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A64839 The reports of Sir Peyton Ventris Kt., late one of the justices of the Common-pleas in two parts : the first part containing select cases adjudged in the Kings-Bench, in the reign of K. Charles II, with three learned arguments, one in the Kings-Bench, by Sir Francis North, when Attorney General, and two in the Exchequer by Sir Matthew Hale, when Lord Chief Baron : with two tables, one of the cases, and the other of the principal matters : the second part containing choice cases adjudged in the Common-pleas, in the reigns of K. Charles II and K. James II and in the three first years of the reign of His now Majesty K. William and the late Q. Mary, while he was a judge in the said court, with the pleadings to the same : also several cases and pleadings thereupon in the Exchequer-Chamber upon writs of error from the Kings-Bench : together with many remarkable and curious cases in the Court of Chancery : whereto are added three exact tables, one of the cases, the other of the principal matters, and the third of the pleadings : with the allowance and approbation of the Lord Keeper an all the judges. Ventris, Peyton, Sir, 1645-1691.; Guilford, Francis North, Baron, 1637-1685.; Hale, Matthew, Sir, 1609-1676.; England and Wales. Court of King's Bench.; England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas. 1696 (1696) Wing V235; ESTC R7440 737,128 910

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Ejectment the Case upon a Special Verdict was to this effect Sir John Danvers being seized of the Lands c. in Tail with the Fee expectant Anno 1646 and in 1647 levied a Fine to the same uses as he was before seized save that a power was reserved to make Leases for any number of years and without reserving any Rent Sir John Danvers did after become Guilty of Treason in Murdring of King Charles the first in 1648 and died in 1655. In 13 Car. 2. cap. 15. the Statute commonly called the Statute of Pains and Penalties Enacts That sundry of the Offenders in that execrable Treason of which Sir J. D. was one should amongst other Penalties there inflicted forfeit all their Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases for years Chattels real and interest of what nature or quality soever See the Act of 14 of this King The Lands were by Patent granted to the Duke of York who let them to the Defendant And John Danvers Heir of Sir John Danvers entred and made the Lease to the Plaintiff It had been several times argued at the Bar and this Term Iudgment was given by the Court for the Defendant And Rainsford Chief Justice delivered the Opinion of the Court and the Reasons for himself Twisden Wild and Jones as followeth The question being Whether an Estate Tail were forfeited by the words of the Act of 13 Car. 2. It was observed that all Estates were Fee simple at the Common Law and forfeitable W. the 2. de donis was the first Statute that protected Estates Tail from Alienations and from all Forfeitures of all kinds and so continued until the 12 E. 4. Taltarums Case from which time common Recoveries have been held not to be restrained by the Statute de donis and by the way it must be considered that Perpetuities were never favoured Then came the Statute of 4. H. 7. of Fines which with the explanation of the 32 H. 8. have been always resolved to bar the Issues in Tail so as to Alienations Estates Tail were set free but were not forfeitable no not for Treason until the 26 H. 8. by which they became subjected to Forfeitures in case of Treason and so by 5 E. 6. But 't is true these Statutes extend only to Attainders and 33 H. 8. Vests the Lands c. in the Kings possession without Office Thus having considered the History and Progress of Estates Tail the reasons why such an Estate should be construed to be forfeited upon this Act of 13 Car. 2. are these First The Crime mentioned is of the same nature and with the same aggravations as in 12 Car. 2. by which the Offenders are attainted of Treason c. for they are called Perpetrators of that execrable Treason with many Expressions to the like effect which was looked upon as an offence of that hainous nature that the same Parliament Enacted An Anniversary Humiliation throughout the whole Kingdom to be perpetually observed upon the account of it as if not only they that acted it but the whole Kingdom and their Posterity like to another Original sin were involved in the Guilt of it Nati natorum qui nascuntur ab illis And therefore the Punishment shall not be mitigated in any other manner than is expresly provided by that Act. Secondly It is proved by the generally and comprehensions of the words which are made use of viz. Possessions Rights Hereditaments of what nature soever Interests which does as well signifie the Estate in the ting as that wherein the Estate is which can have no effect if not extended to Estates Tail We must observe also that at the making of this Act entailed Lands were not protected from Forfeitures and tho' 26 H. 8. extends only to Cases where the Offender is attainted yet 't is of good direction to the Judges in Cases of like nature and 't is plain that by this Act of 13 Car. 2. the Offenders were looked upon in pari gradu with these attainted for when the Proviso comes to save the Estates of Strangers c. in trust for whom the Offenders were seized It is said notwithstanding any of the Convictions or Attainders aforesaid Thirdly It is to be observed that the Act takes notice that divers of the Offenders included in this Act were dead now in regard most Lands are known to be entailed if the Act had not intended such Estates to be forfeited it would signifie nothing indeed if the Offenders had been alive it might have been somewhat satisfied with the Forfeiture during their Lives But as the case was it should be of no effect at all after making a great noise of Forfeitures and Confiscations the Act would have been but a Gun charged only with Powder or as in the Fable Parturiunt Montes c. Fourthly It is manifest that the Parliament did not intend that the Children or Heirs of the Persons within the Penalties of the Act should have any benefit of their Estates for in the saving which is made for Purchasers upon valuable Considerations the Wives Children and Heirs of the Offenders are excepted then surely if they would bar them of the benefit of their Purchases à fortiori from inheriting to an Estate Tail especially of a voluntary Entail that seems to be made with a prospect of this Treason which was perpetrated a year after and such an Entail as scarce the like was ever seen before that a power should be reserved to make Leases for any number of years and without Reservation of any Rent By which it is manifest that Sir John Danvers that committed the Treason was fully Master of the Estate Again all Conveyances are avoided by the Act unless such as were upon valuable Consideration which this Fine was not The great case which has been insisted upon by way of objection is Trudgeons Case Co. Litt. 130. Estates Tail were not forfeited upon the Statute of Praemunire but during the Offenders Life For answer to that it must be observed that that Forfeiture is upon the Statute of 16 R. 2. at which times Estates Tail were under thè protection of the Statute de donis but since that time the Judges have not been so strict in expounding Statutes concerning Estates Tail as appears by Adams and Lamberts Case 4 Co. That an Estate Tail given for a superstitious use was within the Statute of 1 E. 6. cap. 4. where the words are generally and not so large as in our case nor so much to demonstrate the intent as is in our Act to extend to Estates Tail wherefore Iudgment was given for the Defendant Note They that argued for the Defendant endeavoured to maintain that if it should be admitted that Entails were not forfeited by the Act yet the Estate of Sir John Danvers in those Lands would be forfeited in regard he levied a Fine in 1647 and the Act of 13 Car. 2. extends to all Lands c. whereof the Persons therein mentioned were seized c. since 1646 and he being
her But Object All these words together to make a Slander Answ No man can assign me such a ratiocination a male divisis ad bene conjuncta I never heard it but in my Lord Straffords Case viz. that many Trespasses should make a Treason 'T is said he stirred up a Vexatious Action so does a Counsell when he Advises an Unsuccessful Action for the party is amerced pro falso clamore He will milk your Purse taken enunciatively signifies no more than Milking a Bull the Phrase is not come to an Idiom So of Filling his Pockets these Words might have been spoken of the Law and indeed they are spoken of the Thing not the Man or his Practice Dunce Corrupt c. concern the Profession but these words are applicable to any If he had said he were not a Good Fidler would that be Actionable Termino Paschae Anno 28 Car. II. In Communi Banco Hockett Uxor versus Stegold Ux ' TRespass for Assault Battery and Wounding of the Baron and Feme Vpon Not Guilty pleaded the Verdict was as to the Wife Guilty and quoad residuum Not guilty It was moved in Arrest of Judgment that the Baron and Feme could not joyn in an Action of Trespass for Beating them both 2 Cro. 355 655. 2. That there is nothing found as to the Beating of the Husband and so an imperfect Verdict for the Quoad residuum shall extend only to the other Trespasses done to the Wife Yelv. 106. Vid. Lib. which goes to both Points But the Whole Court were of Opinion that the Verdict had Cured this Mistake in the Action 9 Ed. 4. 51. 6 Acc ' Vid. Styles 349. Termino Paschae Anno 29 Car. II. In Communi Banco Herbert Perrot's Case HE having married a Wife that had an Inheritance of a considerable Value prevails upon her while she was but of the Age of 20 years to levy a Fine upon which the Use was declared to him and her and the Heirs of their two Bodies This was taken in the Country upon a Dedimus potestatem by Sir Herbert Perrot his Father and Mother After which the Wife died without Issue but had Issue at the time of the Fine It was moved in Court that this Fine might be set aside and a Fine imposed upon the Commissioners for the undue Practice and taking of a Fine of one under Age. But all the Judges agreed they could not meddle with the Fine but if the Wife had been alive and still under Age they might bring her in by Habeas Corpus and inspect her and set aside the Fine upon a Motion for perhaps the Husband would not suffer the bringing or proceeding in a Writ of Error And Justice Atkyns said These Abuses which are so frequent in taking Fines were occasioned by the Alteration of the Common Law made by the Statute of Carlisle 15 Ed. 2. that Fines which before were always to be done in Court may now be taken by Dedimus But the Common Law ●alls much short of the Order the Statute prescribes which requires that two Judges of the Court or one at the least should taking with him an Abbot Prior or Knight of good Fame take such Fines whereas 't is now the Common Practice to name Attorneys and Inconsiderable persons The Court were of Opinion That if a Commissioner to take a Fine do execute it corruptly he may be Fined by the Court for in relation to the Fine which is the proper Business of this Court he is subject to the Censures of it as Attorneys c. But they held that they had no power to Fine the Parties for a Misdemeanour in them North Chief Justice and Wyndham would have Fined Sir Herbert Perrot for taking a Fine of one under Age But Atkyns and Scroggs dissented because it did not appear that Sir Herbert Perrot did know she was under Age and it could not be discerned by the View she being Twenty Termino Sancti Hillarij Anno 29 30 Car. II. In Communi Banco Sir John Otwaie's Case IN an Ejectment upon a Special Verdict the Case was to this effect It was found that there was a Parish of Ribton and Vill of Ribton but not Coextensive with the Parish J.S. had Land in Tail in the Parish and out of the Vill and bargained and sold by Indenture with a Covenant to levy a Fine and suffer a Recovery to the Vses of the Deed of the said Land in the Parish of Ribton and the Fine and Recovery were only of Lands in Ribton and whether this would serve for the said Land in the Parish of Ribton was the Question Serjeant Maynard Argued that it would not and said that the Division by Parishes is wholly Ecclesiastical the Limits of which are equal to the Cure of the Parson But that of Towns and Vills is Civil and hath the same Limits with the Power of the Constable and Tythingman Where a Place is named in a Record of the Law and no more said 't is always intended a Vill tho' when a Vill and Parish are both mentioned and of the same Name they are intended Coextensive The later Authorities have admitted Fines to be levied of Land in a place known 1 Cro. 2 Ro. 20. But in a Recovery the Town must be mentioned But 't is Objected That here the Intention appears by the Deed that these Lands should pass But he Answered That cannot carry the Words further than they are contained in the Record Again it is Objected That the Deed Fine and Recovery do all make but one Assurance True but each hath its several effect the Deed serves to declare the Uses but it cannot make the Record larger than it is in the Subject Matter of it If a Formedon had been brought and the Fine and Recovery pleaded in Bar had it not been a good Reply to have said Nient comprise c. In 2 Cro. 120. Storke and Fox the Case was Walton and Street were two Vills in the Parish of Street and a Fine was of Lands in Street and Resolved that no Lands but in the Vill of Street tho' in the Parish did pass And so is Mo. 910. in case of a Grant 2 Ro. 54. If this were permitted it would introduce much Mischief for men would not know what passed by searching the Record but this should be known only by a Pocket Deed and so they in Reversion a Lord of Ancient Demesne c. would not know when to make their Claim and should be barred by reason of a Private Deed when the Record of the Fine or Recovery did not import that they were concerned Fines are to end Controversies and therefore must be certain and in that respect sometimes receive a stricter Construction than Grants A Fine of a Tenement is not good but ought to be reversed but a Grant of a Tenement will bind On the other side it was Argued that since Common Recoveries have been so much in practice and become the Common Assurances of mens Estates
against Bates a Schoolmaster who as it was alledged taught School without the Bishops Licence and it was granted because they endeavoured to turn him out whereas they could only Censure him he coming in by the Presentation of the Founder In a Feoffment of Tythes and Lands where there is no Livery if they do adjudge the Tythes to pass notwithstanding there is no Livery a Prohibition will lye In Debt upon a Lease at Will there must be an Averment that the Lessee occupied the Lands But it is otherwise upon a Lease for Years Anonymus THe Court was moved to grant an Attachment against a Justice of the Peace who upon Complaint refused to come and view a Force But the Court denied it and directed the party to bring an Action of Debt for the 100 l Forfeiture given by the Statute in that case It was said by the Court That in an Execution upon a Statute Merchant there is no need of a Liberate as there is upon a Statute Staple And in the Case of a Statute Staple the Conusee can bring no Ejectment before the Liberate neither can the Sheriff upon the Liberate turn the Terre-Tenant out of possession as he is to do upon an Habere facias possessionem Dier versus East AN Action was brought against the Defendant upon an Indeb ' pro diversis Mercimoniis venditis deliberatis to the Wife to the use of her Husband it being for her wearing Apparel And after Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that this Declaration being laid That the Sale was to the Wife tho' it was to the use of the Husband it was not good as if it had been sold to the Servant of the Plaintiff Nevertheless the Court were of Opinion That it being for her Apparel and that suitable to her Degree the Husband was to pay for it as had been Resolved in this King's time in Scot and Manby's Case in the Exchequer Chamber and that the Declaration was well enough Anonymus THe Defendant in an Action of Debt upon a Bond sued out an Injunction in Chancery where after the Case had depended for two years the Court was moved that the Plaintiff might accept of his Principal Interest and Charges The Court said If the Defendant comes before Plea pleaded and makes such a proffer they are ex debito Justitiae to allow it But now he having delayed the Plaintiff in Chancery two years it was in their discretion And the other three against the Opinion of Keeling thought fit to deny it Clarke versus Phillips al' UPon the Trial in an Ejectment the Title of the Plaintiff's Lessor appeared to be by a Remainder limited to him for Life upon divers other Estates and that there was a Fine levied and Proclamations passed but he within the Five years after his Title accrued sent two persons to deliver Declarations upon the Land as the course is upon Ejectments brought The Court Resolved that this was no Entry or Claim to avoid the Fine he having given no express Authority to that purpose and the Confession of Lease Entry and Ouster by the Defendant should not prejudice him in this respect In this Case Keeling and Twisden were of different Opinions in this Point Viz. If he that hath power of Revocation over Lands c. makes a Lease for Life whether it suspends the Power only as a Lease for years would do or extinguisheth it as a Feoffment The King versus Monk al' IN an Information for a Riot it was concluded contra formam Statuti 13 H. 4. which appoints Justice of the Peace upon complaint of Riots to View and Record them And after Verdict it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that this Information was not good it being grounded upon this Statute which only mentions Riots and appoints them to be punished in the manner there expressed But the Chief Justice Keeling was of Opinion that it being a Crime at the Common Law and mentioned in this Statute the Information was well concluded But the other Justices inclined to the contrary Anonymus DEbt upon a Bond Conditioned to perform Covenants in an Indenture The Defendant pleaded That there were no Covenants contained in the Indenture on his part to be performed The Plaintiff demands Oyer of the Indenture which is Entred verbatim and then Demurs which he could not well do before the Entry of it whereby it becomes part of the Bar so the cause of the Demurrer appears Then it was alledged by Saunders whose Hand was to the Plea That the Plaintiff could not have Judgment because he had set forth no Breach But the Court was much offended with him For they held the Plea in Bar meerly for delay and advised against the Statute of Westm 1. Robinson versus Pulford IN an Assumpsit the Plaintiff declared That the Defendant in Consideration that the Plaintiff would deliver such silver Threads and other Wares into the Shop of J. S. that he should require that he would see him paid Now after an Assumpsit pleaded and Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgment That the Plaintiff had not averred in his Declaration that J. S. had not paid for the Goods For the promise to see him paid was no more than if he had said If J.S. doth not pay you I will in which Case such Averment must have been But the Court Resolved that a Promise to pay and to see him paid was all one and the Averment unnecessary Rushden versus Collins IN an Assumpsit the Plaintiff declared the Consideration to be pro opere preantea facto After Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that opere was too general and might intend so inconsiderable a matter as would not amount to a Consideration for the Plaintiff But they gave Judgment for they said labore or servitio had been adjudged sufficient Lee versus Edwards IN an Assumpsit the Plaintiff declared That in Consideration that he would employ his skill and pains and provide Medicaments for and Cure a certain person of a Pthysick that he would pay what he deserved and lays another Promise at the same time in Consideration as aforesaid and alledges the Promise somewhat varying from the first and concludes with an Averment That he had bestowed his pains and cured accordingly Vpon Non Assumpsit pleaded and a Verdict for the Plaintiff the Court was moved to stay Judgment because the Plaintiff had made no Averment of the Cure upon the first Promise and entire Damages were given so it was ill in all But the Court were of Opinion That in regard he had Averred it upon the second Promise so as it appeared upon Record that the Cure was done it aided the omission of it in the first especially being after a Verdict Nota There is an Inquisition upon every ones death that dies in the Kings-Bench by the Master of the Crown-Office and Coroner Pomfret versus Rycroft IN a Writ of
if the Heirs satisfied the Office of their Title without pleading as where Conusans of Pleas have been once allowed it is sufficient in another Action to shew the former Roll where it was alallowed Note An Indictment for a Nusans in the High-way The Court will not quash this Indictment upon Motion unless certified that the Nusans is removed But they will Reverse it upon a Writ of Error if their be Error in it without any such Certificate Iles Case A Mandamus was prayed to the Churchwardens of the Parish of Kinsmere in Hampton to restore John Iles to the place of Sexton there and it was granted And so the Court said hath béen for a Parish Clark Churchwardens a Scavenger But it was denied to one who pretended to be Master of the Lord Mayors Waterhouse for that they said was not an Office but a Service Anonymus A Fine was levied of Lands in Blandford Forum Resolved That this should not pass Lands in a Hamlet of that Town there being Constables distinct in Blandford Forum from others that were in the Hamlet so that they were as two Vills But if a Fine be levied of Lands in a Parish it shall extend to all the Vills within the Parish The Lord Hawley's Case A Mandamus was granted to restore him to the Recordership of Bath The Corporation returned That they were Incorporated by Letters Patents of Queen Elizabeth which empowered them to chuse probum discretum hominem in legibus Angliae peritum to be their Recorder and to hold a Court twice every Week before the Mayor Alderman and Recorder or any two of them whereof the Mayor to be one That the 1st of August 15 of this King he was made Recorder by the Committee upon the Act of this King for regulating of Corporations and that he continued in the Office Secundum locationem illam until the 25 of December 21 of the King and that from the 1 of August 15 of the King to August 21 he absented himself by the space of five years without any reasonable Cause and that he is nullo modo peritus in lege and that at a Court August the 21 they summoned him to appear some days before and he not coming they amoved him from his Office the 30 day of the said August After this Return filed it was moved First That it was repugnant for they returned That the Lord Hawley continued in his Office until the 25 of December 21 of the King and after that they amoved him in August 21 of the King To which it was answered That in regard upon the whole return it appears that he was amoved though it be said he continued after that is not material but surplusage As where a Jury gives a general Verdict and yet discloses special matter disagreeing to it the Court judges according to the special matter or else they might mean that though he were turned out yet he did continue exercising it de facto And the Court were of Opinion that the contradiction in the Return was not material For Hale said If it shall be taken that he is yet in then there is no need of a Mandamus Again it was said That the matter of absence was not sufficiently returned for it appears by the Charter that the presence of the Recorder is not necessary to the holding of the Court for it is to be held before the Mayor Aldermen and Recorder or any two of them whereof the Mayor to be one then they have not returned that they held a Court in all that time neither have they returned that any mischief or inconvenience happned to them by his absence A Park-keeper shall not forfeit his Office for Non-attendance unless a Deer be killed or the like in his absence Also it is returned from the 1 of Aug. 15. Car. to the 1 of Aug. 21. he absented himself for five years and he might be out of Town five years in six years time and yet be there every Court day And for the other cause of removal that he was not peritus in lege It was said That the Corporation being Laymen could not return a thing whereof they were not Judges That the Return was too general nullo modus peritus but ought to have set forth some special Fact whereby it might appear to the Court. Also They could not remove him for a Cause which they could not examin he was put in by Commissioners authorised by Act of Parliament which it was said did capacitate implicitely him at least their Act supplied the Election of the Town which if it had been would have dispensed with his disability And the Case of Bernardiston Recorder of Colchester was much relied upon who in 1655 brought a Mandamus to be restored to his Office And it was returned That he was not learned in the Law and that one being indicted before him upon the Statute of 1 Jac. of having two Wives and convicted he denied him Clergy and also they returned That he absented himself for nine Months and notwithstanding by the Iudgment of the Court he was restored It was said by Sir William Jones on the other side That the absence as it was returned was sufficient Cause to remove him for it is returned That without any reasonable Cause seipsum elongavit by the space of five years which must be intended five years continued and not made up by Fractions and so held the Court in that Case and executionem officij sui totaliter neglexit Now tho' his Presence be not of absolute necessity to the holding of the Court yet it is highly convenient that he should be there seeing the Charter gives such large Iurisdictions to determine all Causes excepting such as concern Freehold according to Law The Court here also must judicially take notice That the Office of Recorder is concerned in other matters besides the Administration of Justice in the Court for he is as it were the Common Counsel of the Corporation And whereas it hath béen objected That it is not returned that they had held a Court during his absence or that any prejudice had ensued Also That it must be intended that there were Courts when they have returned the Charter which empower them to hold one twice every week and 't is returned That he absented himself in Regiminis Civitatis detrimentum c. and ' its apparent they must suffer prejudice by so long absence If a Park-keeper should desert his Office for five years it would make a Forfeiture without Special Damage The other matter returned also That he is nullo modo peritus in lege is good Cause for the Charter appoints them to Elect such an one so one that is not so qualified is not capable and the Act of this King authorises Commissioners but to do what the Corporation might have done It is apparent That the Office requires skill in the Law he hath no power to make a Deputy by the Statute of 21 Jac. Causes in many Cases are
might be given in Evidence tho' upon Non est factum it could not The King versus Alway and Dixon ERror to Reverse a Judgment upon an Indictment because the Award of the Venire was Entred Praeceptum fuit Vicecomiti c. which is more like an Hystory of the Record than the Record it self for it ought to be Praeceptum est and so are the Presidents And for this Cause it was Reversed Waldron versus Ruscarit Hill ult Rot. 225. In an Ejectment a Special Verdict was found That one levied a Fine of all his Lands in Saint Inderion in Cornwal and that he had Lands in Portgwyn and that the Constables of Saint Inderion exercised their Authority in Portgwyn and that Porgwyn had a Tythingman And whether this Fine conveyed the Lands in Portgwyn was left to the Iudgment of the Court and Resolved that it did A Parish may contain ten Vills and if a Fine be levied of the Lands in the Parish this carries whatsoever is in any of those Vills So where there are divers Vills if the Constablewick of the one goes over all the rest that is the Superiour or Mother Vill and the Land which is in the other shall pass per nomen of all the Lands in that And tho' it be found that Portgwyn had a Tythingman Decenarius which prima facie is the same with a Constable and differed little in the Execution of that Office concerning Keeping the Peace Yet Hale said He was not the same Officer and 't is found that the Constables of St. Inderion have a superintendency over Portgwyn and therefore 't is but as an Hamlet of St. Inderion But if found that they had distinct Constables and could not interfere in their Authority it would be otherwise Owen 60. Note It was said by the Court That if there be a Conviction of a Forcible Entry upon the View of the Justices of the Peace no Writ of Error lyes upon it but it may be Examined upon a Certiorari The King versus Green al' THey were Indicted for refusing to take the Oath of Allegigiance contained in the Statute of 3 Jac. tendred to them at the Sessions of the Peace One appeared and the Entry was Nihil decit c. ideo remansit Dom ' Rex versus eundem indenfensus And the other were Convicted and Judgment given quod forisfaciant omnia bona catalla terr' tenementa Domino Regi extra protectionem Dom ' Regis ponantur committuntur quilibet eorum committitur Gaolae They brought Error And First It was moved that the Indictment was for refusing the Oath contained in the Statute of 3 Jac. in his Anglicanis Verbis Viz. I do truly and sincerely acknowledge c. that our Sovereign Lord King Charles the Second is Rightful King of this Realm c. Whereas the Statute is King James and the words of the Statute are That the Justices of the Peace shall demand of such persons there mentioned to take the Oath hereafter following So that 't is tyed up to that Oath in terminis and then it cannot be Administred after the Death of King James And the diversity of the Penning of this Act of 3 Jac. and the Act of 7 Jac. was observed in the last the words are Shall take and receive an Oath according to the Tenour and Effect of the Oath contained in 3 Jac which is as much as to say the same Oath in substance So the Act of 1 Eliz. cap. 1. is That the Oath shall be taken according to the Tenour and Effect hereafter following Therefore it was Objected that the Indictment might have been upon the Act of 7 Jac. but not upon 3 Jac. which it was conceived was tyed up to the Person of King James and therefore determined by his Death As if a Lease be made durante bene placito Regis nunc it doth end by the Dimise of that King that made it Otherwise if it be durante bene placito Regis Moor pl. 311. And though these Statutes for the Oath of Allegiance be General Laws and need not have been recited yet when an Indictment is grounded upon an Act therein mentioned which will not maintain it it shall not be made good upon any other General Act. Secondly Another Matter insisted upon for Error was in the Entry of the Nihil dicit which was Ideo remansit Dom ' Rex versus eundem indefensus whereas it ought to have been remanet and so the Record it self must express But as it is 't is but an History of the Record and therefore upon Indictments where the Award of the Venire is Praeceptum fuit 't is not good but should he Praeceptum est Thirdly An Exception was taken to the Venire which Commands the Sheriff to Return 12 probos legales homines qui nec Dom ' Regem nec aliquam partem aliqua affinitate attingunt whereas in the King's Cases his Kindred may be Returned and therein no Challenge to the Favour neither ought the Sheriff to be restrained from Returning them Fourthly The Judgment is Committuntur quilibet eorum committitur which is an Execution of the Judgment that should have been given and not the Judgment it self which ought to have been Committantur c. as 't is extra protectionem Domini Regis ponantur and not ponuntur Fifthly It was alledged that the Statute was mis-recited in two places 1. For See of Rome it is written Sea of Rome so instead of sedes Romana it is mare Romanum which makes it to be no Sense 2. The Words of the Statute are I do declare in my Conscience before God whereas the Indictment is I do declare c. in Conscience and leaves out my It was also Objected That the words of the Act being That such as refuse the Oath shall incur the danger and penalty of Praemunire mentioned in the Statute of 16 R. 2. which Enacts That Process shall be made against the Offenders therein mentioned by Praemunire facias in manner as 't is Ordained in other Statutes And it appears that no such Process was made upon this Indictment wherefore the Statute is not observed Curia The first Error was disallowed by all the Court and held clearly that the Judgment was well grounded upon the Statute of 3 Jac. For the naming of the King is but an instance of the thing as it stands at present and it might as well be objected that the Oath in the Statute is I A.B. do swear c. And tho' some Statutes say according to the Tenour and Effect and this is the Oath hereafter following it was held to be all one for according to the Tenour and Effect and according to the words are all one as where a Certiorari is to certifie Tenorem Recordi The second was held to be Error and that the Iudgment given upon the nihil dicit must be reversed for there were several Iudgments given viz. One upon that and another given
the first Man for he is only to compound the business if he can Twisden The discharge being set forth in an Order we must intend it duly made 't is the common practice to go to the Sessions first It was moved at first that it did not appear that the Plaintiff had Notice but that Point was waided for being in a judicial proceeding it shall be intended Et Adjurnatur Lucy versus Levington PAsch ult Rot. 96. Covenant by the Plaintiff as Executor of J. S. for that the Defendant covenanted with J.S. his Heirs and Assigns to levy a Fine c. and that they should enjoy the Lands against all persons claiming under Sir Peter Vanlore and then he says that Sir Robert Crooke and Peter Vandebendy in the Testators life time did enter claiming under Sir P. Vanlore c. The Defendant pleads That he had a good and indefeasible Title in the Lands at the time of the Covenant by vertue of certain Fines from Sir Ed. Powel and his Wife but that in 13 Regis nunc there was an Act of Parliament by which these Fines were made and declared to be void and that Sir R. C. and P. Vandebendy had Title and entred by reason of the Act and not otherwise The Act which was pleaded in haec verba recites that certain Men came with armed force and thereby extorted and took the Fines c. And to this the Plaintiff demurred It was urged for the Defendant That this Title was by matter subsequent to the Covenant and not any thing which was in being then as 9 Co. 106. Sir T. Gresham conveys Land to certain uses with power of Revocation and then does revoke and Aliens and dies the Revocation was not warranted by his power but was after made good by Act of Parliament and then Process went out against his Widow for a Fine for the Alienation of Sir T. G. the Lands being of capite tenure but she was discharged because the Alienation had its effectt by an Act of Parliament which can do no wrong Twisden 'T is hard this should be a breach for the Defendant cannot be intended to Covenant against an Act of Parliament a thing out of his power Baron and Feme levied a Fine J. S. Covenants that the Conusee shall enjoy it against all lawfully claiming from B. and F. brings Dower after the Death of B. the Conusee does not plead the Fine but suffers Judgment and brings Covenant against J.S. and adjudged against him for the Covenant shall not extend to a Right which is barred and besides she did not claim lawfully There is an Old Book which says that if an Attainder be reversed by Parliament the person shall have Trespass against him which took the profits of his Land in the interim Hale My Lady Greshams Case is not like this for there the party was in by the Queens consent to the Alienation by the Act she passed but here the Covenant is broken as much as if a Man recover Land and then sell and Covenant thus and then it be evicted in a Writ of Right for this is in the nature of a Judgment Tho' it be by the Legislative power it may be the prospect of this Act was the reason of the Covenant nor has the Defendant reason to complain for the Act was made because of his own fraud and force Every Man is so farr party to a private Act of Parliament as not to gainsay it but not so as to give up his Interest 't is the great question in Barringtons Case 8 Co. the matter of the Act there directs it to be between the Forresters and the Proprietors of the Soil and therefore it shall not extend to the Commoners to take away their Common Suppose an Act says Whereas there is a Controversie concerning Land between A. and B. 'T is Enacted That A. shall enjoy it This does not bind others tho' there be no saving because it was only intended to end the difference between them two Whereupon Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff It was agreed by all the Justices that tho' the Covenant were made only to J. S. his Heirs and Assigns and it were an Estate of Inheritance yet the Breach being in the Testators Life time the Executor had well brought the Action for the Damages Peter versus Opie IN an Assumpsit the Plaintiff declares That there was an Agreement between him and the Defendant that be the Plaintiff should pull down two Walls and build an House c. for the Defendant and that the Defendant should pay him pro labore suo in circa divulsionem c. 8 l and that in consideration that the Plaintiff assumed to perform his part the Defendant assumed to perform his and the Plaintiff avers that he was paratus to perform all on his part but that Defendant had not paid him the Money And after a Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgment That he did not aver that he had done the work Hale Pro labore here makes a Condition precedent and therefore the performance of the work ought to have been averred for tho' in case of a Reciprocal Promise performance need not be averred yet if the Promise refers to an Agreement which contains a Condition precedent the performance of that must be averred as if I should promise one to go to York and in consideration of that he promise to pay me 10 l there needs no averment of my going to York otherwise if the Counter promise were to pay 10 l for my going to York So if the Counter promise were to do a thing after a time ascertained or to be ascertained it must be averred that the time is past Therefore that it is said by way of Reciprocal promise will not concern much for every Agreement is a Reciprocal promise but the matter is what the Agreement is Here tho' the Reciprocal promise be the foundation of the Consideration yet 't is to be considered that it refers to a Conditional promise or an Agreement and the Promise obliges not the Defendant to do it otherwise than according to the Agreement Now to shew this pro labore makes a Condition precedent Suppose the Agreement to be in writing thus Memorand that J.S. agrees and promises to build and J. N. promises to pay him so much for his pains it cannot be taken but that the building must be precedent to the payment 'T is the common way of Bargaining and in common dealing men do not use to pay before the work be done it would be inconvenient to give cross Actions in such cases especially since 't is likely that the Workman is a poor Man 'T is true if there be a time limited for the payment which time may fall out before the work or thing be done there the doing it is not a precedent Condition Vivian and Shipping 3 Cro. An Award that one should pay 10 l and in Consideration thereof the other should become bound
c. be indicted for not repairing of a Way within their Precinct they cannot plead Not guilty and give in Evidence that another by Prescription or Tenure ought to repair it for they are chargeable de communi Jure and if they would discharge themselves by laying it elsewhere it must be pleaded Error ERror to Reverse a Judgment in Debt upon a Bond given in Norwich Court where by the Custom the plea of the Defendant was quod non dedicit factum sed petit quod inquiratur de debito First It was moved to be Error for that the Venire was XII Men c. in figures Sed non allocatur for being in these letters XII and not in the figures 12. it was well enough Secondly It was ad triandum exi tum whereas there was no Issue joyned wherefore it ought to have been ad inquirend ' de debito c. Sed non allocatur for the Presidents are as the Case is here Thirdly The Condition of the Bond was to pay at Alborough and that ought to have been shewn to be within the Jurisdiction of the Court Sed non allocatur for the Plea here is not payment secund ' formam Conditionis but the Jury is to inquire by the custom of all manner of payments and discharges Fourthly In the Record it was continued over to several Courts and in the Court where the Judgment is given 't is said in Curia praedicta and so incertain which but notwithstanding these matters the Iudgment was affirmed Anonymus THe Case upon Evidence at a Tryal in Ejectment was this a Dean and Chapter having a right to certain Land but being out of Possession Sealed a Lease with a Letter of Attorney to deliver it upon the Land which was done accordingly and held to be a good Lease for tho' the putting the Seal of a Corporation aggregate to a Deed carries with it a delivery yet the Letter of Attorney to deliver it upon the Land shall suspend the operation of it while then Tenant for Life being in Debt to defraud his Creditors commits a Forfeiture to the end that he in Reversion may enter who is made privy to the contrivance The Opinion of Hale was that the Creditors should avoid this as well as any fraudulent Conveyance Anonymus IN an Ejectment upon a Tryal at Bar for Lands in antient Demesne there was shewn a Recovery in the Court of antient Demesne to cut off an Entail which had been suffered a long time since and the Possession had gone accordingly But there was now objected against it First That no sufficient Evidence of it appeared because the Recovery it self nor a Copy of it was shewn for in truth it was lost But the Court did admit other proof of it to be sufficient and said if a Record be lost it may be proved to a Jury by Testimony as the Decree in H. 8. time for Tythe in London is lost yet it hath been often allowed that there was one Secondly It appeared that a part of the Land was leased for Life and the Recovery with a single Voucher was suffered by him in Reversion and so no Tenant to the Praecipe for those Lands But in regard the Possession had followed it for so long time the Court said they would presume a Surrender as in an Appropriation of great Antiquity there has been presumed a Licence tho' none appeared Thirdly It was objected That the Tenant in Tail which suffered the Recovery having first accepted of a Fine sur Conusans de droit come ceo his Estate Tail was changed for he was estopped during his Life to say that he had any other Estate than Fee then he being made Tenant to the Praecipe the Recovery was not of the Estate Tail and so should not bind But the Court held clearly that the acceptance of this Fine made no alteration of his Estate If Tenant for Life accepts such a Fine 't is a Forfeiture because he admits the Reversion to be in a Stranger but it does not change his Estate so where two Joynt-tenants in Fee accept a Fine which is to the Heirs of one of them yet they continue Joynt-tenants in Fee as they were before Fourthly The Writ of Right Close did express the Land to lie in such a Mannor and a Praecipe that demands Land ought to mention the Vill in which they lie for a Praecipe of Land in Parochia or in Manerio is not good But this exception was disallowed by the Court for Hale said the Writ of Right Close is directed Ballivis Manerij c. quod plenum rectum teneant of the Land within the Precinct of the Mannor and it is not to be resembled to another Praecipe But if a Praecipe be faulty in that Point unless exception be taken to it in Abatement it cannot be assigned for Error but if it were Erroneous the Recovery would bind until reversed Note After Judgment quod computet tho' it be not the final Judgment yet no motion is to be admitted in Arrest of Judgment and after such Judgment a Scire facias lies against the Executor of the Defendant Note In an Action of Debt against the Lessee he may plead nil debet and give the expulsion in Evidence Anonymus IN an Assumpsit the consideration appeared to be that the Defendant promised to pay a Sum of Money which he owed this is no good consideration tho' after a Verdict unless it appeared that the Debt was become remediless by the Statute of Limitations but payment of a Debt without Suit is a good consideration Anonymus A Justice of the Peace brought an Action of Slander for that the Defendant said He was not worth a Groat and that he was gone to the Dogs and upon motion in Arrest of Judgment notwithstanding that it was urged to maintain it that the Statute of H. 6. requires that a Justice of Peace should have 40 l a year And therefore in regard an Estate was necessary to his Office that the Action would lie yet the Judgment was stayed for such words will not bear an Action unless the person of whom they are spoken lives by buying and selling Anonymus IT was returned upon Elegit that the Sheriff had delivered medietatem Terrar ' Tenementorum in extent and after the Filing and Entry of it upon the Record the Plaintiff moved to quash it because it was insufficient for the Sheriff ought upon such Execution to deliver the Possession by Metes and Bounds Wild held that it being entred upon the Record there was no avoiding of it but by Writ of Error But Hale held that in regard it appeared by the Record to be void it might be quashed as if upon an Ejectment to recover Possession upon such a return it appears upon the Evidence that there was more than the half the Land delivered this shall be avoided So if a Fieri facias be not warranted by the Judgment upon which it is awarded tho' the Sheriff shall be
own Wrong as to enforce the Lessee to pay any thing for the residue Otherwise of a Rightful Entry into part as in the Case at Bar. 'T is true in Ascough's Case in the 9 Co. 't is said a Rent cannot be suspended in part and in esse for part And so in the 4 Co. Rawlin's Case it is held That the whole Rent is suspended where part is Redemised to the Lessor But the Court observed that the Resolution of that Point was not necessary to the Judgment given in that Case which was upon the Extinguishment of the Condition which is entire and not to be apportioned But as to the Rent no Book was found to warrant such an Opinion but Brook tit Extinguishment 48. where 't is said If there be Lord and Tenant by three Acres and the Tenant lets one to the Lord for years the whole Rent is suspended This Case is not found in the Book at large An in 7 Ed. 3. 56 57. where a Formedon was brought of a Rent-Service issuing out of three Acres and as to one Acre it was pleaded that the Demandant himself was Sole seised and concluded Judgment of the Writ But it was Ruled to be a Plea to the Action for so much and to the rest the Tenant must answer which is a full Authority that in such case the Rent is to be apportioned And the Case of Dorrell and Andrews Rolls tit Extinguishment 938. is full in the Point That where Lessee for years let ts at Will which Lessee Licenses the Lessor to enter that the Entry of the Lessor thereupon shall not suspend his Rent For Hale said Tho' it might be Objected that in regard the Lessee at Will cannot lett the Entry of the Lessor thereupon might be a Disseisin but that is ever at the Election of the Lessor And if that were now the Question perhaps the Lessor cannot take such an Entry for a Desseisin It is the Common Experience that where it comes to be tryed upon Nil debet if it be shewn that the Lessor entred into part to Answer this by proving it was the Lease of the Lessee and if the Law should not go upon this difference it would shake abundance of Rents it being a frequent thing for a Lessor to Hire a Room or other part of the thing demised for his Conveniency Hale said That a Case of a Lease for years was stronger than a Lease for Life where the remedy is by Assize and the Tenants of the Land out of which the Rent issues are to be named And for a Condition that must be extinct where part of the thing Demised comes to the Lessor because 't is annexed to such a Rent in quantity For if the Rent be diminished the Condition must fail Holland versus Ellis IN Trespass Quare clausum fregit herbas conculc ' diversas carectat ' tritici ibid ' asportavit After Verdict it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that the Declaration did not mention whose the Loads of Wheat were for it was not ibid. crescent ' Adjornatur Resolved per Cur ' That an Inquisition before the Coroner taken super visum corporis that finds that the Person was Felo de se non compos mentis may be traversed But the fugam fecit in an Inquisition before the Coroner cannot be traversed Termino Sancti Hillarij Anno 27 28 Car. II. In Banco Regis The Earl of Leicesters Case IN an Ejectment upon a Special Verdict the Case was to this effect Robert Earl of Leicester in the .. of Eliz. levied a Fine of the Lands in question to the use of the Earl of Pembrook and his Heirs for payment of his Debts reserving a Power to himself to Revoke by any Writing Indented or by his last Will subscribed with his Hand and sealed with his Seal And sometime after he Covenants by a Writing Sealed and Subscribed as aforesaid to Levy a Fine to other uses and after the Covenant a Fine was levied accordingly And whether this should be taken as a Revocation and so an execution of the Power and the extinguishment of it was the Question It was Argued by Jones Attorney General that this should not be taken as a Revocation In Powers of Revocation there is to be considered the Substance and the Circumstance and that which Revokes must be defective in neither The Deed alone in this Case cannot revoke for tho' it has the Circumstance limited viz. Indenting Writing Sealing Subscribing yet it wants Substance for it doth nothing in praesenti but refers to a future Act viz. the Fine If a man has made his Will a Covenant after that he will levy a Fine or a Charter of Feoffment made will not be a Revocation of the Will 1 Roll. 615. yet there appeared an intention to Revoke and less matter will Revoke a Will than a Deed. Again the Fine alone cannot Revoke because it is defective in the Circumstances contained in the Power but then to consider them both together how can it be conceived that the Fine should communicate Substance to the Deed or the Deed give Circumstances to the Fine But 't is Objected That they make but one Conveyance I Answer If so then the words of the Power here are to Revoke by Deed and not by Deed and Fine Again This Construction is repugnant to the words of the Power which are That it shall be lawful for him to Revoke by his Deed And yet it is agreed here that the Deed of it self is not sufficient to revoke but only in respect of another Act done which as it must be observed is executed at another time The Books agree that a Condition or Power c. may be annexed to an Estate by a distinct Deed from that which conveys the Estate but not unless both are Sealed and Delivered at the same time and so they are but as one Deed But in the present Case the Deed was made in one year and the Fine levied in another Suppose the Power to be with such Circumstances as in our Case and a Deed is made which contains some of them at one time and another Deed comprehending the rest of another time Should both these make a Revocation is one Deed Surely not Again Suppose the Fine had been Levied first and then afterwards such Deed had declared the Uses surely the Power had been extinguished by the Fine tho' there the Fine and Deed might be taken as one Conveyance as well as here Again the different natures of these Instruments makes that they cannot be taken as one entire Act within the Power for the Covenant is the Act of the party and the Fine the Act or Iudgment of the Court. But it has been Objected That this ought to have a favourable Construction I Answer But not so as to dispence with that Form the Execution of the Power is limited to be done by In the 6 Co. 33. Powers that are to divest an Estate out of another person are
in an Inferiour Court for want of infra Jurisdictionem Curiae 2 For variance between the Count and Plaint 6 But it lies not for some Omissions 5 A Writ of Error is a Supersedeas to an Execution 30. Yet the Judgment remains a Record 34 Exception 353 355 A Writ of Error returnable ad proximum Parliamentum not good Secus if to the day of Prorogation 31 266 No Writ of Error lies upon a Conviction before a Justice of Peace 33 In a Writ of Error if the Defendant dies the Writ is not abated Secus if the Plaintiff dies 34 Lies not to reverse a Judgment in a Qui tam nor upon the Statute de Scandalis Magnatis 49 What Records to be returned upon a Writ of Error 96 97 Where it lies upon a Judgment in a Scire facias and where not 168 Error in fact not assignable in the Exchequer Chamber 207 A Writ of Error that bears Teste before the Judgment good to remove the Record if Judgment be given before the Return 255 Escape See Baron and Feme VVhere a Prisoner Escapes by permission of the Sheriff he may be taken again by the Party Plaintiff 4 Debt against the Sheriff for a Voluntary Escape the Sheriff pleads that he took him again upon fresh Suit Good 211 217 Against the VVarden of the Fleet 269 The Lessor of the Custody of a Prison answerable for an Escape where his Lessee is insufficient 314 Escrow See Pleading Evidence See Statutes The party suffering admitted to give Evidence for the King to detect a Fraud 49 Exception See Feoffment Excommunication In Excommunication ipso facto no necessity of any Sentence of Excommunication 146 Excommunication pleaded to an Action per Literas testamentarias Good 222 How discharged where the Capias is not inroled according to the Statute 338 Execution Upon an Elegit the Sheriff ought to deliver Possession by Metes and Bounds or otherwise it may be quasht 259 Executor See Abatement Costs Return Of Infant Executors where to Sue by Guardian 40 54. VVhere by Attorney 40 102 103 If a Man names himself in an Action Executor or Administrator and it appears the Cause of Action was in his own right it shall be well enough and the calling himself Executor is but surplusage 119 VVhere the Executors promise in relation to the Testators Debt shall make the Debt his own 120 268 VVhere Interest is due for a Debt partly in the Testators life time and partly since and one Action brought and Judgment given for the whole this is manifestly Erroneous 199 VVhere chargeable in the Debet detinet and where in the detinet only 271 321 355 Cannot assume the Executorship for part and refuse for part 271 Debt doth not lie against the Executor of an Executor upon a Surmise of a Devastavit of the first Executor 292 Of the Executors renouncing 303 cannot refuse after Oath 335 Of Executor de son tort 349 VVhat Acts an Executor may do before Probat 370 Exposition of Words Obstrupabat 4 Or 62 148 Pair of Curtains and Vallence 71 106 Ad sequendum 74 Vt 73 74 Aliter vel alio modo 92 Mutuasset and mutuatus esset 109 Aromatarij 142 Centena 211 Issue 229 Land 260 Crates 304 Gubernatio Regimen 324 Exilium 326 Vestura terrae 393 Extinguishment Where two Closes are in the same Possession the Duty of Fencing is Extinguished and shall not Revive thô the Closes come after into several hands 97 F. False Latine DE sex bovibus instead of bobus no sufficient Cause to Arrest Judgment 17 Feoffment A Man makes a Feoffment of a Mannor excepting two Closes for the Life of the Feoffor only The two Closes descend to the Heir 106 Fine The Delivery of a Declaration in Ejectment upon the Lands is no Entry or Claim to avoid a Fine 42. So where an Action is brought and discontinued 45 A Fine cannot bar any Interest which was divested at the time of the Fine 56 Whether a Fine and Non-Claim bars the Interest of a Lessee in Trust 80 No Bar to a Mortgage 82 A Parish may contain many Vills and if a Fine may be levied of Lands in the Parish it carries whatsoever is in any of those Vills 170 Lessee for years makes a Feoffment and levies a Fine the Lessor shall have five years to Claim after the Term expired 241 Forcible Entry In an Indictment of Forcible Entry it must appear that the place was the Freehold of the party at the time of the Entry with force because upon the finding a Restitution is to be awarded 23 Foreign Attachment See London Of Foreign Attachments by Custom how to be pleaded 236 G. Gaming See Statutes Guardian See Baron and Feme Executor Grant See Hundred GRant without Consideration hinders not the arising of a Contingent use 189 In Prescriptions or Usage time beyond Memory the Law presumes a Grant at first and the Grant lost 387. And therefore nothing can be prescribed for that cannot at this day be raised by Grant ibid. Of the Kings Grant 408 409 A Grant to a Town to be a County and no Grant of having a Sheriff void 407 H. Habeas Corpus See Statutes THo' the Return be Filed yet the Court may remand the Prisoner to the same Prison and not to the Marshalsey 330 346 Whether it lies to remove a Prisoner in Ireland 357 Half Blood The Sister of the Half Blood shall come in for distribution upon the Stat. 22 23 Car. 2. chap. 10. 316 317 323 Half Blood no Impediment to Administration 424 Harriot Where a Lease is made to commence on the Determination of another if the new Lessee dyes before his Term Commences whether a Harriot shall be due 91 Heir An implied Estate of Land shall not pass in a Will for an Heir shall not be defeated but upon a necessary Implication 323 376 A Man cannot by Conveyance at Common Law by Limitation of Uses or Devise make his right Heir a Purchaser 372 379 Yet Heirs of the Body of his second Wife having a Son by the first is a good name of Purchase 381 Hospital Mastership of a Hospital not grantable in Reversion 151 Hundred A Hundred what it is and the Bayliff of a Hundred 403 The Grant of a Hundred good notwithstanding the Statutes 2 E. 3. 12. 14 E. 3. 9. 410 412. I. Imprisonment Where an Offence is Fineable if the Fine be tenderd there ought to be no Imprisonment 116 Indictment Where a Statute makes an Offence at Common Law more penal yet the Conclusion of the Indictment is not contra formam Statuti 13 A Man cannot be Indicted for saying of a Justice of Peace he understands not the Statutes of Excise but may be bound to Good Behoviour 10 16 Indictment of Forgery upon the Stat. 5 El. 4. where good and where not 23 24 Strictness of words not required in in an Order of Sessions thô it ought in an Indictment 37 For Manslaughter not quasht upon Motion 110.
there be several Extents upon Statutes acknowleged at different times that they are all present Rights because the Liberate delivers the Land to the Conisee to hold immediately ut liberum tenementum and therefore if a Fine be levied he that hath the Extent upon the puisne Statute must claim immediately as well as he that hath the first Extent whereas the Extent upon a latter Statute until there comes an Extent upon an elder Statute is either turned to a Reversion as I Argued before or in the nature of a future Interest And therefore till the first Extent be barred or some way determined he that hath the Extent upon the puisne Statute can have no present Right and consequently is not bound to claim but his Right is preserved by virtue of the second saving of the Statute of 4 H. 7. But it appears by the Verdict that above ten years passed after the Fine of Thomas Lewis without any claim by Edward Lewis so that I conceive he was barred as to both Extents So that which I have taken notice of to have already passed in the Case is enough to bar the two Extents of Knight and Gerrard and to let in the Right of the Extent of Elwaies and Burroughs so that I think they might have entred or made their claim without any thing more But it is found further in the Case that in the year 1670. Sir John Lewis devised the Premisses by his Will in writing to Edward Lewis and the Heirs of his Body and for want of such Issue to his two Daughters who are married to the Earls the Lessors of the Plaintiff and died in August 1671. and 't is found that at the time of the Will and also of the Death of the said Sir John Lewis the Lands were in the possession of Edward Lewis and in Michaelmass Term 1671. Edward Lewis levied a Fine of the Lands in question to Francis Lewis to the use of Edward the Conusor and his Heirs Now if we should admit that the Extents of Knights and Gerrard's Statute were not barred by the Fine of Thomas Lewis let us see what will become of them upon these things done since And here I will agree with those that have Argued for the Defendant that the Devise of the Inheritance to Edward will not drown the Extent upon Gerrard's Statute For as I have Argued before I take the Extent of Elwaies and Burrough's Statute after the eviction by the elder Statute to be turned to a Reversional Interest and then the interposing of the Reversion will hinder the drowning of Gerrard's Extent in the Fee devised to Edward Lewis as aforesaid Now therefore let us see what is found to have been done further in the Case and I conceive if we should grant as the Counsel for the Defendant have urged That the Fine by Thomas Lewis had no effect as to the barring of Gerrard's Extent nor that the Devise of the Inheritance of the Premisses to Edward Lewis will not drown the Extent as I agree it did not by reason of the Extent interposing that was in Elwaies and Burrough's Case being as I have Argued a Reversional Interest I say admitting all this yet when Edward Lewis who had the Extended Interests upon Knights and Gerard's Statute in him and the Estate of Inheritance also in Michalmass Term 1671. Levied the Fine to Francis Lewis to the use of himself and his Heirs that Fine must destroy and determine the Extended Interests that were in him For where a Fine is levied by him that hath the Fee and Freehold in him whatever Right Estate or Interest there is in him besides passeth inclusively in the Fine not by way of transferring the very Interest it self but as it were consolidating with the Fee So as to determine and extinguish such Interest none can pretend that after this Fine of Edward Lewis the Extended Interest did continue in him They could not pass to Francis Lewis as assigned or transferred by the Fine why then they must be destroyed And I think it cannot be denied but that Elwaies and Burroughs might have entred immediately the two former Extents being taken out of the way And 't is found that at the time of the Fine Edward Lewis was in possession so that Five years passing without Claim after the Fine for 't is found that Satisfaction was not acknowledged till Nine years after 't is plain that the Extent upon Burroughs and Elwaies Statute was barred as to the present Right For I think its clear that when a former Statute is determined whether it be by release of the Debt by purchase of part of the Lands by being barred by Non-claim upon the Fine Satisfaction acknowledged or any other means this sets in the puisne Statute And now we are come to the great Question in the Case Admitting the Extent upon Elwaies Statute was barred in respect of the present Right Whether a new Rightcame upon the satisfaction acknowledged upon Gerrard's Sta-tute so that there should be Five years more given by the second saving of the Statute of the 4 H. 7. to claim upon that new Right It has been much urged by those that Argued for the Defendant that wherever there is a Reversion or an Estate to commence after the end of another Estate that if a Fine be levied tho' the Case be so that he in Reversion may enter or bring his Action so that Five years Non-claim will bar him as to the present Right or Remedy yet he shall have Five years more to claim when the Time is incurred or the Limitation come That the first or particular Estate should end Now though the Extents upon the two first Statutes were so avoided that there might have been an entry upon Elwaies Extent yet the proper and natural determination of Gerrard's Extent was not till satisfaction acknowledged upon Record or by perception of Profits appearing upon Record and then there shall be Five years given to claim and that by virtue of the second saving of the Statute of the 4 H. 7. which is to this purpose Viz. Saving to all persons such Right as first shall grow remain descend or come to them after the Fine levied by reason of any matter before the Fine levied so that they take their Action or pursue their Right within Five years next after such Right shall come Now I do not see that the Condition of this saving was performed by those that had the Right of Elwaies and Burroughs Extent the Right indeed came after the Fine levied and upon a matter before for it came after that the Extents upon Knights and Gerrards Statutes were barred or otherwise avoided Whether upon the Non claim by the first Fine or their being destroyed by the second Fine which was levied by Edward Lewis but there was no claim within Five years after either of those Fines so the Right clearly was not pursued within Five years after the Right first came And this has been held necessary
to be done where there has been only a right of Action as in Sawle and Clerke's Case in Jones 211. and Cro. Car. where the Case as to this Point is to this effect A Remainder upon an Estate Tail was divested by the Fine of Tenant in Tail who had made an Estate for Life warranted by the Statute and died without Issue He in the Remainder was barred from bringing a Formedon in the life of the Tenant for Life within Five years after the Fine and had not a new Five years after the death of Tenant for Life tho' he could not Enter in the life of the Tenant for Life And the Reason given in Crook's Reports is because he had no other Right after the Death of the Tenant for Life than he had before and this plainly distinguisheth that and the Case at the Bar from the Cases that have been cited of June and Smye's Case in the 1 Cro. 219. and Laund and Tucker 254. for there the Fine was Levied by the particular Tenant which was a Forfeiture which he in Reversion might choose whether he would take advantage of and as the case might be it would be to his prejudice to take advantage of it where the particular Tenant has charged the Land and therefore if he would he should have Five years after the Estate determined to claim as of his Reversion which is another distinct Right from that of the Forfeiture And this was the standing difference that made the distinction where there should be a new Five years given to him in Reversion after the particular Estate determined and where not as we see in Margaret Podgers Case in the 9 Co. 106. If the Tenant for years were ousted and a Fine levied by the Disseisor he in the Reversion was bound by the first Five years Non-claim because tho' he could not enter as if the Estate for years had been determined or as in the Cases before of the Forfeiture yet he might have immediately brought an Assize with which Sawl and Clarke's Case exactly agrees and goes upon the same Reason As for Freeman's Case the Resolution goes wholly upon the Circumstances of Fraud appearing in the Case the principal of which was That the Lessee continued in possession and paid the Rent I confess they have gone a little further of late and now it is taken That he in Reversion shall have Five years after the Term is ended by effluction of Time tho' there were no Forfeiture incurred at the Levying of the Fine Nor no such plain Circumstances of Fraud as appears in Fermer's Case and the Case put before and cited out of Margaret Podgers Case is not held to be Law The contrary whereof is taken to have been Resolved in Folley and Tancred's Case in the 24 Car. 2. and I do not intend to shake the Authority of that Case but admit it to be good in Law yet I crave leave to observe That it is a Resolution carried beyond the words of the Statute for the Right is not pursued within Five years next after it first came For it is agreed in Fermer's Case fo 79. that there the Construction was against the Letter of the Statute and I must say it is a Construction by Equity which is a little extraordinary to weaken the force of a Statute which was made for the quieting of mens Possessions and to add force to Fines which were of so great regard in Law and especially to make a Construction by Equity contrary to the Reason of the Common Law which took no care of a future Right at all for he in the Reversion in case of a Fine Levied at the Common Law depended wholly upon the Entry or Claim of the particular Tenant and in default of that lost his Estate as in the 1 Inst 262. b. and in Plowden's Commentaries in Stowell's Case I say again I do not design by this to oppose any Case that hath been setled But I confess I should not have gone so far if I had not been led by Authority and am not willing to go a step further And now I shall endeavor to shew that this Case goes a great deal further and would be a greater strain upon the Statute than yet has been And First I Observe that upon all or most of the Cases of a Fine where there has been an Estate for Life or Years in being at the time of the Fine that the Possession has held still in the particular Tenant so that he in Reversion had no reason to suspect any Fine or other thing done upon the Estate there being no alteration of the Possession And this agrees somewhat with the Reason of the Common Law in case of a Fine Executory he that had Right was not bound to claim till there were an Execution of the Fine and Transmutation of the Possession thereupon as in Plowden's Commentaries 257. b. in Stowell's Case But here it is found that the Conusor and not the Conusees or the Tenants by Extent or either of them were in possession so that the Land being in the possession of a Wrong-doer they which had Right ought to have watched and might well suspect that Fines should be Levied to the prejudice of their respective Rights It is said in Fermer's Case If a meer Wrong-doer having got the Possession levieth a Fine on purpose to bind the Right this shall bind notwithstanding his unjust Design But the Differences that I chiefly rely upon to distinguish the Case before us from the Cases of Reversions upon Estates for Life and Years or the like particular Estates are these 1. That in those Estates there is either by an express Limitation of the Parties or an operation of Law a certain and particular Term or End of the Estate which until it happens it has not its proper determination which an Estate by Extent has not I know it is has been much insisted on that the natural and proper determination of an Extent is satisfaction by a perception of Profits according to the extended Value whereas I cannot see but a release of the Debt or satisfaction by a sudden Accident is as properly a determination of the Extent as if it were run out by perception of Profits according to the extended Value For when the first Extent is out of the way the second is immediately to take place or why this acknowledging Satisfactoin on Record should be the natural and proper determination of the Extent more than a Release of the Debt by the Conusee or destroying of it by a Fine which is an higher Record than the Statute or the Entry of Satisfaction acknowledged thereupon 2. To let him that has the Reversion upon an Estate by Extent have Five years to claim after the first Extent run out by perception of Profits or Satisfaction acknowledged is to let in a Claim after an Estate that no man can see to the end of For when it shall be satisfied by the Profits no man can tell and can
the Defendant shew Cause why he should not accept of a Declaration upon payment of Costs Termino Paschae Anno 22 Car. II. In Banco Regis Anonymus IF there be several Contracts between A. and B. at several times for several sums Prohibition each sum under 40 s and they do all amount to a sum sufficient to Entitle the Superiour Court they shall be there put in Suit and not in a Court which is not of Record And so it was resolved in the Case of the Savoy Court and Stanford 24. C. 2. Also it was said That if a Man at divers times Steals things all which amount to above 12d 't is Felony Capital In an Account after a Quod computet the Court Assigns Auditors and they sit upon and return the Account when they will for day is not given them and they give the Parties in the interim what time they please but if the Defendant delays they return it to the Court and Process goes out against him Nota Memorandum On Tuesday April the 26th Steven Mosdel to whom Mr. Lenthal had granted the Office of Marshal of the Kings-Bench for life was sworn Marshal The Oath was this Viz. You shall swear that during the time of your being Marshal you shall well and truly use exercise and behave your self in the said Office you shall encrease no Fees and in all things shall do your Duty in the said Office c. It was resolved That the said Stephen Mosdel could not afterwards practise as an Attorney of this Court and that Mr. Lenthall Marshall in Reversion had no Priviledge Anonymus A Promise was made to give 1000 l to one for curing of his Eyes and an Assumpsit is brought Vpon this the Jury may give less than 1000 l Damages if they think fit Sir W. Mewes versus Mewes A Title of Land was tryed out of the proper County upon a feigned Wager Whether well conveyed or no this is the Course of Issues directed out of Chancery Note In this Case a Bill in Chancery was given in Evidence against the Complainant though held to be but of slight moment Smiths Case SMith and other Commissioners of Sewers which sate at White-Chappel were brought in upon an Attachment awarded against them for a Contempt of this Court. And the Case was thus A Certiorari was lately sent and delivered to them out of this Court upon Special direction and recommendation by the King and Council before whom the Business had been agitated to remove hither Certain Orders and Proceedings of theirs in order to a Tryal of the Right of the Matter in Question At first they did not allow the Certiorari but afterwards having allowed it they proceeded de novo upon the same Matter and made an Order again which certain persons being the same persons who procured the Certiorari refusing to obey the Commissioners fined them 10 l apiece Then a second Certiorari was taken out and delivered to them after which they imprisoned persons for not executing and obeying of a Warrant made upon their second Order and for speaking Contemptuous words of the Commissioners and fined them 5 l apiece Being now questioned by the Court concerning these Contempts and Misdemeanours They said they did this wholly by the advice of their Counsel Mr. Ofley who being in Court received a severe Reprimand therefore and the Commissioners were committed to Prison About the Fortnight afterwards having made and Filed their Return they were brought into Court to receive the Sentence of the Court. And then it was said by them and Coleman their Counsel that they would not urge any thing in justification of their not returning their Proceedings they only offered that what they did was by the advice of their Counsel and that the Clause in 13 Eliz. cap. 9. was so penned as to give a great occasion of doubt in this particular which Clause upon their desire was read And is this And be it further Enacted c. That from henceforth the said Commissioners of Sewers nor any of them shall not be compelled or compellable to make any Certificate or Return of the said Commissioners or any of them or of any of the Ordinances Laws or doings by the Authority of any of the said Commissions nor shall not have any Fine Pain or Amerciament set upon them or any of them or any ways to be molested in Body Lands or Goods for that Cause and after the reading thereof the Court delivered themselves seriatim as followeth Moreton This is a great Offence and Contempt The Commissioners of Sewers and their Proceedings are subject to the Jurisdiction of this Court Sir Henry Mildmayes Case 2 Cro. 336. and Sir H. Hungates in our Memory If Commissioners of Sewers or any other inferiour Jurisdiction excéed their Commission we may reform and restrain them and it nay we prohibit them in Cases where They have no Jurisdiction of the matter Many presidents are with us in the present Case And we cannot answer our Duty to the King without taking notice of and punishing this Offence Therefore my Opinion is That for their not obeying of the first Writ they be fined 40 Marks apiece and for their not obeying of the second Writ 20 Marks apiece Rainsford This is indisputably an Offence and Contempt and the greater for that it was seconded It is aggravated too in that the Commissioners proceeded after they had allowed the Certiorari and that they fell upon and shewed their Indignation against those persons who only pursued the Kings Authority and that this was in a Case which was recommended by the King and Council to which Recommendation the Commissioners were Privy they had contrary advice from other Counsel then there but they would hearken to that advice which pleased them best Obedience is that Ligament of the Government without which all will be turned into Anarchy and Confusion Without betraying the Trust reposed in us by the King and violating of our Oaths we cannot omit to punish this therefore I agree the Fines The Reason of the Fines is the disobeying of the Writs the Reason of their disproportion is to resemble the Measures the Commissioners observed towards those persons whom they unduly fined Twisden It was resolved in 23 Car. That this Statute hath no reference to this Court and that this Clause extends only to Certificates and Returns into Chancery the Statute speaks of Supersedeas c. which issue out of the Court of Chancery only for this Court does not nor ever did send out Supersedeas's but this Court sends out Certiorari's which are to bring the business before the King here and the words of them are quia coram nobis terminari volumus non alibi What should move that Gentleman to give such advice as he did I cannot imagin I suppose there is more in the matter than we know and 't is a strange thing that these Commissioners should ask Counsel whether they should obey the Kings Writ or no Especially when it
be good Now this being the way of Operation there is no reason why he may not Devise it to one after the death of two as well as after the death of one This would be so in Grants were it not that a certainty is required in them 1 Cro. 155. which is not required in Devises Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 22 Car. II. In Banco Regis Freeman versus Barnes EError to Reverse a Judgment in an Ejectione firmae in the Common Pleas the Case upon a Special Verdict was thus The Marquess of Winchester being seised in Fee of the Lands in Question the 8 of July 9 Jac. Lets them to Sir An. Maynee for 100 years in Trust for the Marquess and his Heirs and to wait upon the Inheritance The Lessee enters afterwards the Marquess enters and Lets it to the Lord Darcy for 7 years and then Le ts to the Spanish Embassador for 7 years which Leases being expired Sir A.M. Demises to Freeman for a Term yet unexpired this Demise is not found to be upon the Land Afterwards the Lord Marquess Demises to Germin for 54 years upon Consideration of Money and Reserves a Rent and Covenants to Levy a Fine for the assurance of the Term which was afterwards done with Proclamation Germin enters and five years passed without any Claim made which Lease by mean Assignment came to Wicherly the Lessor of the Defendant who was Plaintiff in the Common Pleas and there had Iudgment The only Question upon this Special Verdict was Whether the Fine and Non Claim should barr the interest of Sir A. M. the Lessee in Trust This Case having béen argued thrée several times at the Bar The Court did this Term deliver their Opinons and did all agrée that the Iudgment ought to be affirmed It was considered quid operatur by the entry of the Marquess and they all except Moreton held that Prima facie he was Tenant at Will as Littleton Sect. 463. is where the Feoffor enters upon the Feoffée to his use but that the Entry of Germin his Lessée did ouft Freeman the Assignee of Sir A.M. which Assignment though not found to be upon the Land 2 Cro. 660. was good as the Chief Justice held because the two former Leases made by the Marquess were expired so he became Tenant at Will again but them he making of another Lease and the Lessee entring this must work an ouster and so the Fine would bar the Right For they agreed that a Fine regularly shall not work upon an Interest which is not divested though in some Cases it doth as upon the Interest of a Term according to Safins Case 5 Co. which yet cannot be divested but though the first Entry make but a Tenancy at Will yet taking upon him to make Leases that is enough to declare his intent to dispossess his Lessee in Trust Besides he reserves a Rent and Covenants for quiet Enjoyment and to make further assurance which could not stand with the Interest of the Lessee in Trust And for the Cases that were objected as Blunden and Baughs 1 Cro. 220. Where it is adjudged That the Entry of the Lessée for years of Tenant at Will should be no disseisin nolens volens to him that had the Freehold for there was no intention of the Parties to make it so and here the Law shall rather give the Election to him which had the Inheritance to make it a devësting than the Lessee or rather as the Chief Justice said the Law construes such Acts to amount to a divesting or not divesting as is most agreeable to the intention of the Parties and the right of the thing which distinguishes it also from the Case of Powsley and Blackman cited in Blunden and Baughs Case where the Mortgageor held at the Will of the Motrgageē and let for years the Lessee entred and held notwithstanding that the Mortgagee might Devest So Sir Tho. Fishes Case in Latches Rep. Where Tenant for years Le ts at Will and the Lessée makes a Lease for years and then the remainder is granted over This Grant is held to be good which whether by the remainder there be understood the interest of the Lessee or the Fee-simple yet it is no more than my Lord Nottinghams Case and not like the Case in Question For there the Lessee held the interest in his own Right and here but in Trust and for the Case in Noyes Reports 23. Twisden said he wholly rejected that Authority for it was but an Abridgment of Cases by Serjeant Size who when he was a Student borrowed Noyes Reports and abridged them for his own use The Case was this Tenant in Fée makes a Lease for years then Levies a Fine before Entry of the Lessee It is held there though five years pass the Lessée is not barred which is directly against the Resolution of Saffins Case and for Authority in this Case they relied upon the Case of Isham and Morris in 1 Cro. 781. Where upon Evidence it was resolved by the Justices That if the cesty quo Trust of a Lease for years Purchaseth the Inheritance and Occupies the Land and Levies a Fine that this after five years shall bar the Term which is not so strong as this Case because there were no Leases made and Entry thereupon and the Trust must pass inclusively by the Fine as is resolved in divers Books especially in this Case where it is to wait upon the Inheritance which though it arises but out of a Term yet it shall follow the Land and go to the Heir And for the inconveniences which were objected That if any Man purchased Land by Fine that he could not keep on Foot Mortgages and Leases which it is often convenient to do The Chief Justice declared his Opinion That in that Case the Fine should not bar there not being any intention of the Parties to that purpose And as to the other that where the Mortgageor continuing in Possession Levies a Fine this should bar the Mortgagee he denied that also and grounded himself upon Fermours Case in 3 Cro. And Twisden agreed Dighton's Case HE brought a Mandamus to be restored to his place of Town Clerk of Stratford super Avon The Corporation returned Letters Patents whereby they were empowered to chuse one into the Office of Town Clerk Durante bene placito and that they removed him from his Office Jones prayed that he might be restored notwithstanding because no Cause of his removal was returned nor that they had ever Summoned him whereas if they had he might peradventure have shewed such Reasons as would have moved them to have continued him and he cited Warrens Case 2 Cro. 540. who was restored to his Aldermanship where the Return was as here But the Court held that they could not in this Case although they confessed they knew the Merits of the Person help him And the Chief Justice said The Case of the Alderman differed for he is a part of the Corporation which
distress upon a Copyholder for a reasonable Fine the value of the Land must be set forth and the certainty of the Fine that the Court may judge of it Austin and Gervases Case Hob. 69 77. In Consideration that he should give him Bond for 10 l the Defendant promised c. and pleads that he offered him Bond for the said sum c. and upon Issue Non Assumpsit it was found for the Plaintiff But he could not have Iudgment because the sum wherein he offered to become bound was not exprest so that it might appear to the Court to be sufficient Jones contra This differs from the Case in Hob. for there the sum being certain for which the Bond was to be given the Court may well judge what Penalty will secure it But it is not so in this Case for it doth not appear to what value the damnification may be so there is nothing as in the other Case whereunto to Proportion the Penalty of the Bond. The Court held that it would not have been good upon a Demurrer but being after a Verdict and the Statute of Jeofails made at Oxford which Twisden stiled an omnipotent Act they gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff Lord Birons Case THe Lord Biron was Plaintiff in an Action and upon a Non-Suit five pounds Costs were taxed against him and he brought another Action for the same matter which was said to be meerly for vexation and that he refused to pay the Costs neither could he be compelled being a Peer and in Parliament time Wherefore the Court gave day to shew Cause why this Action should not stay until he had paid the Costs in the former Anonymus IF a Writ of Error be brought in the Exchequer Chamber and that being discontinued another is brought in Parliament this second Writ is a Supersedeas But if a Writ of Error be brought in Parliament and that abates and the Plaintiff brings a second this is no Supersedeas because it is in the same Court Prior versus Shears IN a Writ of Error to Reverse a Judgment given in the Palace Court in an Assumpsit where the Plaintiff declared sur indebitatus pro Naulo and upon Non Assumpsit c. had Judgment It was assigned for Error That it was not ascertained how the Defendant was indebted and that Fraight was usually contracted for by Charter party and if so the general Indebitatus would not lie for a Debt by Specialty Notwithstanding the Judgment was affirmed for for ought appears there was not any Deed in the Case and it shall not be intended and it is no more than the Common Action pro mercimoniis habitis venditis Note It was further objected That this appears to be for Marriners Wages for Sailing to some Foreign parts which must needs be out of the Jurisdiction of the Marshalsea and though the Argréement were made within it yet the thing being to be done elsewhere they could not hold Plea As if a Carrier should agree within the Limits of the Court to carry Goods from thence to York no Action could be brought there upon it which was agréed But the Court said here It doth not appear they were to Sail to any place out of the Jurisdiction and they have laid all the Matter to be infra Jurisdictionem Curiae And therefore the Judgment was Affirmed Hayman versus Trewant TRin. 22 Car. 2. Rot. 710. In an Action upon the Case for that the Defendant bargained with him such a day and year for the Corn growing upon such Ground affirming it to be his own whereas he knew it to be the Corn of J. S. and postea adtunc ibid. fraudulenter vendidit Warrant ' c. The Defendant pleads That the Plaintiff had another such Action depending for the same Cause and demands Iudgment of the Writ The Plaintiff Replies that that Action was commenced for another Cause and not for the same absque hoc that it was for the same Cause To which the Defendant Demurs specially because the Plaintiff having denied what the Defendant affirmed ought not to have added a Traverse but to have concluded to the Country As the Case of Harris and Phillips 3 Cro. 755. was Adjudged Where in an Audita Querela to avoid the Execution of a Recognizance the Plaintiff sets forth that it was defeazanced upon payment of divers Sums of Money at certain days and that he was at the place appointed and tendred the Money and that the Defendant was not there to receive it The Defendant pleaded Protestando that the Plaintiff was not there to pay it and that he was there ready to receive it absque hoc that the Plaintiff was ready to pay it Which being specially Demurred to the Court held the Plea naught and that there being an express Affirmative and Negative there should have been no Traverse for so they may traverse one upon another in infinitum Notwithstanding the Traverse was here held good which was allowed for putting the Matter more singly in Issue And it appears that Phillips's Case was Adjudged upon another matter For that the Plea in Bar was not entred as the Defendant's Plea but was entred thus Pro placito Bush a Stranger dicit Yelv. 38. Then it was moved That as the Plaintiff hath declared here it appears that the Warranty was subsequent to the Bargain For it is said that he bargained for the Corn knowing it to be the Corn of J.S. postea adtunc ibidem vendidit which is repugnant Sed non allocatur for where it is said first That he bargained that shall intended a Communication only and the Consummation of it after when the Warranty was given which is also said to be adtunc ibidem So alledged well enough Foxwith versus Tremaine TRin. 21 Car. 2. Rot. 1512. Five Executors bring an Action sur Indebitat ' Assumps The Defendant pleads in Abatement That two of them are under the Age of 17. and that they appeared by Attorney And to this the Plaintiffs Demur They who Argued for the Defendant made two Questions 1. Whether they ought all to joyn in the Action And it was said they ought not for one under Age cannot prove the Will And in Smyth and Smyth's Case Yelv. 130. it is Resolved they must be all Named so that their Interest may be reserved unto them but are not to be made parties to the Action And for this the Case between Hatton and Mascue which was Adjudged in the Exchequer Chamber was cited Where in a Scire facias it was set forth That A. being the Executor of B. made his Will thus I Devise all my Personal Estate to my two Daughters and my Wife whom I make my Executrix And that they had Declared in the Ecclesiastical Court that this made them all three Executrixes and that the Will was proved and that the Wife brought this Scire facias to have Execution of a Judgment obtained by A. the Testator And the Defendant Demurred because not
First A Sufficient Consideration Secondly A Deed as in Callard and Callard's Case in 3 Cro. and in Popham's Reports and hath been often Resoved since Thirdly A Seisin in the Covenantor of the Lands at the time of the Deed For a man cannot Covenant to stand seised to an Vse of Lands which he shall after purchase Fourthly A Clear and apparent Intent Fifthly Apt and proper Words And the two last things are wanting in our Case I agree the word Covenant is not necessary so there be other Words sufficient in Law and to declare the parties Intent for all Words will not serve A man Covenanted upon good Consideration that his Feoffees should stand seised It was Resolved that no Use should anise upon it 1 Cro. 856. So Sir Thomas Seymor's Case Where a Covenant was upon good Consideration to levy a Fine to certain Vses and no Fine was after levied It was Resolved that the Covenant did not raise any Vse Dyer 96. Therefore 't is usual to express in such Deeds of Covenant that if the Conveyances therein contained be not executed that then the party shall from henceforth stand seised And where it is said in Vivian's Case Dyer 302. One having given granted and released to his Brother and his Heirs certain Mannors and no Livery made that Plowden would have averred that the Deed was made pro Fraterno amore and so should raise an Use Vnder the Favour of the Court I deny that Opinion of Plowden to be Law And in Debb and Peplewell's Case it is said That the Land was enjoyed against the Release And in Moor pl. 267. One Covenanted in Consideration of Marriage to let his Land discend remain or come to his Daughter It was Resolved no Use did arise thereupon In this Conveyance there are not any Words that sound in Covenant the only word that looks towards an Use is the word Bargain and Sell. and in Ward and Lambert's Case in 3 Cro. 394. it is held That if one gives or bargains and sells Land to his Son it shall not amount to a Covenant to stand seised for want of apt words Now the other are all words of Common Law Give Crant Alien Enfeoff and Confirm There is also a clause of Special Warranty in the Deed and a Covenant to make further assurance by Fine Recovery c. as great a preparation at Common Law as could be And if the Parties intend the Land shall pass at the Common Law by Transmutation of Possession there shall no use arise Co. Lit. 49. Charter of Feoffment to the Son it shall raise no use if no Livery be made The word Dedi in this Deed imports a General Warranty which is not qualified by the Special Warranty after yet if the Land pass by way of use there can be only a Rebutter and so no use of the General Warranty The Authorities since have not béen concurrent with Debb and Poplewells Case but contrary to it And I rely upon the Cases of Pitfeild and Pierce and Forster and Forster in this Court which have been remembred on the other side but no answered And whereas it is said That the Habend is after the Death of them which conveyed the Land they are in that respect stronger than the Case at Bar for by that it appears they could not intend a Conveyance at the Common Law which doth not allow such kind of Limitations therefore it must be by way of use or no way Yet it was resolved they should not pass so It would introduce universal ignorance and carelesness in such as draw Conveyances if the Court should apply their Art to give them effect however they were penned and it is a Rule Politia legibus non leges Politiis adaptantur The Court after heaving the Case twice argued were all of Opinion That the Land should pass by way of Covenant to stand seized and Hale cited Hob. 277. who doth there commend the Judges who are curious and almost subtil to invent reasons and means to make Acts effectual according to the just intent of the parties They all held clearly That words proper for a Conveyance at Common Law would raise an Use as Demise and Grant have béen adjudged to amount to a Bargain and Sale without other words And they said Pitfields and Pierces Case was adjudged upon the absurd contrivance of the Conveyance and so Foster and Fosters Case in this Court and for that in that case the Deed was Articles of Agreement preparatory to what the party intended after and the case in Moor Pl. 267. where there was a Covenant in Consideration of Marriage to suffer the Land to remain descend or come to the Daughter no Use did arise there for the incertainty how it was intended the Daughter should take And they said That if they should not construe an Use to arise by such Conveyance as in the case at Bar it would overthrow all Conveyances by Lease and Release And for the Objection of the Warranty in the Deed it is well known there is so in most Conveyances to Uses Wherefore they gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff Note This Iudgment was afterwards affirmed upon Error brought in the Exchequer Chamber Anonymus AN Indictment was brought for using of a Trade to which he had not béen bound an Apprentice It was moved to quash it because it was not alledged that he did not use the Trade 5 Eliz. for if he did he is excepted out of the Statute But the Court did not much regard that exception Tho' they said it had béen often allowed but it cannot here be intended it being so long since the Statute was made Secondly It was for using the Trade Aromatarij without an Anglicè so it could not be known what Trade was meant and tho' that word is often used for a Grocer yet it must be so Englished or else it shall not be taken for that Trade more than another And for this Cause the Court quashed the Indictment Note If a Man be taken upon a Warrant de securitate pacis or any criminal cause he is not to be charged with Actions unless the Court gives leave which they will rarely do The Case of the Heirs of the Earl of Southampton KIng James by his Leters Petents Enrolled in this Court granted to the E. of Southampton all Deodands within the Mannor of Ditchfield An Inquisition was certified here that a Deodand was forfeited within the said Mannor and Process went out thereupon The Court were moved in behalf of the Daughters and Heirs of the Earl whether they should be driven to set forth their Title in pleading for if so the charges would far exceed the value of the Deodand and it would be very inconvenient that every new Heir should be forced to plead upon every Deodand that happens But the Court said in regard the Letters Patents are here Enrolled and that it appeared by the Inquisition that this Deodand was forfeited within the Mannor it should suffice without pleading
here to forbear to Sue generally but to stay a Suit against the Defendant whom he could not Sue To which it was answered That after a Verdict it shall be intended there was cause of Suit as Hob. 216. Bidwell and Cattons Case And Attorney brought an Assumpsit upon a Promise made to him in Consideration that he would stay the Prosecution of an Attachment of Priviledge and there held that it need not appear that there was cause of Suit for the Promise argues it and it will be presumed And here 't is a strong intendment that the Bond was made in Common Form which binds the Heirs But Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff for the Court said it might be intended that there was cause of Action if the contrary did not appear which it doth in this Case for the Bond cannot be intended otherwise than the Plaintiff himself hath expressed it which shews only that the Ancestor was bound And whereas it was said by the Plaintiff's Counsel that this would attaint the Jury they finding Assumpsit upon a void Promise Hale said there was no colour for that conceit The Plaintiff having proved his Promise and Consideration as 't was laid in the Declaration which is the only thing within their charge upon Non Assumpsit modo forma Bulmer versus Charles Pawlet Lord Saint John IN an Ejectment upon a Tryal at Bar this question arose upon the Evidence Tenant for Life Remainder in Tail to J. S. joyn in a Fine J.S. dies without Issue whether the Conusee should hold the Land for the Life of the Tenant for Life Serjeant Ellis pressed to have it found Specialy tho' it is resolved in Bredons Case that the Estate of the Conusee shall have Continuance but he said it was a strange Estate that should be both a Determinable Fee and an Estate pur auter vie and he cited 3 Cro. 285. Major and Talbots Case where in Covenant the Plaintiff sets forth that a Feme Tenant for Life Remainder in Fee to her Husband made a Lease to the Defendant for years wherein the Defendant covenanted with the Lessors their Heirs and Assigns to repair and they conveyed the Reversion to the Plaintiff and for default of Reparations the Plaintiff brought his Action as Assignee to the Husband And resolved to be well brought because the Wives Estate passed as drowned in the Fee The Court said Bredons Case was full in the point but the Reason there given Hale said made against the Resolution for 't is said that the Remainder in Tail passes first which if it does the Freehold must go by way of Surrender and so down but they shall rather be construed to pass insimul uno flatu Hob. 277 In Englishes Case it was resolved it Tenant for Life Remainder in Tail to an Infant joyn in a Fine if the Infant after Reverse the Fine yet the Conusee shall hold it for the Life of the Conusor 1 Co. in Bredons Case and he resembled it to the Case in 1 Inst a Man seized in the right of his Wife and entituled to be Tenant by the curtesie joyns in a Feoffment with his Wife the Heir of his Wife shall not avoid this during the Husbands Life Nevertheless he told Ellis That he would never deny a Special Verdict at the request of a Learned Man but it appearing that he Plaintiff had a good Title after the Life should fall the Defendant bought it of him and the Jury were discharged Sacheverel versus Frogate PAs 23 Car. 2. Rot. 590. In Covenant the Plaintiff declared That Jacinth Sacheverel seized in Fee demised to the Defendant certain Land for years reserving 120 l Rent And therein was a Covenant that the Defendant should yearly and every year during the said Term pay unto the Lessor his Executors Administrators and Assigns the said Rent and sets forth how that the Lessor devised the Reversion to the Plaintiff an for 120 l Rent since his decease he brought the Action The Defendant demanded Oyer of the Indenture wherein the Reservation of the Rent was yearly during the Term to the Lessor his Executors Administrators and Assigns and after a Covenant prout the Plaintiff declared and to this the Defendant demurred It was twice argued at the Bar and was now set down for the Resolution of the Court which Hale delivered with the Reasons He said they were all of Opinion for the Plaintiff For what interest a Man hath he hath it in a double capacity either as a Chattel and so transmissible to the Executors and Administrators or as an Inheritance and so in capacity of transmitting it to his Heir Then if Tenant in Fee makes a Lease and reserves the Rent to him and his Executors the Rent cannot go to them for there is no Testamentary Estate On the other side if Lessee for a 100 years should make a Lease for 40 years reserving Rent to him and his Heirs that would be void to the Heir Now a Reservation is but a Return of somewhat back in Retribution of what passes and therefore must be carried over to the Party which should have succeeded in the Estate if no Lease had béen made and that has béen always held where the Reservation is general So tho' it doth not properly create a Fee yet 't is a descendible Estate because it comes in lieu of what would have descended therefore Constructions of Reservations have been ever according to the Reason and Equity of the thing If two Joynt-teants make a Lease and reserve the Rent to one of them this is a good to both unless the Lease be by Indenture because of the Estoppel which is not in our Case for the Executors are Strangers to the Deed. 'T is true if A. and B. joyn in a Lease of Land wherein A. hath nothing reserving the Rent to A. by Indenture this is good by Estoppel to A. But in the Earl of Clare's Case it was resolved That where he and his Wife made a Lease reserving a Rent to himself and his Wife and his Heirs that he might bring Debt for the Rent and declare as of a Lease made by himself alone and the Reservation to himself for being in the Case of a Feme Covert there could be no Estoppel altho' she signed and sealed the Lease There was an Indenture of Demise from two Joynt tenants reserving 20 l Rent to them both one only sealed and delivered the Deed and he brought Debt for the Rent and declared of a Demise of the Moiety and a Reservation of 10 l Rent to him And resolved that he might Between Bond and Cartwright which see before and in the Common Pleas Pas 40. Eliz. Tenant in Tail made a Lease reserving a Rent to him and his Heirs It was resolved a good Lease to bind the Entail for the Rent shall go to the Heir in Tail along with the Reversion tho' the Reservation were to the Heirs generally For the Law uses all industry imaginable to conform
the Earl of Warwick and the Earl of Manchester or the major part of them And in case she Marries without such Consent or happen to dye without Issue then I give and bequeath it to George Porter viz. the Lessor of the Plaintiff The Earl of Newport dies and the Lady Anne Knolles being of the Age of 14 years marries with Fry without the Consent of her Grandmother or either of the Earls and it was found that she had no Notice of the Will until after the Marriage and that George Porter at that time was of the Age of 8 years and that after the Death of the Countess she Entred and George Porter Entred upon her and made the Lease to the Plaintiff This Case having been twice Argued at the Bar viz. in Michaelmas Term by Sir William Jones for the Plaintiff and Winnington for the Defendant And in Hillary Term last by Finch Attorney General for the Plaintiff and Sir Francis North Solicitor General for the Defendant It was this Term Resolved by the Court viz. Hale Twisden and Rainsford Moreton being absent for the Plaintiff upon these Reasons Rainsford Here have been three Questions made First Whether the words in the Will whereby the marriage of the Defendant is restrained make a Condition or Limitation If a Condition then none but the Heir can Enter for the Breach But 't is clear that they must be taken as a Limitation to support the intent of the Devisor and to let in the Remainder which he limits over 1 Rolls 411. Secondly Whether the Infancy of the Defendant shall excuse her in this Breach and clearly it cannot For a Condition in Deed obliges Infants as much as others 8 Co. 42. Whittingham's Case the difference between Conditions in Fact and Conditions in Law Especially in this Case the nature of the Condition shewing it to be therefore imposed upon her because she was an Infant Thirdly and the main Point of the Case Whether the want of Notice shall save the Forfeiture of the Estate As to that Let the Rules of Law concerning Notice be considered First I take a difference where the Devisee who is to perform the Condition is Heir at Law and where a Stranger The Heir must have Notice because he having a Title by Discent need not take notice of any Will unless it be signified to him And so is Fraunce's Case 8 Co. Where the Heir was Devisee for 60 years upon Condition not to disturb the Executor in removing the Goods and Resolved that he should not lose his Estate upon a Disturbance before he had Notice of the Will But where the Devisee is not Heir as in this Case he must inform himself of the Estate devised to him and upon what terms Another Rule is When one of the Parties is more privy than the other Notice must be given but where the Privity is equal Notice must be taken by the party concerned A Bargainee shall not Enter for a Condition broken before Notice for the Bargain and Sale lies in his Cognizance and not the Lessees So if a Lease be made to commence after the end of the former if the first be surrendred the Lessor shall not Enter for a Condition broken for Non payment of Rent until Notice given of the Surrender 3 Leon. 95. And therefore there shall be no Lapse to the Ordinary upon a Resignation without Notice If a man makes a Feoffment upon Condition to Enter upon payment of such a Sum at a place certain he must give Notice to the Feoffee when he will tender the Money Co. Lir. 211. a. Dyer 354. And upon this Reason is Molineux's Case 2 Cro. 144. where a Devise was that his Heir should pay such Rents and if he made default then his Executors should have the Lands paying the said Rents and if they failed of Payment then he devised the Land to his younger Children to whom the Rents were to be paid It was Resolved Non-payment by the Executors should be no Breach until they had Notice that the Heir had failed which was a thing that the younger Children must be privy to But in 22 E. 4. 27 28. Tenant for Life Lets for years and dies the Lessee must remove in convenient time to be reckoned from the death of the Tenant whether he had Notice of it or no For he in Reversion is presumed to be no more privy to it than himself So Gymlett and Sands's Case 3 Cro. 391. and 1 Rolls 856. where Baron and Feme were Tenants for Life Remainder to the Son in tail Remainder to the right Heirs of the Baron the Baron makes a Feoffment with Warranty and dies then the Feme and Son joyn in a Feoffment this is a Forfeiture of the Estate of F. tho' she had no Notice of the Feoffment or Warranty whereby the Right of the Son was bound So Spring and Caesar's Case 1 Rolls 469. A. and B. joyn in a Fine to the use of A. in Fee if B. doth not pay 10 l to A. before Michaelmas and if he doth then to the use of A. for Life Remainder to B. B. dies before Michaelmas the Heir of B. is bound to pay the 10 l without any Notice given by A. The Reason given which comes home to our Case is For that none is bound to give Notice and then it must be taken tho' indeed a second be added For that B. from whom his Heir derives had Notice The Mayor and Comminalty of London aganst Atford 1 Cro. where a Devise was to six Persons to pay certain Sums for the Maintenance of an Almshouse c. and if through Obliviousness or other Cause the Trusts were not performed then to J. S. upon the same Condition and if he failed by two Months then to the Mayor and Comminalty of London upon the same Trusts The six did not perform the Trusts J.S. enters J. N. enters upon him and a Fine with Proclamations was levied and Five years passed and the better Opinion was that the Mayor and Comminalty of London were bound to pay the Money appointed by the Will altho' they had no Notice that the six persons or J. S. had failed tho' indeed the Case is adjudged against them as being barred by the Fine and Non-claim Sir Andrew Corbet's Case 4 Co. is very strong to this purpose where a Devise is to J. S. until he shall or may raise such a Sum out of the Profits of the Land If a Stranger Enters after the death of the Devisor tho' the Devisee had no Notice of the Will yet the time shall run on as much as if he had the Land in his own possession These Rules being applied to the present Case it will appear no Notice is to be given First The Defendant is as privy to the Will as any one else viz. as George Porter who is found also to be an Infant It is not found whether there were any Executors if it had they were not concerned to give Notice nor did it
Justices of the Peace in persuance of the Statute of 18 Eliz. was removed into this Court which was excepted to First For that they had appointed the Father to allow 4 s to the Midwife whereas it did not appear that the Parish had procured her or that they were chargeable with it Secondly For that they ordered 7 s a week to be allowed for the Nursing Cloaths c. of the Child until it should be able to get its living by working which was said to be excessive in the Sum and uncertain for the time for it should have béen for so long time as it shall be chargeable to the Parish Hale said that they could make no allowance to the Midwife unless in discharge of the Parish Twisden said that they could not order the 7 s a week to be paid until it should be able to get its living for perhaps the Father would take it away and maintain it himself which he may do if he please but that the Order might be quashed without more delay and the matter remanded to further Examination Sherman consented to pay all the Arrears of the 7 s a week and the Costs that had béen expended in Maintenance of this Order or what more should be laid out in case he should be again found the reputed Father of the Child for he said it was imposed upon him by Combination whereupon it was quashed Sir Ralph Bovy's Case AN Action was brought upon an Escape for that he being Sheriff of Surry voluntarily suffred J. S. whom he had in Execution to escape He pleads that be made fresh pursuit and took him again and doth not Traverse the voluntary Escape to which it was demurred Et Adjornatur Anonymus A Scire facias against the Conusee of a Statute who had extended supposing that he was satisfied He pleads that before the Scire facias brought he had assigned over all his interest and prays Iudgment of the Writ Hale said that the VVrit was good seeing he was a Party to the Record the Plaintiff need not take notice of the Assignee unless he please and if there be part of the Debt unsatisfied that is to be tendred to the Conuzee In a VVrit of Disceit to reverse a Fine of Land in antient Demesne after Assignment the Conuzee shall be made party So in a VVrit of Error tho the Terretenant shall not be turned out of possession without a Scire facias Dionise versus Curtis TRover de duabus Centenis Plumbi urae Anglicè two hundred weight of Lead Ore It was objected that Centena signifies an hundred in a County and 't is uncertain here of what it should be understood but the Court said it was good with the Anglicè and to be understood by the subject matter Trover de duobus ponderibus casei Anglicè two weigh of Cheese hath been held good So de duobus oneribus Cupri Anglicè two Horse loads of Copper Evans c. IN an Action upon the Case whereas he pretended Title to certain Goods in the Custody of one Susan Pricket and claimed them to be his own intending to remove them the Defendant in Consideration that he would suffer them to continue there assumed to see them forth coming and that they should not be imbezelled but safely kept to the use of the Plaintiff and shews that afterwards the Goods were Eloigned c. Vpon Non Assumpsit and Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved to stay Judgment that it doth not appear that the property of these Goods was in the Plaintiff for it is alledged only that he pretended to them and claimed them to be his own Sed non Allocatur For the Declaration is full enough at least must be intended he proved they were his own or the Jury would not have found for him Anonymus IN Debt upon a Record in an inferiour Court upon Nul Tiel Record pleaded they shall certifie only tenorem Recordi and grant Execution afterwards Hale said that he had seen a Certiorari to certifie tenorem Recordi upon a Tryal at Bar concerning the Toll of Uxbridge the Town pretending to be incorporated and to have a right to the Toll and it was resolved that no Bugh holder could be a Witness for the Town Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 24 Car. II. In Banco Regis Mekins versus Minshaw A Prohibition was prayed to the Court of the Chamberlain of Chester where an English Bill was preferred setting forth that J. S. being Indebted to the Plaintiff the Defendant upon good Consideration promised That if J. S. did not pay it he would and that he wanted such precise Proof of the Promise as the Law required Wherefore he prayed to be relieved by the Equity of the Court. The Defendant confessed the Promise in his Answer and alledged further That he had paid the Money And a Prohibition was granted for the Plaintiff had now obtained the end of his Suit and might have remedy at Law upon the Evidence of the Defendants Answer Anonymus AN Action was brought for these words The Defendant said of the Plaintiff That he had picked his Pocket against his Will and at the same time de ulteriori malitia said He was a Pick-pocket The Defendant Iustified but in such manner as it was Ruled against him Then he moved to stay Judgment upon the Insufficiency of the Declaration And the Court were of Opinion that the Words were not Actionable as carrying with them no necessary implication of Felony and might mean only Trespass And Hale said He would not improve Actions for Words further than they are Fortescue versus Holt. A Scire facias was brought upon a Judgment of 1000 l as Administrator of J. S. The Defendant pleaded That before the Administration committed to the Plaintiff viz. such a day c. Administration was granted to J.N. who is still alive at D. And demanded Judgment of the Writ The Plaintiff Replies J. N. died c. de hoc ponit se super Patriam And to that the Defendant Demurs For that he ought to have Traversed absque hoc that he was alive For tho' the Matter contradicts yet an apt Issue is not formed without an Affirmative and a Negative and so said the Court. And also that the Defendants Plea was bad being Concluded in Abatement whereas it goes in Bar which was so palpable as made it evident to be used only for delay Which Hale observing he did exceedingly blame the bad Practice that is amongst Counsel in advising such Pleas and said it was within the Penalty of Westm 1. Serjeants Counters c. and said Tho' Counsel were obliged to be faithful to their Clients yet not to manage their Causes in such a manner as Justice should be delayed or Truth suppressed to promote which was as much the Duty of their Calling as it was the Office of the Judges tho' not in so Eminent a Degree In this Case it was doubted Whether Judgment final should be given or a
that time this made an Estate Tail But if it had béen and after their decease to their Children then the Children should take by Purchase tho' born after 'T is true that case is variously reported in the Books but I adhere to my Lord Coke presuming that being brought before all the Judges in the Argument of VVilds Case it was a true Report As for the second Point 't is plain that the power is extinguished for by the Recovery the Estate for Life to which it was annexed in privity is gone and forfeited so that 't is not necessary to dispute the third Point whether well executed or no But upon the whole I agree with my Brother Rainsford that the Plaintiff ought to have Judgment Hale I differ from my two Brothers and tho' I was of their Opinion at the finding of the Special Verdict yet upon very great Consideration of the Case I am of Opinion for the Defendant I shall proceed in a different method from my Brothers and begin with that Point which they made last and I agree with them admitting that Bernard had but an Estate for Life that the power was destroyed also here the Recovery does not only bar the Estate but all powers annexed to it for the recompence in value is of such strong Consideration that it serves as well for Rents Possibilities c. going out of and depending upon the Land as for the Land it self So Fines and Feoffments do ransack the whole Estate and pass or extinguish c. all Rights Conditions Powers c. belonging to the Land as well as the Land it self Secondly I agree with my Brother Rainsford that if Bernard had but an Estate for Life by the Devise the power was not well executed Where Tenant for Life has a power to make Leases 't is not always necessary to recite his power when he makes a Lease but if he makes a Lease which will not have an effectual continuance if it be directed out of his interest there it shall be as made by virtue of his power and so it was resolved in one Roger's Case in which I was Counsel Again Tho' it be here by Covenant to stand seized an improper way to execute his power yet it might be construed an Execution of it Mich. 51. In this Court Stapleton's Case where a Devise was to A. for Life Remainder to B. for Life Remainder to C. in Fee with power to B. to make his Wife a Joynture B. covenanted to stand seized for the Joynture of his Wife reciting his power tho' this could not make a legal Joynture yet it was resolved to enure by virtue of his power quando non valet quod ago ut ago valeat quantum valere potest But in this Case Bernard has got a new Fee which tho' it be defeasible by him in Remainder yet the Covenant to stand seized shall enure thereupon and the use shall arise out of the Fee Thirdly I was at the first opening of the Case of Opinion that Bernard had but an Estate for Life but upon deep Examination of the Will and of the Authority and Considerations of the Consequences of the Case I hold it to be an Estate Tail And first to ease that Point of all difficulties if cannot be denied but a Devise to a Man and the Heirs of his Body by a second Wife makes an Estate Tail executed tho' the Devisee had a Wife at the time As the Case often cited Land given to a Married Man and a Married Woman and the Heirs of their Bodies We are here in case of the Creation of an estate-Estate-Tail where intention has some influence voluntas Donatoris c. and may help words which are not exactly according to legal form 39 Ass 20. Land given to a Man and his Wife haeredi de corpore uni haeredi tantum this judged an Entail Again we are in case of an Estate Tail to be created by a Will and the intention of the Testator is the Law to expound the Testament therefore a Devise to a Man and his Heirs Males or a Devise to a Man and if he dies without Issue c. are always construed to make an Entail It must be admitted that if the Devise were to B. and the Issue of his Body having no Issue at that time it would be an Estate Tail for the Law will carry over the word Issue not only to his immediate Issue but to all that shall descend from him I agree it would be otherwise if there were Issue at the time Tayler and Sayer 41 Eliz. rot 541. a Devise to his Wife for Life 1 Cro. 742. Remainder to his Issue having two Children it was held the Remainder was void being to the Issue in the singular number for incertainy which should take But that was a little too rank for Issue is nomen collectivum Again I agree if a Devise be made to a man and after his death to his Issue or Children having Issue at that time they take by way of Remainder And that was the only Point adjudged in Wild's Case and there also against the Opinion of Popham and Gawdy This way being made I come to the Case it self and shall briefly give my Reasons why I hold Bernard has an Estate Tail First Because the word Issue is nomen collectivum and takes in the whole Generation ex vi termini and so the Case is stronger than if it were Children And where 't is said to the Issue that he shall have of the Body of the second Wife that is all that shall come of the second Wife For so 't is understood in common Parlance Secondly In all Acts of Parliament Exitus is as comprehensive as Heirs of the Body In Westm 2. de donis Issue is made a term of equivalence to Heirs of the Body for where it speaks of the Alienation of the Donee 't is said quo minus ad exitum discenderet So in 34 H. 8. of Entails setled by the Crown 'T is true in Conveyances c. the wisdom of the Law has appropriated the word Heirs as a Term of Art In Clerke's Case A Lease was made to commence after the death of his Son without Issue the Son had a Son and died and then that Son died without Issue It was Resolved both in the Kings Bench and the Exchequer that the Lease should commence for Issue being nomen collectivum whenever the Issue of the Son failed the term of Commencement did happen But now to see the difference Tyler's Case Mich. 34 Eliz. B.R. He had Issue A. B. C. and D. and Devised to his Wife for Life and after her death to B. his Son in Tail and if he dies without Issue then to his Children A. had Issue a Son and died and B. died without Issue Resolved that the Son of A. should not take as one of the Children of the Testator Which Case I cite to shew the odds between the word Issue and the
word Children My second Reason is from the manner of the Limitation which is to his Issue and of his Body lawfully begotten upon the second Wife Phrases agreeable to an Estate Tail and the meaning of a Testator is to be spelled out by little Hints It is admitted in Wild's Case in the 6 Co. 17. that if the Devise had been to the Children of their Bodies it would have been an Entail Thirdly It appears by the Devise that the Testator knew there could be no Children at that time and shall not be supposed to intend a contingent Remainder Fourthly It appears that the Testator did not intend to prefer the Children of the first Wife of Bernard but did the Children of the second and therefore cannot be thought to mean that John the younger Brother of Bernard should take before failure of the Issue which Bernard should have by his second Wife And to this purpose is Spalding's Case 3 Cro. 185. A Devise to his eldest Son and the Heirs of his Body after the death of his Wife and if he died living the Wife then to his Son N. And devised other Lands to another Son and the Heirs of his Body and if he died without Issue then to remain c. The first Son died living the Wife It was strongly urged that his Estate should cease for being said If he died living the Wife this was a Corrective of what went before But 't was Ruled by all the Court that it was an absolute Estate Tail in the first Son as if the words had been If he died without Issue living the Wife for he could not be thought to intend to prefer a younger Son before the Issue of his eldest Fifthly The words are further and for want of such Issue then to John which words in a Will do often make an Estate Tail by Implication As 4 Jac. Robinson's Case A Devise to A. for Life and if he died without Issue then to remain A. took an Entail So Burley's Case 43 Eliz. A Devise to A. for Life Remainder to the next Heir Male and for default of such Heir Male then to remain Adjudged an Estate Tail 'T is true Dyer 171. is where Lands were Devised to a man and the Heirs Males of his Body and if he died without Issue c. these last words did not make a Tail General to the Devisee For an Implication of an Estate of Inheritance shall never ride over an express limitation of an Inheritance before being 't is said here for want of such Issue the Land should remain 't is plainly meant that it should not before the Issue failed and then the Issue must have it so long for none else can and so 't is an Estate Tail I come now to Authorities 6 Eliz. Anderson num 86. Moor pl. 397. A Devise to his Son for Life and after his decease to the Men Children of his Body said to be an Estate Tail and so cited by Coke in that Book and so contrary to his Report of it in Wild's Case Bendloes num 124. But that Case is not so strong as this for Children is not so operative a word as Issue Rolls 839. A Devise to his eldest Son for Life non aliter for so were the words tho' not printed in the Book and after his decease to the Sons of his Body it was but an Estate for Life by reason of the words Non aliter Hill 13 Car. 2. Rot. 121. Wedgward's Case A Devise to his Son Thomas for Life and after his decease if he died without Issue living at his death then to the Daughter c. it was held to be an Estate for Life But were it an Estate Tail or no it was not necessary to be Resolved the Case depending upon the destruction or continuance of a Contingent Remainder which would have been gone had the Devise made an Estate Tail again there being an express Devise for Life they would not raise a larger Estate by Implication Again Wild's Case where Lands were Devised to A. for Life Remainder to B. and the Heirs of his Body Remainder to Wild and his Wife and after their decease to their Children And the Court of Kings-Bench were at first divided Indeed it was afterwards adjudged an Estate for Life to Wild and his Wife First Because having limited a Remainder in Tail to B. by express and the usual words if he had meant the same Estate in the second Remainder 't is like he would have used the same words Secondly It was not after their decease to the Children of their Bodies for then there would be an Eye of an Estate Tail Thirdly The main Reason was because there were Children at the time of the Devise and that was the only Reason the Resolution went upon in the Exchequer Chamber And tho' it be said in the latter end of the Case That if there were no Children at that time every Child born after might take by Remainder 't is not said positively that they should take And it seems to be in opposition to their taking presently but however that be it comes not to this Case For tho' the word Children may be made nomen collectivum the word Issue is nomen collectivum of it self Hill 42. and 43 Eliz. Bifield's Case A Devise to A. and if he dies not having a Son then to remain to the Heirs of the Testator Son was there taken to be used as nomen collectivum and held an Entail I come now to answer Objections First 'T is objected that in this Case the Limitation is expresly for Life and in that respect stronger than Wild's Case And this is the great difficulty But I Answer That tho' these words do weigh the Intention that way yet they are ballanced by an apparent Intention that weighs as much on the other side which is That as long as Bernard should have Children that the Land should never go over to John for there was as much reason to provide for the Issue of the Issue as the first Issue Again A Tenant in Tail has to many purposes but an Estate for Life Again 'T is possible that he did intend him but an Estate for Life and 't is by consequence and operation of Law only that it becomes an Estate Tail 1651. Hansy and Lowther The Case was A Copyholder surrendred to the use of his Will and Devised to his first Son for Life and after his decease to the Heir Male of his Body c. This was Ruled to be an Estate Tail and this differs from Archer's Case in the 1st of Co. for that the Devise there was for Life and after to the Heir Male and the Heirs of the Body of that Heir Male There the words of Limitation being grafted upon the word Heir it shews that the word Heir was used as Designatio personae and not for Limitation of the Estate So is the Case of Clerk and Day 1 Cro. 313. Another Objection was That there being a Power appointed
excused yet 't is merely void as to the Party Et Ad jornatur Norton versus Harvey THe Case was an Executor being possessed of a Term let part of it reserving a Rent and died And the Question was whether his Executor should have the Rent or the Administrator de bonis non It was argued for the Executor that this Rent is meerly due by the Contract and not incident to the Reversion and the Administrator is in Paramount it being now as if the Testator had died Intestate and therefore before the Statute of this King such Administrators could not have had a Scire facias upon a Judgment obtained by the Executor tho' in the Case of Cleve and Vere 3 Cro. 450 457. 't is held that he may have a Liberate where the Executor had proceeded in the Execution of a Statute so far as an Extent for there the thing is executed and not meerly Executory as a Judgment If a Man that hath a Term in the right of his Wife le ts part of it reserving a Rent the Wife surviving shall not not have the Rent On the other side it was said that this case differed from that because the Reservation here is by him that had the whole Right executed in him Another objection against the Action was that here in the Declaration being in Covenant for Non payment of Rent there is not any demand alledged But that was answered because the Covenant was to pay such a Sum for the Rent expresly but if the Condition of a Bond be for performance of Covenants expressed in such a Lease one of which is for payment of Rent in that case the Bond will not be forfeit without a demand and of that Opinion were the Court and that the Executor should have the Rent but when recovered Hale said it should be Assets in his Hands And accordingly Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 26 Car. II. In Banco Regis Silly versus Silly DOwer of 300 Acres of Land 200 Acres of Pasture 100 Acres Meadow The Tenant pleaded Non Tenure The Jury found him Tenant as to 320 Acres of Land and as to the rest that he was not Tenant And the Iudgment was that the Demandant should recover the 320 Acres Error was assigned in this Court that the Verdict and Judgment were for more Acres of Land than were demanded But on the other side it was said Land was a general word and might include Meadow and Pasture Curia In a Grant Land will extend to Meadow Pasture c. but in Pleading it signifies Arable only and here in regard they are distinguished in the Count the Verdict and Judgment must be reversed for the whole Tho' Hale said antiently such Iudgment would have been reversed but for the surplusage Vid Post Batmore Vxor versus Graves TRover for a 100 Loads of Wood upon a Special Verdict the Case was this Copyhold Land was surrendred to the use of J. S. for years Remainder to the Brother of the Plaintiff's Wife who died before the Term expired and so was not admitted any otherwise than by the admission of the Tenant for years And it was resolved First That the admittance of him that had the Estate for years was an admittance for him in the Remainder 4 Co. 23. a. 3 Cro. 504. Fine sur Grant and render to A. for Life Remainder to B. Execution sued by A. serves for B. So an Attornment to Tenant for Life serves for him in Remainder and this brings no prejuduce to the Lord for a Fine is not due until after admittance and the Lord may Assess one Fine for the particular Estate and another Fine for the Remainder But Wild said he need not pay it until his Estate comes in Possession after a Surrender the Estate remains in the Surrender before admittance of the Cestuy que use yet where Borough English Land was Surrendred to the use of J. S. and his Heirs and he died before admittance It was held that the younger Son should have it Secondly It was resolved that the Possession of the Tenant for years was so the Possession of him in Remainder as to make a Possessio Fratris But then it was moved that the Conversion was laid after the Marriage and so the Feme ought not to have joyned with her Husband in the Action But the Court held that in regard the Trover was laid to be before the Marriage which was the inception of the cause of Action the Wife might be joyned as if one has the Custody of a Womans Goods and afterward Marries her she may joyn in Detinue with her Husband for in case of Bailment the Proprietor is to some purposes in Possession and to some out of Possession Hale said in this case the Husband might bring the Action alone or joyntly with his Wife And so Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Anonymus IN Debt upon a Bond the Condition was to save the Obligee harmless from another Bond. The Defendant pleaded Non damnificatus The Plaintiff replies that the Money was not paid at the day and he devenit onerabilis and could not attend his business for fear of an Arrest The Defendant rejoyns that he tendred the Money at the day absque hoc that the Plaintiff devenit onerabilis to which it was Demurred and the Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff for the Money not being paid at the day the Counter Bond is forfeited Vid. 1 Cro. 672. 5 Co. and the Traverse in this case is naught The Mayor and Commonalty of London versus Dupester IN Debt for a Duty accruing to the City for Timber imported called Scavage The Declaration was that they were and had been a Corporation time out of mind and their Customs were confirmed by Act of Parliament Temps R. 2. c. The Defendant tendred his Law and Co. Entries 118. was cited where in Debt for an Amerciament in a Court Baron tho' the imposing of it was grounded upon a Prescription yet Wager of Law was admitted But notwithstanding in this case the Court overruled the Wager of Law for here the Duty it self is by Prescription and that confirmed by Act of Parlimant Debt for a Duty growing by a By-Law if the By-Law be Authorised by Letters Patents no Wager of Law lies So in Debt for Toll granted by Letters Patents 20 H. 7. Termino Sancti Michaelis Anno 26 Car. II. In Banco Regis Silly versus Silly THe Case was moved again And the Court said that the Demandant might have taken Judgment for the 300 Acres only habito nullo respectu to the rest and released all the Damages But this was not proper for an Amendment the Mistake being in the Verdict but if it could have been amended in the Common Bench the Court might here have made such Amendment Ante. Burfoot versus Peal A Scire facias was brought against the Bail who pleaded that the Principal paid the Debt ante diem impetrationis Brevis
have admitted Wager of Law and therefore lies not against the Executor It was difficultly brought in that Debt should lye against the Executor upon a Surmize of a Devastavit by himself But that Point is now setled but no Reason to extend it further And he cited a Case where Debt was brought against A. Executor of B. Executor of C. who pleaded that he had not of the Goods of C. in his hands To which the Plaintiff Replied That B. had Wasted the Goods of C. to the value of the Debt demanded Vpon which Issue was joyned and found for the Plaintiff and he had Judgment to recover de bonis B. in the hands of A. But that Judgment was Reversed Anonymus IF A. Engages that B. shall pay for certain Goods that B. buys of C. this is good to charge him upon a Collateral Promise but not upon an Indebitat ' Assumpsit for it doth not create a Debt Anonymus IN an Information for a Riot it was doubted by the Court whether it were Local being a Criminal Cause And it was observed that divers Statutes in Queen Elizabeth and King James's time provided that Prosecutions upon Penal Laws should be in their proper Counties Which was an Argument that at the Common Law they might have been elsewhere Taylor 's Case AN Information Exhibited against him in the Crown Office for uttering of divers Blasphemous Expressions horrible to hear viz. That Jesus Christ was a Bastard a Whoremaster Religion was a Cheat and that he neither feared God the Devil or Man Being upon this Trial he acknowledged the speaking of the Words except the word Bastard and for the rest he pretended to mean them in another Sense than they ordinarily hear viz. Whoremaster i. e. That Christ was Master of the Whore of Babylon and such kind of Evasions for the rest But all the Words being proved by several Witnesses he was found Guilty And Hale said That such kind of wicked Blasphemous words were not only an Offence to God and Religion but a Crime against the Laws State and Government and therefore punishable able in this Court. For to say Religion is a Cheat is to dissolve all those Obligations whereby Civil Societies are preserved and that Christianity is parcel of the Laws of England and therefore to reproach the Christian Religion is to speak in Subversion of the Law Wherefore they gave Judgment upon him viz. To stand in the Pillory in Three several places and to pay One thousand Marks Fine and to find Sureties for his Good Behaviour during Life Walker versus Wakeman THe Case was An Estate which consisted of Land a Rectory c. was conveyed to the use of one for Life c. with a Power to Lett the Premisses or any part of them so as 50 l Rent was reserved for every Acre of Land The Tenant for Life Demised the Rectory reserving a Rent which Rectory consisted of Tythes only and whether this was within the Power was the Question Serjeant Pemberton Argued That this Lease is not warranted by the Power for a Construction is to be made upon the whole Clause and the latter Words that appoint the Reservation of the Rent shall explain the former and restrain the general Word Premisses to Land only for if it shall be extended further the Settlement which was in Consideration of a Marriage Portion is of no effect for the Rectory As in case it should de Demised reserving no Rent which it might be if not restrained to the latter words and they applied only to the Land But it was Resolved by the Court that the Lease of the Rectory was good for the last Clause being Affirmative shall not restrain the Generality of the former And this Resolution was chiefly grounded upon Cumberford's Case in the 2 Rolls 263. where a Conveyance was made to Vses of divers Mannors and Lands with a Power to the Cestuy que use for Life to make Leases of the Premisses or any part of them so that such Rent or more were reserved upon every Lease which was reserved before within the space of Two years and a Lease was made of part of the Lands which had not been Demised within Two years before And Resolved it was a good Lease and that thereupon any Rent might be reserved because the Power was General To Lease all and the restrictive Clause should only be applied to such Lands as had been demised within Two years before Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 28 Car. II. In Banco Regis MEmorandum The last Term Sir Richard Rainsford was made Chief Justice Hale Chief Justice quitting it for infirmity of Body and Sir Thomas Jones was made one of the Justices of the Court of Kings Bench. Anonymus IN an Action upon the Case brought against the Defendant for that he did Ride an Horse into a place called Lincolns in Fields a place much frequented by the Kings Subjects and unapt for such purposes for the breaking and taming of him and that the Horse was so unruly that he broke from the Defendant and ran over the Plaintiff and grievously hurt him to his damage c. Vpon Not guilty pleaded and a Verdict for the Plaintiff It was moved by Sympson in Arrest of Judgment that here is no cause of Action for it appears by the Declaration that the mischief which happened was against the Defendants Will and so Damnum absque injuria and then not shewn what right the Kings Subjects had to walk there and if a man diggs a Pit in a Common into which one that has no right to come there falls in no Action lies in such Case Curia contra It was the Defendants fault to bring a Wild Horse into such a place where mischief might probably be done by reason of the Concourse of People Lately in this Court an Action was brought against a Butcher who had made an Ox run from his Stall and gored the Plaintiff and this was alledged in the Declaration to be in default of penning of him Wild said if a Man hath an unruly Horse in his Stable and leaves open the Stable Door whereby the Horse goes forth and does mischief an Action lies against the Master Twisden If one hath kept a tame Fox which getts loose and grows wild he that kept him before shall not answer for the damage the Fox doth after he hath lost him and he hath resumed his wild nature Vid. Hobarts Reports 134. The Case of Weaver and Ward Anonymus IN Trespass in an inferiour Court if the Defendant plead son frank Tenement to oust the Court of Jurisdiction It was said by Wild that they may enforce the Defendant to swear his Plea as in case of Foreign Plea negat Twisden and as in this Court where a Local justification in Trespass c. is pleaded the Defendant must swear it But the Court held no Indictment will lie for Perjury in such Oath no more than upon a Wager of Law Anonymus IN Trover the Hab. corpora
Tenant in Tail and levying of a Fine there is an Instantaneous Fee in him out of which the new Estate Tail is supposed to be created and that cannot hold bring derived out of a Fee subject to the Forfeiture by Relation but this Point was not touched by the Judges for that they were fully agreed upon the other Point Beasly's Case HE was taken in Execution taken a Recognizance of Bail and he made it appear to the Court that he never acknowledged the Recognizance but was personated by another and thereupon it was moved that the Bail might be vacated and he discharged as was done in Cottons Case 2 Cro. 256. But the Court said since 21 Jac. cap. 26. by which this Offence is made Felony without Clergy it is not convenient to vacate it until the Offender is convicted and so it was done 22 Car. 2. in Spicers Case Wherefore it was ordered that Beasly should bring the Money into Court an be let at large to prosecute the Offender Twisden said it must be tried in Middlesex tho' the Bayl was taken at a Judges Chamber in London because filed here and the Entry is venit coram Domingo Rege c. So it differs from a Recognizance acknowledged before my Lord Hobart upon 23 H. 8. at his Chamber and Recorded in Middlesex there Scire facias may be either in London or Middlesex Hob. rep If a false Bayl be acknowledged it is not Felony unless it be Filed and so held in Timberly's Case The King versus Humphrey's al. AN Indictment upon the Statute of Maintenance and one only found Guilty and it was moved in Arrest of Judgment that seeing but one was found Guilty it did not maintain the Indictment 2 Rolls 81. several were indicted for using of a Trade and said uterque eor ' usus fuit and held not good Sed non allocatur for that in that case in Rolls the using of the Trade by one cannot be an using by the other But this is an Offence that two may joyn in or it may be several as in a Trespass But then it was alledged that the Maintenance was in quodam placito in Cur ' coram Domino Rege pendent ' and not said where the Kings Bench Sate and this was held fatal Termino Sancti Hillarij Anno 28 29 Car. II. In Banco Regis Jay's Case A Mandamus to restore to his place of a Common Council Man in the Corporation of Eye in Suffolk The Return was that he was amoved for speaking of approbious words of one of the Aldermen viz. That he was a Knave and deserved to be posted for a Knave all over England And it was moved that the Return was insufficient for words are not good cause to remove a Man from his place in the Corporation To which it was said that this not a difranchising of him but only removing him from the Common Council as a person not fit to sit there To which Twisden said that his place there could no more be forfeited than his Freedom for he was chosen thereunto by the Custom of the place And Magna Charta is that a Man shall not be disseised de liberis consuetudinibus But he held that words might be a cause to turn out a Freeman as if they were that the Mayor or the like did burn the Charters of the Town or other words that related to the Duty of his place But in the Case at Bar the words do not appear to have any reference to the Corporation wherefore it was ordered that he should be restored The Court said that my Lord Hale held That Returns of this nature should be sworn tho' of late days it has not been used and that it was so done in Medlecot's Case in Cro. Abram versus Cunningham UPon a Special Verdict the Case appeared to be to this effect A. possessed of a Term makes B. Executor who makes three Executors and dies two of them dies and the Will of B. the Executor not being discovered Administration is granted cum Testamento annexo to D. who grants over the Term. The surviving Execcutor never intermeddles but so soon as he had Notice of the Will Refused before the Ordinary and the Point was Whether the grant of the Term in the mean time was good Saunders to maintain it Argued That to the making of an Executor besides the Will there was requisite that the Executor should assent and if the Executor refuses 't is as much as if there never had been any There is no Book which proves the Acts of an Administrator void where there is a Will and the Executor renounces Greysbrook and Foxe's Case in Plowden's Com. is that after Administration granted the Executor proved the Will And so in 7 E. 4. 14. in Dormer and Clerke's Case it was held that where there was an Executor who after refused and Administration committed the Administrator should have all the Rent belonging to the Term in Reversion which accrued after the death of the Testator If an Executor be a Debtor and refuses the Administrator may Sue him Which was denied by Twisden because a Personal Action once suspended is ever so Dyer 372. If one makes an Executor who dies and never proves the Will Administration shall be granted as upon a dying Intestate suppose an Executor de son tort had Judgment against him Shall not there be Execution upon a Term as Assets in his hands Twisden It hath been Doubted whether there could be an Executor de son tort of a Term or whether he were not a Disseisor And by the same Reason it may be granted in the present Case for at least the Administrator here is an Executor de son tort before the Refusal Levins contra Anciently Bona Intestati capi solebant in manus Regis as appears in Hensloe's Case in the 9 Co. And since the Power of the Ordinary hath been introduced it was only to grant Administration upon a dying Intestate 4 H. 7. Pl. 10. If the Ordinary cites the Executor to prove the Will and he Renounces 't is said he may grant Administration which implies that it cannot be before So 21 H. 8. cap. 5. is to grant Administration c. upon a dying Intestate or refusal of the Executor the Interest of the Executor commences before the Probat In 36 H. 6. 8. an Executor commanded one to take the Goods and after the Executor refused before the Ordinary who committed Administration and the Administrator Sued the person that took the Goods who Iustified by the Executor's Command and it was held good And a Relation shall never make an Act good which was void for defect of Power And the Court seemed strongly of that Opinion But Serjeant Pemberton desiring to Argue it the Court permitted him to speak to it the next Term. Et sic Adjornatur And afterwards it was Argued again and Judgment was given for the Defendant per totam Curiam Dunwell versus Bullocke IN an Action of
the Suit against one alone ought not to be as in an Assize for a Rent-charge all the Ter-Tenants are to be named and here the party has an Election to Sue a Writ of Annuity and if so be must have named all that had been chargeable Curia 'T is true in our Law it were a good Plea in Abatement but perhaps their Law and Course is otherwise And here they have Jurisdiction and may proceed according to their own Rules or if not you may have an Appeal Whereupon a Prohibition was denied Anonymus IN an Habeas Corpus and Certiorari for the Body of J. S. who had been Imprisoned for not paying of a Fine of 20 l set at the Quarter Sessions The Return was that he being Constable and demanded by the Court to Present an High-way which was sworn before him by Two Witnesses to be out of Repair said in Contempt of the Court That he would not Present it For which and certain other contemptuous words the Fine was set The Counsel for the Prisoner moved that it might be Filed Which was done The Court were of Opinion that the Fine was not well set for Constables are to Present upon their own Knowledge and the Two Witnesses should have been carried to the Grand Jury for the Constable was not obliged to Present upon their Testimony This Court is to judge of their Fines whether without Cause or to mitigate them when excessively imposed and for the Contemptuous Words the Return is ill because not expressed what On the other side it was prayed that the Return might be amended for he had spoken Opprobious Words but that could not be admitted after the Filing And so the party was discharged Anonymus IT was moved to quash an Order of Sessions for the Keeping of a Bastard Child First That it doth not appear that the Child was born within the Parish Secondly 'T is to allow so much Weekly until the Child is Eight years of Age whereas the Statute gives power to make a Weekly allowance while the Child shall be chargeable Thirdly The Order was at Eight years old to pay 5 l for the Binding of it out But the Court would not quash it for they said it was implied by saying it would be chargeable to the Parish that it was born there and 't was apparent it would continue Chargeable for so long as they appointed the Allowance and they might Order 5 l to be paid in the end Sed Quaere For a Sum in gross ought not to be set but a Weekly allowance And the Court said they must shew that respect to Justices of the Peace who served the Country at their own charge as not too nicely to examine their Orders Anonymus ERror upon a Judgment by Nihil dicit given in the Common Pleas where the Action was for Words which in the Declaration were laid thus That the Defendant said Quidam J. S. which was the Plaintiffs Name innuendo the Plaintiff was c. The Error assigned was that there was no Averment that these Words were spoke of the Plaintiff for there might be more of the name But Holt for the Defendant said the Innuendo would help that fault and he cited the Case of Rebotham and Venlecke in the 3 Cro. 378. where the Plaintiff Declared that he had made an Oath before a Judge upon certain Articles exhibited for the Good Behaviour and the Defendant to Scandalize him said He made a false Oath Innuendo the said Oath before the Judge where it was held that the Innuendo was sufficient to ascertain what Oath was meant But the Court Reversed the Judgment in this Case and said that not saying in the Declaration that the Words were spoken of the Plaintiff it was not sufficient to bring that in by an Innuendo which ought to have been Averred and it is the worse because 't is said quidam J.S. which imports another person than the Plaintiff Anonymus ERror to Reverse a Judgment given in the Kings-Bench in Ireland in a Prohibition where the Issue was Whether he had Prosecuted in the Court Christian after the Prohibition and it was found for the Plaintiff and Damages assessed to 100 l and 6 d pro misis custagiis And now the Error was assigned in the Judgment given which was That the Plaintiff should recover damna praedicta per Juratores assess ad 100 l nec non pro misis custagiis de incremento per Cur ' adjudicat ' 20 l omitting the 6 d Costs given by the Jury On the other side it was said That damna praedicta in the Judgment included all and the saying 100 l was but a Miscomputation Et Adjornatur Postea Hill 33 34 Car. 2. How versus Whitfield A Fine of certain Lands to the use of J. S. for Life and after to his Executors and Assigns for 80 years with Power to the Lessee and his Assigns to lett Leases for 21 years reserving the ancient Rent After several mean Assignments the Assignee of an Executor of an Assignee made a Lease for 21 years which in the Special Verdict was found to be made of the said Lands inter alia reserving proinde six shillings per annum and found that six shillings was the ancient yearly Rent for the Land The Court seemed to be of opinion that an Assignee after so many Removes might execute this Power for it was coupled with an Interest and annexed to the Estate tho' to be construed strictly but in regard the Lease was made of the Land inter alia reserving proinde c. in case the Reservation should be taken to be for the whole Land then it was not the ancient Rent reserved for this and upon that they doubted Et Adjornatur Postea Anonymus AN Indictment was quashed for want of Addition For the Court said no Process ought to go out thereupon because the party cannot be Outlawed Anonymus IN an Habeas Corpus the Return was that the party was taken upon an Excom ' Cap ' It was moved that the party might be discharged because upon Search it appeared that the Writ had not been Enrolled in this Court for so it ought to be by the Statute of the 5th of the Queen tho' the Writ issues out of Chancery The Court doubted whether they could Discharge him upon a Motion or that he should be driven to plead this Matter And it was said the Course had been both ways Vid. Parker's Case 3 Cro. 553. But the party was afterwards Discharged ut opinor Herne versus Brown A Prohibition was prayed to a Suit in the Ecclesiastical Court The Libel sets out That a Tax had been made for the Repairs of a Church where the Defendant inhabited and was to make him pay his proportion To which they required his Answer viz. Whether he had paid c. The Suggestion was that the party had tendred his Answer but the Court had refused it because it was not upon Oath and that the Ecclesiastical Court
makes a Lease for the Life of the Lessee not warranted by the Statute and dies leaving B. in Remainder his Heir B. let ts for 99 years to commence after the death of the Tenant for Life reserving Rent and then the Tenant for Life surrenders to B. upon Condition and dies B. suffers a Recovery with single Voucher and dies the Lessee for years enters the Heir of B. distrains for the Rent and the Lessee brings a Replevin and upon an Avowry and Pleadings thereupon this Case was disclosed to the Court of Common Bench and Judgment given there for the Avowant and Error thereupon brought in this Court For the Plaintiff in the Error it was Argued That the Lease being derived out of a Reversion in Fee which was Created in A. upon the Discontinuance for Life and the New Fee vanishing by the Surrender of the Tenant for Life for it was urged he was in his Remitter altho' the taking of the Surrender was his own Act that the Lease for years by consequence was become void Again It was Objected against the Common Recovery that the Tenant in Tail and a Stranger which had nothing in the Estate were made Tenants to the Praecipe and therefore no good Recovery Again In case B. were not remitted after acceptance of the Surrender then he was Seised by force of the Tail and so no good Recovery being with single Voucher On the other side it was Argued to be no Remitter because the acceptance of the Surrender was his own Act and the Entry was taken away But admitting it were a Remitter because by the Surrender the Estate for Life which was the Discontinuance was gone and it was no more than a Discontinuance for Life For if Tenant in Tail letts for Life and after grants the Reversion in Fee if the Lessee for Life dies after the Death of the Tenant in Tail so that the Estate was not executed in the Grantee during the Life of the Tenant in Tail the Heir shall immediately Enter upon the Grantee of the Reversion Co. Litt. It seems also to be stronger against the Remitter in this case because 't is not Absolute but only Conditional However the Lease may be good by Estoppel for it appears to have been by Indenture and if the Lessor cannot avoid the Lease the Lessee shall without question be subject to the Rent But it was Objected against the Estoppel that here an Interest passes and the Lease was good for a time As if the Lessee for Ten years makes a Lease for Twenty years and afterwards purchaseth the Reversion it shall bind him for no more than Ten. To which Pemberton Chief Justice said The difference is where the party that makes the Estate has a legal Estate and where a Defeasible Estate only for in the latter a Lease may work by Estoppel tho' an Interest passed so long as the Estate out of which the Lease was derived remained undefeated As to the Recovery it was held clearly good altho' a Stranger that had nothing in the Land was made Tenant to the Praecipe with the Tenant in Tail for the Recompence in Value shall go to him that lost the Estate and being a Common Assurance 't is to be favourably Expounded Et Adjornatur Termino Sancti Hillarij Anno 33 34 Car. II. In Banco Regis Anonymus IN Error upon a Judgment in Ejectione Firmae in the Common Pleas where the Case was That the Bishop of London was seized injure Episcopatus of a Mannor of which the Lands in question were held and time out of mind were demised and demisable by Copy of Court Roll for Life in Possession and Reversion and J.S. being Copyholder for Life in Reversion after an Estate for Life in Ann Pitt and J.N. being seized of the Mannor by Disseisin J.S. at a Court holden for the Mannor in the name of J. N. surrendred into the Hands of the said J.N. the Disseisor Lord to the used of the said Lord. Afterwards the Bishop of London entred and avoided the Disseisin Ann Pitt died and an Ejectment was brought by J. S. And it was adjudged in the Common Bench that he had a good Title and now upon a Writ of Error in this Court the Matter in Law was insisted upon by Pollexfen for the Plaintiff in the Writ of Error That this Surrender to the Disseisor Lord to the Lords own use was good for all the Books agree a Copyholder may Surrender to a Disseisor of the Mannor to the use of a Stranger and why not to the Lords own use As if Lessee for years be ousted and he in Reversion disseised and the Lessee Releases to the Disseisor this extinguishes his Term. Here is a compleat Disseisin of the Mannor by Attornment of the Freeholders without which the Services cannot be gained and the Copyholders comeing to the Disseisors Court and by making Surrenders c. owning him for their Lords tantamounts Serjeant Maynard contra And he insisted that this Surrender was not good for the Disseisor had no Estate in this Land capable of a Surrender for the Copyholder for Life continuing in Possession and never having been ousted there could be no Disssesin of that And he endeavoured to distinguish it from a Surrender to a Disseisor Lord to the use of another for in such Surrenders the Lord is only an Instrument and does but as it were assent and until admittance the Estate is in the Surrenderer And he resembled it to the Attornment of a Tenant when è converso a Seigniory is granted and he put Cases upon Surrenders of Leases that they must be to one that hath the immediate Reversion as an under Lessee for part of the Term cannot Surrender to the first Lessor and he cited a Case of Lessee for years Remainder for Life Remainder in Fee to a Stranger he that had the Fee enfeoffed the Tenant for years by Deed and made Livery and the Conveyance held void for it could not work by Livery to the Tenant for years who was in Possession before and a Surrender it could not be because of the intermediate Estate for Life and it could not work as a Grant for want of Attornment He said it had been commonly received that a Common Recovery cannot be suffered where the Tail is expectant upon an Estate for Life not made Tenant to the Praecipe which he said was true in a Writ of Entry in the Post which are commonly used And the true reason is because such Writ supposes a Disseisin which cannot be when there is a Tenant for Life in Possession But as he said a Common Recovery in such case in a Writ of Right would be good Pemberton Chief Justice said his reason of Desseisin would overthrow Surrenders to the use of a Stranger for if the Possession of the Copyholder would preserve it from a Disseisin then was it pro tempore lopped off or severed from the Mannor and then no Surrender could be at all Et Adjornatur Berry
upon the Warranty as well as the other tho' the Declaration saith knowing them to be naught yet the knowledge need not to be proved in Evidence Debt upon a Bond and a mutuatus may be joyned in one Action yet there must be several Pleas for Nil debet which is proper to the one will not serve in the Action upon the Bond. Sed Adjornatur Termino Sancti Hillarij Anno 34 35 Car. II. In Banco Regis Anonymus A Quo Warranto was brought against divers persons of the City of Worcester why they claimed to be Aldermen c. of the said Corporation The Cause came to be tried at the Bar and a Challenge was made to the Jury in behalf of the Defendants for that the Jury men were not Freeholders The Court said that for Juries within Corporate Towns it hath hath been held that the Statutes that have been made requiring that Jurymen should have so much Freehold do not extend to such places for if so there might be a failer of Justice for want of such Jurymen so qualified but then to maintain the Challenge it was said by the Common Law Jurymen were to be Freeholders But the Court overruled the Challenge but at the importunity of the Counsel they allowed a Bill of Exceptions and so a Verdict passed against the Defendants and afterwards it was moved in Arrest of Judgment upon the Point But the Court would not admit the Matter to be Debated before them tho' divers Presidents of like nature were offered because they said they had declared their Opinions before and the Redress might be upon a Writ of Error Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 35 Car. II. In Banco Regis Anonymus A Motion for a Prohibition to a Suit in the Ecclesiastical Court for a Churchwarden's Rate suggesting that they had pleaded That it was not made with the Consent of the Parishioners and that the Plea was refused The Court said That the Churchwardens if the Parish were Summoned and refused to meet or make a Rate might make one alone for the Repairs of the Church if needful because that if the Repairs were neglected the Churchwardens were to be Cited and not the Parishioners and a Day was given to shew Cause why there should not go to a Prohibition Termino Sancti Michaelis Anno 35 Car. II. In Banco Regis Gamage's Case ERror out of the Court of the Grand Sessions where in an Ejectment the Case was upon Special Verdict upon the Will of one Gamage who devised his Lands in A. to his Wife for Life Item his Lands in B. to his Wife for Life and also his Lands which he purchased of C. to his Wife for Life and after the decease of his Wife he gave the said Lands to one of his Sons and his Heirs And the Question was Whether the Son should have all the Lands devised to the Wife or only those last mentioned And it was Adjudged in the Grand Sessions that all should pass And upon Error brought it was Argued that they were Devises to the Wife in distinct and separate Sentences and therefore his said Lands should be referred only to the last On the other side it was said that the word Said should not be referred to the last Antecedent but to all If a man conveys Land to A. for Life Remainder to B. in Tail Remainder to C. in forma praedict ' the Gift to C. is void 1 Inst 20. b. It is agreed if he said All the said Lands to his Son and his heirs it would have extended to the whole This is the same because Indefinitum equipollet universali Et Adjornatur Herring versus Brown IN an Ejectment upon a Special Verdict the Case was Tenant for Life with several Remainders over with a Power of Revocation Levied a Fine and then by a Deed found to be Sealed ten Days after declared the Vses of the Fine which Deed had the Circumstances required by the Power The Question in the Case was Whether the Fine had extinguished the Power It was Argued that it had not because the Deed and Fine shall be but one Conveyance and the use of a Fine or Recovery may be declared by a subsequent Deed in the 9 Co. Downam's Case And a Case was Cited which was in this Court in my Lord Hale's time between Garrett and Wilson where Tenant for Life with Remainders over had a Power of Revocation and by a Deed under his Hand and Seal Covenanted to levy a Fine and declared it should be to certain Vses and afterwards the Fine was Levied accordingly This was held to be a good execution of the Power and limitation of the new Vses and the Deed and Fine taken as one On the other side it was Argued That the Deed was but an Evidence to what Vses the Fine was intended and the Power was absolutely revoked by the Fine Suppose he in Remainder had Entred for the Forfeiture before this Deed should the Defendant have defeated his Right Et Adjornatur Postea Hodson versus Cooke IN an Action upon the Case for commencing of an Action against him in an Inferiour Court where the Cause of Action did arise out of the Jurisdiction After a Verdict for the Plaintiff upon Not Guilty it was moved in Arrest of Judgment That it was not set forth that the Defendant did know that the Place where the Action arose was out of the Jurisdiction which it would be hard to put the Plaintiff to take notice of On the other side it was said that the party ought to have a Recompence for the Inconvenience he is put to by being put to Bail perhaps in a Case where Bail is not required above and such like Disadvantages which are not in a Suit brought here and the Plaintiff ought at his peril to take notice However to help by the Verdict And of that Opinion were Jeffreys Lord Chief Justice Holloway and Walcot but Withens contra The Court said that it could not be assigned for Error in Fact that the Cause arose out of the Jurisdiction because that is contrary to the Allegation of the Record neither is the Officer punishable that executes Process in such Action but an Action lies against the party And so it was said to be resolved in a Case between Cowper and Cowper Pasch 18 Car. 2. in Scac. when my Lord Chief Baron Hale sate there Anonymus AN Indictment of Perjury for Swearing before a Justice of the Peace that J. S. was present at a Conventicle or Meeting for Religious Worship c. It was moved to quash it because it did not appear to be a Conventicle viz. That there was above the number of Five and so the Justice of the Peace had no power to take an Oath concerning it and then it could be no Perjury To which the Lord Chief Justice said That Conventicles were unlawful by the Common Law and the Justices may punish Unlawful Assemblies And he seemed to be of Opinion that a man might be
Estate Tail in Michael First Because in this Case the Use returns by operation of Law and executes an Estate in Michael for Life which being conjoined to the Estate limited to the Heirs Male of his Body makes an Estate Tail This Estate for Life rising by operation of Law is as strong as if it had been limitted to him for his Life and after his decease to the Heirs Male of his Body Secondly Because that a Limitation to the Heirs Male of his Body is in Construction of Law a Limitation to himself and the Heirs Male of his Body There is a great difference when he who has the Use limits it to A. for Life the Remainder to the Heirs of the Body of B. here no Estate can rise to B. because nothing moved from him but where he who has the Estate limits it to the Heirs Male of his own Body ut res valeat he shall have it for his Life Thirdly It is plainly according to the intent of the Parties the intent perfectly appears that the Issue by the second Wife should take and that Robert the eldest Son should not take till so much Money be paid therefore if we can by any means serve the intent of the parties we ought to do it as good Expositors For as my Lord Hobart says Judges in Construction of Deeds do no harm if they are astuti in serving the intent of the Parties without violating any Law Obj. Here the Use being never out of Michael he hath the ancient Use which is the Fee simple and consequently being the ancient Use and this being a new Limitation to the Heirs Male of his Body the ancient use and the new one cannot be piec'd to make an Estate Tail executed in Michael but it shall be a Contingent Use if any which ought to rise to the Heir Male of his Body and so remains the ancient Fee simple And it hath been compared to these Cases If a Man Covenants to stand seized to the Use of J.S. or of his Son after his Marriage or after the Death of J. D. these are Contingent Limitations and there is a Fee simple determinable in the Covenantor to serve the future Uses Resp 'T is true if a Man Covenants to stand seized to such Uses as that he leaves a discendible Estate in himself As if a Man Covenants to stand seized to the Use of his Son from and after his Marriage this is purely a Contingent Use because t is possible the Marriage may never take effect and nothing is fetch'd out of the Covenantor so if he Covenants to stand seized to the Use of J. S. after 40 years there is a Fee simple determinable in the Covenantor and therefore those Cases are not to be resembled to our Case where the Estate of Michael cannot continue longer than his Life And this without any wrong done to any Rule of Law may be turned to a Use for Life and therefore such construction shall be Object 2. Here is an Estate to rise by way of Use by a Deed and not by a Will which shall not be by Implication by a Deed. Resp It s a certain truth But we are not here upon raising an Estate by Implication but qualifying an Estate that is now in the Father which by this new Deed is to be qualified to be an Estate for Life to preserve the Estate Tail so that the Cases of Implication are not to the purpose Object 3. In this Case Michael shall be in of his ancient Estate in Fee simple which is in him and not of a new Estate created by Implication of Law and it hath been compared to the Devise of Land to a Mans Heir he shall not be in by the Devise but of his ancient Estate that would have descended to him Resp True But in this Case a Man may qualifie his Estate as in Gilpins Case Cro. Ca. 161. Devise to his Heir upon Condition that he shall pay his Debts in a year the Heir is a Purchasor so here is a qualification to turn the Estate of Michael into an Estate for Life ut res valeat Object 4. Michael had not an Intention to have an Estate for Life for in the Limitation of the other Lands he has limited them expressly to himself for Life and if he had intended to have had an Estate for Life in the Lands in question he would also have so expressed it Resp The intention will not controul the operation of Law his main intent was to settle the Lands upon his younger Children this the Law serves but not his secondary intentions If a Man Covenants to stand seized to the Use of himself for Life without impeachment of Wast and afterwards to the Use of the Heirs Male of his Body the Law supervenes his intention and makes him to be Tenant in Tail And in our Case there was a necessity to limit the other Lands to himself for Life because there was another Estate to intervene the Estate for Life and the Estate Tail The Reason given by my Lord Coke in Fenwick and Mitfords Case is plain enough and it appears that he was of that Opinion afterwards by the Report of Pannel and Lanes Case 13 Jac. in Rolls Rep. 1 part 238. The Case upon which I shall rely which has not been answered is my Lord Pagets Case adjudged by all the Judges of England Tho. Lord Paget Covenants in consideration of the discharge of his Funerals Payment of his Debts and Legacies out of the profits of his Land and for the advancement of his Son Brother and others of his Blood that he and his Heirs would stand seized of divers Mannors to the Use of T.F. one of the Covenantees for the Life of my Lord Paget and after his Death to the Use of C. Paget for the term of 24 years and then to the Use of W. Paget his Son in Tail with Remainders in over and afterwards the Lord Paget was a●●●nted of Treason And it was adjudged that the Lord Paget himself had an Estate for his Life for the Remainder being limited after his Death the Estate cannot pass out of him during his Life and there in Case of a Covenant to stand seized he himself hath an Estate for Life And this is not because the Estate returns as my Brother Twisden has said but because the Estate was never out of him and cannot return either from the Heir or the Covenantee otherwise where should it be during the Life of the Lord Paget who was attainted the Book is that it was never out of him but was turn'd into an Estate for Life So that now it is all one as if he had Covenanted to stand seized to the Use of his eldest Son after his Death And the question is What Estate he has during his Life It is adjudged that he has an Estate for Life for if there had been a Contingent Fee simple in the Lord Paget his Heir could never have had an Amoveas manus
for if a Man Covenants to stand seized to a Contingent Use and afterwards is attainted of Treason before the Contingency happen the Contingency shall never rise for the King has the Estate discharged and the Use is to rise out of the Estate of the Covenantor so is Moor Sir Tho Palmers Case 815 In Moors Rep. of my Lord Pagets Case 194. It s said that W. Paget had an Amoveas manus for the Estate of the Queen leased by the Death of my Lord Paget In Sir Francis Englefeilds Case Popham 18. n. 7. It s resolved that no Use rises because t is that it shall Discend Remain or Come which is uncertain but if he had Covenanted that after his Death he and his Heirs would have stood seized to the Use of John an Use would have resulted to Sir Francis Second Point I conceive if it be impossible for Ralph to take by Discent this would be a Contingent Use in him by Purchase The great Objection against this is that the Limitation is to an Heir and an Heir which ought to take by Purchase ought not to be only Heir of the Body c. but Heir general Of this I am not well satisfied I conceive the Remainder being limited to the Heirs of the Body of Jane begotten by Michael such a Limitation will make a special Heir to serve the turn and t is not to be resembled to Shelley's Case My Reasons are First Because at the Common Law before the Statute de Donis notice was taken that this was a special Heir and therefore 't is no wrong done to make him here a qualified Heir In the Statute de Donis 't is said When Lands are given to Man and his Wife and the Heirs of their two Bodies begotten Secondly Vpon the special penning of the Deed it is apparent that Michael took notice that he had an Heir at Common Law therefore it can't be intended that he meant here such an Heir that should be Heir general to him this would be Contradictio in Adjecto Litt. Sect. 352. puts this Case If a Feoffment be made upon Condition that the Feoffee shall give the Land to the Feoffor and his Wife and the Heirs of their two Bodies begotten In this Case if the Husband dye living his Wife before the Estate Tail is granted to them the Feoffee ought to make the Estate as near the Condition and as near the intent of the Condition as may be viz. To let the Land to the Wife for her Life without impeachment of Wast the Remainder to the Heirs of the Body of the Husband on her begotten If the Husband and Wife dye before the Gift made then the Feoffee ought to make it to the Issue and to the Heirs of the Body of his Father and Mother begotten Suppose that this had been to a second Wife and there had been Issue by a former the Book of 12 H. 4. 3. says that there it shall be in another manner but Litt. says it shall be as near vid. Litt. Sect. 22. Morevils Case Fitzh Tail 23. 2 Ed. 3. 1. 4. Ed. 3. 50. by all these Cases it appears that no regard is had whether the Son be Heir of the Husband if he be Heir of their two Bodies Therefore it seems that by this Limitation Ralph shall take by way of Contingent Remainder For Heirs of the Body of the second Wife is a good name of Purchase I have not read any Case against this Hill 16. or 26 Eliz. there was this Case A Man taking notice in his Will that his Brother who was dead had a Son and that he himself had three Daughters who were his right and immediate Heirs he gave them 2000 l and gave his Land to the Son of his Brother by the name of his Heir Male. Provided If his Daughters troubled his Heir then the Devise of the 2000 l to them should be void And it was resolved that the Devisor taking notice that others were his Heirs the Limitation to his Brothers Son by the name of Heir Male was a good name of Purchase and this agrees with Cownden and Clarks Case in Hob. Wild Justice said he was of the same Opinion with Hale in this last Point And Iudgment was given for the Defendant Three Learned ARGUMENTS One in the Court of Kings-Bench BY Sir FRANCIS NORTH Attorny General And Two in the Court of Exchequer BY Sir MATTHEW HALE Chief Baron there The Argument of Sir Francis North. In Banco Regis Potter and Sir Henry North. IN a Replevin for taking of an Horse in a certain place called the Fenn at Milden-Hall in the County of Suffolk the Defendant makes Cognizance as Bayliff to Sir Henry North and saith That the place Where c. containeth Ten thousand Acres of Pasture in Milden-Hall whereof a certain place called Delfe is parcel and that it is Sir Henry North's Freehold and the Horse was Damage feasant there c. The Plaintiff Replies Confessing the Soyl to be the Freehold of Sir Henry Norths but says That time whereof c. the place Where hath been parcel of the Fenn and parcel of the Mannor of Milden-Hall of which Sir Henry North is seised in Fee and that the Plaintiff was at the time c. seised of an Ancient Messuage one of the Freeholds holden of the Mannor by Rents and Services and parcel of the said Mannor and that Time out of Mind there were divers ancient Freehold Messuages holden of the said Mannor by Rents and Services and divers Copyhold Messuages parcel of the said Mannor by Custom of the said Mannor demised and demisable by Copy of Court Rolls of the said Mannor And the several Tenants of the said Freehold Tenements being seised in their Demesn as of Fee and they whose Estate they have in the same Time out of mind have had together with the Customary Tenants of the said Customary Tenements the sole and several Feeding of 100 Acres of Pasture for all Beasts except Hogs Sheep and Northern Steers levant and couchant upon their several Freeholds every year at all times of the year as to their several Freeholds belonging And that within the said Mannor there is and Temps d'ont c. hath been such a Custom that the several Tenants of the Customary Messuages together with the Freeholders aforesaid have used and accustomed to have the sole and several Feeding of the said 100 Acres of Pasture for all their Beasts except Sheep Hogs and Northern Steers levant and couchant upon their several Copy-holds every year at all times in the year tanquam ad seperal ' Tenementa customar ' spectant ' pertinent ' and the Plaintiff being seised put in his Horse c. and so Iustifies Vpon this the Defendant demurs generally This Prescription is naught in substance and Judgment ought to be given for the Defendant upon these Four Exceptions First That several Freeholders cannot joyn or be joyned in a Prescription to claim an entire Interest in another mans Soyl as
are few that she goes to but lye desperately ill or dye under her hands Action good 21 Thou art a thievish Rogue and didst steal Plate from Wadham Colledge in Oxford The Words spoke in London where to be tryed 22 263 He is a Forsworn Justice and not fit to be a Justice of Peace if I did see him I would tell him so to his Face Action good 50 You are a Pimp and a Bawd and fetch young Gentlewomen to young Gentlemen 53 Of an Attorney That he could not Read a Declaration 98 He hath broke 2 or 3 of his Fathers Ribs of which he shortly after dyed and I will complain to a Justice of him he may be hangd for the Murder tho it were done 20 years since Action good 117 Of a Woollen Draper You are a Cheating Fellow and keep a false Book Action lies 117 He hath Forged his Vncle Row's Will 149 He had pickt his Pocket against his will and was a Pick pocket Not Actionable 213 Of a Justice of Peace He is not worth a groat and is gone to the Dogs Not Actionable 258 He is a false cheating Knave and keeps a false Debt Book with which he cheats the Country Actionable 263 For charging the Plaintiff with Felony generally Good 264 Of an under Carrier of Post Letters He hath broken up Letters and taken out Bills of Exchange Not lies 275 The Defendant said to the Plaintiff I know my self and I know you I never buggerd a Mare The words Actionable 276 He would have given D. Money to have Robbed G's House and he did Rob it 323 Administration By the Civil Law Administration ought to be committed to the Residuary Legatee whether Assets or not Assets 218 To which the Court of K. B. strongly inclined 219 316 Admiralty May punish one that resists the Process of their Court and may Fine and Imprison for a Contempt in the face of their Court but not give the Party Damages 1 Where Sentence is obtained in a Foreign Admiralty one may Libel for Execution thereof here thô the matter were not originally determinable in our Admiralty yet if the Contract were made on Land beyond Seas Prohibition lies 32 Its Jurisdiction in seizing Ships 173 It hath Jurisdiction of Ships taken by Pirates but not if taken by Enemies 308 Hath Jurisdiction for Mariners Wages 343 Age. Bond Conditioned that the Son and the Daughter of J. S. shall at their full Age give Releases this must be taken at their respective Ages 58 Alien Of his Capacity and Incapacity 417 Amendment The Court having Power over their own Entries and Judgments can amend defaults of Clerks after Judgment thô in an other Term 132 Mistake of the name in a Judgment in Ireland amendable here 217 No Amendment of a Return after the Filing 336 Apprentice See Statutes Whether the Quarter Sessions can discharge an Indenture of Apprenticeship 174 Appurtenant See Reputation A thing Appurtenant may be by Grant but a thing Appendant must be by Prescription 407 Connisance of Pleas may be created by the King 's Grant as he pleases either in Gross or as Appurtenant ibid. Arbitrament Award What Pleas good in Arbitrament and what not 50 71 87 184 Arrest Where the Bayliff may break a House upon an Arrest 306 Assault and Battery In an Action for both the Defendant may be found Guilty of the Assault but not of the Battery and here no more Costs than Damages 256 Assets Bonds and Specialties no Assets till the Mony be paid 96 Assignment Assignment where the Assignor keeps Possession Fraudulent and such Fraud may be avered 329 331 The word Assignees includes Assignees in Law as well as Fact 340 Assumpsit See Pleading Whether a Stranger to the Consideration may bring the Action 6 7 318 332 Good cause of Demurrer in Assumpsit where the Consideration carries nothing of trouble or prejudice to the Plaintiff or benefit to the Defendant 9 A mistake in the time relating to a Promise good after a Verdict 14 see also 119 Whether multum gratissimum servitium and multa Beneficia be sufficient Considerations in an Assumpsit 27. So for opere labore Servitio 44 Infant may make a Consideration whereon to ground an Assumpsit 51 The Breach must be laid as the Promise is 64 Forbearance of Suit where a good Consideration whereon to ground an Assumpsit 120 152 154 159 Claim without proof where good to ground a Consideration in an Assumpsit 211 Of Reciprocal Promises 177 214 Assumpsits in Consideration of Marriage 262 268 One Excommunicated for not paying in a Church Rate a Promise to pay in Consideration of Absolution Good 297 In Consideration of delivering Goods to a third person Good 311 Attorney See Mandamus Attorneys at large have the same priviledge with Clerks of the Court 1 Whether an Attorney in the Courts at Westminster may practise in Inferiour Courts 11 Attorneys shall be discharged of the Service of the Common Wealth à fortiori of any private Service as Constable Collector of Rents c. 16 29 Committed for Suing out a Bill of Middlesex against a Countess 295 An Attorney or Clerk of Court shall not have Priviledge if Sued joyntly with others 299 Averment See Pleading Assignment Obligation Where necessary and where not 41 43 44 117 149 177 178 B. Bail THe Action shall not be said to be depending until the Bail is Filed and not from the first day of the Term 135 Condition of the Bail Bond ought to agree with the Writ or else be void 233 234 Whether the Principal and Bail may be both taken in Execution 315 Bankrupt A Tradesman given over Trading may be a Bankrupt in respect of Debts contracted before 5 What makes a Man a Trader so as to make him a Bankrupt 29 166 A Man has Judgment in Debt and then becomes Bankrupt who shall have Execution 193 Victuallers for the Fleet not Traders within the Statute of Bankrupts tho' they Victual Merchantmen with the Surplus 170 The Commissioners Authority as to Commitments 323 Where a Debt paid by a Bankrupt to his Creditors shall be refunded 370 371 Baron and Feme See Statutes In Trover that they ad usum proprium converterunt c. Not good 12 24 33 Indebitatus Assump lies against the Husband for Apparel sold to the Wife 42 How to be Bailed when Arrested 49 Baron and Feme taken in Execution the Husband Escapes the Escape of the Husband is the Escape of the Wife and she shall be discharged 51 Battery brought against both and found only against the Feme Good 93 In a Suit the Baron makes an Attorney for both except the Feme be under Age 185. For then she is to be admitted by Guardian ibid. Where the Husband cannot release without the Wife 209 Battery brought by B. and F. for beating them both how far good 328 Bishop See Pleadings Of Common Right the Dean and Chapter are Guardians of the Spiritualties during the Vacancy of a Bishoprick but the
the Statute are to King James and in administring the Oath King Charles is named 171 172 The Ecclesiastical Court may make Defendants answer upon Oath as the Chancery doth 339 Obligation If two be bound joyntly and one be sued he cannot demur unless he aver the other is living And if there be two Obligees one cannot sue unless he avers the other is dead 34 A Release of one Joint Obligee of all Actions c. upon his own account does not discharge the Obligation 35 I do acknowledge to E. H. by me 20 l upon demand for doing the Work in my Garden Adjudged upon Demurrer to be a good Bond 238 Office and Officer Whether acceptance of a second Grant of an Office be a surrender of the first 297 An Act begun by one Officer and left imperfect what remains for his Successor 319 320. Outlawry Reverst for want of the Words pro Comitatu and why 108 P. Pardon See Witness WHere good without mentioning the Indictment 207 Parliament See Error The Three Estates See King Pasture Custom for Copyholders to have sole Feeding in a Certain Waste it is not needful to alledge that the Beasts were Levant and Couchant Here also a Copyholder may license others without Deed to put on their Beasts 165 Peace See Indictments Ac. Case Formality of Words where necessary in the Proceedings of Justices of Peace 39 Justices of Peace their Proceedings in relation to Bastard Children 48 59 210 310 336 Upon a Forcible Entry 308 Order of Sessions final in relation to a settlement of the Poor 310 King's Bench may judge of Fines imposed at Sessions and mitigate them 336 Perjury See Indictment One gave Evidence at a Trial and afterwards made Affidavit that he was perjured and suborn'd for which Affidavit an Information of Perjury was exhibited against him and he found guilty of Perjury in swearing he was perjured 182 Pleading See Escape Trespass In Debt upon Obligation the Defendant pleads that he delivered it as an Escrow plea nought 9 Where the Defendant pleads in Abatement and the Plaintiff Demurs if it be adjudged against the Defendant it shall be quod respondeat ulterius But if any thing be alledged in Abatement where upon Issue joyned it goes for the Plaintiff there he shall have Judgment to recover his Debt 22 In Actions laid by way of Reciprocal Promise there needs no Averment of Performance 41 178 Double Plea what 48 272 Trespass quare Arbores succidit Declaration insufficient because not exprest what kind of Trees 53 The like of Fishes 272 329 In Battery absque hoc quod moderate castigavit no direct Traverse to the Defendants Justification 70. Yet good after a Verdict ibid. A Plea in Abatement shall not be admitted after Imparlance 76 136 184. Exception 236 A Traverse designed to bring a Colateral matter in question not allowed 77 Executor pleads plene Administravit the Plaintiff confesseth the Plea and prays Judgment de bonis Testatoris quae in futuro ad manus defendentis devenerint 94 Where the Plaintiff denies what the Defendant affirms whether he ought to traverse or conclude to the Country 101 In Trespass where the Defendant claims a Way what Justification is sufficient what not 13 Incertainty in the Declaration or Plea where naught 106 114 120 278. What shall be said a Departure in Pleading what not 121 Where one Declares against one upon a Deed and it appears that another was bound with him it shall not be intended that the other sealed unless averr'd on the Defendants side 136 137 Deed delivered as an Escrow how to be pleaded 210 An apt Issue is not formed without an Affirmative and a Negative 213 To declare that a Bishop was seized in fee and not say in Jure Episcopatus not binds Successor 223 In Debt for Rent semper paratus is no good plea without saying quod obtulit 322 The effect of an Innuendo 337 The Statute for discharge of poor Prisoners how to be pleaded 356 Several Freeholders cannot joyn or be joyned in a Prescription to claim an Intire Interest in another mans Soyl 384. Nor can Freeholders and Copyholders joyn 390 Powers See Rocovery Of Power to Lease where well persued 294 340 Of Power of Revocation See Revocation Whether the Power of Revocation is extinguished by a Fine 368 371 Prescription See Appurtenant Common Grant The Nature and Rules of Prescription 386 Diversity between Prescription and Custom 389 The Owner of the Soyl can by no Prescription or Custom be excluded out of his own Soyl at all times of the year 390. But he may be excluded for a certain time and as to some kind of Profits 391 Prohibition Where it lies to the Admiralty 1 146 To the Ecclesiastical Court where a Parson sues for calling him Knave 2 Whether it lies where a Bishop sues for a Pension in his own Court 3 Whether it lies upon Suggestion that the Proprietors and Occupiers of such a Mannor or any parcel thereof pay a Groat to the Parson for Herbage-Tythes ibid. Lies for citing a man to answer in the Ecclesiastical Court and not delivering a Coppy of the Articles 5. And if the Party be excommunicate a Prohibition with a Mandamus to absolve him ibid. 252 Not lies to the Ecclesiastical Court for calling Impudent Whore 7. Or Whore and Bawd 61 220. Denied to the Ecclesiastical Court for calling Old Theif and Old Whore 10. Secus in London 343 352 In Prohibition on a Suit for Tythes what Suggestion is to be proved within six months 107 To the Ecclesiastical Court to stay a Suit there for Apparators Fees Suggesting there were no such Fees due by Custom 165 To Woodstreet Compter London for refusing to admit a Plea to their Jurisdiction before Imparlance 180 The Defendant in the Ecclesiastical Court pleads that the Tythes belong to another which Plea is refused Prohibition lies 248 335 Granted to the Ecclesiastical Court where Custom and Prescription comes in question tho the Principal Cause belongs properly to that Court as Church-Wardens Rates Tythes Mortuaries 274 Whether it lies to the Ecclesiastical Court for refusing to admit a Proof by one Witness 291 No Precedent for a Prohibition quia timet 313 To the Council of the Marches 330 Proof See Record Where Proof is to be made upon a Writ of Enquiry and where not 347 Q. Queen A Reservation to the Queen of England does not exclude a Queen Dowager 151 One who hath been a Queen not properly called nuper Regina in her Life time 152 Qui tam. See Error Action Judgment arrested because Issue was joyned only on behalf of the Informer and not also for the King 122 Quo Warranto Against certain Persons of the City of Worcester claiming to be Aldermen 366 R. Record If a Record be lost it may be proved to Jury by Testimony 257 Recorder See Mandamus What Causes may be sufficient to remove a Recorder 144 145 Recovery Where a Fine is Levyed to Lessee for years with an Intent
that he should suffer a Recovery his Term is not drowned 195 Tenant for Life with power to make a Jointure suffers a Recovery the Power is extinguished 226 227 Good tho' a Stranger that hath nothing in the Land be made Tenant to the Praecipe for a Recovery being a Common Assurance is to be favourably expounded 358 Whether a Recovery can be suffered where the Tail is expectant upon an Estate for Life the Tenant for Life not being made Tenant to the Praecipe 360 Release See Obligation Of all Demands its effect 314 Remainder Contingent Remainder by what Act destroyed 188 306 334 345 No Cross Remanders upon Construction in a Deed tho' sometimes in a Will 224 Rent Difference between a Rent and a Sum in Gross 99 Lease by Tenant in Fee and Rent reserved to the Lessor Executors Administrators and Assigns the words Executors and Administrators void 162 A Rent may be reserved by Contract without Deed 242 Where Rent shall be suspended and where apportioned by the Lessors Entry 276 277 Reputation Lands repurted parcel of a Mannor shall pass in a Recovery under the Word Appurtenances 52 Retorn Sheriff amerced for retorning Non est inventus on the Writ brought against his Bayliff 12 24 Sheriff retorns that Goods came to the Executors hands elongavit vendidit disposuit ad proprium usum suum convertit this tantamounts to quod devastavit 20 221 Sheriff retorns upon a Fi. fa. that he had taken Goods and that they were rescued from him not good 21 Action against Sheriff for a false Retorn of Cepi Corpus 85 Revocation What shall be a good Revocation upon a Power reserved 278 infra S. Scandal See Action upon the Case for Slander Scandalum Magnatum I do not know but my Lord of P. sent G. to take my Purse Action lies 59 Difference between an Action on the Statute of Scandalum Magnatum and a Common Action of Slander the Words in one Case shall be taken in mitiori sensu and in the other in the worst sense against the Speaker that the Honour of Great Persons may be preserved 60 Sewers Commissioners of Sewers and their Proceedings subject to the Jurisdiction of the King's Bench notwithstanding the Clause in Statute 13 Eliz. cap. 9. 67 Sheriff Sheriff may bring Trover for Goods taken in Execution and after taken away by the Defendant in the first Action 52 Soldiers Every Officer and Soldier as liable to be arrested as a Tradesman or any other person whatsoever 251 A Captain and Serjeant committed to Newgate for a great Misdemeaner in rescuing a Soldier ibid. Statutes When a Statute makes an Offence the King may punish it by Indictment but an Information will not lie when a Statute doth barely prohibit a thing 63 31 Ed. 1. Statute of Winton in an Action upon this Statute what taking shall be sufficient to discharge the Hundred 118 235 4 Ed. 3. cap. 7. Action lies for Executors upon this Statute for cutting and carrying way Corn 187. This Statute hath been always expounded largely ibid. 3 H. 7. cap. 2. A Wife forcibly married contrary to this Statute shall be admitted to give Evidence against her Husband 244 5 Eliz. cap. 4. For using a Trade not being Apprentice thereto 8 51 142 326 346 364. This Statute in relation to Apprentices expounded 174 31 Eliz. cap. 7. Of Cottages no Offence against this Statute to erect a Cottage if no body inhabits therein 107 43 Eliz. cap. 2. Poor By this Statute that enables Justices of Peace to tax a Neighbouring Parish the Justices may tax any of the Inhabitants and not the whole Parish 350 21 Jac. cap. 26. Of Felony to Personate 301 12 Car. 2. Of Ministers A good Act being made by King Lords and Commons and any defects in the Circumstances of calling them together ought not to be pried into 15 This Act extends only to Benefices with Cure ibid. 14 Car. 2. cap. 10. 16 Car. 2. cap. 3. Harth-mony Smiths Forges shall pay 191 192. So empty Houses 312 14 Car. 2. cap. 33. Of Printing Seditious Books 316. 16 Car. 2. cap. 7. Of Gaming Articles for above 100 l at a Horse Race within this Statute 253 254 17 Car. 2 cap. 2. Of Non Con-Ministers explained 328 29 Car. 2. Of Frauds and Perjuries No Promise made before the 24th of June within this Act 330. What Contracts within ths Act 361 31 Car. 2. Habeas Corpus Prayer must be made by Council wiihin the first Week after the beginning of the Term 346 T. Tail THO' a Term in gross cannot be entail'd yet where man hath a Term in point of Interest and at the same time the Trust of the Inheritance here he may entail the Trust of the Term to wait upon the Inheritance 194 What Words create an Estate Tail and what in Remainder contingent or vested 215 230 231 Estates Tail how forfeitable for Treason 299 infra A Devise to a Man and the Heirs Males of his Body with a proviso if he attempts to alien the Estate to cease the Condition void 321 322 A Limitation in Tail how it operates 378 Tender Tender and refusal is as much as payment 167 Tender where not good 252 261 Teste Where the Teste of a Writ before it was taken out is notwithstanding good 362 Tythes May be paid of a Warren by Custom 5. So of Doves and Fish ibid. Whether an Executor may bring Debt upon the Statute 2 E. 6. for Tythes due to the Testator 30 31 Where and what Modus shall bar the Recovery of Tythes in specie 32 A Prescription cannot be suggested time out of mind to pay a Modus for Tythe Hops since they were not known in England till Queen Elizabeth's time 61 Tythes of VVood tho' not Fewel payable unless exprest to be burnt in a House for the maintenance of Husbandry 75 Treason In Coyning and Clipping the Judgment 254 For raising a Rebellion in Carolina 349 Trespass See Pleading Quare Clausum fregit and threw down his Fences what Plea in Justification good 221 Continuando in Trespass where good and where not 363 Trust See Tayl. A Use in former time the same with what a Trust is now 130 Where a Trust for Life Remainder over with Power of Revocation is forfeitable and where not 128 infra Whether a Trustee is compellable to produce Writings or the Key of the Box wherein they are against the Interest of the Party for whom he is Trustee 197 Tryal See Venue What shall be Cause for new Tryal what not 30 Justices of Assize may try Informations tho' commenced before the Justices of a former Assizes 85 181 V. Venue WHere a Deed is forged at S. and given in Evidence at D. from whence the Venue ought to come in an Information thereupon 17 A Breach of Covenant assigned in Barwick the Venue shall arise from the next place in Northumberland 58 Judgment by Nihil dicit reverst after a Writ of Enquiry executed because no
redd ' unius anni mediet ' redd ' unius anni per quem talia terrae vel tenementa sic alienat ' tent ' fuer ' in Manerio praed ' nomine finis pro alienatione and lays a Custom to distrain for the said Alienation Fine and then sets forth an alienation of the said Messuage and Premisses by the said Sir John Sabin to one Walter Tyndall in fee and shews that the said Walter Tyndall made another alienation in fee to one Christopher Yates and so sets forth that there were two Fines due upon the said alienations after the rate aforesaid amounting to 18 l 7 s and 7 d ob and that he as Bayliff of the said Dean and Chapter captionem praed ' bene cognoscit in praed ' loco in quo ut in parcell ' tenement ' praed ' To this the Plaintiff demurred and it was spoken to at the Bar the last Term and likewise this Term The main thing was that the Custom as it was laid was not good for the Alienation Fine is set forth to be due upon the Alienation of any parcel of Lands or Tenements held of the said Mannor to have a year and halfs Rent by which the Lands or Tenements so aliened were held so that if the 20th part of an Acre be aliened a Fine is to be paid and that of the whole Rent for every parcel is held at the time of the alienation by the whole Rent and no apportioning thereof can be but subsequent to the Alienation and this the whole Court held an unreasonable Custom and it is set forth it could not be otherwise understood than that a Fine should be due viz. a year and halfs Rent upon the Alienation of any part of the Lands held by such Rent The Court doubted also whether the Custom was good as to the claiming an Alienation Fine upon an Alienation for Life because by that the tenure of the Lands aliened is not altered for the Reversion is still held as before by the same Tenant Judicium pro Quer ' Colley versus Helyar IN an Action of Debt for 34 l the Plaintiff declared against the Defendant an Attorney of this Court praesente hic in Cur. in propria persona sua upon a Bond of 34 l The Defendant pleads in Bar quoad quinque libras sex solid tres denar of the aforesaid 34 l that the Plaintiff post confectionem Scripti Obligat ' praedict ' scilicet vicesimo c. anno c. ꝑ quoddam Scriptum suum acquietantiae cognovisset se accepisse habuisse de praed Defendente 5 l 6 s and 3 d in part solutionis majoris summae and pleaded a frivolous Plea as to the rest of the Mony to which the Plaintiff demurred And it was argued that the Acquittance under the Plaintiffs Hand and Seal for 5 l 6 s and 3 d part of the Mony due might have been pleaded in bar of the whole and that if the Defendant here had relied upon it it would have barred the Plaintiff of the whole Vide for that matter Hollingwoth and Whetston Sty 212. Allen 65. Beaton and Forrest Note there the payment was since the Action brought and pleaded in abatement where it was said that it could not be so pleaded without an Acquittance Vide Kelw. 20. 162. 3 H. 7. 3 B. receipt of parcel pending the Writ 7 Ed. 4. 15. a. But it seems clear by the Book of Edw. 4. 207. Mo. 886. Speak versus Richards That if part be received and an Acquittance given before the Action it is a Bar only of so much but it seems the Action must be brought for the whole Dickman versus Allen. Cantabr ' ss Case brought against the Defendant for not folding his Sheep upon the Plaintiffs Land according to Custom The Colledge of St. Mary and St. Nicholas seized in Fee j●re Collegii ABRAHAMUS ALLEN nuꝑ de Grancester in Com' praedicto Yeom ' attach ' fuit ad respondend ' Roberto Dickman Gen ' de placito transgr ' suꝑ Casum c. Et unde idem Robertus per Robertum Drake Attorn ' suum queritur quare cum Praepositus Scholares Collegii Regalis Beatae Mariae Sancti Nicholai in Cantabr ' in Com' praed ' seisit ' fuissent de uno Capitali Messuagio cum pertinen ' in Grancester in Com' praedicto ac de centum sexaginta acris terrae arrabil ' jacen ' in Communibus Campis de Grancester praedicta cum pertinen ' in dominico suo ut de feodo in jure Collegii sui praedicti iidemque Praepositus Scholares omnes ill quorum statum ipsi habuer ' de in tenementis praed ' cum pertinen ' a tempore cujus contrarii memoria hominum non existit habuer ' habere consuever ' ꝓ se Firmariis Tenentibus suis eorundem A Custom for all the Tenants to sold their Landlords Land Tenementorum cum pertinen ' libertatem Faldagii Anglicê Foldage omnium Ovium Ovibus suis ꝓpriis Ovibus tenen ' occupatorum ꝓ tempore existen ' quorundam Messuagiorum Terrarum in Villa de Coton in Com' praed ' qui a tempore cujus contrarii memoria hominum non existit respective usi fuer ' Common of Vicinage interc̄oiare causa vicinagii in quibusdam Communibus Campis de Grancester praed ' cum Ovibus suis in super praed ' Messuagiis terris suis in Coton praed ' Levant and Couchant levan ' cuban ' except ' suor ' depascen ' infra Communes Campos territoria de Grancester praedicta a vicesimo quinto die Martii usque primum diem Novembris quolibet anno suꝑ praedictas centum sexaginta acras terras arabil percipiend ' From such a day to such a day faldand ' tanquam ad tenementa praedicta cum pertinenciis pertinen ' praedictisque Praeposito Scholaribus Collegii praed ' de Tenementis praedictis cum pertinen ' The Principal and Scholars demise to the Plaintiff by Indenture in forma praedicta seisit ' existen ' Praepositus Scholares postea scilicet decimo nono die Octobris Anno Domini millesimo sexcentesimo octogesimo primo apud Grancester praedictam quodam Johanne Coppleston Sacrae Theologiae Professor ' adtunc Praeposito Collegii praedicti existen ' ꝑ quandam Indenturam inter ipsos Praepositum Scholares ex una parte quendam Johannem Wittewronge Mil Barronet ' ex altera parte factam cujus alteram partem Sigillo c̄oi ipsorum Praepositi Scholarium signat ' idem Robertus Dickman hic in Cur ' profert cujus dat' est eisdem die anno dimiser ' ad firmam tradider ' eidem Johanni Wittewronge Tenementa praedicta cum pertinen ' Habendum habend ' occupand ' praefat ' Johanni Assign ' suis a tempore confectionis Indenturae illius usque plenum finem terminum viginti
his Bill to have the Land Conveyed according to the Agreement above But for the Defendants it was much insisted upon that this being to settle the Lands in case Thomas should dye without Issue it should not be regarded in this Court for the Execution of a Trust of a Remainder or Reversion in Fee upon an Estate Tail shall not be compelled because it is subject to be destroyed by the Tenant in Tail as here Thomas might have done in case he had made a Settlement according to the import of that Writing who therefore could not have been compelled himself to have executed this Agreement But the Lord Chancellor Fynch Decreed the Land for the Plaintiff because it was proved that the Marriage with the Plaintiffs Wife was in expectation of the performance of this Agreement and he was obliged to have left the Land to the Plaintiff if he had had no Issue Termino Sanctae Trinitatis Anno 34 Car. II. In Cancellaria Collet versus Collet WIlliam Fox having three Daughters Mary Elizabeth and Martha the two latter being Married and the first a Widow by his Will devised in these Words Viz. I give unto Martha my Daughter the Sum of 400 l to be paid unto her by my Executors within one year next after my decease But I will and my desire is that Cornelius Collet the Husband of Martha upon the payment of the said 400 l shall give such Security as my Executors shall approve of that the said 400 l shall be laid out within 18 Months next after my decease and purchase an Estate of that value to be setled and assured upon her the said Martha and the Heirs of her Body lawfully begotten And in the Close of his Will were these words following Viz. I Will That after my Debts which I shall owe at the time of my Decease and my Funeral Expences and the Probat of this my Will be discharged then I do give all the rest of my Personal Estate Unbequeathed to purchase an Estate near of as good value as the same Personal Estate shall amount unto within one year next after my my decease Which said Estate so to be purchased I Will shall be setled and assured unto and upon my said three Daughters Mary Elizabeth and Martha and the Heirs of their respective Bodies lawfully begotten for ever or otherwise my said Daughter Mary and the Husbands of my said two other Daughters Elizabeth and Martha shall for such Moneys as they shall receive of my said Executors for the Overplus of my Personal Estate enter into one or more Bonds in the double Sum of Money as each part shall amount unto the same being to be divided into three parts unto my said Executors within 18 Months next after my decease to settle and assure such part or Sum of Money as each of them shall receive and have by this my Will for the Overplus of my Personal Estate unto and upon the Child and Children of my said Daughters Mary Elizabeth and Martha part and part alike Martha the Wife of Cornelius Collet died within six Months after the Testator leaving Issue only a Daughter who died within four Months after the Mother the other two Sisters surviving Cornelius Collet took out Letters of Administration both to Martha his Wife and likewise to his Daughter the Four hundred Pounds and likewise the Overplus of the Personal Estate being unpaid or disposed of Cornelius Collet preferred his Bill against the Executors and the surviving Sisters and thereby demanded the 400 l and likewise a third part of the Overplus which amounted unto 700 l And the Cause came to be heard before the Lord Chancellor upon Bill and Answer who Decreed the 400 l to the Plaintiff but as to the Surplus of the Estate the Bill was dismissed altho ' it was much insisted upon for the Plaintiff that he might have given Bond to secure the Surplus for his Child and so from the Child it would have come to him as Administrator But seeing that no Interest could vest in the Child till the Election were determined it not being material as to this Point whether the Executors or the Husband a● the Election the Father could not claim it as Administrator to the Child And then if the Money had been laid out in Land and the Settlement according to the direction of the Will the Husband would have had no benefit for there would have been a Ioynt Estate for Life in the Daughters with several Inheritances and no severance of the Ioynture by the Marriage and having Issue Co. Inst and so no Tenant by the Courtesie Therefore as to the Surplusage the Bill was Decreed to be dismissed Note As to the 400 l the Order of my Lord Chancellor was That Interest should be paid for it from the time of bringing the Bill Termino Sancti Michaelis Anno 34 Car. II. In Cancellaria West versus The Lord Delaware WEST Heir apparent of the Lord Delaware Exhibited his Bill against the said Lord setting forth That upon a Marriage agreed to be had between him and the Daughter of one Mr. Huddleston with whom he was to have 10000 l Portion The Lord his Father Articled to settle Lands of such yearly value for the Wives Ioynture for their maintenance and the Heirs of their Bodies c. That the Wife being now dead and without Issue and no Settlement made the Bill prayed an Execution of the Articles and a discovery of what Incumbrances there were upon the Lands to be setled To this the Lord Delaware Answered That he never intended to settle Lands but for the Wives Ioynture only and that the Plaintiff her Husband was not named in the Articles and so was Advised He need make no Settlement and upon that Reason the Plaintiff could not require him to discover Incumbrances An Exception being taken to the Answer for that it did not discover any thing touching Incumbrances it was Argued before my Lord and for the Defendant it was alledged That by the Course of the Court the time of the Discovery should be when the other Point was determined for if that be for the Defendant then no Discovery can be required but if otherwise that then the Defendant shall be put to answer Interrogatories as is usual in Cases of like nature And it cannot be Objected That the Estate may be charged with Incumbrances since the Bill because they will be of no avail On the other side it was said That this would create great delay for upon the discovery of Incumbrances other parties must be made to the Bill and therefore this Case differed from the Case of Account which concerns the Defendant himself only but the Question now is only for the making proper Parties The Court Ordered That a further Answer should be made Nota If a man deviseth that such a Sum of Money shall be paid out of the Profits of his Lands and the Profits will not amount to the Sum in such case the Land
83 W Wager of Law WHere a Man shall be admitted to Wage his Law in an Action of Debt and the manner of doing it 171 Waver An Executor cannot Wave a Term unless he renounce the whole Executorship 209 Way How a man may Intitle himself to a Foot Way 186 Wills See Devise Where there is a Custom to pass Lands by a Parol or Nuncupative Will yet they shall not pass without express and plain Words to shew the Intention 286 A Cumulative Provision in a Will shall not double a Portion unless plainly proved that the Testator intended to do so 347 348 Writs Where a Writ shall be amended according to the Instructions given to the Cursitor 46 49 152 Where an Original Writ shall be new made according to the Instructions first given to the Cursitor 130 Usual for a Plaintiff to take out his Original after Judgment entred 154 ERRATA in the Second Part. PAg. 8. lin 4. read Ireland p. 10. l. ult r. Canon Law p. 16. in fine r. Judaical p. 21. l. 23. r. Lands Freehold c. p. 50. l. 15. r. 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of Jane the second Wife is void and it cannot be returning where the Use is not setled in any Person I agree my Lord Pagets Case because there the Estate was vested in William Paget and the other Use returned by operation of Law and the Estate setled could not be divested but here the Limitation to the Heirs Males being void the ancient Use remained yet in Michael for nothing was out of him he having limited a thing which cannot be And as to a returning Use tho' all be done in an instant yet there is a priority of time in the Eye of the Law for it ought to vest first in him in Remainder and then Return but here nothing vests in the Remainder Secondly It hath béen urged That it shall be made good by Implication of Law and so shall amount to a Covenant to stand seized to the Used of the Covenantor for Life c. and the rather as it has béen said by Wild because Uses are guided by Equity But I answer we are here in case of a Deed where an Estate shall not be raised by Implication as it shall by a Will Cro. Car. Seagood ad Hone 366. A Deed differs greatly from a Will for if a Man Surrenders Copyhold Land to two equally to be divided they are Joynt-tenants but such a Devise would have made them Tenants in Common Admit in some Case an Estate shall be raised by Implication in a Deed yet it shall not be so here for it would be to the disinheriting the Heir As to the case of 13 H. 7. I agree that a Devise to the Eldest Son after the Death of the Wife gives an Estate for Life to the Wife but otherwise it would be upon such a Devise to the Younger Son for there the Eldest Son and not the Wife should have the Estate in the mean time Cro. Jac. Horton and Horton 57. We are not herein Favorabili materiâ and therefore no construction shall be made which does not appear by the words It hath béen strongly urged that this being by way of Use which is a matter of Equity shall be favoured Admit it yet it shall be guided by the Common Law for aequitas sequitur legem There never shall be a Settlement by way of Use to make one capable who is not capable by the Common Law I do not see any difference between a Feoffment to Uses and a Covenant to stand seized for if a Feoffment be made to the use of one for Life the Use shall return which is not disposed of as well as upon a Covenant to stand seized Thirdly It has been urged if these severally cannot support this Limitation yet the intention operating with the Deed will both together make an Estate for Life in Michael But I do not see his intent here to have it for Life the intention even in a Will which is much stronger ought to be collected out of the words of the Will. Cro. Car. Spirt and Bence 368. agreed by the whole Court that words in a Will ought to have an apparent intent to disinherit an Heir and here there is not any apparent intent but rather to the contrary for of some Lands Michael Covenants to stand seised to the Use of himself for Life Remainder c. but of the Lands in question he makes a difference in the Limitation And the words of the Deed are to be considered He Covenants to stand seized to the Uses mentioned declared and limited in the Deed and if Michael shall have an Estate for Life he must have it by operation of Law There was a like case between Flavil and Ventroise in the Common Pleas in which the Court was divided but the same Point came afterwards in question in the Case of Mr. Tape of Norfolk and it was adjudged to be the ancient Use And no Case can be shewn that the Law will create an Estate in the Covenantor where the Use is not vested in any Person but the ancient Use remains in him As to the Cases cited on the other side I have answered my Lord Pagets's Case already And as to my Lord Cokes Case 1 Inst 22. b. I agree the Use returns and the Son is in by discent and so it was adjudged in Fenwick and Mitfords Case there cited But the Paraphrase he makes there I do not understand It is said there when the Limitation is made to his right Heirs and right Heirs he cannot have during his Life the Law doth create an Use in him during his Life Wherefore is this said to make the Heir in by discent No doubt without this he is in by discent and so was the Iudgment in that Case for what Reason then should there be an Estate for Life raised by the Law to be merg'd by the Fee as soon as raised And there 't is said Till the future use come in Esse I do not conceive then where it is so long as the Father lives and what he means by the Future Use I do not know for it always was in Esse and never was out of the Feoffor and this was so adjudg'd in that Case of Fenwick and Mitford and not the construction of my Lord Coke And t is strange that no other Reports should mention his construction Hale Chief Justice for the Defendant If Ralph takes either by Discent from Michael or by Purchase the one way or the other answers the Verdict and the Issue is for the Defendant I shall divide the Case into two Points 1. If he takes by Discent 2. Admitting he does not If he may take by Purchase as this Case is I shall Premise two or three things First It has been agreed if an Estate for Life be raised to Michael the Remainder being to his Heirs Male of the Body of Jane his second Wife the Estate Tail is executed in him be the Estate for Life raised by Implication or express Limitation Secondly It is plain quacunque via It be rais'd that the Estate was long'd in Michael till Ralph the Son be in a capacity to take it either by Discent or Purchase for be it part of the ancient Use or a new Use it ought to be in Michael during his Life for there is nothing to bring it out of him Thirdly In all Cases touching Uses there is a great difference between a Feoffment to Uses a Covenant to stand seized and a conveyance at the Common Law If a Man by Feoffment to uses conveys Land to the use of J.S. for Life he may remit the Use to himself and the Heirs Male of his Body by the same Deed and so alter that wich was before a Fee simple and turn it into another Estate but if A. gives Land to B. for Life Remainder to A. and the Heirs Male of his Body because a Man cannot give to himself the Remainder is void for a Man cannot convey to himself by a Conveyance at the Common Law These things being premised I conceive here is an