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A25990 An essay on a registry, for titles of lands by John Asgill ... Asgill, John, 1659-1738. 1698 (1698) Wing A3928; ESTC R40287 16,041 48

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Assigment Declaration of Trust or other Deed made by Endorsement thereon that the Registring such Endorsement in one of the said Register-Books and making a reference therein to the said former Deed on which the same was indorsed shall be as good and effectual to all Intents and Purposes as if the said former Deed were again Registred with the said Endorsement And whereas it may be Conceived to be sometimes prejudicial or inconvenient to publish the Uses and Trusts to be declared of Lands Be it Enacted that where any Grants Conveyances or Assignments shall be made of any such Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments as aforesaid to any Uses Intents or Purposes to be expressed in the same Deed or any other Deed to which the same Deed shall refer that the Registring of so much of such Conveyances Grants or Assignments by which the Legal Estate of the same Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments contained in the said Deed shall stand transferred and certifying such Registring upon the same Deed so in part registred and also upon the other Deed to which the same so in part registred shall be made to refer Shall be esteemed a Registring of the said Uses or Trusts within this Act whereby to entitle the same Uses and Trusts to such preference as aforesaid as fully and effectually to all intents and purposes as if the same Uses or Trusts were registred at large any thing herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding And whereas Freehold Lands in England are by several Acts of Parliament made liable to Executions on Judgments Recognizances and Statutes which being entered in several places the Searches for the same are chargeable and the finding of them difficult to the further hazarding of the Titles of Lands For remedy thereof Be it Enacted that no Judgment Recognizance or Statute to be had or acknowledged at any time after the said _____ day of _____ shall bind or charge any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments within the Kingdom of England against any Purchasers or Mortgagees thereof except such Lands Tenements or Hereditaments as the Defendants in such Judgments or the Cognizors in such Recognizances and Statutes shall have on the day of the Registring thereof with the said Register in manner herein after-mentioned That is to say that for all Judgments the Names of the Plaintiffs and Defendants therein the Summs recovered thereby and the Day of the Signing thereof by the Judge or other Officer signing the same Shall be Registred and for all Recognizances and Statutes the Names of the Cognizors and Cognizees therein the Summs thereby acknowledged to be due and the day of the Acknowledgment thereof Shall be Registred And be it Enacted that no Devise by Will of any Lands or Tenements within the Kingdom of England shall be allowed as good against any Purchasers or Mortgagees of the same Lands or Tenements unless such Will or so much thereof whereby such Devise shall appear shall be registred in one of the said Register-Books within six Months next after the death of the Testator provided that after such Registring of such Will or Devise the same shall take the Effect from the Death of the Testator And be it Enacted That the said Register for the time being or his sufficent Deputy in that behalf shall from time to time certifie the days of all and every the respective Registries therein before directed upon some part of the Deeds or Writings so to be registred as aforesaid by affixing the Stamp of the said Office thereunto and signing the same Which said Certificate shall be taken as Evidence of such Registries in all Courts of Record and elsewhere I cannot be so Arrogant to dictate this Bill to the Legislative Power but if what I have asserted be true I hope the more Learned Gentlemen of the Law who shall oppose this Remedy will either provide a better or agree this Motto for proclaiming the Laws of England upon every House in the Kingdom NO ONE KNOWS THE OWNER In which they will not be more ingenuous to their Profession than the Athenians were to their Religion by that Inscription on the Altar TO THE UNKNOWN GOD. FINIS
Religion are said to be more haunted with Ghosts than lay-Lay-Tenements I can't tell unless some of their subsequent Augmentations were the Price of Blood as well as their Original Purchase But now to begin at our Laws It is strange to observe how the Parliaments of England did hunt the Priests and Lawyers with Statutes against Mortmain from the making of Magna Charta 9. H. 3. to this Statute in 27. Hen. 8. and yet could never catch them The Statute of Magna Charta as has been observed prohibited the giving of Lands to any Religious House To evade this the Lawyers advised the Clergy two things First That whereas several great Estates were held of them under small Rents that they might purchase in these Estates to their Church because they were before held of them Secondly The Prohibition of the Statute being to Religious Persons only that the Secular Clergy were exempted To hunt them out of these Holds the Statute of 7 E. 1. called Statutum de Religiosis doth prohibit any Religious Persons or others which includes the Secular Clergy by any manner of Craft or Engine to take Lands in Mortmain and so they could not purchase in the Estates held of them To evade this Statute the Lawyers advised the Clergy That if they had any silly Confessants who had a mind to be cheated of their Estates they might suffer a feigned Action to be brought against them and therein lose their Lands by default which Recoveries were adjudged by the Justices not to be within any of the words of this Statute and therefore they were allowed For that Recoveries being prosecuted in course of Law were by Law presumed to be ● just and lawful tho' they were done in Fraudem Legis To drive them out of this Hold the Statute of Westminster 2. makes all Lands so recovered to be forfeited to the Lords of the Fee and for want of their Entry to the King To evade this Statute the Lawyers advised the Clergy two things First That for all Lands lying found the Church they might enter into them by assent of the Tenants and make them Church-yards by Bulls of the Pope whether they had this by precedent from the Original Purchase or according to the Proverb That good Wits jump is not material Secondly They advised them that they might purchase Lands in the Names of other Persons to their Use To hunt them out of these Holds the Statute of 15 R. 2. prohibits both these To evade this the Lawyers advised the Clergy that they might purchase in the Names of other Persons in Trust for themselves which Trust was not within the precise words of Vse And thus the Priests continued to Cheat the People of their Estates and the Lawyers the King of his Eschaets for above three hundred years together in spight of all Laws made to the contrary In which time they had taught the Layety this Craft to convey away their legal Estates to Persons in Trust whereby to prevent the Descent to the Heir and consequently the Wardship to the King and other Lords and yet to keep the use and pernancy of the Profits to themselves and Families Of which King H. 8. complaining to his Judges they advised an Act for Transferring all Uses and Trusts into Possessions for which purpose a Bill was drawn by the King's Counsel and presented to the House of Commons in the 24th year of his Reign when it was rejected but passed in the 27th which is this Statute of Uses And four years after a Statute passed worth all the former for Dissolution of Monasteries by which the Priests lost their Lands and the Lawyers their Clients tho' not their Cunning as will appear by the Sequel Now this Statute of Uses 27 H. 8. hath introduced a new Conveyance in the Law which was not before by way of Bargain and Sale for tho' a Bargain and Sale did raise a Use at the Common Law yet it was not a compleat Conveyance to transfer the Possession without an actual delivery of it in the Country but now this Statute doing that Office by transferring the Use into a Possession a Bargain and Sale became a compleat Conveyance without any other Ceremony And the same Parliament forseeing that this Bargain and Sale so perfected might become a Clandestine Conveyance to be executed any where did intend to provide against it by making a Short Statute the same Sessions for that purpose called The Statute for Enrollments by which all Conveyances of Inheritance of Freehold which pass by Bargain and Sale only are to be Enroll'd within six Months after the Date that Purchasers may have Notice thereof from the Record But of late years the Lawyers have topt their Inventions upon these two Statutes For First They make a Bargain and Sale for a Term only now generally called a Lease for a Year and which is not within the Statute of Enrollments and by this the Lessee gains a Use at Common-Law and a Possession by the Statute of Vses which makes him capable of taking a Release of the Reversion at Common Law and then they make a Release to him and his Heirs accordingly Which two Deeds make him one perfect Conveyance and so by putting the Common-Law at both Ends and the Statute of Uses in the Middle the Statute for Enrollments is bilkt and these Conveyances by Lease and Release which are Clandestine Conveyances and invented by the Abuse of one Statute and the Elusion of the other are become the Common Conveyances of the Kingdom I challenge the Inns of Court to shew that either the Common Law or any Parliaments of England ever directed any Incumbrances to affect Lands but by Solemn Livery and Seisin or matter of Record and therefore these Clandestine Conveyances are crept in contrary to the Intent and Meanings of Parliaments and all the avowed Laws and Customs of the Kingdom There are two Common Titles to Lands in England The one by Descent which is proved by Marriages Baptisms and Burials and the other by Purchase which is proved by Deeds and where there is one Dispute of Title by Descent there are ten by Purchase because the Titles which shew the Descent are registred and those by Purchase are not for were these Marriages Baptisms and Burials left at large without notifying of them as Purchases are it would soon breed Confusion in all the Descents of the Kingdom And is it not a Reproach to the Law that that part of the Titles of Lands which is the Province of poor Parish Clerks should have more certainty in it then that which belongs to the Professors of the Law Third Assertion That all Objections made against a Registry upon account of Mischiefs which may arise by Discovery of Titles are not only contrary to all the avowed Laws and Customs of England but to the very Essence of Title and the History of Conveyances PROVED Some Notice is essentially necessary to the Title of every thing that is vendible To make
not doubt but God had that Kindness for the People of England that an Act would once pass for that purpose by giving the Crown an Equivalent All which was fulfilled since his Death So I have that foresight of the growing Mischiefs for want of a Registry that I am confident the Necessity of it will force its own way And therefore were I now a dying I would send this out into the World to take its Fate with this Motto only Sine me Liber ibis in Orbem A BILL FOR Establishing a REGISTRY FOR Titles of Lands WHereas by the Common-Law of this Realm Lands Tenements and Hereditaments were not to be transferred from one to another but by Solemn Livery and Seisin or Matter of Record And whereas by the Statute made in the 27th Year of the Reign of King Henry the Eighth Entituled An Act concerning Uses and Wills a Bargain and Sale did become a Compleat Conveyance in the Law whereby Lands and Tenements might be transferred from one to another in a clandestine manner without Livery and Seisin or Matter of Record For prevention whereof by another Statute made in the same 27th Year of the late King Henry the Eighth For Inrollment of Bargains and Sales It was Enacted that from and after the last Day of July which should be and since was in the Year of our Lord 1536. No Mannors Lands Tenements or other Hereditaments should pass alter or change from one to another whereby any Estate of Inheritance of Freehold should be made or take Effect in any Person or Persons or any Use thereof to be made by reason only of any Bargain and Sale thereof except the same Bargain and Sale were made by Writing Indented Sealed and Inrolled in one of the Kings Courts of Record at Westminster or else within the same County or Counties where the same Mannors Lands or Tenements so bargained or sold lye or be before the Custos Rotulorum and two Justices of the Peace and the Clerk of the Peace of the same County or Counties or two of them at the least whereof the Clerk of the Peace to be one and the same Inrollment to be had or made within six Months after the Date of the same Writings indented And whereas since the making the said Statutes of late Years there have been several inventions for Conveying of Estates of Inheritance of Freehold by way of Lease and Release and also for making of Bargains and Sales thereof for long Terms of Years without Inrollment of such Conveyances both which are a manifest Abuse of the said Statute concerning Uses and Wills and an Evasion of the said Statute for Inrollments And whereas the said Conveyances by Lease and Release and Bargains and Sales for long Terms of Years being clandestine Conveyances to be Executed any where and invented contrary to the Intent and Meaning of the said Statutes and all the ancient and avowed Laws and Customs of this Realm are now of late Years become the most Usual aud Common Conveyances for Conveying of Freehold Lands whereby several Frauds and Abuses have been committed and several Suits and Contentions have arisen thereupon to the manifest hazarding the Titles of the Freehold Lands of this Kingdom and the dishonour of the Laws thereof For remedying of the Mischeifs aforesaid by providing one certain Place where all the Conveyances and Incumbrances herein after-mentioned relating to Freehold Lands may be Entered in Order to the more easie and ready searching and finding out the same Be it Enacted by the Kings most Excellent Majesty by and with the Advice and Consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament Assembled and by the Authority of the same This Blank is for the Constitution and Qualifications of the Register And be it Enacted that the said Register so to be appointed as aforesaid on or before the _____ day of _____ and all other succeeding Registers for ever then after shall provide and keep within one of the Inns of Court or some other place in or near the Citys of London or Westminster an Office of Registry for the purposes herein after mentioned And shall provide and keep in the said Office several Register-Books for Registring of Deeds and Writings in manner herein after-mentioned and also one or more Stamps for stamping of the same Deeds and Writings in manner also herein after-mentioned the Counterfeiting of which said stamps shall be and is hereby made And be it Enacted that all Conveyances Grants or Assignments of any Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments of Inheritance of Freehold within the Kingdom of England or of any Rents issuing out of the same or of any Leases or Terms for Lives or Years to be made thereof which at any time after the _____ day of _____ shall be duly seale● and executed for good and lawful Consideration and shall after such sealing and executing thereof be registred in one o● the said Register-Books shall in respec● thereof have and be esteemed and taken t● have the Priviledges and Preferences herein after-mentioned that is to say that such Conveyances Grants or Assigments from and after such Registring thereof shall be good and effectual according to the Purport and Contents thereof against all other Conveyances Grants or Assigments whatsoever which after the said _____ Day of _____ shall be made of the same Mannors Lands Tenements or Hereditaments and not Registered as aforesaid Notwithstanding that such Conveyances Grants or Assignments so omitted to be Registred shall be prior in Date or Execution to the said Conveyances Grants or Assignments which shall be so registred Provided nevertheless that all such Conveyances Grants or Assignments so omitted to be registred as aforesaid shall notwithstanding such omission be good and effectual against the Grantors or the Persons making the same and all other Persons whatsoever except the Persons claiming under the said Conveyances Grants or Assignments which shall be so Registred as aforesaid as fully and effectually to all Intents and Purposes as if this Act had never been made And for preventing a double charge in Enrolling of Bargains aud Sales of Inheritance of Freehold before the Entry thereof in the said Register-Books Be it Enacted That such an Entry made as aforesaid of any Bargain and Sale of Inheritance of Freehold at any time within six Months after the Date thereof shall be deemed and taken to have and is hereby made to have the force and effect of an Enrollment within the said Statute for Enrollment of Bargains and Sales as fully and effectually to all Intents and Purposes as if the same were inrolled in either of the said Courts of Record at Westminster or with the Custos Rotulorum of the same County And whereas several Conveyances or Assignments may be made by indorsements upon former Deeds Be it Enacted that when any Conveyance Grant or Assigment shall be duly Registred as aforesaid and after such Registring thereof there shall be any Grant Conveyance or
a Title is to take the Property of a thing from one Man and put it into another of which it is necessary that other persons should have Notice as well as the Parties or else the Purchaser can have no Title because there is no Witness to give Evidence of it in case the Seller should deny it And as some Notice is absolutely necessary to all Title so the more Notice the better is the Title it were better for every Man who is Owner of an Estate that all Men knew his Title and the● whenever he had Occasion to dispose of his Estate there would be no further Enquiry into the Title of his Lands than to the Title of Money in his Possession And as Notice is thus necessary and advantageous to Title so in the History of Conveyancing the most perfect Titles are most Notorious or rather the most Notorious are most perfect And because Antiquity of Precedents is the greatest Argument in the Law I 'll quote one out of that Authority which treats of things done before the Foundations of the World and fortells us of several things that will come to pass after the Dissolution of it The History of the World is but a Modern Treatise of things of a late Date which were done in pursuance of Counsels and Decrees made before Matters of Fact set forth without the Original Design and Institution of them seem irrational and to have no Meaning in them Would any thing seem more ridiculous than that the taking off a Seal and delivery of a piece of Parchment by one Man should give another a Title to an Estate if the Law were not known which gives the Sanction to this Ceremony The Precedent I am going to quote is That great Settlement of Eternal Life made by God upon Jesus Christ for the Considerations therein mentioned The Epitome or Contents whereof and the Manner of the Execution I find in that History which we call the Gospel but because the Contents thereof is not a Subject within this Essay I will not dare to touch upon it here But the manner of the Execution being directly within my Argument or rather my Argument within that I dare relate it as I find it This Settlement was first Enrolled in Heaven in the Volume of the Book it is written of me afterwards was Sealed and Executed in the Blood of Christ the Seal of the Covenant in the presence of all the World the Sound thereof is gone through the whole Earth and since that hath or shall be Written and Preached Printed and Published in all Nations Kingdoms Tongues and Countries This Gospel must first be preached in all the World as a Witness to all Nations and then shall the End be By all which God himself is bound up from disposing Eternal Life in any other manner than pursuant to this Settlement without giving himself the Lye which he cannot do and Man hath such Notice of this Title that he can't accept any other without becoming an Imposter upon himself And this is the highest Precedent for Man to form his Titles by as far as it is imitable by him The things on Earth are but the Patterns of things in the Heavens where the Originals are kept to try the Truth of all things by God delivered out the first Forms of all things in the World of Ships of Regular Buildings of Letters written with his own Hand of Marches and Encampments taught the first Workers in Brass and Bugle-work Linnen and Silks Plowing and Harrowing Sowing and Reaping Threshing and Winnowing all which he owns to come originally from himself A Jove principium And now to begin with the Business of Man The first Purchase I find since the Beginning of the World was made by Abraham of Ephron the Hittite in these Words And the field of Ephron which was in Machpelah which was before Mamre the field and the cave which was therein and all the Trees that were in the field that were in all the Borders round about were made sure to Abraham for a Possession in the presence of the Children of Heth before all that went in at the Gate of the City Another was made by Boaz of Naomi in these words And Boaz said unto the Elders and unto all the People ye are Witnesses this day that I have bought all that was Elimelechs and all that was Chilions and Mahlons of the hand of Naomi Moreover Ruth the Moabitess the Wife of Mahlon have I purchased to be my Wife ye are witnesses this day And all the People that were in the Gate and the Elders said we are witnesses O Tempora O Mores Purchases and Marriages made without Lawyers or Priests However I have mentioned these Conveyances more particularly because I fancy our Modern Conveyancers with all their Trumpery of Stationers Ware can't make better either for Form or Substance and these were made by Paroll being before the Delivery of the Form of Letters to Man The first that I have observed in Writing was the Purchase of Redemption made by Jeremy of Hananael in these words And I subscribed the Evidence and sealed it and weighed him the Money in the Ballances so I took the Evidence of the Purchase both that which was sealed according to the Law and Custom and that which was open and gave them to Baruch in the sight of Hananael and in the presence of the Witnesses who subscribed the Book of the Purchase before all the Jews that sate in the Court of the Prison and charged Baruch saying take the Evidence as well that which is sealed as that which is open and put them in an Earthen Vessel that they may continue many dayes By this it doth appear that Registring of Deeds is as antient as the Deeds themselves Here is the Original Sealed and then Registred in a Book to which the Witnesses subscribe their Names Now Baruch had the Custody of the Registry in the Nature of a Publick Notary for that purpose being elsewhere called Baruch the Scribe But that the Original was delivered him was an extraordinary thing for that belongs to the Purchaser But it being just before the carrying away Captive into Babylon of which Jeremiah had Notice he delivered them both to Baruch to hide them till the return of the Captivity That which I Cite these Precedents for is the Notoriety of them by calling all the People together to bear Witness and an Inrollment beside to that which was in Writing And methinks all the Old Forms in the beginning of Deeds shew the Intention of making them as publick as they could be Know all Men by these Presents and To all People to whom these Presents shall come c. And as the Law intends Notice of all things done by Deed so it hath provided Publications for things done without Deed as Fairs and Markets for Selling of Cattel that the Purchasers may not be cheated Publications in the Churches before Matrimony and Registring after it to prevent Bigamy So the
Law marks Felons in the Hand that none may trust them And yet after all this there is a Provision intended in the Bill for this Registry whereby any one may Conceal the Uses declared of his Estate yet so that there shall be some Notice taken of the Deed by which the Uses are declared that the Owner of the Land shall be incapable of Selling or Mortgaging his Estate 'till he doth produce that Deed whereby a Purchaser or Lender cannot be defeated Fourth Assertion That all Objections made against this Registry upon Account of Reducing the Practice of the Law are one good Reason for it PROVED The practice of the Law in Civil Causes is divided into three Sorts First The transferring of Titles which is called Conveyancing Secondly The shewing forth and defending these Titles in Forms of Law and this is called Pleading Thirdly The arguing upon these Conveyances and Pleadings when they come in contest before the Judges and this is called Practice at the Bar So that the Practice of the two latter doth arise from the Errors or Incertainties of the former Were the Titles of Lands once made certain which they may be by a Registry and no otherwise I know what I think of the future Gains of the Law The profit of the Law arises from the Incertainty of Property and therefore as Property is more reduced to a certainty the profit of the Law must be reduced with it the Fall of the one must be the Rising of the other Actions of Slander and Battery and Causes on the Crown-side would scarce find some of the Circuiteers Perriwiggs and yet if we observe Evidence they stand obliged to Disputes in Titles for many of these Theif and Whore Kick and Cuff are very often the Effect of forcible Entryes Trespasses and serving of Process in which the Title comes frequently in Question But the reducing this part of the practice of the Law are things not seen as yet The Proximus ardet will fall upon the Conveyancers and that not by altering the Forms of legal Conveyances or taking them out of their hands or putting any stop to the Dealing in Lands for that will be encreased but by exposing their manner of practice in this Conveyancing part of the Law For as it was numbered among the Sins of one of the Kings of Israel that he made Priests of the meanest of the people so it is the misfortune of the people of England that Conveyancers are frequently made out of Old Attornies or Noblemens-Lease-makers fumpt up in Bar-gowns Two Qualifications are necessary to a compleat Conveyancer First That he be incapable of dispatching Business so fast as he should Secondly That he doth not dispatch it so fast as he can Not to speak of bantering their Clients with their seeming Care and Caution in delaying their Business shewing great Trunks of old Writings in their Chamber calling to their Clerks before them for one Lord's Settlement and another Ladies Jointure to tell what great Clients they have and when they come to be paid they reckon their Fees by longitude and latitude I have seen an original Mortgage of one Skin bred up by a Scrivener in six Year to one and twenty by assigning it every Year and adding one Skin to every assigment by Recitals and Covenants As Cows after three Years old have one wrinkle added to each Horn for every year after which shows their Age And I am informed that one Deed of sixty Skins was heaved out of a Conveyancer's Office the other Day At this rate in a little time the Clyents must drive their Deeds out of their Lawyers Chambers in Wheel-barrows These Assignments and Re-assignments of Securities have been a pretty sort of Perquisites especially if they have but an old Judgment or Statute kept on foot these are certain annual Incomes I knew two Serjeants at Law Usurers made it their common practice every Long Vacation to swop Securities with one another to make their Mortgagers pay for the Assignments and doing this without Advice of Counsel they once Merged an old Term and thereby spoiled their Title to secure their Fees which as to them answers the Character given of these Graduates by a Forreign Historian Est in Regno Angliae genus hominum doctorum indoctissimum communiter vocat The Learned Serjeants at Law Now I cann't think but these Conveyancers and Assigners would be ashamed to produce such things to a Registry and that therefore they must either abbreviate their Conveyances or loose their Practice But whether this Registry will make these Reductions 1. Of the Length of Conveyances 2. The Incertainties of Titles And 3. By Consequence the other Practice in the Law I cannot tell However I hope it and believe some of them fear it But if the Cryes of Monks and Fryers had been regarded we had never heard of the Dissolution of Monasteries and if the Clamours of Masters of Request Clerks and Eschaetors had prevailed the Court of Wards and Liveries had been standing at this day And yet perhaps most of these had either purchased their Places or were bred up to that part of the Law only Fifth Assertion That the Assurance of the Title and Dispatch of Business by this Registry will be more than equivalent to all the Charge in Registring the Incumbrances PROVED The Certainty of Titles being the main drift of this Essay it would be too mean an Argument to use for it to say That the Charge of Registring of Deeds will be saved by reducing the Charges in making them altho' this be true yet granting it should not and that this Registry should be an additional Charge to all others yet the Priviledge of it will be worth the Price It is said that whenever the Ld. Ch. J. Hales had made a Purchase he would say Now I would give a Years purchase more to be sure of my Title And if we should ask those who have lost their Estates for want of a discovery of Deeds they would set a higher Price upon it Men generally make their Purchases with the acquisitions of all their former life to settle them on their Posterity for whom they are more sollicitous than for themselves and therefore they are always more jealous of the Title than the Value because a deficiency in Title goes to the whole but a deficiency in Value goes but to part only and for that Reason they would almost think nothing too much to assure them of their Title If a Man one hundred and fifty Miles from London is to sue his Neighbour but for 10 l. he must employ an Attorney in the Country who must send to another in London to make out a Writ and this must be Entered in one Office and Sealed in another and then sent to the Sheriff who must make out a Warrant and deliver it to his Under officers who must arrest the Defendant take a Bail bond to the Sheriff and after Bail given to the Action the Plaintiff must declare to
AN ESSAY ON A Registry FOR Titles of Lands By JOHN ASGILL of Lincolns-Inn Esq LONDON Printed by John Astwood at his Printing-House behind St. Christophers-Church in Threadneedle-street the back-side of the Royal Exchange 1698. The Preface MY Name stands already Printed to a late Essay Entituled Several Assertions proved in order to Create another Species of Money than Gold and Silver of which I am not ashamed and I have added my Name to this that whatever usage it meets with I may stand bound to recognize it I hope I have such a Warrant to search for Truth that will justifie me in breaking through all Crafts and Sciences to find it as Hunger justified David and his Men for entering the Priest's House and eating the Shew-bread And because I find that I shall scarce be able to begin much less to get through my Argument without unfolding some Mysteries of Iniquity between Priests and Lawyers relating to the Titles and Settlements of Lands I hope that the Modern Professors of either of these Sciences will not be offended with me for speaking the whole Truth but if they should They will thereby be Witnesses against themselves that they justifie the Deeds of their Fathers And if I should be charg'd with Prophaneness for mingling sacred things with secular I will shelter my self under the Lord of the Sabboth who was accused for doing Business on that day and Haud timeo si jam nequeam defendere Crimen Cum tanto Commune SEVERAL ASSERTIONS PROVED In Order to Introduce a BILL FOR Establishing a REGISTRY FOR Titles of Lands First Assertion That as the Law now stands the Free-hold Lands in England may be incumbered in diverse Manners and at diverse Places PROVED FRee-hold Lands may be incumbered these several ways 1. By Feofment which must be executed in the Place where the Lands lye 2. By Grant with Attornment of which the Tenants must have Notice 3. By Fine and Recovery with a Deed leading the Use which are Matters of Record 4. By Bargain and Sale inrolled in either of the Four Courts at Westminster or with the Custos Rotulorum of the County where the Lands lye 5. By Judgments in Three Courts at Westminster 6. By Recognizances entered in the Courts where they are acknowledged 7. By Statutes Merchant and Staple transmitted into Chancery 8. By Lease and Release which may be Executed any where 9. By Leases granted out of the Lands which may be Executed any where 10. By Rent-charges granted out of the same which may be Executed any where 11. By Will in Writing 12. By Bonds to the King which are in the Nature of Statutes-staple All these are Incumbrances made by the Act of the Party Besides which there are others that happen by Default as Acts of Bankrupcy Eschaets and Attainders Now I am not a going to Calumniate the Law for allowing of so many sorts of Incumbrances on Lands but for permitting them to be done in diverse places Which doth render the Titles to Lands incertain and therefore is a Deficiency in the Law And tho' the Law hath directed several of them to be recorded yet this doth not remedy the Incertainty First Because these Records do lye in several Places which makes the Search thereof chargeable and the Finding difficult Secondly Because those that are upon Record have no Preference above those that be not so that should a Purchaser discover all that are Recorded he may be defeated by those that are not which can never be discovered but by the Confession of them that made them because they may be executed any where Therefore the drift of this Essay is to give a Sanction to one Place above all the rest by annexing a Priviledge to it and leaving it to every Man's pleasure whether he will purchase that Priviledge or not To shew the Necessities and Conveniencies whereof I offer the following Arguments Second Assertion That the Advantage taken by the Conveyancers in the Law of the Statute of Ues 27 H. 8. in making Clandestine Conveyances contrary to the true intent and meaning of that Parliament and all the avowed Laws and Customs of England doth occasion a Necessity of a Registry to prevent them PROVED In tracing out the Occasions of making this Statute I was drawn through all the Statutes against Mortmain as far back as Magna Charta which doth prohibit the giving Lands to Religious Houses by which it did seem to me that Lands had been so given before that time or else it had not been prohibited For humane Prohibitions generally come after the Fact committed whereas the Laws divine prohibit by way of Prevention Adam was forbidden the Tree before ever he had tasted of it The first Statute against Mortmain was made by God himself before the Fact committed for by the Mosaical Law which instituted the first Society of Priesthood the Levites are forbidden to have any Inheritance but the Tithes that they might not dote upon their Possessions but Avarice increasing upon them by an Acquisition of Wealth which they did not know how to dispose of they agreed to set up a Publick Treasury by way of a Joint-Stock for the use of the Church which was not within the Words of the Prohibition and out of this Joint-Stock they paid Judas the thirty pieces of Silver which being returned by him they were loth to part with it and yet puzzled what to do with it because being the Price of Blood it was against their own Canons to put it again into their Treasury Therefore they took Counsel and bought the Potters Field to bury Strangers in As my Lord Coke commends the Wisdom of our Ancient Clergy for always choosing the most Learned in the Law to be of their Counsel so it seems these Priests of old were endued with the like Wisdom For the Children of this World are wiser in their Generation than the Children of the Light Now these Lawyers advised their Clients that notwithstanding this Canon they might purchase Lands with this Money and annex them to their Church But this being against the Law divine prohibiting their purchasing of Lands the Lawyers found this Stratagem to purchase these Lands for a Burying-place only in the Nature of a Church yard which being a thing of Necessity and made Sacred would exempt or at least excuse it from this Statute against Mortmain and the Priests computing that this might turn to as much Profit as any thing else having double Duties for Lodging of Men and Meat for Horses they consented to lay out their Money in it any thing to get a Penny in an honest way And this Field of Blood was the first spot of Glebe in the World to which the Priests will be intituled in right of the Church if ever they gain the possession of the Holy Land But having laid this Nest Egg they went on to join Field to Field and had they been let alone had converted whole Kingdoms into Holy Ground before now And why Houses of