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A28468 Nomo-lexikon, a law-dictionary interpreting such difficult and obscure words and terms as are found either in our common or statute, ancient or modern lawes : with references to the several statutes, records, registers, law-books, charters, ancient deeds, and manuscripts, wherein the words are used : and etymologies, where they properly occur / by Thomas Blount of the Inner Temple, Esq. Blount, Thomas, 1618-1679. 1670 (1670) Wing B3340; ESTC R19028 517,540 312

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False Amprisonment Is a Trespass committed against a man by Imprisoning him without lawful cause It is also used for the Writ brought upon this Trespass Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 86. K. and 88. P. vide Broke and New Book of Entries verbo False Imprisonment False Prophecies See Prophecies False returno brevium Is a Writ lying against the Sheriff for false returning of Writs Reg. judicial fol. 43. b. Falsify Seems to signifie as much as to prove a thing to be false Perkins Dower 383 385. Also to say or do falsly as to falsify or counterfeit the Kings Seal Rex Vic. Lincoln Scias quod dedimus Adae de Essex Clerico nostro pro servicio suo omnes terras tenementa quae fuerunt Will. de Scrubby cujus terrae tenementa sunt excaeta nostra per Feloniam quam fecit de falsificatione Sigilli nostri T. apud Linc. 28. Nou. c. Claus 6 Joh. m. 12. in dorso Familia Pro hida massa manso carucata Donavit terram quinquaginta Familiarum ad construendum Monasterium Beda Hist Eccl. lib. 4 ca. 3. This term Hide is by our Writers sometimes called a Manse sometimes a Family sometimes Carucata or a Plough-land containing as much as one Plough and Oxen could cultivate in one year Cressy's Church-Hist fol. 723. b. Ubi Beda Familiam Saxonicus ejus interpres coaetaneus passim hide redderet Anglo-Normannis Carucata terrae Gloss in x. Script Fanaticks Anno 13 Car. 2. ca. 6. Is used as a general name for Quakers Anabaptists and other dissenters from the Church of England Faonatio or Feonatio from the Fr. Faonner a fawning or bringing forth young as Does do Carta Forestae ca. 8. Farding or Farthing of Gold quasi fourth-thing was a Coin used in ancient times containing in value the fourth part of a Noble viz. xx d. Silver and in weight the sixth part of an Ounce of Gold that is of 5 s. in Silver mention'd 9 H. 5. Stat. 2. cap. 7. thus Item that the King do to be ordained good and just weight of the Noble half-Noble and Farthing of Gold with the rates necessary to the same for every City c. Whereby it plainly appears to have been a Coin as well as the Noble and half-Noble Farandman Sax. Faran to Travel A Merchant-Stranger or Pilgrim to whom by the Lawes of Scotland Justice ought to be done with all expedition that his business or journey be not hinder'd Fardel of Land Fardella terrae Is according to some Authors the fourth part of a Yard-land Yet Noy in his compleat Lawyer pa. 57. sayes Two Fardels of Land make a Nook and four Nooks make a Yard-land Farding deal Sax feord i. quarta del or doele pars alias Farundel of Land Quadrantata terrae Signifies the fourth part of an Acre Crom. Jur. fol. 220. Quadrantata terrae is read in the Reg. of Writs fol. 1. b. where you have also Denariata obolata solidata librata terrae which must probably rise in proportion of quantity from the Fardingdeal as an half-penny penny shilling or pound rise in value Then must Obolata be half an Acre Denariata an Acre Solidata twelve Acres and Librata twelve score Acres yet I find Viginti libratas terrae vel redditus Reg. fol. 94. a. and fol. 248. b. whereby it seems Librata terrae is so much as yields xx s. per annum and Centum solidatas terrarum tenementorum redituum fol. 249. a. And in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 87. f. Viginti libratas terrae vel reditus which argues it to be so much Lands as twenty shillings per annum See Furlong Others hold Obolata to be but half a Pearch and Denariata a Pearch See Spelmans Gloss verbo Obolata terrae Sciatis me Rogerum de Ichtefeld dedisse Medietatem unius Feorwendel terrae de meo dominio c. Mon. Angl. 2 Pa. fo 913. b. Fare Sax. A voyage or passage or the Money paid for passing by Water Anno 2 3 Ph. Ma. cap. 16. Farley or Farle● In the Mannor of West Slapton in Com. Devon if any Tenant die possessed of a Cottage he is by the Custom to pay to the Lord six pence for a Farley Which I suppose may be in Lieu of a Heriot For in some Mannors Westward they distinguish Farleu to be the best good as Hariot is the best Beast payable at the Tenants death Farm From the Sax. Feorme i. Food Reditus est qui in ●locandis praediis Domino elocanti reservatur See Ferm and Spelm. Gloss verbo Firma Farthing of Land Sax. Feorþling Seems to be some great quantity and to differ much from Fardingdeal For I finde in a Survey Book of the Mannor of West Slapton in Devonshire entred thus A. B. holds six Farthings of Land at 126 l. per annum some hold it to be a Yardland See Fardel Fardingdeal and Farding Fat or Uate Is a great Wooden Vessel which among Brewers and Maulsters is used to measure Mault for expedition containing a Quarter Mentioned Stat. 1 Hen. 5. cap. 10. and 11 Hen. 6. cap. 8. It is likewise a Vessel or Pan of Lead for the making of Salt at Droitwich in the County of Worcester whereof the several Owners or Proprietors do claim Estates of Inheritance and Burgesship Fautors Anno 16 Rich. 2. cap. 5. Favorers supporters or maintainers Fealty Fidelitas Fr. Feaulte i. Fides Signifies an Oath taken at the admittance of every Tenant to be true to the Lord of whom he holds his Land And he that holds Land by this onely Oath of Fealty holds in the freest manner because all that have Fee hold per fidem ●iduciam that is by Fealty at the least Smith de Repub. Angl. lib. 3. cap. 8. This Fealty is also used in other Nations as in Lombardy and Burgundy Cassanaeus de consuetud Burgund pag. 419. And indeed as the very first creation of this tenure grew from the love of the Lord towards his Followers so did it bind the Tenant to Fidelity as appears by the whole course of the Feods and the breach thereof is loss of the Fee Hotoman in his Commentaries de verbis Feudalibus shews a Double Fealty one general to be performed by every Subject to his Prince the other special required onely of such as in respect of their Fee are tied by this Oath towards their Land-lords we may read of both in the Grand Custumary of Normandy c. Fealty special is with us performed either by Freemen or by Villains the form of both see Anno 17 Edw. 2. in these words When a Fréeman shall do Fealty to his Lord he shall hold his right hand upon a Book and shall say thus Hear you my Lord R. that I. P. shall be to you both faithful and true and shall ow my Fealty to you for the Land that I hold of you at the terms assigned So help me God and all his Saints When a Uillain shall do Fealty to this Lord he shall hold
from the Fr. Merci i. misericordia signifies the pecuntary punishment of an offender against the King or other Lord in his Court that is found to be in misericordia i. to have offended and to stand to the mercy of the Lord. There seems to be a difference between Amerciaments and Fines These as they are taken for punishments are punishments certain which grow expresly from some Statute but Amerciaments are arbitrably imposed by Affeerors See Kitchin fol. 78. and 214. Manwood in his first part of Forest Laws pag. 166. makes another difference as if an Amerciament were a more easie or merciful penalty and a Fine more sharp and grievous Take his words If the Pledges for such a Trespass appear by common Summons and not the Defendant himself then the Pledges shall be imprisoned for the Defendants default But otherwise it is if the Defendant himself appear and be ready in Court before the Lord Justice in Eyre to receive his Judgment and to pay his Fine But if such Pledges make default they shall be Amerced but not Fined The Author of the New Terms of Law saith That Amerciament is most properly a Penalty assessed by the Peers or Equals of the Party Amerced for an offence done for which he puts himself upon the mercy of the Lord Who also mentions an Amerciament Royal and defines it to be a pecuniary punishment laid upon a Sheriff Coroner or such like Officer of the King by Justices for some offence Ratcliff Baron of the Exchequer 2 Hen. 7. fol. 7. See Misericordia Amortization amortizatio Fr. amortissement Est praediorum translatio in manum mortuam quod tamen sine venia Principis non fiat Jus amortizationis est privilegium seu licentia capiendi in manum mortuam In the Statute De libertatibus perquirendis Anno 27 Edw. 1. the word Amortisement is used See Mortmain Amortize from the Fr. amortir Is to Alien Lands or Tenements to any Corporation Guild or Fraternity and their Successors which cannot be done without Licence of the King and the Lord of the Mannor Anno 15 Rich. 2. cap. 5. See Mortmain and the Statute of Amortizing Lands made tempore Edw. 1. Amoveas manum See Ouster le Main An jour Waste Annus Dies Vastum Look Year Day and Waste Ancorage ancoragium A duty taken of Ships for the Pool of the Haven where they cast Anchor M. S. Arth. Trevor Ar. For no man can let any Anchor fall on the Kings Ground in any Port without paying therefore to the Kings Officers appointed by Patent Ancestor antecessor Is well known but we make this difference betwixt that and Predecessor the first is applied to a natural person as I. S. Antecessores sui the other to a Body Politick or Corporate Episcopus Winton Predecessores sui Coke on Littl. Lib. 2. cap. 4. Sect. 103. Ancestrel As Homage Ancestrel i. Homage that hath been done or performed by ones Ancestors See Homage Ancient Fr. ancien In Greys-Inn the Society consists of Benchers Ancients Barrasters and Students under the Bar where the Ancients are of the more Ancient Barrasters In the Inns of Chancery there are onely Ancients and Students or Clerks and among the Ancients one is yearly the Principal or Treasurer In the Middle-Temple Ancients are such as are past their Reading and never read Ancient demean or demain vetus Patrimonium Domini Is a certain Tenure whereby all the Mannors belonging to the Crown in the days of Saint Edward or William the Conqueror were held The number and names of which Mannors as of all other belonging to common persons after a Survey made of them he caused to be written in a Book now remaining in the Exchequer and called Dooms-day And those which by that Book appear to have at that time belonged to the Crown and are contained under the Title Terra Regis are called Ancient Demesn Kitchin fol. 98. Of these Tenants there were two sorts one that held their Land frankly by Charter the other by Copy of Court-Roll or by Verge at the Will of the Lord according to the Custom of the Mannor Britton cap. 66. numb 8. The benefit of this Tenure consists in these Points 1. The Tenants holding by Charter cannot be impleaded out of their Mannor or if they be they may abate the Writ by Pleading their Tenure before or after answer made 2. They are free of Toll for all things concerning their Sustenance and Husbandry 3. They may not be empannelled upon any Enquest See more in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 14. d. fol. 228 c. By whom it appears these Tenants held originally by Ploughing the Kings Land plashing his Hedges or such like towards the maintenance of his Houshold in which regard they had such Liberties given them wherein to avoid disturbance they may have Writs to such as take the Duties of Toll as likewise for Immunity of Portage Passage or such like No Lands ought to be accounted Ancient Demesn but such as are held in Soccage See Monstraverunt and Demain Ancienty Fr. anciennete i. ancientnes In the Statute of Ireland 14 Hen. 3. is used for Eldership or Seniority As The Eldest Sister can demand no more then her other Sisters but the chief Mease by reason of her Ancienty Andena A swath in Mowing See Dole Annats annates Are all one with First-fruits Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 20. The reason is because the rate of First-fruits paid of Spiritual Livings is after one years profit Annates more suo appellant primos fructus unius anni sacerdotii vacantis aut dimidiam eorum partem says Polydor Virgil de Inven. rerum lib. 8. cap. 2. Note Annates Primitiae and First-fruits are all one Cokes 12. Rep. fol. 45. See First-fruits Anniented from the Fr. aneantir i. To make void signifies as much as frustrated or brought to nothing Littleton lib. 3. cap. Warranty Anniversary days dies anniversarii Were of old those days wherein the Martyrdoms or Deaths of Saints were celebrated yearly in the Church or the days whereon at every years end Men were wont to pray for the Souls of their deceased Friends according to the continued custom of Roman Catholicks mentioned in the Statute 1 Edw. 6. cap. 14. and 12 Car. 2. cap. 13. This was in use among our ancient Saxons as you may see in Lib. Rames Sect. 134. Annua pensione Is a Writ now difused whereby the King having an Annual Pension due to Him from an Abbor or Prior for any of His Chaplains whom He should think good to nominate being as yet unprovided of suffiliving demands the same of the said Abbot or Prior and also wills him for His Chaplains better assurance to give him His Letters Patent for the same Register of Writs fol. 265 307. And Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 231. Where you may see the names of all the Abbeys and Priories bound to this in respect of their Foundation or Creation Anno Domini Is the computation of time from the
lx fol. Et inde producit sectam c. praedictus Johannes venit c. Et non dedicit Conventionem praedictam Et quia videtur Curiae quod tale placitum non jacet inter Christianos Ideo partes praedicti adjournantur usque in infernum ad audiendum judicium suum utraque pa●s in misericordia c. Conventione Is a Writ that lies for the breach of any Covenant in writing Reg. of Writs fol. 185. Old Nat. Br. fol. 101. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 145. calls it a Writ of Covenant who divides Covenants into personal and real making a discourse of both as also how this Writ lies for both Conventuals Are those Religious Men who are united together in a Convent or Religious House See Frier Observant Conventual Church See Parish Convict Convictus Is he that is found guilty of an O●fence by Verdict of a Jury Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 186. yet Crompton out of Judge Dyers Commentaries 275 saith That Conviction is either when a Man is outlawed or appears and confesseth or else is found guilty by the Inquest Cromp. Jus● of Peace fol. 9. Conviction and Attainder are often confounded See Attaint and Attainted A Convict Recusant Is one that hath been legally presented indicted and convic● for refusing to come to Church to hear the Common-Prayer according to the Statutes 1 Eliz. 2. 23 Eliz. 1 and 3 Jac. 4. And these are commonly understood to be Popish Recusants though any others that refuse to come to Church for the purpose aforesaid may as properly be called Recusants See Ju●y Convocation Convocatio Is the Assembly of all the Clergy to consult of Ecclesiastical Matters in time of Parliament And as there are Two Houses of Parliament so are there Two Houses of Convocation the one called the Higher Convocation House where the Archbishops and Bishops sit severally by themselves the other the Lower Convocation House where all the rest of the Clergy sit Anno. 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. See Prolo●utor Conusance See Cognisance Conusant Fr. Cognoissant Knowing understanding apprehending If the son be Conusant and agrees to the Fe 〈…〉 ment c. Coke on Littl. fol. 159. b. Conusor See Cognizor Coopertura A Thicket or Covert of Wood. Carta de Foresta cap. 12. Ca●●●ceners Farticip●s Otherwise called Parceners are such as have equal portion in the inheritance of their Ancestor Littleton lib. 3. says Paroenors are either by Law or by Custom Parcenors by Law are the issue Female which in default of Heir-male come in equality to the Lands of their A 〈…〉 Bracto● lib. 2. cap. 30. Parce●●rs by Cust●● are those who by custom of the Country challenge equal part in such Lands as in Kent by ●●volkind Of these you may read more at large in Littl. lib. 3. cap. 1. 2. and Brittan cap. 27. The Crown of England is not subject to Coparcinery Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 22. Cope Is a Custom or Tribute due to the King or Lord of the Soil out of the Lead-Mines in the Wapentake of Wirksworth in Com. Derby of which thus Mr. Manlove in his Treatise of those Liberties and Customs Printed 1653. Egress and Regress to the Kings High-way The Miners have and Lot and Cope they pay The Thirteenth Dish of Oar within their Mine To the Lord for Lot they pay at Measuring time Six pence a Load for Cope the Lord demands And that is paid to the Berghmasters hands c. Copia libelli deliberanda Is a Writ that lies in Case where a Man cannot get the Copy of a Libel at the hands of the Judge Ecclefiastical Reg. of Writs fol. 51. Copihold Tenura per Copiam Rotuli Curiae Is a Tenure for which the Tenant hath nothing to shew but the Copy of the Rolls made by the Steward of his Lords Court For as the Steward enrols and makes Remembrances of all other things done in the Lords Court so he does also of such Tenants as are admitted in the Court to any parcel of Land or Tenement belonging to the Mannor and the Transcript of this is called the Court-Roll the Copy whereof the Tenant keeps as his onely evidence Coke lib. 4. fol. 25. b. This is called a Base Tenure because it holds at the Will of the Lord. Kitchin fol. 80. cap. Copiholds Fitzh Nat. Br. fol. 12. says It was wont to be called Tenure in Villenage and that Copihold is but a new name and yet it is not simply at the Will of the Lord but according to the Custom of the Mannor So that if a Copiholder break not the Custom of the Mannor and thereby forfeit his Tenure he seems not so much to stand at the Lords curtesie for his right that he may be displaced at his pleasure These Customs are infinite varying in one point or other almost in every several Mannor Copiholders do upon their Admittances pay a Fine to the Lord of the Mannor of whom the Lands are holden which Fines are in some Mannors certain in others incertain Those which are incertain the Lord rates at what Fine he pleaseth but if it exceeds two years value the Courts of Chancery Kings Bench Common Pleas or Exchequer have in their several Jurisdictions power to reduce the Fine unto two years value Copiholds are a kinde of Inheritance and called in many places Customary because the Tenant dying and the hold being void the next of the Blood paying the Customary Fine as Two shillings for an Acre or such like may not be denied his admission Secondly some Copiholders have by Custom the Wood growing upon their own Land which by Law they could not have Thirdly Others hold by the Verge in ancient Demesns and though they hold by Copy yet are they in account a kinde of Freeholder for if such a one commit Felony the King hath Annum diem vastum as in case of Freehold some others hold by Common Tenure called Meer Copihold whose Land upon Felony committed Escheats to the Lord of the Mannor Kitchin fol. 81. Cha. Tenants per Verge in ancient Demesn This is the Land which in the Saxons time was called Folkland West Par. 1. Symbol lib. 2. sect 646. says A Copiholder is he who is admitted Tenant of any Lands or Tenements within a Mannor which time out of minde by the use and custom thereof have been Demisable to such as will take the same by Copy of Court-Roll according to the custom of the said Mannor c. Where you may read more on this subject see Freebench Coram non judice In a Cause whereof they the Judges have not any Jurisdiction and then it is Coram non judice 2 Part. Croke fol. 351. Powels Case Coraage Coraagium Is a kinde of Imposition extraordinary growing upon some unusual occasion and it seems to be of certain Measures of Corn. For Corus tritici is a Measure of Corn. Bracton lib. 2. cap. 116. num 6. Who in the same Chapter num 8. hath these words Sunt etiam quaedam communes praestationes quae
attributed to Justices of Circuit Pl. Cor. fol. 15. and Bailiffs at large See Justices in Eyre and Bailiff See Eyre Errour Error Signifies more specially an Error in Pleading or in the Proces Broke tit Errour Whereupon the Writ which is brought for remedy of this over-sight is called a Writ of Error in Latin De Errore Corrigendo thus defined by Fitz. Nat. Er. fol. 20. A Writ of Error doth also lie to redress false Judgment given in any Court of Record as in the Common Bench London or other City having power by the Kings Charter or Prescription to hold Plea of Debt or Trespass above xxs. This is borrowed from the French practice which they call Proposition d'Erreur whereof you may read in Gregorius de Appell pag. 36. In what diversity of Cases this Writ lies see the Statute of 27 Eliz. cap. 9. R●g of Writs in the Table and Reg. Judicial fol. 34. There is likewise a Writ of Error to Reverse a Fine West par 2. Symbol tit Fin●s 151. New Book of Entries verbo Error For preventing Abatements of Writs of Error upon Judgments in the Exch●qu●r see 16 Car. 2. cap. 2. and 20 Ejusdom cap. 4. And for Redressing and Prevention of Error in Fines and Recoveries the Statute of 23 Eliz. cap. 3. for Inrolling them Errore corrigendo See Error Escambio from the Span. Cambiar to change Is a Licence granted to one for the making over a Bill of Exchange to another over Sea Reg. of Writs fol. 194. a. For by the Statute of 5 Rich. 2. cap. 2. Merchant ought to Exchange or return Money beyond Sea without the Kings License Escape from the Fr. Eschapper i. Effugere Signifies a violent or privy evasion out of some lawful restraint For example if the Sheriff upon a Capias directed to him take one and endeavor to carry him to the Goal and he by the way either by violence or slight breaks from him this is called an Escape Stamf. lib. 1. cap. 26 27. Pl. Cor. names two kindes of Escape voluntary and negligent Voluntary is when one Arrests another for Felony or other crime and afterward lets him go In which Eseape the party that permits it is by Law guilty of the fault committed by him that escapes be it Felony Treason or Trespass Negligent Escape is when one is Arrested and afterward escapes against his will that arrested him and is not pursued by fresh suit and taken again before the party pursuing hath lost the sight of him Read Cromptons Justice fol. 36. Eschange or Exchange Escambium Hanc terram cambiavit Hugo Briccuino quod modo tenet Comes Moriton ipsum Scambium valet duplum Domesday See Exchange Escheat Esehaeta from the Fr. Escheoir i. cadere accidere Signifies any Lands or other profits that casually fall to a Lord within his Mannor by way of Forfeiture or by the Death of his Tenant leaving no Heir general nor special Mag. Charta cap. 31. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 143. T. Escheat is also used sometimes for the place or circuit in which the King or other Lord hath Escheats of his Tenants Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 2. Pupilla ocull par 2. cap. 22. Escheat thirdly is used for a Writ which lies where the Tenant having Estate of Fee-simple in any Lands or Tenements holden of a Superior Lord dies seised without Heir general or special In which case the Lord brings this Writ against him that possesseth the Lands after the death of his Tenant and shall thereby recover the same in lieu of his services Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 144. In the same sence as we say The Fee is Escheated the Feudists use Feudum Aperitur See Coke on Littl. fol. 92. b. Escheator Escaetor Was an Officer appointed by the Lord Treasurer who observed the Escheats due to the King in the County whereof he was Escheator and certified them into the Chancery or Ex●hequer and found Offices after the Death of the Kings Tenants which held by Knights-service in Capite or otherwise by Knights-service he continued in his Office but one year nor could any be Escheator above once in three years Anno 1 H. 8. cap. 8. 3 Ejusdem cap. 2. See more of this Officer and his Authority in Crom. Just of Peace Fitzberbert calls him an Officer of Record Nat. Br. fol. 100. because that which he certified by vertue of his Office had the credit of a Record Officium Escaetriae is the Escheatorship Reg. of Writs fol. 259. b. This Office having its cheif dependence on the Court of Wards is now in a manner out of date See 4 Inst fol. 225. Escbequer Scaccarium from the Fr. Eschequier i. Abacus tabula lusoria Is a Court of Record wherein all Causes touching the Revenue of the Crown are heard and determined and wherein the Revenue of the Crown is received Pol Virgil lib. 9. Hist Angl. says the true word in Latin is Statarium and by abuse called Scaccarium Camden in his Britan pa. 113. saith This Court or Office took name A Tabula ad quam Assidebant the Cloth which covered it being parti-coloured or Chequered We had it from the Normans as appears by the Grand Custumary cap. 56. where it is thus described The Eschequer is called an Assembly of High Justiciers to whom it appertains to amend that which the Bailiffs and other Inferior Justiciers have misdone and unadvisedly judged and to do right to all men without delay as from the Princes Mouth This Court consists of two parts whereof one is conversant especially in the Judicial Hearing and Deciding all Causes pertaining to the Princes Coffers anciently called Scaccarium Computorum the other is called the Receipt of the Exchequer which is properly employed in the receiving and payment of Money The Officers belonging to both these you may finde named in Cam. Brit. cap. Tribunalia Angliae to whom I refer you The Kings Exchequer which now is setled at Westminster was in divers Counties of Wales Anno 27 Hen. 8. cap. 5. 26. See Orig. Juridiciales fol. 49. and 4 Part. Inst fol. 103. Escuage Scutagium from the Fr. Escu i. a Buckler or Shield Signifies a kinde of Knights-service called Service of the Shield the Tenant holding by it was bound to follow his Lord into the Scotish or Welsh Wars at his own charge For which see Chivalry Escuage is either uncertain or certain Escuage uncertain is properly Escuage and Knights-service being subject to Homage Fealty and heretofore Ward and Marriage so called because it was uncertain how often a man should be called to follow his Lord into those Wars and what his charge would be in each journey Escuage certain is that which yearly pays a certain Rent in lieu of all Services being no further bound then to pay his Rent be it a Knights Fee half or the fourth part of a Knights Fee according to the quantity of his Land and this loseth the nature of Knights-service though it hold the name of Escuage being in
so are they said to lead the Fine Upon this Covenant the Writ of Covenant is brought by the Cognizee against the Cognizo● who thereupon yields to pass the Fine before the Judge and so the Acknowledgment being Recorded the Cognizor and his Heirs are presently concluded and all strangers not excepted after five years passed If the Writ whereon the Fine is grounded be not a Writ of Covenant but of Warrantia Chartae or a Writ of Right or of Mesn or of Customs and Services for of all these Fines may also be founded West sect 23. then this Form is observed the Writ is served upon the party that is to acknowledge the Fine and then he appearing doth accordingly See Dyer fol. 179. num 46. Fines are now onely levied in the Court of Common Pleas at Westminster in regard of the solemnity thereof ordained by the Statute of 18 Edw. 1. Before which time they were sometimes levied in the County Courts Court Barons and in the Exchequer as may be seen in Mr. Dugdales Origines Juridiciales alibi This word Fine sometimes signifies a sum of Money paid for an income to Lands or Tenements let by Lease anciently called Gersuma sometimes an amends pecuniary punishment or recompence upon an offence committed against the King and his Laws or a Lord of a Mannor In which case a Man is said Facere Finem de transgressione cum Rege c. Reg. Jud. fol. 25. a. Of the diversity of these Fines see Cromptons Just of Peace fol 141. b. 143 144. and Lamb. Eiren. lib. 4. cap. 16. But in all these diversities of Uses it hath but one signification and that is a Final conclusion or end of differences between parties And in this last sence wherein it is used for the ending and remission of an Offence Bracton hath it lib. 2. cap. 15. num 8. speaking of a Common Fine that the County pays to the King for false Judgments or other Trespasses which is to be Assessed by the Justices in Eyr before their departure by the Oath of Knights and other good men upon such as ought to pay it with whom agrees the Statute 3 Edw. 1. cap. 18. There is also a Common fine in Leets see Kitchin fol. 13. Vide Common Fine Fleta lib. 1. cap. 48. and Coke on Littl. fol. 126. b. Fines for Alienation Are reasonable Fines paid to the King by his Tenants in Cheif for License to Alien their Lands according to the Stat. 1 Edw. 3. cap. 12. But see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Fines pro Licentia Concordandi Anno 21 Hen. 8. cap. 1. See Fine Fine force from the Fr. Fin i. crafty or subtil and ferce i. vis Seems to signifie an absolute necessity or constraint not avoidable and in this sence it is used Old Nat. Br. fol. 78. And in the Stat. 35 Hen. 8. cap. 12. in Perkins Dower fol. 321. Plowden fol. 94. Coke vol. 6. fol. 111. a. Fine adnullando levato de tenemento quod fuit de antiquo Dominico Is a Writ to Justices for disannulling a Fine levied of Lands holden in Ancient Demesn to the prejudice of the Lord. Reg. of Writs fol. 15. b. Fine Capiendo pro terris c. Is a Writ lying for one who upon Conviction by a Jury having his Lands and Goods taken into the Kings hand and his body committed to prison obtains favor for a sum of Money c. to be remitted his imprisonment and his Lands and Goods to be re-delivered to him Reg. of Writs fol. 142. a. Fine levando de tenementis tentis de Rege in Capite c. Was a Writ directed to the justices of the Common Pleas whereby to License them to admit of a Fine for the sale of Land holden in Capite Reg. of Writs fol. 167. a. Fine non capiendo pro pulchre placitando Is a Writ to inhibit Officers of Courts to take Fines for fair pleading Reg. of Writs fol. 179. Fine pro redisseisina capienda c. Is a Writ lying for the release of one laid in prison for a Re-disseisin upon a reasonable Fine Reg. of Writs fol. 222. Finors of Gold and Silver Are those that purifie and part those Mettals from other courser by Fire and Water Anno 4 Hen. 7. cap. 2. They are also called Parters in the same place and sometimes Departers Firdstole See Fridstole Firebare Quod sine dilatione levari reparari fac signa Firebares super montes altiores in quolibet Hundredo Ita quod tota patria per illa signa quo●iescu●que necesse fuit praemuniri potest c. Ordinatio pro vigil observand a Lynne usque Yermouth temp Ed. 2. Perhaps from the Saxon Fyretor a Beacon or a High Tower by the Sea-side wherein were continual Lights either to direct Sailers in the Night or give warning of the Enemy Firebote Sax. Signifies allowance of Wood or Estovers to maintain competent Fire for the use of the Tenant See Haybote Firma see Ferme Ad firmam noctis was a Custom or Tribute paid towards the entertainment of the King for one night according to Domesday Comes Meriton T. R. E. i. tempore Regis Edovardi Conf. reddebat firmam unius noctis i. Provision or Entertainment for one night or the valne of it Firma Regis anciently Pro villa Regia seu Regis Manerio Spel. First-fruits or Annates Primitiae Are the Profits after Avoidance of every Spiritual Living for one year given in ancient time to the Pope throughout all Christendom but by the Stat. 26 Hen. 8. cap. 3. translated here in England to the King For ordering whereof there was a Court erected 32 Hen. 8. cap. 45. but dissolved 1 Mar. Sess 2. cap. 10. And since that time though those Profits are reduced again to the Crown 1 Eliz. cap. 4. yet was the Court never restored but all matters formerly handled therein were transferred to the Exchequer See Annates Fish-garth Anno 23 Hen. 8. cap. 18. A Dam or Wear in a River made for the taking of Fish especially in the Rivers Owse and Humber See Garth Fithwite Rectiùs Fihtewite a Sax. Feoht pugna and wite mulcta mulcta ob commissam pugnam in perturbationem pacis publicae Fithwite i. si pugnaverint percusserint se quamvis sanguinem non extraxerint Prior habebit inde amerciamenta Ex Registro Priorat de Cokesford Fledwite or Flightwite Sax. Flyht fuga wite mulcta Signifies in our ancient Laws a Discharge or Freedom from Amerciaments when one having been an outlawed Fugitive comes to the Peace of our Lord the King of his own accord or with licence Thus Rastal But Quaere whether it does not rather signifie a Mulct or Fine set upon a Fugitive Fléet Sax. Fleot i. A place where the Water ebbs and flows a running Water A famous Prison in London so called from the River on the side whereof it stands To this Prison Men are usually committed for contempt to the King and his Laws or upon absolute
yet Fitz. in his Nat. Br. fol. 157. sayes the contrary because Homage specially relates to service in War He says also That Consecrated Bishops do no Homage but onely fealty the reason may be all one yet the Archbishop of Canterbury does Homage on his knees to our Kings at their Coronation and I have read that the Bishop of the Isle of Man is Homager to the Earl of Derby Fulbec reconciles this fol. 20. in these words By our Law a Religious Man may do Homage but may not say to his Lord Ego devenio homo vester because he has professed himself to be onely Gods Man but he may say I do unto you homage and to you shall be faithful and loyal See Britton ca. 68. Homage is either new with the Fee or ancestrel Homage is also used for the Jury in a Court Baron because it commonly consists of such as owe Homage to the Lord of the Fee This Homage is used in other Countreys as well as ours and was wont to be called Hominium See Hotoman de verbis feud verbo Homo Homage auncestrel Is where a Tenant holds his Land of his Lord by Homage and the same Tenant and his Ancestors whose heir he is have holden the same Land of the same Lord and his Ancestors whose heir the Lord is time out of memory of man by Homage and have done them Homage such service draws to it warrantry from the Lord c. Thus Littleton In this example here put says Sir Edward Coke There must be a double prescription both in the blood of the Lord and of the Tenant and therefore I think there is little or no land at all at this day holden by Homage ancestrel Yet I have been credibly informed that in the Mannor of Whitney in Herefordshire whose Lord is of the same name and the family has been seated and continued there for many ages is one West a Tenant who can perfectly prescribe to hold his Land of Tho. Whitney Esq the present Lord thereof by Homage ancestrel Homager from the Fr. Hommage One that does or is bound to do Homage to another As the Bishop of the Isle of Man is said to be Homager to the Earl of Derby See Homage Homagio respectuando Was a Writ to the Escheator commanding him to deliver seisin of lands to the heir that is of full age notwithstanding his Homage not don Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 269. Homesoken Rectius Hamsoken Hamsoca from the Sax. Ham. i. Domus Habitatio socne Libertas Immunitas Is by Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 23. thus defined Homesoken dicitur invasio domus contra pacem domini Regis It appears by Rastal that in ancient times some men had an immunity to do this Si quis Hamsocam violaverit jure Anglorum Regi emendet 5 libr. LL. Canuti cap. 39. Hamsoken est quod Prior tenebit Placita in Curia sua de his qui ingrediuntur domum vel Curiam alicujus ad litigandum vel furandum vel quicquid asportandum vel aliquod aliud faciendum contra voluntatem illius qui debet domum vel Curiam Ex Reg. Priorat de Cokesford See Hamsoken Homicide Homicidium Is the slaying of a Man and it is divided into voluntary and casual Voluntary homicide is that which is deliberated and committed of a set purpose to kill casual is that which is done by chance without any intention to kill Homicide voluntary is either with precedent malice or without the former is Murder and is the Felonious killing through malice prepensed of any person living in this Realm under the Kings protection West par 2. Symb. tit Inditements Sect. 37. usque ad 51. where you may see divers subdivisions of this matter See also Glanvil lib. 14. ca. 3. and Coke on Litt. lib. 3. ca. 8. See Murther Manslaughter and Chancemedley Homine eligendo ad custodiendam peciam sigilli pro mercatoribus aediti Is a writ directed to a Corporation for the choice of a new Man to keep one part of the Seal appointed for Statutes-Merchant when the other is dead according to the Statute of Acton Burnel Reg. of Writs fol. 178. a. Homine replegiando Is a Writ for the Bailing a man out of Prison In what cases it lies see Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 66. And Reg. of Writs fol. 77. Homine capto in Withernamium Is a Writ to take him that has taken any Bondman or Woman and led him or her out of the County so that he or she cannot be replevied according to Law Reg. of Writs fol. 79. a. See Withernam Hond-habend from the Sax. Hond Hand and Habens having Signifies a circumstance of manifest Theft when one is deprehended with the thing stoln in his hand Bract. lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 8. 32 35. who also uses handberend in the same sence sc latro manifestus Hond-peny Et sint quieti de chevagio Hond-peny Buckstall Tristris de omnibus misericordiis c. Privileg de Semplingham Quaere Honor Is besides the general signification used especially for the more noble sort of Seigniories whereof other inferior Lordships or Mannors depend by performance of some Customs or Services to those who are Lords of them Though anciently Honor and Baronia signify'd the same thing Uti Manerium plurimis gaudet interdum feodis sed plerumque tenementis consuetudinibus serviciis c. Ita Honor plurima complectitur Maneria plurima feoda militaria plurima Regalia c. dictur etiam olim est Beneficium seu Feodum Regale tentusque semper a Rege in Capite Spel. The manner of creating these Honors by Act of Parliament may in part be gather'd out of the Statutes 33 Hen. 8. ca. 37 38. and 34 ejusdem ca. 5. where Ampthil Grafton and Hampton Court are made Honors And by 37 Hen. 8. ca. 18. the King is empowred by letters-patent to erect four several Honors viz. Westminster Kingston upon Hull St. Osyths and Donnington and as many other Honors as he will In reading several approved Authors and Records I have observed these following to be likewise Honors viz. The Honors of Aquila Clare Lancaster Tickhil Wallingford Nottingham Boloine Westgreenwich Bedford Barkhamstead Plimpton Cre●ecure Haganet East-greenwich Windsor Bealieu Peverel Ramesey Skipton Wyrmsgay Clinn Raleigh Montgomery Wigmore Huntingdon Eye Baynards Castle Glocester Arundel Heveningham Cockermouth Bullingbroke Folkingham Leicester Hinkley Whithurch Hertford Newelme Chester Lovetot Pickering Mardstone Tuttebury Warwick Breghnok or Brecnok Bre●mber Halton And in a Charter of 15 Hen. 3. I find mention of the Honors of Kaermardin and Cardigan Sciatis communiter me accepisse in manu mea defensione totum Honorem Ecclesiae de Rameseie c. Charta Gulielmi I. Abbati Rames Sect. 174. See Cam. Britan. fol. 315 407 594 690 c. Bakers Chro. fol. 117. Inquis 10 Edw. 2. Cokes 4 Inst fol. 224. Mag. Charta cap. 31. Reg. Orig. fol. 1. Cromp. Juris fol. 115. Broke tit Tenure num 26 c. This word
to real and mixt Actions and Mainpernors to personal lib. 3. ca. des Pledges Mainpernors See 4 Inst fo 179. ●ainsworn in the North signifies as much as Forsworn Brownl Rep 4. H●b rep 8. Maintainor Anno 19 Hen. 7. ca. 14. Is he that maintains or seconds a Cause depending in Sute between others either by disbursing Money or making Friends for either party towards his help Maintenance Manutenentia Signifies the upholding or maintaining a Cause or Person eithor by Word Writing Countenance or Deed Metaphorically taken from the succoring a young Child that learns to go by ones hand and is used in the evil part Anno 32 Hen. 8. ca. 9. When a Mans Act in this kind is by Law accounted Maintenance and when not See Brooke tit Maintenance and Kitchin fo 202. There lies a Writ against a Man for this offence called a Wr●t ef Maintenance See Coke on Litt. fo 368. b. Maison dieu Fr. An Hospital or Alms-house See Meason dieu Make Facere Signifies to perform or execute as to make his Law is to perform that Law which he has formerly bound himself unto that is to clear himself of an Action commenced against him by his Oath and the Oathes of his Neighbors Old Nat. Br. fo 267. Ki●c●in fo 192. Which Law seems to be borrowed of the Feudists who call those Men that swear for another in this Case Sacramen●ales The formal words used by him that makes his Law are commonly these Hear O ye Iustices that I do not o●● this summ of Money demanded neither all nor any part thereof in Manner and Form declared So help me God and the Contents of this Book To make Services or Custom is nothing else but to perform them Old Nat. 〈◊〉 fo 14. ●alediction Maledictio A Curse which was of old usually annexed to Donations of Land made to Churches and Religious Hous●● Si quic autem quod no● 〈◊〉 〈…〉 c ●ostram Donationem infringero 〈◊〉 p●rp●ss●● 〈◊〉 gelid●● glaci 〈…〉 ●●●tibus malig●orum Spiri●u●m terribiles 〈◊〉 cruciat●● 〈◊〉 sisse non qui●sca● n●s● pri●● in rigu●● p 〈…〉 g●mit 〈…〉 pur●●mendatione emenda●●rit Carta Regis Athelstani Monast d● Wil●un● Anno 933. Again Bolial s● q●i● fili●● carta●● ha●● j 〈…〉 〈◊〉 conscriptam inimicali zel● corrumper● de●id●r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non d●bi●●t a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mei servientibus deo nunc 〈◊〉 usque in s●mpiternum abdicatum excommunicatum sine fine cruciandum unde post mortem a Tartariis rapsus Ministris in profundum pestiferae mortis inferni flammigera concludetur in Domo ibidem in quandam ollam Vulcani ligatis projicietur membris quae assidue bulliente pice repleta esse testatur a talibus frangentibus seu minuentibus intolleratissime atrociterque absque ulla misericordia sentitur nisi hoc ante mortem paenitentiae lamentis emendaverit Carta Eadredi Regis Mon. Angl. 2 Par. fo 867. Quod si forte post haec aliquis haeredum meorum de biis Elemosynis a pr 〈…〉 fata Ecclesia aliquid abstulerit ex ore meo in conspectu Dei sit ille maledictus in tremendo Iudicio nisi resipuerit condemnatus Amen Carta Roberti Camerarii Comitis Richmundiae in Bibl. Cotton Malefesance From the Fr. Malfaire i. To offend or transgress A doing of evil a transgressing Crokes Rep. 2 Par. fo 266. Maletent or Maletolte Fr. Maletoste i. Malum vel indebitum Telonium In the Statute called the Confirmation of the Liberties c. Anno 25 Edw. 1. ca. 7. Is interpreted to be a Toll of 40s for every sack of Wool Stow in his Annals calls it a Maletot fo 461. See the Stat. de Tallagio non concedendo Anno 35 ejusdem Nothing from henceforth shall be taken of Sacks of Wool by color or occasion of Maletent In France they had an extraordinary Tax called Maletoste Malin See Marle Malveis procurors in Art super Chartas ca. 10. Is understood of such as use to pack Juries by nomination or other practise or procurement 2 Inst fo 561. Manbote Sax. Man-bot A recompense for Homicide or a compensation due to the Lord for the slaughter of his Man or Vassal Manbote vero i. compensatio Domino persolvenda pro homine suo occiso Anglorum lege Regi Archiepiscopo tres Marcas de hominibus eorum propriis sed Episcopo ejusdem Comitatus Consuli dapifero Regis viginti solidos Baronibus autem aliis decem solidos c. Spel. de Concil Vol. 1. fol. 622. See Hoveden parte poster annal fo 344. Bote. Manca Charta Regis Eadgari Eccles Sancti Pauli Anno 867. Indictione 15. cum lato digno pretio i. lx Mancas in auro purissimo was a square piece of Gold commonly valued at 30 pence Mancusa was as much as a Mark of Silver Notes upon Canutus Lawes id est Manucusa Coyned with the hand Manciple Manceps A Clerk of the Kitchin or Caterer An Officer anciently so called in the Inner-Temple now he is called Steward there and still in Colledges of whom Jeoffrey Chaucer our ancient Poet and a Student in this House thus A Manciple there was in the Temple Of which all Catours might taken ensemple Mandamus Is a Writ that lay after the year and day where in the mean time the Writ called Diem clausit extremum had not been sent out to the Escheator Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 253. b. See Diem clausit extremum Mandamus was also a charge to the Sheriff to take into the Kings hands all the Lands and Tenements of the Kings Widow who against her Oath formerly given Married without the Kings consent Reg. fo 295. b. See Widow Mandatary Mandatarius He to whom a Commandement or Charge is given Also he that comes to a Benefice by a Mandamus Mandate Mandatum Is a Commandement judicial of the King or his Justices to have any thing done for the dispatch of Justice whereof you may see diversity in the Table of the Register Iudicial on this word The Bishops Mandat to the Sheriff Anno 31 Eliz. ca. 9. Manentes Was anciently used for Tenentes or Tenants Concil Synodal apud Clovesho Anno 822. Also Manses or Hides of Land Cressy's Ch. History fo 723. Manning Manopera A dayes Work of a Man in some ancient Deeds I have seen reserved so much Rent and so many Mannings Manor Manerium a Manendo of abiding there because the Lord of it did usually reside there Est feodum nobile partim vassallis quos Tenentes vocamus ob certa servitia concessum partim Domino in usum Familiae suae cum jurisdictione in vassallos ob concessa praedia reservatum Quae vassallis conceduntur terras dicimus tenementales quae domino reservantur dominicales Totum vero feodum dominium appellatur olim Baronia unde Curia quae huic praeest jurisdictioni hodie Curia Baronis nomen retinet Touching its original There was antiently a certain compass of Ground granted by the
King to some Baron or such like man of worth for him and his heirs to dwell upon and to exercise some jurisdiction more or less within that circuit as he thought good to grant performing him such services and paying such yearly rent for the same as he by his grant required and that afterward this great Man parcelled his Land to other meaner Men enjoyning them again such services and rents as he thought good and by that means as he became Tenant to the King so the inferiors became Tenants to him See Perkins Reservations 670. and Horns Mirror of Justices lib. 1. ca. du Roy Alfred In these dayes a Manor rather signifies the jurisdiction and Royalty incorporeal than the Land or scite For a man may have a Manor in Gross that is the right and interest of a Court Baron with the Perquisits and another enjoy every foot of the land belonging to it Kitchin fo 4. Bracton lib. 5. Tract 5. ca. 28. nu 1. See Fee A Manor may be compounded of divers things as of a House Arable Land Pasture Meadow Wood Rent Advowzen Court-baron and such like And this ought to be by long continuance of time bey ond mans memory For at this day as some hold a Manor cannot be made because a Court-Baron cannot be made and a Mannor cannot be without a Court-Baron and two suiters at least Manpygarnon Will. Walcote tenet Manerium de Adington in Com. Surr. per servitium inveniendi ad Coronationem Regis quoddam Potagium vocat Manpygarnon Mansion Mansio a Manendo A dwelling house a Country habitation most commonly used for the Lords chief dwelling House within his Fee otherwise called the Capital Messuage or the chief Manor-place See Skene verbo Mansus The Latin word Mansia in the Charter granted by King Kenulphus to Ruchin Abbot of Abingdon and mentioned by Sir Edward Coke in his Report de Jure Regis Ecclesiastico seems to signifie a certain quantity of Land Hida vel Mansia Mat. Westm in Anno 857. And in a Charter of Edw. Conf. it is written Mansa v. Hist of Pauls fo 189. Mansura Masura Are used in Domesday and other ancient Records for Mansiones vel habitacula villicorum But in carta de Anno 1 Edw. 3. n. 3. we read de tribus mansuris terrae in Wigornia quaere Manslaughter Homicidium Is the unlawful killing a Man without prepensed malice as when two meet and upon some sudden occasion falling out the one kills the other It differs from Murder because it is not done with foregoing malice and from Chancemedley because it has a present intent to kill and this is Felony but admits Clergy for the first time Stamf. pl. Cor. lib. 1 ca. 9. and Britton ca. 9. It is confounded with Murder in the Stat. 28 Edw. 3. ca. 11. Mansus Anciently a Farm Seldens Hist of Tythes pa. 62. Haec Indentura testatur quod Reginaldus Grey Dominus de Hastings Weisford de Ruthin tradidit Iohanni Saunders Mansum Manerii de Bedworth c. dat 18 Hen. 6. Here Mansum Manerii is used for the Mannor House or Mannor-Place Mansum capitale dicitur de aedibus Domini Manerii quas aulam vulgo nuncupant Mansum or Mansus is sometimes confounded with Mesuagium Spelman Manubrium The handle or haft of a Sword or Dagger Iur. praesentant quod A. de C. Aurifaber 2 Iunii 2 Iac. apud S. praedict quoddam Manubrium pugionis ferreum Anglice dictum A Dagger hilt of Iron c. Apud Maidston Manucaptio Is a Writ that lies for a Man who taken on suspicion of Felony and offering sufficient Bayl for his appearance cannot be admitted thereto by the Sheriff or other having power to let to Mainprise Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 249. See Mainprise How diversly it is used see the Table of Reg. of Writs And Pryns Animadversions fo 268. Manuel Manuelis That whereof present profit may be made or that is employed or used by the hand Stamf. Praerog fol. 54. As such a thing in the Manuel occupation of one i. Actually used or employed by him Manumission Manumissio Is the freeing a Villain or Slave out of bondage The form of this in the time of the Conqueror Lamb. in his Archai fo 126. sets down in these words Si quis velit servum suum liberum facere tradat cum vicecomiti per manum dextram in pleno comitatu quietum illum clamare debet a jugo servitutis suae per manumissionem ostendat ei liberas portas vias tradat illi libera arma scilicet lanceam gladium deinde liber homo efficitur Some also were manumitted by Charter Vide Brooke tit Villenage fo 305. Another way of Manumitting was for the Lord to take the Bondman by the Head and say I will that this Man be Free and then shove him out of his hand There was also Manumission imply'd as when the Lord made an Obligation for payment of Money to the Bondman at a certain day or sued him where he might enter without Sute or the like See Neif EDWARDUS Dei Gratia Rex Angliae Franciae Dominus Hiberniae Omnibus ad quos praesentes Literae nostrae pervenerint Salutem Sciatis quod nos ex gratia nostra speciali ex mero motu nostro Manu misimus ab omni jugo servitutis liberamus Johannem Dedwiche de Orleton in Com. Heref. Husbandman William Dedwiche de eadem Husbandman Nativos nostros de Manerio sive Dominio nostro de Orleton praedict Cum omnibus bonis catallis suis tuta eorum sequela progenie de eorum corporibus procreatis sive procreandis Ita quod nec Nos nec heredes nec Successores nec Assignati nostri aliquod Iuris vel clamei ratione alicujus Villenagii in ejusdem Johanne Willielmo seu de eorum progenie procreatis sive procreandis seu de bonis Catallis suis exigere vel vendicare poterimus in futuro c. In cujus rei testimon has literas nostras sub sigillo nostro Comitis nostrae Marchiae fieri fecimus Patentes Dat. vicessimo die Mensis Aprilis anno regni nostri octavo Ex ipso autographo penes Johan Colman Gen. locus sigil i. Sigillum Edwardi quarti dei gra regis anglie francie diu hiberme conntatussin marchie Manupastus Saepe obvenit in forensi dialecto pro famulo serviente Domestico Spelman Erat culpabilis tanquam de Manupasto Manwood cap. 16. n. 6. i. He shall be culpable as of a thing done by one of his family Gloss in x. Scriptor Manutenentia Is a Writ used in case of Maintenance Reg. of Writs fol. 182. 189. See Maintenance Manworth Sax. Manwyrth The price or value of a Mans Life or Head every Man according to his degree being rated at a certain price according whereunto satisfaction was of old made to his Lord for the killing him Marches Marchia Are the Bounds and Limits between
us and Wales or between us and Scotland Anno 24 Hen. 8. cap. 9. Which last are divided into West and Middle Marches Anno 4 Hen. 5. cap. 7. and 22 Edw. 4. cap. 8. The word is used in the Statute 24 Hen. 8. cap. 12. generally for the Precincts of the Kings Dominions and may be derived from the Sax. Meane i. Signum nota Character Marchers Were the Noblemen that lived on the Marches of Wales or Scotland who in times past according to Camden had their private Laws like Petty Kings which are now abolished by the Statute 27 Hen. 8. cap. 26. Of these Marchers you may read Anno 2 Hen. 4. cap. 18. 26 Hen. 8. cap. 6. and 1 Edw. 6. cap. 10. where they are called Lord Marchers See also 1 2 Ph. Ma. cap. 15. Marchet Marchetum Consuetudo pecuniaria in Mancipiorum filiabus maritandis Bract. lib. 2. tit 1. cap. 8. num 2. Merchetum vero pro filia dare non competit libero homini Extenta Manerii de Wivenho 18 Dec. 40 Edw. 3. alia 13 Edw. 3. Anno Dom. 1230. Rich. Burr tenet unum Mesuagium Et debet Tallagium Sectam Curiae Merchet hoc modo quod si maritare voluerit filiam suam cum quodam libero homine extra villam faciet pacem Domini pro maritagio si eam maritaverit alicui Custumario Villae nil dabit pro maritagio This Custom is in divers parts of England and Wales as also in Scotland and the Isle of Gernsey See Spelman at large on it Sir Edward Coke on Littl. fol. 140. says it is called Marchet as it were a Chete or Fine for Marriage By the Custom of the Mannor of Denever in the County of Carmarthen whereof Sir Edw. Rice is Lord every Tenant at the marriage of his Daughter pays x s. to the Lord which in the British Language is called Gwabr Merched i. A Maids Fee See Meiden Rents and Gwabr-merched Mareshal Marescallus from the Germ. Marschalk i. Equitum Magister With us there are divers Officers of this name the cheif is the Earl Marshal of England mentioned Anno 1 Hen. 4. cap. 7. and in divers other Statutes his Office consists especially in matters of War and Arms as well with us as in other Countreys as you may read in Lupanus de Magistratibus Franciae lib. 1. cap. Marcshallus The next is the Marshal of the Kings House whose special authority is according to Britton in the Kings place to hear and determine all Pleas of the Crown and Sutes between those of the Kings House and others within the Verge and to punish faults committed within the Verge c. Cromp. Jurisd fol. 102. Anno 18 Edw. 3. stat 2. cap. 7. and other Statutes See more of this Office in Fleta lib. 2. cap. 4. There are other Inferior Officers of this name as Marshal of the Justices in Eyr Anno 3 Edw. 1. cap. 19. Marshal of the Kings Bench Anno 5 Edw. 3. cap. 8. Who hath the custody of the Prison called the Kings Bench in Southwark I finde also in Fleta lib. 2. cap. 15. mention of a Marshal of the Kings Hall There is also a Marshal of the Exchequer Anno 51 Hen. 3. stat 5. to whom the Court commits the custody of the Kings Debtors for securing the Debts He also assigns Sheriffs Customers and Collectors their Auditors before whom they shall account Marshalsée Maresealtia Is the Court or Seat of the Marshal also used for the Prison in Southwark so called the reason whereof may be because the Marshal of the Kings House was wont perhaps to sit there in Judgment or keep His Prison See the Stat. 9 Rich. 2. cap. 5. And 2 Hen. 4. cap. 23. Mariage Maritagium Signifies not onely the lawful joyning of Man and Wife but also the interest of bestowing a Ward or a Widow in marriage Mag. Char. cap. 6. And it signifies Land given in marriage Bracton lib. 2. cap. 34. 39. See also Skene on the word Maritagium which according to Glanvil lib. 7. cap. 1. Is that portion which the Husband receives with his Wife See Dower Maritagio amisso per defaultam Is a Writ for the Tenant in Frank-marriage to recover Lands c. whereof he is deforced by another Reg. fol. 171. Maritagio forisfacto See Ferisfactura Maritagii Mark Merca from the Sax. Mearc i. Signum In ancient time I finde a Mark of Gold was eight ounces Stows Annals pag. 32. A Mark of Silver is now well known to be 13 s 4 d. Char. Reg. Joh. de dote B. Reginae quondam ux R. Ricardi Paten 3. Joh. m. 17. n. 31. Assignavimus ei pro dote sua mille marcas argenti annuatim 13 s 4 d. computatis pro Marca Marketzeld Recti●s Marketgeld Et valent per an le Streteward le Marketzeld xviii s ob in omni terra pertinente ad Honorem de Haulton Ex Cod. M. S. in Bibl. Cottoniana It signifies Toll of the Market The word Zold importing a payment I finde it elswhere written Markethgald Plac. apud Cestriam 31 Edw. 3. Mark-peny Was one peny paid at Maldon by those who had Pipes or Gutters laid or made out of their Houses into the Streets Hill 15 Edw. 1. Mr. Philips of Purveyance Market Marcatus Comes from the Fr. Marche i. Emporium forum nundinarum and signifies the same thing with us as also the Liberty or Priviledge whereby a Town is enabled to keep a Market Old Nat. Br. fol. 149. So Bracton uses it Lib. 2. cap. 24. num 6. lib. 4. cap. 46. where he shews that one Market ought to be distant from another Sex leucas dimidiam tertiam partem dimidiae By Stat. 27 Hen. 6. cap. 5. no Fair nor Market is to be kept upon any Sunday nor upon the Feasts of the Ascension of our Lord Corpus Christi the Assumption of our Blessed Lady All Saints nor Good Friday except for necessary victual and in the time of Harvest Marle Marla Is a kinde of Earth or Mineral which Men in divers parts of this Realm cast upon their Land to make it more fertile It is otherwise called Malin Anno 17 Edw. 4. cap. 4. Marlerium or Marletum A Marlepit Sciant quod ego Rogerus la Zouche dedi Henrico de Hugefort haeredibus suis c. Et quod habeant omnem libertatem liberam communiam in boscis in planis in viis in semitis in aquis in molendinis in bruariis in turbariis in quarrer in piscar in Marleriis in omnibus aliis locis aisiamentis ad praedictum Manerium de Tonge spectan Et quod capiant Marlam pro voluntate sua ad terram suam marlend Reddendo inde annuatim mihi haeredibus meis unum capellum Rosarum die Nativitatis S. Jo. Baptistae si in villa de Tonge fuerimus si non ponatur super imaginem Beatae Mariae in Ecclesia de Tonge pro omnibus servitiis Sine dat penes
sort of Money so it were Silver and the reason is there given because those two Shires Monetarios de antiqua institutione non habent Moneyers are now also taken for Banquers or those that make it their Trade to turn and return money Monger Seems to be a little Sea-vessel which Fishermen use Anno 13 Eliz. ca. 11. Monopoly from the Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vendo Is an Institution or allowance of the King by his Grant Commission or otherwise to any person or persons of or for the sole buying selling making working or using of any thing whereby any person or persons are restrained of any freedom or liberty that they had before or hindred in their lawful Trade which is declared illegal by 21 Jac. ca. 3. Except in some particular cases which see in 3 Inst fo 181. Monstrans de droit i. Shewing of ones right Signifies a writ issuing out of the Chancery to be restored to Lands or Tenements that indeed are mine in right though by some Office found to be in possession of one lately dead See Stamf. Praer ca. 21. at large and Cokes Rep. lib. 4. fo 54. Wardens of the Sadlers Case Monstraverunt Is a Writ that lies for Tenants that hold freely by Charter in ancient Demaine being distreined for the payment of any Toll or Imposition contrary to the liberty which they do or should enjoy Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 14. Month or Moneth Sax. Monath Shall be understood to consist of 28 dayes See Coke lib. 6. fo 61. b. And see Kalendermoneth Moot from the Sax. Motian to treat or handle Is well understood at the Inns of Court to be that exercise or arguing of Cases which young Barrasters and Students perform at certain times for the better enabling them for practise and defence of Clients Causes The place where Moot-cases were argued was anciently called a Moot-hall from the Sax. Motheal In the Inns of Court there is a Bailiff or Surveyor of the Moots who is yearly chosen by the Bench to appoint the M●otmen for the Inns of Chancery and to keep accompt of performance of Exercises both there and in the House See Orig. Juridiciales fo 212. Mootmen Are those that argue Readers Cases called also Moot-cases in the Houses of Chancery both in Terms and in Vacations Cokes Rep. 3 Part in Proaemio Moratur or Demoratur in Lege Signifies as much as he Demurrs because the Party goes not forward in pleading but rests or abides upon the Judgment of the Court in the point who deliberate and take time to argue and advise thereupon Whensoever the Counsel learned of the Party is of opinion that the Count or Plea of the adverse party is insufficient in Law then he Demurrs or abides in Law and refers the same to the Judgment of the Court Coke on Lit. fo 71. b. See Demurrer Moriam Is all one in signification with the French Morion i. Cassis a headpiece and that from the Italian Morione Anno 4 5 Phil. Mary ca. 2. now called a Pot. Morling alias Mortling Signifies that Wool which is taken from the Skin of a dead Sheep whether dying of the rot or being killed Anno 4 Edw. 4. cap. 2. 3. and 27 Hen. 6 cap. 2. This is written Morkin Anno 3 Jac. cap. 18. Morling or Shorling Anno 3 Edw. 4. cap. 1. 14 Car. 2. cap. 18. See Shorling Mortdancester See Assize Mortgage Mortuum vadium vel Mortgagium from the French Mort i. Mors and Gage i. Pignus Signifies a Pawn of Land or Tenement or any moveable thing laid or bound for Money borrowed peremptorily to be the Creditors for ever if the Money be not paid at the day agreed on And the Creditor holding such Land on such Agreement is in the mean time called Tenant in Mortgage Glanvile lib. 10. cap. 6. defines it thus Mortuum vadium dicitur illud cujus fructus vel reditus interim percepti in nullo se acquietant Thus it is called a Dead Gage because whatsoever profit it yields yet it redeems not it self by yielding such profit except the whole sum borrowed be likewise paid at the day the Morgagee by Covenant being to receive the profits till default of payment He that lays this Pawn or Gage is called the Morgager and he that takes it the Morgagee This if it contain excessive Usury is prohibited Anno 37 Hen. 8. cap. 9. Mortmain Manus Mortua i. Dead Hand From the. Fr. Mort i. Mors and Main i. Hand Signifies an Alienation of Lands or Tenements to any Corporation Guild or Fraternity and their Successors as Bishops Parsons Viccars c. which may not be done without Licence of the King and the Lord of the Mannor or of the King alone if it be immediately holden of him The reason of the name proceeds from this that the services and other profits due for such Lands should not without such Licence come into a Dead Hand or into such a Hand as it were Dead and so dedicate unto God or pious uses as to be abstractedly different from other Lands Tenements or Hereditaments and is never to revert to the Donor or any Temporal or common use Mag. Charta cap. 36. and 7 Edw. 1. commonly called the Statute of Mortmain 18 Edw. 3. stat 3. cap. 3. and 15 Rich. 2. cap. 5. Which Statutes are something abridged by Anno 39 Eliz. cap. 5. whereby the gift of Land c. to Hospitals is permitted without obtaining of Licences of Mortmain Hottoman in his Commentaries De verbis Feudal verbo Manus mortua says thus Manus mortua locutio est quae usurpatur de iis quorum possessio ut ita dicam immortalis est quia nunquam haeredem habere desinunt Qua de causa res nunquam ad Priorem Dominum revertitur nam Manus pro possessione dicitur Mortua pro immortali c. And Skene says That Dimittere terras ad Manum Mortuam est idem atque dimittere ad multitudinem sive universitatem quae nunquam moritur The President and Governors for the poor within the Cities of London and Westminster may without Licence in Mortmain purchase Lands c. not exceeding the yearly value of 3000 l c. Stat. 14. Car. 2. cap. 9. Mortuary Mortuarium Is a gift left by a Man at his death to his Parish Church in recompence of his Personal Tythes and Offerings not duly paid in his life time A Mortuary is not properly and originally due to an Ecclesiastical Incumbent from any but those onely of his own Parish to whom he ministers Spiritual Instruction and hath right to their Tythes But by Custom in some places of this Kingdom they are paid to the Incumbent of other Parishes in the Corps of the Dead Bodies passage through them See the Statute 21 Hen. 8. cap. 6. before which Statute Mortuaries were payable in Beasts Mortuarium says Lindwood sic dictum est quia relinquitur Ecclesiae pro anima defuncti
patent seems to be extended farther in use then the original intention For a Writ of right of Dower which lies for the Tenant in Dower is patent as appears by Fitzherb Natura Brevium fo 7. E. The like may be said in divers other cases of which see also the Table of Reg. of Writs verbo Recto This Writ is properly tryed in the Lords Court between Kinsmen who claim by one title from their Ancestor But how it may be thence removed and brought either to the County or Kings Court see Fleta lib. 6. ca. 3 4 5. Glanvile seems to make every Writ whereby a Man sues for any thing due unto him a Writ of Right lib. 10. ca. 1. lib. 11. ca. 1. lib. 12. ca. 1. Recto de dote Is a Writ of Right of Dower which lies for a Woman that has received part of her Dower and proceeds to demand the Remnant in the same Town against the Heir Of this see more in Old Nat. Br. fo 5. and Fitz. fo 7. E. Reg. of Writs fo 3. and New Book of Entries verbo Droyt Recto de dote unde nihil habet Is a Writ of right which lies in case where the Husband having divers Lands or Tenements has assured no Dower to his Wife and she thereby is driven to sue for her Thirds against the Heir or his Guardian Old Nat. Br. fo 6. Reg. of Writs fo 170. Recto de rationabili parte Is a Writ that lies alwayes between privies of Blood as Brothers in Gavelkind or Sisters or other Coparceners as Nephews or Neeces and for Land in Fee-simple For example if a Man Lease his Land for Life and afterwards dies leaving issue two Daughters and after the Tenant for life likewise dies the one Sister entring upon all the Land and so deforcing the other the Sister so deforced shall have this Writ to recover her part Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 9. Reg. of Writs fo 3. Recto quando Dominus remisit Is a Writ of right which lies in case where Lands or Tenements that are in the Seigneury of any Lord are in demand by a Writ of right For if the Lord hold no Court or otherwise at the Prayer of the Demandant or Tenant shall send to the Court of the King his Writ to put the Cause thither for that time saving to him at other times the right of his Seigneury then this Writ issues out for the other party and has its name from the words therein comprised being the true occasion thereof This Writ is close and must be returned before the Justices of the Common-Bank Old Nat. Br. fo 16. Reg. of Writs fo 4. Recto de advocatione Ecclesiae Is a Writ of right lying where a man has right of Advowsen and the Parson of the Church dying a stranger presents his Clerk to the Church and he not having brought his Action of Quare impedit nor darrein presentment within six Moneths but suffer'd the Stranger to usurp upon him Which Writ he onely may have that claims the Advowsen to himself and his heirs in Fee And as it lies for the whole Advowsen so it lies also for the half the third or fourth part Old Nat. Br. fo 24. Reg. of Writs fo 29. Recto de custodia terrae haeredis Is a Writ which by the Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. is become useless as to Lands holden in Capite or by Knight-service but not where there is Guardian in Socage or appointed by the last will and Testament of the Auncestor The form of it see in Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 139. Reg. of Writs fo 161. Recto sur disclaimer Is a Writ that lies where the Lord in the Court of Common-Pleas does avow upon his Tenant and the Tenant Disclaims to hold of him upon which Disclaimer he shall have this Writ and if the Lord aver and prove that the Land is holden of him he shall recover the Land for ever Old Nat. Br. fo 150. which is grounded on the Statute of Westm 2. ca. 2. Rector Lat. Signifies a Governor And Rector Ecclesi● parochialis Is he that has the Charge or Cure of a Parish-Church qui tantum jus in Ecclesia parochiali habet quantum Praelatus in Ecclesia Collegiata It has been over-ruled that Rector Ecclesiae parochialis is he that has a Parsonage where there is a Vicaridge endow'd and he that has a Parsonage without a Vicaridge is called Persona But the distinction seems to be new and subtile It is certain Bracton uses it otherwise lib. 4. Tract 5. ca. 1. in these words Et sciendum quod Rectoribus Ecclesiarum parochialium competit Assisa qui instituti sunt per Episcopos Ordinarios ut Personae Where it is plain that Rector and Persona are confounded Note also these words there following Item dici possunt Rectores Canonici de Ecclesiis praebendatis Item dici possunt Rectores vel quasi Abbates Priores alii qui habent Ecclesias ad proprios usus See Vicar Rectory Rectoria Is taken pro integra Ecclesia parochiali cum omnibus suis juribus praedi is decimis aliisque proventuum speciebus Spelm. Rectus in Curia i. Right in Court Is he that stands at the Bar and no man objects any offence against him Smith de Repub. Angl. lib. 2. ca. 3. Reddendum Is used substantively for the clause in a Lease c. whereby the Rent is reserved to the Lessor Coke lib. 2. Cromwels case fo 72. b. Reddition Redditio Is a judicial confession and acknowledgment that the Land or thing in demand belongs to the Demandant or at least not to himself Anno 34 35 Hen. 8. ca. 24. Perkins Dower 379. 380. Redemptions Redemptiones Mulctae gravissimae utpote quae pro aestimatione capitis ipsius delinquentis impinguntur Anglice Ransomes See Misericordia Redisseisin Redisseisina Is a Disseisin made by him who once before was found and adjudged to have disseised the same Man of his Lands or Tenements for which there lies a special Writ called a Writ of Redisseisin Old Nat. Br. fo 106. Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 188. See New book of Entries on this word The punishment for Redisseisin see in the Stat. 52 Hen. 3. ca. 8. Redmans or Radmans Domesday in fine Cestrescire Tit. Lanc. Blacburn Hundret Rex E. tenuit Peneverdant Ibi 11 Car. sunt in Dominio 6 Burgenses 3 Radmans 8 Vil. 4 Bovar These Redmans may be the same in signification as the Rod or Rad Knights Men which by the Tenure or Custom of their Lands were to ride with or for the Lord of the Mannor about his business or affairs Redubbors or Adubbors Are those that buy stoln Cloth and to the end it may not be known turn it into some other Colour or Fashion Briton ca. 29. and see 3 Inst fo 134. Re-entry From the Fr. Rentrer i. Rursus intrare Signifies the resuming or re-taking that possession which we had lately foregone As if I make a Lease of Land or
Michaelmas He makes another Record whether Sheriffs and other Accountants keep their dayes of Prefixion All Estreats of Fines Issues and Americiaments set in any Courts of Westminster or at the Assises or Sessions are certify d into his Office and are by him deliver'd to the Clerk of the Estreats to make out Process upon them There are also brought into his Office all the Accompts of Customers Controllers and other Accountants to make entry thereof on Record See Repertory of Records fo 121. The Remembrancer of the First-fruits takes all Compositions and Bonds for First-fruits and Tenths and makes Process against all such as pay not the same Remitter from the Lat. Remittere to restore or send back Where a man has two titles to Land and is seised of the later and that proving defective he is restored to the former more ancient title This is a Remitter Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 149. F. Dyer fo 68. num 22. and see Brook tit Remitter If Land descend to him that has right to it before he shall be remitted to his better Title if he will Doctor and Student ca. 9. fo 19. b. See Terms of the Law on this word Coke on Litt. li. 3. c. 12. Render from the Fr. Rendre i. Reddere Retribuere and so it signifies with us A Fine with render is where Lands are render'd back by the Cognizee to the Cognizor Also there are certain things in a Mannor that lie in Prender that is which may be taken by the Lord or his Officers when they chance without the Tenants leave as Escheats c. and certain that lie in Render that is must be rendred or answer'd by the Tenant as Rents Reliefs Heriots and other Services West Par. 2. Symb. Sect. 126. C. Also some Service consists in seisance some in Render Perkins Reservations 696. Renegeld Per Renegeld Johannes Stanley Ar. clamat habere de qualibet bovata terrae infra feodum de Aldford 1 d exceptis Dominicis terris terris in feodo praedicto infra Hundred de Macclefeld Rot. Plac. in Itin. apud Cestriam 14 Hen. 7. Renovant from renovo to renew or make again The Parson sued one for Tithes to be paid of things renovant but this Horse being onely for labor and travel would not renew c. Croke 2 Part fo 430. Rent Reditus Is a summ of Mony or other consideration issuing yearly out of Lands or Tenements Plowden Casu Browning fo 132. b. 138. a. 141. b. Of which there are three sorts Rent-service Rent-charge and Rent-seck Rent-service is where a man holds his land by fealty and certain rent or by Fealty Service and Rent Litt. lib. 2. ca. 12. fo 44. or that which a man making a Lease to another for years reserves yearly to be paid him for the same Rent-charge is where a man chargeth his Land or Tenements by Deed indented either in Fee ' Fee-tail or for term of life with a summ of Money to be paid to the Grantee yearly with clause of distress for not payment thereof Litt. ubi supra Rent-seck otherwise Dry-rent is that which a man making over an Estate of Lands or Tenements by Deed indented reserves yearly to be paid him without Clause of Distress mentioned in the Indenture See more on this subject in the Terms of the Law and the difference between a Rent and an Annuity in Doctor and Student ca. 30. Dial 1. Rents resolute Redditus resoluti Are reckon'd among the Fee-farm Rents to be sold by the Stat. 22 Car. 2. ca. 6. and are such Rents or Tenths as were anciently payable to the Crown from the Lands of Abbies and Religious-Houses and after the dissolution these Abby-lands being demised to others the said Rents were still reserved and made payable again to the Crown Renusiator Et sunt communes latrones Renusiatores hominum c. Trin. 28 Ed. 3. Ebor. 37. q. Reparatione facienda Is a Writ that lies in divers cases whereof one is where there are three Tenants in Common Join-tenants or pro indiviso of a Mill or House which is faln into decay and the one is willing to repair it the other two not In this case the party willing shall have this Writ against the other two Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 127. where you may see the form and many uses of it as also in Reg. of Writs fo 153. b. Repeal From the Fr. rappel i. revocatio Signifies the same with us as the Repeal of a Statute is the revoking or disanulling it Brook uses Repellance in the same sence Re-pleader Replacitare Is to plead again that which was once pleaded before See Brook and New Book of Entries verbo Repleader Replegiare de averiis Is a Writ brought by one whose Cattel are distrained or put in pound upon any cause by another upon surety given to the Sheriff to pursue or answer the Action at Law Anno 7 Hen. 8. ca. 4 Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 68. See Reg. of Writs for divers sorts of this Writ New Book of Entries ver●o Replevin and Dyer fo 173. num 14. Replevie Plevina Is derived of replegiare to re-deliver to the owner upon pledges or suerty and signifies the bringing the Writ called Replegiari facias by him that has his Cattel or other goods distrained by another for any cause and putting in Surety to the Sheriff that upon delivery of the thing distreined he will pursue the Action against him that distreined Coke on Litt. lib. 2. ca. 12. Sect. 219. Goods may be replevied two manner of wayes viz. by Writ and that is by the Common-Law or by Plaint and that is by Statute-Law for the more speedy having again of their Cattel and Goods Replevie is used also for the bailing a man Pl. Cor. fo 72 74. and Westm 1. ca. 11. and 15. Replevish Replegiare Is to let one to Main-prise upon surety Anno 3 Ed. 1. ca. 11. Replication Replicatio Is an exception of the second degree made by the Plaintiff upon the first Answer of the Defendant West par 2. Symb. tit Chancery Sect. 55. and Westm 2. ca. 36. It is that which the Plaintiff replies to the Defendants Answer in Chancery and this is either General or Special Special is grounded upon matter arising out of the Defendants answer c. General so called from the general words therein used Report From the Lat. Reportare Is a publick relation or a bringing again to memory Cases judicially argued debated resolved or adjudged in any of the Kings Courts of Justice with such causes and reasons as were delivered by the Judges of the same Coke on Litt. fo 293. Also when the Chancery or other Court refers the stating some case or computing an account c. to a Master of Chancery or other Referree his Certificate therein is called a Report Reposition of the Forest i. A re-putting to Was an Act whereby certain Forest-grounds being made Purlieu upon view were by a second view laid or put to the Forest again Manwood
imaginibus equitum in Sigillis posuerunt Arma sua in parvis Scutis Chron. Joh. Rossi in Bibl. Cotton Sealer Sigillator Is an Officer in the Chancery who is appointed by the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the Great Seal of England to Seal the Writs and Instruments there made in his presence Seam Sax. See Seme Sean fish Anno 1 Jac. Ses 1. ca. 25. Seems to be that sort of Fish which is taken with a great long Net call'd a Sean Searcher See Alneger Sea-rover Anno 16 Car. 2. ca. 6. See Privateir Second Deliverance Secunda Deliberatione Is a Writ that lies after a return of Cattle replevied adjudged to him that distrained them by reason of a default in the party that replevied for the replevying the same Cattle again upon security put in for the redelivery of them in case the Distress be justified New Book of Entries verbo Replevin in Second Deliverance fol. 522. Vide Dyer fol. 41. num 4 5. Secta ad Curiam Is a Writ that iies against him who refuseth to perform his Sute either to the County or Court Baron Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 158. Secta facienda per illam quae habet aeniciam partem Is a Writ to compel the Heir that hath the Elders part of the Coheirs to perform service for all the Coparceners Reg. of Writs fol 177. a. Secta Molendini Is a Writ lying against him that used to grind at the Mill of B. and after goes to another Mill with his Corn. Reg. of Writs fol. 153. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 122. But it seems by him that this Writ lies especially for the Lord against his Frank-tenant who held of him by making Sute to his Mill. See the New Book of Entries on this word Secta ad Molendinum and Assises of Nusance are now much turned into Trespasses and Actions upon the Case Secta ad justitiam faciendam Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 6. Is a Service which a Man is bound by his Fee to perform Secta Shirarum Per Sectam Shirarum clamat esse quiet de secta in Com. Cestriae Flint coram Justic Domini Principis in Communi Aula placitorum Plac. in Itin. apud Cestriam 14 Hen. 7. Secta unica tantum facienda pro pluribus haereditatibus Is a Writ that lies for that Heir who is distrained by the Lord to more Sutes than one in respect of the Land of divers Heirs descended to him Reg. of Writs fol. 177. 4. Sectis non faciendis Is a Writ that lies for a Woman who for her Dower ought not to perform Sute of Court Reg. of Writs fol. 174. Secunda super oneratione Pasturae Is a Writ that lies where Admeasurement of Pasture hath been made and he that first surcharged the Common does it again notwithstanding the Measurement Reg. of Writs fol. 157. Old Nat. Br. fol. 73. Vide 13 Edw. 1. cap. 8. Secundary Secundarius A Second Officer who is next to the Cheif Officer As the Secundary of the Fine Office Secundary of the Compter who is next to the Sheriff of London in each of the two Compters Secundary of the Office of the Privy Seal Anno 1 Edw. 4. cap. 1. Secundaries of the Pipe two Secundary to the Remembrancers which are two Officers in the Exchequer Camden pag. 113. Securitatem inveniendi quod se non divertat ad partes exteras sine Licentia Regis Is a Writ that lies for the King against any of His Subjects to stay them from going out of His Kingdom The ground whereof is That every Man is bound to serve and defend the Commonwealth as the King shall think meet Fitz. Nat. Br fol. 85. Securitate Pacis Is a Writ that lies for one who is threatned death or danger against him that so threatens and is taken out of the Chancery directed to the Sheriff whereof the form and farther use you may see in Reg. of Writs fol. 88. b. and Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 79. Se Defendendo Is a Plea for him who is charged with the death of another saying He was forced to what he did in his own defence the other so assaulting him that if he had not done as he did he must have been in danger of his own life Which danger ought to be so great as that it appears to have been otherwise inevitable Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 1. cap. 7. And although he justifie it to be done in his own defence yet is he driven to procure his pardon of course from the Lord Chancelor and forfeits notwithstanding his Goods to the King Seignior Dominus Fr. Seigneur Signifies generally as much as Lord but particularly it is used for the Lord of the Fee or of a Mannor as Dominus or Senior among the Feudists is he who grants a Fee or Benefit out of the Land to another and the reason is because as Hotoman says having granted the use and profit of the Land to another yet the property i. Dominium directum he still retains in himself Seignior in Gross See Lord in Gross Seignory Dominium Fr. Seigneurie i. Ditio Dominatus c. Signifies a Mannor or Lordship Seignorie de Sokemans Kitchin fol. 80. Seignorie in Gross seems to be the title of him who is not Lord by means of any Mannor but immediately in his own person As Tenure in Capite whereby one held of the King as of His Crown was Seignorie in Gross Idem fol. 206. Seignourage Anno 9 Hen. 5. stat 2. cap. 1. Seems to be a Regality or Prerogative of the King whereby He challengeth allowance of Gold and Silver brought in the Mass to His Exchange to be coyned Seisin Seisina Fr. Scisine Possession and Primier Seisin is the first Possession Seisin is twofold in Fact and in Law Perkins Dower 369 370. Seisin in Fact is When an Actual Possession is taken Seisin in Law is When something is done which the Law accounts a Seisin as an Inrolment Seisin in Law is as much as a right to Lands and Tenements though the owner be by wrong d●●●eised of them Perkins Tenant pur le Curtesie 457 478. Coke lib. 4. fol. 9. a. Calls it Seisin in Law or Seisin Actual Seisina habenda quia Rex habuit annum diem vastum Is a Writ that lies for Delivery of Seisin to the Lord of his Lands or Tenements who was formerly convict of Felony after the King in right of His Prerogative hath had the Year Day and Waste Reg. of Writs fol. 165. a. Selda From the Sax. Selde a Seat Stool or Settle Assisa Mensurarum Anno 9 Rich. 1. apud Hoveden Prohibemus ne quis mercator praetendat Seldae suae rubros pannos vel nigros vel scuta vel aliqua alia per quae visus emptorum saepe decipiuntur ad bonum pannum eligendum In Majoribus Chronicis ubi locus hic vertitur Selda Window exponitur says Spelman But by what follows it seems clearly to signifie a Shop Shed Standing or Stall Sciant praesentes futuri quod
Statute forfeited to him Tenant in Franc-marriage Idem fol. 158. that holds Land by vertue of a Gift thereof made to him upon marriage Tenant by the Curtesie that holds for his life by reason of a Childe born alive and begotten by him of his Wife being an Inheritrix Tenant per Elegit that holds by vertue of the Writ Elegit Tenant in Morgage that holds by vertue of a Morgage Tenant by the Verge in Ancient Demesn Kitchin fol. 81. is he that is admitted by the Rad in a Court of Ancient Demesn Tenant by Copy of Court Roll is one admitted Tenant of any Lands c. within a Mannor which time out of minde have been demisable according to the Custom of the Mannor West Par. 1. symbol lib. 2. sect 646. Tenant by Charter is he that holds by Feoffment or other Deed in Writing Very Tenant that holds immediately of his Lord for if there be Lord M●sn and Tenant the Tenant is Very Tenant to the Mesn and not to the Lord above Kitchin fol. 99. Tenant Paravail see Paravail Joynt-tenants that have equal Right in Lands by vertue of one Title Littl. lib. 3. cap. 3. Tenants in Common that have equal right but hold by divers Titles Particular Tenant Stamf. Praerog fol. 13. is he who holds onely for his term See Coke in Sir Will. Pelhams Case Lib. 1. fol. 15. called also Termor for Life or Years See Plowden Casu Colthirst fol. 23. b. Sole Tenant Kitchin fol. 134. he that hath no other joyned with him Several Tenant is opposit to Joynt-tenant or Tenant in Common Tenant al Praecipe is he against whom the Writ Praecipe is brought Coke lib. 3. Case of Fines fol. 88. Tenant in Demesn Anno 13 Edw. 1. cap. 9 is he that holds the Demesns of a Mannor for a Rent without Service Tenant in Service An. 20 Edw. 1. stat 1. is he that holds by Service See Britton cap. 39 96. Tenant by Execution Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 5. is he that holds Land by vertue of an Execution upon any Statute Recoguizance c. Tenant in Fee-simple Kitchin fol. 150. Tenant in Fee-tail Tenant at the Will of the Lord according to the Custom of the Mannor Tenant at Will by the Common Law Idem fol. 165. Tenant upon Sufferance Tenant of Estate of Inheritance Stamf. Praerog fol. 6. Tenant in Burgage Tenant in Soccage Tenant in Franck-fee c. with divers others Tenement Tenementum Signifies most properly a House or Homestal but in a larger sence it is taken either for House or Land that a Man holds of another and joyned with the Adjective Frank it contains generally Lands Houses or Offices wherein we have Estate for Life or in Fee For Kitchin fol. 41. makes Frank-tenement and base Estate opposit and in the same sense Britton uses it Chap. 27. Tenheved Sax. tienheofed i. Decem habens capita Decanus Decemvir caput vel princeps Decaniae sive decuriae LL. Edw. Confess cap. 29. Statuerunt Justiciarios super quosqne decem friborgos quos Decanos possumus appellare Anglice vero tienheofod dicti sunt Tenentibus in Assisa non onerandis c. Is a Writ that lies for him to whom a Disseisor hath alienated the Land whereof he disseised another that he be not molested for the damages Awarded if the Disseisor have wherewith to satisfie them himself Reg. of Writs fol. 214. b. Tenmantale Sax. tienmantale i. Sermo decem hominum vel decemvirorum numerus Decuria Tithinga LL. Edw. Conf. cap. 20. Et sint quieti de Geldis Danegeldis Themanatale Concelationibus Scottis c. Cart. 29 Edw. 1. n. 25. Abbat de Thornton See Friburgh Tenore indictamenti mittendo Is a Writ whereby the Record of an Inditement and the Process thereupon is call'd out of another Court into the Chancery Reg. of Writs fo 169. a. Tenths Decimae Is that yearly portion or Tribute which all Livings Ecclesiastical yield to the King For though the Bishop of Rome does originally pretend right to this Revenue by example of the High-Priest among the Jews who had Tenths from the Levites Numb ca. 8. Hieron in Ezech. yet we read in our Chronicles that these were often granted to the King by the Pope upon divers occasions sometimes for one year sometimes for more until by the Statute 26 Hen. 8. ca. 3. they were annexed perpetually to the Crown See Disms It signifies also a Tax levied of the Temporalty 4 Inst fo 34. Tentor A stretcher tryer or prover which Dyers and Clothiers used Anno 1 Rich. 3. ca. 8. But prohibited by the Stat. 39 Eliz. ca. 20. Tenure Tenura Is the manner whereby Tenants hold Lands and Tenements of their Lords What makes a Tenure and what not see Perkins Reservations 70 where you shall find most of those Tenures recited which are now in England See Cromptons Jurisd fo 200. New Book of Entries verbo Tenure Mr. Fabian Philips Book entituled Tenenda non Tollenda and the Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. The Family of Barnhams hold the Mannor of Nether Bilsington in the County of Kent by this tenure to carry the last Dish of the second Course to the Kings Table at His Coronation and presenting Him with three Maple-cups which was performed at the Coronation of King Charles the Second Term Terminus Signifies commonly the bounds and limitation of time as a Lease for term of Life or Years Bracton lib. 2. ca. 6. nu 4. But most notoriously it is used for that time wherein the Tribunals or places of Judgment are open for all that list to complain of wrong or to seek their right by course of Law or Action The rest of the year is called Vacation Of these Terms there are four in every year during which time matters of Justice are dispatch'd One is Hillary Term which begins the 23d of January or if that be Sunday the next day following and ends the twelfth of February The next is Easter Term which begins the Wednesday fortnight after Easter-day and ends the Munday next after Ascension-day The third is Trinity Term beginning the Friday next after Trinity-Sunday and ending the Wednesday Fortnight after The fourth is Michaelmas-Term which anciently began the ninth of October but by Stat. 17 Car. 1 ca. 6. contracted to the 23d of October and ending the 28th of November Termini apud nos dicuntur c●rtae anni portiones agendis litibus designatae See Spel de origine ratione Terminorum forensium Termonland Seems to be the Gleab-land or Land of the Church anciently so called Termor Tenens ex termino Is he that holds for term of years or life Kitchin fo 151. Litt. fo 100. Terra Giliforata Land held by the Tenure of paying a Gilly-flowre MS. Terra extendenda Is a Writ directed to the Escheator c. willing him to enquire and find out the true yearly value of any Land c. by the Oath of twelve Men and to certifie the Extent into the Chancery
c. Reg. of Writs fo 293. b. Terra frusca Continens xl acras terrae fruscae pasturae c. Mon. Angl. 2 Par. fo 327. b. Fresh-land or such as hath not been lately plowed This is elsewhere written Terra frisca Terra nova Saepe legitur in Chartis feodalibus in sensualibus schedulis vel proterra noviter concessa vel noviter assarta Prior. Lew. pa. 1. Reddat pro nova terra 2 sol Spe 〈…〉 Terra vestita Is used in ancient Charters for Land sown with Corn. Terra sabulosa Lat. Gravelly or grossesandy land Et praedictae xxiiii acrae terrae valent per ann xiii sol iv denar non plus quia est terra sabulosa Inq. 10 Ed. 3. n. 3. Norf. in Turr. Lond. Terra puturata See Putura Terra lucrabilis Tam in Mora quam in terra lucrabili Marais cum omnibus piscariis suis Mon. Angl. 1 Par. fo 406. a. Land that may be gained from the Sea or inclosed out of a Wast to particular use Terra excultabilis Totam illam terram excultabilem quam habuit apud Norwicu 〈…〉 in Campis Mon. Angl. 1 Par. fo 426. b. Land that may be till'd or plow d. Terra culta Land that is Tilled or 〈◊〉 nured and terra inculta the contrary see Wacnoth Terrage Terragium Edward the Third granted by Patent to John of Gaunt and Blanch his Lady for their live quod sint qui 〈…〉 de Theolonio Savagio Passagio Lastagio Tallagi● Carvagio Prisagio Pickagio Terragio which seems to be an exemption a Praecariis viz. Boons of Plowing Reaping c. and perhaps from all Land-Taxes Terrar Terrarium vel Catalogus ter 〈…〉 Is a Book Survey or Land-Roll wherein the several Lands either of a single person or of a Town are described containing the quantity of Acres boundaries Tenants names and such like Anno 18 Eliz. ca. 17. In the Exchequer there is a Terrar of all the Glebe-lands in England made about 11 Edw. 3. Terris bonis catallis rehabendis pest purgationem Is a Writ that lies for a C 〈…〉 to recover his Lands Goods or Chattels formerly seized on after he has cleer'd himself of that Felony upon suspition whereof he was formerly convict and deliver'd to his Ordinary to be purg'd Reg. of Writs fo 68. b. Terris liberandis Is a Writ that lies for a Man convicted by attaint to bring the Record and Process before the King and to take a Fine for his Imprisonment and to deliver him his lands and Tenements again and to release him of the Strip and Waste Reg. of Writs fo 232. a. Terris catallis tentis ultra debitum levatum Is a Writ Judicia for the restoring Lands or Goods to a Debtor that is distreined above the quantity of the Debt Reg. Jud. fo 38. b. Terre tenant Terrae tenens Is he who has the natural and actual possession of the Land which we otherwise call the Occupation Anno 39 Eliz. ca. 7. For example a Lord of a Mannor has a Freeholder who lets out his free-land to another this other having the actual possession Is called the Terre-tenant West Par. 2. Symb. tit Fines Sect. 137. Cromp. Jurisd fo 194. Britton ca. 29. Perkins Feoffments 231. Ters See Tierce Tertian A Measure containing fourscore and four Gallons Anno 1 Rich. 3. ca. 13. 2 Hen. 6. ca. 11. So called because it is the third part of a Tun. Tertium denarium See Third-peny Testament Testamentum What it is in the common signification see in Will It was anciently used according to Spelman pro Scripto charta vel instrumento quo praediorum rerumve aliarum transactiones perficiuntur sic dictum quod de ea re vel testimonium ferret vel testium nomina contineret siquis contra hoc meae authoritatis Testamentum aliquod machinari impedimentum praesumpserit c. Charta fundationis Croylandiae ab Aethelbaldo Rege Anno Dom. 716. Testator Lat. He that makes a Testament See Swinborn of Wills and Testaments and see Will. Testatum Is a Writ in personal Actions As if the Desendant cannot be arrested upon a Capias in the County where the Action is laid but is returned non est inventus by the Sheriff This Writ shall be sent out into any other County where such person is thought to have whence to satisfie which is termed a Testatum because the Sheriff has formerly testified that the Defendant was not to be found in his Balywic See Kitchins return of Writs fo 287. b. Leste Is a word commonly used in the last part of every Writ wherein the date is contained which begins with these words Teste me ipso c. if it be an original Writ or if judicial Teste Johan Keeling Milite or Iohanne Vaughan Mil. according to the Court whence it comes Yet we read in Glanvile lib. 1. ca. 6. 13. lib. 2. ca. 4. The last Clause of an Original Writ to be Teste Radulpho de Glanvilla apud Clarendon c. and divers times in the Reg. of Writs Teste Custode Angliae as namely in the Title Prohibition fo 42. a. Consultation fo 54. b. Testimonial Anno 39 Eliz. 17. Is a Certificate under the hand of a Justice of Peace Testifying the place and time when and where a Souldier or Mariner landed and the place of his dwelling and birth unto which he is to pass c. or such like 3 Inst fo 85. Teston Anno 2 3 Ed. 6. ca. 17. A sort of Money which among the French did bear the value of 18 Denar and so perhaps formerly in England but in Henry the Eighths time being made of Brass lightly gilt with Silver it was reduced to 12 d and in the beginning of Edward the Sixth to 9 d afterterwards to 6 d. Thack-tile Anno 17 Edw. 4. ca. 4. otherwise called Plain-tile which are laid on the side of a House Thanage of the King Thanagium Regis Signify'd a certain part of the Kings Lands or Property whereof the Ruler or Governor was called Thane Domania Regis and Thanagia idem significant Sayes Skaene Thane or Theyn Thanus from th'Saxon thegen Signifies sometimes a Nobleman sometimes a Free-man sometimes a Magistrate but more properly an Officer or Minister of the King This appellation was in use among us after the Norman Conquest as appears by Doinesday and by a certain Writ of William the First Willielmus Rex salutat Hermannum Episcopum Stewinum Britwi omnes Thanos meos in Dorsestrensi pago amicabiliter MS. de Abbotsburi Skaene sayes it is the name of a Dignity equal with that of the Son of an Earl Cambden sayes They were enabled onely by the Office which they administred See Mills de Nobilitate fo 132. Theft Furtum Is an unlawful Felonious taking away another mans moveable and personable Goods against the owners will with an intent to Steal them which is divided into Theft simply so called and petit
be accounted of than a VVoolfs head LL. hdw. set forth by Lamb. fo 127. b. num 7. and Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 11. See Utlary V●oolfeshead VVulferford are all one Coke on Litt. fo 28 b. Wyke VVyka A Farm or little Village Et tutam Wykam cum hominibus c. Mon. Angl. 2 Par. fo 154. Wyte or Wite VVyta vcl VVita Sax. ƿite i. Paena mulcta Saxones duo mulctarum genera statuere Weram Wptam Wera mortis reos gravissime peccantes liberabat Wyta mediis levioribus delictis statuta fuit non certa sed pro qualitate commissi alias gravior alias levior salvo tamen semper contenemento delinquentis ut lex loquitur in Mag. Char. ca. 14. hoc est aestimatione ejus Anglice his Countenance Ex his placitis quaedam emendantur centum solidis quaedam Wera quaedam Wyta quaedam emendari non possunt Leg. Hen. 1. ca. 13. Emendet juxta ordinis digu●tatem sive per redemptionem i. Were per forisfacturam i. Wite per Legis transgressionem i. Lasblite MS. de LL. Canu●i in Bibl. Cotton sub tit Vitellius C. 9. X. XEnia Dicuntur munuscula quae 〈◊〉 Provincialibus Rectoribus Provinciarum offerebantur Vox in Privilegiorum Chartis non insueta ubi quietos esse a Xeniis inmunes notat ab hujusmodi muneribus aliisque Donis Regi vel Reginae praestandis quando ipsi per praedia Privilegiatorum transierint ut in Chart. Domus Semplingham Principibus enim olim fuit in more a subditis vel invitis munera extorquere Itaque ab hoc jugo liberos fecit Ecclesiasticos Aethelbaldus Rex Merciorum Anno 749. ut ab exemplari Chartae suae cum apud Ingulphum Saxtum Wil. Malmsb. Lib. de Gestis Reg. Angl. p. 29. l. 4. His verbis habetur Concedo ut omni Monasteria Ecclesiae Regni mei a publicis vectigalibus operibus oneribus absolvantur Nec munuscula praebeant Regi vel Principibus nisi voluntaria Spelm. Nulla autem persona parva vel magna ab bominibus terrae Radingensis Monasterii exigat non equitationem sive expeditiunem non summagia non vectigalia non navigia non opera non tributa non Xenia c. In Memorand Scacc. de Anno 20 Edw. 3. Trin. Rot. 3. Y. YA Nay Quod homines sui Riponienses sint credendi per suum Ya per suum Nay in omnibus querelis Curiis licet tangen Fréedmortel c. Carta Athelstani Regis Yard Virga Is a well known measure of three foot in length which according to Sir Richard Baker Henry the First ordained by the length of his own Arm. See Virga Terrea Yard Land Virgata Terrae a Sax. gyrd i. Virga Is a quantity of Land various according to the place As at Wimbleton in Surrey it is but 15 Acres in other Counties 20 in some 24 in some 30 and in others 40 Acres Virgata terrae continet 24 acras 4 virgatae constituunt unam Hidam quinque Hidae constituunt feodum militare MS. Abbatiae Malmsb. This Yardland Bracton lib. 2. cap. 10. 27. calls Virg 〈…〉 m Terrae but expresseth no certainty what it contains It is called a Verge of Land Anno 28 Edw. 1. Statute of Wares See Seldens Titles of Honor fol. 622. Year and day Annus dies Is a time that determines a right in many cases and is in some an usucaption and in others a prescription as in case of an Estray if the owner Proclamation being made challenge it not within that time it is forfeit So is the year and day given in case of Appeal of Descent after entry or claim of Non claim upon a Fine or Writ of Right of the death of a Man sore bruised or wounded of Protections Essoigns in respect of the Kings Service of a Wreck and divers other cases Coke Vol. 6. fol. 107. b. and 3 Inst fol. 53. Year Day and Waste Annus dies vastum Is a part of the Kings Prerogative whereby he challengeth the profits of their Lands and Tenements for a year and a day that are attainted of Petit-Treason or Felony whosoever is Lord of the Mannor whereto the Lands or Tenements do belong and not onely so but in the end may waste the Tenement destroy the Houses Root up the Woods Gardens Pasture and Plough up Meadows except the Lord o the Fee agree with him for redemption of such Waste afterwards restoring it to the Lord of the Fee whereof you may read at large Stamf. Praerog cap. 16. fol. 44. Yelding or Yéelding and Paying Reddendo solvendo Is a corruption from the Sax. geldan and gyldan Sulvere praestare And in Domesday Gildare is frequently used for solvere reddere the Saxon g being often mistaken into Y. Yeme Is an ancient corruption of Hieme Winter as I have seen in an old Deed Reddend Ad Festum S. Martini in Yeme c. And in another of 4 Edw. 3. Thus Reddend quando dict quatuor acrae terrae s●miaantur somine Yemali duodecim Bussel boni legalis frumenti ad Festum Purificationis c. Yeven or Yeoven as we use at the end of Indentures and other Instruments Yeoven the day and year first above written Is a corruption from the Saxon Geofian i. Dare and is the same with Given So Dictum de Kenelworth concludes with Yeoven and proclaimed in the Castle of Kenelworth the day before the Calends of Nov. Anno 1256. Yeman or Yoman from the Sax. geman i. Communis These Camden in his Britan pag. 105. placeth next in order to Gentleman calling them ingenuos whose opinion the Statute affirms Anno 6 Ric. 2. cap. 4. And 20 Ejusdem cap. 2. Sir Tho. Smith in his Repub. Angl. lib. 1. cap. 23. calls him a Yoman whom our Laws call Legalem hominem which says he is in English a Freeman born that may dispend of his own Free-land in yearly Revenue to the sum of Forty shillings Sterling Verstegan in his restitution of Decayed Intelligence cap. 10. writes That Gemen among the ancient Teutonicks and Gemein among the Modern signifies as much as Common and that the first Letter G. is in this word as in many others turned into Y. and so written Yemen which therefore signifies Commoner Yoman signifies also an officer in the Kings House in the middle place between the Serjeant and the Groom as Yoman of the Chaundry Yoman of the Scallery Anno 33 Hen. 8. cap. 12. Yoman of the Crown Anno 3 Edw 4. cap. 5. The word Yongmen is used for Yomen in the Statute of 33 Hon. 8. cap. 10. And I have seen it written Jeman in old Deeds See Jeman Yingeman LL. Hen. 1. cap. 16. Danagildum quod aliquando Yingeman dabatur i. 12 d. de unaquaque hida per annum si ad terminum non reddatur Wita emendetur The Learned Spelman thinks this may possibly be mistaken for Inglishman or Englishman though he
signifies a Forfeiture or an Amerciament and is much transformed in the writing since more probably it should be Mishersing Mishering or Miskering according to the Learned Spelman It seems by some Authors to signifie a Freedom or Liberty because he that has this word in any Charter or Grant has not onely the Forfeitures and Amerciaments of all others for transgressions within his Fee but also is himself free from all such control by any within that compass Abjuration abjuratio a forswearing or renouncing by Oath a sworn banishment or an Oath taken to forsake the Realm for ever For as Stamford Pl. Cor. lib. 2. cap. 40. saith The devotion towards the Church first in Edward the Confessors time and afterward till 22 Hen. 8. was so zealous That if a man having committed Felony could recover a Church or Churchyard before he were apprehended he might not be thence drawn to the usual tryal of Law but confessing his fault to the Justices at their coming or to the Coroner and before them or him give his oath finally to forsake the Realm The form and effect whereof you may read in De Officis Coronatorum and in Horns Mirror of Justices lib. 1. cap. Del Office de Coroner Quando aliquis abjuravit regnum Cruoc ei liberata fuit in manu sua portanda in itinere suo per semitas regias vocabitur vexillum sanctae Ecclesiae Essex Plac. Hil. 26 Ed. 3. But this grew at last to be but a perpetual confining the offender to some Sanctuary wherein upon abjuration of his liberty and free habitations he would chuse to spend hs life as appears Anno 22 Hen. 8. cap. 14. It is Enacted 21 Jac. cap. 28. That hereafter no Sanctuary or Priviledge of Sanctuary shall be allowed and consequently Abjuration is taken away 2 Instit fol. 629. See Sanctuary Abolition Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 21. A destroying or putting out of memory Institutae actionis peremptio The leave given by the King or Judges to a criminal accuser to desist from further prosecution Abridge from the Fr. Abreger to make shorter in words holding still the whole substance But in Law it seems to signifie for the most part the making a Declaration or Count shorter by substracting or severing some of its substance For example a Man is said to abridge his Plaint in an Assize or a Woman her Demand in an Action of Dower that hath put into the Plaint or Demand any Land not in the Tenure of the Tenant or Defendant and if the Tenant pleads Non-tenure or such-like Plea to parcel of the Land demanded in Abatement of the Writ the Demandant may abridge his Plaint or Demand to that patcel that is he may leave out that part and pray the Tenant may answer the rest to which he has not yet pleaded any thing The cause is for that in such Writs the certainty is not set down but they run in general And though the Demandant hath abridged his Plaint or Demand in part yet the Writ remains good still for the rest Brook tit Abridgment An. 21 H. 8. cap. 3. Abridgment of a Plaint See Abridge Abrogate abrogo to disannul take away or repeal as to abrogate a Law i. To lay aside or repeal it Anno 5 6 Edw. 6. cap. 3. See Prorogue Absentees or des Absentees was a Parliament so called held at Dublin 10 May 28 H. 8. And mentioned in Letters Patent Dat. 29 H. 8. See Cokes 4 Inst fol. 354. Abuttals See Abbuttals Accedas ad Curiam Lat. is a Writ that lies for him who has received false Judgment or fears partiality in a Court Baron or Hundred Court being directed to the Sheriff as appears by Dyer fol. 169. numb 20. As the Writ De falso judicio lies for him that has received such Judgment in the County Court the form whereof you may see in Fitz. Nat. Er fol. 18. And in the Register fol. 9. b. where it is said this Writ lies for Justice delayed as well as falsly given and that it is a Species of the Writ Recordare Accedas ad Uicecomitem is a Writ directed to the Coroner commanding him to deliver a Writ to the Sheriff who having a Pone delivered him doth suppress it Reg. of Writs fol. 83. Acceptance acceptatio is a taking in good part and a tacite kinde of agreeing to some former Act done by another which might have been undone or avoided if such Acceptance had not been For example if Baron and Feme seized of Land in right of the Feme make a joynt Lease or Feoffment by Deed reserving Rent the Baron dies the Feme accepts or receives the Rent By this the Feoffment or Lease is made good and shall bar her to bring the Writ Cui in vita Coke on Littl. fol. 211. b. Accessory or Accessary particeps criminis most commonly signifies one that is guilty of a felonious offence not principally but by participation as by command advice or concealment and is of two sorts 1. Before the offence or fact is he that commands or procures another to commit Felony and is not himself present but if he be then he is also a Principal 2. After the offence is he that receives assists or comforts any man that has done any Murder or Felony whereof he hath knowledge He who counsels or commands any evil shall be judged accessary to all that follows upon it but not to another distinct thing As I command one to beat another and he beats him so that the other dies of it I shall be accessary to this murder But if I command one to steal a White Horse and he steals a Black one or to burn such a House which he well knows and he burns another I shall not be accessary If I command one to kill I. S. in the Field and he kills him in the City or Church or to kill him at such a day and he kill him on another I shall be accessary nothwithstanding For the killing is the substance and the day place or weapon is but circumstance But if I command one to kill I. S. and before he hath killed him I come and say I am penitent for my malice and charge him not to kill him and yet he kills him I shall not be accessary Where the Principal is pardoned or hath his Clergy the Accessary cannot be arraigned there being a Maxim in the Law Ubi non est principalis non potest esse accessorius For it appears not by the Judgment of Law that he was Principal but if the Principal after Attainder be pardoned or hath his Clergy allowed him there the Accessary shall be arraigned See Sir Edward Cokes 2 Part Institutes fol. 183. In the lowest and highest offences there are no Accessaries but all are Principals as in Riots forcible Entries and other transgressions Vi armis which are the lowest offences So in the highest offence which is crimen laesae Majestatis there are no Accessaries but in Felony there are
hac pr●senti Carta nostra confirmasse Baronibus nostris de Civitate nostra London quod elegant sibi Mayer de seipsis singulis annis c. See Spelmans Gloss at large upon this word Baronet Baronettus Is a dignity or degree of Honor which hath precedency before all Banerets Knights of the Bath and Knights-Batchelors except such Banerets as are made Sub vexillis Regiis in exercitu Regali in aperto bello ipso Rege personaliter pr●sente This Order of Baronets King James created in the year 1611. with such precedency as abovesaid and other priviledges c. as may appear in Rot. Fat 10 Jac. part 10. m. 8. 14 Jac. par 2. m. 24. with an Habendum sibi Haeredibus masculis c. See Baneret Where Baronets are mentioned in our old Statutes and ancient Authors it is mistaken for Banerets 2 Inst fol. 667. And Seldens Titles of Honor fol. 736. Barony Baronia Is the Dignity Territory and Fee of a Baron under which notion are comprehended not onely the Fees and Lands of Temporal Barons but of Bishops also who have two estates one as they are Spiritual Men by reason of their Spiritual Revenues and Promotions as was the Tribe of Levi among the Israelites The other grew from the bounty of our English Kings whereby they have Baronies and Lands so called and are thereby Barons or Lords of Parliament This Barony as Bracton says Lib. 2. cap. 34. Is a right indivisible and therefore if an Inheritance be to be divided among Coparceners though some capital Messuages may be divided yet Si capitale Messuagium sit caput Comitatus vel caput Baroniae they may not be parcelled The reason is Ne sic caput per plures particulas dividatur plura jura Comitatuum Baroniarium deveniant ad nihilum per quod deficiat regnum quod ex Comitatibus Baroniis dicitur esse constitutum The Mannor of Burford in the County of Salop was found by Inquisition capt 40 Edw. 3. Teneri de Rege ad inveni●ndos 5 homines pro Ex●rcitu Walliae per servitium Baroniae and the Lord thereof Sir Gilbert Cornwal is called Baron of Burford but is no Baron of Parliament Barrator or Barater Fr. Barateur i a Deceiver Is a common mover or maintainer of Suits Quarrels or Parts either in Courts or elswhere in the Country and is himself never quiet but at variance with one or other Qui cum Terentiano Davo omnia perturbat To this purpose read Lamb. Eiren. pag. 342. who says also That Barrettor for so he writes it may come from the Latin Baratro or Balatro a vile Knave or 〈…〉 hrift and by a Metaphor a Spot in a Commonwealth See the Statute of Champerty 33 Edw. 1. Stat. 2. and Westm 1. cap. 32. Skene in the word Barratry says That Barrators are Symonists so called of the Italian word Barrataria signifying Corruption or Bribery in a Judge giving a false sentence for Money whom you may read more at large as also Hortensius Cavalcanus in his Tract de Brachio Regio parte 5. num 66. Barraster Barrasterius Repagularis Causidicus See Utter-Barraster Barre Fr. Barriere or Barre Signifies legally a destruction for ever or taking away for a time the action of him that hath right and it is called a Plea in Bar when such a Bar is pleaded Coke on Littl. fol. 372. Plowden in Colthirsts Case fol. 26 28. And Brook tit Barre num 101. and 5 Hen. 7. fol. 29. This word is also used for a Material Bar as the place where Serjeants at Law or Counsellors stand to plead Causes in Court or Prisoners to answer their Indictments whence our Lawyers who are called to the Bar or Licensed to plead in other Countreys called Licenciati are termed Barrasters 24 Hen. 8. cap. 24. See Blank-bar Bar Fee Is a Fee of xx d which every Prisoner acquitted of Felony pays to the Goaler Crompt Just of Peace fol. 158. Barrel Is a Measure of Wine Oyl c. containing the eighth part of a Tun the ●ourth of a Pipe and the moyety of a Hogshead that is Thirty one Gallons and a half Anno 1 Rich. 3. cap. 13. But the quantity of this Vessel seems to differ according to the Liquor for a Barrel of Beer contains Thirty six Gallons the Kilderkin Eighteen and the Firkin Nine A Barrel of Ale Thirty two Gallons the Kilderkin Sixteen and the Firkin Eight Anno 23 Hen. 8. cap. 4. and 12 Car. 2. cap. 23. The said Assise of 32 Gallons of Wine-measure which is about 28 Gallons of old Standard well packed and containing in every Barrel usually a thousand full Herrings at least is and shall be taken for good true and lawful Assise of ●erring Barrels Anno 13 Eliz. cap. 11. Barriers Fr. Barrieres Signifies with us that which the French call Jeu de Barres i. Palaestram A Martial Exercise of Men armed and sighting together with short Swords within certain Bars or Rails whereby they are severed from the Beholders now disused Barter from the Span. Baratar i. To sell cheap or to deceive or cheat in Bargaining Signifies with us to exchange one commodity for another to truck Wares for Wares Anno 1 Rich. 3. cap. 9. And so Bartry the Substantive 13 Eliz. cap. 7. The reason may be because they that chop and change in this manner do endeavor for the most part one to over-reach or deceive the other See Barrator Barton In Devonshire and the West of England Is used for the Demesn Lands of a Mannor for the Mannor-house it self and in some places for Out-houses and Fold-yards In the Statute 2 3 Edw. 6. cap. 12. Barton Lands and Demesn Lands are used as Synonima's See Berton Base Court Fr. Cour Basse Is any Co●rt not of Record as the Court Baron Of this read Kitchin fol. 95 96 c. Base Fee See Base Estate Base Estate Fr. Bas Estat Signifies that Estate which Base Tenants have in their Lands Base Tenants are those according to Lamb. verbo Paganus who perform inferior Villanous service to their Lords Kitchin fol. 41. makes Base-tenure and Frank-tenure to be contraries and puts Copiholders in the number of Base Tenants whence it may be gathered that every Base Tenant holds at the will of the Lord yet that there is a difference between a Base Estate and Villenage which Fitzherbert in his Nat. Br. fol. 12. seems to confound For to hold in pure Villenage is to do all that the Lord will command him So that if a Copiholder have but Base Estate he not holding by the performance of every Commandment o● his Lord cannot be said to hold in Villenage Whether it may be said That Copiholders are by custom and continuance of time grown out of that extream servitude wherein they were first created I leave to others of better Judgment since Fit●● loco ●itato says Tenure by Copy is but of late time Basels Baselli A sort of Coyn al●olished
made in the Reigns of Henry the Third Edward the First or Second but uncertain which set down in Poulton fol. 110. cap. 4. 9. Toll shall be taken by the Rase and not by the Heap or Cantel which seems to signifie the same we now call the Lump as to buy by Measure or by the Lump Cantred or rather Cantref Cantredus Signifies an Hundred Villages being a British word compounded of the Adjective Cant i. An Hundred and Tref a Town or Village In Wales the Counties are divided into Cantreds as in England into Hundreds The word is used Anno 28 Hen. 8. cap 3. Capacity capacitas An aptness to contain or receive Our Law allows the King two Capacities A Natural and a Politick In the first He may purchase Lands to Him and His Heirs in the later to Him and His Successors And a Parson hath the like Cape of Good Hope Cabo de bon ' speranza A Promontory or Elbow of Land that lies in Cafraria a Province of Aethiopia Inferior and was first discovered by the Portugals under the command of Bartholomew Diaz Helyns Cosmog fol. 984. and is mentioned in the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 18. Cape Lat. Is a Writ Judicial touching Plea of Land or Tenements so termed as most Writs are of that word which carries the especial est intention or end of it And this Writ is divided into Cape Magnum and Cape Parvum Both which as is before said in Attachment take hold of things immoveable and seem to differ in these points First Because Cape Magnum or the Grand Cape lies before appearance and Cape Parvum afterward Secondly The Cape Magnum summons the Tenant to answer to the Default and over to the Demandant Cape Parvum Summons the Tenant to answer to the Default onely and therefore is called Cape Parvum or Petit Cape Old Nat. Br. fol. 161 162. Yet Ingham saith it is called Petit Cape not because it is of small force but that it consists of few words Cape Magnum in the Old Nat. Br. is thus defined Where a Man hath brought a Praecipe quod Reddat of a thing that touches Plea of Land and the Tenant makes default at the day to him given in the Original Writ then this Writ shall go for the King to take the Land into His hands and if the Tenant come not at the day given him thereby he loseth his Land c. A Form of this Writ you may see in the Reg. Judicial fol. 1. b. Of this Writ and the Explication of its true force and effect read Bracton lib 3. tract 3. cap. 1. num 4 5 6. Cape Parvum or Petit Cape in Old Nat. Br. fol. 162. Is thus defined Where the Tenant is summoned in Plea of Land and comes at the Summons and his appearance is of Record and at the day given him prays the View and having it granted makes default then shall Issue this Writ for the King c. The difference betwixt the Grand Cape and Petit Cape which in effect or consequence are alike is that the Grand Cape is Awarded upon the Defendant or Tenants not appearing or demanding the View in such Real Actions where the Original Writ does not mention the parcels or particulars demanded And the Petit Cape after Apparence or View granted It s Form see in Reg. Jud. fol. 2. and Fleta lib. 6. cap. 44. Cape ad Valentiam Is a Species of Cape Magnum so called of the end whereto it tends and in Old Nat. Br. fol. 161. thus described Where I am impleaded of Lands and I vouch to warrant another against whom the Summons Ad Warrantizandum hath been Awarded and the Sheriff comes not at the day given then if the Demandant recover against me I shall have this Writ against the Vouchee and shall recover so much in value of the Lands of the Vouchee if he hath so much if not then I shall have execution of such Lands and Tenements as descend to him in Fee or if he purchase afterwards I shall have against him a Resummons and if he can say nothing I shall recover the value This Writ lies before Apparence Of these and their divers uses see the Table of the Reg. Judicial verbo Cape Capias is a Writ of two sorts one before Judgment called Capias ad Respondendum where the Sheriff upon Original or other Writ in a Personal Action returns Nihil habet in Baliva nostra The other is a Writ of Execution after Judgment being also of divers kindes as Capias ad Satisfaciendum Capias pro Fine Capias Utlagatum after Judgment c. Capias ad Satisfaciendum Is a Writ of Execution after Judgment lying where a Man recovers in an Action Personal as for Debt Damages Detinue c. in the Kings Court In which case this Writ Issues to the Sheriff commanding him to take the body of him against whom the Debt is recovered who shall be put in prison till he make satisfaction Capias pro Fine Is where one being by Judgment fined to the King upon some offence committed against a Statute does not discharge it according to the Judgment By this therefore is his body to be taken and committed to prison until he pay the Fine Coke lib. 3. fol. 12. Or where upon a Non est factum pleaded his Plea is by evidence or his own after-acknowledgment not made out or verified and the like Capias Utlagatum Is a Writ which lies against him who is outlawed upon any Action Personal or Criminal by which the Sheriff apprehends the party outlawed for not appearing upon the Exigend and keeps him in safe custody till the day of return and then presents him to the Court there farther to be ordered for his contempt which if in the Common Pleas was in former times to be committed to the Fleet there to remain till he had sued out the Kings Charter of Pardon and appeared to the Action At present in the Kings Bench the Outlary cannot be reversed unless the Defendant appear in person and by a present of Gloves to the Judges implore and obtain their savor to reverse it And in the Common Pleas the Defendant not being an Executor or Administrator is now to give good Bail which he is allow'd to do by Atturny to answer the Action if the Debt or Damage demanded be 20 l. or above and to pay the Plaintiffs charges before the outlary be reversed And by a special Capias Utlagatum in the same Writ the Sheriff is commanded and may seize all the Defendants Lands Goods and Chattels for the contempt to the King and the Plaintiff may after an Inquisition taken thereupon and returned into the Exchequer obtain a Lease of the Lands extended and a grant of the Goods whereby to compel the Defendant to appear which when he shall do and reverse the Utlary are to be restored to him See Old Nat. Br. fol. 154. and Table of Reg. Judic verbo Capias Capias in Withernamium de Averiis
Is a Writ lying for Cattle in Withernam Reg. of Writs fol. 82. 83. See Withernam Capias in Withernamium de Homine Is a Writ that lies for a Servant in Withernam Reg. fol. 79. 80. See Withernam Capias conductos ad proficiscendum Is an Original Writ which lies by the Common Law against any Soldier that hath covenanted to serve the King in his War and appears not at the time and place appointed directed to two of the Kings Serjeants at Arms to arrest and take him wheresoever he may be found and to bring him Coram Consilio nostro with a Clause of Assistance 4 Inst fol. 128. Capite from Caput i. Rex unde tenere in Capite i. Tenere de Rege omnium terrarum Capite Was a Tenure which held of the King immediately as of his Crown were it by Knights Service or Soccage Broke tit Tenures 46 94. Dyer fol. 123. num 38. But by Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. all Tenures by Knights Service of the King or of any other person Knights Service in Capite or Soccage in Capite of the King and the Fruits and consequences thereof are taken away and discharged from 24 Febr 1645. And all Tenures of all Mannors Lands c. held either of the King or of any other person from that time shall be construed and taken for ever to be turned into free and common Soccage And all Tenures hereafter to be created by the King upon any Gifts or Grants of Mannors Lands c. are by that Statute ordained to be in free and common Soccage onely and not by Knights Service or in Capite and are to be discharged of all Wardship c. Caption Captio When a Commission is executed and the Commissioners names subscribed to a Certificate declaring when and where the Commission was executed that is called the Caption which commonly begins thus Virtute istius Commissionis nos c. Or Executio istius Commissionis patet in quadam Schedula annexata c Capture Captura The taking a prey a little gain an Arrest or Seisure Anno 14 Car. 2. cap. 14. Caput Baroniae Is the Castle or cheif Seat of a Nobleman which is not to be divided among Daughters if there be no Son but must descend to the eldest Daughter Caeteris filiabus aliundè satisfactis Carecta Carectata Sax. Cret unde Cart A Cart or Cart-load Facient precarias de Caruca Carecta i. De aratro carro Custumar Prior. Lewes M. S. Quinque Carectatas clausturae ad praedictae terrae clausturam sustinendam Mon. Angl. 2. par fol. 340. a. Caretarius A Carter Sciant quod ago Herewardus Pril Dedi In liberam puram perpetuam Eleemosinam Deo Altari B. Mariae in Conventuali Ecclesia Leominstr xii d annui reditus provenientes de quodam Mesuagio in Marisco quod fuit Ricardi Caretarii c. sine Dat. Ex libro Cart. Priorat Leominstr See Carreta Cark Is a quantity of Wool thirty whereof make a Sarpler Anno 27 Hen. 6. cap. 2. See Sarpler Carno Seems to signifie an immunity or priviledge Cromp. Jurisd fol. 191. Prior de Melton se homines suos immunes clamat ab omnibus Amerciamentis in Foresta ab omnibus Geldis Footgeldis Buckstals Tritis Carno Sumag c. Itin. Pick. fol. 168. b. Quaere Carpemeals A course kinde of Cloth made in the North of England and mentioned Anno 7 Jac. cap. 16. Carreta aliàs Carrecta Was anciently used for a Carriage Wain or Cart-load Sciant praesentes futuri quod ego Henricus de Ribesford Dedi Rogero filio Ade Pistonis pro Homagio Servicio suo totum pratum meum de Wiggemore Reddend inde annuatim mibi haeredibus meis ipse haredes sui unam Carretam soeni rationabilem bene foenatam c. Sine dat Penes Tho. Bridgwater gen Carrick or Carrack Carrucha A Ship of great burden so called of the Italian word Carico or Carco a burden or charge Mentioned 2 Rich. 2. cap. 4. Cartel See Chartel Carucage Carucagium As Hidage was a Taxation by Hides of Land so Carucage was by Carucata s of Land Dederunt S. Edmundo de qualibet Carucata terrae in toto Episcopatu quatuor Denarios annuos quod usque modo ea de causa Carucagium est appellatum Mon. Angl 1 par fol. 294. a. Carrucate or Carve of Land Carrucata terrae of the Fr. Charrue i. aratrum Is a certain quantity of Land by which the Subjects have sometimes been taxed whereupon the Tribute so levied was called Carvagium Bracton lib. 2. cap. 26. num 8. Carucata t●rrae A Plough Land may contain Houses Mills Pasture Meadow Wood c. Coke on Littl. Sect. 119. Carrucata is sometimes also used for a Cart-load Una Carrucata ligni in Foresta nostra quae appellatur defensa Mon. Angl. 2. par fol. 311. a. Littleton cap. Tenure in Soccage saith that Soca idem est quod Caruca a Soke or Plough-Land are all one Yet Stow in his Annals pag. 271. says The same King Henry took Carvage that is two Marks of Silver of every Knights Fee towards the Marriage of His Sister Isabel to the Emperor Where Carvage cannot be taken for a Plough-Land except there were some other farther division whereby to raise of every Plough-Land so much and so consequently of every Knights Fee that is of every 680 Acres two Marks of Siver Rastal in his Exposition of Words says Carvage is to be quit if the King shall tax all the Land by Carves that is a priviledge whereby a Man is exempted from Carvage Skene says it contains as great a Portion of Land as may be labored and tilled in a year and day by one Plough which also is called Hilda or Hida terrae a word used in the old British Laws Lamb. in the end of his Eirenarcha translates Carrucatam terrae a Plough-Land The word Carve is mentioned in the Statutes of Wards and Relief made 28 Edw. 1. And in Magna Char. cap. 5. Anno 1200 facta est Pax inter Johannem Regem Angliae P. Regem Franciae c. Et mutuavit Regi Franciae 30 millia Marcarum pro quibus collectum est Carvagium in Anglia scil iii s. pro quolibet aratro Ex Registro Priorat ●e Dunstaple in Bibl. Cotton See Coke on Littl. fol. 69. a. Cassatum Cassata Habitaculum cum terra idonea ad unam familiam alendam alias Casamentum Saxonibus nostris ride Bedâ Familia Ego Forterus famulus famulorum Dei pro redemptione animae meae unum Cassatum dedi Aldberto Abbati quae sita est juxta fluvium Aesee ad portam quae dicitur Bledenithe ad insulam parvam ad Ecclesiam beati Martini Confessoris in propriam substantiam Habendum Donandumque cuicunque voluerit Qui hanc cartam infringere temptaverit sciat seipsum a Communione Sanctorum separatum ab omnipotenti Deo + Ego Forterus
nature and essence of the Covenant And Crompton Juris fol. 185. saith That to be subject to the feeding of the Kings Deer is Collateral to the Soil within the Forest So we may say That Liberties to pitch Booths or Standings for a Fair in another Mans Ground is Collateral to the Ground The Private Woods of a common person within a Forest may not be cut without the Kings Licence for it is a Prerogative Collateral to the Soil Manwood par 1. pag. 66. Collateral Warranty See Warranty Collation of Benefice Collatio Beneficii Signifies properly the bestowing a Benefice by the Bishop who hath it in his own gift or patronage and differs from Institution in this That Institution into a Benefice is performed by the Bishop at the motion or presentation of another who is Patron of it or hath the Patrons right for the time Yet Collation is used for presentation Anno 25 Edw. 3. Stat. 6. Collatione facta uni post mortem alterius c. Is a Writ directed to the Justices of the Common Pleas commanding them to direct their Writ to a Bishop for the admitting a Clerk in the place of another presented by the King who during the suit between the King and the Bishops Clerk is departed this life For Judgment once passed for the Kings Clerk and he dying before admittance the King may bestow his presentation on another Reg. of Writs fol. 31. b. Colour color Signifies a probable Plea but in truth false and hath this end to draw the tryal of the Cause from the Jury to the Judges As in an Action of Trespass for taking away the Plaintiffs Beasts the Defendant saith That before the Plaintiff had any thing in them he himself was posseised of them as of his proper Goods and delivered them to A. B. to deliver them to him again when c. And A. B. gave them to the Plaintiff and the Plaintiff supposing the property to be in A. B. at the time of the gift took them and the Defendant took them from the Plaintiff whereupon the Plaintiff brings his Action This is a good Color and a good Plea See Doctor and Student lib. 2. cap. 13. And Broke tit Color in Assise Trespass c. fol. 104. Collusion Collusio Is a deceitful agreement or compact between two or more for the one party to bring an Action against the other to some evil purpose as to defraud a third person of his right c. See the Statute of Westmin 2. cap. 32. and 8 Hen. 6. cap. 26. which gives the Quale ju● and enquiry in such Cases See Broke tit Collusion and Reg. of Writs fol. 179. a. Gifts made by Collusion see in 50 Edw. 3. cap. 6. Combat Fr. Signifies as much as Certamen pugna But with us it is taken for a formal tryal between two Champions of a doubtful cause or quarrel by the Sword or Bastons of which you may read at large in Glanvile lib. 14. cap. 1. Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 21. Britton cap. 22. Horns Mirror of Justices lib. 3. cap. Des Exceptions in fine proxime cap. Juramentum Duelli Dyer fol. 301. num 41 42 When Alan de la Zouch had judicially sued John Earl of Warren who chose rather to try the title by the Sword Point than by Point of Law he was wounded by him even in Westminster-hall in the year 1269. says Camden in his Britan. fol. 519. The last Trial by combat was admitted 6 Car. 1. between Donnold Lord Roy Appellant and David Ramsey Esquire Defendant Scotchmen in the Painted Chamber at Westminster before Robert Earl of Lindsey Lord High Constable Thomas Earl of Arundel Earl Marshal with other Lords where after the Court had met several times and Bill Answer and Replication put in by the Parties and Council heard with other Formalities it was at last determined that the matter should be referred to the Kings will and pleasure whose favor enclined to Ramsey Bakers Chron. fol. 500. See Coke on Littl. fol. 294. b. Origines Juridiciales fol. 65. And Spelmans Gloss at large verbo Campus Comitatu Commisso Is a Writ or Commission whereby the Sheriff is authorised to take upon him the charge of the County Reg. of Writs fol. 295. Cokes Rep. lib. 3. fol. 72. a. Comitatu Castro Commisso Is a Writ whereby the charge of a County with the keeping of a Castle is committed to the Sheriff Reg. of Writs fol. 295. Comitatus Of dead Ferms and Debts desperate whereof there is no hope one Roll shall be made and shall be entituled Comitatus and read every year upon the account of Sheriffs 10 Edw. 1. cap. unico Commandry Praeceptoria Was a Mannor or cheif Messuage with Lands and Tenements appertaining thereto belonging to the Priory of St. Johns of Jerusalem in England and he who had the Goverment of any such Mannor or House was called the Commander who could not dispose of it but to the use of the Priory onely taking thence his own sustenance according to his degree who was usually a Brother of the same Priory New Eagle in the County of Lincoln was and still is called the Commandry of Eagle and did anciently belong to the said Priory so were Slebach in Pembrokeshire and Shengay in Cambridgeshire Commandries in time of the Knights-Templers says Camd. These in many places of England are termed Temples as Temple Bruere in Lincolnshire Temple Newsum in Yorkshire c. because they formerly belonged to the said Templers Of these read Anno 26 Hen. 8. cap. 2. and 32 Ejusdem cap. 24. See Preceptories Commandment Praeceptum Hath a divers use as the Commandment of the King when upon his meer motion and from his own mouth he casts any Man into Prison Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 72. Commandment of the Justices is either absolute or ordinary Absolute as when upon their own Authority in their Wisdom and Discretion they commit a Man to prison for a punishment Ordinary is when they commit one rather for safe-custody then punishment A Man committed upon an Ordinary Commandment is replevisable Pl. Cor. fol. 73. Commandment is again used for the offence of him that willeth another Man to transgress the Law or to do any thing contrary to the Law as Murther Theft or such like Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 19. which the Civilians call Mandatum Commendam Ecclesia Commendata Is a Benefice or Church-Living which being void is commended to the charge and care of some sufficient Clerk to be supplied until it may be conveniently provided of a Pastor And that this was the true original of this practise you may read at large in Durandus De sacris Ecclesiae Ministeriis Beneficiis lib. 5. cap. 7. He to whom the Church is commended hath the Fruits and Profits thereof onely for a certain time and the Nature of the Church is not changed thereby but is as a thing deposited in his hands in trust who hath nothing but the custody of it which may be
Cosoning and New Book of Entries verbo Disceit Decenna and Decenniers See Deciners Decennary Decennaria The Limits or Compass of ten Friburghs See Deciners Deceptione Is a Writ that lies properly for one that receives harm or dammage by him that does any thing deceitfully in the Name of another Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 95. And is either Original or Judicial as appears by Old Nat. Br. fol. 50. where you may read the use of both to this effect This Writ of Deceit when it is Original lies where deceit is used to a Man by another by not sufficiently performing a Bargain or Promise or by using some Guile whereby he may be disinherited or evil intreated c. And when Judicial it lies out of the Rolls of Record as in the Case where scire facias is sent to the Sheriff that he warn a man to be before the Justices at a certain day and the Sheriff returns the Writ served whereas the Party was not warned whereby he that sues the scire facias recovers then the Party who ought to have been warned shall have the said Writ against the Sheriff See Reg. of Writs fol. 112. and Reg. Judicial in the Table verbo Deceptione Decies tantum Is a Writ that lies against a Juror who hath taken Money for giving his Verdict called so of the effect because it is to recover ten times so much as he took It lies also against Embracers that procure such an Enquest Anno 38 Ed. 3. ca. 13. Reg. of Writs fol. 188. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 171. New Book of Entries verbo Decies tantum Decimation Decimatio the punishing every tenth Souldier by Lot was termed Decimatio Legionis Also a tithing or paying the tenth part What Decimation was in the late Usurpers time 1655 is still in the Memory of many good Subjects of this Realm See Tenths Decimis solbendis pro possessionibus alienigenarum Is a Writ or Letters Patent yet extant in the Register which lay against those that had farmed the Priors aliens Lands of the King for the Rector of the Parish to recover his Tyth of them Reg. of Writs fol. 179. Deciners alias Decenniers alias Doziners Decenarii Decearchi Signifie in the Ancient Monuments of our Law such as were wont to have the oversight and check of the Friburghs for Maintenance of the Kings Peace And the limits or compass of their Jurisdiction was call'd Decenna Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 15. of whom you may also read Fleta lib. 1. ca. 27. And Reg. of Writs fol. 98. b. These seemed to have large Authority in the Saxons time taking knowledge of Causes within their Circuit and redressing Wrongs by way of Judgment and compelling Men thereunto as you may read in the Lawes of K. Edward the Confessor published by Lambert Numb 32. In later times I find mention of them as in Britton ca. 12. who sayes in the Kings Person for so he Writes his whole Book We will that all those who are 14 years old shall make Oath That they shall be sufficient and loyal to Us and neither be Felons nor assenting to Felons And We will That all Profess themselves to be of this or that Dozein and make or offer Surety of their Behaviour by these or those Doziners except Religious Persons Clerks Knights eldest Sons and Women Yet the same Author in his 29th Chap. sayes all of 12 years old and upwards are punishable for not coming to the Sheriffs Turn except Earles Prelates Barons Religious persons and Women Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 37. has these words The like Law is where the Dozeniers make Presentment that a Felon is taken for Felony and delivered to the Sheriff c. And Kitchin fol. 33. thus Religious persons Clerks Knights or Women shall not be Deceniers A Dozein seems now to extend so far as every Leet extends because in Leets onely this Oath is Ministred by the Steward and taken by such as are twelve years old and upwards dwelling within the Precinct of the Leet where they are sworn Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 261. a. The particulars of this Oath you may read in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 1. num 1. who sets down fifteen years for the age of those that are to be sworn to the Kings Peace but afterwards names twelve years See Inlaugh We may note out of the Premisses a diversity between the ancient and these modern times in this Point of Law and Government as well in the age of those who are to be sworn as also that Decennier is not now used for the chief Man of a Dozein but for him that is sworn to the Kings Peace and lastly That now there are no other Dozeins but Leets and that no Man ordinarily gives other security for keeping the Kings Peace but his own Oath and that therefore no Man answers for anothers transgression but every Man for himself See Frank-pledge and 2 Part. Inst fol 73. Declaration Declaratio Is properly the shewing forth or laying down in writing the Cause of Action in any sute at Law wherein the party supposes to have wrong This in an Action Real is properly called a Count which ought to contain Demonstration Declaration and Conclusion In Demonstration are contained three things viz. Who complains against whom and for what matter In the Declaration there ought to be comprised how and in what manner the Action rose between the parties when what day year and place and to whom the Action shall be given And in the Conclusion he ought to aver and proffer to prove his sute and shew the damage he hath sustained by the wrong done him Terms de la Ley. Decretals Decretales Are a Volume of the Canon Law so called or Books containing the Decrees of sundry Popes or a Digestion of the Canons of all the Councils that pertained to one Matter under one Head Dedi as if it be said in a Feoffment I. S. hath Given granted c. It is a Warranty in Law to the Feoffee and his Heirs Coke on Littl. fol. 384. a. Dedimus Potestatem i. We have given power Is a Writ whereby Commission is given to one or more private persons for the speeding of some Act appertaining to a Judge The Civilians call it Delegationem And it is granted most commonly upon suggestion that the party who is to do something before a Judge or in a Court is so weak he cannot travel It is used in divers Cases as to take a Personal Answer to a Bill of Complaint in Chancery to examine witnesses in a Cause depending in that Court to levy a Fine c. West part 2. Symbol tit Fines sect 112. and divers other as you may see in Fitz Nat. Br and in the Table of the Reg. of Writs verbo Dedimus Potestatem Déed Factum Is an Instrument written in Parchment or Paper consisting of three things viz. Writing Sealing and Delivery and comprehending a Contract or Bargain between party and party Of which there are two sorts Deeds Indented and Deeds
Villenagium quod traditur villanis quod quis tempestive intempestive resumere possit pro voluntate sua revocare Lib. 4. tract 3. cap. 9. num 5. Demains according to common speech are the Lords chief Mannor place with the Lands thereto belonging which he and his Ancestors have from time to time kept in their own Manual occupation howbeit according to Law all the parts of a Mannor except what is in the hands of Freeholders are said to be Demains And the reason why Copihold is accounted Demain is because Copiholders are adjudged in Law to have no other estate but at the will of the Lord so that it is still reputed to be in a manner in the Lords hands Demain is sometimes used in a more special signification as opposite to Frank-fee For example those Lands which were in the possession of King Edward the Confessor are called Ancient Demains and all others Frank-fee and the Tenants which hold any of those Lands are called Tenants in Ancient Demain the others Tenants in Frank-fee Kitchin fol. 98. See more on this subject in the Learned Spelman verbo Dominicum Demand Fr. Demande i. postulatio Signifies a calling upon a Man for any thing due It hath also a proper signification distinguished from Plaint For all Civil Actions are pursued either by Demands or Plaints and the pursuer is called Demandant or Plaintiff viz. Demandant in Actions Real and Plaintiff in Personal And where the Party pursuing is called Demandant the party pursued is called Tenant where Plaintiff there Defendant If a Man release to another all Demands this is the best Release which the Releasee can have and shall enure most to his advantage Littl. fol. 117. a. There are two manner of Demands the one in Deed the other in Law In Deed as in every Praecipe there is express Demand In Law as every Entry in Land Distress for Rent taking or seising of Goods and such like acts which may be done without any words are Demands in Law As a Release of Sutes is more large then a Release of Quarrels or Actions so a Release of Demands is more large and beneficial then either of them By Release of all Demands all Executions and all Freeholds and Inheritances executory are released By Release of all Demands to the Disseisor the right of Entry in the Land and all that is contained therein is released And he that releaseth all Demands excludes himself from all Actions Entries and Seisures but a Release of all Demands is no Bar in a Writ of Error to Reverse an Outlary Coke lib. 8. fol. 153 154. Demandant Petens Is he who is Actor or Plaintiff in a Real Action because he demandeth Lands c. Coke on Littl. fol. 127. b. See Demand Demain-Cart of an Abbot Seems to be that Cart which the Abbot used upon his own Demain Anno 6 Hen. 3. cap. 21. Demi-haque See Haque and Haquebuz Demise Dimissio Is applied to an Estate either in Fee-simple Fee-tail or for term of Life and so it is commonly taken in many Writs 2 Part. Inst fol. 483. The Kings death is in Law termed the Demise of the King Demsters See Deemsters Demurrer from the Fr. Demeurer i. Manere in aliquo loco vel morari Is a kinde of pause or stop put to the proceedings of any Action upon a point of difficulty which must be determined by the Court before any further proceedings can be had therein For in every Action the Controversie consists either in Fact or in Law if in Fact that is tried by the Jury if in Law the Case is plain to the Judge or so hard and rare as it breeds just doubt We call that plain to the Judge wherein he is assured of the Law though perhaps the party and his Council yield not to it And in such case the Judge with his Associats proceed to Judgment without more ado but when it is doubtful then stay is made and a time taken either for the Court to consider further of it and agree if they can or else for all the Judges to meet together in the Exchequer Chamber and upon hearing what the Serjeants can say on both sides to determine what is Law And whatsoever they conclude stands firm without further Appeal Smith de Repub. Angl. lib. 2. cap. 13. This Demurrer is in our Records expressed in Latin by Moratur in Lege At the Common Law the Defendant sometimes demurreth to the Plaintiffs Count or Declaration and sometimes the Plaintiff demurs to the Defendants Plea by averring That it is not a sufficient Plea in the Law c. In Chancery the Defendant demurs to the Plaintiffs Bill averring it to be defective in such or such a point and demands the Judgment of the Court thereupon whether he shall be compelled to make any further or other answer thereunto c. See Moratur in Lege Denariata terrae See Fardingdeal of Land Denariatus Precium rei quae Denario constat Mercis redditus terrae Sciant quod ego Willielmus filius Philippi de Colewal Dedi Egidio de la Berne de Hereford pro quadam summa pecuniae Octo Denariatos annui redditus c. Sine dat Denelage or Danelage From the Sax. dane and laga lex Is the Law the Danes made here in England See Merchenlago Denizen Fr. Donaison i. Donatio Signifies an Alien that is enfranchised here in England by the Kings Charter and Donation and enabled in many respects to do as the Kings Native Subjects do namely to purchase and possess Lands to be capable of any Office or Dignity Yet is it short of Naturalization because a stranger naturalized may inherit Lands by descent which a Denizen cannot And again in the Charter whereby a Man is made Denizen there is commonly contained some one clause or other that abridges him of that full benefit which natural subjects enjoy And when a Man is thus enfranchised he is said to be under the Kings Protection or Esse ad fidem Regis Angliae before which time he can enjoy nothing in England Bracton lib. 5. tract 5. cap. 25. num 3. saith That he and his goods might be seised to the Kings use See Horns Mirror lib. 1. cap. de la Venue de Franc-plege and 2 Part. Inst fol. 741. De non Residentia Clerici Regis Is an ancient Writ the Form whereof see in 2 Part. Inst fol. 624. Deodand Deodandum Is a thing given or forfeited as it were to God for the pacification of his Wrath in a Case of Misadventure whereby a Christian Soul comes to a violent end without the fault of any reasonable Creature As if a Horse strike his Keeper and kill him If a Man in driving a Cart falls so as the Cart-wheel runs over him and presses him to death If one be felling a Tree and gives warning to the standers by to look to themselves yet a Man is killed by the fall of it In the first of these Cases the Horse
paying Legacies and Debts without Specialties to the prejudice of the Creditors that have Specialties before the Debts on the said Specialties are due for in this Case the Executors are as liable to Action as if they had wasted the Goods of the Testator riotoufly or converted them to their own use and are compellable to pay such Debts by Specialty out of their own Goods to the value of what they so paid illegally For the orderly payment of Debts and Legacies by Executors so as to escape a Devastation or charging their own Goods See the Office of Executors ca. 12. Devenerunt lat Is a Writ anciently directed to the Escheator when any of the Kings Tenants holding in Capite dyed and when his son and heir within age and in the Kings custody dyed then this Writ went forth commanding the Escheator that he by the Oath of good and lawful men enquire what Lands and Tenements by the death of the Tenant came to the King See Dyer fol. 360. Pl. 4. and Keilways Rep. fol. 199. a. Though this Writ in the sence abovesaid be disused yet a new use of it is prescribed by Act of Parl. 14 Car. 2. ca. 11. Entituled An Act for preventing frauds and regulating abuses in His Majesties Customes Devest Devestire Is contrary to Invest for as Invest signifies to deliver the posession of any thing so Devest signifies the taking it away Devise or Divise from the French Deviser to confer or converse with or from Diviser to divide or sort into several parcels Is properly that act by which a Testator gives or bequeaths his Lands or Goods by his last Will in Writing He who makes the Devise is called the Devisor and he to whom the Devise is made the Devisee The words of a Will the Law interprets in a larger and more favourable sence then those of a Deed For if Land be Devised to a man to have to him for ever or to have to him and his Assignes in these two Cases the Devisee shall have a Feesimple but given in the same manner by Feoffment he has but an Estate for term of life So if one Devise Land to an Infant in his Mothers Belly it is a good Devise but 't is otherwise by Feoffment Grant or Gift for in those Cases there ought to be one of ability to take presently otherwise it is void 14 Eliz. Dyer 304. and Coke on Litt. fol. 111. Deboires of Caleis Anno 2 Rich. 2. Stat. 1. ca. 3. Were the Customes due to the King for Merchandise brought to or carried out of Caleis when our Staple was there Paying their Customes and Devoyres to the King Anno 34 Ed. 3. ca. 18. Devoire in French signifies Duty Devorce See Divorce Dictum de Kenelworth Was an Edict or Award between King Henry the Third and all those Barons and others who had been in Armes against him and so called because it was made at Kenelworth-Castle in Warwickshire Anno 51 Hen. 3. containing a composition for the Lands and Estates of those who had forfeited them in that Rebellion Dicker of Leather Is a quantity consisting of Ten Hides The word probably comes from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies Ten. Diem claufit extremum Was a Writ that Issued out of the Chancery to the Escheator of the County upon the death of any of the Kings Tenants in Capite to inquire by a Jury of what Lands he died seised and of what value and who was next heir to him Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 251. Dies In the Common-Law there are Dies juridici Dies non juridici Dies non juridici are all Sundayes in the Year and in Easter-Yerm the Feast of the Ascension of our Lord in Trinity Term the Nativity of St John Baptist in Michaelmas Term the Feasts of All Saints and All Souls and in Hillary Term the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary And this was the Antient Law of England and extends not onely to Legal Proceedings but to Contracts 2 Part. Inst fol. 264. Dies datus Is a Day or time of Respit given to the Tenant or Defendant by the Court Brooke tit Continuance Dignitaries dignitarii Are those who are advanced to the Ecclesiastical dignity of Dean Arch-deacon Prebendary c. See 3 Part. Inst fol. 155. Dieta rationabilis Is in Bracton used for a reasonable days Journey Lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 16. Dignity Ecclesiastical Dignitas Ecclesiastica Is mention'd in the Stat. 26 Hen. 8. ca. 31 32. ejusdem ca. 15. And is by the Canonists defin'd to be Administratio cum jurisdictione potestate aliqua conjuncta whereof you may read divers examples in Duarenus de Sacris Eccles Ministris Beneficiis lib. 2. ca. 6. Of Dignities and Prebends Cam. reckons in England 544. Britan. pa. 161. Dilapidation dilapidatio A wastful spending or destroying or the letting Buildings run to ruine and decay for want of due reparation Anno 13 Eliz. ca. 10. Money recover'd for dilapidations shall be employ'd in repair of the same Houses Anno 14 Eliz. ca. 11. Dioces diocesis from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies with us the Circuit of every Bishops Jurisdiction for this Realm hath two sorts of Divisions one into Shires or Counties in respect of Temporal Policy another into Diocesses in order to Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical of which we reckon 22 in England and 4. in Wales Dimidietas The one half Sciant quod ego Matilda filia Willielmi le Franceys dedi Waltero de Stetton dimidietatem illius Burgagii c. sine dat Ex libro Cart. Priorat Leominstr Disability disabilitas Is when a man is disabled or made incapable to inherit or take that benefit which otherwise he might have done which may happen four wayes by the act of the Party or his Ancestor by the act of Law or of God Disability by the parties own act is If I bind my self that upon surrender of a Lease I will grant a new Estate to the Lessee and afterwards I grant over my Reversion In this case though I afterwards repurchase the reversion yet I have forfeited my Obligation because I was once disabled to perform it Coke lib. 5. fol. 21. Also if a Man be Excommunicated he cannot during that time sue any Action but shall be thereby disabled Coke lib. 8. fol. 69. Disability by the act of an Ancestor is if a man be attainted of Treason or Felony by this attainder his blood is corrupt and both himself and children disabled to inherit Disability by the Act of Law is most properly when a Man by the sole act of the Law is disabled and so is an Alien born who is disabled to take any benefit thereby Disability by the Act of God is where a man is not of whole Memory which disables him so that in all cases where he passeth any Estate out of him it may after his death be disanull'd for it is a Maxim in Law That a Man of
custom was so kept that the Sheriffs at every County Court did from time to time take the Oaths of young ones as they grew to Fourteen years of age and see that they were setled in one Dozein or another whereupon this Branch of the Sheriffs Authority was called Visus Franci-plegii View of Frank-pledge See the Statute for View of Frank-pledge Anno 18 Edw. 2. See Decennier Leet View of Frank-pledge and Friborgh What Articles were wont to be enquired of in this Court see in Horns Mirror lib. 1. cap. De la Veneu des Francs-pleges and what those Articles were in ancient times see in Fleta lib. 2. cap. 52. See also 2 Part. Inst fol. 73. And if there be ony persone within the Warde that is not under Franc-pledge that is to saye under loue and Lawe c. Out of an Ancient Charge of the Quest of Wardmore in every Ward in London Frée-bench Franc-bank Francus Bancus i. Sedes Libera Signifies that estate in Copihold Lands which the Wife being espoused a Virgin hath after the death of her Husband for her Dower according to the custom of the Mannor Kitchin fol. 102. As at Orleton in the County of Hereford the relict or a Cop holdtenant is admitted to her Free-bench that is to all her Husbands Copihold Lands during her life the next Court after her husbands death Bracton lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 13. num 2. hath these words Consuetudo est in partibus illis quod uxores maritorum defunctorum habeant Francum Bancum suum de terris Sockmannorum tenent nomine dotis Fitzherbert calls it a Custom whereby in certain Cities the Wife shall have her Husbands whole Lands c for her Dower Nat. Br. fol. 150. See Plowden Casu Newis fol. 411. Of this Free-bench several Mannors have several customs As it is the custom of the Mannors of East and West Enborn in the County of Berks● That if a Customary Tenant dye the Widow shall have her Free-bench in all his Copihold Lands Dum sola casta fuerit but if she commit Incontinency she forfeits her estate yet if she will come into the Court riding backward on a Black Ram with his tail in her hand and say the words following the Steward is bound by the Custom to re-admit her to her Free-bench Here I am Kiding upon a Black ●am Like a Whore as I am And for my Crinoum Crancum Have lost my Binkum Bankum And for my Tails Game Have done this Worldly shame Therefore I pray you ●r Steward let me have my Land again The like Custom is in the Mannor of Tor in Devonshire and other parts of the West Free-bord Francbordus Et totum hoscum quod vocatur Brendewode cum Francbordo duorum pedum dimid per circuitum illius bosci Mon. Angl. 2 Part. fol. 241. a. In some places more in some less is claimed as a Free-bord beyond or without the Fence Frée-chappel Libera Capella Is in the opinion of some a Chappel founded within a Parish for the Service of God by the Devotion and Liberality of some good Man over and above the Mother Church to which it was free for the Parishioner to come or not and endowed with maintenance by the Founder and therefore called Free Others say and more probably that those onely are Free-chappels which are of the Kings Foundation and by him exempted from the Jurisdiction of the Ordinary but the King may licence a Subject to found such a Chappel and by his Charter exempt it from the Ordinaries Visitation also That it is called free in respect of its exemption from the Jurisdiction of the Diocesan appears by the Register of Writs fol. 40 and 41. These Chappels were all given to the King with Chantries also Anno 1 Edw. 6. ca. 14. Free-Chappel of St. Martin le Grand Anno 3 Ed. 4. ca. 4. 4 Ed. 4. ca. 7. Freedstoll See Fridstoll Freehold Liberum tenementum Is that Land or Tenement which a Man holds in Fee Fee-tayl or for term of life Bracton lib. 2. ca. 9. And it is of two sorts Freehold in Deed and Freehold in Law The first is the real Possession of Land or Tenement in Fee Fee-tail or for Life The other is the right that a Man has to such Land or Tenement before his entry or seisure Freehold is likewise extended to those Offices which a Man holds either in Fee or for life Britton defines it to this effect Franktenement is a possession of the Soyl or services issuing out of the Soyl which a Freeman holds in Fee or at least for life though the Soyl be charged with free-services ca. 32. Freehold is sometimes taken in opposition to Villenage Lambert in his explication of Saxon words Verbo Terra ex scripto says Land in the Saxons time was called either Bockland that is holden by Book or Writing or Folckland held without Writing The former he reports was held with far better condition and by the better sort of Tenants as Noblemen and Gentlemen being such as we now call Freehold The later was commonly in the possession of Clownes being that which we now call at the will of the Lord. R●g Judicial fol. 68. a. sayes That he who holds Land upon an execution of a Statute-Merchant until he be satisfi'd the Debt Tenet ut liberum tenementum sibi ussignatis suis and fol. 73 the same of a Tenant per Elegit where I conceive the meaning is not that such Tenants are Freeholders but as Freeholders for their time until they have receiv'd profits to the value of their Debt Freeholders in the ancient Laws of Scotland were called Milites according to Skene verbo Milites Frenchman Francigena Was anciently used for every stranger Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 15. See Englecery Frendles man Was the old Saxon word for him whom we call an Out-law The reason was because he was upon his exclusion from the Kings Peace and protection deny'd all help of friends after certain days Nam forisfecit amicos Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 12. num 1. says thus Talem vocant Angli Utlaugb alio nomine antiquitus solet nominari friendlesman sic videtur quod forisfecit amicos unde si quis talem post utlagatariam expulsionem scienter paverit receptaverit vel scienter communicaverit aliquo modo vel occultaverit eadem paena puniri debet qua puniretur utlagatus ita quod careat omnibus bonis suis vita nisi Rex ei parcat de gratia sua Frendwite vel Infeng Significat quietantiam prioris prisae ratione convivii Fleta lib. 1. ca. 47. Fresh disseisin from the Fr. Fraiz i. Recens disseisir i. Possessione ejicere Signifies that Disseisin which a man may seek to defeat of himself and by his own power without the help of the King or Judges and which is not above fifteen dayes old Britton ca. 5. Of this you may read Bracton lib. 4. ca. 5. at large concluding that
most part not required Knight Marshal Mareschallus Hospitii Regis Is an Officer of the Kings House having jurisdiction and cognizance of any transgression within the Kings House and verge of it as also of contracts made within the same house whereto one of the House is a party Reg. of Writs fo 185. a. and 191 b. and Spelmans Glossar in voce Marescallus Knight-service servitium militare Was a tenure whereby several Lands in this Nation were held of the King which drew after it Homage and Service in Warr Escuage Ward Marriage c. but is taken away by Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. In Domesday book some Land holden by Knights service is called Tainland and land holden by Soccage Reveland fo 86. a. Knights fee Feodum militare Is so much inheritance as is sufficient yearly to maintain a Knight with convenient Revenue which in Henry the Thirds dayes was 15 l. Cam. Brittan pa. 111. But Sir Thomas Smith in his Repub. Angl. lib. 1. ca. 18. rates it at 40 l. And by the Stat. for Knights 1 Ed. 2. ca. 1. such as had 20 l. per Ann. in Fee or for life might be compelled to be Knights which Stat. is Repealed by 17 Car. 1. ca. 20. Stow in his Annals pa. 285 says There were found in England at the time of the Conquerour 60211 Knights Fees according to others 60215 whereof the Religious Houses before their Suppression were possessed of 28015. Unde octo Carucatae terrae faciunt feodum unius militis Mon. Angl. 2 p. fo 825. a. Of this you may read more in Seldens Titles of Honor fo 691. and Bracton lib. 5. Tract 1. ca. 2. See Coke on Litt. fo 69. a. A Knights Fee contained 12 Plow-lands 2 Part Inst fo 596. or 680 Acres Knighten-gyld Was a Gyld in London consisting of 19 Knights which King Edgar founded giving them a portion of void ground lying without the Walls of the City now called Portsoken-ward Stowes Annals pa. 151. This in Mon. Angl. 2. p. fo 82. a. is written Cnittenegild Kyddiers Anno 13 Eliz. ca. 25. See Kidder Kylyw Et sint quieti de pastu Kylyw omnibus aliis exactionibus quas Forestarii alii Balivi solent exigere Mon. Angl. 1 Par. fo 722. b. Perhaps it might signifie some kind of Pottage for Kele in the North is still used for Pottage L. LAborariis Is a Writ that lies against such as having not whereof to live do refuse to serve or against him that refuseth to serve in Summer where he served in Winter Reg. of Writs fo 189. b. Laches Fr. Lache i. Frigidus Ignavus Signifies slackness or negligence As no Laches shall be adjudged in the Heir within age Litt. fo 136. and Old Nat. Br. fo 110. Where a Man ought to make or do a thing and he makes or does it not I of his Laches cannot have an Assise but must take an Action on the Case See Coke on Litt. fo 246. and 380. b. Lafordswick Sax. Hlaford Dominus swic Proditio Infidelitas erga Dominum A betraying ones Lord or Master In the Lawes of Hen. 1. ca. 13. Quaedam Placita emendari i. Quaedam crimina expiari non possunt Husbrech Bernet Openthefe Eberemorth Lafordswick Which word is also found in Canutus Laws ca. 61. and in some Authors corruptly written Labordfith Laga Sax. Lag Law Lagam Regis Edwardi vobis reddo cum illis emendationibus quibus Pater meus eam emendavit says Magna Charta Hence Seaxenlage Mercenlage Danelage c. Lageman or Lahman Lagamannus Homo legalis seu legitimus Such as we call now Good men of the Jury I find the word in Domesday and in the Lawes of Edward the Confessor ca. 38. thus Postea inquisisset Justitia per Lagamannos per meliores homines de Burgo c. Lagen Lagena Fleta lib. 2. ca. 8 9. In ancient time it was a Measure of six Sextarii Hence perhaps our Flagen Donatio insuper de sex Lagenis olei annuatim Carta 2 Ed. 3. m. 25. n. 82. See Minstrel Lagon From the Sax. Legan Liggan i. Jacere Is that which lies in the bottom of the Sea See Flotson Lahs●it Lags●ite Laghs●ite Sax. Lag Lex flite Ruptio The breaking or transgressing the Law and sometimes the punishment for breaking a Law Si quis Dei rectitudines per vim teneat solvat Lahs●ite cum dacis plenam Wytam cum Anglis Leg. Hen. 1. ca. 13. Lairwite Lecherwite Legergeldum A Sax. Lagan seu Laegan Concumbere site Mulcta A Fine or Custom of Punishing Offenders in Adultery and Fornication which priviledge did anciently belong to the Lords of some Mannors in reference to their Villains and Tenants which Fleta lib. 1. ca. 47. seems to infer See 4 Inst fo 206. Lammas-day Anno 23 Hen. 8. ca. 4. Is the first of August and so called quasi Lamb-Mass on which day the Tenants that held Lands of the Cathedral-Church of York which is dedicated to St. Peter ad Vincula Were bound by their Tenure to bring a live Lamb into the Church at High-Mass on that day See Gule of August Landa A Laren or open Field without wood Robertus Comes Legrecestriae Radulpho Pincernae omnibus Baronibus fidelibus suis salutem Sciatis me dedisse servo dei Malgero Monacho in Eleemosina parvam Landam quae est inter Lunbreodam Coptieleiam ad Mansiones oratorium ibidem faciend Testibus c. Sine dat Landboc a Sax. Land i. Terra boc Liber A Charter or Deed whereby Lands or Tenements are held or given Ut praefata Abbatissa praenominatam terram scil centum Manentium cum libris quos Angli dicunt Landboc in perpetuam haereditatem traderet Concil Synodale apud Clovesho Anno Dom. 822. Sic Anglo-Saxones Chartas Instrumenta nuncuparunt praediorum cessiones jura firmitates continentia Spel. Landegandman Was one of the inferior Tenants of a Mannor Custumariorum genus seu inferiorum tenentium Manerii says the learned Spelman who adds Occurrit vox in Customar de Hecham Landcheap Sax. Land-cear from Cearan to buy and sell A certain ancient customary Fine paid either in Mony or Cattel at every alienation of land lying within some Mannor or within the liberty of some Borough As at Maldon in Essex there is yet a Custom claim'd by the same name viz. that for certain Houses and Lands sold within that Borough xiii d. in every Mark of the Putchase-Money shall be paid to the Town which Custom of Landcheap is claimed by a Grant inter al. made to that Town by the Bishop of London Anno 5 Hen. 4. The word is also found in Spel. de Concil Vol. 1. fo 502. Somner in his Sax. Dict. says Landceap fortasse precium fundi pacto datum ●el debitum Landgable Sax. Land-gafel Terrae census vel redditus A Tax or Rent issuing out of Land Domesday Census praedialis vel tributum quod a praediis colligitur
Charter of Feossment if all the witnesses to the Deed be deed then Violent Presumption which stands for a proof is continual and quiet Possession Coke on Littl. lib. 1. ca. 1. sect 1. Praesumptio stat in dubio it is doubted of yet it is accounted Veritatis comes quatenus in contrarium nulla est probatio ut regula se habet Stabitur praesumptio donec probetar in contrarium Presumption was anciently taken for intrusion Assultus Roberia Sterbrech Praesumptio terrae vel pecunia Regis Thesaurus inventus c. LL. Hen. 1. cap. 11. De his quae sunt de Jure Regis Pretensed Right Jus Pretensum Is where one is in possession of Lands or Tenements and another who is out claims it and sues for it here the Pretensed Right or Title is to be in him who so does sue and claim Price See Value Pricked-bread Molendinario septem panes de Conventu septem panes de Pricked-bread Monast Angl. 1 Part. fol. 496. b. Quaere Pride-gabel In the Mannor of Rodeley in Com. Gloc. is paid to this day as a Rent to the Lord of the Mannor by certain Tenants in duty and acknowledgment to him for their liberty and priviledge of Fishing for Lamprays in Severn Prid for brevity being the later syllable of Lamprid as anciently they were called and Gavel a Rent or Tribute Taylors Hist of Gavelkind fol. 112. Primo Beneficio See Beneficio Primage Anno. 32 Hen. 8. ca. 14. Is a duty due to the Mariners and Sailers for the Loading of any Ship at the setting forth from any Haven which is in some places a penny in the pound in others six pence per Pack or Bale according to the Custom of the place Primier Seisin Prima Seisina i. The first Possession Was a Branch of the Kings Prerogative whereby he had the first possession of all Lands and Tenements holden of him in cheif whereof his Tenant died seised in Fee and consequently the Rents and Profits of them until the Heir if he were of age did his homage if under age until he were But all charges arising by Primier Seisins are taken away by the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Prince Princeps Is sometimes taken for the King himself but more properly for the Kings Eldest Son who is Prince of Wales as the Eldest Son to the French King is called Dauphine both being Princes by their Nativity Ferns Glory of Generosity pag. 138. Before Edward the Second was born at Carnarvan and was the first Prince of Wales the Kings Eldest Son was called Lord Prince Stamf. Praerog ca. 22. fol. 75. See 27 Hen. 8. ca. 26. And 28 Ejusdem ca. 3. Principal Principalium An Heir-lome Quod vide In Urchenfield Com. Heref. certain Principals as the best Beast best Bed best Table c. pass to the eldest Childe and are not subject to Partition Also the cheif person in some of the Inns of Chancery is called Principal of the House See Ancient Principality of Chester Anno 21 Rich. 2. ca. 9. See County Palatine and Cromp. Jurisd fol. 137. Prior perpetual or Dative and removeable Anno 9 Rich. 2. ca. 4. And 1 Edw. 4. ca. 1. Lord Prior of Saint Johns of Jerusalem Anno 26 Hen. 8. ca. 2. See Abbot Priors Aliens Priores Alieni Were certain Religious Men born in France and Normandy and Governors of Religious Houses erected for Outlandish Men here in England which were by Henry the Fifth thought no good Members for this Land and therefore suppressed whose Livings were afterwards by Henry the Sixth given to other Monasteries and Houses of Learning Stows Annals pag. 582. And 1 Hen. 5. ca. 7. but specially to the erecting of those two famous Colledges called The Kings Colledges of Cambridge and Eaton 2 Part Inst fo 584. Priority Prioritas Signifies an Antiquity of Tenure in comparison of another less ancient As To hold by Priority is to hold of a Lord more anciently than of another Old Nat. Br. fo 94. So to hold by Posteriority is used in Stamf. Praerog ca. 2. fol. 11. The Lord of the Priority shall have the custody of the Body c. Cromp. Juris fol. 120. See Posteriority Prisage Prisa Fr. Pris Is that Custom or Share that belongs to the King or Lord Admiral out of such Merchandises as are taken at Sea by way of lawful Prize which is usually a Tenth part 31 Eliz. ca. 5. Prisage of Wines Anno 1 Hen. 8. ca. 5. Is a word almost out of use now called Butlerage because the Kings cheif Butler receives it which is a Custom whereby the King challenges out of every Bark loaden with Wine containing Twenty Tuns or more two Tun of Wine the one before the other behinde the Mast at his price which is Twenty shillings for each Tun yet this varies according to the Custom of the place for at Boston every Bark laden with Ten Tuns of Wine or above pays Prisage See Butlerage and Calthrops Reports fol. 20. And 4 Part Inst fol. 30. MEmorandum quod Rex habet ex antiqua consuetudine de qualibet Nave Mercatoris Vini 6 Careat Applican infra aliquem portum Angliae de viginti doliis duo dolia de decem doliis unum de Prisa Regia pro quodam certo ab antiquo constitut solvend P. Rec. 20 R. 2. Prise Prisa From the Fr. Prendre i. Capere Signifies in our Statutes the things taken of the Kings Subjects by Purveyers Anno 13 Edw. 1. ca. 7. and 28 Ejusdem stat 3. ca. 2. It signifies also a Custom due to the King An. 25 Ejusdem ca. 5. Reg. of Writs fol. 117. b. In forancis paginis antiquis says the Learned Spelman Prisae plerumque intelliguntur de annonae reique frumentariae captionibus aliis etiam necessariis ad alenda instruendaque castrorum praefidia nec non regiam familiam minori quam justo pretio agricolis areptis c. In Rescripto quodam Anno 3 Edw. 1. Norf. ss Rogerus de Monte alto qui sororem haeredem Hugonis de Albeney c. desponsaverat clamat habere libertates has subscriptas viz. Castellum suum de Risinge cum Prisis 40 dierum c. Ubi clausulam cum Prisis 40 dierum intelligo de libertate capiendi victualia quae vocant ad sustentationem praesidiarii militis Castri sui ita quod pretium reddat infra 40 dies See the Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. Prisoner Fr. Prisonnier Signifies one that is restraiued of his liberty upon any Action Civil or Criminal or upon Commandment And a Man may be Prisoner upon Matter of Record or Matter of Fact Prisoner upon Matter of Record is he who being present in Court is by the Court committed to Prison onely upon an Arrest be it by the Sheriff Constable or other Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 1. ca. 32. fol. 34 35. Privation Privatio A bereaving or taking away Most commonly applied to a Bishop or Rector of a Church when by Death or
le mesme the Defence is good See Kitchin in Cha. Que est le mesme fo 236. Que estate Signifies verbatim which estate or the same Estate and is a Plea whereby a man entituling another to Land c. saith that the same estate himself had he has from him For example in a Quare impedit the Plaintiff alleageth that such four persons were seized of Lands whereunto the Advowson in question was appendant in Fee and did present to the Church and afterwards the Church was void que estate that is which estate of the four persons he has now during the vacation by vertue whereof he presented c. Broke tit que estate fo 175. and see Coke on Litt. fo 121. Queen Regina Is either she that holds the Crown of this Realm by right of Blood or she that is Marryed to the King which last is called Queen Consort In the former signification she is in all construction the same that the King is and has the same power in all respects In the later she is inferior and a person exempt from the King for she may sue and be sued in her own name yet what she hath is the Kings and what she loseth the King loseth Stamf. Praerog ca. 2. fo 10. and Coke lib. 4. Copyhold-Cases fo 23. b. Queen gold Aurum Reginae Is a Royal Duty or Revenue belonging to every Queen Consort during her Marriage to the King of England both by Law Custom and Praescription payable by sundry persons in England and Ireland upon divers Grants of the King by way of Fine or Oblation amounting to ten Markes or upwards to wit one full tenth part above the entire Fine as Ten pounds for every Hundred pounds Fine upon Pardons Contracts or Agreements which becomes a real debt and duty to the Queen by the name of Aurum Reginae upon the Parties bare agreement with the King for his Fine and recording it without any promise or contract for this tenth part exceeding it Lib. Nig. Scac. pa. 43. 44. Cokes 12. Rep. fo 21. 22. and Mr. Pryns Tractate on this Subject per tot Quein redditum reddat Is a Writ Judicial lying for him to whom a Rent-Seck or Rent-Charge is granted by Fine levied in the Kings Court against the Tenant of the Land that refuseth to atturn to him thereby to cause him to atturn Old Nat. Br. fo 156. Querela frescae fortiae Is a Writ See Freshforce Querela coram Rege Consilio c. Is a Writ whereby one is called to justifie a complaint of a Trespass made to the King himself before the King and his Counsel Reg. of Writs fo 124. Questus est nobis c. Is the form of a Writ of Nusance which by the Stat. Anno 13 Ed. 1. ca. 24 lies against him to whom the House or other thing that breeds the Nusance is alienated whereas before the Statute this Action lay onely against him that first levied or caused the Nusance to the damage of his Neighbor Quia improvide Seems to be a Supersedeas granted in the behalf of a Clerk of the Chancery sued against the priviledge of that Court in the Common-Pleas and pursued to the Exigend or in many other cases where a Writ is erroneously sued out or misawarded See Dyer fo 33. n. 18. Quid juris clamat Is a Writ Judicial issuing out of the Record of a Fine which remains with the Custos Brevium of the Common-Pleas before it be engrossed for after it cannot be had and it lies for the Grantee of a reversion or remainder when the particular Tenant will not atturn West par 2. Symbol tit Fines Sect. 118. See New Book of Entries on this Writ Quid pro quo Is an artificial Speech signifying as much as the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among the Civilians which is a mutual performance of both parties to a Contract or a giving one thing for another as 10 l. for a Horse Kitchin fo 184. Quietancia sectae Hundredi Wichmote Per haec verba Johannes Stanley Ar. clamat quod ipse tenentes sui non teneantur venire ad Curiam istam Pl. in Itin. apud Cestriam 14 Hen. 7. See Acquietancia Quietancia Assisarum super Assisam Per haec verba Johannes Stanley clamat quod ipse tenentes residentes sui non ponantur in Assisis jurat nec magnis Assisis Plac. ut supra Quietus i. Freed or acquitted Is a word used by the Clerk of the Pipe and Auditors in the Exchequer in their Acquittances or Discharges given to Accountants usually concluding with abinde recessit quietus which is called a Quietus est and is mentioned in the Act of general Pardon 12 Car. 2. ca. 11. and 14 Car. 2. ca. 21. A Quietus est granted to the Sheriff shall discharge him of all accounts due to the King Anno 21 Jac. ca. 5. Quinquagesima Sunday Is that we call Shrove-Sunday and is so called because it is about the fiftieth day before Easter of which you may read in Durandi Rationali Divinorum cap. de Quinquagesima and mentioned in Briton and other ancient Law-writers Quinque portus The Cinque-ports which are 1. Hastings 2. Romene 3. Hethe 4. Dover and 5. Sandwich To the first Winchelsea and Rye belong which are reckoned as part or members of the Cinque-ports Servitium quod Barones Quinque Portuum praescriptorum recognoscunt facere ad summonitionem Regis per annum si contigerit per 15 dies ad custum eorum proprium ita quod primus dies computatur a die quo vela navium erexerunt usque partes ad quas n dere debent vel ulterius quamdiu Rex voluerit ad custum ejus See Cinque Ports Quinsieme or Quinzime Decima quinta Is a French word signifying a Fifteenth with us it is a Tax so called because it is raised after the Fifteenth part of Mens Lands or Goods Anno 10 Rich. 2. cap. 1. and 7 Hen. 7. cap. 5. See Fifteenth and Tax It is well known by the Exchequer Roll what every Town throughout England is to pay for a Fifteenth Sometime this word Quinsieme or Quinzime is used for the fifteenth day after any Feast as the Quinzime of S. John Baptist Anno 13 Ed. 1. in the Preamble Quintane Quintana Fr. Quintaine Bersant A kinde of exercise tkat young Men did and still do use in some parts of this Nation especially Shropshire by breaking Poles on Horse-back against a strong Plank or Butteress set up in the High-way most used at marriages What it was anciently Matthew Paris thus delivers Eo tempore juvenes Londini statuto Pavone pro bravio ad stadium quod Quintana vulgariter dicitur vires proprias equorum cursus sunt experti In Hen. 3 sub initio Anni 1253. Quint-exact Anno 31 Eliz. cap. 3. Quinto exactus Is the last Call of a Defendant who is sued to the Outlary when if he appear not he is by the judgment of the Coroners returned outlawed
if a Feme waved See Exigent Quinzime See Quinsieme Quiteclaim Quieta clamantia Is a Release or Acquitting a Man for any Action that he hath or may have A quitting of ones Claim or Title Bracton lib. 5. tract 5. cap. 9. num 9. and Lib 4. tract 6. cap. 13. num 1. Quit-rent Quietus Redditus Quasi Quiet-rent is a certain small Rent payable yearly by the Tenants of most Mannors which when paid the Tenant is quiet and free till it becomes due again This in some ancient Records is written White-rent because paid in Silver Quod ei Deforceat Is a Writ that lies for the Tenant in Tail Tenant in Dower or Tenant for Life against him that entred or took away their Land recovered or against his Heir See Brook hoc tit Reg. of Writs fol. 171. and Westm 2. cap. 4. Quod Clerici non eligantur in Officio Balivi c. Is a Writ that lies for a Clerk who by reason of some Land he hath is made or like to be made either Bailiff Bedel or Reeve or some such like Officer See Clerico infra sacros c. And Regist of Writs fol. 187. Quod permittat Is a Writ that lies for the heir of him that is disseised of his Common of Pasture against the heir of the Disseisor being dead Briton cap. 8. says This Writ lies for him whose Ancestor died seised of Common of Pasture or other like thing annexed to his Inheritance against the Deforceor See Brook hoc tit and New Book of Entries Quod Clerici beneficiati de Cancellaria Is a Writ to exempt a Clerk of the Chancery from contributing towards the Proctors of the Clergy in Parliament Regist of Writs fol. 261 a. Quod persona nec Prebendarii c. Is a Writ that lies for Spiritual Persons that are distrained in their Spiritual Possessions for the payment of a Fifteenth with the rest of the Parish Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 176. Quod non permittat See Consuetudinibus Servitiis Quo jure Is a Writ that lies for him who hath Land wherein another challengeth Common of Pasture time out of minde and it is to compel him to shew by what title he so challenges it Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 128. and Britton cap. 59. at large Quo minus Is a Writ that lies for him who hath a grant of House-bote and Hay-bote in another Mans Woods against the Grantor making such Waste as the Grantee cannot enjoy his Grant Old Nat. Br. fol. 148. and Kitchin fol. 178. This Writ also lieth for the Kings Farmer in the Exchequer against him to whom he sells any thing by way of Bargain touching his Farm or who oweth him any Money or against whom he hath any cause of Personal Action Perkins Grants 5. For he supposeth by the Vendees detaining any due from him he is made less able to pay the King Rent Under which pretence any one who pays the King a Fee-farm Rent may have this Writ against any other person for any debt or damage and bring the Cause to tryal in the Exchequer Quo Warranto Is a Writ that lies against him who usurps any Franchise or Liberty against the King as to have Waiff Stray Fair Market Court-Baron Leet or such like without good Title Old Nat. Br. fol. 149. or else against him that intrudes himself as heir into Land Bracton lib. 4. tract 1. cap. 2. num 3. And 18 Edw. 1. stat 2 3. And 30 Ejusdem See also the New Book of Entries Quorum Is a word often mentioned in our Statutes and much used in Commissions both of Justices of the Peace and others As for example where a Commission is directed to five persons or to any three of them whereof A. B. and C. D. to be two in this Case A. B. and C. D. are said to be of the Quorum because the rest cannot proceed without them So a Justice of the Peace and Quorum is one without whom the rest of the Justices in some cases cannot proceed Anno 3 Hen. 7. cap. 3. And 32 Hen. 8. cap. 43. Quyke Was anciently used for a Live or Quick Beast John Bracebrige of Kinnersbury Esq in his Will dated 7 Hen. 8. Ordained That his best Quyke should be taken in the name of his Mortuary R. RAchetum alias Rachatum from the Fr. Rachater or Racheter i. Redimere Theifbote the Compensation or Redemption of a Theif Nullus capiat Rachetum hoc est Theifbute de Latrocinio 1 Stat. Rob. R. Scot. cap. 9. Rack Fidiculae sic dict quia eis rei in eculeo torquentur ut fides inveniatur An Engin in the Tower with Cords and Strings to extort Confession from Delinquents John Holland Earl of Huntingdon was by King Henry the Sixth created Duke of Exeter Anno 16 H. 6. the King granted to him the Office of Constableship of the Tower He and William de la Poole Duke of Suffolk and others intended to have brought in the Civil Laws For a beginning whereof the Duke of Exeter being Constable of the Tower first brought into the Tower the Rack or Brake allowed in many Cases by the Civil Law and thereupon it was called The Duke of Exeters Daughter because he first brought it thither 3 Inst fol. 35. Rack-vintage Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 14. Is a second Vintage or Voyage for Wines by our Merchants into France c. for Rack'd Wines that is Wines drawn from the Lees. from this Voyage our Merchants commonly return about the end of December or beginning of January Rad Knights See Rod Knights Radechenistres i. Liberi homines Domesday tit Leofminstre Lempster Ibi erant 8 Praepositi 8 Bedelli 8 Radechenistres 238 Villani 75 Bordarii c. Radman Domesday tit Herefscire 15 Bordar Praepositus unus Radman c. Seems to be the same with Rod-Knight Rageman Is a Statute so called of Justices assigned by Edward the First and his Council to hear and determine throughout all England all Complaints of Injuries done within five years next before Michaelmas in the Fourth year of His Raign Ragmans-Roll Edward the Third says Sir Richard Baker in his Chronicle fol. 127. surrendered by His Charter all His Title of Soveraignty to the Kingdom of Scotland restored divers Deeds and Instruments of their former Homages and Fealties with the famous Evidence called Ragmans Roll. Ran Sax. Aporta Rapina so open a spoiling a Man as it cannot be denied Hoveden inter ea quae Willielmus prinius constituit in emendationem legum Angliae parte post Hen. 2. Decretum est etiam ibi ut si Francigena appellaverit Anglicum de perjurio aut murdro furto homicidio Ran quod dicunt apertam rapinam quod negari non potest Anglicus se defendet per quod melius voluerit aut judicio ferri aut duello Consonant whereunto it is to this day vulgarly said by one who taketh the Goods of another injuriously and by violence He hath taken all he could Rap and ran rap from
Par. 1. Pa. 178. Reprisels Reprisalia From the Fr. Reprise i. Recaptio vel captio rei unius in alterius satisfactionem Is all one in the Common and Civil Law Reprisalia est potestas pignorandi contra quemlibet de terra debitoris data Creditori pro injuriis damnis acceptis Vocab utriusque Juris This among the Ancient Romans was called Clarigatio In the Statute 27 Edw. 3. Stat. 2. ca. 17. it is called Law of Marque because one destitute of Justice in another Territory redresseth himself by the goods belonging to Men of that Territory Reprises Fr. Resumptions or takings back We use it for deductions and duties which are yearly paid out of a Mannor or lands as Rent-charges Pensions Fees or Stewards or Bailiffs c. Therefore we say the Mannor of Dale yields 40 l. per annum ultra Reprizas besides all Reprises Requests Curia Requisitionum See in Court The place where this Court was held was anciently called Camera alba Rot. Parl. Anno 17 Edw. 3. Resceit Receptio Is an admission or receiving a third person to plead his right in a cause formerly commenced between other two New Book of Entries verbo Resceit As if Tenant for life or years brings an Action he in the Reversion comes in and prayes to be received to defend the Land and to plead with the Demandant See Brook Tit. Resceit fo 205. and Perkins Dower 448. Resceit is also apply'd to an admittance of Plea though the controversie be onely between ●two Brook tit Estoppel Coke on Litt. fo 192. b. Resceit of homage Receptio Homagii Is the Lords receiving Homage of his Tenant at his admission to the Land Kitchin fo 148. See Homage Rescous Rescussus From the Fr. Rescousse i. Liberatio redemptio Is an illegal taking away and setting at liberty a Distress taken or a person arrested by Process or course of Law which is a Rescouse in Deed And where a man has taken a Distress and the Cattel distreined as he is driving them to the Pound happen to go into the House of the owner if he that took the distress demand them of the owner and he deliver them not this is a Rescous in Law Coke on Litt. lib. 2. ca. 12. Sect. 237. It is also used for a Writ which lies for this fact called Breve de rescussu whereof you may see both the form and use in Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 101. Reg. of Writs fo 125. and New Book of Entries verbo Rescous This in some cases is Treason upon matters of Treason and in some Felony in cases of Felony Cromp. Justice fo 54. b. Rescussor Is he that commits such a Rescous Crokes Rep. 2 Part fo 419. Reseiser Reseisire Is a taking again of Lands into the Kings hands whereof a general Livery or Ouster le main was formerly missued contrary to order of Law Stamf. Praerog 26. See Resumption Reservation Reservatio A providing for store as when a man departs with his Land but reserves or provides for himself a rent out of it for his own livelihood Sometimes it serves to reserve a new thing and sometimes to except part of the thing in esse that is granted See Perkins Reservations per totum Resiance Resiantia From the Fr. Reseant vel resseant i. Resident Signifies a Mans aboad or continuance in a place Old Nut. Br. fo 85. Whence also comes the participle resiant that is continually dwelling or abiding in a place Kitchin fo 33. It is all one in truth with residence but that custom ties this onely to persons Ecclesiastical Veteri autem jure nostro etiam Scotico aliud significat utpote morbum validum seu veteranum quo quis exire de suis aedibus prohibetur Essonium igitur quod de malo lecti nuncupatur hoc est excusatio quod ratione infirmitatis sistere se in foro non valeat essonium nuncupant de reseantisa Glanvile lib. 1. ca. 11. Quandoque intervenit Essonium ex infirmitate de reseantisa Ubi in margine notatur Essonium de reseantisa idem valet quod essonium de malo lecti Et Galli apertius dixerunt Exoine de mal resseant Spelm. Residence R 〈…〉 tia Is peculiarly used both in the Canon and Common-Law for the continuance or aboad of a Parson or Vicar upon his Benefice The defalt whereof except the party be qualify'd and dispensed with is the loss of ten pounds for every moneth Anno 28 Hen. 8. ca. 13. Resignation Resignatio Is used particularly for the yielding up a Benefice into the hands of the Ordinary otherwise called renunciatio by the Canonists And though it signifie all one in nature with the word Surrender yet it is by use restrained to the yielding up a Spiritual Living as aforesaid and Surrender to the giving up Temporal Lands into the hands of the Lord. And a Resignation may now be made into the hands of the King as well as of the Diocesan because he has Supremam Authoritatem Ecclesiasticam as the Pope had here in times past Plowden Casu Gr●ndon fo 498. Resort or Ressort Fr. Is a word used properly in a Writ of Tayle or Cousenage as Descent is in a Writ of right In French it signifies the Authority or Jurisdiction of a Court. Salvo tamen tam ressorto quam aliis jure nostro jure etiam alieno Lit. Pat. Philip le Hardy R. Franc. Respectu computi vicecomitis habendo Is a Writ for the respiting a Sheriffs account upon just occasion directed to the Treasurer and Barons of the Exchequer Reg. fo 139 and 179. Respite Respectus Is used for a delay forbearance or continuation of time Praecipio tibi quod poni facias in respectum usque ad aliquem terminum competentem Glanvile lib. 12. ca. 9. in Brevi Regis Respite of Homage Respectus Homagii Is the forbearance of Homage which ought first of all to be performed by the Tenant holding by Homage but it had the most frequent use in such as held by Knight-service in Capite who did pay into the Exchequer every fifth Term some small Summ of Money to be respited the doing their Homage see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. whereby this Respite of Homage is taken away as a charge incident or arising from Knight-service c. Respondeat superior Where the Sheriffs are removable as in London for insufficiency responde●t superior that is the Mayor and Commonalty of London Pur insufficiency del Bailiff d'un Libertie respondeat Dominus libertatis 44 Ed. 3. 13. See 4 Inst fo 114. Responsalis qui Responsum defert Is he that appears for another in Court at a day assigned GIanvile lib. 12. ca. 1. But Fle●a lib. 6. ca. 11. makes a difference between Atturnatum Essoniatorem Responsalem as if Essoniator came onely to alledge the cause of the parties absence be he the demandant or tenant and Responsalis came for the Tenant not onely to excuse his absence but to signifie what trial he meant to
against the Steward or Marshal for holding Plee in his Court of Freehold or for trespass or contracts not made within the Kings houshold Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 241. Super Statuto de articulis Cleri ca. 6. Is a Writ against the Sheriff or other Officer that distrains in the Kings High-way or in the Glebeland anciently given to Rectories Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 173. Supervisor Lat. A Surveyor or Overseer It was anciently and still is a Custome among some especially of the better sort to make a Supervisor of a Will an Office or Title as it is now carelesly executed to little purpose and of as little use however the intendment may be good viz. That he should supervise the Executors and see the Testators will punctually performed Supervisor of High-wayes Anno 5 Eliz. ca. 13. Is otherwise called Surveyor See Surveyor Supplicavit Is a Writ issuing out of the Chancery for taking the surety of Peace against a Man It is directed to the Justices of Peace and Sheriff of the County and is grounded upon the Statute 1 Edw. 3. ca. 16. which ordains that certain persons shall be assigned by the Chancellor to take care of the peace See Fitz. Nat. Brev. fo 80. This Writ was of old called Breve de minis as Lam. in his Eiren. notes out of Reg. of Writs fo 88. Sur cui in vita Is a Writ that lies for the heir of that Woman whose Husband has alienated her Land in Fee and she brings not the Writ Cui in vita for the recovery of her own Land in this case her heir may have this Writ against the Tenant after her decease Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 193. Surcharge of the Forest Superoneratio Forestae Is when a Commoner puts on more Beasts in the Forest than he has right unto Manwood Par. 2. ca. 14. nu 7. and is taken from the Writ De secunda superoneratione pasturae in the same sence when the Commoner surchargeth 3 Inst fo 293. Surplusage Fr. Surplus i. Corollarium additamentum Signifies a superfluity or addition more than needs which sometimes is a cause that a Writ abates Brooke tit Nugation Superfluity fo 100. Plowden Casu Dives contra Maningham fo 63. b. It is sometime also apply'd to matter of account and signifies a greater disbursment than the Charge of the Accountant amounts unto Satisfaciant in omnibus quod conjunctum fuerit per praedictum computum inter eos de surplusagio recepto de averiis venditis c. Ordinatio de marisco Romeneiensi Pa. 38. Surrejoynder Is a second defence of the Plaintiffs Action opposite to the Defendants Rejoynder West Part 2. Symbol tit Supplications Sect. 57. And therefore Hotoman calls it Triplicationem quae est secunda Actoris defenfio contra Rei duplicationem appusita Surrebutter A second Rebutter or a Rebutting more then once See Rebutter Surrender Sursum redditio Is an Instrument in Writing testifying with apt words that the particular Tenant of Lands or Tenements for Life or Years does sufficiently consent and agree that he who hath the next or immediate Remainder or Reversion thereof shall also have the present estate of the same in Possession and that he yields and gives up the same unto him For every Surrender ought forthwith to give a possession of the thing surrendred West Par. 1. lib. 2. sect 503. where you may see divers Presidents And a Surrender may be of Letters Patent to the King to the end he may grant the estate to whom he pleaseth But there may be a Surrender without writing and therefore there is said to be a Surrender in Deed and a Surrender in Law The first is that which is really and sensibly performed the other is in intendment of Law by way of consequent and not actual Perkins Surrender fol. 60● As if a Man have a Lease of a Farm and during the term he accept of a new Lease this Act is in Law a Surrender of the former Coke 6 Rep. fol. 11. b. There is also a Customary Surrender of Copihold Lands for which see Coke on Littl. sect 74. Surrogate Surrogatus One that is substituted or appointed in the room of another most commonly of a Bishop or the Bishops Chancellor Sursise Supersisae Seems to be an especial name used in the Castle of Dover for such Penalties and Forfeitures as are laid upon those that pay not their Duties or Rent for Castleward at their days Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 48. Bracton hath it in a general signification Lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 1. num 8. and Fleta lib. 6. cap. 3. Surveyor Supervisor Is compounded of two French words Sur i. Super and Veois i. Cernere intueri Signifies one that hath the over-seeing or care of some great persons Lands or Works As the Surveyor-General of the Kings Mannors Cromp Jurisd fol. 106. And in this signification it is taken Anno 33 Hen. 8. cap. 39. where there is a Court of Surveyors erected Surveyor of the Kings Exchange An. 9 Hen. 5. stat 2. cap. 4. Was an Officer whose name seems in these days to be changed into some other or the Office it self being very ancient legal and profitable for the Common-wealth disused Survivor from the Fr. Survivre i. Superesse Signifies the longer liver of two Joynt-tenants See Brook tit Joynt-tenants fol. 33. or of any two joyned in the right of any thing Suskin See Galli halfpence Suspense or Suspension Suspensio Is a Temporal stop or hanging up as it were of a Mans right as when a Seignory Rent c. by reason of the Unity of Possession thereof and of the Land out of which they issue are not in esse for a time tunc dormiunt but may be revived or awaked and differs from Extinguishment which dies for ever Coke on Littl lib. 3. cap. 10. sect 559. Brook tit Extinguishment and Suspension fol. 314. Suspension Is also sometimes used by us as it is in the Cannon Law Pro minori Excommunicatione Anno 24 Hen. 8. cap. 12. Suspiral from the Lat. Suspirare ●i Ducere suspiria Seems to be a Spring of Water passing under the Ground toward a Conduit or Cistern Anno 35 Hen. 8. cap. 10. Sute See Suite Sute-silver Is a small Rent or sum of Money which if paid does excuse the Freeholders from their appearance at the Court Barons within the Honor of Clun in Shropshire Swan-heard See Kings Swan-heard Swanimote or Swainmote Swainmotus From the Sax. swang i. as we now call our Rusticks A Countrey Swain a Boclandman A Freeholder and gemote i. Conventus the Sax. g being usually turned into i or y signifies a Court touching matters of the Forest kept by the Charter of the Forest thrice in the year before the Verderors as Judges Anno 3 Hen. 8. cap. 18. What things are inquirable in the same you may read in Cromp. Jurisd fol. 180. And is as incident to a Forest as a Court of P●e powder to a Fair. See Lamberts Explication of Saxon words verbo
Conventus Nullum Swainmotum de caetero teneatur in Regno nostro nisi ter in Anno viz. In Principio quindecim dierum ante Festum Sancti Michael c. Circa Festum S. Martini initio quindecim dierum ante Festum Sancti Johannis Baptistae c. Charta de Foresta tam Regis Johan quam Hen. 3. cap. 9. See 4 Inst fol. 289. Swarff-money The Swarff-money is one penny half-penny it must be paid before the rising of the Sun the party must go thrice about the Cross and say the Swarff-money and then take witness and lay it in the hole and when ye have so done look well that your witness do not deceive you for if it be not paid ye give a great forfeiture xxx s. and a White Bull. This Exposition was found in an old MS. containing the Rents due to the Catesbies in Lodbroke and other places in Warwickshire But conceived to be mistaken for or to signifie the same with Warth-money See Ward-penny Swepage Coke on Littl. fol. 4. b. Is the crop of Hay got in a Meadow called also the Swepe in some parts of England Swoling or Suling of Land Sulinga Solinga vel Swolinga terrae Sax. Sulung from sul vel sulh i. Aratrum as to this day in our Western Parts a Plough is called a Sul and a Plough-staff a Sul-paddle Is the same with Carucata terrae that is as much as one Plough can Till in a year a Hide of Land others say it is Quantitas incerta Dedit ctiam idem inclitus Rex Willielmus Conquestor cidem Ecclesiae de Bello in Cantia Regale Manerium quod vocatur Wy cum omnibus appendiciis suis septem Swolingarum id est Hidarum ex sua Dominica Corona cum omnibus libertatibus regalibus consuetudinibus c. Rentale MS. de Wy tempore Ven. Patr. Tho. Ludlowe Abbatis fol. 1. Terram trium aratrorum quam Cantiani Anglice dicunt Thrée Swolings Carta pervetusta Eccles Cantuar. de qua vide Somne●rum in Antiquitat loci pag. 211. Syb and Som Sax. Pax securitas Eallum Cristenum Mannum syb som gemene id est Omnibus Christianis Pax securitas communis esto LL. Eccles Canuti Regis cap. 17. Sylva Caedua Lat. Wood under Twenty years growth Coppice-wood See the Stat. 45 Edw. 3. cap. 3. It is otherwise called Subbois 2 Inst fol. 642. Synod Synodus A Meeting or Assembly of Ecclesiastical Persons for the Cause of Religion of which there are four kindes 1. A General Occumenical or Universal Synod or Council where Bishops c. of all Nations meet 2. National Synod where those of one onely Nation meet 3. A Provincial Synod where Ecclesiastical Persons of one onely Province meet 4. Diocesan Synod where those of but one Diocess meet See Convocation Which is the same thing with a Synod this being a Greek that a Latin word Synodal Synodale Is a Cense or Tribute in Money paid to the Bishop or Arch-deacon by the Inferior Clergy at Easter Visitation and it is called Synodale or Synodaticum Quia in Synodo frequentius dabatur The Impropriation of Derehurt in Com. Gloc. pays yearly vii s. ix d. Pro Synodalibus Procurationibus Pat. 20 July 34 Hen. 8. Et quod sint quieti a Synodalibus ab omni Episcopali consuetudine excepto denario Beati Petri. Mon. Angl. 2 Par. fol. 276. b. See Historical Discourse of Procurations and Synodals pag. 66. 98. These are called otherwise Synodies in the Statute of 34 Hen. 8. cap. 16. Yet in the Statute of 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. Synodals Provincial seem to signifie the Canons or Constitutions of a Provincial Synod And sometimes Synodale is used for the Synod it self T. T. Every Person convict of any other Felony save Murder and admitted to the benefit of his Clergy shall be marked with a T. upon the Brawn of the Left Thumb Anno 4 Hen. 7. cap. 13. Tabellion Tabellio A Notary Publick or Serivener allowed by Authority to Engross and Register private Contracts and Obligations His Office in some Countreys did formerly differ from that of Notary but now they are grown or made one Quoniam Tabellionum usus in Regno Angliae non habetur propter quod magis ad Sigilla authentica credi est necesse ut eorum copia facilius habeatur statuimus ut Sigillum habeant non solum Archiepiscopi Episcopi sed eorum Officiales Matth. Paris fol. 454. de Anno 1236. Tabling of Fines Is the making a Table for every County where His Majesties Writ runs containing the Contents of every Fine passed in any one Term as the name of the County Towns and places wherein the Lands or Tenements lie the name of the Demandant and Deforceant and of every Mannor named in the Fine This is properly to be done by the Chirographer of Fines of the Common Pleas who every day of the next Term after the ingrossing any such Fine does fix every of the said Tables in some open place of the said Court during its sitting And the said Chirographer is to deliver to the Sheriff of every County his Under-Sheriff or Deputy fair written in Parchment a perfect content of the Table so made for that Shire in the Term next before the Assizes or else between the Term and the Assizes to be set up every day of the next Assizes in some open place of the Court where the Justices sit to continue there so long as they shall sit c. If either the Chirographer or Sheriff fail herein he forfeits 5 l. And the Chirographers Fee for every such Tabling is 4 d. Anno 23 Eliz. cap. 3. Tail Fr. Taille i. Sectura Signisies two things grounded upon one reason Plowden Casu Willion fol. 251. First it is used for the Fee which is opposite to Fee-simple by reason it is so minced as it were or pared that it is not in the owners free power to dispose but is by the first giver cut or divided from all others and tied to the issue of the Donee Coke lib. 4. in Proamio And this limitation or Tail is either General or Special Tail General Is that whereby Lands or Tenements are limited to a Man and to the Heirs of his Body begotten and it is General because how many Women soever the Tenant holding by this title shall take to his Wives one after another his issue by them all have a possibility to inherit one after another Tail Special Is that whereby Lands or Tenements are limited to a Man and his Wife and the Heirs of their two bodies begotten because if the Man bury his Wife before issue and take another the issue by his second Wife cannot inherit the Land Also if Land be given to A. and his Wife B. and to their Son C. for ever this is Tail Special See Fee and Littl. lib. 1. cap. 2. and New Book of Entries ●erbo Tail Tail in the other signification is that we vulgarly call a Talley For Une
morum Was wont to be the name of the Regarders Office in ancient time Manwood Par. 1. pa. 195. See Regarder Uisne Vicinetum Signifies a Neighbour-place or a place near at hand Anno 16 Rich. 2. ca. 6. dicitur vicinetum in Jure nostro locus quem vicini habitant qui olim intelligebantur de eadem villa sive adjacentibus atque alias de eodem Hundredo vel proximit modo vero de eodem pago sive Comitatu 〈◊〉 hoc est compagenses Spelm. See Venew Uisu Franciplegii Is a Writ to exempt him from coming to the View of Frankpledge who is not resident within the Hundred For men are bound to this View by reason of their habitation and not of Lands held where they dwell not Reg. of Writs fo 175. Uitteller alias Uictualer Victualarius al. Vitellarius Is he that sells Victuals for whom there is a Writ in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 172. If they exercise their Trade bearing a Magistracy in any Town Corporate Uiva pecunia Anciently used for live Cattle See Pecunia Uiva voce See Deposition Uivary Vivarium Signifies a place on Land or Water where living things are kept In Law it most commonly signifies a Park Warren Fish-pond or Piscary Cokes second part Inst fol. 100. Haec est conventio inter Priorem Conventum Canonicorum de Rudham Rogerum de Glanvilla de Molendino stagno de Thorp sc quod Canonici reddent annuatim praefato Rogero 7 sol quemadmodum pater ejus Robertus de Glanvilla solebat habere tempore Michaelis Prioris si Rogerus de Glanvilla fuerit in Ructon vel uxor ejus ipse poterit piscari in Vivario absque Wasto cum Batello Canonicorum c. Anno 1171. 8 Maii. M. S. Penes Gul. Dugdale Arm. Ulnage See Alnage Uncore prists Is a Plea for the Defendant being sued for a debt due at a day past to save the forfeiture of his Bond saying he tendred the debt at the time and place and that there was none to receive it and that he is yet also ready to pay the same 7 Edw. 6. 83 Dyer See Unques prist Uncuth Sax. Unknown It is used in the ancient Saxon Laws for him that comes to an Inn guest-wise and lies there but one night in which case his Host was not bound to answer for any offence he committed whereof he was guiltless himself See Lamb. Archai fol. 133. num 7. Item secundum antiquam consuctudinem dici poterit de familia alicujus qui hospes fuerit cum alio per tres noctes quia prima nocte poterit dici Uncuth Secunda vero Gust tertia nocte Hoghenehine Bracton lib. 3. cap. 10. num 2. See Thirdnightawnhine Unde nihil habet Is a Writ See Dote unde nihil habet Under-chamberlain of the Exchequer Is an Officer there that cleaves the Tallies written by the Clerk of the Tallies and reads the same that the Clerk of the Pell and the Comptrollers thereof may see their Entries be true he also makes searches for all Records in the Treasury and hath the custody of Domesday Book There are two Officers there of this name Under Sheriff Subvicecomes See Sheriff Under sitter Is an Inmate See Inmate Undertakers Were such as were employed by the Kings Purveyors as their Deputies Anno 2 3 Phil. Ma. cap. 6. And such as undertake any great work as draining of Fens c. Anno 43 Eliz. cap. 11. Under Treasurer of England Vicethesaurarius Angliae Anno 39 Eliz. cap. 7. This Officer is confounded in other Statutes with Treasurer of the Exchequer as in 35 Eliz. In the vacancy of the Lord Treasurers Office he does all things in the Receipt that the Lord Treasurer doth Anciently he did Chest up the Kings Treasure at the end of every Term and note the content of Money in each Chest and see it carried to the Kings Treasury in the Tower for the ease of the Lord Treasurer c. Uniformity Uniformitas One form of Publick Prayers and Administration of Sacraments and other Rites and Ceremonies in the Church of England prescribed by the Statutes 1 Eliz. cap. 2. And 14 Car. 2. cap. 4. Union unio Is a combining or consolidating of two Churches in one which is done by the consent of the Bishop the Patron and Incumbent But there are two other sorts of it as when one Church is made subject to the other and when one Man is made Rector of both and when a Conventual is made Cathedral as you may read in the Gloss of the Chapter Licet de locato conducto in Lyndwoods Provincials Sect. Et quia In the first signification by the Statute 37 Hen. 8. cap. 21. It was made lawful to make an Union or Consolidation of two Churches in one whereof the value of the one is not above six pounds in the Kings Books of the First Fruits and not above one mile distant from the other And by another Statute 17 Car. 2. cap. 3. It shall be lawful for the Bishop of the Diocess Major Bailiff c. of any City or Corporate Town and the Patron or Patrons to unite two Churches or Chappels in any such City Town or the Liberties thereof provided such Union shall not be good if the Churches so united exceed the sum of One hundred pound per annum unless the Parishioners desire otherwise c. Unity of Possession Signifies a Joynt-possession of two Rights by several Titles As if I take a Lease of Land from one upon a certain Rent afterwards I buy the Fee-simple this is an Unity of Possession whereby the Lease is extinguished by reason that I who had before the occupation onely for my Rent am become Lord of the same and am to pay my Rent to none but my self University Universitas Is most usually taken for those two Bodies which are the Nurseries of Learning and Liberal Sciences in this Realm Oxford and Cambridge endowed with great favors and priviledges as appears not onely by Anno 2 3 Ph. Mar. cap. 15. 13 Eliz. cap. 21. 18 Ejusdem cap. 6. But much more by their several Charters granted by divers pious and munificent Kings of this Land Anno 14 Car. 2. cap. 4. Unlage Sax. Un-laga A wicked or unjust Law In which sence the word occurs in LL. Hen. 1. cap. 34. 84. Unlawful Assembly Illicita Congregatio Is the meeting of three or more persons together with force to commit some unlawful Act and abiding together though not endeavoring the execution of it as to assault or beat any person to enter into his House or Land c. West par 2. Symbol tit Indictments sect 65. Lambert in his Eiren. cap. 19. By the Statute of 16 Car. 2. cap. 4. And 22 Ejusdem cap. 1. If five persons or more shall be Assembled together above those of the Family at any Conventicle or Meeting under colour of any Exercise of Religion it is unlawful and punishable by Fines and otherwise as in
certain Lands in or near the Forest of Whitehart which hath continued from Henry the Third's time who imposed it upon Thomas de la Linde for killing a most beautiful White Hart which that King before had purposely spared in Hunting Cam. Brit. pag. 150. Whiterent See Quitrent White Spurs A sort of Esquires so called See Esquires White-straits A kinde of course Cloth made in Devonshire of about a yard and half quarter broad raw and mentioned Anno 5 Hen. 8. cap. 2. Whitson-farthings see Pentecostals mentioned in Letters Patent of Henry the Eight to the Dean and Chapter of Worcester Widow of the King Vidua Regis Was she who after her Husbands death being the Kings Tenant in Capite was driven to recover her Dower by the Writ De Dote Assignanda and could not marry again without the Kings consent Stamf. Prarog cap. 4. see the Statute of the Prarog Annu 17 Edw. 2. Mag. Char. cap. 7. And 32 Hen. 8. cap. 46. Widowhood Viduitas The state or condition of a Widow Sciant presentes futuri quod ego Margeria quae fui uxor Ricardi Smith de Birchore Com. Heref. in Viduitate in legitima potestate mea remisi relaxavi c. Dat. apud Birchore die Dominica in Fest Nativitatis Sancti Johannis Baptistae Anno 9 Hen. 4. Will or Last Will Testamentum ultima voluntas Is of two sorts a Will in Writing called also a Testament and a Will by word of mouth onely called a Nuncupative Will which being proved by witnesses may be of as good force as that in writing except onely for Lands which are not devisable but by a Testament put in writing in the Life of the Testator See Touchstone of Wills pag. 2. Ex codice MS. nuncupativo March penès Registrar Curiae Praerog Domini Archiepis Cantuar. Qu. 7. IN nomine Patris Filii Spiritus Sancti Amen The sevententh day of September the yer of our Lord ●hū Crist a thousand four hundred and foure I Lowys Clyrforth fals and traytour to my Lord God and to alle the blessyd company of Hevene and unworthi to be clepyd a Cristen man make and ordeyne my Testament and my last Wille in this manere At the begynnynge I most unworthi and Goddys tratour recommaund my wrechid and synfule Sowle hooly to the grace and to the grete mercy of the blessfull Trynytie and my wrechid careyne to be beryed in the ferthest corner of the Chircheyerd in which parishe my wrechid soule departeth fro my body And I pray and charge my Survivors and my Executors as they wollen answere to fore God as all myne hoole trest in this matère is in hem that on my stinking careyne be neyther leyd clothe of gold ne of slike but a blake clothe and a Taper at myne bed and another at my fete ne stone ne other thinge wherby eny man may witte where my stynkyng careyne liggeth And to that Chirche do myne Executors all thingis which owen duly in such caas to be don without eny more cost saaf to pore men And also I pray my Survyvors and myne Executors that eny dette that eny man kan axe me by true title that hit be payd And yf eny man kan trewly sey that I have do him eny harme in body or in good that ye make largely his grée whyles the goodys wole strecche And I wole alsoe that none of myne Executors meddle or mynystre eny thinge of my goodys withoutyn abyse and consent of my Supervisors or sum of hem Now first I bequethe to Sire Phylype la Vache Knyht my Masse-boke and my Portoos and my boke of Tribulacion to my doughter hys wif. Et quicquid residuum fuerit omnium singulorum bonorum catallorum superius seu inferius non legatorum do integre lego Philippo la Vache Johanni Cheynee Thomae Clanvow militibus libere sibi possidendum c. Probatum c. 5 Dec. An. 1404. Wigreve a Wig vel Wic quod Sylvam sonat An overseer of a Wood a Woodward Thus Spelman But ƿig in Saxon signifies Via so it may rather signifie an Overseer of the Highways Winches Anno 21 Jac. cap. 32. A kinde of Engin to draw Barges up the Water against the Stream Winkinga Et dedi eis totas Winkingas in Boschis Plants Mon. Angl. 1 par fol. 592. b. Quaere Winter-heyning Anno 20 Car. 2. cap. 3. Is from the Eleventh day of November to the 23 of April which time is by the said Act excepted from the liberty of Commoning in the Forest of Dean Wisgilthef Vale royal pa. 113. Perhaps mistaken for Weregelthef which see Wite Sax. Punishment pain penalty a fine or mulct Hence our Wite or Witfree one of the terms of Priviledge granted to our Portsmen signifying a freedom or immunity from Fines or Amercements not as it is vulgarly accepted and construed among them from being liable to be beg'd for fooles for lack of wit or understanding Sax. Dict. See Wyte Gloss in x. Scriptores Witerden alias Witereden Winterden Was a kind of taxation among the West-Saxons imposed by the publick Counsel of the Kingdom For wite and ●itan signifie majores regni and paedan concilium Charta Ethelwulfi Regis catholica apud Malm. de gest R. lib. 1. pa. 41. Mansio sc quaevis Ecclesiae assignata Sit tuta libera ab omnibus secularibus seruitiis Nec non regalibus tribuin majoribus minoribus sive taxationibus quae nos dicimus Witereden c. Withernam Vestitum namium Sax. ƿyþ ● contra Nam captio i. Reprisals Is the taking or driving a distress to a Hold or out of the County so that the Sheriff cannot upon the Replevin make deliverance thereof to the party distreined In which case the Writ of VVithernam or de vetito namio is directed to the Sheriff for the taking as many of his Beasts as did thus unlawfully distrein or as much goods of his till he has made deliverance of the first distress Also if the Beasts be in a Fortlet or Castle the Sheriff may take with him the power of the County as appears by the Statute VVestm 1. ca. 20. Briton ca. 27. VVithernam in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. ca. 37. and in VVestm 2. ca. 2. seems to signifie an unlawful distress made by him that has no right to distrein Anno 13 Ed. 1. ca. 2. See the New Book of Entries on this word Waad Glastum Is an Herb like Plantain growing in some parts of England the parts of Tolouse in France and in Spain much used for the dying a blew colour Anno 7 Hen. 8. ca. 2. we call it woad from the Italian Guado Wold Sax. Lat. Walda A Plain a Down an open Champian ground Hilly and void of Wood as Stow in the Wolds and Cotswold in Gloucestershire This is sometimes misunderstandingly confounded with VVeald Wong Sax. ƿang A Field Tres acrae terrae jacentes in lez wongs i. In campis opinor seminalibus magis quam
or Cursing Bracton mentions Bannus Regis for a Proclamation or Silence made by the Court before the Congress of the Champions in a Combat Lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 21. In terra suae ditionis Bannum i. Interdictum misit quod est prohibitio ut nullus fur vel latro esset c. Hist Norm edit Anno 1619 fol. 85. b. Bane from the Sax. bana A Killer or Murderer Signifies the destruction or overthrow of any thing As I will be the Bane of him is a common saying And he who was the cause of another Mans drowning is said to be Labane i. Malefactor Bracton l. 2. tract 8. cap. 1. Baneret Banerettus Eques vexillarius or Miles vexilliferus Is a Knight made in the Field with the Ceremony of cutting off the point of his Standard and making it a Banner according to Sir Tho. Smith in his Repub. Angl. Others add That Blood must be first drawn in the Field They are allowed to display their Arms in a Banner in the Kings Army as Barons do Camden in his Britan. fol. 109. hath these words Baneretti cum Vassalorum no men jam desierat a Baronibus secundi erant quibus inditum nomen a Vexillo Concessum illis erat Militaris virtutis ergo quadrato vexillo perinde ac Barones uti unde Equites Vexillarii à nonnullis vocantur c. Some maintain a Baneret ought not to be made in a Civil War but I finde in Sir Rich. Bakers Chron. fol. 260. That Henry the Seventh made divers Banerets upon the Cornish Commotion in the year 1495. Of creating these Knights read Seagar-Norroy his Book Lib. 2. cap. 10. and Seldens Titles of Honor fol. 799. That they are next to Barons in Dignity appears by the Statute 14 Rich. 2. c. 11. and 5 Rich. 2. Stat. 2. cap. 4. They were anciently called by Summons to the Parliament And we finde that a Baneret for Praying a Pardon for a Murderer contrary to the Statute is subject to the same punishment with a Baron 13 Rich. 2. Stat. 2. cap. 1. Will. de la Pole was created Baneret by Edward the Third by Letters Patent Anno Regni sui 13. Memb. 13. Those Banerets who are created sub Vexillis Regiis in exercitu Regali in aperto bello ipso Rege personaliter praesente explicatis take place of Baronets as appears by the Letters Patent for Creation of Baronets See Cokes 4 Inst fol. 6. Bank Lat. Bancus Fr. Banque Hath two significations the first and that most noble is a Seat or Bench of Judgment as Bank le Roy the Kings Bench Bank de Common Plees the Bench of Common Pleas or the Common Bench called also in Latin Bancus Regius Bancus Communium Placitorum The second is a Bank where a great sum of Money is let out to use returned by exchange or otherwise disposed to profit Jus Banci or the Priviledge of the Bench was anciently allowed onely to the Kings Judges Qui summam administrant justitiam for Inferior Courts such as Court Barons and Hundred Courts were not allowed that Priviledge Since at this day the Hundred Court of Freibridge in Norfolk is held under an Oak at Geywood and the Court for the Hundred of Woolsey in Herefordshire is held under an Oak near Ashton in that County which is called the Hundred Oak See Free-Bench Bankrupt quasi Bancus ruptus Because when the Bank or Stock is broken or exhausted the owner is said to be a Bankrupt Anno 34 Hen. 8. cap. 4. and 1 Jac. 15. He is thus doscribed ALl and every such person and persons using or that shall use the Trade of Merchandise by way of Bargaining Exchange Bartery Chevisance or otherwise in Gross or by seeking his her or their Trade of Living by Buying and Selling and being a Subject born of this Realm or any the Kings Dominions or Denizen who at any time since the First day of this present Parliament or at any time hereafter shall depart the Realm or begin to keep his other House or Houses or otherwise to absent him or herself or take Sanctuary or suffer him or herself willingly to be arrested for any debt or other thing not grown or due for Money delivered Wares sold or any other just or lawful cause or good consideration or purposes or hath or will suffer him or herself to be outlawed or yield him or herself to prison or willingly or fraudulently hath or shall procure him or herself to be arrested or his or her Goods Money or Chattels to be attached or sequestred or depart from his or her Dwelling-house or make or cause to be made any Fraudulent Grant or Conveyance of his her or their Lands Tenements Goods or Chattels to the intent or whereby his her or their Creditors being Subjects born as aforesaid shall or may be defeated or delaid for the recovery of their just and true Debt or being Arrested for Debt shall after his or her Arrest lye in Prison Six Moneths or more upon that Arrest or any other Arrest or Detention in Prison for Debt and lie in Prison Six Moneths upon such Arrest or Detention shall be accounted and adjudged a Bankrupt to all intents and purposes But by Act 14 Car. 2. cap. 23. it is provided That no person whatsoever who shall adventure in the East-India or Guiney Company or in the Royal Fish Trade shall be esteemed a Merchant or Trader within any Statute for Bankrupts or lyable to the same Bannum et Banleuga A Territory Precinct or the utmost Bounds of a Mannor or Town so it is used 47 Hen. 3. Rot. 44. Carta Canuti Regis Coenobio Thorneiae Notum facio me eleemosinam nostram Christo concessisse omnibus Sanctis suis viz. primo terram illam à Twiwella usque Thorney ubi Bannum nostrum cessat Banishment Fr. Bannissement Hath a known signification but there are two kindes of it one voluntary and upon Oath whereof you may read Abjuration the other upon compulsion for some offence or crime as if a Lay-man succor him who having taken Sanctuary for an offence obstinately refuses to abjure the Realm he shall lose his life if a Clerk do so he shall be banished Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 117. Barator See Barrator Barbican Barbicanum A Watch-Tower Bulwark or Brest-work Mandatum est Johanni de Kilmyngton Custodi Castri Regis Honoris de Pickering quoddam Barbicanum ante portam Castri Regis praedicti muro lapideo in eodem Barbicano quandam portam cum ponte versatili c. de novo facere c. T. Rege 10. Aug. Claus 17 Edw. 2. m. 39. Barcaria or Barcarium A Sheep-coat and sometimes a Sheep-walk M. S. de Placit Ed. 3. See Bercaria Bard a lias Beard See Clack Bargain and Sale Is properly a Contract made of Mannors Lands and other things transferring the property thereof from the Bargainer to the Bargainee which ought to be in consideration of Money it is a good Contract for
Land c. and the Fee passeth though it be not said in the Deed To have and to hold to him and his heirs and though there be no Livery and Seisin given by the Vendor so it be by Deed indented sealed and enrolled either in the County where the Land lies or in one of the Kings Courts of Record at Westminster within six moneths after the date of the Deed. 27 Hen. 8. cap. 16. Such Bargain and Sale may also be made by Lease and Release without either Livery or Enrolment Barkary barkaria corticulus A Tan-house Heath-house or House to keep Bark in New Book of Entries tit Assise corp Polit. 2. Baron baro Hath divers significations First it is a degree of Nobility next a Viscount Bracton Lib. 1. cap. 8. numb 4. says Sunt alii Potentes sub Rege qui dicuntur Barones quasi robur belli In which signification it agrees with other Nations where Baroniae are as much as Provinciae So as Barons are such as have the Government of Provinces as their Fee holden of the King some having greater some lesser authority within their Territories Yet it is probable that of old here in England all those were called Barons that had such Seigniories or Lordships as we now call Court Barons who are at this day called Seigneurs in France And the Learned in our Antiquities have informed us That not long after the Conquest all such came to the Parliament and sate as Peers in the Lords House But when by experience it appeared that the Parliament was too much thronged with such multitudes it was in the Reign of King John ordained That none but the Barones Majores should for their extraordinary wisdom interest or quality be summoned to Parliament After that again Men seeing this estate of Nobility to be but casual and depend meerly upon the Princes pleasure they sought a more certain hold and obtained of the King Letters Patent of this Dignity to them and their Heirs-male who were called Barons by Letters Patent or by Creation whose posterity are now by inheritance and true descent of Nobility those Barons that are called Lords of the Parliament of which kinde the King may create at his pleasure Nevertheless there are yet Barons by Writ as well as Barons by Letters Patent Those Barons who were first by Writ may now justly also be called Barons by Prescription for that they and their Ancestors have continued Barons beyond the Memory of Man The original of Barons by Writ Camden in his Britan. pag. 109. refers to Henry the Third Barons by Letters Patent or Creation commenced 11 Rich. 2. The manner of whose Creation read in Seldens titles of Honor fol. 687. Ferns Glory of Generosity pag. 125 126. To these Seager lib. 4. cap. 13. Of Honor Civil and Military adds a third kinde of Baron calling them Barons by Tenure which are some of our Ancient Barons and likewise the Bishops who by vertue of Baronies annexed to their Bishopricks always had place in the Lords House of Parliament and are termed Lords Spiritual Baron in the next signification is an Officer as Barons of the Exchequer of whom the principal is called Lord chief Baron Capitalis Baro and the three other are his Assistants in Causes of Justice between the King and his Subjects touching matters appertaining to the Exchequer and the Kings Revenue The Lord Cheif Baron is the cheif Judge of the Court and in Matter of Law Information and Plea answers the Bar and gives order for Judgment thereupon He alone in the Term time sits upon Nisi prius that come out of the Kings Remembrancers Office or out of the Office of the Clerk of the Pleas which cannot be dispatched in the mornings for want of time He takes Recognizances for the Kings Debts for appearances and observing orders He takes the presentation of all the Officers in Court under himself and of the Lord Major of London and sees the Kings Remembrancer give them their Oaths He takes the Declaration of certain Receivers accompts of the Lands of the late Augmentation made before him by the Auditors He gives the two Parcel-makers places by vertue of his Office The second Baron in the absence of the Lord cheif Baron answers the Bar and takes Recognizances as aforesaid He gives yearly the Oath to the late Major of London for the true accompt of the profits of his Office He takes certain Receivers accompts and examines the Letters and Sums of such Sheriffs Forein Accompts as also the Accompts of Escheators and Collectors of Subsidies and Taxes as are brought him by the Auditor of the Court. The third Baron in the absence of the other two answers the Bar and takes Recognizances as aforesaid He gives yearly the Oath to the late Major and Gawger of London for his true accompting He also takes certain Receivers Accompts and examines the Letters and Sums of such of the former Accomptants as are brought unto him The fourth Baron is always a Cursitor of the Court at the days prefixed he takes Oath of all High Sheriffs and their Under Sheriffs Bailiffs and other Accomptants for their true accompting He takes the Oath of all Collectors Comptrollers Surveyors and Searchers of the Custom-houses that they have made true Entrances in their Books He apposeth all Sheriffs upon their Summons of the Pipe in open Court and informs the rest of the Barons of the Course of the Court in any Matter that concerns the Kings Prerogative He likewise examines such Accompts as are brought to him These Barons of the Exchequer are ancient Officers for I finde them named in Westm 2. cap. 11. Anno 13 Edw. 1. and they are called Barons because Barons of the Realm were wont to be employed in that Office Fleta lib. 2. cap. 24. Their Office is to look to the Accompts of the Prince and to that end they have Auditors under them as also to decide all Causes appertaining to the Kings Revenue coming into the Exchequer by any means as in part is proved by the Statutes of 20 Edw. 3. cap 2. and 27 ejusdem Stat. 2. cap. 18. 5 Rich. 2. Stat. 1. cap. 9. and 12 14 ejusdem cap. 11. Whereupon they have been of late persons learned in the Laws whereas in ancient time they were Majores Discretiores in Regno sive de Clero essent sive de Curia There are also Barons of the Cinque Ports Anno 31 Edw. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 2. and 33 Hen. 8. cap. 10. which are two in every of these Towns Hastings Winchelsey Rye Rumney Hithe Dover and Sandwich who have places in the Commons House of Parliament See Seldens Titles of Honor at large sol 687. seq Baron in the third signification is used for the Husband in relation to his Wife The cheif Magistrates of London were also called Barons before there was a Lord Major as appears by the City Seal as also by their ancient Charters Henricus 3 Rex Sciatis nos concessisse