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A42889 Reports of certain cases arising in the severall courts of record at Westminster in the raignes of Q. Elizabeth, K. James, and the late King Charles with the resolutions of the judges of the said courts upon debate and solemn arguments / collected by very good hands, and lately re-viewed, examined, and approved by Justice Godbolt ; and now published by W. Hughes. Godbolt, John, d. 1648.; Hughes, William, of Gray's Inn. 1652 (1652) Wing G911; Wing H3330_CANCELLED; ESTC R24389 404,377 461

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adjourned Pasch 10. Caroli in the Kings Bench. 518 BARKER and TAYLOR's Case IN an Ejectione firme the Case upon the Evidence was this Two Coparceners Copy-holders in Possession the one did surrender his reversion in the moity after his death Charles Jones moved That nothing did passe because he had nothing in Reversion Vide C. 5. part Saffyns Case If a man surrendreth a Reversion the Possession shall not passe 2. It is not good after his death so was it adjudged in C. 2. part Buckler and Harvey's Case Curia The Surrender is void and the same is all one as well in the Case of Copy-hold as of Free-hold and so was it adjudged 26. El. in Plats Case and so also was it adjudged in this Court 3. Caroli in Simpsons Case Pasch 13. Caroli in the Kings Bench. 519 HUMFREYS and STUDFIELD's Case IN an Action upon the Case for words the Plaintiff did declare That he was Heir apparant to his Father and also to his younger Brother who had purchased Lands but had no Issue either Male or Female and that the Defendant with an intent to bring him in disgrace with his Father and also with his younger brother and thereby to make the Father and younger Brother to give away their lands from the Plaintiff did maliciously speak these words to the Plaintiff Thou art a Bastard which words were spoken in the presence of the Father and younger Brother by reason of speaking which words the Father and younger Brother did intend and afterwards did give their Lands from the Plaintiff And by the opinion of the whole Court it was adjudged That the words were Actionable and Judgement entred accordingly FINIS I have perused this Collection of Reports and think them fit to be printed Per me JOHANNEM GODBOLT Unum Justiciar ' de Banco 18. Jun. 1648. An Alphabetical TABLE A ABatement of Writs 9 34 64 By Death 66 68 For Surplusage 380 Abeyance 313 314 319 443 Acc●ptance 47 39 384 385 425 When a man is bound to accept c. 39 Accessary 65 Accusation before a Justice 444 Acts which purge the wrong before 384 Act subsequent where lawfull 28 29 First Act 337 Action 337 Another Action hanging 258 In what County 42 See County there where it bears date 388 Possessory 34 Before Seisin c. Special 186 Accord see Arbitrament Account 30 43 56 90 291 155 122 123 210 As Bai●y ad Merchandizandum 58 Against Executors 291 292 Acquittal 19 Acquittance 104 Addition de Parochia 203 Administrator is found to be an Executor 26 Surety in debt is Administrator c. 149 Administrator counts of his own Possession before he be possessed 34 see 40 Retains for his own debt 217 Administration 33 34 2 Durante minori c. 30 Sues to Execution the Executor comes of age 104 Admiralty upon a stipulation or bill there the body of the stipulators who are for the most part Masters of ships and Merchants transeuntes may be taken no execution can be upon lands It s jurisdiction 260 261 Admiralty Court its jurisdiction things partly done on land 386 387 388 389 390 Adv●wson 17 38 128 129 passes in Grants 425 Equity in Statutes 308 Agreement disagreement 180 After an ar●est 360 After Assumpsit 361 Alien 275 Amendment 57 286 103 Amercement 49 135 Distress for it without Presentment 190 Annuity 4 144 Ancient Demesn pleaded 64 320 Appeal 275 Appendant Appurtenant 40 352 353 Apportionment of rent 95 118 139 Apprentices bound by Covenants though Infants 122 Appropriation 1●4 Approvement of common 116 Arbitrement 13 241 25 276 165 185 in part good 256 Arreers 12 Array triers of it 429 430 Arrests 125 358 lawful 360 Assault and battery 251 Assent of parties 429 430 Assets 29 30 31 averred 176 Assignment 18 of Debts 81 c. Assignee 3 16 70 271 277 120 162 Assize 4 for erecting houses 189 Assurance as counsel shall advise 435 bound to assure 445 446 Assumpsit 13 31 274 72 73 94 159 the arrest is void 360 337 338 350 138 144 358 to the servant 361 Attachment of Debts by custome 297 196 401 402 403 404 Attainder 267 275 303 325 376 Attaint 271 378 279 Atturnment 19 25 320 142 Atturney for livery 39 Atturney must not do acts unlawful 387 what he may do 389 Receipt by him 217 Audita querela 257 104 155 377 Averment of uses 269 214 in a devise 131 432 that Cestuy que vie is alive 195 Avowry 24 302 320 upon whom 368 Authority must be persued 39 84 195 389 naked 307 to recover a debt without more 358 359 Ayde 318 B BAil 148 339 Debt against them 354 Bailment of Goods 160 403 Bankrupts one Commissioner hath right to the land 319 division where but one bond 195 196 Bargain and sale 270 156 Bar Pleas in Bar 253 434 Insufficient 138 two bars 397 Barretor 384 Bastard 275 281 Battery a base fellow strikes a man of dignity 207 Benches 246 247 Bill Suits by bill 389 Bill for oppression or extortion 438 By-Lawes 50 Bishops their Acts 342 Borough English 3 C CApias 39 257 83 372 373 Case Action of c. 13 40 54 55 58 64 240 241 73 285 98 155 160 381 412 li●s 329 330 338 344 346 137 176 200 362 426 against an Inn-keeper 42 See Slander Vi armis c. 426 Trover c. 267 274 Challenge 234 110 193 428 429 to the Sheriff and Coronets 357 Chancery 262 Chaplains 41 Charge 3 Charters 370 Things in point of Charter 93 Church-Wardens 279 Cessavit 84 Certainty incertainty 14 93 336 220 once in a deed 198 Certiorari Certificate 14 356 404 Citation out of the Diocess 190 Claim 333 389 of the Lessee 105 Clark of a Parish 163 Colledges are Corporations 394 Collusion Covin 78 298 Colour 159 Commission Commissioners 105 193 High Commissioners 58 Common 4 21 96 97 185 168 169 170 171 Surcharged 182 Digging in the Common c 343 344 making Coney Boroughs 327 Where woods are inclosed 267 What the Commoner may do upon the ground 123 12● Conclusion by the word praetextu 344 Condition assignee 162 c. 3 9 29 38 39 75 99 101 against Law 250 void 293 Lessee assignes Rent 336 broken acceptance by rent after 47 performance 299 that neither A. B. or C. shall disturb c. 60 61 not to implead A. 72 to assure lands as Councel shall advise 338 339 360 Confession 80 to save harmlesse c. 134 Confirmation 25 Consideration 13 31 32 94 134 159 437 against Law 251 to forbear a debt 303 306 See assumpsit 428 Conspiracy 76 206 447 Consultation 446 447 Contract 31 98 176 intire 154 Continuance to some intents 309 in Courts 195 Contribution for one surety against another 243 Conviction before it lands not to be begged 206 nor seised there 365 366 Copy-hold 2 11 47 233 268 129 130 140 Admittance 269 143 extinguished 101 Statutes extend to it 15 369 tailed 20 21 367 Fines 265 Leases
of the Justices was That the Fee was executed for a moitie Manwood If the Land be to one for life the Remainder for yeers the Remainder to the first Tenant for life in Fee there the Fee is executed so as if he lose by default he shall have a Writ of Right and not Quod ei deforceat for the term shall be no impediment that the Fee shall not be executed As a man may make a lease to begin after his death it is good and the Lessor hath Fee in possession and his wife shall be endowed after the Lease And I conceive in the principall case That the term shall not be extinct for that it is not a term but interesse termini which cannot be granted nor surrendred Mounson If he had had the term in his own right then by the purchase of the Fee the Term should be extinct But here he hath it in the right of another as Administrator Dyer If an Executor hath a term and purchaseth the Fee the term is determined So if a woman hath a term and takes an husband who purchaseth the Fee the term is extinct Manwood The Law may be so in such case because the Husband hath done an act which destroyes the term viz. the purchase But if the woman had entermarried with him in the Reversion there the term should not be extinguished for the Husband hath not done any act to destroy the term But the marriage is the act of Law Dyer That difference hath some colour But I conceive in the first case That they are Tenants in common of the Fee Manwood The Case is a good point in law But I conceive the opinion of Manwood was That if a Lease for yeares were to begin after the death surrender forfeiture or determination of the first lease for yeares that it shall not begin in that part for then perhaps the term in that part shall be ended before the other should begin Pasc 20. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 3. A Man seised of Copyhold land descendable to the youngest Son by Custome and of other Lands descendable to the eldest Son by the common Law leaseth both for yeers The Lessee covenanteth That if the Lessor his wife and his heirs will have back the land That then upon a yeers warning given by the Lessor his wife or his heirs that the Lease shall be void The Lessor dieth the Reversion of the customary Land descends to the younger son and the other to the eldest who granteth it to the younger and he gives a yeers warning according to the Covenant Fenner The interest of the term is not determined because a speciall heir as the youngest son is is not comprehended under the word Heir but the heir at common Law is the person who is to give the warning to avoid the estate by the meaning of the Covenant But Manwood and Mounson Justices were cleer of opinion That the interest of the term for a moity is avoyded for the Condition although it be an entire thing by the Descent which is the act of Law is divided and apportioned and the warning of any of them shall defeat the estate for a moity because to him the moity of the Condition doth belong But for the other moity he shall not take advantage by the warning because that the warning is by the words of the Condition appointed to be done by the Lessor his wife or his heirs And in that clause of the Deed the Assignee is not contained And they agreed That if a Feoffment of lands in Borough-English be made upon condition That the heir at common Law shall take advantage of it And Manwood said that hee would put another question Whether the younger son should enter upon him or not But all Actions in right of the Land the younger son should have as a Writ of Error to reverse a Judgment Attaint and the like quod nota Pasc 22. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 4 IT was holden by Meade and Windham Justices of the Common Pleas That a Parsonage may be a Mannor As if before the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum the Parson with the Patron and Ordinary grant parcel of the Glebe to divers persons to hold of the Parson by divers Services the same makes the Parsonage a Manor Also they held That a Rent-Charge by prescription might be parcel of a Manor and shall passe without the words cum pertinentiis As if two Coparceners be of a Manor and other Lands and they make partition by which the eldest sister hath the Manor and the other hath the other Lands and she who hath the Lands grants a Rent-charge to her sister who hath the Manor for equality of partition Anderson and Fenner Srjeants were against it Hill 23 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 5. THis Case was moved by Serjeant Periam That if a Parson hath Common appendant to his Parsonage out of the lands of an Abby and afterwards the Abbot hath the Parsonage appropriated to him and his Successors Whether the Common be extinct Dyer That it is Because he hath as high an estate in the Common as he hath in the Land As in the case of 2 H. 4. 19. where it is holden That if a Prior hath an Annuity out of a Parsonage and afterwards purchaseth the Advowson and then obtains an Appropriation thereof that the Annuity is extinct But Windham and Meade Justices conceived That the Abbot hath not as perdurable estate in the one as in the other for the Parsonage may be disappropriated and then the Parson shall have the Common again As if a man hath a Seignorie in fee and afterwards Lands descend to him on the part of the Mother in that case the Seignory is not extinguished but suspended For if the Lord to whom the Land descends dies without issue the Seignorie shall go to the heir on the part of the Father and the Tenancy to the heir on the part of the Mother And yet the Father had as high an estate in the Tenancy as in the Seignory And in 21 E. 3. 2. Where an Assize of Nusance was brought for straightning of a way which the plaintif ought to have to his Mill The defendant did alledg unity of possession of the Land and of the Mill in W. and demanded Judgment if c. The plaintif said that after that W. had two daughters and died seised and the Mill was allotted to one of them in partition and the Land to the other and the way was reserved to her who had the Mill And the Assize was awarded And so by the partition the way was revived and appendant as it was before and yet W. the Father had as high an estate in the Land as he had in the Way Hill 23 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 6. A Man makes a Feoffment in Fee of a Manor to the use of himself and his Wife and his heirs In which Manor there are Underwoods usually to be cut every one and twenty yeers and
condition 3 Jacobi in the Star-Chamber 186 RUSWELL'S Case A Man took away Corne in the night time to which he had a right and was punished for a Riot in the Star-Chamber because of his company only Hillar 3. Jacobi 187 KINGSTON and HILL'S Case AN Action upon the Case was brought for saying these words viz. Thou art an arrant Papist and it were no matter if such were hanged and thou and such as thou would pull the King out of his Seat if they durst Adjudged that the words were not actionable Et quod querens nihil capiat per Billam Pasch 3 Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 188 NOte It was holden by the Court That if a Fierifacias go to the Sheriffe to do Execution and he levieth the money and delivereth the same to the party yet if it be not paid here in the Court the party may have a new Execution and it shall not be any Plea to say That he hath paid the same to the party for it is not of Record without bringing of the money in Court Vide 11. H. 4. 50. ar Pasch 3. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 189 DUKE and SMITH'S Case NOte That if he in the reversion suffer a recovery to divers uses his Heirs cannot plead That his father had nothing in the Land at the time of the recovery for he is estopped to say That he was not Tenant to the Praecipe And it was agreed ●That it was a good recovery against him by estoppel Quaere this case Mich. 3. Jacobi in the King's Bench 190 BIRRY'S Case BIrry was committed by the High Commissioners and removed by Habeas corpus into the Kings Bench They returned the Writ with a Certificate That they did commit him for certain causes Ecclesiasticall which generall cause the Court did not allow of They certified at another time That it was for unreverent Carriage and sawcie Speeches to Doctor Newman The Court also disallowed of that cause Birry put in Bail to appear de die in diem and was discharged It was holden That if Birry did not put off his Hat to him or not give him the wall the same were not sufficient causes for them to commit him And it was agreed by the whole Court That whereas the said Commissioners took Bonds of such as they cited to appear before them to answer unto Articles before that the party had seen the Articles that such Bonds were void Bonds Mich. 3. Jacobi in the King 's Bench. 191 ANN MANNOCK'S Case ANN Mannock was indicted in Suffolk upon the Statute of 1. El. cap. 2. for not coming to Church twelve Sundayes together which Indictment was removed into the Kings Bench and Exceptions taken unto it 1. That the Statute is That all Inhabitants within the Realme c. and it is not averred in facto that she did inhabit within the Realme and the Exception was disallowed for if it were otherwise it ought to be shewed on the Defendants part The second Exception That by a Proviso of the Statute of 28. Eliz. cap. 6. it is ordained That none shall be impeached for such offence if he be not indicted at the next Sessions and it appears by the Indictment That the Offence was almost a year before the Indictment and in the mean time many Sessions were or debuerunt to have been And that Exception was also disallowed for perhaps the truth is That there was not any Sessions in the mean time although there ought to have been The third Exception That the Indictment was That she was indicted Coram A. B. sociis Justices of Peace and it doth not name them particularly The Exception was disallowed for that it doth not appear that there were any other Justices there and what was their names And therefore it was said That it differs from the Case of 1. H. 7. of a Fine levied C●ra● A. B. ●●●iis suis The fourth Exception was That the words of the Statute are Ought to abide in the Church till the end of Common Prayer Preaching or other Service of God in the Disjunctive and the Indictment was in the Conjunctive The Exception was disallowed for although the words are in the disjunctive yet a man cannot depart so soon as the Service is ended if there be preaching but he ought to continue there for the whole time Pasch 4. Jacobi in the King 's Bench. 192 AN Enfant did acknowledge a Statute and during his Nonage brought an Audita querela to avoid the Statute and had judgment The Conusee at the fall age of the Enfant brought a Writ of Error and reversed the judgment given in the Audita querela and the Enfant the Conusor prayed a new Audita querela but it was denyed by the whole Court Mich. 4. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 193 PETO and CHITTIE'S Case IT was adjudged in the Court of Common Pleas in this Case That concord with satisfaction is a good plea in Barre in an Ejectione firme Mich. 5. Jacobi in the King 's Bench. 194 TWo Men were bound joyntly in a Bond one as principal and the other as surety the principal dyed Intestate the surety took Administration of his goods and the principal having forfeited the Bond the surety made an agreement with the Creditor and took upon him to discharge the Debt In Debt brought by another Creditor the question was upon fully administred pleaded by the Administrator If by shewing of the Bond and that he had contented it with his own proper Mony whether he might retain so much of the Intestates estate and it was adjudged that he might not For Flemming Chief Justice said that by joyning in the Bond with the principal it became his own Debt Pasch 5. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 195 TAYLOR and JAME'S Case IN a Replevin by John Taylor against Richard James for taking of a Mare and a Colt in Long Sutton in a place called H. in the County of Somerset The Defendant did avow the taking and shewed That Sir John Spencer was seised of the Manor of Long Sutton whereof the place where c. is parcel and that he and all those whose estate he hath in the said Manor c. have had all Estrayes within in the said Manor and shewed that the Bailiff of Sir John Spencer seised the said Mare and Colt as an Estray and proclaimed them in the three next Market Towns and afterwards the Bai●iff did deliver them to the Defendant to keep in the place where c. And if any came and challenged them and could prove that the same did belong to him and pay him for their meate that he should deliver them unto him and then shewed how that the Plaintiff came and claimed them for his own and because he would not prove that they did belong unto him nor pay him for their meate c. he would not deliver them upon which plea there was a Demurrer in Law After argument by the Serjeants Cook Chief Justice said that it was a
Execution of Justice is no wrong when it is for the King The King hath the precedency for the payment of his Debts to him as it appeareth in Stringfellows Case cited before by Justice Dodderidge And when Lands are once lyable to the payment of the Kings debts let the Lands come to whom you will yet the Land is lyable ●o his debt as it appeareth in Cavendishes Case Dyer 224 225. which was entred Pasc ● Eliz. Rot. 111. in the Exchequer 50. Ass 5. A man bindeth himself and his heirs and dieth and the heir alieneth the Land the Land is discharged of the Debt as to the Debtee But in the Kings Case if at any time the Land and Debt meet together you cannot sever them without payment of the Kings debt Vid. Littleton Executors and soe Administrators are chargeable in an Account to the King and the Saying of Mr Littleton are adjudged for Law and are Judgments A sale in Market over nor a Fine and Nonclaim shall not bind the King and so it is of things bought of the Kings Villeyn because Nullum tempus occurrit Regi A common person in London by Custom may attach a Debt in anothers hands As he may come into Court and shew that his debtor hath not any thing in his hand to satisfie his debt but only that debt which is in the hands of another man and that Custom is allowable and reasonable And if it shall be reasonable for a Subject so to attach a Debt will you have it unreasonable for the King Before the Statute of 25. E. 3. cap. 19. The King might protect his Debtor as it appeareth by the Register 281. and Fitz. 28. 6. But the Statute of 25. E. 3. gave the Partie a liberty to proceed to Judgement but doth barr him from taking forth of Execution upon the Judgment untill the King be satisfied his Debt In Dyer 296 297. a man condemned in the Exchequer for a Debt due to the Queen was committed to the Fleet and being in Execution he was also condemned in the Kings Bench at the Suit of a Subject upon a Bill of Debt in Custodia Mariscalli Maris●alciae Afterwards upon prayer of the Partie a Habeas Corpus cum causa was awarded out of the Kings Bench to the Warden of the Fleet who retorned the Cause ut supra and he was remanded to the Fleet in Execution for the Debt Afterwards a Command was given by the Lord Treasurer upon the Queens behalf to suffer the Prisoner to go into the Countrie to collect and levie monie the sooner to pay the Queen her Debt In that Case the Subject brought an Action of Debt against the Warden of the Fleet upon the Escape who justified the Escape by the said Commandment It was holden in that case That although the Partie was in Execution for both the Debts yet before the Queen was satisfied the Execution for the Subject did not begin For the King cannot have equall to have interest in the Body of the Prisoner Simul cum illo But if the Case were as Lassels case 3. Eliz Dyer then he might be in Execution for the King and for the Subject Lassels was taken in Execution at the Suit of a Subject and before the Writ was retorned a Writ for the Queen came to the Sheriffe and Lassels was kept in Execution for the Queen In that case Lassels was in Execution for them both viz. the Queen and the Subject So there is a difference where the Partie is first taken for the King and where he is first taken for the Subject Now I will consider of the Case at Barr Whether the Land might be extended notwithstanding the Conveyance made The Kings Debt is to be taken largely and so Goods in such case are to be taken largely and so is it likewise of Lands viz. any Land be it Land in Use upon Trust by Revocation By the Law Debts are first to be paid then Legacies then childrens preferments There is a difference where the Land was never in the man and where it was once in him C. 8. Part. 163. Mights Case Might Purchased lands to him and to his heir It was resolved that this original Purchase could not be averred to be by Collusion to take away the Wardship which might accrue after the death of Might for they were Joynts and the survivor shall have the whole Note that there was no fraud for that it was never in him but if it had once been the Lands only of Might and then Might had made the conveyance to him and his heir then it would have been fraud to have deceived the King of the Wardship In the Case at Barr Hatton hath not aliened the land For an Alienation is alienum facere and here he hath not made it the land of another having a power of Revocation Sir John Packington Mortgaged his lands for 100l The Mortgagee enfeoffed W. and within the time of Redemtion Packington and he to whom the money was to be paid agreed that Packington should pay him 30l of the said 100l and no more and yet in appearance for the better performance of the Condition it was agreed that the whole 100l should be paid and that the residue above 30l should be repaid back to Packington which was done accordingly It was resolved in that Case that the same was no performance of the Condition because it was not a payment animo solvendi And so in this Case there was not any allienation animo 〈◊〉 For Sir Christopher Hatton gave the Lands but yet he kept the possession and received the profits of them And if Sir Christopher Hatton had given the land with power of Revocation or reserving as in this Case he did an Estate for his own life it had been all one If a man deviseth the profits of such lands the lands themselves do pass And a Conveyance of lands upon Condition not to take the profits is a void condition in Law Lit. 462 463. A Feoffment is made upon confidence and the Feoffor doth occupie the land at the will of the Feoffees and the Feoffees do release unto the Feoffor all their right Litt. 464. there it was said that such a Feoffor shall be sworn upon an Inquest if the lands be of the value of 40s per annum and that by the Common Law Therefore it seemeth that the Law doth intend That when a man hath Feoffees in Trust that the lands are his own and then if in such case the Commonwealth shall be served shall not the King who is Pater reipublicae be served so as he may be satisfied his debts If the Case of Walter de Chirton had never been yet I should now have the same opinion of the Law in such Case as the Judges then had The King is not bound by Estopels nor Recoveris had betwixt strangers nor by the fundamental Jurisdiction of Courts as appeareth 38. Ass 20. where a Suit was for Tythes in the Exchequer being a meer spiritual
thing and shall he be bound by a Conveyance Anno. 16. H. 6. then in the time of Civil War Uses began and of Lands in use the Lord Chief Baron Tanfield in his Argument hath cited diverse cases where the lands in use were subject and lyable to the debt of Cestuy que use in the Kings Case and so was it untill the Statute of 27. H. 8. of Uses was made Babbington an Officer in the Exchequer had lands in the hands of Feoffees upon Trust and a Writ issued out and the lands were extended for the Debt of Babbington in the hands of his Feoffees Sir Robert Dudley having lands in other mens hands upon Trusts the lands were seized into the Kings hands for a contempt and not for debt or damages to the King And in this Case although that the ●nquisition do find the Conveyance but have not found it to be with power of Revocation yet the Land being extended it is well extended untill the contrary doth appear and untill the extent be avoided by matter of Record viz. by Plea as the Lord Chief Baron hath said before Ley Chief Justice of the Kings Bench argued the same day and his Argument in effect did agree with the other Justices in all things and therefore I have forborne to report the same at length And it was adjudged That the Extent was good and the Land well decreed accordingly Pasch 21 Jacobi in the Exchequer Chamber 417. The Lord SHEFFIELD and RATCLIFF'S Case IN a Writ of Error brought to reverse a Judgment given in a Monstrans de Droit in the Court of Pleas The Case was put by Glanvile who argued for Ratcliffe the Defendant to be this 2 E. 2. Malew being seised of the Mannor of Mulgrave in Fee gave the same to A. Bigot in tail which by divers discents came to Sir Ralph Bigot in tail Who 10 Jannarii 6 H. 8. made a Feoffment unto the use of ●is last Will and thereby after his Debts paid declared the use unto his right heirs in Fee and 9. H. 8. dyed The Will was performed Francis Bigot entred being Tenant in tail and 21 H. 8. made a Feoffment unto the use of himself and Katherine his wife and to the use of the heirs of their two bodies Then came the Statute of 26 H. 8. cap. 13. by which Tenant in tail for Treason is to forfeit the Land which he hath in tail Then the Statute of 27 H. 8. of Uses is made Then 28 H. 8. Francis Bigot did commit Treason And 29 H. 8. he was attainted and executed for the same Anno 31 H. 8. a private Act of Parliament was made which did confirm the Attaindor of Francis Bigot and that he should forfeit unto the King word for word as the Statute of 26 H. 8. is saving to all strangers except the Offendor and his heirs c. 3 E. 6. The heir of Francis Bigot is restored in blood Katherine entred into the Mannor and dyed seised 8 Eliz. their Issue entred and married with Francis Ratcliffe and had Issue Roger Ratcliffe who is heri in tail unto Ralph Bigot And they continue possession untill 33. Eliz. And then all is found by Office and the Land seised upon for the Queen who granted the same unto the Lord Sheffield Francis Bigot and Dorothy die And Roger Ratcliffe sued a Monstrans de Droit to remove the Kings hands from off the lands and a Scire facias issued forth against the Lord Sheffield as one of the Terre-Tenants who pleaded all this special matter and Judgment was thereupon given in the Court of Pleas for Roger Ratcliffe And then the Lord Sheffield brought a Writ of Error in the Exchequer-Chamber to reverse the said Judgment And Finch Serjeant argued for the Lord Sheffield that the Judgment ought to be reversed And now this Term Glanvile argued for Roger Ratcliffe that the Judgment given in the Court of Pleas ought to be affirmed There are two points The first If there were a Right remaining in Francis Bigot and if the same were given unto the King by the Attaindor and the Statute of 31 H. 8. Second If a Monstrans de Droit be a proper Action upon this matter which depends upon a Remitter for if it be a Remitter then is the Action a proper Action The Feoffment by Ralph Bigot 6 H. 8. was a Discontinuance and he had a new use in himself to the use of his Will and then to the use of his Heirs Then 9 H. 8. Ralph Bigot dyed And then Francis Bigot had a right to bring a Formedon in the Discendor to recover his estate tail 21 H 8. then the point ariseth Francis Bigot having a right of Formedon and an use by force of the Statute of 1 R. 3. cap. 1. before the Statute of 27 H. 8. by the Feoffment he had so setled it that he could not commit a forfeiture of the estate tail When a man maketh a Feoffment every Right Action c. is given away in the Livery and Seisin because every one who giveth Livery giveth all Circumstances which belongs to it For a Livery is of that force that it excludes the Feoffor not only of all present Rights but of all future Rights and Tytles v. C. 1. par 111. and there good Cases put to this purpose 9 H. 7. 1. By Livery the Husband who was in hope to be Tenant by Courtesie is as if he were never sised 39 H. 6. 43. The Son disseiseth his Father and makes a Feoffment of the lands the Father dyeth the hope of the heir is given away by the Livery It was objected by Serjeant Finch 1. Where a man hath a right of action to recover land in Fee or an estate for life which may be conveyed to another there a Livery doth give away such a Right and shall there bind him But an estate in tail cannot be transferred to another by any manner of Conveyance and therefore cannot be bound by such a Livery given I answer It is no good Rule That that which doth not passe by Livery doth remain in the person which giveth the Livery 19 H. 6. Tenant in tail is attainted Office is found The estate tail is not in the King is not in the person attainted but is in abeyance So it is no good Rule which hath been put When Tenant in tail maketh a Feoffment Non habet jus in re neque ad rem If he have a Right then it is a Right of Entre or Action but he cannot enter nor have any action against his own Feoffment 19 H. 8. 7. Dyer If Discontinuee of Tenant in tail levieth a Fine with proclamations and the five years passe and afterward Tenant in tail dyeth his issue shall have other five years and shall be helped by the Statute for he is the first to whom the right doth accrue after the Fine levied for Tenant in tail himself after his Fine with Proclamations hath not any right But if Tenant in tail be
in tail may have a Formedon against the Bishop But in our Case it is otherwise Tenant in tail maketh a Feoffment and takes back an estate unto himself in tail the remainder in Fee to his right heirs The Bishop in such case shall not have the land forfeited for Treason because that the Bishop cannot have the estate tail but in such case the King shall have the Land by the Statute of 26 H. 8. cap. 13. And the Bishop in such case shall not have the Fee because it is one estate and the King shall not wait upon the Subject viz the Bishop The Right waits upon the possession For 11 H. 7. 12. If the son and a stranger disseiseth the father and the father dyeth this right infuseth it self into the possession and changeth the possession And it is a Release in fact by the father to the son 9 H. 7. 25. Br ' Droit 57. A Disseisor dyeth seised and his heir enters and is disseised by A. The first Disseisee doth release unto A. all his right All the right is now in the second Disseisor viz. A. because the right and the possession meet together in A. 40 E. 3. 18. b. Tenant in tail makes a Lease for life with warranty If Tenant for life be impleaded by the heir to whom the warranty doth discend he shall rebut the right in tail being annexed with the possession for that is in case of a saving of the land by that right But where one demands land there all the Right ought to be shewed 11 H. 4 37. If a man be to bring an Action to recover then he ought to make a good title by his best right if he hath many rights But if a man be in possession and an Action be brought against him then he may defend himself by any of his rights or by all his rights 11 H. 7. 21. Tenant in tail maketh a Feoffment to his use upon Condition and afterwards upon his Recognisance the land is extended and afterwards the Condition is performed yet the interest of the Conusee shall not be avoided For although the Extent come upon the Fee and not upon the Tail yet when the Extent was it was extracted out of all the rights C. 7. part 41. A Tenant in tail makes a Lease for life now he hath gained a new Fee by wrong and afterwards he makes a Lease for years and Tenant for life dyeth He shall not avoid his Lease for years although he be in of another estate because he had a defeicible title and an ancient right the which if they were in several hands shall be good as the Lease of the one and the Confirmation of the other And being in one hand it shall be as much in Law as a saving of the Right In our Case the Right and Possession both were in Francis Bigot And Ratcliffe is entitled to the old estate tail and to the new also There is a difference betwixt him who claims the land so forfeited to the King and the heir of the body of the person attainted Litt●719 Land is given to A and the issue males of his body the remainder to the heirs females of his body If the Father commit Treason both heir male and female are barred for they both claim by the Father but if the heir male after the death of his Father be attainted of Treason the King shall have the lands as long as he hath issue male of his body and then the heir female shall have the lands for she shall not forfeit them because she claimeth not by the brother but by the father Com. in Manxels case A man hath three several rights of estate tails and comes in as Vouchee If the Recovery pass it shall bar all his Rights for one Recompence and they shall be all bound by one possession There is a difference where the Kings title is by Conveyance of the party and where for forfeiture for Treason by this Statute of 26 H. 8. cap. 13. v. the Abbot of Colchesters Case The Abbot seised in the right of his house did commit Treason and made a Lease for years and then surrendred his house to the King after the Statute of 26 H. 8. The question was whether the King should avoid the Lease It was adjudged That the King was in by the surrender and should not avoid the Lease and not by the Statute of 26 H. 8. But if the King had had it by force of the Statute then the King should have avoided the Lease Com. 560. Tenant in tail the reversion to the King Tenant in tail maketh a Lease for years and is attainted of Treason The King shall avoid the Lease upon the construction of the Statute of 26 H. 8. which gives the lands unto the King for ever The third point is upon the Remitter This point had been argued by way of Admittance For as I have argued The ancient right is given away unto the King and then there is no ancient right and so no Remitter There is a difference where the issue in tail is forced to make a Title and where not In point of defence he is not so precisely forced to make his Title as he is in case of demand Whereas the Defendant demands the lands from the King the Discent will not help him because the Attaindor of the Ancestor of Ratcliffe hinders him in point of title to make a demand Dyer 332 b. In this case he ought to make himself heir of the body of Francis Bigot and Katharine C. 8. part 72. C. 9. part 139 140. There Cook couples the Case of Fine levied and the Case of Attaindor together C. 8. part 72. Land is given to husband and wife and to the heirs of their two bodies The husband alone levies a Fine with proclamations Or is attainted of Treason and dyeth The wife before Entry dyeth The issue is barred and the Conusee or King hath right unto the land because the issue cannot claim as heir to them both viz. father and mother for by the father he is barred 5 H. 7. 32 33. C. 9. part 140. Husband and wife Tenants in tail If one of them be attainted of Treason as it was in our Case the lands shall not discend to the issue because he cannot make title And there Cook puts the Case That if lands be given to an Alien and his wife they have a good estate tail and yet it is not discendable to the issue The Consequence then of all this is That if Ratcliffe cannot take advantage of the discent by reason of the disability by Attaindor à fortiori he shall not be remitted And yet I confess that in some Cases one may be remitted against the King Com. 488 489 553. But that is where the King is in by matter of Law by Conveyance but in this Case the King is in by an Act of Parliament and there shall be no Remitter against a matter of Record Another reason is because that
house and then by his Will deviseth his houses called the Swan The rooms of the Lyon which A. occupied with the Swan shall pass by the Devise although of right those rooms do belong to the Lyon-house Pasc 36 Eliz. Ewer and Heydon's Case A man hath a house and divers lands in W. and also a house and lands in D. And by his Will he deviseth his house and all his lands in W. D. there the house which is in D. doth not pass for his intent and meaning plainly appears that his house in D. doth not pass But if he had devised all his lands in W. and had not spoken of the house the house had passed A Case was in the Common-Pleas betwixt Hyam and Baker The Devisor had two Farms and occupied parcel of one of the Farms with the other Farm and devised the Farm which he had in his possession The part of the other Farm which he occupied with it did pass with the Farm devised Dodderidge Justice The Devise is in the Case at Bar All his Farm called Locks to his eldest Son and all his Farm called Brocks to his younger Son And the Land in question was purchased long after that the Devisor purchased Brocks but that Land newly purchased was not expresly named in the Will and therefore it shall discend to the heir viz. the eldest Son Land is not parcel of a house and in strictness of Law cannot appertain to a house Yet Land is appertaining to the Office of the Fleet and the Rolls but that is to the Office which is in another nature then the Land is For the Land newly purchased the Jury did not find the same to be usually occupied with Brocks it shall not pass with Brocks although it be occupied together with Brocks I do occupie several Farms together and then I devise one of the Farms called D. and all the lands to the same belonging the other Farms shall not pass with it although they be occupied all together Haughton Justice What time will make lands to belong unto a house All the profits of the lands used with the house for a small time will serve the turn Ley Chief Justice There are two manner of belongings One belonging in course of Right and another belonging in case of Occupation To the first belonging there ought to be Prescription viz. time out of mind But in our Case Belonging doth borrow some sense from occupying for a year or a time And then another year to occupie it will not make it belonging in the later sense In strictness of Law Land cannot be said to belong to a house or land but in vulgar reputation it may be said belonging And in such case in case of grant the Land will not pass as appertaining to Land C. 4. part Terringham's Case But in our Case it is in case of a Will Usually occupied is not to be meant time out of mind Here other lands were belonging to Brocks and so the words of the Will are satisfied But it might have been a Question if there had been no other lands belonging to it Dodderidge Justice If the Devisor had turned all the profits thereof to Brocks then it had passed by the Will Ley Chief Justice This occupying of it promiscuously doth make it belong to neither At another day Ley Chief Justice said Here is nothing which makes it appear to us that this Land doth belong to Brocks For the Jury find not that it was occupied either with Brocks or Locks and so this Land belongs to neither of them Dodderidge There is not any Question in the Case It is not found that it doth belong And then we must not judge it belonging The ground of this question ariseth out of the matter of fact and it ought to be found at the least that it is appertaining in Reputation Haughton The Jury find that Knight was seised of Brocks and of lands belonging to it And that he was seised of Locks and of lands belonging to that And lastly they find that he was seised of this Land in question but they do not find that it was any wayes belonging to Brocks or Locks It was adjudged for the Plaintiff and that the Land did not pass by the Devise but that it did discend to the heir Trin. 21 Jacobi in the Kings Bench. 448. SELY against FLAYLE and FARTHING IN an Ejection Firme the Verdict was found for the Defendant Three of the Jurors had Sweet-meats in their pockets and those three were for the Plaintiffe untill they were searched and the Sweet-meats found with them and then they did agree with the other nine and gave their Verdict for the Defendant Haughton Justice It doth not appear that these Sweet-meats were provided for them by the Plaintiffe or Defendant and it doth not appear that the said three Jurors did eat of the Sweet-meats before the Verdict given And so I conceive there is not any cause to make void the Verdict given but the said three Jurors are fineable Dodderidge Justice Whether they eat or not they are fineable for the having of the Sweet-meats with them for it is a very great misdemeanour And now we cannot tell which of the Jurors the three were and because it was not moved before the Jurors departed from the Bar it is now too late to examine the Jurors for we do not know for which three to send for The nine drew the three which had the Sweet-meats to their opinions and therefore there is no cause to stay Judgment But if the three Jurors had drawn the nine other to them then there had been sufficient cause to have stayed the Judgment but as this case is there is no cause And therefore per Curiam Judgment was given for the Defendant according to the Verdict Trin. 21 Iacobi in the Kings Bench 449. NOte It was vouched by George Crook and so was also the opinion of the whole Court That by way of Agreement Tythes may pass for years without Deed but not by way of Lease without a Deed. But a Lease for one year may be of Tythes without Deed. Trin. 21 Iacobi in the Kings Bench. 450. THe Plaintiffe recovered in Debt in the Kings Bench and a Capias ad Satisfaciendum was awarded and immediately upon the awarding of the Capias the Defendant dyed Quaere if in such case an Action of Debt lieth against the special Bail The Executors having nothing a Scire-facias doth not lie against the Bail And in the Common-Pleas in that case the Court was divided two Judges being against the other two Judges Ideo quare Trin. 21 Jacobi in the Kings Bench. 451. LEONARD's Case IN a Scire facias to have Execution of a Recognizance the Case was That a special Supplicavit for the Peace was directed out of the Chancery to A. and B. Justices of the Peace and to the Sheriffe of the County of c. to take a Recognizance of L. M. N. for the Peace and good behaviour and the
and Slingbyes case 361 Londons case 374 Ludlow and Stacies case 377 Loxe case 345 Lee and Grissels case 442 Leonards case 451 Lone and Hills case 458 Litfield and Melhers case 459 Langley and Stotes case 478 Lancaster and Kigleys case 507 Lovegrave and Brewens case 514 M MOuntjoyes Case 24 Macrowes Case 38 Marsh and Palfords Case 53 Megods Case 77 Miller and Gores Case 122 Mayes Case 173 Mannocks Case 191 Me●r and Ridouts Case 241 Marriots Case 248 Morris Case 265 Mounteagle and Pemeddocks Case 266 Meades Case 274 Miller and Reignolds Case 293 Manwoods Case 301 Maior of Yorks Case 360 Mildmays Case 416 Morgans Case 416 Morris and Clarks Case 435 Mellon and Herns Case 435 Mills Case 464 Marshes Case 465 Manns Case 471 Mutle and Does Case 480 Mole and Carters Case 484 Monk and Butchers Case 508 Moor and Hawkins Case 486 N NOrris and Salisburies case 154 Newton and Richards case 240 Newmans case 242 Newman and Babbingtons Case 250 Norton and Lysters case 291 Norton and Symms case 303 O OSborne and Trittels Case 99 Occoulds case 268 Owen alias Collins case 363 Owfield and Sheirts case 430 Ognels case 483 Offlies case 517 P POles case 13 Prideaux case 44 Plymptons case 116 Proctors case 168 Pinders case 185 Peto and Chitties case 193 Perepoints case 217 Piggot and Goddens case 221 Pitts and Wardels case 230 Prrrot and Kebles case 281 Porters case 302 Paynes case 308 Piggot and Pigots case 330 Prat and Lord Nor●hs case 358 Paginton and Huets case 370 Plotts case 380 Pollyes case 403 Sir Iohn Parkingtons case 416 Pritchard Williams case 423 Philpot and Fielders case 427 Pye and Bonners case 443 Peters case 456 Pits and Horkley's case 458 Proctor and Cliffords case 468 Payn and Colleges case 490 Parks case 502 Palmers case 509 Perpoynt Thimblebys case 513 Pages case 717 Plats case 518 L. Pagets case 510 Q Quodds case 246 R ROots case 139 Rushwels case 186 Royley and Dormes case 260 Read and Hewes case 269 Rosse● and Walshes cass 296 Reorsbies and Cuffs case 316 Roe and Gloves case 332 Roberts and Hills case 434 Randal and Harveys case 452 Royden and Moulstons case 458 Roper and Roydons case 491 Roy and Hills case 517 S Skipwiths case 22 Savel and Cordels case 35 Sydenham Worlingtons case 40 Savacres case 47 Stargies case 75 Smith and Smiths case 88 Shotbolts case 91 Stransam and Colborns case 97 Strangden and Barcels case 163 Sayland and Ridlers case 177 Skipwith and Sheffields case 178 Stowels case 182 Sir John Spencer and Poyntz case 203 Stebbings case 239 Stones case 247 Sancford and Havels case 263 Sprat and Nicholsons case 283 Seymors case 307 Stowhridge Archers case 311 Smiths case 317 Sherloes case 347 Sheriff and Bridges case 349 Simpsons case 364 Smith and Staffords case 379 Slyes case 390 Spicer and Spicers case 398 Stewry and Stewryes case 410 L. Sheffield Ratcliffs case 417 Sadlers case 417 Snell and Bennets case 426 Shooter and Emets case 435 Stone and Roberts case 435 Sely and Flayles case 448 Seignior and Wolmers case 453 Stanton and Barneys case 458 Sherrington Worsleys case 465 Suttons case 476 Symmes case 477 Samson and Gatefields case 482 Scots case 487 Sommers case 489 Shortridge and Hills cases 492 Shirtford and Berrowes case 502 Syms and Smiths case 513 Simpsons case 518 Shackbolts 495 Spurlings case 479 T. THrogmorton and Terringhams case 37 Taylor and Ribera's case 90 Taylor and James case 195 Traherns case 321 Totnam and Hoskins case 445 Taylor and Askies case 455 Tollyn and Taylors case 469 Tanfield and Hirons case 486 Treventries case 488 Tucker and Carrs case 491 Taylor and Tomlyns case 511 Tennants case 507 Tompsons case 369 U. VIcar of Pancras case 63 Vernon and Grays case 145 Vaughans case 327 Veseys case 406 Vrry and Bowyers case 479 Vinior and Viniors case 515 W. VVEbb Potters case 25 Windsmore Hulberts Case 64 Wiseman and Wallmyers case 107 Wood and Ashes case 135 Warrens case 138 Widdal sir John Ashtons case 142 Winkefields case 152 Warners case 183 Whitlock and Hartwells case 184 Wilson and Wormels case 226 Woolseys case 249 Wekers case 257 Wright and Wrights case 262 Wetherell and Greens case 280 Wedlock and Hardings case 295 Wheelers case 315 Wormleighton and Hunters case 338 Whorewoods Case White and Moores case 340 Wrotesley Candishes case 354 Winscomb and Dunches case 376 Webb and Tucks case 392 Waite and Inhabitants of Stokes case 397 Webb and Paternosters case 401 Williams and Gibbs case 409 White and Edwards case 412 Wiseman and Denhams case 424 Waterer Montagues case 429 Wheeler Appletons case 434 Waterman and Cropps case 467 Whittie and Westons case 479 VVillis case 483 VVilliams and Floyds case 495 VValdrons case 509 Y. YArram and Bradshawes case 145 Yate and Alexanders case 408 Young and Englesfields case 422 Z. ZOuch and Bramports case 165 Zouch and Mitchels case 225 Zouch and Moores case 491 Mich. 17. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 1. THis Case was moved to the Court. If an Abby hath a Parsonage appropriate in D. which is discharged of payment of Tithes and afterward the Abbot purchaseth part of the lands in the same Town and Parish where the Parsonage is That this land so purchased is discharged of Tithes in the hands of the Abbot For the Tithes were suspended during the possession of the Abbot in his own hands But after that the Abby was surrendred into the hands of the King Anno 30. H. 8. And afterwards the same possessions c. were given to King H. 8. by the Statute of 31. H. 8. cap. 13. as they were in the hands of the Abbot The question was Whether the Land so purchased by the Abbot before the surrender were discharged of payment of Tithes by the Statute or not And the opinion of Mr. Plowden was That they were not discharged of Tithes by the Statute For that no lands are discharged by the Statute but such lands as were lawfully discharged in right by composition or other lawfull thing And the lands in this case were not discharged in right but suspended during the possession of the Abbot in his own hands And so hee said it is when the Land is purchased by one and the Parsonage by another the right of Tithes is revived and the lands charged as before the purchase of the Abbot And so he said it had been adjudged Pasc 17. Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 2. A Man makes a Lease for Life and afterwards makes a Lease unto another for Years to begin after the death of Tenant for life The Lessee for yeers dieth intestate The Ordinary commits Administration The Administrators and the Tenant for life joyn in the purchase of the Fee-simple Two questions were moved The first was Whether the Fee were executed in the Tenant for life for any part 2. Whether the Term were gone in part or in all And the opinion
for by this Act done it is plaine from the beginning to be unlawfull for the Sale is only a Declaration of his ill intent and a means that his meaning was by felling of the trees to benefit himself by the hurt and injury of another But in the Principall Case because he ought to digge the Land and that was lawfull for him to do the Act subsequent cannot be unlawfull And so it was adjudged 27. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 38. MACROWE's Case MAcrowe brought Debt upon a Bond which was endorced upon Condition to pay a lesse sum The Defendant pleaded the Statute of 13. Eliz. That all Covenants Contracts and Bonds made for the enjoying of Leases made of Spirituall Livings by Parsons c. were void And averred that that Bond was made for enjoying of such a Lease But because the Condition expressed of the Bond was for payment of monie The Justices held it cleer for Law That the Bond was good and out of the Statute And so it was adjudged 27. Eliz. in the Common Pleas 39. KITTLEY's Case AN Action of Debt was brought against Eustace Kittley and Charls Kittley Executors of the Will of Francis Kittley The Defendants pleaded That they had fully Administred and upon a speciall Verdict the Case was this Francis Kittley made the Defendats his Executors who being within age Administration was committed unto another untill they came of full age and after they were of full age the Jury found That in the hands of the Administrator Fuerunt bo●a debita Testatoris to the value of 4000.li. To which Administrator the Defendants Executors did release at their full age all Demands the which Release whether it were Assets in the hands of the Executors or not the Jurours prayed the Opinion of the Court Puckering the Queens Sergeant It is not Assets for a Release of a thing which is not Assets in the hand of an Executor cannot be said Assets and things in Action before they come in Possession cannot be said Assets But a Gift of Goods in Posssession is Assets and a Devastavit of the Goods of the dead Also there is a difference betwixt a certain thing released and a thing uncertain of a certain it is Assets for by such means he hath given such a thing which is Assets but contrary of an uncertain A●● this Difference is proved by 13. E. 3. Execut. 91. where it is holden That if Executors release to the Debtor he shall account for such Sum before the Ordinary by Parne But Trew He shall not account But the whole Court was against Puckering And first Anderson It is a cleer Case That this Release is Assets for he hath thereby given away that which might have been Assets And the Law doth intend That when he release● that he hath Recompence and Satisfaction from the Party to whom the release is made And he denyed the Difference of certain and uncertain put by Puckering and be it in Account or Trespasse a Release is Assets And it is not requisite that every Assets be a thing in Possession or in the hands of the Testator for a thing may be Assets which never was in the Testators hands if those things 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 of the thing which was in the hands of the Testaor as Money for Land or other Goods so●d Or if they came by reason of another thing which was in the hands of the Testator as increase of Goods by the Executors in their hands by Merchandizing with the Goods of the Testator or Goods purchased by the Villain of the Testator after his death shall be Assets So money received by the Executor of the 〈◊〉 of the Testator after his death shall be said Assets Windham Justice So it is if the Testator have Sheep Swine or Cowes and dieth and they have young Lambs Pigs or Calves they are Assets for the reason aforesaid And he agreed that the Release is Assets and he said It had been so here adjudged and he denyed also the difference taken by Puckering Periam agreed with the rest in all and also denyed the difference And by him Things in Action or Possession certain or uncertain if they be released they are Assets And he said That the uncertainty must be such that the same cannot be proved to the Court or unto a Jury that the thing released might not by Possibility have been Assets For if Trespasse be done to the Testa●●● by taking his goods and he dieth and the Executors release all Actions the same is Assets because 〈◊〉 might be proved to the Jury That had they not released but had brought their Action of Trespasse De bont● asportatis in vita testatoris c. that they might have recovered Damages which would have satisfied the Debts or Legaces of the Testator and therefore it shall be Assets And yet the thing recovered was not in the Testator or a thing in Possession or certain in the hands of the Executors with whom Rodes agreed And Periam conceived That such Administrators made Durante minori aetate of the Executor could not by our Law neither Sue nor be Sued For as he conceived the Infant was the Executor and an Infant Executor may either Sue or be Sued and may release if there be a sufficient Consideration given him and therefore Administration for such defect is but idle Wherefore he said That if an Infant doth release where he hath no cause nor good consideration he shall be answerable of his own goods when he cometh of full age for the wasting of the estate and such Release shall be Assets And it was holden That a Release before probate of the Will is good and it is Assets also And the same Term Judgment was given that the Release of the Enfant Executor was Assets 27. Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 40. SYDENHAM and WORLINGTON's Case SYdenham brought an Action upon the Case upon an Assumps●t against Worlington for 30 li and alledged for Consideration that he at the request of the Defendant was Surety and Bail for J. S. who was arrested into the Kings Bench upon an Action of 30 li and that afterwards for the default of J. S. he was constrained to pay the said 30 pounds After which the Defendant meeting with the Plaintiff promised him for the same consideration that he would repay that 30 pound upon which promise and consideration the Plaintiff brought this Action Walmesley This Consideration will not maintain this Action because the consideration and the promise did not concur and go together for the consideration was long before executed so as now it cannot be intended that the promise was for the same consideration As if one give to me an Horse and a month after I promise him for the said Horse ten pounds for that he shall neither have Debt nor Assumpsit for it is neither a Contract nor a sufficient Consideration because it is executed Anderson The Action will not lie for it is but nudum pa●●●● because the supposed
who is out of the Faith of the King shall forfeit his Land for the same à for●iori he who is out of the faith of God and that he swore to be Law Whereupon Burgh said Respondes ouster And so saith Fitzherbert Tryal 54. by that Plea and Judgement Miscreancy and Deprivation at Rome shall bee tryed here And there the Venire facias was awarded to the Sheriffe where the Church was and not to the Bishop of Durham and so the Miscreancy and Deprivation shall bee tryed where the Church is The third Point was Whether an Administrator might count of his own Possession although he was never possessed and the whole Court were of Opinion that he might if the Intestate at the time of his death was possessed The Administrator may declare of Goods taken out of his owne Possession although he was never possessed for of transitory things the Law casts upon him a sufficient possession to maintain an Action Possessory as the Lord before seisin may have a Ravishment of Ward c. But otherwise it is if one take the Goods of the Intestate out of his Possession before he dieth for then but only a bare right comes to the Administrator And that is to bee meant when the Goods are taken Transgressivè and not Destrictivè The fourth Point was Whether the Jury might find matter done out of the Realme and if that should abate the Writ or not And they held also cleerly That upon a generall Issue the Jury may find a Forrain matter as a thing done out of the Realme but it shall not abate the Writ if it be not matter of substance and pleaded before But here the finding of the Letters of Administration is more then they had in Issue and also is but matter of Evidence for the substance in this Case was the Possession and not the Administration for he might have an Action of his Possession without shewing the Letters of Administration And afterwards Judgement was given for Carter the Plaintiffe Mich. 27. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 42. FUTTER aud BOOROMES Case THE Case was that the Queen by her Letters Patents anno 12. of Reign ex certa scientia mero motu c. did grant to B. totam illam portionem decimarum Garbarum in L. in Com. Norf. unà cum omnibus aliis decimis suis cujuscunque generis speci●i fu●rint in L. nuper in possessione Johannis Corbet or his Assigns nuper Abath d● Wenly pertinent c. And in facto the Parsonage of L. was parcell of the Abby of Wenly and out thereof was a portion appertaining to another Church And this Rectorie came unto the Queen by the Statute of dissolution of Abbyes The question was whether the Rectorie do pass by the Grant totam illam portionem there being also words in the Patent viz. Non obstante any misnosmer misrecital or other such things which are recited in the Statute for confirmation of Patents Hamon the Grant is good for this word portion shall not be said a thing severed from the Church and Rectorie And all the Tythes are parcel of the Rectorie for as 44. E. 3. 5. is before the Councel of Lateran a man might give his Tythes to what Church he pleased And when any thing is given to the Church it is a portion belonging to the Church as the Glebe is which is but a clod of Earth which is parcel of the Rectorie and a portion of it And a case in this Court in the time of this Queen was argued and there in a Rectorie there were many Priests and each of them knew his portion so as they were called portionary Priests which was in respect they had each of them interest in the Church and not because their portions were severed each from the other And 22. E. 4. 24. by Pigot it is said If a Parson hath any Tythes in another Parish as appertaining to his Church it is called a portion so as portion is not meant that which is severed by it self as in gross But by portion is meant all the Tythes appertaining to the Rectorie or the Rectorie it self For as 22. Ass 9. is If the King have Tythes of those Lands which lie out of any Parish if he grant totam portionem decimarum c. I conceive that the Tythes shall pass thereby And yet it is a thing severed from other Tythes but it doth contain all the qualitie of Tythes in that place And also if the King grant his Rectorie of D. to J. S. saving to him the Tythes and afterwards grants totam portionem Decimarum c. I conceive cleerly under correction that the Tythes shall pass And in the principal case If the Tythes shall not pass by this word portion yet the Non obstante in the Letters Patents de male nominando c. shall make it to be a good grant and that so the Tythes shall pass thereby We are also to consider if by any words subsequent in the Patent the grant be not good viz. by these words cum omnibus aliis Decimis c. in tenura occupatione Johannis Corbet c. Whereas in truth John Corbet was never Occupier of them And as to that I conceive That the words before cum●omnibus c. passe the Tithes And that the words after shall not abridge or controle the largeness of the precedent words and to that purpose is the Case 39. E. 3. 9. of the Grant of the King to the Earle of Salisbury c. In the end of which Grant were these words Quas nuper concessimus patri c. although that the thing granted was never granted to the Father yet the Grant was good and not restreined by those words coming after 2. E. 4. A Release was pleaded of a right which the party had in Lands of the part of his Father c. there although he had the Land from the part of his Mother yet the Release was good In the Case of the Bishop of Bath and Wells which was lately argued in the Exchequer Chamber There it was agreed That if the King grant a Faire in such a place or elsewhere in the County of Somerset if he mistake the County in putting one County for another yet the Grant is good and all that coming after the alibi shall be void He further argued That all the matter appearing by speciall Verdict is not well found for the Jury find That no Tithes were in the Occupation of John Corbet at the time of the Grant and no mention is in it that they were not in his Occupation nor in the Occupation of his Assignes for they might be in the Occupation of his Assigns although that they were not in his own Occupation For in a Verdict if it strongly imply any thing not expressed as in the Case of Trivilian where the Jury found a devise of Land without saying That the Land was holden in Socage it is a good finding of the Jury for no devise
which implyes an Affirmative which yet seems to be repugnant to a Negative as in 21. H. 6. 19. In a Writ of Entrie the Defendant pleaded the deed of the Demandant after the darrein Continuance The Demandant said It was not his deed after the darrein Continuance And that was holden a Negative pregnans wherefore he was compelled to plead and say he made it by dures before the darrein Continuance such a day absque hoc that he made it after the darrein continuance and then Issue was taken upon it The same Case is in 5. H 7. 7. But there it is said That in Debt upon a Bond to perform an Arbitrement Non fecerunt Arbitrementum per diem is no Negative pregnans The same Law that non deliberavit arbitrium in Script 38. H 6. in Formedon Ne dona pas in taile is a Negative pregnans Vide 39 H. 6. The Case of the Dean and Chapter The second Exception was That he hath pleaded neque such nor such nor such had disturbed him by any indirect means but onely by due course of Law And that cannot be tryed neither by Jury nor by the Judges Not by the Jury because it is not to be put to them whether they had disturbed him by indirect means or by due course of Law for they shall not take upon them the construction What is an indirect means and what is the due course of Law for it appertaineth to the Justices to adjudg that Not by the Judges because hee hath not put it certain that it was a due course of Law by which he disturbed him As 22. E. 4. 40. In Debt upon a Bond the Defendant saith that it is upon condition That if the Defendant or any for him came to Bristow such a day and there shewed to the Plaintiff or his Councell a sufficient Discharge of an Annuity of forty shillings per annum which the Plaintiff claims out of two Messuages of the Defendant in D that then c. The Defendant said that A. and B. by the assignement of the Defendant came the same day to Bristow and tendered to shew to N and W. of the Plaintiffs Councell a sufficient Discharge of the Annuity and that they did refuse to see it and demanded judgment of the Action The Plaintiff did demur upon the Plea And after a long argument it was adjudged by all the Justices to be no Plea c. because it lay in the judgment of the Court to judg of it and he did not shew in certain what discharge he tendered as a Release Unitie of possession c. If a man be bound to plead a sufficient plea before such a day in Debt upon such a Bond it is no plea to say That he hath pleaded a sufficient plea before the day but hee ought to shew what plea he hath pleaded For the Court cannot tell whether it be a sufficient plea or not if it do not appear what manner of plea it is 35 H. 6. 19. The Condition of a Bond was That where the Plaintiff was indebted to J. S. in one hundred pounds If the Defendant acquit and discharge the Plaintiffe that then c. The Defendant pleaded That hee had discharged him c. and the Plaintiffe did demurre upon the plea because hee did not shew how and it was holden no good plea. So 38. H. 8. Br. Condition 16. per curiam in the Kings Bench where a man pleaded That he had saved him harmlesse it was no Plea without shewing how because he pleaded in the Affirmative contrary if he had pleaded in the Negative as Non damnificatus est Suit and Clenche Justices said That if he had pleaded That he was not disturbed by any indirect means it had been good enough Gaudy If he had said That he was not disturbed contra formam conditionis praedict ' it had been good as upon a pleading of a Statute Ne entra pas contra formam Statuti Clench If I be bound to suffer I. S. to have my house but not I. D. I ought to answer That I have suffered the one and not the other to have it Suit Justice They are both severall issues and one shall not be repugnant to the other Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 75 STURGIE'S Case A Case was moved upon the Statute of 5. Eliz. Cap. 14. The Case as I conceive was thus Grandfather Father and Daughter Land descended from the Grandfather to the Father who made a Lease for one hundred years the Father died and the Daughter forged a Will of the Grandfather by which he gave the Land to the Father for life the Remainder to the Daughter in Fee and the same was forged to have avoided an Execution of a Statute Staple the Lease being defeated and if it were within the Statute of 5. Eliz. was the question Solicitor That it was within the statute and within the first Branch viz. If any shall forge any deed c. to the intent that the Estate of Free-hold or Inheritance of any person c. in or to any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments Freehold or Copyhold or the right Title or Interest of any c. of in or to the same or any of them shall or may be molested c. Lessee for years hath a Title hath an Interest hath a right therefore within the words of the Statute and those words shall be referred to the words Lands Tenements c. But Cook said They shall be referred to the words precedent viz. Estate of Freehold or Inheritance and then a Lease for years is not within them Also by the Solicitor A Testament in writing is within the words of the Statute and therefore he recited a clause in the end of the Statute viz. and if any person plead publish or shew forth c. to the intent to have or claime thereby any Estate of Inheritance Freehold or Lease for years And also he said a Statute Staple is an estate for years although it be not a Lease for years because it is not certain Cook If she should be within both branches then she should be twice punished which Law will not suffer And the Statute is whereby any Estate for years shall be claimed and she would not claim but defeat an Estate for years and a Statute Staple is not a Lease for years and the Statute is not to be taken by Equity because it is a Penall Law Solicitor When the Statute is extended then it is an Estate for years although it be uncertain If a man forge a Lease for years it is directly within the Statute But if a man have a Lease and another is forged to defeat it it is a question whether it be within the Statute And all the doubt of this Case is upon the reference of these words Right Title Interest And it was adjourned Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Kings Bench. 76 THE Vicar of Pancras Case was argued again by Godfrey And he said That no Plea shall be
licence be to A. and B. or C. some conceived that A. or B. might alien but not C. Et è●converso Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 105 IT was agreed by the whole Court That a Partition made by word betwixt Joyntenants is not good See Dyer 29. Pl. 134. and 350. Pl 20. doth agree and see there the reason of it Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 105 IT was holden by the whole Court That if the Father do devise Lands unto his Son and Heir apparant and to a stranger that it is a good Devise and that they are Joyntenants for the benefit of the Stranger Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 106 FULLER'S Case A. Promises unto the eldest son that if he will give his consent that his Father shall make an Assurance unto him of his Lands that he will give him ten pounds If he give his assent although no assurance be made yet he shall maintain an Action upon the promise But at another day Periam Justice said that in that case the son ought to promise to give his assent or otherwise A. had nothing if his son would not give his consent And so where each hath remedy against the other it is a good Consideration In Hillary Term after Fenner spake in arrest of Judgment upon the speciall Verdict That because that the Assumpsit is but of one part and the other is at liberty whether he will give his consent or not that therefore although that hee do consent that hee shall not recover the ten pounds Also he said That the promise was that if hee would give consent that his Father should make assurance to him and here the assurance is made to A. to the use of the Defendant and his Wife in taile so as it varies from the first Communication and also it is in tail Shuttleworth contrary in as much as he hath performed it by the giving of consent then when he hath performed It is not to the purpose that he was not tyed by a crosse Assumpsit to do it but if he had not given his consent he should have nothing At length Judgment was given for the Plaintiff And Periam Justice said in this Case That if a covenant be to make an Estate to A. and it is made to B. to the use of A. that he doubted whether that were good or not Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Intratur Hill 28. Eliz. Rot. 1742. 107 WISEMAN and WALLINGER'S Case A Man seised of two Closes called Bl. Acre makes a Lease of them rendring Ten Shillings rent The Lessee grants all his Estate in one of them to A. and in the other to B. The Lessor doth devise all his Land called Bl. Acre in the tenure of A. and dieth The Devisee brings an Action of Debt for the whole Rent against the first Lessee And the Opinion of the whole Court was That the Action would not lie because they conceived That but the Reversion of one Close passed and also that the rent should not be apportioned in that Case because a terme is out of the Statute and a Rent reserved upon a Lease for years shall not be apportioned by the act of the Lessor as where he takes a Surrender of part of it But otherwise by Act in Law as where the Tenant maketh a Feoffment in Fee of part of the Land and the Lessor entreth And at another day Anderson Chief Justice said That if the Lessor of two Acres granteth the Reversion of one Acre that the whole Rent is extinct Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Common Pleas 108 A Lease for years is made of Land by Deed rendring Rent the Lessee binds himselfe in a Bond of Ten Pound to perform all Covenants and Agreements contained in the Deed the Rent is behind and the Lessor brings an Action of Debt upon the Bond for not payment of the Rent the Obligor pleads performance of all Covenants and Agreements the Lessor saie That the Rent is behind it was holden That it is no Plea for the Obligor to say That the Rent was never demanded But in this Bar he ought to have pleaded That he had performed all Covenants and Agreements except the payment of the Rents And as to that That he was alwayes ready to have paid it if any had come to demand it but as the first Plea is it was held not to be good And as to the demand of the Rent the Court was of opinion That it was to be demanded for the payment of the Rent is contained in the word Agreements and not in the word Covenants and then if he be not to performe the Agreements in other manner then is contained in the Deed of that agreement the Law saith That there shall be a demand of the Rent But if the Lessee be particularly expressed by covenant to pay the Rent there he is bound to do it without any Demand Mich. 28 29. Eliz. in the Common Pleas. 109 HOLLENSHEAD against KING THomas Hollenshead brought Debt against Ralph King upon a Recovery in a Scire f●cias in London upon a Recognizance taken in the Inner or Ouster Chamber of London and doth not shew That it is a Court of Record and that they have used to take Recognisances and Exception was taken unto the Declaration and a Demurrer upon it and divers Cases put That although that the Judgement be void that yet the Execution shall be awarded by Scire facias and the party shall not plead the same in a Writ of Error But Periam Justice took this difference Where Execution is sued upon such a Judgement and where Debt is brought upon it for in Debt it behoves the Party that he have a good Warrant and ground for his Action otherwise he shall not recover but upon a voidable Judgement he shall recover before it be reversed Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Intratur Trinit 28. Eliz. Rot. 507. 110 COSTARD and WINGFIELD'S Case IN a Replevin the Defendant did avow for Damage Feasans by the commandment of his Master the Lord Cromwell The Plaintiffe by way of Replication did justifie the putting in of his Cattell into the Land in which c. by reason that the Towne of N. is an ancient Town and that there hath been a usage time out of mind That every Inhabitant of the same Towne had had common for all his cattel Levant and Couchant in the same Town and so justified the putting in of his cattell The Defendant said That the house in which the Plaintiffe did inhabite in the same Towne and by reason of Residency in which house he claimed common was a new house built within 30 years and within that time there had not been any house there and upon that Plea the Plaintiffe did demurr in Law Shuttleworth Serdeant for the Plaintiffe That he shall have common for cause of Resiance in that new house and the Resiancy is the cause and not the Land nor
intend to entermarry with Alice S. by Indenture did covenant with J. D that he would marry the said Alice being then of the age of seventeen years and that after the marriage had betwixt them that they would levy a Fine of divers Lands which said Fine should bee unto the use of the said J. D. and his Heirs and accordingly after the entermarriage the said J. S. and Alice his Wife did levy a Fine unto the said J. D. and his Heirs without any other use implied or expressed but what was contained in the said Indenture before marriage and according to the said Fine the Conusee continued the possession of the said Lands for a long time viz. for thirty years Cook Chiefe Justice said That this continuance of possession was a strong proofe and could not otherwise be intended but that the Conusee came to the possession of the said Lands by the said Fine which was so levied to him and his heirs And he said That it was adjudged in this Court in the Case betwixt Claypoole and Whestone That in a Recovery the Covenant did not lead the use of the Recovery for that it was but an evidence that such was the intent of the parties And in this Case it was agreed by the whole Court and was so said to be resolved in Clogat and Blythes case 30. Eliz. That when no use is expressed or implyed by Indenture or other agreement that it shall be to the ancient use viz. to the use of the Conusor As if Husband and wife be seised of one moytie of the Land in the right of the wife and the Husband of the other moytie by himselfe and they joyne in a Fine generally the Conusee shall be seised to the former uses as it is agreed in Beckwiths case C. 2. part And so it was agreed That if the Husband doth declare the use and the wife doth not disagree or vary from it that the declaration of the Husband shall bind the wife And Cook said That it is not alwayes necessary that the wives name be set to the Indenture which doth declare an use And further Cook said That if a Fine be levied of Lands yet the uses may be declared by subsequent Indentures And it was said Obiter in this Case That if a man for valuable consideration doth purchase a Lease for years and hee nameth two of his servants as joynt-purchasers with him in the Deed and afterwards the Master would sell the Lands alone and the servants do interrupt the sale or will not joyne with him that he hath no remedy to compell them to do it but by a Bill of Chancery Trinit 8. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 254 A Vicar was endowed in the time of King Henry the 3d. of divers Tithes and afterwards he libelled for those Tithes in the spirituall Court The Defendant alledged a M●dus Decimandi and prayed a Prohibition and day was given to the party to shew cause why the same should not be granted and at the day the Deed of Endowment was produced and shewed in Court By which it did appear That the Vicar was endowed of Hay viz. of the tenth part of it and so of the remnant of the Tithes for which he libelled whereupon the Court refused to award a Prohibition Quaere Causam For as I conceive a Modus Decimandi may accrue after the Endowment Trinit 9. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 255 Sir W. DETHICK and STOKE's Case STokes libelled against Sir William Dethick in the spirituall Court for calling of him Bald Priest Rascally Priest and for striking of him and for those offences he was fined by the spirituall Court an hundred pound and imprisoned And the opinion of the whole Court was That neither the Fine nor Imprisonment were justifiable because the Statute of Articuli Cleri is Non imponant poenam pecuniariam nisi propter redemptionem c. And Cook said They might onely excommunicate and thereupon a Writ de Excommunicat● capiendo might be awarded and that is their onely course and then the Party may have his Cautione admittenda And the Court said That if the spirituall Court would not enlarge the party upon sufficient Caution offered them that then the Sheriffe should deliver him Trinit 8. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 256 IT was the opinion of the whole Court That if a man have a Judgment against two men upon a joynt Bond That he cannot have severall Executions viz. a Capias ad satisfaciendum against the one and an Elegit against the other for he ought to have but unicam satisfactionem although he sue them by severall Actions And if he sue forth severall Executions an Audita Querela will lye Mich. 9. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 257 CARLE'S Case NOte it was adjudged in this Case That if a man say of another that he hath killed a man an Action upon the case will not lie for those words for he may do it as Executioner of the Law or se def●nde●do So if one say of another That he is a Cutpurse an Action will not lie for that a Glover doth and a man may cut his own purse and the same Term it was holden in the Kings Bench That an Action will not lie for calling one Witch Mich. 9. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 258 IT was holden by the whole Court That a Commoner cannot generally justifie the cutting and taking away of Bushes off from the Common but by a speciall prescription he may justifie the same So he may say That the Commoners have used time out of mind to dig the Land to let out the water that he may the better take his Common with his cattell and it was agreed That if the Lord of the Waste doth surcharge the Common that the Commoner cannot drive his cattell off the Common or distraine them damage feasance as he may the cattell of a stranger But the remedy against the Lord is either an Assize or an Action upon the Case Mich. 9. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 259 IT was agreed by the whole Court That if a man deviseth unto his daughter an hundred pound when she shall marry or to his son when he shall be of full age and they die before the time appointed that their Executors shall not have the money otherwise if the devise were to them to be paid at their full ages and they die before that time and make Executors there the Executors may recover the Legacy in the spirituall Court Hill 9. Jacobi in the Kings Bench. 260 ROYLEY and DORMER's Case TWo Boyes did contend and fight near unto their houses and the one stroke the other so as he did bleed who went and complained to his father who having a rod with him came to the other boy and beat him upon which he died And the opinion of the whole Court was That it was not murder Mich. 9. Jacobi in the King 's Bench. 261 EDWARDS and DENTON's Case UPon a special Verdict the Case was
And per Curiam a Prohibition shal be awarded And Cook chief Justice said That there were three Causes in the Bill for which a Prohibition should be granted which he reduced to three Questions 1. If a Copy-holder payeth his rent and the Lord maketh a Feoffment of the Manor Whether the Copy-holder shall be compelled to attorn 2. If a man be seised of Freehold Land and Covenants to stand seised to an use Whether in such case an Attornment be needfull 3. If a Feoffment be made of a Manor by Deed Whether the Feoffee shall compell the Tenants to attorn in a Court of Equity And for all these Questions It was said That the Tenants shall not be compelled to attorn for upon a Bargain and Sale and a Covenant to stand seised there needs no attronement And Cook in this case said That in 21. E. 4. the Justices said That all Causes may be so contrived that there needed to be no Suit in Courts of Equity and it appears by our books That a Prohibition lies to a Court of Equity when the matter hath been once determined by Law And 13. E. 3. Tit. Prohibition and the Book called the Diversity of Courts which was written in the time of King Henry the eighth was vouched to that purpose And the Case was That a man did recover in a Quare Impedi● by default and the Patron sued in a Court of Equity viz. in the Chancery and a Prohibition was awarded to the Court of Chancery Mich. 11 Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 298 Sir JOHN GAGE and SMITH's Case AN Action of Waste was brought and the Plaintiffe did declare that contrary to the Statute the Lessee had committed Waste and Destruction in uncovering of a Barn by which the timber thereof was become rotten and decayed and in the destroying of the stocks of Elmes Ashes Whitethorn and Blackthorn to his damage of three hundred pound And for title shewed That his Father was seised of the Land where c. in Fee and leased the same to the Defendant for one and twenty years and died and that the Land descended to him as his son and heir and shewed that the Waste was done in his time and that the Lease is now expired The Defendant pleaded the generall issue and it was found for the Plaintiffe and damages were assessed by the Jury to fifty pound And in this case it was agreed by the whole Court 1. That if six of the Jury are examined upon a Voyer dire if they have seen the place wasted that it is sufficient and the rest of the Jury need not be examined upon a Voyer dire but onely to the principall 2. It was agreed if the Jury be sworn that they know the place it is sufficient although they be not sworn that they saw it and although that the place wasted be shewed to the Jury by the Plaintiff's servants yet if it be by the commandment of the Sheriffe it is as sufficient as if the same had been shewed unto them by the Sheriff himselfe 4. It was resolved That the eradicating of Whitethorn is waste but not of the Blackthorn according to the Books in 46. E. 3. and 9. H. 6. but if the blackthorn grow in a hedg and the whole hedg be destroyed the same is Waste by Cook chief Justice It was holden also so that it is not Wast to cut Quick-set hedges but it shall be accounted rather good husbandry because they will grow the better 5. It was agreed That if a man hath under-woods of Hasell Willowes Thornes if he useth to cut them and sell them every ten years If the Lessee fell them the same is no wast but if he dig them up by the roots or suffereth the Germinds to be bitten with cattel after they are felled so as they will not grow again the same is a destruction of the Inheritance and an Action of wast will lie for it But if he mow the Stocks with a wood-sythe as he did in the principall Case the same is a malicious Wast and continuall mowing and biting is destruction 6. It was said That in an Action of Wast a man shall not have costs of Suit because the Law doth give the party treble damages And when the generall issue Nul Wast is pleaded and the Plaintiff counted to his damages 100l. the Court doubted whether they could mitigate the damage But 7. It was agreed That in the principal Case although the issue were found for the Plaintiff that he could not have judgment because he declared of Wast done in 8. several closes to his damage of 300l. generally and did not sever the damages And the Jury found That in some of the said Closes there was no Wast committed Wherefore the Court said he could not have judgement through his own default But afterwards at another day Hobart then chief Justice and Warburton Justice said That the verdict was sufficient and good enough and so was also the declaration and that the Plaintiffe might have judgment thereupon But yet the same was adjourned by the Court untill the next Term. Mich. 11. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 299 CLARK's Case NOte It was said by Cook chief Justice and agreed by the whole Court and 41. and 43. E. 3. c That if a man deliver money unto I. S. to my use That I may have an Action of Debt or account against him for the same at my election And it was agreed also That an Action of Trover lieth for money although it be not in bags but not an Action of Detinue Mich. 11. Jacobi in the Common Pleas. 300 IRELAND and BARKER's Case IN an Action of Wast brought the Writ was That the Abbot and Covent had made a Lease for years c. And it was holden by the Court that it was good although it had been better if the Writ had been That the Abbot with the assent of the Covent made the Lease for that is the usuall form but in substance the Writ is good because the Covent being dead Sons in Law by no intendment can be said to make a Lease But the Dean and Chapter ought of necessity to joyne in making of a Lease because they are all persons able and if the Dean make a Lease without the Chapter the same is not good per curiam if it be of the Chapter Lands And in Adams and W●o●●stey's Case Harris Serjeant observed That the Lease is said to be made by the Abbot and Covent and it is not pleaded to be made by the Abbot with the assent of the Covent Mich. 11 Iacobi In the Common Pleas. 301 The Dean and Canons of Winsor and WEBB's Case IN this Case it was holden by the Court That if a man give Lands unto Dean and Canons and to their Successors and they be dissolved or unto any other Corporations that the Donor shall have back the Lands again for the same is a condition in Law annexed to the Gift and in such Case no Writ of
Tenures of such men viz. A. B. C. 3. All his lands which he had by Purchase c. And the words All my Lands are to be intended all those my Lands which are within the restrictions And he said that the word Et being in the copulative was not material for all was but one sentence and it did not make several sentences and the word Et is but the conclusion of the sentence 3. They resolved That general words in a Grant may be overthrown by words restrictive as is 2 E. 4. and Plow Com. Hill Granges Case And therefore if a man giveth all his lands in D. which he hath by Discent from his Father if he have no lands by Discent from his Father nothing passeth 4. They agreed That a Restriction may be in a special Grant as in C. 4. par Ognels Case but they said that if the Restriction doth not concur and meet with the Grant that then the Restriction is void Note the principal Case was adjudged according to these Resolutions Mich. 11. Iacobi in the Common-Pleas 293. COOPER and ANDREWS Case TO have a Prohibition to the Spiritual Court suggestion was made That the Lord De la Ware was seised of 140 Acres of lands in the County of Sussex which were parcel of a Park And a Modus Decimandi by Prescription was said to be That the Tenants of the said 140 Acres for the time being had used to pay for the tythes of the said 140 Acres two shillings in mony and a shoulder of every third Deer which was killed in the same Park in consideration of all tythes of the said Park And it was shewed how that the Lord De la Ware had enfeoffed one Cumber of the said 140 acres of land who bargained and sold the said 140 acres of land to the Plaintiffe who prayed the Prohibition The Defendant said that the said Park is disparked and that the same is now converted into arable lands and pasture-grounds and so demanded tythes in kind upon which the Plaintiffe in the Prohibition did demur Hutton Serjeant By the disparking of the Park the Prescription is not gone nor extinct because the Prescription is said to be to 140 acres of lands and not to the Park and although the shoulder of the Deer being but casual and at the pleasure of the party be gone yet the same shall not make void the Prescription 2. He said that the act of the party shall not destroy the Prescription and although it be not a Park now in form and reputation yet in Law the same still remains a Park And he compared the Case unto Lutterels Case C. 4. par 48. where a Prescription was to Fulling-Mils and afterwards the Mils were converted to Corn-Mils yet the Prescription remained 3. He said Admit it is not now a Park yet there is a possibility that it may be a Park again and that Deer may be killed there again For the Disparking in the principal Case is only alleadged to be that the Pale is thrown down which may be amended For although that all the Park-pale or parcel of it be cast down yet the same doth still remain in Law a Park and a Park is but a Liberty and the not using of a Liberty doth not determine it nor any Prescription which goes with it And if a man have Estovers in a Wood by Prescription if the Lord felleth down all the Wood yet the right of Estovers doth remain and the Owner shall have an Assise for the Estovers or an Action upon the Case Vid. C. 5. par 78. in Grayes Case the Case vouched by Popham Further he said That in the beginning a Modus Decimandi did commence by Temporal act and Spiritual and the mony is now the tythe for which the Parson may sue in the Spiritual Court And a Case Mich. 5. Jacobi was vouched where a Prescription to pay a Buck or a Doe in consideration of all Tythes was adjudged to be a good Prescription And the Case Mich. 6. Jacobi of Skipton-Park was remembred where the difference was taken when the Prescription runs to Land and when to a Park In the one case although the Park be disparked the Prescription doth remain in the other not And 6 E. 6. Dyer 71. was vouched That although the Park be disparked yet the Fee doth remain And so in the Case at Bar although the casual profit be gone yet the certain profit which is the two shillings doth remain Harris Serjeant contrary And he said that the Conveyance was executory and the Agreement executory and not like unto a Conveyance or Agreement executed And said that Tythes are due jure divino and that the party should not take advantage of his own wrong but that now the Parson should have the tythes in kind And upon the difference of Executory and Executed he vouched many Authorities viz. 16 Eliz. Dyer 335. Calthrops Case 15 E. 4. 3. 5 E. 4. 7. 32 E. 3. Anuitie 245. And in this case he said that the Parson hath no remedy for the shoulder of the Deer and therefore he prayed a Consultation Hobart Chief Justice said That the Pleading was too short and it was not sufficiently pleaded For it is not pleaded That the Park is so disparked that all the benefit thereof is lost But he agreed it That if a man doth pull down his Park-pale that the same is a disparking without any seisure of the Liberty into the Kings hands by a Quo Warranto But yet all the Court agreed That it doth yet remain a Park in habit And they were all also of opinion That the disparking the Park of the Deer was not any disparking of the Park as to take away the Prescription The Case was adjourned till another day Mich. 11. Iacobi in the Common-Pleas 330. PIGGOT and PIGGOT's Case IN a Writ of Right the Donee in tail did joyn the Mise upon the meer Right and final Judgment was given against the Donee in which case the Gift in tail was given in Evidence Afterwards the Donee in tail brought a Formedon in the Discender and it was adjudged by the whole Court that the Writ would not lie For when final Judgment is given against the Donee in tail upon issue joyned upon the meer Right it is as strong against him as a Fine with Proclamations and the Court did agree That after a year and day where final Judgment is given the party is barred and also that such final Judgment should bar the Issue in tail Mich. 11 Iacobi in the Exchequer-Chamber 331 AN action upon the Case was brought for speaking these words Thou doest lead a life in manner of a Rogue I doubt not but to see thee hanged for striking Mr. Sydenhams man who was murdered And it was resolved by all the Justices in the Exchequer-Chamber That the words were not actionable At the same day in the same Court a Judgment was reversed in the Exchequer-Chamber because the words were not actionable The words
puisne or the lesser Debt and although the Debtor be able and sufficient to pay both Debts viz. the Kings Debt and the Debt owing to the Subject yet the Kings Debt is to be first paid Now to apply these cases to the Case in question Here is a Subject who is indebted to the King And I say That the Lands which such a Debtor hath in his power and dispose although he hath not any Estate in the Lands shall be liable to pay the Debt to the King And I say That Sir Christopher Hatton had a Fee in the Mannors and Lands in this case And although he did convey them bona fide yet untill his death by reason of the Proviso of Revocation they were extendable Trin. 24. E. 3. Rot. 4. Walter de Chirton Customer who was indebted to the King for the Customs purchased Lands with the Kings monies and caused the Feoffor of the Lands to enfeoffe certain of his friends with an intent to defraud and deceive the King and notwithstanding he himself took the profits of the Lands to his own use And those Lands upon an Inquisition were found and the values of them and retorned into the Exchequer and there by Judgment given by the Court the Lands were seized into the Kings hands to remain there untill he was satisfied the Debt due unto him And yet the Estate of the Lands was never in him But because he had a power viz. by Subpena in Chancery to compell his Friends to settle the Estate of the Lands upon him therefore they were chargeable to the Debt You will say perhaps there was Covin in that Case But I say that neither Fraud Covin nor Collusion is mentioned in the Report in Dyer 160. C. 11. par 92. And that Case was a harder Case then our Case is For Walter de Chirton in that Case was never seised of the said lands But in our Case Sir Christopher Hatton himself had the lands And when he had the lands he was assured of the Office although he had not the possession of it For he was sure that no other could have it from him and no other could have it but himself And for another cause our Case is a stronger Case then the Case of Walter de Chirton For Chirton had no remedy in Law to have the lands but his remedy was only in a Court of Equity and a remedy in Consc ' onely But in our Case Sir Christopher Hatton had a time in which he might let the land to passe and yet he had a power to pull it back again at his pleasure So as he had the disposition of it but before the alteration of the uses he dyed And if he had been living being indebted to the King the King might have extended the lands because that then he had the possession of them There were two Considerations which moved Sir Christopher Hatton to Convey the Lands the first was honorable viz. For the payment of his Debts the second was natural viz. For the preferment of his Children Although the Conveyance of the Lands for payment of his Debts was but for years yet the same was too short like unto a Plaister which is too short for the sore For the Covenanters were not his Executors and so they were not liable to Debts And although he be now dead and cannot revoke the former uses yet he had the power to revoke the uses during his life And so he was chargeable for the Debt due to the King Tanfield Chief Baron agreed with Justice Dodderidge in all as before And he said That all powerful and speedy courses are given unto the King for the getting in of his Revenues and therefore he said he had the said Prerogatives as have been recited And in 25 E. 3. in libro rubro in the Exchequer there the Foundations of the said Prerogatives do appear If a common person arrest the body in Execution he shall not resort to the lands contr to Blumfields Case C. 5. par The course of the Exchequer makes a Law every where for the King If any Officer be indebted unto the King and dyeth the course of the Exchequer is For to call in his Executors or the Heir or the Terre-Tenants to answer the Debt and if he hath no lands then a Writ issueth out of the Exchequer to know what goods he had and to whose hands they be come All Inquisitions concerning Lands in the like Cases are Habuit vel seisitus and not that he was seised onely The word Habuit is a large word and in it is contained a disposing power But in this Case Sir Christopher Hatton had a power every day to revoke the uses And when he had once revoked them then was he again as before seisitus 7 H. 6. in the Exchequer the Kings Farmor had Feoffees to his use and dyed indebted to the King And upon an Inquisition it was found that Habuit for he had them in his power by compelling his Feoffees by Equity in Chancery and therefore it was adjudged that the King should have the Lands in the Feoffees hands in extent But in this case Sir Christopher Hatton might have had the Lands in him again without compulsion by a Court of Equity for that he had power to revoke the uses in the Conveyance at his pleasure Mich. 30. H. 6. rot in the Exchequer A Clark of the Court was assigned to receive monies for the King who had Feoffees of lands to his use And the lands were found and seised for the Kings monies by force of the word Habuit 32 H. 6. Philip Butler's Case who was Sheriffe of a County being indebted to the King his Feoffees were chargeable to the Kings debt by force of the word Habuit For habuit the lands in his power 6 E. 4. Bowes Case acc ' 34 H. 6. A widow being indebted to the King her Feoffees were chargeable to pay the Kings debt because she had power of the lands It being found by Inquisition that habuit 1 R. 3. the like Case And 24 Eliz. in Morgan's Case it was adjudged That lands purchased in the names of his Friends for his use were extended for a debt due by him to the King Hobart Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas argued to the same purpose and agreed with the other Justices and he said in this case it was not material whether the Inquisition find the Deed to be with power of Revocation For he said that the Land is extended and that the extent remains good untill it be avoided And he said that a revocable Conveyance is sufficient to bind the Parties themselves but not to bind the King but the Lands are lyable into whose hands soever they come When a man is said to forfeit his body it is not to be intended his life but the freedom of his body Imprisonment At the Common Law a Common person could neither take the bodie nor the Lands in Execution But yet at the Common Law
a Capias lay upon a force although it did not lie in case of Debt Agreement c. The King is Parens Legum because the Laws flowed from him he is Maritus Legum For the Law is as it were under Covert Baron he is Tutor Legum For he is to direct the Laws and they desire aid of him And he said that all the Land of the Kings Debtor are liable to his Debt The word Debitor is nomen equivocum and he is a Debtor who is any ways chargeable for Debt Damages Dutie Rent behind c. The Law amplifies evry thing which is for the Kings benefit or made for the King If the King releaseth all his Debts he releases only debts by Recognizance Judgment Obligation Specialtie or Contract Every thing for the benefit of the King shall be taken largely as every thing against the King shall be taken strictly and the reason why they shall be taken for his benefit is because the King cannot so nearly look to his particular because he 〈◊〉 intended to consider ardua regni pro bono publico The Prerogative Laws is not the Exchequer Law but is the Law of the Realm for the King as the Common Law is the Law of the Realm for the Subject The Kings Bench is a Court for the Pleas of the Crown The Common Pleas is for Pleas betwixt Subject and Subject and the Exchequer is the proper Court for the Kings Revenues 13. E. 4. 6. If the King hath a Rent-charge he by his Prerogative may distrein in any the Lands of the Tenant besides in the Lands charged with the Rent 44. E. 3. 15. although that the partie purchaseth the Lands after the Grant made to the King but then it is not for a Rent but as for a dutie to the King And the King in such case may take the Body Lands and Goods in Execution See the Lord Norths Case Dyer 161. where a man became Debtor to the King upon a simple Contract N. When he was Chancellor of the Augmentation received a Warrant from the Privy Councel testifying the pleasure of King E. 6. That whereas he had sold to R. c. That the said Chancellor should take Order and see the delivery of c. and should take Bond and Sureties for the King for the payment of the money By force of which Warrant he sent one T. his Clark to take a Bond of W. for the payment of the money and he took Bond for the King accordingly and brought the same to the Chancellor his Master and delivered the same to him to the Kings use and presently after he deliverd the same back to T. to deliver over to the Clark of the Court who had the charge of the keeping of all the Kings Bonds and Specialties And when T. had received the same back he practised with R. and W. to deliver them the Bond to be cancelled and so it was done and cancelled And it was holden in that Case because that the said Bond was once in the power and possession of N. that he was chargeable with the Debt But the Queen required the Debt of R. and W. who were able to satisfie the Queen for the same In Mildmay's Case cited before there it was holden That the Queen might take her Remedy either against the Parties who gave the insufficient Warrant or against Mildmay himself at her Election So a man he said shall be lyable for damages to the King for that is taken to be within the word Debita In Porters Case cited before there was neither Fraud Covin nor Negligence and yet the persons who presented Porter to the King to hold the Office were chargeable for his negligence whom they preferred to be Master of the Mint But in that Case The Bodie and goods of Porter were delivered to his Sureties as in Execution to repay them the monie which the King had levied of them These Cases prove that the word Debitor is taken in a large sence That the King shall have for the Debts due to him the Bodie Goods and Lands in Execution The word Goods doth extend to whatsoever he hath 11. H. 7. 26. The King shall have the Debt which is due to his Debtor upon a simple Contract and therein the Debtor of the Debtor shall not wage his Law For after you say that you sue for the King it is the Kings Debt and the King if he please may have Evecution of it An Ejectione firme was brought in the Exchequer by Garraway against R. T. upon an Ejectment of Lands in Wales and it was maintainable in the Exchequer as well as a Suit shall be maintainable here for an Intrusion upon Lands in Wales upon the King himself and the King shall have Execution of the thing and recover Damages as he shall in a Quo minus in satisfaction of a Debt which is due by his Debtor to the King 8. H. 5. 10. There the Kings Debtor could not have Quo minus in the Exchequer The Case there was That a man Indebted to the King was made Executor and by a Quo minus sued one in the Exchequer who was indebted unto his Testator upon a simple Contract as for his proper debt and the Quo minus would not lie because the King in that Case could not sue forth Execution and every Quo minus is the Kings Suit and is in the name of the King 38. Ass 20. A Prior Alien was arrear in Rent to the King The Prior brought a Quo minus in the Exchequer against a Parson for detaining of Tythes here is a variance of the Law and the Court for the Right of Tythes ought to be determined by the Ecclesiastical Law and it was found by Verdict for the Prior. A Serjeant moved That the Court had not jurisdiction of the Cause To whom it was answered that they had and ought to have Jurisdiction of it For that when a thing may turn to the advantage of the King and hasten his business that Court had Jurisdiction of it and divers times the said Court did hold jurisdiction in the like Case and thereupon issue was joyned there and the Reporter made a mirum of it But it seems the Reporter did not understand the Kings Prerogative For it is true That such Suit for Tythes doth not fall into the Jurisdiction of the Kings Bench or Common Pleas but in the Exchequer it is otherwise And if the Suit be by Quo minus it is the Kings Suit At a common persons Suit the Officer cannot break the house and enter but at the Kings Suit he may And a common person cannot enter into a Liberty but the King may if it be a common Liberty But for the most part when the King granteth any Liberty there is a clause of Exception in the Grant That when it shall turn to the prejudice of the King as it may do in a special Case there the King may enter the Liberty and a house is a Common Liberty and the
Judgement was affirmed for by intendment the Judgment was given upon the first Original which bore date before the Iudgment Another Error was assigned because the Plea was That such a one was seised of the Castle and Mannor of Mulgrave predictis in the plural number I answer that there is not any colour for that Error for the word predictis doth shew that the Mannor and Castle are not one and the same thing So upon the whole matter I pray that the Iudgment given in the Court of Pleas may be affirmed Sir Henry Yelverton argued for the Lord Sheffield that the Iudgment might be reversed There are three things considerable in the Case First If any right of the ancient estate tail was in Francis Bigot who was attainted at the time of his Attainder Secondly admit that there was an ancient right if it might be forfeited being a right coupled with a Possession and not a right in gross Thirdly Whether such a Possession discend to Francis Bigot that he shall be remitted and if this Remitter be not overreached by the Office First If by the Feoffment of Francis Bigot 21. H. 8. when he was Cestuy que use and by the Livery the right of the ancient entail be destroyed And I conceive it is not but that the same continues and is not gone by the Livery and Seisin made There is a difference when Cestuy que use makes a Feoffment before the Statute of 1 R 3. and when Cestuy que use makes a Feoffment after the said statute of 1 R 3 For before the statute hee gives away all Com 352. but after the statute of R. 3. Cestuy que use by his Feoffment gives away no Right In 3 H. 7 13. is our very case almost For there the Tenant in Tail made a Feoffment unto the use of his Will so in our Case and thereby did declare that it should be for the payment of his debts and afterwards to the use of himself and the heirs of his body and died the heir entred before the debts paid but in our Case he entred after the debts paid there it is said that the Feoffment is made as by Cestuy que use at the Common Law for his entrie was not lawfull before the debts paid But when Francis Bigot made a Feoffment 21 H. 8. he was Cestuy que use in Fee and then is the Right of the Estate tail saved by the Statute of 1. R. 3. And by the Statute of 1. R. 3. he gives the Land as Servant and not as Owner of the Land and so gives nothing but a possession and no Right 5 H. 7. 5. Cestuy que use since the Statute of 1 R. 3. is but as a Servant or as an Executor to make a Feoffment And if an Executor maketh a Feoffment by force of the Will of the Testator he passeth nothing of his own Right but only as an Executor or Servant 9 H. 7. 26. proves that Cestuy que use since the Statute of 1 R. 3 hath but only an Authority to make a Feoffment For Cestuy que use cannot make a Letter of Attorney to make Livery for him for he hath but a bare Authority which cannot be transferred to another Cestuy que use hath a Rent out of Land and by force of the Statute of 1 R. 3. he maketh a Feoffment of the Land yet the Rent doth remain to him for he giveth but a bare possession So in our Case the right of the Estate Tail doth remain in Francis Bigot notwithstanding his Feoffment as Cestuy que use by the Statute of 1 R. 3. If Cestuy que use by force of the Statute of 1 R. 3. maketh a Feoffment without Warranty the Vouchee shall not Vouch by force of that Warranty For as Fitzherbert saith Cestuy que use had no possession before the Statute of 27. H. 8. Cap. 10. 27 H. 8. 23. If Feoffees to Use make a Letter of Attorney to Cestuy que use to make a Feoffment he giveth nothing but as a Servant The Consequent of this Point is That the right of the old Estate Tail was in Francis Bigot at the time of his Attainder and was not gone by the Feoffment made 21 H. 8. The second Point is Whether a right mixt with a possession of Francis Bigot might be forfeited by the Statutes of 26. H. 8. and the private Act of 31. H. 8. The Statute of 31. H. 8. doth not save this Right no more then the Statute of 26. H. 8. For they are all one in words I say that he hath such a right as may be lost and forfeited by the words of the Statute of 26. H. 8. Cap. 13. For that Statute giveth three things First It gives the Forfeiture of Lands and not of Estates Secondly How long doth that Statute give the lands to the King For ever viz. to the King his Heirs and Successors Thirdly It gives the lands of any Estate of Inheritance in Use or Possession by any Right Title or means This Estate Tail is an Estate of Inheritance which he hath by the Right by the Title and by the means of coming to the Right it is forfeited These two Statutes were made for the punishment of the Child For the Common Law was strict enough against the Father viz. he who committed the Treason And shall the same Law which was made to punish the Child be undermined to help the Child The ancient Right shall be displaced from the Land rather then it shall be taken from the Crown which is to remain to the Crown for ever And this Statute of 26 H. 8. was made pro bono● publico and it was the best Law that ever was to preserve the King and his Successors from Treason for it is as it were a hedg about the King For before this Statute Tenant in Tail had no regard to commit Treason For he forfeited his Lands but during his own life and then the Lands went to the issue in Tail But this Statute doth punish the Child for the Fathers offence and so maketh men more careful not to offend least their posterity may beg I take two grounds which are frequent in our Law First That the King is favoured in the Exposition of any Statute Com. 239 240. The second That upon the construction of any Statute nothing shall be taken by equity against the King Com. 233 234. Here in this Case although the Right were not in possession yet it was mixed with the possession from Anno 13. E. 1. untill 26. H. 8. Tenant in Tail feared not to commit Treason For the Statute of West 2. did preserve the Estate Tail so as the Father could not prejudice his issue per factum suum And therefore the Commonwealth considering that a wicked man did not care what became of himself so as his issue might be safe provided this Statute of 26. H. 8. Cap. 13. although the Statute of 16. R. 2. Cap. 5. which giveth the Premunire doth Enact that all Lands and
have Attaint 44 E. 3. b. 7. But if he be not partie to the Writ he shall not maintain Attaint as if he pretend Joynt-Tenancy with a stranger who is not named and the verdict pass against him he shall not have attaint But Jones Justice said that he might have Attaint Admit the first Feoffee viz. C. might have a Writ of Error yet Brooker in this case cannot because he is the second Feoffee and a Writ of Error is a thing in Action and not transferable over C. 3. part The Marquiss of Winchesters Case C. 1. part Albanies Case One recovers against A. who makes a Feoffment to B. neither the Feoffee nor Feoffor shall have Error for he viz. B. comes in after the title of Error and the Feoffor shall not have the Writ of Error because he is not a partie griev'd 34 Eliz. in the Common Pleas. Sherrington and Worsleys Case Sherrington had Judgment against Worsley and afterwards acknowledged a Statute to B. Sherrington sued forth Execution B. brought Error upon the Judgment and it was adjudged that it would not lie First because he was a stranger Secondly because he came in under and after the title of Error See the reason C. 3. part the Marquiss of Winchesters Case where it is said that a Writ of Error is not transferrable This Attaindor doth not work upon the Land and so it doth not make the Terre-Tenant privy but it works upon the person and blood of Henry Isley the Land is not touched For Henry Isley was attainted in the life of his Father and so it did not touch the Land For if Henry Isley had died without issue in the life of his father the youngest son should have had the Land by discent which proves that it works not upon the Land but upon the person Bankes for the Plaintiff and he desired that the Outlawrie might be reversed As this Case is there is no other person who can maintain Error Henry Isley had his pardon before the Outlawrie but he came not in to plead it and now having enjoyed it so long a time we hope a Purchasor shall be favoured before him who beggs a concealed title The first Exception was taken To the Devise by a person attainted I answer That that is but the conveyance to the Writ of Error Secondly it was said that none but privies or parties could maintain Error and the adverse partie would disable the heir on the part of the Mother and by Custome Thirdly he would disable the Feoffees and make them as strangers First the Outlawrie was 20 Eliz. against Henry Isley which was after the seisin of the Land and Brooker is a party able to bring a Writ of Error being the heir of the purchasor Error and Attaint go with the Land 13 H. 4 19. Dyer 90. Br. Cases 337. But Estopels and Conditions go to the heir Fitz. 21. Error brought by a special heir It is not necessary that alwaies the heir and partie to the Record have the Writ of Error but sometimes he who is grieved by the Record A Scirefacias is a Judicial Writ founded upon a Record and hath as much in privity is Error and yet a stranger to the Record shall have it 16 H. 7. 9. The heir of the purchasor brought a Scirefacias to execute a Fine It was objected that he was not a partie to the Record but it was resolved in respect he was to have the benefit that he was a sufficient person to maintain the Writ 17 Ass 24. 18 E. 3. 25. Execution was upon a Statute before the time that it ought to have been and a Feoffee brought Error It was objected that he was not partie nor privie to the Record yet because he was was grieved by the Execution he did maintain the Writ of Error Trin. 34 Eliz. in the Kings Bench Sherrington and Worsleys Case not rightly remembred Sherrington did recover in debt against Worsley who aliened the Land to Charnock afterwards an Elegit is awarded upon the Roll and Charnock brought Error and it was admitted good and Sherrington forced to plead to it Now in the principal Case we are the partie grieved by the Outlawrie and therefore may maintain the Writ 21 H. 6. 29. A Reversioner or he in the Remainder without aid prayer or Resc ' shall have a Writ of Error because they are damnified although they be not parties to the Record I agree that where one is not grieved by the Judgment there a stranger shall not have Error 21 E. 4. 23. A Recovery is in Debt and the Defendant is taken and escapes the Sheriff shall not have a Writ of Error for he is not grieved by the Record but by the escape 2 R. 3. 21. The Principal is Outlawed in Felony afterwards the Accessory is condemned he shall not have a Writ of Error to reverse the Outlawrie of the Principal for he is not grieved by that Outlawrie but by his own Condemnation Another Objection was because here was an Outlawrie against him and therefore he shall be disabled to sue I answer Our Writ of Error is brought to reverse that Outlawrie and we shall not be rebutted by that Outlawrie when we are to reverse it 7 H. 49 40. Error brought to reverse an Outlawrie the Defendant would have disabled the Plainfiff by another Outlawrie and it was not allowed because he seeks to avoid it 10 H. 7. 18. For the Mastership of an Hospital Exception was taken to the Writ because the Assise is brought to undoe the name of Master and therefore he ought not to name him Master 22 H. 6. 26. Abbot and Covent the Abbot is preferred and the Covent elected another Abbot And the Patron brought a Quare Impedit to defeat the Election It was ruled because he goes about to overthrow the Election he need not name him Abbot Garranty 29. and 18 E. 3. 8. ●o the same purpose The matter of devise is but conveyance to the Writ of Error and the Writ shall not be abated for surplusage 9 E. 4. 24. 7 E. 4. 19. Surplusage is no barr nor Estopel The Outlawri● was against Henry Isley and Peckham and wants these words Nec eorum alter comparuit Dodderidge Justice To say where a Feoffee shall have a Writ of Error is a large field If this Feoffee bring Error and reverse the Judgment he must restore the heir in blood and who can have a Writ of Error to restore blood but he who is privie in blood and that is the heir Jones Justice Marshes Case C. 8. part 111. was never adjudged There an Executor could not reverse an Attaindor by Outlawrie because it doth restore the blood The Case of Sherrington and Charnock was to reverse the Execution and not the Judgment An Executor shall have a general Writ of Error to reverse an Outlawrie It was adjourned Pasch 3. Car. in the Kings Bench. 466. GUNTER and GUNTER's Case A Writ of Error was brought to reverse a Judgment in the Court
and for these causes he prayed Judgment for the Defendant Observe Reader the Argument of Calthrope he doth not speak to the point where part of the thing or Contract is upon the Sea and part upon the Land as it was urged by Andrews who argued on the other side The Case was adjourned Pasch 3 Caroli rot 362. in the Kings Bench. 475. IT was cited to be adjudged That if a man purchase the next Avoidance of a Church with an intent to present his son and afterwards he present him that it is Symony within the Statute Pasch 3 Caroli in the Kings Bench. 476. SUTTON the Chancellor of Gloucester's Case IN the Case of Sutton who was Chancellor of Gloucester and put out of his place for insufficiency in the Ecclesiastical court Trotman moved for a Prohibition to the Spiritual Court and said that the Bishop had power to make his Chancellor and he only hath the Examination of him and the allowance of him as it is in the Case of a Parson who is presented to the Bishop and said that if his sufficiency should be afterwards reexamined it would be very perilous Doddridg Justice If an Office of Skill be granted to one for life who hath no skill to execute the Office the grant is void and he hath no Frank-tenement in it A Prohibition is for two causes First to give to us Jurisdiction of that which doth belong unto us And secondly when a thing is done against the Law and in breach of the Law then we use to grant a Prohibition Jones Justice Brook had a grant of the Office of a Herald at Arms for life and the Earl Marshal did suspend him from the execution of his Office because he was ignorant in his profession and full of Error contrary to the Records and it was the opinion of the Justices that because he was ignorant in such his Office of Skill that he had no Freehold in the Office In the Principall Case the Prohibition was denyed And afterwards Sutton was put out of his Office by Sentence in the Spiritual Court for his insufficiency Pasch 3 Caroli in the Kings Bench. 477. SYMM'S Case TWo men having speech together of John Symms and William Symms one of them said The Symmses make Half-crown peeces and John Symms did carrie a Cloak-bag full of clippings And whether the Action would lie was the Question because it was incertain in the person For he did not say these Symmses but The Symmses Like unto the Case where one Farrer being slain and certain persons being Defendants in the Star-Chumber one having speech of them said These Defendants did murder Farrer and it was adjudged that the Action would not lie for two causes First because the words These was uncertain in the person And secondly it was incertain in the thing For it might be that they had Authority to do it as in Mills Case 13 Jac. in the Kings Bench Thou hast Coyned Gold and art a Coyner of Gold Thirdly a Cloakbag of clippings that is also uncertain for it might be clippings of Wooll or other things or it might be clippings of Silver from the Goldsmith For the Goldsmith that maketh Plate maketh clippings And fourthly It is not shewed any certain time when the words were spoken And for these causes it was adjudged that the Action would not lie Pasch 3 Caroli in the Kings Bench. 478. WHITTIE and WESTON'S Case AN Action of Debt was brought upon the Statute of 2 E. 6. and the Plaintiff declared That at the time of the Action brought he was Parson of Merrel and that Weston the Defendant did occupie such Lands and sowed them with corn Anno 21 Jac. and that he did not fet forth his Tythe-corn c. The Defendant pleaded in barr of the Action That W. W. Prior of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem was of the Order of Hospitalers c. and that he held the said Lands free from the payment of Tythes and that the Priory came by the Statute of 32. H. 8. to the King By vertue of which Statute the King was seised thereof and that the same descended to Queen Elizabeth who granted the Lands unto Weston to hold as amply as the late Prior held and that he was seised of the Lands by vertue of that grant Et propriis manibus suis excolebat Upon this Plea the Plaintiff did demurr in Law Noy argued for the Plantiff There are three points in the Case First If these Lands the possessions of the Hospitalers of St John which they held in their own hands were discharged of Tythes Secondly If there be any thing in the Statute of 32 H. 8. by which the Purchasor of the King should be discharged Thirdly Admitting that it shall be a discharge if the Defendant hath well entitled himself to such discharge or Priviledg First it is not within the Statute of 31 H. 8 cap. 13. for that Statute did not extend to the Order of St John Secondly the Statute of 31 H. 8. cap. 13. doth not discharge any but what was then dissolved Thirdly The Statute of 32 H. 8 cap. 24. gives the possessions of the Hospitalers of St Johns to the King and not the Statute of 31 H. 8. Note that the Defendant did recite the branch of the Statute of 31 H. 8. cap 13. That as well the King his heirs and successors as all and every such person and persons their heirs and assignes which have or hereafter shall have any Monasterie c. or other Religious or Ecclesiastical houses or places shall hold c according to their Estates and Titles discharged and acquitted of the payment of Tythes as freely and in as large and ample manner as the said Abbots c. had or used Also he recited the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 7 which Enacts that none shall pay Tythes who by Law Statute or Priviledg ought to be discharged The Statute of 31 H. 8. recites that divers Abbies c. and other Religious and Ecclesiastical houses and places have been granted and given up to the King The Statute ena●ts that the King shall have in possession for ever all such late Monasteries c. and other Religious houses and places c. And also enacts that the King shal have not only the said Monasteries c. but also all other Monasteries c. and all other Religious and Ecclesiastical houses which hereafter shall happen to be dissolved suppressed renounced relinquished forfeited given up or by any other means come to the King and shall be deemed adjudged vested by Authority of this present Parliament in the very actual possession and seisin of the King for ever in the state and condition they now be Vi. The Statute And shall have all priviledges c. in as ample manner and form as the late Abbots c. had held or occupied c. The Question then is Whether the men of the Hospital of St John at Jerusalem are intended to be within the
Dodderige Justice the encroachment doth not make it to be no parcell of the Mannor Ley chief Justice it is not layed to be a Disseisin but an Encroachment and therefore it is not so strong as a Disseisin with a Discent but in Right it belongs to the Mannor Tenant in Tail makes a Feoffment to the use of himself and deviseth the Lands to A. the Devise doth prevent the Remitter Haughton Justice the Discent is Traversed The Father dieth seised and hath issue two Sons and that the Lands discended to him the other may say That the Land is borough English and that the Lands discend unto him Absque hoc that they discended to the Eldest Dodderidge Justice Regularly you shall not Traverse the Discent but by the dying seised but in this Case it ought to be of necessity sc ● in case of a Devise the Traverse must be of the Discent for here they cannot traverse the dying seised for if they traverse the dying seised then they overthrow their own Title sc the Devise but here in Case of a Will the partie shall traverse the Discent for he cannot say that it is true that the Lands did discend and that he Devised it c. The heir cannot traverse that which entitles him by Discent but here his Title is by the Devise and not as heir Finch Recorder the Devise is not of the four Foot for if we confess the dying seised of the four Foot which was holden in Capite then we should overthrow our own Devise The Office finds that he died seised of the whole and therefore of the four foot He being never seised we traverse the dying seised thereof and we deny that he ever had it so the Traverse is good without making of us any Title unto it for we desire not to have it Dodderidge Justice If a man deviseth to his heir it is a void Devise for the discent shall be preferred But if one hath Issue four daughters and he deviseth to one of them it is good for the whole Land so devised to her and no part of the Land so devised shall discend to the other the Lands being holden in Socage Ley Chief Justice and the whole Court did agree That they might deny and traverse the four Foot if the Ancestor had no Title unto it and Judgment was given accordingly against the King quod nota Trin. 21 Jac. in the Kings Bench. 490. PAYNE and COLLEDGES Case AN Agreement was made between Payne and Colledg That if Payne being Chirurgion did Cure Colledg of a great Disease viz. A Noli me tangere That then he should have 10l and that if he did not cure him That then for his pains and endeavours Colledg would give him 5l In an Action upon the Case brought by Payne he doth not shew in his Declaration in what place he used his endeavour and Industry And there is a difference where the Plaintiff is to do any thing of Skill and Industry for there he may do the same at several times and in several places and so this Case differs from the Cases in our books 15 H. 6. Accord 1. is expresly in the point There the Defendant pleaded an Accord That if the Defendant by his Industry c. And exception was taken because that he did not shew a place 3 E. 4. 1. Debt brought by a Servant and declares that he was reteined by the predecessor of the Defendant c. and that he had performed his Service c. It was moved in Arrest of Judgment and Exception taken as in our Case because he did not shew where he did the Service for that is issuable and Denly there said That he need not shew the place because he might do it in several places Bridgeman Serjeant contrarie If the issue had been upon a Collateral matter it had been good enough but here the issue is taken upon an endeavour and you ought to alleadg a place for the tryal of it Dodderidge Justice The Jury was from the place where the Agreement was made the verdict will not make good the Declaration although the Jury have found the whole matter of fact for it doth not appear to us That that was the Jury which could try his endeavour The Case of 3 E. 4. of the Servant was to serve him seaven years and there he need not shew any place where he did his Service but only that he obeyed his Master in his Service for the seaven years If the Plaintiff in this Case had shewed but any one place of doing his endeavour in it had been sufficient but here he sheweth no place at all And therefore Judgment was given That Querens nihil Capiat per Billam Trin. 21 Jacobi in the Kings Bench. 491. The Lord ZOUCH and MOORES Case IN an Action of Trespass for cutting down of Trees in Odiham Park in Hampshire It was found by special Verdict That King Henry the eighth was seised of the Mannor and Park of Odiham And by his Letters Patents 33 of his Reign did grant unto Genny the Office of Stewardship of the said Mannor and the Office of Parkership of the said Park with reasonable Herbage and by the same Letters Patents did grant unto him the Mannor of Odiham cum pertinaciis and 100. Loads of Wood excepting the Park the Deer and the Wood for fifty years if he should so long live Then they found That after that Genny did surrender and restore the Letters Patents in the Chancery to be cancelled and that in truth they were cancelled and that the said Surrender was made to the intent to make a new Lease thereof unto Pawlet and that this Lease of 33 H. 8. being surrendred That King Henry the 8. Anno 36. of his Reign reciting the Letters Patents made to Genny to be dated anno 32 H. 8. whereas in truth they were dated 33 H. 8. and that they were surrendred and that the intent of the Surrender was to make a new Lease to Pawlet Did grant the same to Pawlet as before they were granted to Genny excepting as before They further found That King Philip and Queen Mary 5 6 of their Reigns being seised of the said Mannor and Park in jnro Coronae reciting that Henry the 8. anno 36 of his Reign had granted unto Paulet as before omitting the Proviso which was for 50 years if he should so long live and the Exceptions before And reciting that those Letters-Patents were surrendred ea intentione to make a new Lease in forma sequente They in consideration of good service and 200l paid did grant the Office as before and by those Letters-Patents did grant Herbage generally whereas the first Patent was reasonable Herbage And by these Letters-Patents did grant to him the Mannor cum pertinaciis except the grand trees and woods in the Park and Felons goods which were granted by the first Letters Patents for 50 years And here was a Rent reserved and a Proviso that for doing of Waste that the
taking be before the Action brought R. is excused We say That postea antè the purchasing of the Bill and I suppose we need not lay down any day but the postea antè makes it certain enough If the viz. be repugnant to our allegation it is surplusage 41. Eliz. in Communi Banco Bishops Case Trespass is brought for a Trespass supposed to be done 4. Maii 39. El. It is ruled in that Case That the videlicet doth not vitiate the premises because it is surplusage Trinit 34. El. in the Kings Bench Garford and Gray's Case In an Avowry it was shewed That such an Abbot surrendred 32. H. 8. and that the King was seised of the possessions of the said Abby and that postea scilicit 28. H. 8. the King did demise and that the same descended to King Ed. 6. there it was ruled that postea had been sufficient though he had not shewed the year of the demise of the King so here postea ante do expresse that he was taken before the Bill brought Dodderidge Justice If the day had been certain at the first and then he cometh and sueth that postea videlicet such a day and alledgeth another day which is wrong there the videlicet is not material but if the first day be uncertain then the videlicet ought to be at a certain day otherwise it is not good Curia If you had left out your time your videlicet it had been good for you must expresse a certain time for when the time is material it ought to be certain If you had layed down a certain day of the purchase of his Bill then the ante would have been well enough Dodderidge Justice If a thing is alledged to be done in the beginning of the Term quaere if that shall be intended the first day of the Term if you can make it appear that it must be intended of necessity of the first day of the Term then you say somewhat and then the videlicet is void and surplusage Judgement was given for the Plaintiff Pasch 3. Caroli in the Kings Bench. 498 DEAN and STEELE's Case AN Action upon the Case for words was brought for words spoken in the Court of Sudbury and it was layed That he did speak the words at Sudbury but did not say Infra jurisdictionem curiae 2. The Judgement in the Action upon the Case was capiatur And for these two Errors the Judgement was reversed Pasch 3. Caroli in the Kings Bench. 499 GOD and WINCHE's THIS Case was put by Serjeant Astley A Lease is made for life by Husband and Wife and the Covenants were That he should make such reasonable assurance as the Counsel of the Lessee should advise and the Counsel advised a Fine with warranty by the Husband and Wife with warranty against the Husband and his Heirs and the Defendant did refuse to make the assurance in an Action of Covenant brought it was moved That it was not a reasonable assurance to have a Fine with Warranty because the Warranty did trench to other Land But the Court did over-rule it and said That it is the ordinary course in every Fine to have a Warranty and the party may rebut the Warranty Pasch 3. Caroli in the Kings Bench. 500 IT was cited to be adjudged That if a man purchase the next avoidance of a Church with an intent to present his son and afterwards he doth present his son that it is Symony within the Statute of 31. Eliz. Ter. Mich. 4. Caroli in the King 's Bench. 501 HILL and FARLEY's Case IN Debt brought upon a Bond the Case was A man was bound in a Bond That he should perform observe and keep the Rule Order and finall end of the Councel of the Marches of Wales And in Debt brought upon the Bond the Defendant pleaded That the Councel of the Marches of Wales nullum fecerunt ordinem The Plaintiffe replied That Concilium fecerunt ordinem that the Defendant should pay unto the Plaintiffe an hundred pound The Defendant did demurre in Law upon the Replication And the only Question was If the Plaintiffe in his Replication ought to name those of the Councel of Wales who made the Award by their particular names Jermyn who argued for the Plaintiffe said That he ought not to name the Councellors by their proper names and therefore he said That if a man be bounden to perform the Order that the Privy Councel shall make or the Order which the Councel should make That in Debt upon the same Bond If the Defendant saith that he hath performed Consilium generally of the Councel without shewing the particular names of the Councellors it is good And he vouched 10. H. 7. 6. 10. E. 4. 15. and Com. 126. Sir Richard Buckleys case That the number of the Esliors ought not to be particularly shewed But in an Action brought upon the Statute of 23. H. 6. he may declare generally that he was chosen per majorem numerum and that is good And 10. E. 4. 15. In debt upon a Bond That the Defendant shall serve the Plaintiffe for a year in omnibus mandatis suis licitis The Defendant said That he did truely serve the Plaintiff untill such a day as he was discharged And it is there holden that he is not compellable to shew the certainty of the services Banks contrary and said That he ought to name the Councel by their particular names And therefore in this case he ought to have pleaded specially as in 9. E. 4. 24. If a man will plead a Divorce Deprivation or a Deraignment he ought to shew before what Judge the Divorce Deprivation or Deraignment was So 1. H. 7. 10. If a man will plead a Fine he must shew before what Judges the Fine was levied although they be Judges of Record And he took this difference That the Judges ought to take notice of the Jurisdiction of generall Courts which are Courts of Record and of the Customes of those Courts but of particular Courts which have but particular Jurisdictions and particular Customes the Judges are not to take notice of them nor of the Lawes and Customes of such Courts if they be not specially shewed unto them And therefore although it was alledged That it was the generall usage to plead Awards or Orders made before the Councel of the Marches of Wales as in the principall Case yet he held that the Judges were not to take notice thereof And therefore the Councellors who made the Order ought to be particularly named 2. He said that the Replication was not good because the Plaintiffe in his Replication doth not shew that the Order was made by the President and the Councel for by the Statute of 34. H. 8. it ought to be made by the President and the Councel 3. He said That the Replication was not good because the Plaintiffe doth not shew within the Record that the matter of which the Order was made was a matter which was within their