Selected quad for the lemma: land_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
land_n die_v life_n tenant_n 4,628 5 10.2669 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A45254 The reports of that reverend and learned judge, Sir Richard Hutton Knight sometimes one of the judges of the common pleas : containing many choice cases, judgments, and resolutions in points of law in the severall raignes of King James and King Charles / being written in French in his owne hand, and now faithfully translated into English according to order. England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas.; Hutton, Richard, Sir, 1561?-1639. 1656 (1656) Wing H3843; ESTC R14563 150,299 158

There are 17 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the Award of Costs were in full force and effect But that afterwards viz. such a time as well the said Iudgment de non pros as the said Iudgment of thirty pounds Debt against the now Plaintiff were evacuated wherupon the Defendant demurred And it having been often debated by Hitcham for the Defendant and Henden for the Plaintiff And now upon Oyer of the Record and of the Iudgment the Court gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff And the Lord Finch said that this action upon the case is grounded upon two misdemeanours 1. The procurement of the said Iudgment for Edw. L. after a Non pros entred for the Defendant And though the Iudgment was erroneous yet the now Plaintiff was vexed and imprisoned therby which indeed is the cause of this action 2. The taking therof unlawfully when the first Iudgment de non pros was in force and the Plea of Nil tiel Record go only to one of the Causes And admitting that there was never a Iudgment de non pros but that the Defendant had unlawfully procured a Iudgment and taken Execution therupon and procured the Plaintiff to be taken in Execution and Imprisoned this is cause of action And to that he hath not answered and therfore he ought to have pleaded Not guilty to that which he takes by protestation Iudgment pro quaerente Pasch 11 Car. Baker versus Hucking Adjudged B. Rs. Tenant in tail and he in Reversion make a I. case Pro ut aut vic TEnant in tail and he in Reversion joyn by Deed in a Lease for life he in Reversion devise the Land by his Will to one in Fee and dieth Tenant in tail dies without Issue and the Heir of him in Reversion and the Devises claim the Land And the sole question is if this Lease be a Discontinuance and it was adjudged a Discontinuance and then the Devise void for he had not a Reversion And the difference was taken when Tenant for life and he in Reversion joyn in a Lease by Deed for without Deed it is first a Surrender Discontinuance and then the Lease or Feoffment of him in Reversion it shall be the Lease of Tenant for life so long as he live and after the Lease of him in Reversion and yet they shall joyn in a Writ of Wast And in this case there is no question but if the Lease had been made solely by Tenant in tail that then it were a Discontinuance and the joyning of him in Reversion alters it not for that amounts to nothing but as a Confirmation and is not like to Bredons case Coke lib 1. fol 76. Where Tenant for life and he in remainder in tail levy a Fine for every one there passeth that which lawfully he may And upon Argument it was adjudged that it was a Discontinuance and not the Lease of him in Reversion but his Confirmation Iustice Crooke differed in opinion Mich. 11 Car. Lashbrookes Case Somerset LEwes Lashbrook an Attorney of this Court brought an action of Trespasse against I. S. for entring into his house and breaking his Close And in the new Assignment he alledged the Trespasse to be in a house called the Entry and in a house called the Kitchin and in his Garden and in one Close called the Court. The Defendant as to the force c. and to all besides the Entry plead Not guilty And as to his entry into the Court and Kitchin A Warrant to four and two of them execute it and the Tenements aforesaid of the new Assignment he plead that he had brought an action against a woman for Trespasse and had so proceeded that he recovered and had execution directed to the Sheriff of Somersetshire and therupon a Warrant directed to four speciall Bayliffs to arrest the said Woman and two of them at Minehead in the County of Somersetshire arrested her and carried her to the house of the Plaintiff in Minehead being a Common Inn and the Defendant entred into the said houses called the Entry and Kitchin and the Tenements aforesaid of the new Assignment to speak to the Bayliffs and to warn them to keep her safe And as soon as he could he returned wherupon the Plaintiff demurred And now Henden took two Exceptions the first was 1. That the Defendant had not pleaded to all the Closes but that was over-ruled for he justified in the tenements aforesaid of the new Assignment 2. The second was that the Warrant to the Bayliffs was to all and not Conjunctim and Divisim and therfore it should be by all and not by two only To that it was answered and resolved that when a Sheriff makes such a Warrant which is for the Execution of Iustice that may be by any of them for it is Pro bono publico And the very Case was adjudged 45 Eliz between King Hebbs Coke Littleton 181. b. And Iudgment was given for the Defendant Hil. 11 Car. Davies Case Hereford DAvies an Attorney of this Court brought an action upon the case for these words If I list I can prove him Perjured Words And the opinion of the Court was that they were not actionable for there is not any Affirmative that he was perjured but a thing which is Arbitrary and saies not that he would do it Iudgment pro Defend Mich. 7 Car. Rot. 1097. Alston versus Andrew Suff. P●ter Alston Executor of Peter Alston brought an action of Debt upon an Obligation of a hundred and twenty pounds against William Andrew The Obligor and the Obligee make the same person Executor and Edward Andrew and count That the Defendants and one Francis A. became obliged to the Testator c. and that they did not pay it is the said Testator in his life nor to the now Plaintiff and one Francis Andrew Co-executor with the Plaintiff who is summoned and the Plaintiff admits to prosecute alone without the same Francis c. The Defendants demand Oyer of the Obligation which is entred in haec verba and plead that Francis A. in the said Writing named after the making therof made the said Francis Andrew and Barb. A. his Executors and died And that the said Francis A. accepted the Burthen of the Testament And after the said Peter Alston the Testator made his will and Constituted the Plaintiff and the said Francis his Executors and died Et hoc paratus est verificare unde c. wherupon the Plaintiff demur Trugeon and Meron Mich 2 Jac. Rot. 2663. Garret Trugeon Plaintiff against one Anthony Meron and others the Administrators of Benjamin Scrivin upon a single Bill The Defendants demand Oyer of the Bill wherby it appears that one John Simcocks was obliged to the said Trugeon joyntly and severally with the said Scrivin Quibus lectis auditis the Defendants sayd that the said Simcocks died intestate and that the Administration of his Goods was granted to the now Plaintiff who accepted the Burthen of the Administration and Administred the Plaintiff demurred
he had nothing else to say but submit himself to the mercy of the King And there execution was awarded and a Roll made therof and so it was done in Lepu's case as the President was shewn and he was committed to the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex and by them he was brought to the Gatehouse and the next day which day the Lord Mayor of London came to Westminster to take his Oath he was beheaded in the great Court at Westminster and he died in a good and religious manner and spake much without any fear of death submitted himself to the Block and by his death gained great reputation in this life and by the grace and mercy of God remission of his sins and eternall life afterwards c. Bishop and others FAther Tenant in tail hath Issue two Sons the Father with the eldest Son makes a Feoffment with Warranty the eldest Son dies Lineall Warranty and after the Father dies the younger Son brought his Formedon and this Feoffment with warranty of the eldest Son is pleaded in Bar and upon Demurrer Iudgment for the Demandant For it is but a lineall Warranty and then without Assets it is no Bar for though the eldest Son dye in the life of the Father yet the younger Son by possibility might have the Land as Heir to him Mich. 16 Jacobi AN action of Debt was brought upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. for perjury against one that was produc't as a Witnesse in an action of Trespasse and deposed falsely And upon Nil debet pleaded the Plaintiff was non-suit Costs shal not be allowed upon a non-suit in an action brought upon the Statute 5 Eliz. of Perjury And whether the Defendant should have costs or no was moved by Serjeant Harvy and that stands upon the words of the Statute of 23 H. 8. cap. 16. the words are In any Action Suit Bill upon the Case or upon any Statute for any Offence or wrong personall immediatly supposed to be done to the Plaintiff The opinion of the Court was that the Defendant should not have costs upon this non-suit because that this action is founded upon a Statute made long after the making of that Statute Also this is not an immediate wrong to the Plaintiff but to the Secondary for it is an immediate wrong to the truth and such Statutes which are intended by this Act shall be like to Trespasse done to the party himself as Ravishment of Ward Also it is not aided by the Statute of 4 Jacobi cap 3. for that gives costs to the Defendant where the Plaintiff shall have costs if he recover And Mr. Brownlow the Prothonatory said that it had been ruled so before for the Plaintiff should not have costs if he recover because the Act 5 Eliz. gives a Penalty viz. a forfeiture of twenty pounds against the Witnesse and forty pounds against the Suborner and so the Plaintiff if he had recovered should not have had any costs and therfore it is not aided by the Statute of 4 Jacobi Mich. 16 Jacobi Conesbies Case THe Lady Conesby being the Wife of Sir Ralph Conesby was cited into the Ecclesiasticall Court by Mr. Watts Prohibition who had married Elizabeth the Grand-child of the Father of Sir Ralph to which Grand-child by Will one Legacy of a hundred pounds was devised and that was pass 3 Jac. by the Lady Conesby Executor of the first Testator and upon payment an Acquittance under the hand and Seal of the said Watts was c. in the presence of two Witnesses now dead And this being denied and they allowing of no proof by comparison of hands nor by circumstances but only proof of them which wrote it or of them which saw them subscribe And by their Law an Acquittance of the Husband for a Legacy to the Wife without the Wife is not sufficient also if Watts himself will deny it upon his Oath there it shall stand against all proofs A Prohibition was granted upon the motion of Serjeant John Moore and after Serjeant Harvy had said all that he could say Trin. 16 Jac. Rot. 954. Kind versus Ammery KInd Plaintiff in a Replevin against Ammery Replevin The Avowry was for a Rent-charge and the Grant was of a rent of twelve pounds payable at two Feasts Demand not necessary in an Avowry for a Rent-charge and if it vs behind for the space of a month after any of the said Feasts it being lawfully demanded that he might distrain and for Rent arrear at the Annunciation and by the space of a month after and not paid he distrained And the Plaintiff demurred upon this Avowry and shewes for cause that it is not shewn that the Avowant made any demand before the Distresse And Serjeant Harris relied upon a Case which was An 31 Eliz. as he said and vouched the number Roll Bosdens case that upon demurrer between Bosden and Downes there the Avowry was not good for the same cause And Maunds case Coke lib. 7 fol. 28. implies that it ought to be demanded but it is not issuable if it be at the day or after And he said it was debated 31 Eliz. whether it was form or substance which shall not need to be shewn upon Demurrer But the Court agreed that no actuall demand was necessary to procede the Distresse in this case but that the Distresse is a demand But if the Grant has been penned in this form if it be arrear at such a Feast and for a month after demand that then he may distrain otherwise it is for there the Distresse is limited to the month after the demand And so it was adjudged in this Court between Coppleston and Langford Trin. 3. Car. Rot. 2865. Copplestone Langford Replevin between Beriman and Bower Avowry for Rent granted out of ten acres of Land in Crediton payable at such a Feast upon the Town stone upon the Key in Barnstable if it be lawfully demanded with clause of Distresse and the Distresse was before demand and upon demurrer it was resolved a good Distresse without demand vide Dyer 348. Booton against the Bishop of Rochester A Quare impedit was brought by Booton against the Bishop of Rochester who pleads that he claims nothing but as Ordinary and yet pleads further that the Clerk which the Plaintiff present had before contracted with the Plaintiff Simoniacally Insufficient return on a Writ in Quare Impedit to the Arch bishop and therfore because he was Simoniacus he refused him and that the Church was then void and so remained void wherupon the Plaintiff had a Writ to the Arch-bishop of Canterbury who returned that before the coming of this Writ viz. 4 July the Church was full of one Mr. Doctor Grant ex collatione of the said Bishop of Rochester which had collated by Laps and this return was adjudged insufficient First it is clear that though the six months passe yet if the Patron present the Bishop ought to admit although it
are not Affirmative or Positive but a supposition only as if he had said Nowels case I will indite him for such a matter it was vouched to be adjudged 51 Eliz. in Nowels case that to say of an Attorna●● That he was Cooped for forging Writs maintain an action And 14 Eliz. He is infected of the Robbery and he smelleth of the Robbary adjudged actionable In balls case There is never a Purse cut in Northamptonshire but Ball hath a part of it will not bear action But the Court would not declare their opinion Quia sub spe Concordiae Griggs Case GRigg which is the Examiner at Chester preferred there this Bill in the Chancery vocat the Exchequer Prohibition ●i Chester against one which inhabite within the same County and another which inhabite in London being executors to one to whom the said Grigg was indebted by Obligation which Obligation was put in suit in the Court of Common Pleas and there proceed to processe before the Bill exhibited and the Bill concern equity of an Agreement that the Testator had promised that one Robert Grigg should assign a lease of Tithes to the Plaintiff in consideration of his entry into the said Obligation and if he could not procure it that then the Obligation should not be prejudiciall to him and he which was distributing in Chester answered therto And an Order was made by Sir Thomas Ireland Vice-Chamberlain that Processe should be awarded to him which dwelleth in London And an Inquisition was granted to stay the proceedings at Common Law And afterwards upon the motion of Serjeant Hitchar● Sir Thomas Ireland was in Court and shew all that he could to maintain the Iurisdiction viz. That the Contract was made in the County Palatine and that the priviledge pursued the Plaintiff and ipse qui est reus non potest eligere c. Yet it was resembled to ancient Demesn and Guildable And by Lord Hobart he which inhabit at Dove● by this way may be inforced to come and answer to a Bill in Chester which would be infinite trouble and the matter is transitory And it was resolved that the Court of Chester had not power in this case but it belonged to the Chancery of England And a Prohibition was granted Hil. 20 Jac. ONe case was in the Kings Bench viz. Trespasse Baron and Feme brought in action of Trespasse Quare clausum fregit Trespasse by Baron and Feme for breaking the Close of the Baron for the Battery of the Wife and for Battery of the Feme the Defendant pleaded a License to enter into the Close made by the Baron and not guilty as to the Battery And the Court was moved in Arrest of Iudgment because the Husband and Writ could not ioyn for the weaking of the Close of the Baron the Writ shall abate for all But the Lord chief Iustice and Iustice Dodderidge were of opinion that the Plaintiff should have Iudgment And it seems that the Law is clear accordingly vide 9 E 4. 51. Trespasse by the Husband and Wife for the Battery of them both the Iury found so much for the Battery of the Husband and so much for the Battery of the Wife and so Damages assessed severally because the Wife could not soon with the Husband in an action for the Battery of the Husband for that part the Writ shall abate and for the Battery of the Wife they shall recover for for that they ought or joyn in an action vide 46 E 3. 3. Baron and Feme brought Trespasse for the Battery and Imprisonment of the Wife and the Writ was ad damnum ipsorum and yet good vide 9 H 7. in the case of Rescous and 22 E 4. 4. there is a good diversity when the Writ is falsified by the shewing of the party himself and when it is found by Verdict And Iustice Haughton and Iustice Chamberlain were of opinion that the Writ should abate for it is apparent that as to the Trespasse Quare clausum fregit the Wife had no cause of action But this case being debated at Serjeants Inn in Chancery Lane at the Table the Lord chief Baron was of opinion that Plaintiff should have Iudgment for that part and he held the Writ good in part and Reddenda singula singulie Me●enest issint as it seems no more then in the case of 9 E 4. for there the Writ shall avate for part And if an action of forgery of Deeds be brought against two for forging and publishing and found that one forged and the other published the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment Howell versus Auger Trespasse IN an action of Trespasse brought by Noy Howell against Auger for breaking of a house and five acres of Land in Fresham upon Non Culp pleaded the Iury gave a speciall Verdict Devise of a Fee after a Fee Robert Howell seised of the Land in Question and of other Land by his Will in writing devised this Land to Dorothy his Wife for life and devised this Land to Thomas Howell his younger Son to him and his Heirs in Fee under the Condition which shall be afterwards declared And the other Land was also devised to Dorothy for life and to the Plaintiff and his Heirs in Fee under the Condition hereafter limited If Dorothy died before the Legacies paid then he will that they shall be paid by Noy and Thomas his Sons portion-like out of the Houses and Lands given them And if either of my Sons dye before they enter or before the Legacies paid or before either of them enter Then I will that the longer liver shall enjoy both parts to him and his Heirs And if both dye before they enter then his Executors or one of them to pay the Legacies and to take the profits till they be paid and a year after and made Dorothy his Wife and Christopher Roys his Executors and died Dorothy entred the Plaintiff Noy by his Deed In 33 Eliz. in the life of Dorothy released to Thomas all his right c. with Warranty Release of Lands devised before they be vested Thomas by his Will devised the Land for which the action is brought to Agnes his Wife and died in the life of Dorothy and before Legacies paid Dorothy died and Agnes entred and took to Husband Henry Ayleyard who leased to the Defendant upon whom Noy entred and the Defendant re-entred And Si super totam Materiam c. And this Case was well argued at Bar in two Terms and the first question was If this Devise of a Fes after a Limitation be good or not much was said for it and they relyed upon a case which was adjudged in the Kings Bench between Pell and Brown of such a limitable Fee Pell and Brown And many Cases put that this operate as a future Devise Executory as well as one may by his Will Devise that if his Son and Heir dye before he marry or before that he come to the age of
use of the Kings Bench is never to enter the Admission but only to recite it in the Count vide 11 H 7. Rot 412. In a Writ of Right by Baron and Feme and another Feme Infants there per custodes good vide 8 E 4 5. for the Mainprise entred in another Term lib Intractionum fol 366. It was vouched by Croke and affirmed by Yelverton in one Simpsons case in Durham Simpsons case where the Tenant was by Prochein amy where it should be by Guardian was Error The Presidents are that an Infant when he sue may be by Guardian or Prochein amy the one or the other but when he is sued it shall be by Guardian Mich. 3 Car. Wolfe versus Hole WOlfe an Attorney Plaintiff against Hole by a Writ of Priviledge Amendment and he Count upon an Assumpsit And after Verdict given and Iudgment a Writ of Error was brought and moved that there was a default in the Imparlance Roll viz. fault de trover pledges which was as it ought to be in the Plea Roll And it was moved that it might be amended and after debate at Bar by Henden and Davenport it was resolved that the not finding of Pledges is not matter of form but matter of substance and it concerns the King for if the cause to amerce the Plaintiff the Iudgment is Ideo le Plaintiff ses pledge sont Amerce and that it is not aided by the Statute of 18 Eliz. quod quaere and vide 12 Eliz Dyer 288. there is a Case written by me that An 17 Jac was amended after the Verdict and in one Hillaries case and vide th●re in Dyer that the Plaintiff when he is sued by Priviledges ought to find pledges and that as well as when a Bill is filed against an Attorney But now because that it was assigned for Error and that if it be amendable the Iustices of the Kings Bench would amend it this Court would not but if it had been in the Imparlance Roll and omitted in the Plea Roll it should be amended vide 18 E 4. 9. that Pledges may be entred at any time Hil. 2. Car. Rot. 565. Hilton versus Paule RIchard Hilton brought an action of Trespasse against Robert Paule Trespasse Which shall be said a Parish Church within the act of 43 Eliz. for the maintenance of th● poor for the taking of a Saddle at Stoke-Goldenham And upon Not guilty pleaded the Iury gave a speciall Verdict Viz. That the Parish of Hinkley was de temps dont memory c. and yet is an ancient Rectory and a Church Parochiall And that the Town of Stoke-Goldenham is an ancient Town and parcell of the Rectory of Hinkley And that from the time of H. 6. and afterwards untill this time there hath been and is in the Town of Goldenham a Church which by all the said time hath been used and reputed as a Parish And that the Inhabitants of Stoke-G by all the said time had had all Parochiall Rights and Church-wardens And that the Tow●● of Stoke-Goldenham is distant two miles from Hinkley And the Verdict concluded it it should seem to them that Stoke Goldenham is a Parish for the relief of Poor within the Statute of 43 Eliz. cap. 2. then they find for the Plaintiff if not for the Defendant And this Case was argued by Serjeant Barkley and he vouched Linwood fol 89. and said that there is Ecclesia major minor and a dependant Church upon the principall and another Church and which is found to be used and reputed ergo it is not a Parish And that the Exception of the Chappell of Foulnes which by the Statute is made a Parish proves that Chappell and Parish are not within the Statute he vouched 4 E 4. 39. and 5 E 4. to prove that divers Town may be one Parish And the Lord Richardson said that it is a clear case that this is a Parish within the intent of the Statute of 43 Eliz. for the relief of Poor And that the Church-wardens and Overseers of Stoke-Goldenham might assesse for the relief of the Poor And though it be found that after the time of H. 6. and untill now it had been used as a Parish Church that doth not exclude that it was not used so before And a Reputative Chantery is within the Statute of Chantries 1 E 6. And this Statute being made for the relief of the Poor and that they might not wander therfore the intent of the Statute is to confine the relief to Parishes then in esse and so used And every one of the Court delivered their opinion and concurred And so Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Hil. 3 Car. Peto versus Pemmerton Mich. 3 Car. Rot. 414. Replevin SIr Edward Peto Knight brought Replevin against Robert Pemmerton and Giles Thompson The Defendants made Conusance as Bayliffs to Humphrey Peto Where Grantee of a Rent-charge takes a Lease of part of the Land and surrenders it the Rent shall be revived and that Humphrey the Father of the said Humphry was seised of the place in which c. in Fee and by his Deed granted the Rent of six pounds to the said Humphrey his Son for life out therof to Commence after the Death of the Grantor and shewed that Humphrey the Father died and for Rent arrear c. The Plaintiff in Bar to the Avowry confesse the grant and seisin of the Land and that the said Humphrey died seised of the Land out of which the Rent was granted and that that descended to William and from William to the Plaintiff who entred and demised to the said Humphrey the Son parcell of the Lands unde c. for five hundred years by force of which Lease the said Humphrey had entred and was possessed The Defendants replyed that afterwards and before any part for which they made Conusance was arrear the said Humphrey the Son surrendred the said Lease to Sir Edward Peto to which surrender the said Sir Edward agreed wherupon the Plaintiff demurred And this Case was argued by Henden and he said that when the act of him which had the Rent made the suspension his act alone could not revive it But a Rent suspended might be revived by the act of Law or by the joynt act or agreement of the parties by whom the suspension was made 21 H. 7. 7. 19 H 6. 4. 19 H 6. 45. 7 H 6. 2. As for the personall things when they are suspended they are extinct unlesse it be in auter droit as if Feme Executrix take the Debtor to Husband and the Baron dies the Wife shall have an action of Debt against his Executors One reason in this case is because that by the surrender which is accepted the Contract is determined and that is by the act of both And by the surrender the Estate for years is extinguisht to all purposes as to that to which the surrender was made as if he had granted a Rent now it shall
fee 60 Devise and what said in tail inde 85 Dower barred by Joynture 51 E. ELegit the Sheriff ought to deliver the Moyety by meets and bounds 16 Essoign though the Writ be not returned 28 Essoin upon return of an alias Summons 43 Essoine shall not be allowed in Dower after Issue 69 Error in omission of additions 41 Estate derived from one and shews not how 15 Ex●cutors to what intents they shall be before probat of the Will 30 Executor the same person made by the Obligor and by the Obligee 128 Execution shall be de bonis testatoris where the Executors breake the Covenants of the Testator 35 Execution shall not be awarded upon Iudgment given in the grand Sessions of Wales 117 Extortion 53 78 Estrayes where they may be fettered 67 F. FIne to two and the Heirs of one to the use of them two and their Heirs 112 Fine de Oct. puris where the Caption was 14. February 135 G. GRant of an Advowson without alledging it to be by Deed 54 Grantee of a Rent-charge takes a Lease of part of the Land and after surrenders it the Rent shall be revived 94 Tenant for life with a Remainder to him in tail expectant and remainder to him in fee 96 Grant a Rent in fee and after had fee by Fine 96 H. HEriot where the Lord shall loose it when the Tenant hath none 4 Habeas Corpus liberty cannot be given to a Prisoner therby 129 Habendum void to parties not named in the Deed 88 Hue and Cry and Debt upon that Statute 125 I. INdempnitas nominis and supersedeas inde 45 Infant where he shall appear by Guardian and where by Prochein amy 92 Inditements for Rape and Buggery 115 Inns how they may be erected or restrained 99 Information against a Subject for Extortion 53 Information where it shall be brought 98 Intermarriage where it is a release of a promise c. before marriage 17 Jurisdiction a Plea therto where part of the land lies in the Cinque Ports 74 Judgment to what day it shall have relation 95 Joynture bars Dower 51 L. A Lord where he may be sworn 87 Lease by Feme in speciall tail 84 Lease by Baron and Feme without reservation of any rent 102 Lease where the acceptance of a new Lease makes a surrender of the former 104 N. NOtice where it shall be upon a promise 80 Nusances 136 O. OUtlawry where it may be pleaded 53 Obligation by the Sheriff where void 52 Office of a Park-keeper is good if the King dispark the Park 86 Obligation to levy a Fine before a day who shall do the first act 48 P. PArdon 79 Parliament what shall be said a Session 61 Pleas severall and by severall Defendants upon joynt Contracts 26 Prescription for a way and no place to which c. issue joyned on the Prescription 10 Prescription to have Herbage 45 Prescription to have Deer in discharge of Tithes 57 Plea as Heir and shews not how 15 Prescription to have Common omni tempore anni without saying quolibet anno 1 Plea of Grant of an Advowson without alledging by Deed 54 Prohibition 22 Prohibition to Chester 59 Q. QVire Impedit c. 31. 36 Quid juris clamat 89 Quod permittat 28 R. REcord shall be good where the conveyance is delivered to be inrolled but is not inrolled 1 Release of land devised before it be vested 60 Rationabile parte bonorum 109 Recovery if the Town be omitted therin the Land doth not passe 106 Record matter of Record tryed per pais 20 Remainder where it shall be said Contingent 118 Rent tendred at the day 13 Rent Assumpsit lies not for it 34 Rescous by the Plaintiff in the first action 98 Request where necessary 2. 73. 106 Return insufficient of a Writ of Quare Impedit 24 S. Statutes What shall be said a Parish Church within the Statute of 43 Eliz. 93 Resolves upon the Statute of 3 H. 7. cap. 2. 2 Resolves upon 35 Eliz. cap. 1. concerning Sectaries 61 Resolves upon 5 Eliz. concerning Aliens 132 Resolves upon the Statutes concerning Souldiers 134 Upon the Statute of Hue and Cry 125 Statute-Merchant without day of payment 42 Statute of Limitations extends not to Arrearages of Rent reserved upon Indenture 109 So De rationable parte bonorum 109 Debt upon a poenall Statute is not gone by the death of the King 82 Sci. fac against a Sheriff to have Execution of monies returned levied by him 32. 11 Sci. fac by Baron and Feme the death of the one shall abate it 37 Sci fac against the Sheriff for taking insufficient Pledges 77 Surrender by Baron and Feme of the Estate of the Feme for life and the King in consideration therof makes a new Lease 7 Suspension of things where they may be revived 94 Supersedeas by the Wife upon an Exigent against Husband and Wife 86 T. TEnder of Rent at the day 13 Tithes and action therupon 121 Tithes of Wood and small tithes 77 Trespass by Baron and Feme for breaking the Close of the Baron and for the Battery of the Wife 59 Tryall where nul tiel vill it pleaded 31 Traverse upon Traverse 96 Traverse of a day 121 Town shall be intended whole Town 74 Traverse of Seisin 123 Tenure by Castleguard is Socage Tenure 91 Tryall of Treason how it shall be 131 Tryall of an action of Account upon receit in two Counties 111 Tryall of matter of Record by the Country 20 Trover and Conversion the Defendant justifie without confession of the Conversion 10 Treason persons attainded therof and set at large how they shall be brought to execution 21 V. VEnire fac from a Towne within a Parish 6 Ven. fac from divers Towns 27 39 Ven. fac where nul tiel vill is pleaded 31 Ven. fac of a Visne from a place known in a Town without making it from the Town 106 View counterpleaded 44 View upon a Quod permittat 28 Usurpation 66 Judgment in Dower upon Voucher 71 W. VVAter increase thereof in Westminster Hall 108 Waifes where they may be fettered and other learning therupon 67 Warrant to four and two only execute it 127 Warranty lineall bind not without Assets 22 Wast in cutting wood to make Cole-mines 19 Wast and inquiry of damages theron 45 Wast how the Writ shall be made where a Lease for life is made the remainder in fee 110 Writs and filing therof 112 WORDS I. S. is in Leicester Gaole for stealing a Horse 2 Welsh words 8 He is a cousening Knave and so I have proved him before my Lord Major for selling of me a Saphire for a Diamond 13 George is a cousening Knave and cousened a poore man of a hundred pounds and all the Georges are Knaves 14 He is a cousening Knave and hath cousened me of forty pounds 14 He is a false Knave and keeps a false Debt-book for he chargeth me with the receit of a peice of Velvet which is false 14 Thou art a pilfering Merchant and hast pilfered away my Goods from my Wife and Children 14 She is a cousening woman and hath cousened one of her Neighbours of four pounds and I will bring good proof of it 14 I doubt not but to see you indited for Sheep stealing 18 Forgery spoken of an Attorny 29 Thou hast forsworn thy self in the Councell before the Marches 34 Thou art a filching fellow and didst filch four pounds from me 34 I charge thee with Felony for taking money out of I. S. pocket and I will prove it 38 I have matter enough against thee for I. S. hath found Forgery against thee and can prove it 41 Forsworn where actionable and where not 44 He is a Bankrupt spoken of one not a Tradesman 45 He is a Bankrupt spoken of a Baker without alledging him to be a common Baker 49 Cousening Knave whether actionable or not 52 I will have him hanged for robbing in the high-way 58 Thou art a Theef and hast stoln my Corn 15 He is as arrant a Knave as any in England 72 I doubt not but to prove that the Plaintiff hath spoken Treason 75 Thou art a common Barretor a Judas a Promoter spoken of an Attorney 104 Thou art a Theef and hast stoln Passions Lamb and marked it and he denied it 110 Thou art a Theef and hast cousened my Cosin Baldwin of his Land 113 I will charge him with flat Felony for stealing my Ropes from of my Shop 113 Thou didst bring Faggots a mile and halfe to burn the Colliers 123 Thou hast made many false Certificates to the Major and Burgesses in that Court 123 Trust him not he is not worth four pence of a Tradesman 125 If I list I can prove him perjured 127 Thou old Witch thou old Whore I will have thee hanged if I can do it 132 I accuse Mr. Justice Hutton of high Treason 131 He is a Witch and an Inchanter and hath bewitched the Children of Strong 13 Errata PAge 1. line 28. for Bormis Inn read Bozuni's Inn p. 3. l. 19. r. grant p. 7 l. 25. blot out by p. 13. l. 2. r Witch p. 22. l. 20. for to the Secondary r. secondarily p. 24. l. 27. r. of p. 28. r. Quod permittat p. 49. l. 8. r. entire l. 24. r. Ignoramus l. 36. r. Lord Hobart the same p. 54. l. 18. the same L. 38. p. 56. l. 42. r. Vicaridge l. 54. r. folk p. 61. l. 9. r. vested p. 65. l. 37. r. Lord Hob. p. 76. l. 38. r. sold p 81. l ●● r. Justices p. 88. r. Hartopp p. 99. l. 25. r. unwholesome p. 104. l. 35. r. Perpoint l ult r. demised p. 105. l. 23. r. Lessee l. 33. after One add Grants proximam Advocationem to and after l. ult r. admitted p. 107. l. 10. r. founded l. 15. r. trimming p. 109. l. 24 r. objection l. 25. r. Action p. 110. l. 14. r. property l. 19. the Ter-tenant r. and held the said lands l. 37. r. dimisione p 112. l. 10. r. time l. 24. put out which granted p. 214. l. 8. r. agreed l. 35. r. rendred p. 116. l. 5. r. Georges p. 117 l. 24. r. Certiorari p. 119. l. 23. r. her l. 35. r. to p. 130. l. penult r. according
Plaintiff had before brought a Quare impedit against the Defendants for the same Church which Writ was returned and that they did appear to defend it First we must know that this Assise shall be taken only in the Common Bench vide Mag Char cap 13. Assize of Darrein presentment abate by a Quare ●●pedit then the Arch-bishop making default and the Assise being awarded against him by default if the other Defendants plead to the Assise yet the Assise shall not be presented because an Assise shall not be taken by parcels and therfore a Resummons shall be awarded against the Arch-bishop and the same for the Iury. But the other Defendants pleading their Plea to the Writ the Court was of opinion that it was a good Plea in abatement of the Writ for the Quare impedit is a Writ of a higher nature vide Regist fol 30. That if he against whom an Assise of Darrein presentment is brought brings a Quare impedit the Darrein presentment shall abate And the Statute of West 2. cap 5. saies it may be in the Election of one whether he will have an Assise of Darrein presentment or Quare impedit ergo he cannot have them both And if an Assise of Darrein presentment be brought and after that a Quare impedit for one avoidance the Assise shall abate for the Quare impedit is higher in his nature that is for the right and for the possession And Iustice Warburton vouched 10 Ed 3 Statham in Darrein presentment 3. If a man shall have a Quare impedit and also an Assise of Darrein presentment of one and the same Advowson pending at one and the same time the Darrein presentment shall abate and the Quare impedit shall stand because that it is of an higher nature By Hank and Hill it was urged that the Quare impedit was not depending untill he had appeared and it is not pleaded that he did appear but vide 2 Ed 4. fol that it is depending when it is returned And in a Quare impedit by the Earl of Bedford against the Bishop of Exeter Bedford versus the Bishop of Exeter it was adjudged Pasch 15 Jac. that he could not have two Quare impedits of one Church and for one avoidance And in this Case the whole Court agreed that the plea was good in abatement of the Writ and awarded that the Assise should abate Mich. 14 Jac. Rot. 3297. Shaw versus Taylor Wigorn. Replevin Where the Lord shal lose his Heriot when the Tenant have not any Beasts BRidget Shaw brought a Replevin against George Taylor for the taking of an Horse at Northfield in a place called Little falling the Defendant makes Cognizance as Bayliff to Sir Thomas Gervas because that one Richard Shaw was seised of an House and divers Lands of which the place where c. was parcell in his Demesn as of Fee and them held of the said Sir Thomas Gervas as of his Mannor of Northfield by Fealty and Rent of twenty pounds and rendring and paying after of every Tenant dying therof seised one Heriot and alledged Seisin and that he died seised And that for one Heriot so due and not delivered he distrained in the place in which c. as within the Fee The Plaintiff plead in Bar to the Avowry and takes the whole Tenure by protestation and for Plea saies that the said Richard Shaw at the time of his death had no Beasts wherof a Heriot might or could be rendred upon which the Defendant demurrs And upon the matter it seemed to the Court that if he had not any Beasts than the Lord must lose it for it is a casuall thing if he have it unlesse the Custom or Tenure be to have the best Beast or such a summ And if he had conveyed it away and so prevented him by any fraud then the Statute of 13 Eliz. had provided remedy but where there is nothing of any such thing which may be rendred at the time of the death there the King must lose his right And it was resolved by the Court that the Cognizance was not good for it ought to be certain i. e. for the best or two best Beasts and not generally for one Heroit and not shewing what thing in certain vide 3 Eliz Dyer 199. A Heriot is Quaedam prestatio c. and see there the Plea that there was no Beast at the time of his death And the opinion of the Court was also that the Bar to the Avowry was not good because the Issue is tendred to a thing not alledged for in the Avowry he made not mention of any beast but generally of one Heriot which is not certain And therfore it was awarded that the Plaintiff should recover and should have a return c. and Damages Pasch 14 Jac. Rot. 907. Norris versus Stapes Goldsborough Berk. RObert Norris and Thomas Trussells Warden● and the Society of Weavers in the Burrough of Newbury De● 1. By lawes in the County of Berkshire brought an Action of Debt for five pounds against John Stapes and Count that Queen Eliz. by her Letters Patents 14. of Octob An 44. at the request of the Inhabitants there using the Art of Weaving and to the intent that Corruption therin might be taken away and avoided c. did grant to all Weavers within the said Town to be a Body Politick by the name of the Wardens and Society c as before and to have perpetuall succession power to purchase to plead and to be impleaded And also power to make Laws and Ordinances agreeable to reason and not in any wise contrary and repugnant to the Laws and Statutes of the Realm for the well Government of the Society Apprentices and Servants and all using the Trade of weaving or selling of any thing therto belonging within the same Burrough and power to inflict punishment by Imprisonment Fine or Amercement upon the Offenders And granted further that the said Wardens and Society shall have the survey of those Lawes and the benefit of the Forfeitures And that no other person born within or without the said Burrough shal exercise the Art of weaving within the said Burrough if he shall not be admitted therto by the Wardens and Society And they recite the Act of 19 H 7. cap 7. of not putting of any Law or Ordinance in execution before it shall be allowed by the Lord Chancellor Treasurer and two chief Iustices or three of them or before both the Iustices of Assise in their Circuits upon pain of forfeiting forty pounds And shew that one Cuthbert Goodwin and John Hame Wardens of the said Society with the greater part of the said Society 1. Maij 45 Eliz. at the Guildhall within the said Burrough made divers Lawes and Ordinances for the Government of Weavers and that the 18 Novemb. 1 Jac. the said Orders were confirmed by the Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer and Lord Anderson one of the chief Iustices among which one
Court 12 E. a. granted a Rent-charge of two shillings out therof to John Milleton and Walter Milleton In Replevin one makes Conusance derive his Estate from one as Cosin and Heir and shews not how John Milleton dies and Walter survived and died seised and this Rent descended to one John Milleton of P. as Cosin and Heir to the aforesaid Walter and he was seised in Fee and one John Dinham was seised in Fee of one house and twenty acres of Land in Pensons and by Deed shewn in Court exchanged them with the said John Milleton for the said Rent and Walter de la Therne being seised of the Land out of which the Rent issued attorned and gave Seisin of the Rent to John Dinham wherby he was seised in Fee of the Rent and conveyed the Rent by three discents to this John Dinham for whom the Defendant makes Conuzance for ten shillings for five years arrear And the Plaintiff demurs generally upon the Conuzance And the cause was that it is not shewn how John Milleton is Cosin and Heir to Walter upon the discent First if it be good as this Case is viz. That he claimes not as Cosin and Heir but makes Title under him by conveyance afterwards Also because the Defendant makes Conuzance and is a stranger Secondly if it be but forme And this Case was argued at Bench briefly in Trin. 16. And I was of opinion because that this is the Conuzance of a Bayliff and it is a discent in one blood to which Dinham is a stranger and because that a good Issue might be taken therupon as it is alledged And if it had been a case of Bastardy the Iury might have tryell it therfore it is good by the Common Law and differs from a Formedon for there he which brings it is privy vide 41 Eliz. 13 14 in a Scire facias good without shewing how 33 H. 6. 34. Sir T. C. Case 27 H. 6. 2. 4 E. 3. 43. vide 19 E. 3. Quare impedit 58. And if it were not good by the Common Law yet it was but form and aided by the Statute of 27 Eliz cap. 5. vide in Doctor Leifeilds Case lib 10. fol 94. And Iustice Winch agreed with me but Warburton to the contrary and argued strongly that it was substance and was very materiall and he relied upon the Book in the 38 H 6. 17. and he put the cases of 11 H 6. 43. 8 H 6. 22. 2 H 2. and Wimbish and Talbois case Plowden There is debate and argued two against two and no Iudgment given because that it is not shewn Comment Cosin vide 2 H 5. 7. a good Issue there is no such Ancestor a generall Demurrer confesse not the matter as in Debt upon a Bill he plead payment and the Plaintiff demur that Demurrer doth not confesse the payment Lord Hobart would not speak of the Common Law but it seemed good to him by the Statute The Title of the Act is An Act for furthering of Justice Definitive Iustice and Interlocutery The Statute takes not away form but the intrappings and snares of form No place where the Obligation is made cannot be tried by them affirmatively Hough and Bamfields case matter and no form and so Dyer 319. But the point of Cousinage which comes by videlicet is form And if the case of Wimbish and Talbois had been at this day it should bee aided and Iudgment for the Defendant Sheriff ought to deliver the Moyety by meets and bounds IT was argued by the Court that upon an Elegit the Sheriff ought to deliver the Moyety by meets and bounds and if it be so that the Conuzor be Ioynt-tenant or Tenant in Common then it ought to be so specially alledged and contained in the return Pasch 16 Jac. Drury versus Fitch Case DRury an Attorney of this Court brought an action upon the case against Fitch one of the Serjeants of London for saying I arrest thee for Felony and after not guilty pleaded the Plaintiff was Non-suited Costs upon Non-suit where the Plaintiff hath no cause of action And now it was moved that no costs should be given to the Defendant because that the words will not beare action and therfore Iudgment shall be given Quod nil capiat per billam And they vouched one President in Grewstons case in Ban. Reg. vide that now by the last Statute costs shall be given to the Defendant in all cases where the Plaintiff should have costs if he recover but in such case where the Plaintiff if he recover shall not have costs the Defendant upon the Non-suit of the Plaintiff shall not have costs But it seemed to Lord Hobart that in this case the costs are for vexation and this is more vexation if he had no cause of action vide 29 H 8. fol 32. It is there resolved that an action lies for the costs notwithstanding a Writ of Error brought And the last day of this Term the Court was of opinion that the action lies for the words for it is more then these I charge thee with Felony and if the Action lies not yet the Defendant shall have costs for it was such an Action in which the Plaintiff ought to have costs if he recover Vpon motion in Court by the direction of Iustice Warburton who had caused a Iury to be drawn by reason of the slendernesse of the matter and for avoiding the charge of a speciall Verdict the Case was A Copyholder was a Lunatick and the Lord committed the custody of his Land to one which brought an Action of Trespasse Action brought by the Committee of a Lunatick which is a Copyholder and whether it ought to be brought by him or by the Lunatick was the question And the opinion of the Court was that the Committee was but as Bayliff and hath no Interest but for the profit and benefit of the Lunatick and is as his Servant and it is contrary to the nature of his Authority to have an Action in his own name for the interest and the Estate and all power of Suits is remaining in the Lunatick And it was ruled in this Court that a Lunatick shall have a Quare impedit in his own name vide Beverlies case Coke lib 4. the diversity between a Lunatick and an Ideot and H 8. Dyer fol 25. And though when Guardian in Socage as it was adjudged makes a Lease for years his Lessee shall have an Ejectione firmae yet there the Guardian hath the Interest and is accountable therfore But in this case the Committee hath no Interest but is as a Servant appointed by the Lord to keep the possession for him who is not able to keep it for himself Lord Hobart and the Court also agreed that the Lord of a Mannor hath not power to commit or dispose of the Copyhold of a Lunatick without speciall Custom no more then a man shall be Tenant by the Curtesie c. of a Copyhold
Boucher Turner Bolder and one other Turner appear and tender his Law Sir John Boucher and another plead Nil debent and the other was Outlawed and it was said that he ought to have joyned but it was resolved by the Court that they may sever in Bars but ought to joyn in Delatories For otherwise if one which never bargained be joyned in the action he must put his matter upon their pleadings And in Debt upon a joynt Obligation one may plead a Release the other Non est factum vide 48 E 3. 21. and vide Presidents in this case according to this resolution Sabud versus R●w ● Trin. 26 Eliz Rot. 821. Trin 26 Eliz Rot 821. Sabud against Robinson Matson and Loughton and Count sur emisset Waston and Loughton pleaded and Non sum informatus by Robinson Sed judicium inde cesset quousque the Issue be tryed and Venire facias awarded and found for the Plaintiff Pe●iam T.P. H. P I.P. Hil 41 Eliz Rot 455. John Periam and Margaret his wife Executors of John Hart vrought an action of Debt upon Emisset against Thomasin Phelpes Widdow Henry Pittard and John Phelpes John Phelpes was Outlawed and Iudgment against Henry P. by Non sum informat and Thom P. plead Nil debet Fleet and Harrison Venire facias and Iudgment respited quousque c. and after tryall the Plaintiff had Iudgment Hil 13 Jac Rot 841. Fleet brought an action of Debt against Ja Harrison and Isaac Brooke upon Emissent And James H. waged his Law Iudgment against Isaac Brooke by nihil dicit Et quia Conveniens est quod judicium de loquela praedicta unicum sit versus praedictos Isaac Jacobum si contingat ipsum Jacob. de perficiend legem suam praedictam desicere Ideo parcat in judicium inde versus praefatum Isaac reddendum quosque praedictus Jacobus legem praedictam perficeret sive inde desiceret postea praedictus Jacobus perfecit legem suam Ideo consideratum est per Curiam quod praedictus querens nihil capiat per breve suum praedictum sed sit in miserecordia pro falso clamore suo inde quod praedictus Jacobus eat inde sine die And according to this President it was agreed per Curiam that so it ought to be Hil. 12 Jac. Rot. 3007. Reyner versus Waterhouse Ebor. Case JOhn Reyner brought an action upon the case against L Walterhouse Ven. fat de d●versis villis and declares that wheras he is and by the space of twenty years past have been an Inhabitant within the Town of Long Leverseidge in the Parish of Burstall And wheras the Inhabitants of Long Leverseidge aforesaid De tempore cujus contrarii memoria hominum c. used to have a common way as well for Foot-men as for Horse-men to go and ride from the said Town of L. to the Parish Church of Burstall aforesaid on Lords daies and Festivall daies and other convenient times to hear Divine Service within the said Church and to carry bodies c. dying in the said Town to the said Church to be interred Modo forma sequent viz c. and shews the way through divers Closes in Long Leverseidge Little Leverseidge and Gomersall and over the Church-yard of the Church of Burstall and from thence unto the Church aforesaid and backward c. and shew one disturbance made by the Defendant by making of a Ditch in one of the Closes in Gomersall the Defendant pleaded Non culpab and found for the Plaintiff and in Arrest of Iudgment it was alledged that the Venire facias fuit de Gomersall tant And the Venire facias was quashed per Curiam and a new one awarded de L.L.G. Burstall Hil. 16 Jac. Bigg versus Malin BIgg brought an action upon the Case against Malin Case as Administrator and counts that whereas the Intestate was indebted to him in ten pounds and the Defendant also was indebted to him in forty shillings they accounted and upon account the Debt being twelve pounds In case upon Assumpsit against Executors it is not necessary to alledge Assets the Defendant being Administrator did assume and promise to pay it Et licet saepius requisitus non solvit And upon Non assumpsit pleaded the Verdict was found for the Plaintiff And by Finch it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Plaintiff had not shewn in this Count sufficient consideration to charge the Defendant because that it doth not appear that the Defendant hath Assets But the Court disallowed that for if that were necessary it ought to be presumed to be found in the Verdict As in the case in consideration that the Plaintiff had sold and delivered to him twenty quarters of good and merchantable Barly the Defendant promise to pay him twenty pound Non Assumpsit the Plaintiff ought to prove the promise and the delivery And as in Debt against Executors upon a simple Contract it shall not need to be alledged that they had Assets to pay Debts by specialties yet good and that ought to be proved But it seemed to be agreed that if an Executor or Administrator which hath not Assets makes promise of payment if it be not mixed with any profit to himself viz. forbearance c there it shall not charge him But by Warburton if an Executor hath fifty pounds Assets and he promise to pay to a Creditor a hundred pounds that shall bind him for all for when he hath Assets for part the Plaintiff hath Iudgment for all and execution only for so much as is found And in this case the Plaintiff had Iudgment Brook versus Groves BRook brought a Quod permittat against Groves and after Imparlance the Defendant demanded a view and ruled by the Court that he might and vide 34 H 6. 9 10. accordant vide 6 E. 4. 1. and the Plea Quare impedit viz. the View was De tenementis predictis which was as well of the Lands to which the Nusance as of the Lands which was the Nusance View And the View in this action is but for fifteen daies Egerton versus Egerton THe Lady Egerton Wife of Sir John Egerton brought a Writ of Dower against Edward Egerton the Tenant at the day of Essoin did not cast any Essoin And the Demandant entred her exception at that time the Writ was not returned and upon motion to the Court for the tenant to be essoined notwithstanding the exception Dower it was resolved that notwithstanding the writ was not returned yet the Tenant might have his Essoin vide 2 E. 4. 11. 21 E. 4. 7 8. 30 H. 6. 1. that an Essoine may be before the Writ be returned and vide 2 H 7. 4. 10 E 4. 4. the Tenant may be Essoined at any day Essoin though the Writ be not returned as wel at the fourth daie as the day of Essoin unlesse the Essoin be challenged viz. an exception
c. but at the time of taking was so To this it was answered That the Count chargeth not the Defendant absolutely with all the time but Diversis diebus vicibus And also he justifie for two weeks which is the same Trespasse Then upon the matter the question is if he which hath Estrayes or Waifes if he seise an Estray qui est ferox whether he may fetter such Estray It was agreed by the Court that when an Estray comes within a Mannor and walk there this is a Trespasse and the party in whose Land the Estray is Damage-feasant may chase him out of his ground Also it was agreed that untill the Lord or his Bayliff or Tithing-man seise the Estray that shall not be said an Estray but when the Lord seise than he hath the Commencement of a property therby and he is chargable against all others for the Trespasse which this Estray doth and if this Estray within the year estray out of the Mannor the Lord may chase back the Estray untill he be seised by another Lord which hath Estrays But if he be seised by another Lord then the first hath lost all his possibility of gaining the property and the other Lord ought to proclaim it de novo It was moved that if a Lord of a Mannor which hath Estrayes and hath seised an Estray suffer that Estray by negligent keeping to stray away and never can be found again the Owner may have an action upon the case of Trover and Conversion against the Lord Quare vide 44 E 14. there the Lord seised an Asse for an Estray he to whom the property did belong came and challenged the Estray the Lord may detain him untill he tender sufficient recompence for the Pasture vide purc 20 H 7. 1. by Vavisor and 39 E 3. 3. That the Owner cannot take an Estray untill he tender recompence likewise the Lord after seisin of the Estray if he took him not Damage-seasant may have Replevin and he ought to make him amends The Lord cannot work the Estray but may keep him in his Stable And if the Sheriff upon a Fieri facias fetter the Colt and after the Defendant redeem him for money he shall not have trespasse vide 6 E 3. 8. it is not alledged that the fettering was to any damage of the Estray vide 22 Ass 56. Entred Pasch 18 Jac. Rot. 650. Treherne versus Cleybrooke Debt IOhn Treherne brought an action of Debt against Cleybrooke and count of a Lease made by John Treherne Grand-father to the Plaintiff of Lands in S. Olives in Surrey and intituled himself by the Will of the Grand-father by which he devised the Lands to the Plaintiff in tail Devise the remainder over to Leonard Vpon Nil debet pleaded the Iury found specially scilicet the Devise of the Reversion in tail the remainder over to A. in tail the remainder of one Moyety of the Land to one Daughter in tail and the other Moyety to another with Proviso that for the raising of a Stock for John Treherne the Grand-child when he come to the age of one and twenty years or if he dies for the raising of a Stock for Leonard in like manner he willed that Edward Griffin and Anne his Wife shall take the profits and shall receive all the rent of the Land devised to John Treherne to their own use untill he come to the age of one and twenty years upon Condition and so as the said Edward Griffin and Anne shall within three months after the death of the Testator become bound to his Overseers in an Obligation with such penalty as the said Overseers shall think fit to pay to the said John or if he dye without Issue to the said Leonard within three months after he come of age such a summ the Condition to be drawn and devised by his Overseers And if Edward Griffin and his Wife refuse then the Overseers should receive the Rent and Profits to their proper use But the Condition appoint not to whom the Overseers shall be bound And made Edward Griffing and William Iremonger his Executors and I. and others Supervisors and died and that within fourteen daies after the death of the Testator the Will was read to the said Overseers And that they did not devise or draw within the time appointed any Obligation nor tendred any within that time and that notice therof was given to the Defendant and that the Rent was demanded and the Reversion claimed by the Plaintiff sed utrum c. Vpon the Argument of Serjeant Harris which argued for the Plaintiff and vouched 21 H. 6. 6. That when one made Executors and also Coadjutors the Coadjutors are not Executors and that it is a Condition precedent vide 14 H 8. 22. Wheelers case 46 E 3. 5. Truels case Coke lib 5. 127. Palmers case 4 E 3. 39. 11 H 4. 18. And because that in this case the said Edward Griffin and his Wife are to have benefit they ought to require them to nominate the summ But because it appears to the Court that this Action is founded upon a Contract in Law therfore it ought to be brought in Surrey as it was agreed in Ungle and Glovers case An 36 Eliz vide Coke lib 3. fol 23. Nota that the Iudgment is speciall for this cause and no costs upon the Statute of 23 H 8. for the Defendant for the Statute saies that upon a Contract made by the Plaintiff the Defendant shall have costs and yet upon this Statute if the Executor be non-suited or Verdict given against him he shall not pay costs Where costs shall not be against Executors by common experience alwaies after the Statute and yet he shall have costs if he recover And in this case the Plaintiff shall have costs if he recover and yet it seems upon this Iudgment the Defendant shall not have costs against him and especially because that they are expresse words in the Statute that the Defendant shall have costs after Non-suit or lawfull tryall against the Plaintiff and here is neither Non-suit nor lawfull tryall vide Statute 4 Jac cap. 3. seems to be full in all cases where the Plaintiff shall have his costs upon Non-suit or when the Verdict passe against him the Defendant shall have costs yet it hath been taken that it shall be intended in actions of Debt upon the Contract of the Plaintiff himself for Executors neither upon Verdict nor upon Non-suit shall pay any costs because that their actions are brought upon Debts or Contracts not made between them and the Defendants vide the Statute of Glocester cap 1. that where a man recover damages there also he shall have costs Hickson versus Hickson HIckson Demandant in Dower against Hickson They are at issue the Tenant offer to be essoined upon the Venire facias and for want of the Adjornment therof by the Demandant Essoin shall not be allowed in Dower the Tenant had procured a Non-suit and yet the
in a Garden then minutae decimae And it was agreed by the Court that it might have been so found that it should be Majores decimae and pr●●diall as if all the Profits of the Parsonage consist of such Tithes And so of other things which in their own nature are minutae may become majores if all the profit of the Parish consist therin As in some Countries a great part of the Land within the Parish is Hemp or Lime or Hops there they are great Tithes and so it may be of Wholl and Lambs Beddingfields Case Pasch 3 Jac. in the Kings Bench Beddingfeilds case Farmer to the Dean and Chapter of Norwich who had the Parsonage Impropriate and had used to have Tithes of Grain and Hay and the Vicar had the small Tithes And a Feild was planted with Saffron which contain forty acres And it was adjudged that the Tithes therof belong to the Vicar Potmans case There was a Case in this Court as it was vouched by Henden 3 Jac. between Potman a Knight and another And the question was for Hops in Kent and adjudged that they were great Tithes but as for Hops in Orchards or Gardens these were resolved to belong to the Vicar as Minutae decimae There was a Case in this Court for tithe of Weild which is used for Dying and that was in Kent and it was sown with the Corn and after the Corn is reaped the next year without any other manurance the said Land brings forth and produce Weild And that was a speciall Verdict whether the Vicar shall have the tithe of it or the Parson but one of the parties died before any Iudgment And if Tobacco he planted here yet the tithes therof are Minutae decimae And all these new things viz. Saffron Hops Wood c. if it doth not appear by materiall circumstances to the contrary shall be taken as Minutae decimae And so this case was adjudged for the Defendant Hil. 1 Car. Townley versus Steele FRancis Townley and three others the Executors of William Peacock brought a Writ of Ravishment of Ward against Richard Steele and Anne his Wife for the Ravishment of the body of Ralph Smith Cosin and Heir of Ralph Smith In Ravishment of Ward brought by Executors are Non-suited whether they shall pay costs and count of the Tenure by Knights-service in Ralph Smith of William Peacock and that Ralph Smith died the said Ralph his Cosin and Heir being within age and that William Peacock the Testator seised of the body and died possessed therof and made them his Executors and they being possessed of the said Ward the Marriage of whom belong to them the Defendants Rapuere illum abduxere And upon Not guilty pleaded the Iury was at Bar and the Plaintiffs after Evidence were Non-suited And whether the Defendants shall have costs in this case was the question upon the Statute of 23 H. 8. cap. 15. or by the Statute of 4 Jac. cap. 3. And it being argued by Davenport and Attho the Court this Term the chief Iustice being absent gave their opinions And Iustice Crook argued that they should not have costs and put many cases when Executors bring actions they shall not pay costs and so is Common Experience after the Statutes which is the best Interpreter of the Law And if it should be otherwise Executors would be discouraged to bring actions for the debts of their Testator And Iustice Harvy was of the same opinion but Iustice Yelverton and Hutton to the contrary And they agreed that in all actions brought by Executors upon Contracts Obligations or other things made to the Testator there shall be no costs for that is not within the Statute viz. Contracts or Specialties made to the Plaintiff or if an action be De bonis asportatis in the life of the Testator or upon any Tort supposed to be done not immediatly to the Plaintiff there shall be no costs because that the Statute gives not costs in these cases 20 Mariae Debt upon a Demise for years if the Plaintiff shall be Non-suited there shall be costs for it is upon Contract though in some sort reall But in this case though the Plaintiffs are named Executors and their Title is derived from their Testator yet the action is brought upon an immediate Tort done to themselves and it is within the very words of the Statute and this Statute which is to prevent Vexatious Suits shall be taken favourably If Executors have a Lease for years and they demise it rendring rent and for Rent arrear they bring an action it shall be in the Debet and Detinet and they shall pay cost if they be Non-suited and yet their Title is as Executors but it is founded upon their own Contract so if they bring an action of Trespasse for the taking of Goods which came to their possession which Goods were in truth tortiously taken by the Testator and he died possessed therof and they being Non-suited they shall pay costs And Executors in actions brought against them shall pay costs and if they have no Goods of the Testator it shall be De bonis propriis And vide that upon Contracts made by them or Rent arrear in their time the action shall be in the Debet and Detinet vide Coke lib 5 Hergraves case But when Debt in brought by Executors and recovery had and after a recovery an escape and Debt upon this escape this shall be in the Deticet only according to the first cause of action And this Ravishment of Ward is an action within the Statute of 23 H 8. and the Statute of Westminster ● gives no Damages and therfore costs by the Statute of Glocester cap 1. and the Statute of 4 Jac. inlarge the actions and not the persons Hil. 1 Car. Beverley versus Power VPon an Assembly this Term of all the Iustices at Serjeants Inne by vertue of an Order of the Star-chamber made the last Term at reading the Case was Iames Beverley was Plaintiff against Robert Power Pardon and Mary Beverley and others which Bill was exhibited Hil 16 Iac. and the Bill was for scandalous matter not examinable in this Court and for other matter which was examinable and Witnesses examined and published And then the 19. of Febr. 21 Iac. the generall Pardon is made by Parliament by which all Offences Contempts and Misdemeanors del 20. Decemb. before except such Offences contempts c whereof or for which any Suite or Bill within eight years before was exhibited into the Star-chamber and there remaining to be prosecuted this last day of this present Parliament And afterwards viz. Mich. 1 Caroli the Cause came to hearing at the Suit of the Defendant and upon the hearing Power was fined two hundred pounds and for the abuse and contempt to the Court for exhibiting the scandalous matter the Plaintiff was fined five hundred pounds and for damage to the Defendant five hundred marks And yet because of the difficulty
Yelverton and I were opinion that the Debt is gone for it is at the suit of the King and Iudgment is given for the King And there shall be an answer to the King And we relyed upon the cases vouched by the Lord Coke but Iustice Harvey and Crook to the contrary And upon conference with all the Iustices of Serjeants Inne it was resolved that this action was at the suit of the party for he might be Non-suited vide 25 H 8. Br. Non-suit that the Informer may be Non-suited vide 6 E. 2. Fitz Non-suit 13. when the Iury come again to deliver their Verdict the King cannot discharge them and be Non-suited and the King cannot discharge this action And his Attorney reply not as in an Information Clotworthy versus Clotworthy Amendments Debt SImon Clotworthy brought an action of Debt against John C. Cosin and Heir of Bartholmew C. And the Imparlance Roll is Quod cum praedictus B. cujus consanguineus heres idem Johannes est viz. filius Johannis Clotworthy fratris praedicti B. C. And upon the Plea Roll upon which Iudgment is given this space was perfected and Iudgment for the Plaintiff and now the Defendant brought a Writ of Error and it was moved to be amended And if the Imparlance Roll shall be amended which is the foundation of the subsequent Rolls is the question For it is commonly holden that the Plea Roll shall he amended by the Imparlance but not e converso Hil. 18 Jac. Rot. 67● Walker versus Worsley Amendments WAlker brought an action of Debt against Worsley Debt as Son and Heir of Thomas W. in the Imparlance Roll which was entred Mich 18 Jac Rot 576. the words which bind the Heir were omitted viz. Ad quam quidem solutionem obligasset se Heredes suos but they were in the Plea Roll And after Iudgment that was assigned for Error in the Kings Bench and it was amended in the Common Bench by the Court vide there that it was by the fault and mis-prision of the Clerk who had the Obligation and so amendable by the Statute of 8 H 6. cap 15. 1. Hil. 9 Jac. Rot. 516. Govard versus Dennet GOvard against Dennet and Iudgment and the name of the Attorney viz. Henry was omitted in the Imparlance Roll and it was in the Plea Roll Henry and after Error brought it was amended Mich. 16 Jac. Rot. 581. Arrowsmith's Case THe Imparlance Roll Trin 16 Jac Rot 1727. Debt for three hundred pounds against Arrowsmith for part sur emisset and the other part sur in simul computasset And in the Imparlance Roll both parcells did not amount to three hundred pounds but wanted six pounds therof and after Error brought it was amended Pasch 12 Jac. Rot. 420. Godhow versus Bennet REplevin by Godhow against Bennet divers spaces in the Imparlance Roll were supplyed in the Plea Roll after Verdict Hil. 12 Jac. Rot. 420. Parker versus Parker THe Imparlance Roll was Mich 12 Jac Rot 547. Parker against Parker in Trover and Conversion the Imparlance Roll wanted the day and year of the possession and conversion but the Issue Roll was after the Verdict and motion in Arrest of Iudgment amended Mich. 2 Car. Crocker versus Kelsey JOhn Canterson and Agnes his Wife Tenants in speciall tail had Issue a Son Lease made by Feme in speciall tail viz. John and John the Father died John the Son levied a Fine with Proclamations to the use of himself in Fee Agnes leased to John Herring and Margaret his Wife Lessors to the Plaintiff for one and twenty years rendring Rent c. by vertue wherof they entred Agnes died John the Son entred and afterward the said John Herring and Margaret his Wife entred And the said John the Son made his Will in writing and by that devised the Land to Kelsey the Defendant and another in Fee and died John Herring and Margaret leased to Crocker the Plaintiff who entred and being ousted by Kelsey brought Ejectione firmae And this speciall Verdict being found Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff and now affirmed upon Error brought in the Exchequer Chamber Mich. 2 Car. Franklin versus Bradell FRanklin a Woman servant brought an action upon the case upon a promise against John Bradell Consideration in an Assumpsit ex post facto And count that wheras she had served the Defendant and his Wife and done to them loyall service the Defendant after the death of his Wife in consideration of the service which the Plaintiff had done to the Defendant and his Wife promised to pay her thirteen shillings four pence upon request and alledged request and non-payment And after Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment upon the Book of 13 Eliz. Dyer that this is no sufficient consideration because that it is not alledged that the Plaintiff at the request of the Defendant had served him Also it was not sufficient because that it was done after the service performed And it was answered that it was a good consideration and that the service was to the benefit of the Defendant And therfore in consideration that the Plaintiff had married the Daughter of the Defendant he promise to pay twenty pounds it is a good consideration and so in consideration that you have been my surely to such a man for such a Debt I promise to save you harmlesse And in consideration that the Plaintiff was Baile for the Defendant he promised to give him a Horse this is good And in consideration that I.S. being a Carpenter had well built my house I promise to give him five pounds And Iudgment for the Plaintiff Hil. 2 Car. Hearne versus Allen. Entred 22 Jac Rot 1875. Oxford 1. RIchard Hearne brought an Ejectione firmae against John Allen Ejectione firmae for two acres of Land in Langham upon a Lease made by Anne Keene which was the Wife of Edward Keene and upon Not guilty pleaded a speciall Verdict was found Richard Keene was seised of an house in Chippin-norton Devise and of two acres of Land there in Fee and of two acres of Meadow in Langham in Fee used with the said Messuage which were holden in Socage And by his Will in writing dated the 20. May 30 Eliz. he devised the said house Cuni omnibus singulis ad inde pertinentibus vel aliquo modo spectantibus to Tho. K. and his Heirs for ever And for want of Heirs of him the said Thomas then to one Anne K. the Daughter of the Devisor and her Heirs for ever And for default c. then to Iohn K. his Cosin and his Heirs for ever And by the same Will devised his Goods and all his Lands to Eliz. his Wife during her Widow-hood and died Elizabeth his Wife entred Thomas the Son entred upon the Wife and disseised her and having enfeoffed one Edward K. in Fee died and Tho. K. also died without Issue Edward K. by his Will devised
Defendants disturbed her The said Bishop died and the Defendant plead that he is parsona imparsonata ex presentatione Domini Regis nunc And said that Sir Thomas Chichley was seised in Fee of the said Advowson and also of the Mannor of Preston and divers other Lands in the County of Cambridge which Mannors and Lands were holden of King James in Capite by Knights-service and being so seised he died and that this Advowson and the Mannor descended to Thomas Chichley his Son and Heir who at the time of his death was within age And that afterwards by force of a Writ of Diem clausit extremum this matter was found wherby the King seised the body and was possessed of the Mannor and of the Advowson and that the said King James died the King which now is suscepit regimen hujus regni and was possessed and the Church became void And the King by his Letters Patents under the great Seal presented the Defendant Thompson and traversed the Grant made by Sir Thomas Chichley to Thomas East and Edward Anger of the said Advowson as the Plaintiff had alledged The Plaintiff replyed protestand● that the Defendant is not Parson Imparsonee and that the Plea is insufficient Pro placito dicit quod non habetur aliquod tale recordum talis inquisionis post mortem praedicti Thomae Chichley militis modo forma prout wherupon the Defendant demurred And after many Arguments at Ba● by Attho Henden Davenport and Hedley it was adjudged for the Defendant And that the Title of the Plaintiff being traversed brought to have been maintained and not to traverse other matter alledged by the Defendant for Traverse upon Traverse is only when the matter traversed is but Inducement Also it appears fully that the King is entituled to this Presentation though there was not any Office vide 21 E 4. 14 H 7. and then all the Titles of the King should be answered and therfore the deniall of the Office is not materiall for if he dies seised the King may present without Office vide Bendoes case 21 Eliz Rot 1378. Crachford against Gregory Lord Dacren when the King is entituled by Office to an Advowson though the very Title be in a stranger yet if the Church be void and he which hath Title present this is but Vsurpation Vide 17 H 7. Kel 43. 11 H. 8. ibid. fol. 200. vide 21 E 4. 1. 5 E 4. 3. or 13. of things which lye in Grant the King is in actuall possession Crachfords case 20 E 4. 11. Stamf. fol 54. 2. R 3. issue 7. 28. 23 H 8. Kel 97. new Book of Entries fol 130. vide there that Traverse is allowed to be taken upon Traverse vide for that 9 H 7. 9. 10 E ● 49. Dyer 107. 10 E 4. 2. 3. 6 E. 3. ● When two Titles appear for the King as here the dying seised of the Advowson of Sir Thomas C. who also died seised of the Mannor of Preston holden in Capite that is a good Title and the Office found is another Title and ●oth ought to be answered in case of the King vide for that matter 37 H 6. 6. 24 H 3. 27. 46. E. 3 25 9 H 6. 37. 39 H 2. 4. 40 E 3. 11. In case of severall charges to the King although the King be not party yet they ought to be answered Hedley Serjeant argued for the Plaintiff that the presentment of the King tolls all the right of the Plaintiff and therfore only ought to be answered and he ought not to traverse the Title of the Plaintiff which by the Plea was toll'd but notwithstanding that he answered not the dying seised of the Advowson and the Tenure by which the King is intituled upon the Office and therfore all is one And the Plaintiff had waved his Title and not maintained it And therfore Iudgment was given for the Defendant Pasch 4 Car. Congham's Case Rescous by the Plaintiff in the primer action IN an action upon the Case against Congham and his Wife That wheras the Plaintiff hath recovered in Debt against one and had a Writ of Capias ad satisfaciendum directed to the Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and the Sheriff had arrested the party and had him in Execution for the Debt the Defendants rescued the party and he escaped Vpon Not guilty pleaded the Feme was found guilty of the Rescous And it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment by Aleph that this action lies not because that Debt lies against the Sheriff And the Sheriff shall have an action for the Rescous vide F N B. 102. And properly this action of Rescous lies where it is upon mean processe and that is for the delay by the Rescous and damage may be greater or lesser accordingly And the Rescous is according to the condition of him which is arrested for if he may be easily taken again and that he becomes not more poor that then the damage is the lesse vide 16 E 4. fol. 3. But after divers motions at Bar Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff And the Lord Richardson held strongly that it lies And this Tort may be punisht at the Suit of the party who had damage therby viz. the party the Sheriff or Baily And Harvey and Crook agreed but Yelverton and my self doubted therof because that it is an immediate wrong to the Sheriff or Baily and the party had no prejudice in common presumption because that his action is transferred to the Sheriff who hath more ability to satisfie him Farrington versus Caymer LIonell Farrington qui tam pro se quam pro c. brought an Information against William Caymer Information where it shall be brought upon the Statute of 23 H. 8. cap. 4. against Ale-brewers and Bear-brewers for selling Bear at higher prises then were assessed by the Iustices upon Not guilty pleaded the Plaintiff had a Verdict at Norfolk Assises And it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Information was brought in the Common Bench and yet it was brought and tryed in the proper County where the Offence was committed wheras by 33 H. 8. cap 10. 37 H 8 cap 7. 21 Jac cap 4. it ought to be brought in the Country and not in the Common Pleas. And upon grand deliveration and hearing of councell of either part the Court resolved that Iudgment should be given for the Plaintiff And first it was agreed that wheras by the Statute of 23 H. 8. cap. 4 which appoint that the Iustices of Peace assesse the prises of Barrels and other Vessels of Beer and that they which sell against that rate forfeit six shillings c. to be recovered by action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any Court of Record in which no wager of Law c. and gives one Moyety to the party which will sue and the other to the King no action may be brought in any Court of Record but onely in one of the four Courts of Record at Westminster
to him and he will pay for the making therof that is a good consideration vide Coke lib 8. fol 147. And in this case all the Court were of opinion that the consideration was good for wheras he might have detained the Horse untill he had been paid for the pasture and feeding he at the speciall request of the Defendant had delivered the Horse to him to the use of the Owner which is to the prejudice of the Plaintiff and alienest to him to whose use he was delivered And Iustice Harvey vouched a case which was in this Court adjudged which was in consideration that the Plaintiff had promised to pay to the Defendant ten pounds at a day according to the Condition of an Obligation the Defendant promised to deliver the Obligation and adjudged a good Consideration Turner versus Hodges THe Custom of the Mannor of _____ is found to be for the Copyholders without the License of the Lord of the Mannor they being seised in Fee may make any Lease for a year Custom in a Mannor to make a● Lease for years or many years and when they dye that ●●e 〈◊〉 shall cease and that the Heir or Heirs may enter It was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that this was a bad Custom and that the Copyholders had by Custom an Inheritance and might by the generall Custom of the Ream make a Lease for one year And that tenor the generall Custom of the Realm but the Custom of every Mannor within the Realm vide Coke lib 4. fol 26. in Melwiches Case Custom creates the Estate and the Custom is as ancient as the Estate and is casuall and upon the Act of God and is reasonable that the Heir who is to pay the Fine should have the Possession And yet a Custom that if the Copyholder had surrendred to the Lord that the Lease should be void had been a 〈◊〉 Custom because that he might subvert and destroy by his own act that Estate that he himself had made and he which took the Lease ha●ing notice of the Custom takes the Lease at his perill for otherwise he might have procured the License of the Lord and then by this License the Lord had dispenced therwith and that is as it were the Confirmation of the Lord For if a Copyholder makes a Lease for twenty years with the License of the Lord and after dies without Heirs yet the Lease shall stand against the Lord by reason of his License which amounts to a Confirmation And the Plaintiff had Iudgment Hil. 4 Car. EJectione firmae was brought and count upon a Lease made by Husband and Wife Lease by Baron and Feme without reservation of any Rent and that was by Indenture And upon Not guilty pleaded a speciall Verdict was given in which the sole question was Whether this Lease was made by Baron and Feme being there was no Rent reserved therby It was objected that this Lease could not be made good by the Feme by any acceptance and therfore it is not the Lease of the Feme no more then if the Verdict had found that the Lease was by an Infant and no Rent reserved that had been a void Lease But it is contrary of a Baron and Feme for the Baron had power and the Feme joyning in the Lease it is not void for she may affirm the Lease by bringing a Writ of Wast or she may accept Fealty And so was the opinion of the Court and Iudgment entred accordingly vide Coke lib 2. fol 61. in Wiscots case Count of a Lease by Baron Feme and shew not that it was by Deed and yet good vide Dyer 91. Pasch 5 Car. Paston versus Utber JOhn Paston brought Ejectione firmae against Barnard Utber upon a Lease made by Mary Paston And upon Not guilty pleaded a speciall Verdict was found at the Bar and the Case was thus Custom that the Lord have a Feild-course over the Lands of his Coppyholders if the Tenant inclose it is no forfeifture Barnard Vtber seised of the said Land to him and his Heirs by Copy of Court-Roll according to the Custom of the Mannor of Binham And that within that Mannor there is such a Custom that the Lord had had one field course for five hundred Ewes in the North-field and the West-field wherof these fifteen acres were parcell from the Feast of Saint Michael if the Corn were inned and if it were not then after the Corn were inned untill the Feast of the Annunciation if it were not before that time sown again with Corn in all the Lands of the Copyholders not inclosed And that it is a Custom that no Copyholder may inclose any Copyhold Land without the License of the Lord And if any be inclosed without License then a reasonable fine should be assessed by the Lord or his Steward for the Inclosure if the Lord would accept therof And it is also a Custom that if the Lord will not accept therof then the Copyholder which so incloseth shall be punished at every Court after untill he open that Inclosure And the said Vtber inclosed the 15. acres with an Hedge and Fence of Quick-set 3. feet deep and 6. feet broad and that he had left 4. spaces of 9. feet broad in the said 15. acres And that the said Vtber was required by the Steward to lay open the said Inclosure and he did it not whereupon there was a command to the Bayliff to seise them as forfeit which was done And the said Mary being Seignoress of the Mannor entred and leased to the Plaintiff and the Defendant entred upon him Serjeant Davenport argued that it is a forfeiture and against the Custom which creates the Feildage for the Lord as well as the Estate of Copyhold for the Tenant and that this leaving of four spaces is a fraud and device and that it is against his Fealty and is to the damage of the Lord and a thing unlawfull vide Dyer 245. 34 E. 1. Formedon 88. 15 A 7. 10. 29 E 3. 6. That if the Tenant inclose the Commoner may break his hedges And though by Littleton an Inclosure which is a Disseisin is a totall Inclosure wherby he which hath the rent cannot come to distrain yet this also is an Inclosure because that it obstructs the feild-course for they cannot come so freely without interuption or damage for the hedges may deprive the Sheep of their wooll And he compared it to the case of 3 H. 7. 4. One is obliged to make an Estate of his Mannor of Dale if he alien part and then make a Feoffment the Condition is broken and vide 5 E 3. fol 58. a Recognizance with Condition to make a Feoffment to I. S. of the Mannor if he alien part therof he forfeit his Recognizance he vouched 42 E 2. 5. and Coke lib 4. that deniall of Services or making of Wast is a forfeiture 22 H 6. 18. 41 E 3. Wast 82. Dyer 364. And though that the Lord may
latter Lease taken by him which was void did n●t surrender his former Lease which was good Sir Rowland Heywards Case the Lessee had Election to take as a Lease or as a Bargain and Sale and that it is not by way of Estoppell because it was contracted out of the Reversion Trin. 14 Jac. Rot. 3308 Thompson against Green Thompson and Green Mills and Whitewood adjudged that when one grants Proximam Advocationem to mother this is meerly void 13 Eliz. Rot. 1428. Ejectione firmae brought by Mills against Whitewood adjudged that where Lessee for years takes a new Lease after the death of his Lessor of the Gardian in Socage this is no surrender of his Lease 42 Eliz. Rot. 105. In Sir Arthur Capels Case adjudged _____ Rud who was Lessee for sixty years of an Advowson when the Church was void took a Presentation to himself of the Lessor and is admitten and inducted this was a Surrender of his Lease Mich. 5 Car. Baker versus Johnson A Iury was at the Bar in an Ejectione firmae brought by Henry Baker against Bartholomew Johnson upon a Lease made by James Baker which was seised of two Marshes among others called Knightswick and Southwick In a recovery if the Town be omitted the Land do nor pass which lye in an Island called Camby in the Parish there called North-Benfleet And he being Tenant in tail and intending to dock it and to make himself seised in Fee by Indenture the 10. of Eliz. Covenanted to suffer a recovery of these two Marshes by name and of many other Lands and that it should be to the use of himself in Fee and the recovery was had and therin South-Benfleet and many other Parishes named and Camby but the Parish of North-Benfleet was omitted And if the Lands in North-Benfleet passed or no was the Question And it was strongly argued by Crew and Henden to have it found specially it being in a Common Recovery which is but a Common Conveyance But all the Court agreed that the Town and Parish being omitted although that Camby was a place known but it appeared that that extends in and to ten Towns yet being in a Town that the Recovery extends not therto no more then if one had a Mannor in the Town of Dale which Mannor is called Bradford and within the said Mannor is a place known which is called Braisty Wood and he omit the Mannor and the Town and say the hundred acres of Land in Braisty Wood that is not good And the Court agreed that a Common Recovery is good in a Town Parish or Hamlet and peradventure in a place known out of the Town Parish or Hamlet as in the Forrest of Inglewood in Insula de Thamete c. But if it should be admitted that a Common Recovery shall be good in a place known in a Town or Hamlet that shall be absurd for there is no Town in which there are not twenty places known and it had been adjudged that a Venire facias de viceneto of a place known in a Town without making the Visne of the Town is not good Mich. 5 Car. Bill versus Lake London Case FRancis Bill brought an action upon the Case against Sir Aurthur Lake and counted that wheras at the speciall instance of Lettice Wife of the Defendant Where the request is the cause of action he had provided for the said Lettice a Tasfety Roll the Defendant did assume to pay as much as it was worth upon request And so in like manner for providing of Linnen stuff c. and making of severall Garments for the Wife and aver that the severall things bought amount to such a summ and the making therof was worth such a summ which in toto c. and alledge the request And aver that they were necessary Vestments and convenient for the degree of the Wife and after the making of them he had delivered them to the Wife The Defendant pleaded the Statute of 21 of King James for Limitation and said that the Plaintiff within six years after the promise supposed nor within three years after the end of the Parliament had not prosecuted any Originall or any Action upon this promise and Assumpsion wherupon the Plaintiff demurred And upon Argument at Bar by Serjeant Brampton for the Plaintiff and Davenport for the Defendant the matter was reduced to this Question Whether the cause of Action shall be said upon the request Quest or upon the promise Brampton agreed that where it is found upon an Assumpsit in Law and that the request is but for increase of Damages and not issuable there the Assumpsit is the cause of the Action But this cannot be founded upon an Assumpsion in Law because that it is not certain but to be made certain first by the Plaintiffs buying and providing of the Stuff Secondly by the Plaintiffs termining and making therof and then the matter of promise is for the payment of so much money as it should be reasonably worth and therfore the request is there collaterall and then it is the cause of the action and so within the Statute if it be an action which is founded upon an Assumpsit in Law then it doth not charge the Husband see the difference when request is materiall and shall be alledged and when not in Mecholl and Pecks Case before and a Feme Covert is not capable to make any Contract because she is Sub potestate viri And though it be for necessaries of Diet and Apparrell that shall not charge the Husband Sir William Alephs Case But an Infant is capable to make Contract for Diet and Apparrel necessary An 25 Eliz Sir William Alephs case was adjudged that where an Infant had taken so much for his necessary Apparrell and Diet which amounted to fifty pounds which was paid by Sir William Aleph And he took an Obligation with a penalty adjudged that it did not bind him in regard of the forfeiture And Dyer 234. Sir Michael Penits case the Wife took Sattin and Stuff to make her a Gown and Sir Michael paid the Taylor for the making therof And yet upon an action of Debt brought against the Husband it was resolved that it did not charge him And that the request to the cause of the action he vouched Dyer 31. 18 E 4. 4. solvend sur request and 9 H 7. fol 22. Replevin and Tenure for plowing the Land when he shall be required he ought to alledge the request and he concluded with a Case adjudged Hil 4 Car Rot. 710. Banco Regis between Shuesouth and Fernell an action upon the Case and count that the Defendant An 1618. had kept a Dog which he know had used to woory Sheep and that the Dog had wooried and killed divers Sheep of the Plaintiffs And the Defendant in consideration therof promised to satisfie the Plaintiff what he was damnified when he should be required therto and the promise was An 18 Jac. and the request and
Peter Edgecombe and it was to the intent of granting the Rent to the King and his Heirs and then of the recovery of the Mannor out of which c. to the said Sir Peter Edgecombe in tail the remainder to the King and they being seised by their Deed dated the third of June 11 H 8. sealed and delivered which is found in haec verba and that it was inrolled afterwards viz. 7. June granted the said Rent to H 8. Et si super totam materiam the Court adjudged it a Grant by Deed the third of June 11 H 8. then for the Defendant c. And upon Argument at Bar and conference had we all declared our opinion and agreed that Iudgment should be given for the Defendants The first reason was that the Issue is joyned upon the Grant modo forma and not upon the day as is offered by the Traverse but upon the Grant modo forma And the matter found is generally as is alledged vide Littleton Title Release that modo forma avoid and prevent the matter of day and goes solely to that which is materiall And by any thing which appears by the Verdict there is no intervening matter after the third day and before the seventh when the Deed was enrolled and then it is a good Grant of the third of June vide H 7 31. Then the speciall Conclusion found which is contrary to Law shall not conclude the Iudges to give Iudgment according to Law And so Iudgment was given for the Defendants Mich. 8 Car. Col. versus Wilkes SAmpson Cole brought an action of Debt upon the Statute of 2 H. 6. against Leonard Wilkes Tryall at the Bar Debt Debt upon the Statute of the 2 E. 6. for Tithes A Lease was made to two they enter and occupy and set not out their Tithes Debt was brought against one of them it lies not But here it was found that one only occupyed the Land and therfore the action well lies Sir John Gerards case And a Case was shewn Mich 8 Jac. An action of Debt was brought upon this Statute by Sir John Gerard against two Tenants in Common and it appeared that one of them set out his Tithe and that the other afterwards took it and carried it away and adjudged that the action lies only against him which carried it away Pasch 9 Car. Strilley's Case Amendment of the proclamation of a fine VPon motion made in this Court for the amendment of a Proclamation of a Fine levied by Strilley of Lands in Nottinghamshire Mich 11 Eliz. The Proclamations endorsed by the Chirographer upon the Fine were well but in the Transcript and Note of the Fine which is delivered to the Custos brevium by the Chirographer according to the Statute the second Proclamation was entred to be made the twentieth of May where it should have been the twenty third day of May and that by the misprision of the Clerk And it was moved that that might be amended And the Court was of opinion that it should be amended for the Ingrossement upon the Fine by the Chirographer is the foundation and that being well it is sufficient Warrant to amend the other And the Court was of opinion that it was a good Fine without any amendment But it being the misprision of the Clerk it shall be amended as in the case Coke lib 8. Blackamores case The Proclamation made and entred before the Originall shall be amended And it was objected that this Fine and Proclamations as they found in the Office of the Custos brevium are exemplified under the Great Seal and therfore by a Clause in the Statute of 23 Eliz cap. 3. could not be amended after such exemplification To that it was answered that that Statute extends only to Fines before levied which should be exemplified before the first day of June An 1582. And the latter clause in the said Statute doth not extend but to Fines exemplified according to the said Statute And therfore it was awarded to be amended Pasch 9 Car. Glasier versus Heliar Sussex Case GLasier brought an action upon the case for words against Heliar and shewed that three Colliers being in an house in Sussex were feloniously burnt in the said house and shewed that two or three men were indicted convicted and executed for the said Murther the Defendant knowing therof and intending to bring the Plaintiff in perill of his life Words as accessary to the said Murther sayd to him Thou didst bring Faggots a mile and a half to the burning of the Colliers And after Verdict for the Plaintiff and motion in Arrest of Iudgment it was adjudged that the words were actionable For if a Mansion-house be burnt feloniously to say You brought fire to set in the Thatch of the house which is burnt it is actionable Iudgment pro quaerente Smith versus Cornelius Southamp JOhn Smith Town-Clark of Southampton Case brought an action upon the case against one Cornelius an Attorney of this Court and shew that the Plaintiff was of good fame and Town-Clark of the Major and Burgesses of Southampton and was their Scribe and had the custody of all Rolls Pleas and Certificates Words and other proceedings before the Major and Burgesses in the Court before them to be holden And the Defendant intending to draw him into Infamy and to cause him to lose his Office said to him Thou hast made many false Certificate to the Major and Burgesses in that Court and the more thou stirrest in it the more it will stink And it was adjudged that these words are not actionable 1. Because that it is not alledged that there was any Colloquium concerning his Office of Town-Clark 2. Because that it appears not in the Count that the making of Certificates belong to his Office but only that he had the custody of them 3. It might be false and yet no blame to him if he did know them to be false or that he had made them false maliciously And therfore Iudgment was given for the Defendant And this Case was moved again by Hitcham the first day of Trinity Term next And then Iudgment was affrmed Hil. 9 Jac. Edwards versus Laurence Trin. 9 Car. Rot. 2488. Suff. RAchel Edwards brought an action of Trespasse against Richard Laurence for breaking of her Close Trespasse The Defendant in Bar to the new Assignment plead Traverse of Seisin that before the time of the Trespasse supposed to be done one Francis Tayler was seised in Fee of the Tenements wherof c. and so being seised died wherby it descended to Francis his Son and Heir who being seised therof 8 Car. demised it to the Defendant for two years by vertue wherof he entred and gives colour to the Plaintiff by a Grant made to him by Francis the Father where nothing passed therby and so iustifie The Plaintiff replyed that long before Francis Tayler the Son had any thing one Francis Tayler Grand-father of
font and twenty years that then I. S. shall have the Land and it shall be good vide Dyer 33. Coke lib 10.46 Lampets case But Tuesday the eleventh of February the Lord Hobart by our direction because that we were streightned of time and Howell was so importunate for Iustice that we could not argue delivered the opinion of the Court that Iudgment should be given for the Defendant And he declared that as to the point of a Fee-simple which he called the mounting of one Fee-simple upon another we now declared no opinion But we all without difficulty resolved that this release of Noy be it a Condition or not had discharged it And as to him it is an Interest used by the Devise but not executed untill it happen And therfore in Lampers case there the Release discharged it for there he had no Title executed but vested and commenced and so may have Noy Howell the Plaintiff in this case and it is not like to an Heir in the life of the Father for be is a stranger and he hath no Title at all and yet his Release with Warranty bars him and here this Release is accompanied with Warranty of which nothing was spoken Also as to Noy it is a Condition according to the words of the Will and therfore sans question that Noy had barred himself The Vacation after Hil. 20 Jac. MEmorand That on Munday the seventeenth of February at Serjeants Inn upon the assembly of all the Iustices to take consideration upon the Statute of 35 Eliz. cap. 1. for the Abjuration of Sectaries the Atturney-generall and Serjeant Crew being there Resolutions upon the Statute of Eliz. cap. 1. concerning Sectaries after the perusall of the Statute and the Continuances therof it was first upon debate considered whether this Statute was in force or discontinued and upon the perusall of the Proviso in the Statute of Subsidy and upon reasoning the matter these Points were resolved 1. If a Parliament be assembled and divers Orders made What shall be said a Session of Parliament and a Writ of Error brought and the Record delivered to the higher house and divers Bills agreed but no Bills signed That this is but a Convention and no Parliament or Session as it was An. 12 Jac. in which as it was affirmed by them which had seen the Roll it is entred that it is not any Session or Parliament because that no Bill was signed vide 33 H 6 Brook Parliament 86. every Session in which the King signes Bills is a Parliament 2. It was agreed that if divers Statutes be continued untill the next Parliament or next Session and there is a Parliament or a Session and nothing done therin as to continuance all the said Statutes are discontinued Beriatim Jones Chamberlain Hutton Denham Haughton Dodderidge Winch and Bromley declared their opinions that this Statute is discontinued And that the Statute of Subsidy is a Parliament and that every Parliament is a Session but not e converso for one Parliament may have divers Sessions as the Parliament 1 Jac had four and ended An 7 Jac. vide 33 H 6. Br. Parliament 86. And that this Proviso is not to any other purpose but to continue their proceedings in the same Estate as if this Act had not been made and if this Proviso had not been then this Statute had been discontinued by this act of Subsidy but when this ends and is determined then is the Session ended then it is a Session scilicet a Parliament which ought to be pleaded at the Parliament holden c. and all the Commissions of Subsidy are accordingly and the Proviso call it a Session Then this being done the Lord chief Baron did not deliver any opinion for he said that he had not considered the Statute and afterward it was desired that the Lords would deliver their opinions and therupon the Lord Hobart declared his opinion accordingly That it seemed to him that it was a Session and that it was not safe to meddle with such Law and that he would never refuse to declare his opinion with his Brethren After the Lord chiefe Iustice Ley made a long discourse concerning the purpose and intent of Parliament scilicet That it was not their purpose to destroy so good Lawes and therfore it was not any such Session as was within the intent of the preceding Parliament which was that these should determine when it is a Parliament or Session in which good Lawes are made And Doderidge said that it was fit to see the Commission and that that which hath been said was not to bind any one but every one spoke what then he was advised of and peradventure might change upon better consideration And afterwards upon Tuesday on an Assembly of the two chief Iustices the chief Baron Iustice Haughton Baron Denham Hutton Chamberlain and Jones the Attorney-generall brought the Commission de 12 El. June 1. and that had these words Pro eo quod nullus Regalis Assensus nec responsio per nos praestat fuit nullum Parliamentum nec aliqua Sessio Parliamenti lata aut tent fuit They have power to adjourn this Parliament thus begun And the Commission to dissolve this Parliament 38. Feb. An. 19 Jac. had the same words saving that he recite that he had given his Royall assent to an act of Subsidy by which was intended that it should not be a Session And upon view of the Commission the Lord chief Iustice moved that the King was mistaken in this that he had given power to dissolve this Parliament which had not any Session and if it be a Session then he had no power to dissolve it and then it is as it were a recesse and a Parliament cannot be discontinued or dissolved but by matter of Record and that by the King alone and if the Parliament yet continue then this Statute also continue during the Parliament by the Proviso but that would not serve for first it is against the intent of the King and against his Proclamation And also the case is truly put in the Commission as to the matter in fact and he is not mis-informed but mistaken in the Law and then the Commission for the dissolving is good semblable to the Lord Shandoi's Case and other Cases vide in Cholmleys case But because that all the Iudges were not at this Conference therfore it was deferred untill the next Term and in the interim the Grand Secretary and the Attorney-generall were to inform the King that the Statute is obscure and had not been put in ure and that we could not agree Mich. 20 Jac. Rot. 2805. Bawtry versus Skarlet Sussex JOhn Bawtry Clerk Case brought an action upon the case against Benjamen Skarlet one of the Attorneys of this Court by Bill and count In consideration that the Plaintiff will confesse Judgment the Attorney promise to defer the entry of the Judgment c. that wheras one William Carter Trin. 20 Jac.
the Land to Anne his Wife the Lessor of the Plaintiff for life and died Anne entred and made a Lease to the Plaintiff Et si super totam materiam c. And it seems that the Defendant Allen claim under the Title of Anne K. the Daughter but that was not found nor no other Title for the Defendant and therfore of necessity Iudgment ought to be given for the Plaintiff And this case was well argued by Crawley for the Plaintiff And Henden for the Defendant And three Points were argued 1. If the two acres in Langham passed by the words Cum pertinentiis and it seemed to the Court that they did not passe without saying Cum terris eidem Messuagio spectantibus vel pertinentibus And that is agreed in Hill and Granges case by Conveyance and 23 H. 8. 6. and it is all one in a Will Also in this case it is not found for what time these two acres had been used with the house And there was sufficient to supply the words Cum pertinent for ought that appears And if the Law be so the two acres do not passe but discend to Thomas Keene and the Feoffment good 2. If by these words it be an Estate-tail as in Beresfords Case Coke lib 7. fol 41. 9 E 3. Fitz tail 21. 12 E 3. 7 E 6. 16 Eliz in Chapmans case or a Fee-simple And yet Yelverton and Crook inclined that it was an Estate-tail but Lord Richardson Hutton and Harvey to the contrary for an intent against Law shall be void vide Abraham and Twiggs case Co●e lib 7. fol 41. 3. If the Collaterall Warranty which descended had extinguish● and barred the right of Anne Keene Henden would have maintained it because that the Warranty is speciall although it was collaterall that it did not Bar which is san● question be it speciall or generall it bars the others upon whom it descends vide Coke lib 15. Seniors case he held no descent and then no Bar 12 E 4. discontinuance 50. 7 H 6. speciall Warranty shall be used by Rebutter but not by Voucher And Iudgment for the Plaintiff If a Feme shal have a supersedeas upon an Exigent against Baron and Feme Un supersedeas fuit Mis● for the Feme upon an Exigent against Baron and Feme And upon much debate it was agreed that the Feme for the safeguard of her self from imprisonment being returned upon the Exigent or upon the Capias viz. upon the one Quod reddidit ●● upon the other Caepi and as to the Husband Non est inventus may appear and so long as the Processe continues against the Husband she shall have idem dies But when the Baron is returned utlegatus she shall be discharged sans idem d●es And that stands well and raconciles all the Books But whether she shall have a Supersedeas de non molestando is doubtfull for by the 11 of H 4. 80. and Dyer 271. if the Baron be outlawed and the Wife W●ived and the King pardon the Feme that shall be allowed and she shall go sine die and vide 4 E ● 34. and 14 H 6. 14. 13 H 4. 1. And it seemed by all to be agreed that the Baron after he purchaseth his pardon or after he come and reverse the Outlawry he shall not have allowance of his Pardon nor his appearance received si non qui il amesne sa feme qui par le presumption de leye est amesnable per luy mes les baron n'est amesnable per le feme vide 18 E 4. 4. there the case was that a Feme Covert was sued as Feme sole her Husband being beyond Sea and not known to be alive and she was outlawed and then her Husband came again and brought a Writ of Error for the reversall therof in his name and in the name of his Wife And there it is said that it is questionable being that he was not party to the Suit And then one said that it would be a good way to be rid of a Shrew And the Prothonotaries said that no Supersedeas was ever granted for the Wife in such a case Hil. 2 Car. Sir Charles Howards Case MEmorand That the Earl of Marleborough Lord Treasurer of England came to Serjeants Inn in Chancery Lane 6. Febr. and there assembled all the Iustices to have their opinion upon a Case which was depending in the Exchequer Chamber Where the office of the keeper of a Park is gone if the K●ng dispark it upon an English Bill for the King by the Attorney-generall against Sir Charles Howard for avoiding the possession of a Lodge and desisting from taking the profits of a Park called Putney Mooreclapp the Custody of which Park and three pounds annuall Fee with the Windfalls c. and the custody of the Lodge was granted to him The King which now is by his Charter disparked the Park and after granted all the D●er to Sir Richard Weston Chancellor of the Exchequer And whether by this disparking of the Park the office of the Keepership he determined or no then whether the annuall Fee be determined then if the casuall profits as Windfalls c. may be yet taken by Charles Howard who is the Patentes And upon debate it was unanimously agreed that the King might dispark his Park and that by the disparking therof the Office of the Keepership is gone and determined for Sublata causa tollitur effectus and this Office is not of necessity and such Offices are not prefumed in Law to be altogether for the benefit of the Patentes but reciprocally for the Commodity of the King and by the disparking of the Park the labour and charge is gone It was also agreed that the King might discharge the Patentee of this Office although the Park continue And i● one grant the Stewardship of a Mannor and he dismember the Mannor the Office determines And if a Corporation grant the Office of Town-Clerk or of Recorder and after surrender their Patent and take a new Patent which incorporates them by a new name all the Offices are determined It was agreed that the annuall Fee certain remain in both cases be he discharged or be the Park disparked vide 5 E 4. 9. 4 E 4. 22. 18. E 4. 9 Dyer 71. 6 H 8. Kelway 171. Plowd Sir Thomas Wrothes case The Earl of Lincolns Case Star-chamber MEmorand That the Sollicitor Generall moved that Sir Henry Fines had preferred a Bill against the Earl of Lincoln in this Court Where a Lord may bri● sworn And there was a Commission De dedimus potestatem granted to take his answer upon Oath and he offered his answer upon his Honor. And the Commissioners returned this speciall matter and he prayed an Attachment And this case was propounded to the Iudgges and it was resolved by them the Lord Keeper and all the Court of Star-chamber that he ought to answer upon his Oath for it is Juramentum purgationis and not promissionis Also