Selected quad for the lemma: land_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
land_n grant_n grant_v reversion_n 1,539 5 12.2834 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A90794 An exact abridgment in English, of The commentaries, or reports of the learned and famous lawyer, Edmond Plowden, an apprentice of the common law. Concerning diverse cases and matters in law, and the arguments thereupon; in the times of the reignes of King Edward the Sixth, Queen Mary, King Philip, and Queen Mary, and Queen Elizabeth, with the exceptions to the pleadings, and answers thereunto; the resolutions of the matters in law, and all other principall matters arising upon the same. By F.H. of the Inner Temple London, Esq; Plowden, Edmund, 1518-1585.; Hicks, Fabian. 1650 (1650) Wing P2609A; Thomason E1297_1; ESTC R208982 174,168 307

There are 27 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

thing shall be as this to which it is referred it As if a man make a Lease for so many yeers as I. S. hath in the mannor of D. there he shall have so many yeers as I. S. hath and shall take avermen that I. S. had so many issiut tale corodium quale I.S. nuper habuit So 11. H. 4. 20. H. 7. grant office taking such fee as I. S. which executed the same before had ought to be shewed what he had So 20. E. 3. the King granted to Litales liberties that the Town of N. had by shewing of the records or writings prove their liberties the grantee shall have the like Browning against Beeston LEase for yeers by Indenture by which the Lessee Covenants and grants to render and pay for that land 1 Mar in ba. Ray Trespass thirty seven pound yeerly at two feasts of the yeer naming them or within two moneths after at a certain place out of the Land and moreover Covenants grants if the said rent and farm of thirty seven pounds be areare and not paid at the time limited without any demand of the Lessor then the Lease shall be utterly void extinct and of no effect and that it shall be lawful for the lessor to re-enter and after the rent was not paid and before the entry the lessor maketh a new Lease and the first Lessee bringeth trespas against the second Lessee and he pleads the matter aforesaid and pleads the condition in this manner as in the Indenture is contained and saith not precisely that the Lessee had Covenanted as aforesaid And also said that the Rent was arear by the space of two moneths next after the said feast and adjudged for the plantiff for these two causes only 1. That the pleading of the Covenant which is contained in the Indenture that the first Lessee hath covenanted is not but a recitall and no express averment that he hath made such a Covenant in facio fol. 143. by Bromly 2. Because that the pleading of the Rent arear for two moneths varies from the Indenture which is after two moneths fol. 143. b. by all contrary to Catlin for he said that this is to be intended so if necessity Matters in Law are left at large but the better opinion was for the defendant If this Covenant and grant of the Lessee to pay thirty seven pounds yeerly be a reservation of the Rent or not and by Ramsey fol. 132 it is not 1. For that it is not issuing out of the Land by the way of Charge for pro terra implies a cause of the grant and is not words to Charge the Land 2. It is not a Rent service for default of words of reservation of the lessor as reddendum reservandum tenendum c. for this commences by words of the Lessee and which amounts not to a sum in gross because it goeth not with the revertion as he which hath Land on the part of the mother maketh a Lease for yeers by Indenture the Lessee Covenants and grants to pay to him and his heirs twenty shillings Rent the Lessor dies without issue the heir on the part of the mother shall have the revertion and on the part of the father the Rent for that it is a some in gross and not a Rent incedent to the revertion 3. It is not farm because it is not a Rent because they are all one 4. It is a void condition if it be a condition because it refers to the farm and Rent where there is not any such as a condition that the Feoffee shall infeoffe a Corporation which is not or his wife is voide because the first is impossible and the other against Law but the state because it is Precedent in defeasans of which they are made shall stand good Stamford and Walsh Justices fol. 134. It is a Rent first this Covenant and grant is equivalent to reservation and is by Indenture in which the words are the words of both and taken for the words of him which most aptly speaks them as a Rent upon a Feoffment Litl 47. is a grant of the Feoffee and in Judgment of Law shall dispose words which have substance formality and words there shall be taken indifferently For all parties assent and are privy to the speaking of them But words of a deed poll taken more available to the grantee 20. H. 7.8 by Brian and the Law expounds one word in the sence of another as 10. E. 31. 14. H. 8.2 21. E. 3.49 Reverter for Remainder So it taketh a word spoken by one for the word spoken by another and namely by Indenture and although it were not a Rent but a sum in gross yet it extends to it and to issue out of the Land for the Law because it is spetially alleadged the ground of payment of a sum to be for the Land and yeerly to be paid and the one is executory for the other For before fol. 71. if Land recovered by an elder title shall not pay which hath not the thing which ought to pay as 15. E. 4.4 if he may not have the ancient Pale he is excused to make a new so 9. E 4 10. if he will not give counsell the other shall stay the Annuity and 39. Assise 23. Rent for equality of partition charge the Land parted not mentioned because the Rent was granted and executory for the land So 2. H. 7 5. it shall discend to the heirs of the grantee without naming because it cometh in respect of the Land which should discend to the heir and when the ground of the matter appeareth the Law supplies the fault of the words because the Law respects the ground of the matter and consideration Gawdy It is not a rent fol. 136. in 39. H. 6.33 all the words shall be taken the words of one party viz. The first in the Indenture wherefore they are not the words of both because it estops not the other party and an estopple discends upon the Heir of him which is Heir at the Common Law because he is Son by the half venter neither Sister or Brother by the entire bloud and although they agree to have the same yet how viz. as a rent or not is not parcel of their agreement So it shall not be construed a rent because words may have a reasonable construction otherwise in 22. E. 4. in the case of the Prior of Bingham the Covenant was of a rent which shall be intended rent service the Fine saith not predictum redditum but was of five acres and was for the land and the Grantor was Tenant so holden there to be an annuity so here Morgan it is a rent f. 137. b. for the assent of the parties is the chief matter to be considered and not who speaks for the Lessor shall not have debt for the rent reserved unless it be a Contract and it is not a Contract without the assent of all and the words comming out of the mouth of
one shall be the words of all in the operation of the Law Catline To the same purpose because words equivalent to a Reservation for the Law takes words of substance and not usual equivalent and words of substance is usuall and the Law regards the effect and substance more then form the words and substance will supply the form rather then the intent of the parties shall be void as Lessor and Lessee for life makes a Feoffment it shall be the Feoffment of the Lessee and confirmation of the Lessor yet no word of Confirmation before fol. 59. And so if a Tenant for years and the Lessor make a Feoffment in Fee this shall be taken the Livery and Feoffment of the Lessor and surrender of the Lessee and yet there is nor any word of surrender of the Lessee but shall be so taken by the judgemen of Law So a rent granted by Tenants in common is severall because estates several yet words joynt after fol. 161.171 and Perkins fol. 22. so renuntiavit communiam 9 H. 6.35 after fol. 162. it is a a Lease because where words are equivalent in substance the Law will appoint how they shall enure and in Contracts it is not materiall who speaks the words if the other agree for the Law respects it and the words which prove the assent and have substance sufficient And therefore 21. H. 6. if the words of the Obligee make a Condition viz. the Obligee vult concedit if the Obligor steterit arbitrio yet usually they are the words of the Obligor for Condition Brooks cond fol. 58. abridge this contrary So an annuity pro consilio or a rent for Composition of Tythes 9. E. 4.16 enure as words Conditionall and a Covenant that the Farmor shall not be impeached for waste amounts 21. H. 6.47 to hold without impeachment of wast 17. E. 3.9 award assigns land of greater value then the Dower to the Widow and the second Husband who granted a rent by the same Deed to him with distress for the overplus and the Deed recites this the Wife Lessee after the death of her husband because the Grant to pay the rent for the overplus of the land a good reservation for otherwise he shall not be bound contrary before of a Grant for reasonable Dower and no mention made that the land was more worth then the Dower because without consideration there and is a Collateral thing and so words shall enure upon Acts between the parties concerning the principal matter and Collateral matter differ also the summ is certainly recited and the rent shall be this summ for the sentence stands good without words rent or farm where those words shall be adjudged void rather then the certainty expressed to be void as 4. E. 4.29 I. is obligee to B. Solvendum to I. yet good and the Count shall be to be paid to B. for the intent of the parties makes this good So a Grant of Remainder by the name of Reversion of the land a good Grant notwithstanding the mis-terming of the thing because the certainty of the land appeareth but by a Grant of all Reversions a Remainder doth not pass because the grant is in generalty and so certainty by special Terms and by general differs So where he saith if all rents shall be arear and where the said rent of 37. l. 3. s. 4 d. in certain So words containing generalty and incertainty and specialty and incertainty differ to pay 10 s. at Michaelmas 1599 and at the same Feast of S. Michaelmas next ensuing other 10. s. there the summ is taken the like for that it cannot be the same if it come after so one word taken for another supplies the intent of the parties 2. That the Covenant and Grant for not payment that the Lease shall be void is not a Condition by Ramsey fol. 133. because it is not spoken by him which gives the estate as if two Joynt-Tenants make a Lease upon Condition and that then one Lessee enters he shall not enter but into one moytie for that he gave no more and the words of one because the Law saith he speaketh only for his moytie shall not make this Condition to another which speaks not And also the Condition is subsequent in time of the Statute which was executed before for the Demise and habendum maketh the Lease contrary by Stamford and Walsh fol. 135. for that the parties are so agreed by Indenture and the one party and the other assents and therefore all one as if he had reserved the Conditional payment which is called Rent and is a Condition annexed for to avoid the Estate Litl fol. 70. So here because the summ certainly named be it a Rent or summ in gross for it is not requisite that the Lessor should speak but if the words of the Indenture had intendment to avoid the estate it sufficeth and the words shall be taken agreement of every party and not spoken by one party more then another as provisoes are or si contingal and all the words of a Deed shall take effect at one instant because the delivery is at one instant and it hath not several times proved by 10. ass 15. where several Deeds delivered at one and the same time the one being a Lease for years the other a Charter upon Condition to have Fee if disturbed before fol. 34. So 9. H. 6.35 Lease without Impeachment of Waste provided That he makes not voluntary waste in houses is Conditional and waste lieth because all made by one Deed if by two Covenants yet it is not spoken by the Lessor more then the Lessee but shall be taken as an agreement of both the parties Gawdie Justice to the contrary fol. 137. Defeasance of a thing Executory as an Obligation Recognisance or Warranty 43. Ass fol. 44. good of a thing executed not As 43. E. 3. Defeasance of a release unless delivered at one instant nor of a Lease executed by Morgan it is Conditional fol. 138. For Covenant lyeth not here because that Covenant lyeth of a thing to come and to be done by the person of some one and not of a thing to be executed in it self and therefore if the words enure not to the effect to determine the first Lease here they shall be void because it may not enure to another effect It is not a Condition by Brooks because it is not restrictive and compulsarie as are Ita quod non if the Lessee doth such an Act or if it happens or proviso but a proviso alwaies maketh not a Condition as in Dockwraies case 27. H. 8.15 because voluntary for Leessee without words compulsary of the Lessor Covenants and Grants That he will remove c. by Catlyn fol. 142. is a condition because it implies the intent of the parties to be Conditional yet it hath not the usual words as a Feoffment to pay 20. s. or instruct his Son in such an Art For it is a Condition because the parties purport such
intent So proviso That the Lessee make such a thing So here it shall enure as a Condition in whatsoever manner it be called it shall enure as a Determination of the Leasee because it was made at the time when the Lease began If the second Lease admit it be a Condition shall be good before re-entry or not Ramsey fol. 133. It is not good because after the Condition broken untill he enters he hath but a Title because he may not grant and the Lease continues and the possession also And therefore 22. E. 4.37 Lesser shall not have Trespass untill entry 14.3 Ass 11. Distress estop his entry because it affirms the continuance of his Term. Where a man may enter he ought to enter or not have the thing and where he cannot enter he ought to make claim before he shall have it As a Reversion granted upon Condition which is broken the Rent is extinct without Claim for that he may not have it by Claim by Stamford and Walsh it is good fol. 136. for that the first Lease for years commenced by words without entry it may be determined by words without entry Lease for life not 2. Mar. fol. 142. because Livery and Seisen which gave the State and Entry which ought to be avoided by entry upon Condition broken it is expressed here how the Lease shall be avoided viz. by entry and there if he enters not or doth an Act which excludes him to Enter as the making of an acquittance or distraining there the Lease is good But the words here are utterly extinct dissolving the Lease without Entry and no Act after shall make it good and the words of the entry here are surplusage and take away the effect of the first words As to 22. E. 4. The Lessor cannot punish him because the entry was first with his assent and when the Lease ended he was Tenant at sufferance but he may make a Lease to another and it determines his will by Gawdy it is not good Void here shall be expounded void by Entry as W. 2. cap. 1. before fol. 82. Finis ipsojure sit nullus viz. to the right yet it is a discontinuance So by 8. H. 6. cap. 10 Outlary shall be void in Indictment or Appeal if no Capias in the County where he dwelleth Common Law 19. H. 6.2 expounds it shall be void by Writ of Error he that hath a possession in Law may Lease before entry after fol. 142. after a stranger hath abated not because another hath possession in Deed. So a Lease by the Husband for years shall not be void of the Wives land after his death before entry of the Wife for possession ought to be defeated by possession and possession ought to be gained by entry Catline fol. 142. b. By the not payment the first Lease is determined without entry because it may be made by word without other circumstance otherwise of Free-hold and therefore may make a Lease but cannot have Trespass without entry as Heir before fol. 137. he may make a Lease before entry but cannot have Trespess before entry 11. H. 7.22 So a Lessee may grant his Term before it commence 22. E. 4.37 yet he shall not have Trespass before entry 37. H. 6.18 To shew two matters where both are effectual and answerable makes a double plea as 3. H. 6.32 Feoffment up-Condition to infeoff the Heir and averment of the Collusion in Wardship of the body So 20. H. 6.7 Seisen in his Ancestor and himself by avowing So 22. H. 6.37 Two continuall claims viz. by the predecessor and the Plaintiff for to avoid a discent So 19. E. 4.4 by Vavisor and Brian Two discents in Fee bars not two discents is not double in Tail because one answer viz. he gave not makes an end of all for if he cannot shew one thing without the other it is not double nor if the one is pursuant to the other as fully administred and so nothing in his hands for the last is but a conclusion of the former But the other Justices held the aforesaid two exceptions effectual for the causes aforesaid and that the Rejoynder was vicious wherefore they said That it was in vain to argue them and therefore in consideration of them onely without respect to the other matters rising upon the Rejoynder and before debate they awarded for the plaintiff Throgmorton against Tracie M. Mar in the Common Plaes second deliverance A Man makes a Lease for life and after Grants the Reversion of the Land habendum the land at Michaelmas after the determination of the first Lease for life for one and twenty years and adjudged a good Lease for years of the Reversion and of the Land Reverting and that the Habendum stood well with the premises because that the land is the degree and state of the Grantor was included in the premises by the word Reversion and the degree and estate excluded by the Habendum and the other part onely granted viz. The land Reverting and so was the intent of both the parties Reversion is compounded of the remnant of the estate which is left in the Lessor and of the land Reverting and carties with him the land to be afterwards happening in possession and the land is the substance of both and by the grant of this both pass So the Mannor which is compounded of Demeasnes and Services and of stegno aqua priscarie 4. E. 3. or gurgite which consists of water and land The Habendum which is not pursuant to the premises is void as a grant of a Mannor Habendum a Rent parcell of the Mannor because in the grant it was Rent service and in the Habendum it is Rent Seck So a Grant of Services Homage Fealty and rent Habendum the rent to the Grantee in Fee this habendum is void because in the grant the rent was contained as a rent Service but here it is rent Seck Grant of it after the death of I. S. void for the nature of a Grant is that the thing Granted ought to pass presently after fol. 155. for it is a thing in possession and is granted as a Reversion where no Reversion was of it If one maketh a Lease of land for years and after maketh a feoffment of the same without livery it passeth not the Reversion by Attornment Quere because the Grant of a thing which includes all interests in it shall make the Reversion to pass but the Reversion granted shall not make the possession to pass 38. H. 6.34 and after fol. 399. The King Grants a Mannor to which an Advowson is appendant for life the Advowson passeth not nor if he grant the Reversion Habondum cum advocatione it passeth not because in gross because it was not mentioned in the first Grant but the Reversion of an Advowson may be parcel or appendant of or to a Mannor in possession not possession of or to the Reversion of a Mannor the Habendum passes not a thing not parcel nor appendant
or appurtenant unless it be comprised in the premises The Office of the Habendum is for to limit the estate as a grant a Rent and stay there is for life Habendum for a year is for one year 7. E. 3.10 by Trew 7. Ass 1. Perkins fol. 22. The Habendum repugnant to the premises void and the estate before the Habendum shall stand 14. H. 8.13 by Pollard Perkins fol. 34. Contrary 13. H. 7.23 by Fineux a Grant to one and his Heirs Habendum for Life So to two Habendum to the one of them two for life the Remainder to the other for life because it severs the joyncture in the estate So a grant of two acres to two Habendum the one acre to one and the other to the other because it includes the interest of every one in one acre A Lease of land reserving the profits or two acres except one void because parcel of the thing granted Doctor and Student fol. 98. Reversion is a Tenement and ought to vest presently as a Reversion and not at a day to come otherwise it is of land Reverting without estate and agreed of land by the Serjeants for the Defendant Every Deed shall be construed most strongly against the Grantor and if it may be taken to any effect by any reasonable intendment it shall be and the intent of the parties shall be observed as here of using this word Reversion not in its proper signification for then it first ought to vest as in Reversion presently by Attornment and not at a day to come but as a demonstration certain of the land viz. all the land that they have in Reversion and that they will not have the land to pass in the degree of a Reversion but in degree of Demeasne And the Law will That when the intent appeareth incline the words not apt of their proper and common signification to the intent and one word shall have the sense of another as Litl fol. 121. Dedi concessi by the Disseisee shall enure as a confirmation So 17. E. 3.8 Mannor pass by the name of Fee de Chivalry So 10. E. 44. 5. H. 7.1 plead Demise by words of licence to occupie where one word includes in it one thing as here Reversion includes the land the thing included shall pass by the word as 11. R. 2. Piscary pass per a quam and 40. E. 3.45 Soil by Piscary and by Turbary 7. E. 3.342 So Soil and Wear by Gorss for 14. E. 3. Formedon lyeth de gurgite So 6 E. 3.183 By the name of one acre cornubiensi for Cornish acres contain so many A man Grants his Remainder of one acre to have and to hold the same Reversion of that acre good because the Law respects the intent of the matter and applies the words to it So a Gift in Tail reserving the first three daies a Rose and after 10. s. good because one rent in substance A man seised of two acres Leases one for years and after maketh a Feoffment of both Livery in this wherein he hath possession by Attornment the Reversion of the other passeth 7. E. 4.21 So 30. E. 1. Totum Molendinum suum the Reversion of the third of the Mill which was in Dower pass but Tenant for life ought to Attorn upon the Grant Brook grants f. 30. the Habendum explains and corrects the words of the premisses as here the words Reversion of the land to the land it self being the same substance So 7. E. 3.308 A Rent Granted out of a Man nor to take off one acre of the same Mannor nothing shall be charged but this acre in performance of the intent of the parties by the Serjeants for the Plaintiff Anthony Brown Serjeant for the Plaintiff Tenement compriseth a Reversion as 33. E. 3. the King licences to purchase Tenements in Mortmain he purchases a Reversion good Fitzh grants 402. and Cook Alienation fol. 55. is Advowson yet the word Tenement here agrees not with the premisses First because that in the mean time after the first Lease finished at Michaelmas the land is in possession and then it is not a Reversion because no particular estate and therefore may not yest as a reversion as 21. H. 7.11 before fol. 25. Remainder may not vest but during the particular estate and not at the ending of the first estate up on Condition broken So 10. E. 3. dower of a rent reserved upon an estate Tail good so long as the estate continues otherwise it is if the Tail be altered in Tail after possibility or Tenancy by the Courtesie for that the inheritance is determined and the rent is now in another degree 12. E. 3. and 10. H. 7.13 by Keeble if a rent be granted with a cessing during the nonage of the Heir the Wife shall have Dower and Execution shall be staid otherwise the Wife of the Son dying within age for that during the Cesser she had not possession Secondly because the Reversion cannot be granted at a day to come for then he shall have the particular estate in the mean time and shall be Lessor to himself and 38. H 6.38 a man cannot reserve the lesser estate giving the greater without alteration of the Lesser as in 8. H. 7.3 by Vavisor before fol. 152. A. hath rent in Fee and grants this to B. after the death of I.S. void because the Fee passeth presenly if ever and then he should have Franck-tenement of his own grant until I.S. dies And the Estate shall not be so devided without alteration of the whole Estate for a thing in esse cannot be granted to be in esse one time and to be insuspended or differ from the other but a new rent may be granted to commence at a day to come for there he shall not have the particular estate in the mean time because not in esse before after fol. 197. Time material shall void the thing in all viz. both the premisses and Habendum not e converso if it may not pass according to the limitation thereof because time parcel of the parties intent and if it may not pass as to the intent all is void As a man hath a Rent or Term and Grant it if he stay there good if he saies besides Habendum after the death of I. S all is void after fol. 250. So the Remainder void if the Termor enter without Livery Litl 12. But if the Term was to Commence at a day to come the Remainder over there it is void notwithstanding Livery because there is no estate present to which the Livery may be annexed so that the time of Commencement is materiall and Livery before its Commencement is void and Livery shall not destroy the time but the time the Livery and grant every act shall be taken strongest against the makers and most beneficial to him to whom it is made and he hath liberty in another sence to his advantage then the words purport prima facie for every Deed shall be construed
to some purpose and not to be void because it is made to some purpose as 21. H. 6.8 one may plead a Lease for years and a release as a Feoffment So 7 H. 6.7 and 22. H. 6.42 The Feoffment of a Joynt-Tenant as a confirmation So 9. H. 7.2 The King by Parliament confirms the estate of the Patentee dat conceditur he may use it as a Grant or confirmation So in 21. H. 7.23 Obligor may plead a Grant That it shall not be sued before M. in Bar or have a Covenant for it So here the party uses this as a Demise of the Land and not as a Grant of the Reversion for the Reyersion of the Land compriseth the Land as Litl fol. 106. after fol. 161. a release of all the land to him in Reversion is good So 5. H. 5.8 A Lease for years and after a grant of the rent this changes the reversion So Litl fol. 150. recovery of the land against Tenant for life will divest the reversion So 19. E 4.9 Writ of Covenant and the Concord is of the land to pass the reversion So Quid jur is clamat recites That the land was granted before the reversion was So before fol. 149. Formed on shall say de uno messuagio where the Reversion was granted in Tail So a Reversion in Fee Granted to a Termor he hath the intire Term presently in Possession for the reversion of the land comprises the land in substance one word will pass the thing by another word having the same sence yet varying in name because one same thing and intent of the party as 2. H. 6.4 before fol. 134. and afterwards f. 170. reverter for remainder So 3. H. 6.6 makes a Testament and commits Administration is an Executor So 20. H. 7.11 Retorn for revert by the Grant by Grant of the Church Advowson passes 14. E. 4.2 by Grant of the name of a Clerk a presentment passeth So before fol. 151. by Stagnum molendinum the Soil passes and the thing contained in the premises named in the Habendum by another name containing the same in substance is good So a Grant of the nomination of an advowson Habendum the advowson good So Manerium Habendum the services So mannor by Fine Habendum one acre of this in Fee he shall have the acre in Fee and the Mannor for life because it wanteth limitation of the estate in the residue of the Mannor So a Gift of a Mannor Habendum the reversion in Fee of one acre which is in Lease for life good Fee for the acre and for life in the Mannor because no estate is expressed in it So Litl fol. 120. confirms the estate of Lessee for life Habendum the land in Fee good because in the estate land was contained So a Joint-Tenant confirms to another Habendum the land to him and his Heirs the Fee will pass the Habendum may limit the estate to a stranger not named before in the premisses as 13. H. 7.17 a Devise to I. Habendum to him in Fee after the death of the Wife of the Devisor not named before hath an estate by implication of the intent of the party So 5. E. 3.17 a man gives land Habendum in Franck marriage with a Daughter So a Lease to A. Habendum to him for 20. years the remainder to B. in Fee good because the intent of the parties therefore a fortiori here the Habendum may explain the intent of the parties in the premisses Die● Serjeant for the Plaintiff A reversion is Jus sine possessio revertendi nomen verbale quasi terra revertens after the particular estate ended proved by W. 2. of Advowsons of Churches and prayer to recite the reversion if he shall overlive the Tenant for life and bringeth wast good 14. E. 2. Fines saith remanera and not revertera where a reversion was granted before fol. 157. a reversion granted in Tail Formedon in remainder lyeth because the entire estate is not given Fitzh nat br 118. D. 10. E. 2. the Heir grants the other two parts with a third part in Dower cum acciderit reversion of Dower pass 33. H. 8. cap. ultima the not making of Leases in reversion is expounded That they shall not make Leases beginning after the first ends ad firmum dimiserunt imply that the parties intend that it shall enure as a Lease of the Demeasne for properly a man may not be Farmor of a reversion not have an Ejectione firma of a reversion No Attornment needs upon a Lease for years because it is a Contract interpretationem apportet esse benignam ut res valeat as 30. E. 2. Discendera pro Remanera 6. E. 2. recipe pro re-entry So a gift to one for life post ejus decessum to 1. in Fee good remainder for the manifest intent an Habendum giveth an estate which was not given before and to a stranger not named before and alters the estate given in the premisses as a Confirmation to Husband and Wife or to Tenant for life remainder in Fee to another good Litl 129. So Habendum by moity Litl 66. makes Tenants in common 8. E. 3.427 by the better oppinion a gift to two Habendum to one for life and after his decease to another in Fee the one shall have the entire for life onely notwithstanding the Joyncture in the premisses Otherwise fol. 153. if it be comprised within the Grant good in the Habendum as a Grant De dispositione Ecclesiae habendum advocationem grants de Soil the Wood habendum the Wood defundo domus habendum domum Manerium habendum the advowson appendant good but a Grant of Common out of the land habendum the land or herbage of a Park habendum the Park and such like are not good because not comprised in the premisses Stamford Justice rules of Exposition First deeds shall be taken most beneficially for the Grantee Secondly they shall not be void where the words may be applyed to any intent Thirdly words shall be applyed viz. expounded to the intent of the parties and not otherwise The intent directs gifts rather then the words as 41. E. 3.6 16. H. 7.10 by Fineux Grantee of annuity pro consilio hath divers faculties yet the Councel shall be given in such a faculty as was intended 9. E. 4.22 one bound to pay Recepta recipienda shall not pay what he received not but that which he hath received because the intent is taken more forcibly then the words 7. E. 3.7 Lessee of of a house which may for his profit make houses there within may not pull down or make waste for the intent was not so Sanders Justice to the same intent with the Plaintiff Exposition of Deeds shall be reasonable without wrong to the Grantor as a Grant of Corrody Estovers and Common for all Beasts he shall not have with Goats and with the largest advantage to the Grantee as a Disseisor releases all his right to the Termor he hath for his life
Litl fol. 108. before fol. 140. two Tenants in Common grant 20. s. it shall enure as several Grants 34. ass fol. 11. Grants totum piscariam salvo stagno molendini sui yet the piscarie passes not for the stagno shall be excepted and not the piscarie because he hath a Reversion in the Propriety of the land and possession of the Ter-Tenancy The nature of an habendum is to give in large or qualifie Malitiosa juris interpretatio herere in verbis c. the words are but witnesses to the contract reversion includes land by all Brown Justice To the same intent of the Abbot and Covent and of Smith and his wife was to have the land pass as a Lease after the paticular estate ended and not otherwise and from that hour that their intent was to have the word reversion enure that way it seemed to him That the Law would warrant it for the land is included in the reversion for if it was not a man by Granting of a reversion could not have the Land in possession after the particular estate ended And a Feoffment of a Carue habendum the Mannor of D. is good if the Carue maketh the Mannor And if land is parcel of an Office it shall pass by the Grant of the office Much more he said tending to the effect to make the Lease good and so the Plaintiff shall recover Brook Chief Justice to the contrary Estate in lands includes land it self land is a generall word and contains Grantor and reversion particular words containing a Decree where one estate onely intent shall be inclined and ruled by the Law and not otherwise and intent nevertheless in certainty of words as 9. H. 6.35 Renuntiavit communium and not to whom void before fol. 122. 13. E. 3. Husband and Wife Tenants for life grant reversion of the Land that he holdeth by Homage Fealty and Castle gard the Lord grants all Services Castle gard passeth not because he granted not the Castle But in Testaments the intent shall be onely observed and rule the Law because the Teastator had not time by presumption to ordain all things according to the Law In conclusion he agreed that Judgement should be given for the Plaintiff Hill against Grange A Man maketh a Lease for years of a Messuage and an hundred acres of land appertaining to it 3. Mar in Common Pleas in Trespass c. by Deed indented the 6. of August rendring rent yearly payable at our Lady day and Michaelmas or 10 days after with clause of re-entry and after Grants the reversion and the Grantee the last instant of the 10. day after Michaelmas demands the rent and enters for not payment and it was adjudged that the entry was good for these reasons 1. Land may not appertain to a Messuage because both are things corporate simply otherwise of Advowsons waies c. which are things incorporate but things Corporate or Incorporate may pertain or be parcel of a thing compounded as a Mannor Castle Knights Fees Honors Forrests Monasterie Rectorie fol. 170. a. But here the land passes as appurtenant but by the intent and phrase of the parties as they have said usually occupied or let c. 2. The rent shall be paid at the first Feast of M. for otherwise it cannot be annual notwithstanding the other feast be first named 10. E. 3. the Abbot of Osneys case 3. The demand of the rent the last instant is good 4. That the Gantee of a Common person is an Assignee to have benefit of a Condition or Covenant fol. 173. a. and shall not be intended of the Pattentee of the King 5. That the Pattentee of the Heir and Successors of E. 6. shall take benefit of the Condition by equity of the said Stat. and not by the words Things of distinct and several natures the one is not parcel of or appendant to the other as 8. H. 7.1 by Keeble a Warren cannot be pertaining to a Leet nor a Leet to a Hundred nor one Office to another nor land to other land to a thing Compounded they may as a Mannor Knights Fee Honor Monastery Castle and a Village or to words general as are Oxgang a yard land a hide of land which contains land meadow pasture wood c. Messuage is a single word consisting of a thing special and not Compound nor a general word for that 27. H. 6.2 Land not parcel or appendant to a house and by demand of a Messuage in precipe land shall not be recovered and therefore pass not by the Grant of a House by the Serjeants on the part of the Plaintiff 23. H. 8. and 31 H. 3. by Feoffment of a Messuage with the appurtenances Land passes not a Mannor and things made appertaining to it are made by usage and continuance So 2. H. 7.28 land belonging to a Forrest and Warden of the Fleet and the house of the Master of the Rolls and divers farms to the Guardians of the Castle of Colchester and one Office to another as the custos brevium giveth one of the Offices of prothonatories and use and continuance is cause of it A man Leases a Messuage and land rendring rent be ought to demand the rent at the Messuage because most worthy Perk. 166. Meadow appertains to land 3. E. 3. by the Serjeants on the part of the Defendant Norwood against Read Action upon the case upon assumpsit made by the Testator 5. Mar ●…n K. Bench. lieth against the Executors adjudged For that the Testator could not gage his Law otherwise it is where he might gage his Law for the ignorance that the Law imputes of it to Executors and therefore there they ought to Demur but if they plead in Bar which is found against them they have lost the benefit of the Law and take Conusance of it whereof otherwise their ignorance shall excuse them 39. H. 6.19 12. H. 8.11 27. H. 8.23 Woodward against the Lord Darcie IF the Debtor make the Debtee his Executor and leaves him assets to satisfie the debt 5. Mar. Reso by the Judges of both Courts and dies the Debtee may pay himself by way of retainer by the Court 12. H. 4 21. according And in such case the Action is not utterly exstinct by the Administration for that the Law intends that he is satisfied by retainer before and so a thing in Action altered to a thing in possession by Act in Law for satisfaction of the party which hath no other remedy but if he hath not sufficient assets for to satisfie the debt the administration there extinguishes not the Action because that he cannot retain for parcel and have his Action against the Heir for the residue but ought to do the one for the other at his peril Wrotesly against Adams A Lease for 80. years of a Farm Tr i El. in Com. Pleas. Ej. firme the Lessor granted the Reversion of the Farm to a stranger to have and to hold the Farm for 60. years after the
cannot do any thing without Record And so Acts that the King doth touching things which he hath in his body naturall require the same circumstances and order as things which he hath in his politique body by the union thereof for the thing possessed changeth not from the person of the King but the person nor doth the possession change the cause of a thing possessed Henry the 4. which was Duke of Lancaster held his Dutchie annexed to the Crown as parcel of it by the assumption of the Crown and because his Title to the Crown was defeasable and because he would preserve the Dutchie to his Heirs if he should be removed from the Crown he severed it from the Crown by a Statute made 1. H. 4. as it was before onely in course of inheritance of the Land and of the Government of it viz. for the manner of Conveyance as it was before in the hands of the Duke as by Livery and Attornment but not severed from the Crown for the prerogatives of his person as 10. H. 4. 7. H. 4. the King had a scire facias against the Lord Le strange with a non omittas for the Dutchieland So 3. H. 6. Rot. 112. the Committee of a Ward hath aid before issue and a procedendo with a Clause of not going to judgement Rege inconsulto So the person of the King for Dutchie land taken to be higher then a Duke because he shall not have aid untill after issue of the Duke for that he is a Common person and shall make a Lease by the name of KING because it drowns the name of DUKE in his Realm therefore Officers finding that he held of the King as of the Dutchie and not as of the Duke of and by 3. H. 5. all Charters of the Dutchie land shall be sealed with the Dutchie Seal or should be void to the end that all possessions of it should be distinct used and known from the possessions of the Crown for the policie aforesaid because he was the Lineal heir to the Dutchie and as the Dutchie was in the hands of H. 4. so in like manner it was in H. 5. and H. 6. But E. 4. because he was lawfull inheritor to the Crown annexed the Dutchie of Lancaster and made it to be forfeit to the Crown and so he altered the course of inheritance of it out of the natural body into the politick body of the King and his Successors but not in the manner of Government name c. but separates it from other possessions of the Crown in conveyance of it by another Seal and other means viz. by Livery and Attornment which are used for the possessions thereof as 21. E. 4.60 Land of the Dutchie in the County Palatine passe by Pattent out of it by Livery because there he hath it as Duke and by the Statute of 1. H. 7. the Dutchie was severed from the Crown and made inheritable to the natural capacity of the King as it was in H. 5. because H. 7. discended of the House of Lancaster so is it in E. 6. the Queen made a Feoffment of the Dutchie Land forth of the County Palatine to be holden in Capite the Feoffee shall hold in Capite of the Crown and not as of the Dutchie for that the King is not Duke within his Realm but may be when he is out of the Realm Willion against the Lord Berkly A Fine was levied to two and to the Heirs of one 4. Eliz. in C.P. in an Ej. firme with Grant and Render to the Conusor in Tail the Remainder to King Henry the seventh and to the Heirs Males of his body ingendred remainder to the right Heirs of the Conusor the Conusor dies without issue and after H. 7. entred and died seised and H. 8. gave the land to the Queen his Wife for her life and died E. 6. Granted the reversion to one and his Heirs and dyed without issue the right Heir of the Conusor entred and his entry adjudged lawfull So the King shall be in a worse condition then a common person for a common person may bind the inheritance by a common Recovery suffered by him otherwise of the King by W. 2. cap. 1. after fol. 244. a. 1. That the Writ of Ejectione firme that wanteth words bona Cattalla ibidem inventa cepit asportavit is good if the truth of the matter be so and proces of utlarie lieth in this writ by the Common Law fol. 228. 2. The Entry of King Henry the seventh is lawfull without office for that the Law casts the Freehold upon him otherwise it is where he taketh an estate by Office as Ward Perquisites of villains c. and the right Heir may enter without Office or Ouster le main by the same reason fol. 229. a. 3. Where the parties agree upon the matter in deed and conclude upon the matter in Law thereupon Nilrefert but the Court shall adjudge according to the Law fol. 230. 4 Recitall of one part of a generall Statute is good enough otherwise it is of a particular Seatute fol. 232. a. 5. Omission of the date or place of Letters Patents is not materiall in pleading not Averment fol. 231. 6. A feoffment pleaded without entry of the Feoffee is good because it is included in the liverry fol. 232. b 7. The fee vests by the guift before the Statute of W. 2 and is made more perfect by the means of the issue fol. 233 a. 8. The pleading that H. 7. had issue and died without issue is repugnant of his own shewing otherwise it is where it cometh on the part of the defendant fol. 233. 9. The pleading that one enter untill that the Lessor entred upon him and made the Lease is not good there without saying that he custed him and made the Lease The King shall be bound by the Statute of W. 2. of gifts conditional for that it is in preservation of an inheritance in benefit of the publike good and restitution of the intent of the donor and the exposition that the donee might alien after issue before the Statute of Gifts conditional hath been a common error As to the matter in Law it was said by the Sergeants of Counsel with the defendant that the capacity that the King hath in his naturall body after that he is King Remains and the State Royall confounds not this capacity as 45. ass pl. 6. Henry the third gave the Mannor to the Earl of Cornwall in tayle who exchanged it by a deed for another Mannor and died without issue and warranty and assets discended upon Edward the first his heir he is barred and therefore the assignee of the party to the exchange had restitution out of the hands E. 3. who had seised it and so by this warranty and assets which discended upon the naturall body of the King was a Bar to the reversion that he demanded in his body politike And as a King may take as heir by discent in his
not because he had no recompence So in 17. E. 4.1 In Trespass for the taking of wheat the Defendant pleads That the Plaintiff sold it if he liked it upon view he should have it paying 40. d. and afterwards he saw it liked it and took it this is no good justification because he doth not alleadge payment so here So contracts conditional are good when they are performed but before performance they are onely communications Brook Recorder of London for the Defendant Where matters are to be tryed in the Civil Law there ought to be two witnesses here not necessary For where tryal is by twelve men because the Inquest may give a precise Verdict where there is no Testimony or Verdict or Evidence or Evidence be contrary to the Witnesses as in 14. H. 7.2 the Inquest acquit one indicted of murther he is arrained and acquit the Jury shall say who killed him although they have no witnesses and so witnesses are not necessary but where the matter is to be tryed by witnesses onely for if the witnesses were so necessary then it would ensue That the Jurors should not give their Verdict contrary to the witnesses where the Law is meerly contrary for when witnesses for tryal of the Fact joyn with the Jury if they cannot agree with the Jurors the Verdict of the 12. shall be taken and the witnesses rejected wherefore this point is clear enough And as to this which hath been said by Bradshaw That the deposition of Da. will make against us for that he saith That S. shewed to him that the entry was not made for more then 2000 Kintals Sir this saying is nothing to the purpose for if he cannot say something to prove the issue in which he cometh to depose then it is neither with us nor against us but it is of the same effect in Law as if he had said nothing or that he knew not of the matter and so this point is also clear enough And as to that which hath been moved also by Mr. Attorney That he ought to shew what rate in certain Sir this needs not here because it is expressed in the Statute 12. d. of every 20. s. and of general Statutes every one shall take notice And he argued and said That the agreement here shall be good and is within the intent of the Statute for in many Cases Gifts and Grants made will not be certain at the beginning and yet shall be good for that there is a mean to reduce them afterwards to certainty and yet the nature of Gifts and Grants is to be executed presently and every Gift is an agreement between the parties and so is every Grant and then if Gifts and Grants which are also agreements and the nature of which is to be executed properly at the time of the making of them it shall be good notwithstanding they are incertain at the beginning à fortiori Agreements Executory of things shall be good where they are incertain at the first and to prove that such Gifts and Grants shall be good notwithstanding their incertainty at the first there are many Cases and therefore if the King at this day grant over certain Lands which have come to his hands before and Grant over to the Grantee such Liberties Priviledges and Jurisdictions howbeit that the King knoweth not the certainty of the Liberties c. yet the Grant is good So in 9. H. 6.27 The King grants to the Dutches of York an Island with all Issues and Amerciaments c. there it is holden that the grant is good yet the King knew not what Issues or what Americiaments shall be afterwards forfeited but for that that when they shall be forfeit they will be certainly known and so hath a means to know the certainty of them this is the cause that the Grant shall be good And so in 5. E. 4. the King Granted to one called Garter the Office of the King of Heralds cum seodis prosicuis ah antiquo c. There this Grant purports a certainty of the Fees and Profits belonging to it and therefore good And so in 30. H. 6. The King Grants all such Lands as came to him by Attainder c. it is good although it comprehends no certainty And so if the King will pardon all Riots Pardon is good howbeit it comprehends no certainty 21. H. 6.43 A Parson grants to me his Tythe-wooll the next year or perquisites of his Court the Grants are good So Perkins 17. Feoffment of two Acres to hold the one for life the other in Fee without saying he shall have Fee if he lose both by default he may have Quod ei deforceat for the one and Writ of right for the other So if one grant a rent charge to another the Grantee may avow or have a Writ of annuity So in 9. E. 4.36 per. Litt. Grant 20. s. or a garment good because certain by the will of the Grantor So a Lease for so many years as I. S. shall name is good So Perkins Fol. 17. If I have a black and white Horses and I give one of them to I. S. this gift is good notwithstanding the incertainty by the election of the Donee And although it is not concluded who shall weigh and when yet it is good because there is an Officer in every Port which keeps a Beam and ought to weigh And although the Statute do speak of an agreement certain yet Law the reason aswaies exempts something out of the prohibition of the words of Statutes as 15. H. 7.2 by Keble a Prisoner which breaketh Prison by the words of the Statute is a Felon but if he break it when it is on fire not So 14. H. 7.29 Stamford 25. cap. 5. Jurors severed by a great Tempest shall not be Amerced and their Verdict good So W. 2. cap. 3. Gives not to a Fem Covert Receipt but where the wife is ready to answer yet the wife received by prayer in aid 20. H. 6.48 and there she is received where she is not ready to answer because otherwise she shall loose the recompence by warrantie So W. 2. cap. 1. say That Dones shall not alien yet 5. E. 2. is intended of their Issues so here for to avoid mischiefs c. Harris the Kings Serjeant to the contrary And he argued as the Kings Attorney did that is to say That the evidence which proves the agreement upon condition warrants not the issue which shall be intended a general agreement as if the Derendant in Trespass plead not guilty and give a licence in evidence or in formedon in discendre upon a gift in free marriage if the gift is traversed and a Deed is shewed of the gift in free Marriage the Remainder over in Fee or upon traverse of a Lease for years alleadged without Deed and the Deed is shewed in evidence this evidence warrants not the issue So here an agreement conditional maintains not the general agreement intended in issue the Collector could
H. 8. c. 34. to enter for a Condition broken 2. The tender of the Rent on the Feast day is not requisite nor until the last instant of the 40. day 3. Notwithstanding that the Rent be apppointed to be paid out of the Land at the Feast day and not the 40. day by express words yet it shall be so intended by relation to the place last named 4. No demand here is requisite because that the Land which is Debtor is absent the contrary is upon a general reservation and if a Rent seck payable in a forreign County be demanded and denled there it is not a disseisen by Plowden contrary upon the Land The place which was once charged with the payment in the hands of the Lessor remains chargeable in the hands of any other because he hath this as a Liberty and Authority imposed upon it by the Lessor and such Liberty is saved by the Statute of suppression of Monasteries and therefore the Lessor nor the Lessee are not Trespassers by their coming there to tender and receive the Rent Rosse against Pope ROss acknowledged a reconusance to Pope after Levies a Fine to him of patcel of his Land 5. E. 6. In Chancery upon an Audita quetela and afterwards Pope sues Execution and takes the body of the said Rosse and he brings an audita querala in the Chancery and adjudged that it lieth not 1. For that the Land is not debter but the person and the Land is onely charged in respect of the person and not otherwise until Execution sued 2. For that the purchase was before Execution sued otherwise it had been if sued afterwards for then the Land was charged in facto and not chargeable And if any part be discharged by act in Law as discent or act of the party as Surrender Feoffment c. also it shall be discharged because the duty is personall and entire 3. Because that the Conusor shall not have contribution against the Feoffees but they shall have against him and here the Conusee shall not have Execution against his Feoffees for that they may not have contribution against him Wimbish against Willoughby Assize directed Coronatoribus in Lincoin upon the surmise of the Plantiff that the Sheriff was his Cosen and shewed also Tr. 6. E. 6. Assice against L. Wall That one of the Coroners was servant to the Defendant and adjudged good 1. For the speedy expedition of the Assize and the mischlef of the Plaintiff if it should be abated by the exception of the Defendant and no mischief to him and here the venire facias is awarded the first day as in a precipe 2. Coroners in Lincoln shall be intended Coroners of Lincoln for that they are the words of the King In the Argument of this case see first where a Writ Original shall be directed to the Coroners where not Secondly and when other Judicial process Thirdly an exposition of the words in and de in Writs Grants or c. Fourthly what words are sufficlent to make a Grant of a Rent charge Fifthly some matters touching challenges and where they shall be Traversed c. Partridge against Strange and Croker IN Debt the Plaintiff counts upon the Statute of 32. H. 8. cap. 9. H. 6. 7 E. 6. In the Common Leath Of buying and selling of pretenced Titles and Rights and alleadge this to be done 28. April 32. H. 8. where in truth it was not done this day and that the Defendants have made a Lease for years of a house and nine acres of Land pertaining to it whereof they nor their ancestors nor any by which the claim were in possession Reversion or Remainder nor took the Profits for one intire year before c. and holden 1. That the Statute need not to be specially recited and pleaded because it is general but for that it is misrecited it is not good by the Court sol 84. and yet is surplusage and it shall prejudice the party in some cases sol 29. as debt by I. S. Parson of D. it is a good Traverse because he is not Parson or that there is not such a village called D. 2. When the Term shall not be certainly pleaded for that it is Conveyance of the Action and is not material here and he which pleads it is a stranger as an Indictment of the death of a certain man unknown or the stealing of the goods of a certain man unknown 3. That a Lease for years or a grant of parcell of the Right is within the Statute because the Statute speaketh of any right and is not intended only of an entire right and that the entire value of the Land shall be forfeit by such Lease per Curiam fol. 87. That this Lease made by one in possession is out of the Statute for that it is not averred to be a pretenced right by Hales and Montague fol. 87. against Cook For they mean that he which hath possession one day or however may make a Lease or Feoffment bona fide and shall be forth of the Statute although that he hath not possession or taketh the profits one whole year without averment that it is made for maintenance and the Statute shall be intended onely of those which makes Leases c. having but a right and not the possession as Montague held a promise by him which is out of possession to depart with the Land when he shall attain the possession is within the danger of the Statute fol 88. And if the Issue in Tail at full age marry a woman discontinuee of his father and maketh a Lease for years this is within the Statute for that he Leases his ancient right So by Morgun if the heir release to the Abator and afterwards claiming by discent maketh a Lease for years this may be averred a pretenced right and then is within the danger of the Statute fol. 86 and a right is within the Statute which comprehends all rights Pretenced right is where one hath the possession and another which is out of possession claims this or sues for it by Mont. f. 88. Morgan Serjeant for the Defendant He which voucheth a Record and vary in the year or Term haith failed of his Record So the Statute here no Act without the consent of the King when all assent it shall have relation to the first day of the Parliament and from that time is an Act of Parliament unless it be otherwise appointed when it shall first take effect An act made in the first or second Session relates not but to the first day of the same Session Misrecital shall prejudice the party in some cases as Debt by I. S Parson of D. where there is no such Village D. a good Traverse and abates the Writ yet the naming of him Parson surplusage So here because it recites a Statute certain made such a day where it was not although that the day is surplusage it hath made the matter vitious although it
H. 6.25 Of vigor of an appeal pleaded against an excomunication the usuall form shall be observed and good as in debt when the defendant acknowledgeth himself to be bound c. So in forgery against one only quod falsa conspiratione habita good 11. H. 6.2 because the usuall form where a man may not have by common intendment precise notice of the certainty of a thing it sufficeth to alleadge this generally as 21. H. 6.9 9. H. 7.15 that executors have administred to B. without shewing what things good because he may not know that another hath administred and that he is not privy So 5. E. 4.8 Obleige to discharge the Sheriff of all things touching his office he said that he had discharged him generally good because for the infiniteness of it Talbot and Corbets case tempore H. 7. upon the same Statute 23. H. 6. where the issue was joyned that Corbet was chosen Knight for the Parliament and he was admitted to prove it c. So 2. E 4. 19. imprison to make an obligation to the defendant to others unknown without naming them good contrary in false imprisonment So 10. E. 4. 19. bound for to serve in all lawfull commands he said that he had served him lawfully untill such a day without shewing in what good So in 12. H 7.14 he had found him meat drink and apparel untill one and twentd yeers without shewing what good So monstraverunt homines without shewing the number because a great number for the Law compels not to shew the certainty of the thing which is not to be known or remembred Brook Chief Justice so 128. and in Parliament the most voices in the upper house shall be numbred by the Clerk of the house for every one there shall be severally demanded otherwise it is in the house of Commons for there the assent is tryed by voices sounding all at one time So in election of Coroners Sanders so 126. the County of Chester was alwayes parcel of the Realm of England yet Knights and Burgesses came not from thence untill the Statute of 34. 35. H. 8. ca. 13. Statute penall extends not further then the words and namely for to punish others as 21. H. 7.21 of malefactors in Parks extends not to Forrests So 13. H. 6. cap. 10. that Sheriffs shall not let their Counties extends not to him which Leases parcel of it 21. H. 7.36 the contrary was held 20. H. 7.12 and before fol. 87. So treble dammages for a forcible entry in an Assise or trespas extends not to entry in the nature of an Assise 7. H. 4. which limit order for the election of Knights extended not to the false return of the Sheriff untill 11. H. 4. was made if London inlarge the Ancient custome viz that a villen shall not be drawn out which hath remained there a yeer and a day because Ancient demeansne 7 H. 6.32 extends not to enlargment So England altered not the subjecton of Wales Rape is made fellony by W. 2. ca. 34. Abetters inquirable cap. 12. and at one time good 2. E. 2.22 E. 3. yet Chapter the 12. seeme to be intended of fellons before made and not by the same Statute Sanders justice the allegation alledged under the viz. is a plain precise and effectuall affirmation in deed proved by Rules in grammer the authority of Latine Authors by the Register 66.160 natura brevium 63.134 h. 135. b. and the opinion of the Doctors of the Civill Law 21. E. 4.49 and after so 143. by Catlin an Abbot in discharge to be collector saith inter Record of such a term continetum that R. 2. had granted to his predecessors that he nor his successors shall be collectors and naught for it may be contained amongst the Records and yet no Record escuage was first invented to suppress the Welch and Scots rebels against whom war was made by the King of England as against Rebels and not as against enemies for that they were subject to England H. 3. made E. 1. his eldest son Prince of Wales and so it hath continued to this time which Act of H. 3. was the first alteration of Wales King E. 1. made the Statute of Snowdon The third was the Statute of 27. H. 8. the welch may sue by quod ei deforceat in the nature of what action they will Statutes sometimes explaines the Common Law Merton cap. 2. quod vidua legare possunt bluda c. and late Statutes aided by equity Statutes made before so lineal warranty Bars not the issue in taile without assets by the equity of Glocester made long before after fol. 78. so Land delivered in execution by the Statute of Marchants 1● E. 1. yet it shall be delivered also to so high extendors although 13. E. 1. speaketh not of it by equity of Acton Burnel 11. E. 1. cap. 2. which giveth goods prised at two high prises in dammage and that the Connusee shall have them for the price because it intended to aide things in like degree although not in esse then Brown Justice to the same purpose and said that in things touching Grammer their predecessors have consulted with Grammarians and pursued their Rules as it appeareth in our books that the the Judges have said proximo antecedenti fiet Relatio the which sentence they might take out of Grammar and he argued that licet was a plain affirmative and that the matter contained under the licet is an affirmation with greater vehemency then it should be without the licet and that the licet augments the affirmation And he argued further that the generall words of the Statute of 27. enabled the plantiffe to take benefit of the penalty and in what he said agreed with Sanders in effect Brook chief Justice Gavel kind commenced by the Brittans by partition of England Scotland and Wales between the three sons of Brute continued by Bellinus Brennus Ferrex and Porrex and was altered in England by the conquest of the Saxons and the eldest son by their Law was inheritable But Gavel kind continued in Wales until 27. H. 8. for it was not conquered Priviledges within certain precincts or Dominions followed not the enlargement of the place So 38. H. 6.10 Liberties granted to the Bishop of Durham in feedis suis extends not to the purchase after So 21. H. 6. Warren is granted to B. in all his Lands in Dale and he purchaseth other Land in Dale he shall not have warren there So a grant of Conusans of Pleas of a thing parcel of the mannor of Dale tenancy Escheats afterwards he shall not have of it For the grant taketh execution of his precinct and circuit at the time of the making of it and the services shall be then parcel of the mannor and not the demeans which now escheat So grant wreck to B. in all his Lands it shall not extend to the Land of which he was then disseised because not his but the disseisors pro tempore Reference to another
end and expiration of the first Term of years the Lessor maketh a Lease for life to the first Lessee for years during the first Term and the second Lessee Enters and upon an Ouster bringeth Ejectione firme and by the Court it well lyeth 1. By the Law by a Grant of the reversion of the Farm the Farm and all the Demeasnes of it pass because it is nomen collectivum and certain in its self and so it was adjudged in the case of Bridges That by the Demise of the Farm the reversion and rent incident to it passeth 2. That the word Reversion shall be intended land reverting in the premisses and the habendum and not the estate in reverter which hath his continuance but in respect of the Term and during it it is a Grant of the reversion habendum the farm or land or reversion after the particular estate ended are all one 3. That the second Lease for years commencing by any determination of the first Lease whether it be in Law or in Deed and the expiration refers to the Term and not to the years Term is an estate in or for years and is finished when the estate is finished and this may finish when the years remain If a man marry with a woman Termor and the woman dies her husband shall have the Term for notwithstanding that the marriage hath not divested this out of the woman during coverture yet by her death this is given to the husband by Act in Law because it is a thing in possession and not in Action The Law is the Common use in Letters Pleas and Judgements and the Common Law is but common use by Anthony Brown fol. 195. Stradling against Morgan EXceptions alleadged in arrest of Judgement 2 El. Exchequer debt upon not guilty pleaded by the Defendant and found against him 1. The Plantiff hath shewed in his Declaration That the Defendant was then receiver c. and saith not That the Mannors were the Queens then and therefore shall be intended more strong against him then it should be to a common person and by consequence the Defendant is Baily to a common person by the Court. 2. That no receiver or Baily accomptant of a common person shall be within the Statute of 7. E. 6. c. 1 but onely of the Queen by the Court. 3. That the Action was not maintainable and the matter well alleadged lieth in the Queens Courts at Westminster notwithstanding the Statute of 34. and 35. H. 8. for Wales for that they are in the Affirmative and not in the Negative 4. That by this Statute an Action of debt by original Writ lieth for the forfeiture in the Exchequer howbeit that the party hath not cause of priviledge there 5. The Plaintiff ought to make mention of the Statute of 38. H. 8. and 7. E. 6. in his count for that the one is founded upon the other 6. He ought to shew expresly in his Count That the Queen was seized and made him her Bedel 7. Jeofails remedies not mispleadings in counts adjudged in Moon and Cliffords case In Debt the Plaintiff counts That whereas he was Bedel and Collector of certain Mannors by vertue of Letters Pattents of H. 8. and had a Fee for it the Defendant being Receiver of the said Mannor in 3. and 4. P. and M. took extortion for the payment of his Fee viz. 4. d. for every pound against the form of the Statute of 7. E. 6. the Defendant pleads not guilty and found against him And yet judgement given against the Plaintiff because the Count was incertain to whom he was Receiver and shall be intended against him then done to a Common person and a Receiver of a Common person is not within 7. E. 6. yet within the words for the intent of the makers shall be observed in the exposition of Statutes and so acts general in words have been expounded to be but particular where the benefit hath been particular As the King shall not have Wardship of lands which discends to the youngest Son but of that which discends to the heir general 12. E. 4. Stamford fol. 8. yet the Tenant dyed seized of others in Fee because the Statute of Praerogativa regis cap. 2. intends where the land is holden of the King and a Common person discended to the same Heir where one is Heir to the Tenant And Praerogativa Regis cap. 3. intends not that Soccage in capite shall give to the King primer seisen of lands holden of a Common person yet the words are general before fol. 109. Stamford Prerogative fol. 13. So Marlebr cap. 4. intends where Signiory and Tenancie are in the same County and therefore the Lord may bring a Distress taken in one County to a Mannor in another County of which the land is holden 1. H. 6.3 30. E. 3.6 before fol. 18. So Glouc. cap. 1. giveth Damages to the Disseisee against him which is found Tenant after the Disseisor for that he is Tenant by his own agreement and therefore the Disseisee shall not recover Damages against him which agrees not to a Feoffment made to him and others by the Disseisor yet he is Tenant but not Tenant by his agreement Litl Remitter fol 153. so long 5. E. 4. fol. 142. if he hath view in a precipe and afterwards abates the Writ for false Latine or for some other cause apparent he shall again have another Writ because there the Court might have abated this without motion For W. 2. cap. 49. although general intends where the Tenant abates the Writ by exception not apparent by 25. E. 3. cap. 16. by non-tenure of parcel no Writ abateable but for the quantity intends if the thing demanded be several as Acres but all the Writ shall abate where the thing demanded is entire as a Mannor before fol. 109. and the intent of the Statute never was contrary to the Text. By W. 2. cap. 25. if one fail of a Record he shall be a Disseisor yet a woman Covert shall not be 11. H. 4.50 nor infant because excepted by the intent yee in words hath included all So extenders shall not pay presently according to the words of Acton Burnel which ought to answer presently c. but shall be debtors presently with the duty and chargeable with the payment and daies payable of the rent or Revenues receiveable So by Exposition it seems against the Text of the Statute and is not because the intent of the makers guides them to it Of the part of the Defendant it was argued That the Action shall be sued there in Wales where the receipt is alleadged although that Wales is united to England by 27. H. 8. because by the same Statute Wales is divided into 12. Counties and by 34. and 35. H. 8. four Justices are appointed for wales viz. one for every three Counties and hold plea of all things within their circuit and one seal appointed for every circuit and all Actions suable there by the words of
copulative for to make words to stand with reason and with the intent of the parties as the Obligee shall pay 10. l. if he infeoff not him or his Heirs when he cometh to I. intends yet words disjunctive in sense That he shall infeoff him if he be living and if dead then his Heirs because he cannot have an Heir during his life so here a Covenant to make a Lease at a time to come to him and his Assignes Copulatively shall be taken disjunctively viz. to him if he be alive and to his Assignes if he be dead So 4. Mar. before 171. A. and B. Grants a Rent Charge of 20. s. out of all lands which they both have the Grantee shall have several 20. s. out of both their lands and yet the Grant was out of the lands which were to A. and B. 19. H 6.3 I release all actions which I have against A. and B. if he hath any actions against either of them they are gone So Arbitrators 2. R. 3.18 may make Arbitrement of actions joynt and several where one and two others submit themselves to their arbitrement because it literally couples them yet in sense goes to them severally And so in the Common case in Indenture of bargain and sale which Covenants to make a sure estate or deliver evidences to the Bargainee and his heirs within two moneths and he dies before he ought to make the estate to his Heirs because impossible to be performed literally viz. joyntly for in his life he cannot have Heirs that thing which another doth by my authority is my act As if I demise That I. S. shall sell my land or authorize my Steward to demise it or my Baily to sell my sheep which doth it so it is my alienation demise and sale by him So the second Executor shall be immediate Executor and in such degree to the first Testator as the first executor was as chosen by the first executor by force of the Authority given to him by the first Testator which intends the same or otherwise all contracts would be destroyed by the Common Law in a short time viz. after the death of the first executor because administrators could not have actions given to the intestate untill 31. E. 3. cap. 11. proved by 10. E. 3.2 the executor of an executor because executors have not those actions by the Common Law but by Statute and because by equity they were not to be extended to an executor of an executor but the action of Debt was put in the Act in 25. E. 3. cap. 5. not of necessity because the Law gave it to an executor of an executor before but for to take away the doubt that some had of it and so an executor of an executor may have all actions that the Common Law gives to the first executor and so may have actions of Covenant and if not they should have it by equity of the Statute of 25. E. 3. cap. 5. Admitting that the word Assignee was void or omitted out of the Covenant yet this Lease here shall be made to the executor for that the intent which is the chief thing to be considered in every agreement was such which shall be performed so near as may be or the words shall not be effectual and the chief effect of the agreement was the estate which should be made not the person to whom but if the Tenant bind himself and Covenant to do corporall service to the Lord he cannot to the Heir or executor because it must be done to the body of the Lord and if I perish the thing also perisheth The intent performed and not the words good as in the cases of Litl fol. 82. That the Feoffee shall re-infeoff the Feoffor and his Wife and the Heirs of their two bodies before fol. 6. And it is not requisite alwaies that in agreements every thing ought to be performed according to the words for if the Mortgagee accept of another thing in another place good Litl f. 79. So if the Obligee cometh not to the place at the day appointed to receive his summ he hath not lost it 7. E. 4.4 but 19. H. 8 12 if the Obligee sue for the penalty the Obligor ought to shew that he was ready at the day and place and say that he is yet ready So payment of a lesser summ at another place Perk. fol. 145. or before the day 10 H. 7.14 good So Litl fo 77. upon a Mortgage the Heir or Executor of the Feoffer shall pay at a day certain and Litl fol. 76. the Feoffee of the Feoffee pays at the day good because he hath interest in the Land So 17. E. 3. ass pl. 2. the Disseisor Grants by Indenture That if the Disseisee paies unto him 10. l. such a day that one release which the Disseisee hath made to him shall be void and before the day the Disseisor makes a Feoffment and at the day 10. l. was paid to the Feoffee Words performed and not the intent as it may be in some cases yet the agreement is not performed as 21. H 6.10 before fol. 23. one binds himself that his Feoffees of the mannor of D. shall Grant out of it 40. s. annual Rent to the Plaintiff he hath 3. Feoffees and two Grants it is nought because he intended that all should do it for there but two parts of the Mannor are charged So 3. H. 7.4 one bindes himself to infeoff me of the Mannor of Dale he infeoffs an other of parcel and afterwards me of the Mannor he hath performed the words but not the intent which was That I shall have all the Mannor as then it was So before fol. 21. and 23. si vellet inhabitare residens c. during the Term intends all the Term. So 10. E. 4.16 the words of a verdict true yet the verdict false because he brought Annuity as Abbot and prescribe so without naming of him parson where he had the annuity in right of his Parsonage as Parson Impersonee the new Lease here shall be in the Executor of the Executor to the use of the first Testator because the Title of Covenant cometh to him derived from the first Testator and that which is done in perfermance of the Covenant ought to be in him in such degree as the Covenant was in him So 11. H. 6.11 An Executor assignes Auditors to one which was an Accomptant to the Testator and he is found in arrearages the Executor shall have Debt in the Detinet onely because the Debt shall be in him as Executor and hath a respect to the foundation So 32 H. 8. and Doctor and Student 92. One hath a Villain for years as an executor the Villain purchaseth hands the executor enters it shall be to the use of the Testator and assets in his hands because the Villain which was the cause of it was to such use So here the Covenant which was the cause of the Lease cometh to the executors in right of the
Sturgeons because they are the most excellent fishes that the sea or water renders So that the Treatise of Praerogativa Regis ca. 11. which saith Rex habebit Balneas Sturgiones is but a Declaration of the Common Law before Secondly for the necessity of defending his people and preserving the Common-wealth against forreign hostility Thirdly for the commodity of his Subjects That they by the Coin made thereof which the King onely may make may have between them mutual Commerce and Traffick because if the subject shall have gold or silver found in his own land he might convert it into Coyn for falsifying or counterfeiting money was Treason at the Common Law and for that cause a woman was burnt 23. ass pl. 2. Also it would be inconvenient That a subject which is proprietor in the land should have it for that he thereby would exceed the King in Treasure which would be perilous to his estate The second proofe was by presidents of three sortes First Commissions Grants and Demises by which the King hath Granted such Mines in others Lands viz. in Annis 32. E. 3.8 R. 2.5 H. 6. 15. E. 4. and primo H. 7. and in some of them the King gave licence to digg in another land without licence of the owner and where some of them saith habita licentia fodiendi which is intended land subject where they give amends for the digging or Assign part to the Lord of the Soil this is of courtesie and clemencie of the Prince and not of necessity Secondly Accounts of the Grantees of such Mines Thirdly Informations and Impleading of them which have disturbed the Grantees or Imported their Oar also the King may punish him which taketh Oar in another mans Soil And so Charters Accounts and Pleas against the takers of Gold and Silver in the Soil of another proves strongly those Mines to belong to the King by his Prerogative for the Records of every Court are the most effectual proofs of Law in matters Treated of in this Court and account lies not against an Executor by any except for the King Litl f. 28. The King may seise the Land of his Debtor which he hath by what means or whosoevers hands it cometh after the cause of the Debt Sir William Candish case in the Exchequer The 3. proofe is upon authorities of Law viz. The book called Exposition of Terms of the Law and the reading of Hescot of Charta Forestae and the Laws of St. Edward the Confessor and William the Conqueror and so those Authorities and the said presidents and the reasons aforesaid for the excellency of the Metal and for the necessity of it and the publique good agreeing in one That the King shall have all Mines and Oars of Gold and Silver in Land is Treasure found Thesauri de terra taken for Gold and Silver in Land is Trea. sure Trove the use and continuance Ratifies this Prerogative by prescription although that it need not be contained in the Treatise of Praerogativa regis for the King the Common Law hath many which are not there recited as Tenant of the King aliens without Licence it was a forfeiture before the Statute of 1. E. 3. cap. 12. 9 E. 3.26 although it be to the preiudice of another Free-holder yet because the Law gives those Mines to the King it giveth to him all necessary means to have it by digging with all incidents thereunto for every Prerogative contains in it self prescription for it is in usage and as prescription and usage will give Title or interest to the King in the Free-hold of another as by Prerogative the King might enter into the woods of another and take Trees for to repair his Castles before the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 22. so he might Afforest another mans woods before the Statute of Forresta cap. 2. So 7. H. 3. he might break a Pond and take the fish for his provision So 27. ass pl. 49. The Lord might not take his Villain yet is his freehold and inheritance in the presence of the King for it is a Protection to him for the time So 13. E. 4.6 The King may distrain for his Rent Charge in all the other Lands of him which ought to pay it So the Prerogative of the King chargeth his other Freehold to the Kings distress The King shal have by his Prerogative Mines of Copper containing Gold or Silver in the Lands of another because they are as a thing entire by the Commixture magis dignum trabit ad se minus dignum as 41. E. 3.32 36. H. 6.26 and 3. H. 7.14 The Heir shall have the Charters with the Box if it be sealed so Carts to which Horses are tyed if it fall upon a man the King shall have all Stamford fol. 20. before 243. because as one thing they altogether occasion his death So the King shall have all the Obligations and Horses where one of the Joynt-Tenants is attainted because a thing entire proves that the King shall have all where Gold or Silver mixt with base mettal by Commissions 7. E. 3. and 17. R. 2. 7. H. 4. 17. H. 6.30 and 31. of H. 6. proved also by accounts for Silver and base Mettal no Mine of Copper void of Gold or Silver no Mine of Tin void of Silver and therefore those of Devon and Cornwal for digging in their Land and in other Land for Tin and to have this to their use derive their power from the Kings of this Realm made unto them and giving them such liberties as by Charter 33 E. 1 confirmed by R. 2. but the power given to them for to digg in anothers Land and to pull down houses of another was restrained by the Statute of 50. E. 3. Darby shire and other places prescribes to take lead of Mines steril which is without Gold or Silver without paying any thing On the part of the Earl against the Queen The thing of the most in value is worthiest where the Quantity of Copper exceeds the Quantity of Gold yet the lesse is the most precious Quantity for Quantity the Gold or Silver ought to be of more value then the charges of separating of it from the base Mettal cometh to otherwise this aliquid nihil est if he hath lost by it Wast of 2. d. is dispunishable because de minimis non curat Lex 9. H. 6.36 38. E. 3.7 by this reservation upon the said Demises it is intended a good quantity of Gold or Silver Also because the information sheweth not what value of Gold or Silver is to defray the charge which is incertain and bad because this is the Declaration of the King Also Commissions are not of great estimation but shew the obedience of Subjects and are made at their requests for whom they are granted and many of the said Commissions and Leases were limited That the Grantee should make to the owners of Lands in Cornwal used for the digging of Tin before the said Charter proves by the words themselves
Marriage that she shall not refuse 9. H. 6.9 Recitall of an Indenture of defeasans concludes the party to deny the Deed. By the Counsell of the Plaintiffe the Act of Parliament cannot enure as a Confirmation of an Attainder and as a new Attainder also for then a man shall be twice convict of one Crime which shall be superfluous yet 1. H. 5.5 One attainted of Fellony may be arraigned of Treason because it is a higher offence and shall forfeit Lands of whomsoever holden if the Treason is committed before the Fellony but where offences are equall he shall not be twice attainted for one Deed shall not be a Confirmation and Grant of one same thing As the King recites by his Letters Patents that he hath made J. a Denison or hath manumissed him being his villain and confirm it and besides grants that he shall be a Denison or Free all this is but a confirmation because the Kings Patents shall not enure to two intents and therefore cannot plead the second Patent for his Legitimation or Manumission But the first Patent so 9. H. 7.2 before fol. 156. and 7. H. 7.14 The King grants Land by his Letters Patents and reciting them confirmes the Estate of the Patentee by the second Letters Patents by authority of Parliament and saith further that he gives and grants the same Land to the Patentee he shall plead the second by way of Confirmation because the Land pass by the first Patent not by the second if he doth not shew that the Land came again to the Kings hands after the first Patent But if the King grants Pasture for two Oxen in his Land and by the second Patent reciting his first Grant confirmes it and moreover giveth and granteth Pasture for two Oxen to the first Grantee there it shall enure as a Grant and confirmation also And the Grantee shall have Pasture for foure Oxen because they are severall things which are mentioned in the Confirmation and in the Grant And in the other Cases before it is one same thing mentioned in both and not severall Also the Statute recites none but persons therere cited to be attainted but the Plaintiffe was not attainted before for the reasons aforesaid therefore he is not attainted by the Statute as the King recites by name that such and such were Burgesses of L. and grants to the Burgesses before named to be quit of Toll c. that will take the benefit of it they ought to averre who is Burgess of L. And if the Plaintiffe be attainted by Act also and the Defendant will plead this so then his plea shall be double because he hath pleaded an attainder by the Common Law and also by the Statute But here it is not double because it is not a new attainder but a Confirmation And because he cannot plead the Confirmation without the thing that was Confirmed Also the Recitall and Confirmation by the Statute is not taken but pro ut And also the recitall being false shall be intended to be upon Information And therefore an averment lies against this recitall So a License to alien Lands holden of the King ut dicitur there he which hath the Lisence is not Estopped to say that it is holden of another then the King because the Tenure in Capite is not precisely affirmed but ut dicitur which taketh away all absolute affirmance 29. Ass 38. Also the Statute refers to an Attainder had before And so to a thing which is not inre● veritate for the cause aforesaid and therefore shall be void but if the things was before and wanteth force and effect then this shall be made good by the Statute and there the Act is good and hath power as to the thing 29. E. 3. 24. Grants Fitzh 100. The King reciting an Attainder by Parliament of one Mattravers by his Charter of Pardon reverseth the same and restores him and after this all is recited in another Parliament and Confirmed by the same Parliament and good for the Cause aforesaid So 38. H. 6.33 Parliament confirmes the first Letters Patents this enures according to the Effect and Purport of the first grant and shall not take away the Condition if any such be the King gives Land to J. S. the Parliament Confirmes it s a good grant And so when the Parliament Confirmes a thing which is defective it shall give power to it if it be Confirmed as here the Act shall be void to all purposes as 5. E. 4.40 and 41. If one Village hath Customes which is against the Law and Reason and no others and the Parliament Confirmes their Customes it is void because they had not Customes for things used meerly against the Law and Reason are not Customes notwithstanding such usage And if the branch of one Act recites another Act be it in the Commencement or Continuance it is void as 1. E. 6. c. 12 repeales all offences made Fellony after the Commencement of the reigne of H. 8. and by one branch in it this Statute excepts imb●sselling of goods by servants made Fellony in the seven and twentieth yeare of H. 8. commencing the 4. of February and continuing untill the 24. of Aprill whereas it finished the fourteenth of Aprill and so Statutes which misrecite things and are referred to them should be void and conclude no man And so here the Statute which recites that the Plaintiffe was attainted and confirmes it whereas indeed he was not attainted shall be void Coles Case IF one gives to another a mortall wound 13. Eli. whereof he languish the 12. of February and the Queen by a generall Pardon by Parliament Pardon all misdemeanors c. the 20. day of February and after the party dies Now this murther is Pardoned Adjudged for that the wound was a Misdemeanor and the cause of death and then by consequence all that which ensueth the Cause is also pardoned The end of the first Book Newis and his Wife against Larke and others A Man devise his Lands to his eldest Son in tayle M. 13. 14. El. in the Common Pleas. Remainder to his youngest Son in tayle the Remainder to the heires of his body the Remainder over in Fee and moreover his Will was that if any of his entaylees do wrong vex or molest any other of them for the sayd Lands or should Mortgage bargaine and sell c. the sayd Lands or otherwise incumber it other then to Lease it to them that from thenceforth every such person and his heires that shal so doe shall be excluded and dismissed touching the said intaile and that the conveyance of the intaile of the said Lands against him or them shall be of no force But that it shall descend and come to the party next in tayl to him as if such disorderous person had never bin mentioned in the sayd Testament And after the eldest Son levies a Fine and after he and the youngest Brother suffer a common Recovery and their Sister enter and by
Land to him for fifty foure yeares rendring Rent hath issue and dyes before any Proclamation made and after the Proclamations passe and after the Husband and Wife dyes Adjudged that the Lease is good against the issue of N. in tayle by reason of the Rent otherwise it were if the Rent had not been reserved First The Lease had not been voyd against N. T. the Father himselfe if he had survived the Husband and Wife if it were by words notwithstanding it be a present contract because it depends upon an estate for life which is uncertaine when it shall determine otherwise it is if the first had been a Lease for yeares which containe certainty there the second Lease shall be voyd for the first terme except that it be by Deed poll with Attournment in which case it shall enure by way of a grant of the Reversion if the party will use it so or by Indenture or Fine which are matters of Estoppell Secondly The Lease is but voidable against the issue because of the Rent which is a recompence otherwise it is of a charge for it shall be voyd by the Remitter and inasmuch as this contingent Lease is not avoided but continues during the Proclamations the Statute of 32. H. 8. maketh this a barr against the issue during the terme Thirdly A Lease by word made by the Husband and Wife is the Lease of the Husband onely and not of the Wife possession without title is sufficient to make an Advowry for dammage feasant protection pleaded for part and Inter alia good by the Rule of the Court A Fine pleaded by way De finalie Concordia facta fuil and not that he levied a Fine and also pleaded that it was acknowledged in the Kings Court without saying in the Common pleas is good and 22. H. 6.13 A Fine is a Record although it be not ingrossed and shall be executed Fourthly How and in what degree this Lease passe at the beginning by the Fine The estate of N. not altered by the Fine of a stranger which had not any right or Estate in the Land but is Estopped for his life to say otherwise but that he receives fee simple by the Fine Leases by word by Deed Poll by Indenture are to be considered how they shall enure As if a Lease be made by words without Deed of Lands by one that hath see simple for one and twenty years to commence presently rendring a rent and after the same day maketh a new Lease by Paroll to another for the same terme or for a lessor terme the second Lease is void although that the first Lessee surrenders or forfeits because at the time of the first Lease he hath not but a Reversion and no interest in him to contract for the possession And he that will by contract make another possessor of the thing ought to be proprietor of the same himself As if one sells a Horse upon condition that the Vendee shall pay him forty shillings at Easter and after he sells the Horse to a stranger and after the first Vendee payes not the forty shillings at Easter and the Vendor reseiseth the Horse the second Vendee shall not have the Horse because the Vendor had him not at the time of the sale the Condition only inables him not to contract for the property and possession which he then had not but if the Lessee for one and twenty years be and the Lessor the same day grant the Reversion by Deed for twenty one years to commence presently it is good with Attournment and he shall have the Reversion during the first Lease and the Rent as incident thereunto because it is another thing then the possession So a Lease by word for years to commence after the first year is good because it is of another thing then the first Lessee had because the second Lessee is to have the possession after the first possession and interest expired A man leases for one and twenty years in possession and presently maks a Lease of it for one and thirty years by word this is good for the last ten years and Executory for it for a Lease for years is Executory and severall for every yeare and day and is as to execution as severall contracts And therefore such contract may be good in part and void in part So if he Leases for 21. years to commence 10. years after and he maketh a Lease for 31. years to commence presently it is good for the first 10. years and void for the last 21. years for that he had contracted before and was certain although that the first Lease were forfeited or surrendred otherwise it is if the first Lease had bin incertain as a Lease for life there the second Lease had bin good after the Tenants life not during his life although he surrendred or forfeited unlesse it had bin by Fine or Indenture because Estoppels if the second Lease for the same years be by Deed Poll there the reversion with the rent pass by Attornment by the demise of the land by the name of Land if the possession cannot as a Reversion upon an Estate for life passeth by bargaine and sale of the land by Deed inrolled and the Grantee may use his Deed as he pleaseth and therefore may use it as a Grant of a Reversion with attornment otherwise it is if it be by word because the Reversion for years cannot be granted by word But if Lessee for years will use a Leas Poll as a present Leas where he hath not attornment the Leas is void although the first surrendred or forfeited as it is if it were by word because a contract by Deed Poll passeth not that which another then injoyes But if the second Lease were by Fine or Indenture and the first surrendred or forfeited it is good for if one leases land to me which he hath not at the time by Fine or Indenture and after purchase it or it desends to him I may enter and occupy by Estoppell and I shall be compelled by Estoppell to pay the Rent because every one is concluded to say but that the land passeth in possession for fourty five yeares by Estoppell and shall be good in estate to have the other yeares because they are not incurred in the life time of the Tenants for life for if the Lease for fourtie five yeares had been by word and the particular Tenant for life had died the Lessee should have it against the Lessor If the estate given by the Fine is defeated the Fine shall be void although the Proclamations passe after for the Fine is the Principall and the Proclamations but accessary to the Fine as Tenants in taile disseised levies a Fine to the disseisor Sur conusans de droit or sur release and dies there the issue if he enters before all the Proclamations are passed is remitted and is not harred for that 32. H. 8. which saith that Fines after Proclamations bars tayle intends of Fines remaining
and the Defendant shew a matter in Law which upon the Law discussed proves the said matter alledged by Plaintiste true or false there he ought not to take a traverse for then the Jury shall try this matter in Law which properly belongeth to the Court to discusse Per Curiam 1. Appropriation of an Advowson ought alwayes to be made to a body Politicke or Corporation Spirituall being Patron of the said Advowson and such Parson onely is capable of an Appropriation and no other and by the Law such Parson in Parsonee may not grant over his Incumbency no more then an Incumbent of a Parsonage presentable at this day nor any other shall have it because it is appropriate to his Parson 3. E. 3.1 The Case of the Templers that by their dissolution the Appropriation was dissolved And yet was first ordained when such Parsons by incroachment and sufferance were made Parsons in Parsonees which could not say Service nor Administer the Sacraments as Deane and Chapter Nuns Abottesles c. which was a thing horrible by the Lord Dyer 2. Every Appropriation shall be made by the King for the losse which he may have otherwise as King by reason of the Tenure and by the or dinary Supreame or Inferiour for the interest that they ought to have in seeing the Cure served by the Patron to whom the Appropriation shall be made and those three are Actors in the Play as Dyer said But here the Appropriation made by the King which is also Supreame ordinary by the Statute of 25. Hen. 8. which transfers to him the Authority of the Pope is good As the Deane of Wells Assigne to the King good by the Court because he is Supreame ordinary by the Statute of 25. Hen. 8. in Sir John Pollards Case against Waldron and here the King doth three things First he grants the Advowson Secondly he maketh the Appropriation as Supreame Ordinary Thirdly he giveth his consent as King fol. 501. if time of Lapps be devolved to the King hee shall present as Supreame Patron in respect that the Advowson is holden of him mediately or immediately If the Appropriation be made without License of the King be the Advowson holden of him or of a common Parson the King shall seise the Advowson and shall have the Presentments untill hee be satisfied of the Fine by his Prerogative and as in the name of a distresse 21. E. 3.5 And there it is said That the Appropriation is not Mortmaine because it is not any transmutation of the possession nor Substraction of Services but the Tenure remaineth as it was before 3. The Appropriation may be made by words future when the Church is full although that the Incumbent hath the Fee and Inheritance of the Church and none shall medle with it which is his in his life but otherwise it is of present words and the proper time to appropriate it is when the Church is void because then it may be executed presently But the Patron cannot present when it is full by future words scilicet that he shall be incumbent when the Church shall be void For that he hath not Title to Present before the avoydance If the King presents to an Advowson and appropriate the Church to a Deane and Chapter which maketh a Lease for yeares in the life of the Incumbent this is a voide Lease after the death of the Incumbent by Plowden for that at the time of the making of it they had nothing in the Rectory and the Appropriation was not executed untill after the avoydance 4. An Usurpation may not be upon a Parson in Parsonee for that he is perpetuall Incumbent and two Incumbents cannot be in one Church 38. H. 14.39 H. 6.21 and 27. and there cannot be ousted by wrong nor have right of Advowson for he is not out of Possession and if one presents to such an Advowson Appropriate and the Clerk is admitted Instituted and Inducted by six moneths yet the Church is not become Presentative nor by any other Act except onely where the Parson in Parsonee himselfe presents for there volemi non sit injuria by Manwood and Dyer the dissolution of the Corporation to which the Advowson is Appropriate is a disappropriation of the Advowson and the Lord of whom it is holden may Present If a Deane and Chapter seised of a Mannor to which an Advowson is Appendent and the Church is Appropriate to them and after they make a Feoffement of the Mannor with the Appurtenances this disappropriates the Advowson for by some it passeth Appendent by the common Law because the Appropriation destroyes not the Appendency But now by the Statute which maketh lay Persons capable of Parsonages Appropriate they are severed from Mannors by the intent of the Act and by the grant of the Parsonage Appropriate which now may be granted to a common Parson and the Advowson shall passe Foure answers to the foure exceptions of the Plea First The first exception is because the Patent is not pleaded with a Non obstante of the Statute of Mortmaine and therefore not good by Dyer But Plowden held the contrary for that the Grant is good untill Office found and then hee may well pleade a licence for that time also the Patent is Excerta scientia which countervailes the clause of Non obstante for that implies that the King was knowing of the Law for ignorance indeed may be allowed in the King ignorance in Law not So if the King grant Lands to his Villain the Land passeth untill Office but it is no infranchisement because if he was his Villain or not is a forrain matter and not apparent to the King And the Kings Grant shall not enure to two intents where one is forraine matter The clause of Non obstante is requisite in a Patent to be Sheriffe for life 2. H. 7. because the Statute saith by precise words That he shall not be Sheriffe above one yeare So a Patent to a Murtherer for pardon and that he shall not finde sureties for his good behaviour ought to have a Non obstante 10. E. 3. because this Statute avoided the Patent by precise words without such surety But the Statute of Mortmaine doth not so here but giveth entry or seisure for a paine admitting the Grant to be good The second exception was that the Patent made not them Parson by expresse words by Dyer The second exception was answered by Plowden who said because the words amounted to as much and for that the Kings appeared to be so that it should not be void because Ex gratia mero motu The third exception made by Dyer was that they did not plead that they entred But Plowden answered that because the Patent granted them power to retaine c. And also they pleaded that they were seised which implies an entrie and in the Common Pleas use upon possession executory shall say seised onely without saying that he entred and was seised The fourth exception that was made
thereof he entred this is a departure from the Bar for it is a new matter For the same reason a special agreement in evidence shall not maintain the general issue one witness is not enough nor one Juror for to try an issue if more were warned by the Sheriff 8. E. 3.50 So here the Defendant had but one witness which proves for him which is not sufficient and so judgement shall be given for the King Atkins for the Defendant A witness produced to prove a thing if he saith That he knoweth nothing of the matter his deposition is void so if he depose negatively as to say no more was not entred then so much and if no witness the knowing of the Jurors aid not the tryal of the matter and a Verdict given contrary to the testimony of witnesses good It is not needfull to aver that which of necessity must be intended as that the King hath a Beam there special agreement is an agreement as a Feoffment upon condition is a Feoffment and so this word Agreement includes every agreement by which the evidence well maintains the issue The Statute speaks not of surety and peradventure intends it not and therefore in vain to speak of it and therefore it may be he hath not answered to this exception Agreement in our Law is threefold viz. Executed at the beginning of it with payment intended by the Statute of 25. E. 3. cap. 3. which saith That goods bought by fore-stallers are forfeited to the King if the buyer had made agreement with the seller such agreement is not meant in our case because then the Statute should not be intended in the disjunctive for then the first and the second clause should be all one but the word Or disjoyns the clauses Agreement to an act made by another as in 20. E. 4.9 To a disseisin to his use maketh him a disseisor from the beginning so the party ravished to agree to the ravisher is an agreement executed here because nothing is to be done afterwards and agreement here may not be an executory agreement because the performance shall be afterwards yet both parties accord at one time before 26. H. 8. cap. 3. intends such because it speaks of payment or agreement for first fruits c. and common usage to pay after upon obligation made before proves this which intends agreement executory and here agreement is intended executory because it is not the first nor the second and an agreement executory is Duplex the one certain at the beginning as this of first fruits the other by matter ex post facto upon certainty to be known as here and such agreement executory the Statute will warrant for no Law will punish him in whom there is no default and where he cannot prevent the mischance by no possibility for the necessity of the matter and for that inevitable chance shall not prejudice any 20. H. 7.11 Fineus A man by the Common Law may kill another in his own defence or as a champion for the necessary safeguard of his life and the Tryal of right so notwithstanding the custom of the Realm new Natura brevium 94. b. If enemies of the King steal of Guests the Hoastler is discharged because he cannot resist So if the ship were on fire the casting of the goods on the land without payment or agreement for the Subsidie shall excuse the Defendant so here the extremity of the Tempest doth excuse the vigor of the Statute Sanders the Kings Serjeant Notwitstanding that an agreement conditional is included in the words of the Statute viz. The Collector not agreed with yet every Statute although it be penal shall be taken as the makers intended for the Statute of Waste is If any make waste in Lands which he holdeth by Demise c. yet if his Estate be Ex ligatione it shall be punishable in waste and yet the Statute gives Ex demissione onely suo de assignat and so it is holden 10. H. 6.3 But Gloucester cap. 5. W. cap. 14. nor Martebridge cap. 13. speaks nothing de demissione So quia emptores terrarum viz. W. 3. speaks secundum quantitatem terrae intend valore So 4. E. 4.12 An information for shipping Wooll without sureties of the carrying of Bullion according to the 14. E. 3. the last chapter holden good because the finding of sureties is not repealed by the general words of 36. of E. 3. cap. 11. which giveth the old custom of half a Mark for every sack after three years nor of 45. E. 3. cap. 4. which imposeth no charge upon Wooll other then Custom and Subsidie granted to the King and without assent of Parliament and the two last Sta●intend not for to discharge Bullion but great Subsidies upon Wooll after 3. years so that the mind intent of the makers shall expound the general and doubtfull words of Star and abridge the generalty of them so here it shall be intended an agreement certain Also because the Commons pray the King That he will be pleased to accept of their Grant for that the words of the Statute which is their Grant shall be taken more beneficial for the King and most strong against the Grantors according to the Principle of the Common Law in case of a common person So the Statute of Prerogativa Regis 17. Ed. 2. Rastal wards 13. is the Grant of the Commons to the King which saith The King shall have the custody of all the Lands of such which hold of him by Knights service in Capite whereof the Tenants were seized in their Demeasne as of Fee at the day of their death of whomsoever they hold also by like Knights Service and notwithstanding that Fee is commonly taken to be Fee-Simple yet the King shall have of Tail because it shall be construed most strongly for the K. where it hath two intendments Agreements upon which the Common Law giveth no remedy are void and not good as in 19. H. 6.36 Upon an information for the forging of false Deeds the Defendant pleads Arbitrement made viz. That the Plaintiff shall not farther prosecute his Writ against the Defendant and saith also That the Defendant shall be non-suited in the Assize This is no Plea because non-suited founds not in satisfaction and cannot compell him to be non-suited for the award is not good if it be not executed wholly or the thing awarded may be recovered by action and therefore in 6. H. 7.10 In Trespass to say That he hath paid money but he hath not made his windows which the Heir may compel him to do for the concord is intire but wants execution in all and indeed before action brought is not good then it is performed yet not immediately and therefore it was held no Plea So in 27. ass pl. 5. A Baily known pledge the Ox of his Master for Wheat and if he pays not c. he shall keep the Ox alwaies This shall bind the Master because the wheat cometh to his use otherwise
compulsive so that he shall have prejudice if he doth not but is a thing obligable at the will of the Defendant and then his entry is not material but is at pleasure and therefore the not shewing thereof shall not make the Plea vicious Admitting that it be a Condition yet it is subsequent and in Defeasance of his Estate 30. And therefore shall not be shewed by him but by him which shall have benefit by the breaking of it So if a Condition be enlarged which may be good leaveth that out which is material because it is Surplussage Also it hath no Livery for to convey Title nor hath it enabled him any waies to take the benefit of the breach of the Condition if it were broken because he hath Demurred generally upon the Bar in which the Defendant hath not acknowledged any reversion And so it appeareth not by the Record that he is other then a meer stranger And by the Common Law no man shall take benefit of a Condition but such a one as is privy And therefore 38. H. 8.34 Pattentees of the King after 177. Also if it be a Condition during the Term it shall be intended all the Term as a man bound to perform Covenants is bound to perform all and his Feoffees fol. 30. Yet if he be sometimes absent and his Family there it is good because the Law shall have a reasonable Construction in things alwaies If W. dies then the Remainder is a Limitation and appoyntment of the time when the remainder shall vest But admitting that it be a Condition yet a Remainder may depend upon a Condition which every lawfull owner of the land may give to what person or persons and in what manner and at what time he pleaseth if his gift be not against Law or repugnant as 10. E. 3.39 A man makes to his Termor in surety of his Term a Charter of Feoffment upon Condition That if he be disturbed of any part of his Term that then he shall have Fee he was disturbed and afterwards outed and recovers in Assise which proves that the Franck-Tenant passed upon condition express to the Livery be it mediate or immediate it stales not the Remainder because his Livery shall be taken most strongly against him So 27. H. 8.24 Remainder to a stranger if the gift fail for bearing of the standard So in Plessintons case it is held That the estate of Free-hold there could not Commence upon Condition but the cause wherefore was because he had not the Free-hold upon performance of the Condition which was repugnancie So a Remainder upon condition contrary to the Law or impossible is not good because a Condition unlawfull or impossible may not obtain the thing by doing of it So if the Do●… aliens then it shall remain is not good because repugnant for when he hath aliened to one it may not remain to another Remainder ought to have estate precedent for that 9. H. 6.24 Lease to a Monk Remainder over void because a Monk hath not capacity and so the estate which precedes the Remainder void Remainder also ought to be of a thing in esse before and therefore a Grant of a rent out of land remainder in Fee void because the rent was not in esse before and the remainder here passeth presently by the Livery upon possibility to be afterwards performed and vests when W. dies and in the mean time rests in abeyance as 15. H. 7.10 Fee Tail passeth upon possibility That a Fem Covert and a married man may inter-marry and in the mean time the Inheritance viz. The Tail shall be in abeyance but holden there That they are seised in Tail presently and concludes that the Remainder is good and the pleading also and so the Plaintiff shall be Barred Plat against the Sheriffes of London ONe Goodlad was in Execution Ludgate upon a recovery in Debt had against him by plaint in the Guild-Hall of London 4 E. 6. In the Excheq and going with a Baston that is to say a Servant of the Gaolers attending upon him into Southwark in the County of Surrey and the Administrator of him which recovered brings his Bill of Debt into the Exchequer against the Sheriffs for the escape and adjudged that he should recover thereupon But no exceptions were taken to the Bill and the reasons of the Judgement were 1. For that the Action lyeth at the Common-Law by 45. E. 3.9 Debt against one Abbot or Prior and also for that That he had not remedy against him which escaped for by the esape he is discharged for ever against the party and the Goaler also and the Officer which suffers the escape is charged contrary to 13. H. 7.1 But the Action lay not by the Common Law by 42. ass 11. 2. Admitting that it lay not by the Common Law yet it lyeth by equity of the Statute of 1. R. 2. c. 12. which gives an Action against the Warden of the Fleet or by the equity of the Statute of Westm 2. c. 11. which gives an Action against the Gaoler which suffers an Accomptant for to escape 3. The defendants have admitted the action good by their Demurrer 4. That it is an escape because he was out of the Jurisdiction and Authority of the Sheriffs and that his Imprisonment is ended the last instant that he was in London and his escape began the first instant that he came into Southwark and so he was never in prison in Southwark for he had no guard there The effect of every suit contains and implies in it selfe 3. things First to shew the verity of the matter to the Judge thereof which is the duty of the party Secondly to have judgement to recover and execution thereupon and this is the duty of the Judge Thirdly the making of execution for to take the Defendants body and detain it in prison and this is the duty of the Officer and because he only hath offended it is reason that he be punished that is That he answer the loss to the Plaintiff for that he hath not any remedy against him which escapes nor the Gaoler never apprehended him because a personal thing once suspended is extinguished and therefore if the Debtee maketh the Debtor and another which surviveth the Debtor his Executors yet the Debt is extinct and the person of either of them discharged Therefore in respect that after the escape the Plaintiff shall not have other execution and so without any remedie against the Defendant in the first suit the Common Law which is Common Reason provides That the Plaintiff shall have an Action of Debt against the Gaoler in whose default the Execution of the Plaintiff or otherwise the Common Law will be defective in this point And therefore by 45. E. 3. 9. Abridged by Fitz. h. in Title Debt 130. which was before the Stat. of R. 2. where a Prior dative and removeable le ts one in Execution in his Guard for dammages recovered in his Court of Py-powder escape P.
will not claim nor enter into the said land in bar that he entred not nor claimed the Plaintiff replies that he claims he ought to say how viz. That he came to the Land and claimed and entred So in 5. E. 4 6. in Replication the Plaintiff ought to shew how he is next of bloud to the Woman ravished with consent to the ravishment So for Mortmain how he is Ld. So for receipt how he came to the reversion by special conveyance to the things which the Statutes give by general words as here Titles alwaies ought to be certain because he that makes Title is by this an Actor and an Actor ought to plead certainly by Hales fol. 51. b. If a Wife which hath a Joyncture by her Husband suffers a faint recovery contrary to 11. H. 7. if the Daughter enter the Son born after shall not out her during the life of the Wife By Montogue he may enter presently and save because the Statute saith he shall enjoy it according to his Title therein and the Title is Tail which is devolved to the Son and after f. 1●… But the Daughter because prima de sanguine ●…ring because the Wife assents to the Ravisher shall hold against the Son born afterwards and there it is Fee-simple In 5. E. 4.6 So 9. H. 7.25 the Daughter shall hold the Remainder appointed to the right Heirs against a Son born afterwards because it is vested in the Daughter as a purchaser because it is Fee-simple to which the Son afterwards born hath not right for the Land was never in any of his Ancestors before Et possessio fratris de feodo simplici facit c. of Fee-Tail not but it discends to the youngest Son of the half bloud So a Bastard eign-abate in Fee-simple Land and dies without interruption and his issue enter he shall hold against the Mulier puisne 39. E. 3.38 Of Land entailed it is otherwise so it is a great difference between Fee-simple and Fee-Tail and according to the Proverb One shall beat the Bush and another shall have the Bird. As 9. H. 7.24 and 25. A man hath Lands by the Mother and aliens upon Condition and dies without issue the Heir of the part of the Father enters for the Condition broken the Heir on the part of the Mother outs him 14. H. 8.18 by Portman if a Remainder in Tail be once executed the issue in formedon shall declare upon the Gift immediately for all passes at one time and upon one Livery But in 20. Ass Ph. ultima it was shewed of a Reversion after Seisen or making Title by grant of the Reversion he which makes Title is alwaies Actor and ought to plead certainly So 2. H. 6.14 A Patentee sheweth his Letters Patents if he maketh Title by them Words alwaies if they are ambiguous and obscure in Statutes have been expounded according to the intent of the makers as W. 2. cap. 3. speaks when a man amiserit per defaltam is expounded when the Husband and Wife lose by default because the Law alwaies was that the Wife may enter if the Husband alone lose by default So W. 2. cap. 1. Et si finis super hujusmodi tenementa imposterum levetur ipse in re sit nullus The Words seem to make a Fine void but yet it is not void but is a discontinuance and void as to bar the right of Tail So the Statute of Gloucester cap. 3. saith Whereof no Fine is levied intends by husband and Wife for they may well levy the marriages of Women and their Estates and advancement by this are greatly favoured in our Law for 14. H. 8.7 The Wife shall recover her Land given causa matrimonii praelocuti if the Feoffee will not marry her So shall have all Free-hold after Divorce So a Wife shall have a Cui ante divortium to recover the land lost by the Husband and Wife by default before the Divorce So 11. H. 7. intends to punish women if they will recompence this favor of the Law with wrong to the disinherison of Heirs here the Wife hath an Estate in the use and by his inhereditament and the Land and Use also is the inheritance of the Husband and therefore within the words of the Statute because an Use is an Hereditament For 5. E. 4.7 possessio fratris of an Use good for the Sister also if she hath the value of 40. s. in Use 15. H. 7.13.5 E. 4 7. and by Litl 108. he shall be sworn in Assizes by the Common Law and Statute of Pernors of Profits and other Statutes have admitted an Use for an Hereditament and the Land and use also is the inheritance of the Husband for an inheritance is such an Estate as the Heir may inherit as he may here and every Fee and Tail by purchase or discent is inheritance by Littleton and Britton contains many errors As to the Case of cui in vita in 7. H. 4. before fol. 47. by those of the Chancery and also by the Register Original 232. is the one the other quam clamat esse jus hereditat c. The Feoffees here were seised to the use of the husband and every of them hath an entire Use for between Husband and Wife are no moieties and after the execution of the possession to the Use By 27. H. 8. The Parliament made the Conveyance of the Land from one to another and the Feoffees are Donors for when a Gift is made by Parliament every one by it is privy and assents to it yet the thing shall pass from him which hath most right and most Authority to give it As in 21. H. 7.32 He to whose Use and the Feoffee joyn in a Feoffment it shall be said the Feoffment of the Feoffee for they have most Authority for to give this So Tenant for Life and he in a Reversion joyns in a Feoffment it shall be adjudged the Livery of the Tenant for Life So if one seised in Fee and another which hath nothing joyns in a Feoffment it shall be said the Feoffment of him which hath right and the confirmation of the other So here it shall be said the Gift by Parliament of the Feoffees and the assent and confirmation of all others For if any other shall be adjudged the Donor the Parliament should do wrong to the Feoffees in taking the thing from them And an Act of Parliament will not prejudice any man as 19. H. 6.62 the Rector of Edington had an exemption from Tythes by the Kings Grant he afterwards agrees to the Act which granted Tythes to the King and so was one of the Grantors yet shall not take benefit by this but shall be discharged For the Common Law saith That none shall be damnified by such general Act made by the Parliament and therefore W. 2. cap. 1. Gifts upon Condition shall not take away right Pattent in London but that remains to this day with protestation to sue in the nature of a Formedon in
which ought to pay it 13. E. 4.6 The Title of the King appeareth yet he is not party the Court of Office shall adjudge for him Stamford cap. 29. fol. 96. Fitzh nat br 38. E. 31. 6. H. 7.12 and 11. H. 4.71 by customes the custom of London to retain a pledge cujuscunque fuerit until he pays binds not the King 35. H. 6.35 nonsale in market overt 35. H. 6.28 and Doctor and Student 40. nor Wreck Waise nor Stray binds not the King 35. H. 6.26 27. Custom that all distresses taken within his Mannor shall be impounded there binds not the King 21. E. 3 4. by Statutes which binds not the King where he is not named yet he shall take advantage of them As of the Stat of Waste of 9. R. 2. c. 3. of Error and attaint by him in reversion upon a recovery against Tenant for life And of W. 2. c. 7. fol. 140. If the King as Heir to his mother brings asur cui in vita the Plea shall not be delayed by the Nonage of the Heir the King not named is not restrained by Magna Charta cap. 10. upon which the Ne injuste vexes is founded for to avoid incroachment That if the King incroach more then he ought he hath no other remedy then by Petition The King bringeth a Quare impedit in the Common Pleas good notwithstanding Magna Charta quod communia placita c. 31. E. 3.18 E. 3.22 before fol. 240. Plenarty no Plea against the King 43. E. 3.14 Non obstante W. 2. cap. 5.32 H. 8. cap. 2. Of Limitations binds not the King The King may not suffer a Common Recovery for to Dock the Tail as a common person may because no precipe or Covenant lieth against him 12. H 7.12 by Constable So the King shall be in a worse condition then a subject or common person to bar the issue Anthony Brown Justice The name of King drowns the Sir-name of the King and includes it and his proper name also and this word of substance by it self may not be omitted in purchases Pattents or Writs Land given to Henry the seventh omitting King giveth nothing to him omitting his name of Baptism So a gift by him by these words in the Pattent Rex concessit That the name Politick of the King includes his natural name and when this name is conjoyned to his natural person it altereth the quality and degree of the person natural in the estimation of the Law So if that he be within age he shall be adjudged of full age and his attainder frustrate when he is King that the greater removes the Imperfection of the Lesser before fol. 138. the body politick hath the preheminence of the natural body as Land given to the King by the name of Baptism and of King also as to Henry the King and to his Heirs this shall go in succession as the Crown and if he dieth without issue the Heir of the part of his mother which hath the Crown shall have the Land also because this name King being the greater shall have the greater preheminence in the purchase and shall draw the land with him So that his brother of the half bloud being King shall have it yet here the King shall take in such body and in such estate and condition as the Donor limits and not otherwise So if a Gift had been made before the Statute to the King and the Heirs of his Body he had taken Fee Conditional as another Common person That if he dies without issue the Donor should enter without Office And if the King before the Stat. giveth to one and his Heirs of his body there the King shall not have the Reversion more then a Common person should have and there his Donee might alien after issue because the person of the King shall not rule the estate of the land but on the contrary for to make Remitter right and possession ought to discend to one person simul and semel 19. H. 6.59.58 and 45. before the Statute after Issue the Donee might do all acts of a full Fee because then he had full Fee and inheritance and not before 5 6 7 and 8. E. 3. And the words in the Statute hath given prius facia non extenditur intends not the Donees made by the Donors before the Statute but of alienations made by the Donees before the Statute and lawfully and after issue as a Lease for life and release of Tenant in Tail before the Statute good and barred the issue in Formedon after the Statute because it was not voidable neither before nor after the Act if it was according to the power that the Common Law permitted to them 44. E. 3. But the Statute extends as to Alienations after the Statute where the Gift was before So as to the Alienation before the Statute if it were not lawfull as a woman Tenant in Tail taketh Husband having issue they alien before the Statute the issue shall have a Formedon after the Statute that is a discontinuance to the wife because Covert and when she dies a right discends to the issue but if they have aliened by Fine it is good and bars the issue because there it is duly made in respect that she is examined 4. E. 2.12 H. 4.7 before the Statute the King might not Alien before issue had as a Common person might not because the King could not do wrong and his Prerogative could not alter his estate yet the person of the King might alter the course of the thing as purchase of the King shall discend to the eldest daughter onely but if land discend to the King another or Gavel kind to him and his brother the King shall have but the Moity but this Moity shall discend to his eldest Son onely because the quality of the person may alter the discent not the estate be it Fee or Tail So that the estate shall be in the King as in another before fol. 234. and before issue had the Donee could not alien after issue he might and this mischief and other Acts of the Donee the Common Law permitted to Bar issues and the Donor until remedied by the Statute So the Common Law permits other wrongs as Lessee to make waste So if one Joynt-Tenant takes all the profits of the land the other is without remedy at the Common Law Doctor and Student fol. 32. So if the King kill a man So disinheriting of another as here post prolem is a wrong suffered by the Common Law which otherwise the issue should have had and if the issue had not issue then the Donor before the Statute the Donor had not a Reversion yet the land reverted to him as land escheated to the Lord neither had he a Reversion after the Statute of W. 2. c. 1. Yet no word in the Act divides the Statute but the Construction of the Statute ex consequenti divides the estate for to execute the will of the Donor by the intent of
Testator and to the same use shall the Lease The Court increases the costs here Osburn against Carden and Jay A Woman guardian in Soccage taketh husband they make a Lease for years of the Land to Commence at Michaelmas M. 7. 8. El. in K. Bench Tr. and before Michaelmas the Lessee maketh a Lease for a lesser Term of years the Husband dies the Wife enters and being outed bringeth Trespass and adjudged lawful For that the Lease is voidable by the Wife because she hath the Wardship to another use and by reason of Natural affection presumed by the Law to be the nearest friend for the proximity of bloud for that the Custody of him cometh not to the executor Litl fol. 27. The Custody cannot be given by the Husband or forfeited by Utlary or Attainder longer then during the life of the Guardian because no such Natural affection there 33. H. 6.55 But the husband hath interest in the Custody in the right of his Wife for to participate with his Wife in all matters of interest and Prerogatives because they are one person in Law but looseth his interest when his Wife dies because Cessante causa cessat effectus And although Doctor and Student saith fol. 13. That the Wife cannot avoid the Act of the Husband as to give Demise or sell Chattels real or personal which she hath to her own use yet here she may because she hath it in anothers right and the Wardship of the body which is the principal remains which shall be maintained with the profits of the Land and this is in effect the suit of the Ward by the woman Caril against Cuddington A Woman seised of 2. acres in Fee the one holden of the Queen by Knights Service onely M. 7. 8. El. in the Court of Ward the other in Soccage taketh husband she and her husband levies a Fine sur Conusans come ceo of both the Conusee Grants and Renders to the husband and Wife and the Heirs of their bodies Remainder in Fee to the right Heirs of the wife the Husband and wife die their issue within the age of 14. years the Grand-mother on the part of the Mother enters and the Grand-father on the part of the Father of the infant sues as next friend in the Court of Wards because that the Queen hath the Wardship of the acre holden by Knights Service and of the body and adjudged that the Grandfather on the part of the father shall have the wardship of the acre holden in Soccage as Guardian in Soccage and not the Grand-mother for that the Grand-mother by possibility may have the Land by discent after the estate Tail determined and the Grand-father cannot but they are in equal degrees as to the estate Tail the wife here is a purchaser by the Fine of the Fee-simple and the Law is all one of land only as if it were of the land and body also Sherington c. against Stratton ANdrew Bainton by Indenture Covenants and Grants with his brother Edward M. 7. 8. El. in K. B. Tr. for the affection that he hath That the Lands shall discend and come to the Heirs males of their own bodies and continue in the bloud and name of the Baintons and also for brotherly love and good will That he his Heirs and Assignes shall stand seized to the use of himself for his life and after to the use of Edward Bainton for his life and after to the Heirs Males of the body of Andrew and afterwards to the Heirs Males of the body of Edward and adjudged that every of the considerations by it self being grounded upon Nature is sufficient to raise the uses according to the Limitation although it were without Deed. And so Covenant and Grant That he will stand seized to another use by Indenture without any valuable or natural consideration is good enough for that the deed imports consideration in the Will of the Covenantor by Plowden Quere notwithstanding Fleetwood and Wray for the Plaintiff An use is a confidence annexed to the estate with which he departs An use may be created by the Common Law First by Transmutation of Possession as by Feoffment Fine or Recovery to the use intended Secondly without Transmutation of Possession by one Act done importing good consideration which shall make the land subject to the use as a bargain and sale or Covenant or Grant upon good consideration First by a new Act done of two parts 21. H. 7.18 and 6. E. 6. by bargain and sale viz. Land for mony or 36. H. 8. Covenant for marriage because advancement to the Daughter and comfort to her parents Secondly where of one part onely as Covenant for Natural affection from the Father to the Daughter or Brother to Brother and a desire to have the land continue in his name and posterty For a new thing to be done by both is not requisite by the Councel of the Defendant But long acquainiance ancient familiarity or that they have been Scholars in their youth no considerations to raise a use because they are not considerations of value or recompence as if I promise to pay to you 10. l. because you are my Brother or old acquaintance it is Nudum pactum and so note that a use was at the Common Law A new use cannot be Created without consideration but being created and in esse may be granted over without consideration as another Chattel and Doctor and Student fol. 99. may be devised 1. Bromley and another Aprrentice with the Defendant and they Grant that there are two waies by the Common Law to make a Use without Transmutation of possession viz. Bargain and Sale and Covenant upon Consideration proved by the words of 27. H. 8. cap. 10. and Consideration arising from the one part onely good and it is not requisite to have Consideration and a new thing done by both the parties First Consideration It is natural to engender and nourish after engendred or otherwise the first is without effect the Father shall have the Custody and Education of his Son for his natural affection to him Litl fol. 25.33 H. 6.55 and Trespass for taking away his Son Fitzh nat br fol. 143. and 3. E. 4.12 And the Son shall have an Appeal of the death of his Father before others for his earnest intent of revenge and his reciprocal love So a Feoffment to the Son a Suit depending is not Champerty 6. E 3. cap. 274. yet within the words of Articuli super Chartas cap. 2. because by all Laws the Son ought to aid his Father and so out of the intent of the Statute and there by Herle the Son may abet his Mother to bring an appeal of the death of her husband and shall not answer Damages And Litl 8. The Son and Heir apparent endowes his wife ex assensu patru●… good without Livery because the wife of his Son is as his own wife for the love that the Law presumes is between the Father
the Devise shall be void So of an infant which maketh his will publisheth it and dieth at ful age it is not of any effect because death without good Commencement giveth not effect And so the Commencement and the intent of it is to be considered in every act So the Disseisee of two acres in Dale releaseth all his right in all Lands in D. and delivers the release as a scrowle to be delivered the first of May as his Deed the Disseisor before the first of May disseises him of another acre and the release is delivered the 10. of May the right as to the 3. acre shall not pass because the first livery was void to this intent so the consummation of it which is the second livery So I have a Reversion of two acres that I. S. holdeth for life after I purchase the Reversion of another acre which I. S. holdeth for life after I. S. Attourns to B. for all three the third acre passeth not for Attornment passeth not more then was contained in the intent of the first Grant And so here That which is not in the intent at the begining Commencement of the grant shal not be in the intent at the consummation of the same but if he had published his will after he had purchased the new Land there it may be all might pass for by the new publication his intent shall be taken That all that which the words contain at the time of the publication will pass and by him if a man Devise a thing by a name certain as the Mannor of D. or white acre and after purchase the same it shall pass for it shall be taken that he intended to purchase it or otherwise the Will shall be void to all intents 39. H. 6 18. But here when he hath 10. acres and Devises all his Lands they are satisfied in passing of the 10. acres and there is no meaning by the words for the land purchased after the Will because the thing is not named certainly as the Mannor of Dale or White-acre Also he may not Devise the 12. acres because by Dier the Statute 32. and 34. H. 8. cap. 1. and 5. intend that the Devisor shall be seized at the time of the making of the will because it speaks of having Lands which he may Devise and here he hath not those at the time of the Devise Quaere of the case where he Devises by special name and after purchases it because of the word having Second point if the Land vests in the Heir of the Devisor where he dieth in the Life of the Devisor Manwood for the Defendant Because it is more consonant to the will of the Devisor and reason That the effect shall take place and the form perish rather then both should perish together as Devisee for life the Remainder over dies in the life time of the Devisor it is a good Remainder and shall have the immediate possession which is the effect yet the form was for to have by Remainder So if a Dean die or a woman Covert taketh another husband before their Devisor dies yet they are especially named Land shall vest in the new Dean and his Successors and in the woman which is now the wise of another according to the intent because it cannot according to the words and if the intent of a man in Conditions shall be performed as 4. H. 7. by Joy he ought to infeoff the survivor and his heirs onely where the other dieth a fortiori the intent in Wils shall be observed where the words cannot and the effect here is that the Heir shall have the Land and it is the form of the limitation that he shall have it by discent 21. R. 2. Remainder Ecclesiae-Sancti Andreae in Holborn good And Parson shall take because it was comprehended in the Devise although he was not named Lovelas and all the Justices besides Walsh to the contrary For by the death of the Devisee the Devise is countermanded for that the Devisee is not in rerum natura when the Devise took effect and in all gifts be they by Devise or otherwise there ought to be a Donee in esse capable when the thing ought to vest or otherwise the gift is void and the word Heirs limits the estate and not the persons which shall take and enables the Devisee as well to alien as to permit it of Discent for a Discent to the Heir is but a thing subsequent to the estate of Fee-simple first vested in the Devisee and a thing at his pleasure And things of sequel which ensue if the estate had been vested first as are Discent Dower Escheat are not good causes to make things vest in others then those to whom limited And therefore the heir shall not have the land here no more then the woman shall have dower or Lord Escheat if he had died without heir which should be so if it had vested in the Devisee And therefore if a man Devise a Lease or goods to I. S. which dies and afterwards the Devisor dies the Executor of I. S. shall not have them The speaking to the Son of the Devisee That he shall be his heir c. is void for that the Statutes of 32. and 34. H. 8. gives licence and authority to every man to Devise his Lands by his last Will and Testament in writing and those are sufficient in themselves for to make the thing devised pass and not regard words without writing by all the Justices but if he had published the Testament of new the Devisee should have the 12. acres in this case for that it had been as it were a new Testament but not his heirs Delamer against Barnard A Man in 13. H. 8. makes a Feoffment to the use of himself and his wife in special Tail Remainder to the husband in general Tail 10 El in K B ●…r Remainder in Fee to the brother of the husband and after in 26. H 8. The husband maketh a Feoffment to A. which infeoffs the Brother being in Remainder in Fee 2. E. 6. The brother infeoffs the Defendant the Husband dies the heir of the first Feoffee enters to revive the use to the Wife and adjudged lawfull 1. By the Feoffment of the Husband in 26. H. 8. all the estate of the Feoffee to use is drawn out of him and setled in the second Feoffee and by consequence all the uses which were created out of the first Fee-simple are discontinued and shall not be revived untill a re-entry of the Feoffee after the death of the husband and that he may enter then notwithstanding the Feoffment of the Brother 2. The Feoffment of the Brother in Remainder is not warranted by the Statute of 1. R. 3. cap. 5. for that he hath not use in possession nor in esse but only a right which he could not grant neither shall it be executed by the Statute of 27. H. 8. but onely may pass by Livery by way of
So the Husband maketh a Feoffment of the Land of his Wife upon the condition which is broken the Feoffee levies a Fine the Husband dies in the fourth year after Proclamations having Issue by the Wife after the Wife dies and five years passe the Heir is barred to enter as Heir to the Father for the Condition but shall have five years from the death of his Father as Heir to his Mother for her right for the cause aforesaid by Saunders Ireland and Scotland are severall Realms But Scotland was holden of the Crown of England and was within the Fee and ●igniory of the Crown of England and he which is in any of the two Realms shall be said out of the Realm and shall be within the Exception of 4. H. 7. So Ideots Lunaticks and they which have the lethargy shall be comprehended in the words of Non-sane-memory as well as Mad-men For Zouch Peace which is the end of all Law described and the necessity and benefit thereof and those Laws which carrie most peace are the most estimable And the Statute which Ousts Nonclaim was to the universall trouble of all the Realm for the avoyding whereof and to make Fines to have their antient force the Act of 4. H. 7. was made and the Preamble of it is to be considered because it is a Key to open the minds of the Makers of the Act and the mischiefs that they intended to remedy and the preamble shews that the Makers of the Act were of Opinion that Fines ought to be of greater force for to avoid contention then they were before the Statute of Non-claim and now is used to the contrary viz. to the universall trouble of the Kings Subjects and therefore they were Enemies to former rights because that stirred up many Suits and made the Purview strongly against it Et lex si prospiciat majori parti retilis est All Infants are bound by the generall Purview which containeth them in the Exceptions As an Infant levies a Fine Proclamations pass he shall not have error yet within age for no Infant is excepted But he that is not Party to the Fine by Southcot and Walsh he is excepted out of the generall Purview in the intent of the Makers of the Act. And Stowell the Heir is not within the Purview nor Exception of the Statute for that he had not right at the time of the Fine levied but then the right rested in his Ancestor which was disseised for the Exception is always an exemption of that which is contained before in the generall words otherwise could not be excepted As a Feoffment of a Mannor except such an Acre which is not parcell of it or a Lease of all Lands of the part of the Father except Lands of the part of the Mother is a void exception because this exception was not in the Feoffment nor Demise or right or not right is not the matter but claim or Nonclaim within five years is the matter where a Fine is pleaded to conclude any And this Tried by issue by the one or the other maketh an end of the matter Catline a Writ of deceit by the Lord in ancient Demeasne made 20. years after Proclamation upon a Fine Levyed by his Tenant shall make void the Fine and the Tenant shall be restored to the land because he claims signiory and services out of the Land and no right to the Land when the Fine was levyed and therefore is out of the purview which extends not from whom he claims or had right in possession Reversion or Remainder to the thing comprised within the Fine when the Fine was Levyed upon matter rising before The first saving giveth five years after proclamation to those which have right and their Heirs with a Condition annexed to it viz. so that they pursue their Title Claim c. within five years after Proclamations and as the saving is general to all Heirs notwithstanding they have their imperfections of Nonage Insanity c. So is the Condition general and extends to all Heirs whatsoever they are and this was the cause of the Judgement for otherwise the saving shall be for all heirs and the So shall be of all Heirs within age and then the So is not so large as the saving And so the Heir within age is bound to the Condition of the first saving as well as he is saved in the same because general tranquillity is more favored then an Infant and no time shall be gained by exposition or equity beyond the words of the act where the Act as here to strains all men to a time certain for the common tranquillity of the people and Infants had been bound by the general purview of 32. H. 8. c. 2. if they had not been excepted there And therefore if one of the Terms limited by 4. H. 7. be adjourned because the Statute saith then next ensuing all the Proclamations before are void until the Statute of 1. Mar. cap. 7. Rastall Fines 12. because time limited by the act ought to be pursued and once attached in part ought to be continued So the 5. County upon Exigent ought to be the next to the fourth or it is discontinuance and Allocatur Comitatus shall not aid but is error And therefore an Infant at the Common law shall be bound to year and day otherwise f. 365. where by the Statute of 4. H. 7. The five years Commence in the father being of full age Non-claim within the time limited by the Common Law shall lose right and infancy there shall not aid the party as 7. H. 6.32 Nonclaim by the Lord of his villain by a year and day which hath fled into ancient Demeasne So 15. E. 4. 6. Nonclaim of liberties before Justices in Eire So wood of another within a Forrest of the Kings seised into the Kings hand shall be forfeited by Nonclaim within the year and day before fol. 57. So if a Bastard die seised and Mulier claims not So 2. H. 7.10 one shall lose his appeal of Murther if he bringeth it not within the year and day So by the custom of some Mannor one shall lose Copy-hold if he claims it not within a year and day after the death of his ancestor a fortiori time shall be peremptory where it is limited by the Statute for the common repose of the Realm which shall be more favored then the private profit of any single person be he Infant of non sane memory c. by Carus and Dier the right of a Mulier within age is bound by discent of the bastard because the Law in this case is a binding Law by Southcot and Sanders contrary because infancy shall excuse Laches of entry 31. ass 18. 22.36 ass 2. 33. E. 3. The second saving giveth new 5. years to other persons and hore Stowel is the same person which had five years with his ancestor by the first saving because the saving and the so is in the Copulative and the word
Ouster during the coverture because by this he continues all his estate but that part of the State taken from him by the disseisin by the Eiectione Firme And the stranger may have Eiectione Firme for his Moity as two oyntenants for life and to the heires of one of them looses by default the one shall have right and the other a Quod ci deforceat and the Moity of the terme is not suspended for then it shall not survive Parson Patron and Ordinary make a Lease for yeares of Gleeb-land the Parson dyes the Lessee is made Parson and dyes his Executors shall not have the residue of the terme because the terme was extinct by the freehold of the Land which the Parson had in him because both in his owne right and to his owne use yet in severall capacities But by Dier it shall not be extinct because he hath the terme in his owne right and in Capacity of his naturall body and the Inheritance as Parson which is another Capacity But where the Lessor hath the terme of yeares as Executor to the Lessee it is not extinct but the terme when the Lessor dyes shall be revived Bracebridge against Clouse A Man seized in Fee of a Mannor maketh a Lease of forty Acres parcell of the Mannor for forty yeares if the Lessee shall live so long and after by Poll makes a Lease of the sayd forty Acres to J. S. for seventy yeares J. S. grants his terme to the Wife of the Lessor and a stranger the Husband makes a Feoffment in fee by Indenture of the Mannor and moreover grants by it all his other Lands and Tenements in the same Village to the Feoffee and his heires and this Feoffment was to the use of the Feoffor and his heires and dyed his Wife dies the first Lessee for yeares dyed within the forty yeares the stranger entred into the whole forty Acres and upon an Ouster by the heire of the Lessor brought E. Firme And adjudged that he shall recover for his owne moity and shall be barred for the moity of the Wife 1. That the Lease for seventy yeares is good for so many years which are to come of it after the death of the first Lessee yet is without Deed for that the Lessor in respect of his Reversion in fee may contract with another for any estate to be derived out of the Reversion and shall take effect then and not stay untill the forty yeares are extinct be effluction of time for the Condition if he shall live so long is a limitation which determines the estate otherwise it is of a Collaterall Condition for although that the terme be finished by it or by surrender or forfeiture the second terme shall not commence untill the terme be incurred for that hee had not power to contract for the possession during the first terme in respect of any such possibility of the breach of Condition surrender forfeiture c. As upon a Lease for life for the incertainty of the determination of the estate by his death and for the possibility which was at the time of the Contract that the Lease shall be executed before the death of Tenant for life by his surrender forfeiture c. As the Lessor maketh a Lease for life and after maketh a Lease to another for one and twenty yeares to commence presently Tenant for life dyes or surrenders the second Lease shall commence presently But if one make a Lease for forty yeares by word defeasible upon Condition to be performed by the Lessor and incontinently makes a new Lease for forty yeares by word this is void yet the first Lease is avoided by performance of the Condition or is surrendered because there is no possibility that it will be executed in respect of the Collaterall Condition But if the second Lease be by Indenture it is good by Estoppell And if it be by Deed Poll with Attornement the Reversion will passe 2. By the first Lease of forty yeares the forty Acres were severed from the Mannor for a time for that the Lease was executed by entry but the Reversion and Francktenement is parcell of the Mannor but the Lease for seventy yeares not nor may be executed by entry during the first Lease but is executory after this determined then of this Lease for seventy yeares the Lessor hath not any Reversion then this is not severed from the Mannor but continues parcell of it because it is executory and not executed by entry and then when the Lessor maketh a Feoffment of the Mannor the Reversion which depends upon the Lease for forty yeares passe as parcell of the Mannor which Reversion may be parcell of a thing in possession But not contrary discharge the moity of the terme for seventy yeares which is extinct by the Livery that gave the possession otherwise it were if the terme had beene executed at the time of the Livery except the Husband made Livery in this Land leased for the Land is severed by the Lease and here the execution of the possession to the use in an instant shall not revive the terme which was extinct before by the Livery Lessee for yeares before entry hath not possession so that a Release to him before entry is not good but he hath onely an Interest and right which is grantable or forfeitable before entry the Lessor shall not have Rent untill he hath waved the possession or the Lessee enters because presently the Lessor is adjudged occupier 28. H. 8.14 3. The grant of all his Lands and Tenements shall passe the terme because it is his Land for the time and for that hee had not any other Land there or otherwise the words would be void and therefore the opinion of Brook was denyed to be Law 7. E. 6. which is contrary but if he had other Lands there then it may be that the terme will not passe 4. He had Judgement for one Moity and was barred for the other where he demanded the whole which is not good b● Plowden but should have been barred for all if exception had been taken to it for that he might have had a better Writ for the Moity Vernon against Manners CHallenge of the Array because the Sheriffe which made it is Cosen to the Tenant in the ninth degree M. 14. 15. El. in the Kings Bench. Adjudged good he can shew how he is Cosen 21. E. 4.75 And notwithstanding the Tenant be seized in right of his Wife to whom the Sheriffe is not inheritable for by reason of Cosenage it shall be intended favourable and although that he cannot inherite the Land demanded yet he may inherite other Land as he ire to the Tenant Smith against Stapleton LEase for life to Husband and Wife P. 15. El. in the Kings Bench. Replevin Remainder in tayle to N. T. their Son a stranger levies a Fine Sur Conusans de droit come ceo que il ad de son done a● N.T. the Son which grants and renders the
and therefore shall not extend to the death of the daughter which is another distinct Act Otherwise it is if one had followed the other in one person As if I command you to rob J. S. and he resists and you kill him So if I command you to beat him and he dies of the battery So if I command you to burn the House of J. S. and you doe it and by the fire the House of J. D. is burnt I am accessary to both because the commandement reacheth to all the sequell thereof and is the cause of it and therefore I shall be partaker of what ensues this ill Act commanded by me otherwise it is if I command you to robb J S. as he is going to Sturbridge Faire and you rob his House in Cheapside for this is another manner of Fellony and there are severall Acts As if I command you to steale a white Horse and you steale a bay Horse or an Oxe or burne the House of J. whereas I commanded you to burne the House of B. there I am not accessary for that my assent may not be lyable to it because it is a thing distinct and contrary to my commandement directly But if I command you to kill J. and you kill him by another meane or Instrument another day or place then I command there I am accessary because the death is the principall matter and the others onely the manner and forme and the variance in the manner and forme of his commandement discharges not me to be accessary But if I countermand this before you kill I am not accessary for the minde of the accessary ought to continue to doe evill at the time of the act done If one be pardoned of Murder and the wife of the dead sue an appeale and a stranger receives him and gives him Meate and Drinke knowing of the Murder and Pardon he is accessary to the Fellony against the Wife although that he is not against the King because this Fellony is discharged against the King but remaines as to the Wife per Catlin But Popham held otherwise because that at the time of the receipt there is not any offence continuing against the Crowne and Dignity of the King for that he was pardoned before and one cannot be accessary without offence to the Crowne But Plowden held that if the Goaler suffer him to escape after the Pardon this is Fellony in him because he suffers a Fellon to escape for that he was in for Fellony for he was detained in Prison at the suite of the Wife appellant Nicholls against Nicholls THE Lord Lovell M. 17. 18. El. in trespas 18. E. 4. Lease for life to Thomas Wtright and moreover grants that if he dyes without issue that then the Lessee shall have fee And the Lord was attainted of high Treason by Parliament 1. H. 7. and all his Land forfeit to the King saving to every stranger such right title and interest which they had as if the Statute had not been ever made and after the Lord dyed without issue and in 11. El. an Office was found The question was whether the Lessee should have the Fee by the Condition and the saving And adjudged that he should have the Fee 1. That all the Fee Simple passeth not out of the Lord Lovell but continues alwayes in him untill the Condition which is precedent to the estate be performed 14. H. 8.17 Wheelers Case 10. Assi 15.6 R. 2. Plessingtons Case and 12. R. 2. That Action shall be brought against Lessee for years upon condition to have Fee and the Lessor together a Condition precedent shall have relation to the Livery for to avoid incumbrances for vesting the Fee which was at the time of the performance Husband and Wife may not take by Moities yet they shall vouch upon a Feoffment made to them before the Coverture because that although they were sole when the Warrant was made yet were Covert when the Recovery was So a Reversion is granted when they are sole and when they have intermarried the tenant attornes to them they have not distinct Moities because then the Reversion settles in them not to grant when sole and so time in which the thing vests is specially to be considered 2. That the estate in Fee appointed by the Condition nor Reversion because it commenceth at a day to come nor a Remainder because in its vesting it drowns the particular Estate but shall enure by way of inlargement of his Estate 3. That the Freehold in Deede or in Law but a right or Title onely is not vested by the word Forfeiture in this Statute without an Office to finde the certainty of the Land which the party attainted had as in 4. E. 4.22 the Lord Hungerfords Case for then the Statute of 33. H. 8. cap. 20. which now giveth Actuall possession to the King for Treason without Office should be made in vaine and goe to attainders hapning after this Statute of 33. not to those before as our Case is And if one be attainted of Treason the Freehold and Fee remaineth in him and shall not be in the King untill Office found by the course of the common Law for if he hath capacitie to take by new purchase so he shall retain the antient and shall be Tenant to the Precipe out when he dieth the Land cannot descend to his Heire because the blood is corrupted but it shall Escheat to the Lord if it be holden of a common person or to the King in the nature of a common Escheat if it be holden of him and not as an Escheat by Treason untill Office by Barham and Dier To the first Objection it was said That the Condition performed which is a reall agreement shall divest the state in Fee out of any stranger which hath the Reversion without privity as by grant Escheat c. For that the Land is charged with this agreement reall in whose hands soever it cometh and therefore the Fee shall vest in the Lessee by the performance of the Condition discharged of all incumbrances made after the Condition and the previty there is destroyed by the Act of the Lessor So 6. R. 2. Plessingtons Case where a man leases for yeares upon Condition performed to have Fee after levies a Fine the Lessee performes the Condition he shall have Fee of the Conusee but by Belknap there he shall have the moneys which the Lessee by his Condition ought to pay otherwise it is if the privity be destroyed by the Act of the Lessee as where the Lessee grants his Estate there the Fee shall not vest in him nor his assignee 4. fol. 483. 5. For answer to the second Objection it was said that the Condition shall be saved by the words which shall extend to all Conditions Rents Profits or other things out of or in Land and the saving of the right of him which hath not offended shall be taken beneficiall By some right is where a thing is taken
away from another by wrong Title is where a man hath cause to have the thing which another hath and hath not Action Condition is a possibilitie to have Title Action is a suite given by the Law Interest is part of the Estate of the Land as a Lease for yeares or execution by Statute fol. 484. 6. The answer to the third Objection The Lessee ought not to shew in pleading that he is not excepted in the Statute for that he gains not any new thing but will retain the old and also because the Statute is to his disadvantage but that he shall take benefit of a Statute shewing it 7. For answer to the fourth Objection it was said that admitting that the Fee here shall be forfeited to the King without Office yet the Condition shall draw it out of him without Petition or Monstrans de droit by some but Quere thereof for otherwise it shall not vest at the time of the death of the Lord Lovell it shall not vest at all for it is appointed to him as if the Lessee here had entered into Religion and the Lessor without being attainted had died without issue after the Lessee is deraigned he shall not have the Fee because it may not vest in him at the time of the Condition performed So if he was disseised at that time And so here for to avoid the inconveniency by the operation of the Law or former agreement a thing shall be devested out of tho King at the instant of the Condition performed without any such circumstance As Tenant in Taile discontinues the Discontinuee infeoffs the King by Deed inrolled the King Leases to the Tenant in Taile for life with the Remainder to his Issue for life the Lessee dies the Issue is remitted by the remainder falling to him and the Fee devests out of the King without any circumstance And so a Remitter shall defeat the Estate of the King and an Office of the King shall defeat the Remitter fol. 488. as 3. E. 4.25 in the Earle of Northumberlands Case by relation or if the Disseisee enters after the Attainder of his Disseisor Possession of the King by Office shall not be removed without Petition but if he enter before his Disseisor be attainted he shall be removed without Petition because the Title of the King there is more antient and the Office shall have relation to the Attainder onely for the profits although it relate to the time of the Treason for to avoid mean Acts and Incumbrances So Tenant in Capite maketh a Lease for life rendring Rent with clause of Re-entry for not payment and dies his Heire within age enters for the Rent arere An Office is found the entry of the Heire for the Condition broken is avoyded by Lovelace for the possession of the Heire by force of which he entered is utterly defeated by Relation which intitles the King to the Grant And so the entry of the Heire for a thing not due to him shall be adjudged Tortius by relation So if Trespasse 19. E. 4.2 where for things coming of the Land as Grasse c. Office avoids the punishment against those which doe the wrongs and takes it away by relation of the Office which Intitles the King because of the Escheat before the Trespasse an Action once good But for the entry into the Land or breaking his Fences which ariseth not from the Revenue of the Land the Action is not gone by the Office If an Office virtute Commissionis be pleaded he ought to shew the authority given by it and the execution thereof accordingly because persons appointed by Commission have not any other then what is appointed to them by the Commission otherwise it is of an Inquisition taken virtute Officii before the Escheator Sheriffe Steward of a Leete c. for that their authority appeareth to the Court judicially because it is known by the Law for that they are Officers of the Common Law A Remainder ought to vest when it is appointed otherwise it shall never vest The Kings Pardon shall not excuse any man for the repairing of a Bridge which ought to do it because it shall not take away the Interest that the Subjects take therein So a man pledgeth a Jewell for ten pound and after is attainted the King shall have it without paying of the ten pound So 13. R. 2. the Earle of Kent had return of certain Cattell in Replegiari and the Proprietor of them is attainted the Earle shall keep them against the King untill he be satisfied of the thing because the Prerogative will not give any prejudice to another Ludford against Gretton A Warrant to make Letters Patents M. 18. 19. El. in the Kings Bench Trespas was directed by H. 8. to the Chancellor which entered not the day of the Receit of the Watrant in the Record according to the Purview of the Statute of 18. H. 6. cap. 1. And yet the Letters Patents made thereupon were adjudged good For that the Purviewe of the Statute maketh Letters Patents void onely for the variance between the date of the Patent and the day of the entery of the Warrant And the Court held three manner of Patents good upon the Statute 1. If no Warrant be made at all it is good by the Common Law and not void by the Statute because there is not any variance 2. If there be a Warrant and the day of the delivery of the Warrant be not entered as in the Principall Case 3. If the day of the delivery of the Warrant be entered and the Patent dated after the day of the delivery for this variance is out of the mischief of the Purview which was in antedating of Patents before the delivery of the Warrant and not after dating and yet is within the words but out of the intent of the Act. Records shall have Relation to their date and cannot be averred contrary to the date not to vary from it because it tends to the discredit of an Officer of Record Deeds relates to the Livery and date in Deeds concludes not any to aver the contrary Grendon against the Bishop of Lincolne HENRY the eighth being seised of an Advowson in the right of his Crown P. 19. El. in the Common Pleas. Quare Impedit presents J. S. and dies E. 6. by his Letters Patents grants the advowson to the Dean and Chapter of L. and their Successors in Fee and also grants to them License and Liberty virtute authoritatis sue Regiae supremae Ecclesiae qua fungimur that they shall retain the said Advowson and all the Profits thereof for ever to their proper uses whensoever the said Church shall become void And after the death of the said Incombent the said King E. 6. present his Clerk to the said Church which was Admitted Instituted and Inducted and adjudged no usurpation which shall put the Dean and Chapter out of possession If the Plaintiffe alledge matter effectuall as discent c.
by Dyer was for that they pleaded that they were seised of the Rectory of the Parsonage of the Deane in the right of their Cathedrall Church of Worcester whereas it should be in the right of the Church of the Deane Plowden answered the fourth exception thus That they plead the seisen of all the intire thing otherwise if it were of parcell of it or things pertaining to it for there they should plead that they were seised of it in the right of the Church of the Deane But Judgement was given for the Bishop Eare against Snow and others TEnant in taile and his Wise which had nothing in the Land suffer a common Recovery in 23. Hen. 8. to his owne use in Fee H. 20. El. in the Kings Beuch Fiect firme the Husband by his Will in writing deviseth the Land to J. S. and after the Statute of 27. H. 8. is made and after that he publisheth his Testament of new and dies the issue in taile enters J. S. dies his heire within age the issue in taile dies the heire of J. S. enters upon the Son of the issue in taile And adjudged lawfull And no Remitter but that the estate taile shall be barred by the Recovery notwithstanding the overliving of the Wife for the Wife was named onely to be barred of her dower and forasmuch as she had not any estate nor no losse she shall not recover any estate nor any recompence and besides the estate recovered is an estate taile as the estate lost was to which the Wife was a stranger and although she shall have the recompence in value yet the issue in taile might enter and out her because the losse is his and not to the Wise and he shall not be estopped by conclusion of his Ancestors by joining his Wife in the Voucher and besides it is uncertaine what estate the Wife shall have in the recompence Welkden against Elkington LEssee for yeares devise that his Wife shall have and occupie the terme for so many yeares as she shall live H. 20. El. in the Common Pleas. Trespas and after her death he gave and bequeathed the residue of the said yeares of the said Lease then not expired to his Son and his assignes and made his said Wife his sole Executrix and dyed the Wife entred agreeing to the Legacie and after aliened the terme and the alienee granted it againe to the Wife and the Wife died within the terme And adjudged that the Son or his Administrator shall have the residue of the terme Assent to the particular estate shall reach to the Remainder also but an assent to the devise of a rent shall not extend to the devise of the terme and the devise is made of a rent or common out of the terme and after of the Land it selse payment of the rent by the Executor or his sufferance for the Devisee to use the common is not execution of the terme because the terme is one thing and the profit out of it is another but where soure yeares of a terme is devised to one and the remainder to another there otherwise it is because all is of one same thing fol. 621.524 so the same fol. 541. First The devise to the Wife for her life is not an absolute devise of the intire terme but conditionally or upon limitation if she lives so long for if she dies her Interest is determined by the limitation and devise to him for his life by implication because the residue of the terme is devised to the Son after the death of the Wife in which is implied that the Wife shall have it for her life and also determinable by the limitation as above said and the devise to the Son shall be expounded to precede the devise of the Wife and so both shall stand fol. 522.523 624. Secondly The devise to the Wife and Son is of one same thing setlicet Of the Land it selfe and the Wife shall have the Collaterall occupation onely of the Land by the devise but the very Interest and terme of the Land she shall have conditionally and so two parties of one terme the one to the Wife and the other to the Son and then the execution of the devise in the Wife shall be execution of the Legacie to the Son Thirdly The Alienation of the Wife hath not devested the interest of the Son which is accrued to him by the Condition or limitation nor extinct the Condition or limitation which shall transferr the interest to him Executor being legatory of a terme by the devise of the Testator enters generally he is possessed as Executor because it is his first title untill he maketh election to agree to the devise A Termor grants his terme to one for life the Grantee shall have the intire terme by Popham because for life which is a greater time then for yeares But Quere if he dies if the Grant be determined As Lessee for yeares grants a rent to one for his life he shall have the rent during all the yeares if he shall so long live which time of life includes all the years which is a lessor terme yet if he dies the rent shall be determined by Plowden fol. 525. and the Grantee hath but a Chattell in the rent for he may not have freehold out of a Chattell Lessee for yeares grants all his terme which shall be arreare after his death this is voide for the uncertainty for by the reservation of the terme for his life he hath reserved all the terme and therefore the Grant which is but one sentence without any Habendum is voide 7. E. 6. by devise good otherwise if he had granted his terme habendum after his death there the Grant is good and passeth the terme presently and the habendum is void for the Repugnancy But fol. 156. it is void 9. H. 58. A man maketh a Lease for ten years after maketh another Lease for six to commence the same day the second is void and he shall not maintaine an action of debt against his Lessee although the Lessee for ten yeares upon render because during the ten yeares he may not contract with another for a Lease to take effect during this time Implication in a devise giveth an estate for life to the Wife 13. H. 7.17 profit to be taken out of the Land is a distinct thing from the interest of the estate Execution of an occupation of a thing not of property it selfe as in a devise of a Book to use as 37. H. 6.30 Condition or possibility goes in privity and cannot be limitted to a stranger Circum locution in a devise or Lease is equivalent to a direct Grant as to have from day to day during life is all one Intent shall be observed in the Exposition of Wills as if one devise his Land by the premises to one and after deviseth the rent to another out of the same Land by the sayd Will this is a good devise of the Rent