Executor dieth yet the other may sell the Mannor and pay his debts Dyer 371. But if a Letter of Attorney be made to deliver Livery of Seisin after the death of the Feoffor the Letter of Attorney is void Coke com f. 52. b. And if a Mayor and Comminalty maketh a Charter of Feoffment and a Letter of Attorney to deliver Seisin the Livery and Seisin is good after the death of the Mayor because the Corporation dieth not But if the Lessor by his Deed licence the Lessee for life or for years to alien and the Lessor dieth before the Lessee doth alien yet is death no countermand of the licence but that he may alien for this licence was executed on the part of the lessor as much as may be M. 3. Jac. c. 23. And so if the King doth licence to alien in Mortmain and dieth the Licence may be executed afterward Coke ibidem There is a diversity between authorities created by the party for private uses and an authority created by Law for execution of Iustice As for example if a man deviseth that his two Executors shall sell his land if one of them dyes the Survivor shal not sell it but if he had devised his lands to his Executors to be sold there the Survivor shall sell it coke com f. 181. b. And if a man make a Letter of Attorney to two to do any Act if one of them dye the Survivor shall not do it But if a Venire facias be made to foure Coroners to impanell and return a Iury and one of them dye yet the other shall execute and return the same vide ibidem plura And if there be two joynt Attorneys to return Livery for another and livery of Seisin is made to one of them in the name of both this is void unless the Warrant be joyntly and severally Coke com f. 49. l. vide ibidem plura Mandata licita strictam recipiunt interpretationem sed illicita latam extensam Bacon Max. 60. lawfull Commands receive a strict interpretation but unlawfull large and extensive In committing of lawfull authority to another a man may limit it as strictly as he pleaseth and if the party authorised do transgress his authority though it be in circumstance expressed it shall be in most cases void in the whole act as hath before been demonstrated and distinguished But when a man is the Author and advisor to another to commit any unlawfull act then he shall not excuse himself by circumstances pursued Therefore if I make a Letter of Attorney to I. S. to deliver Livery and Seisin in the capitall Messuage and he doth it in another place of the land or between the hours of two and three and he doth it after or before in these cases the act of the Attorney as to execute the estate is void Or if I express the Seisin to be delivered to I.D. and my Attorney deliver it to I.B. it is void but if my Attorney maketh it to his Attorney it shall be intended for it is a Livery to him in Law But on the other side if I command I. S. to rob I. D. on Shooters-hill and he doth it on Gads-hill or to rob him such a day and he doth it not himself but procureth another to do it or to kill by poyson and he doth it by violence in all these cases he
is that which is called Tenure of land in which reservation he had four serviceable Institutions suitable to the state of a Conqueror 1. Marriage of the Wards Male and Female 2. Horse for service 3. Homage and Fealty And fourthly Primer Seisin Bacons uses f. 30. vide ibidem plura But Sir John Davis is of opinion Davis 21. f. 41. that though William the Conqueror made a more absolute and entire Conquest of England then Henry the second did of Ireland yet he did not seise all and had not the actuall possession of all the lands within the Realm of England vested in him by the Conquest yet he acknowledged that the book of Domesday which is an exact discription of all the Realm was made in the time of the Conqueror and that by it appeareth that the Conqueror had certain lands in Demesne which lands were in the hands of Edward the Confessor and are intituled Terrae Edwardi regis and other lands which himself had seised upon the Conquest and are entituled terrae regis and called them the ancient Demesnes of the King and of the Crown of England but he maketh no mention of the lands which he conferred on the Normans which without doubt were very great and whom by Mannors as well as by Honours he made predominant in England as to Hugh Lupus the son of his Mother Lotte and one Hoclewin a Noble man of Normandy whom she had married he gave the Earldome of Chester to hold of him as freely by his sword as he held the Crown of England by vertue of which Grant the said Hugh ordained under him four Barons B. Cr. f. 34. such an honour as no Subject in England ever enjoyed the like which also is manifest by the Grant he made to Warren a Norman of principall qualitie of the Castle of Shirburn in Norfolk B. cr f. 33. which afterwards he restored to the Heir because he had never born Armes against him by which this consequence may probably be inferred that notwithstancting his universall Conquest he had such a moderate respect to those who were neither Actors nor Opposites to his atchievement of the Crown that though upon suspitious informations he had by Grants deprived them of their estates yet in consideration of their submissive homage and fealty he gratiously restored them But to the point in hand upon this Conquest the ancient Lawes did seem to be silent Co. l. 3 71. ad lectorem for he abrogated many of them and in their stead brought in other Lawes which Sir Edward Coke confesseth efficacissima ad regni pacem tuendam were effectuall and forcible to maintain the peace of the Kingdome commanding them to be written in French and also that all causes should be pleaded and all matters of form dispatched in French thereby intending to make the Normans Language as predominant as their persons and therein intimating the Romans who upon their Conquest of any Country as well as England introduced and used their Language in all matters of state and Courts of Judicature both which are altered and changed by our Parliaments as an ancient badge of conquests and servitude So Edward the first made a Conquest of the Dominion of Wales and changed their Lawes and Customs as he hath expressed in his Charter as the Statute of Rutland whereas to their Lawes and Customes he saith Quasdam illarum de consilio procerum regni nostri de levimas quasdam correximus ac etiam quasdum alias adjiciendas faciendas decrevimus c. Some of them by the advice of the Nobles of our Kingdome we have abolished some we have corrected also some we have decreed to add and make Optimi ducis est Scire vincer● cerdere prudenter tempori Coke com f. 71. a. It is the part of an excellent Captain to know and to overcome and wisely to yeild unto the time Men must not fight onely with War-like Weapons and Engines but with the force of his wit and ingeny for dolus cunning and policy is much used in military affaires and standeth in equall ballance with strength and might according to the poeticall sentence Nil refert armis contingat palma dolove Nam dolus an virtus surit quis in hoste requiret By might and slight to conquer yea or no It is no matter for either in a foe Who doth require Nay often times prudent subtlety prevaileth more in such War-like enterprises then might and strength of hand and therefore are Stratagems more commonly more commodious then plain and equall encounters which a compleat Generall will alwaies practise upon a convenient occasion as Vegetius prescribeth Boni duces non aperto morte praelium in quo est commune periculum sed ex occulto semper attentant ut integris suis viribus quantum possint hostes interrimant certe vel terreant Good Captains will not fight in open field in which the danger is common and equal but will invade them unawares that with all their forces in what they can they may either destroy the enemy or otherwise put them into a fear and fright And therefore the Lacedominans when they over-came the enemy by Stratagem did sacrifice to Mars an Oxe but when by open strength a Cock of which Plutarch giveth the reason that so they might accustome their Leaders that they should not onely be valiant but also by subtle wiliness which is requisite in an Emperor they should excell in Stratagems And which by the Law of God is more to be desired for God commanded Joshua Josh 8. to lye in ambush for the City of Aye behind it and so did David when he was to fight with the Philistims Thou shalt not go up but fetch a compass behind them and come upon them over against the Mulberry Trees So it is a cunning policy in the besieged that they pretend to abound in those things which they most want So the Romans when the Capitall was besieged by the French and were pressed with the extream necessity of famine did cast down loafes of bred among their enemies Val. Max. l. 7. c. 4. that they might seem to abound in provision by which device the enemy was induced by compact to leave the siege And so in such a siege it is a commodious thing to a Captain to move in treaty of agreement and to make truce with the enemy for certain daies which usually maketh the enemy more negligent so as he may the more easily get out of their hands By this way Sylla delivered himself twice from the enemy and by the same deceit Asdruball in Spain got out from the force of Claudius Nero who had besieged him Match l. 6. f. 89. vide ibidem plura Lib. II. MISCELLANEA or an Hotch-pot Or divers scattered grounds concerning the reasonable construction of the LAW SECT I RAtio est anima legis Coke com f. 394. b. Reason is the life of the Law for then we are said to know the Law
re-entry is good if the other party confesse the condition If twelve be sworn and one depart another of the pannell by consent may be sworn and with the eleven give verdict The Court in a Quare impedit by consent may give longer day then is limited by the Statute of Marlebridge The Statute of 2. E. 3. 20. E. 3. provide that neither for the great Seale or the petty Seale Justice shall be delayed yet when the matter concerneth the King onely if he command it it may be stayed F. N. B. 21. b. Tenure at this day may be created by consent of all notwithstanding the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum 27. H. 8. By speciall consent of parties re-entry may be made for default of payment of the rent without demande of it Dyer 78. vide by all which cases it appeareth that consent of parties altereth the forme and course of Law ibidem Coke l. 5. f. 40. Electio semel facta placitum testatum non patitur regressum 20. H. 6. 24. Coke com f. 146. a. An election once made and testified by pleading suffereth no returne As if a Rent-charge be granted to A. and B. and their heires and A distraineth the Beasts of the Grantor and he sueth a Replevin A. avoweth for himselfe and maketh conusance for B A. dyeth B. surviveth B. shall not have a Writ of Annuity for in that case the election and the avowry for the rent of A. barreth B. of any election to make it an Annuity ibidem Coke l. 4 f. 5. b. in Vernoms case If the Baron discontinue the Land of his wife and dyeth and the wife bringeth a Writ of dower against the discontinuee and recover the third part shee is by it estopped to bring a cui invita for by the Writ of Dower shee claimeth Title of Dow●r onely and therefore shall be estopped to claime any other right by a cui invita 10. E. 3. double Plea 8. 10. E. 3. Scire facias 13. F. N. B. 194 17 Ass Pl. 3. For when shee bringeth her Writ of Dower and hath judgement to have the third part of all by it shee affirmeth that shee hath but title of Dower and by consequence no estate and therefore shee shall be estopped to claime any part of it of which shee hath demanded by her Writ to be endowed and an acceptance of rent by her Deed indented concludeth the feme of her right 11. H 7. 10 vide ibidem plura in Christians case But here a diversity is to be observed that a man may have several remedies for a thing that is meerly personal or meerly reall As if a man may have an action of account or an action of debt at his pleasure he bringeth an action of account appeareth to it and after is non-suite yet he may have an action of debt afterwards because both actions charge the person the like case is of an assize of a writ of entry in the nature of assize and the like Coke com f. 146 a. Multa conceduntur per obliquum quae non conc●duntur de directo Coke l. 6. f. 47. a. Many things are granted by the by which are not directly granted As when a Bar is pleaded in a reall or personall Action as a release c. in a forrain County there the Jurors which try it shall assesse damages according to the profits of the Land in another County so by that meanes enquire of things locall in another County for many things are granted by the by c. And when they try the matter of the Bar upon good and pregnant evidence they ought to finde all dependants upon it as damages c. vide ibidem plura Dispositio ●e interesse facturo lest inutilis Bacon f. 56. The grant of a future interest is vaine and void for the Law doth not allow of grants unlesse there be a foundation of an interest for the Law will not accept of Grants of Titles or of things in Action which are imperfect interests much lesse will it allow a man to grant or incumber that which is no interest at all but meerly future As a Writ of Annuity was granted by a prebend after collations admissions and institutions but before installation or induction which though it was confirmed by the ordinary who was the Patron also was adjudged void because he had but jus ad rem and a future interest but not in re for he shall not be said a prebendary to all intents nor at the Common Law without the reall possession which is by induction Dyer 221. Pl. 18. A. maketh a Lease of Land for years to B without reservation of the Woods and Trees the Lessor cannot sell all the Woods and Trees for the Woods and Trees are parcell of the Lease and passe to the Lessee as well as the Land if they be not excepted upon the Lease for all the fruites and profits coming from the fruitfull Trees belong to the Lessee and the shadow and also the branches and loppings for fire or enclosure of fences Dyer 90. Pl. 8. If I grant unto you that if you enter into an obligation to me of one hundred pounds and after procure me such a Lease that then the same obligation shall be void and you enter into such an obligation unto me and afterwards doe procure such a lease yet the obligation is simple because the defeasance was made of that which was not 20 Eliz. 19. H. 6.62 So if I grant unto you a rent-charge out of white-acre and that it shall be lawfull for you to distraine in all my other Lands whereof I am now seised and which I shall hereafter purchase although this be but a liberty of distresse and no rent save onely out of white-acre yet as to the Lands after to be purchased the clause is void 27 E. 3. If I covenant with my Son in consideration of naturall Love to stand seised to his use of the Lands I shall hereafter purchase the use is void 25. 27. Eliz. So if I devise the Mannor of D. by speciall name of which at that time I am not seised and after I purchase it except I make some new publication of my will my devise is void Ployd Rigdens case vide Bacon ibidem plura f. 57.58 Non refert an quis assensum praebat verbis an rebus factis Coke l. 10 f. 52. b. It mattereth not whether a man giveth his assent by words or by things themselves and Deeds Whereas the assent of an Executor is necessary before any legancy can be had for that debts are first to be paid and that the Executor must look to it at-his perill Offi. of Exec. 234. the assent consent and agreement of John Morris the Executor to the Legacy of William Taylor and Elizabeth his wife did appeare in that at the speciall instance and request of the said Morris the said William Taylor and Elizabeth his wife did release the said Legacy to the said Morris