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A29389 Reports of that grave and learned judge, Sir John Bridgman, knight, serjeant at law, sometime chief justice of Chester to which are added two exact tables, the one of the cases, and the other of the principal matters therein contained. Bridgman, John, Sir.; J. H.; England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas. 1659 (1659) Wing B4487; ESTC R19935 180,571 158

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him and his heirs for ever if B. shall have issue of his body and if he die without heirs of his body that the Land shall revert to the Donor and his heirs B. had issue which died without issue and it was adjudged that B. had but an Estate in tail and because he died without heirs of his body it was adjudged that the Donor should recover against the collaterall heire of B. And if the Law be so in Deeds or Grants executed in the life of the Donor a fortiori in a Devise which is to be taken more favourably then an estate made by Deed and therefore it is sufficient in a Devise to have the intention of the Devisor understood either to make an estate in fee or in tail although proper words to make such an estate be not used and the intent of the Devisor cannot be more manifest to have an estate in tail then in this case As to the second Point the question will be whether the younger Son hath an estate in Tail or in Fee determinable by this limitation and it seemed to them that he shall have but an Estate in tail In which the question is to which estate these words of limitation to wit living the elder Son shall be referred viz. Whether to the Estate made to the younger Son or to the Estate given to the elder for if they be referred to the Estate made to the younger there is no question but these words do abridge restrain the estate but if to the elder then they make no restraint or restriction as to the estate of the younger Son but onely limit the remainder to the elder Son on this contingency only viz. If he be alive at the time of the death of the youngest Son without issue And to prove that these words shall be referred to the estate devised to the elder brother They said That if the land had been devised to the younger Son and the heirs of his body and if he dyed without issue living the elder that the elder should have the estate to him and his heirs it is clear that the younger hath an absolute estate tail and that then the remainder to the elder shall be on this contingency viz. If he be living when the younger dies without issue And so is Frenchmans Case 1 2. Eliz. who demised land to his wife for life the remainder to Charles Frenchman and the heirs males of his body and if he died without heirs males of his body the remainder to Arthur Frenchman and the heires males of his body Charles had issue a Daughter and died without issue male and it was adjudged that the Daughter should not have the land for this contingency does not alter the Estatetail that was first limited to Charles and although the Devise in the case at Bar be to the youngest Son and his Heirs without any limitation of his body yet the limitation afterwards to wit if he die without issue does explain well enough that the heires of his body are intended and then the subsequent words living the Eldest Son cannot alter the estate first given to the younger Son And Hil. 40. Eliz. in the Kings Bench by Walmesly If one deviseth land to his Son and his heirs and further deviseth that if he die without issue that the land shall be sold yet the Son shall have an estate in fee and not in tail but otherwise if he devised that if he died without issue that the lands should remain over for in the first case he disposeth of no more of the estate by the last words then he did at the first but in the last case he disposeth of the estate it self in remainder And this was agreed by Owen 18 19. Eliz. Rot. 354. and 15. 16. Eliz. Rot. 330. where the case was That one Edward Clark being seised in fee of two houses had issue Henry and two Daughters Alice and Thomasin Henry dyed before the two daughters living the Father the Father devised one house to his daughter Alice and her heirs for ever and the other to Thomasin who was at that time but eight years of age and her heirs for ever and if she died before the age of sixteen years Alice then living Alice should have it to her and heirs and if Alice should die having no issue living Thomasin Thomasin should have the house of Alice to her and her heirs and if both of them died without issue he devised the two houses to the two Daughters of his Son Henry and their heirs and if they died without issue he devised the remainder to a stranger Proviso That if Alice should marry I. S. that Thomasin should have her part to her and her heirs and if Thomasin should dye having no Child that the daughters of Henry should have all and if they died having no Child the remainder to a stranger as aforesaid The Devisor dies then Alice marries N. but not I. S. and enters into her house Thomasin after sixteen years of age dies without issue And if Alice or the daughters of Henry should have the estate of Thomasin was the question And it was holden by three Iustices that the daughters of Henry should have it because that Thomasin did not die within the age of sixteen years and that it being objected that there was no estate tail to any of the daughters but a fee simple conditionall upon a contingent it was at last adjudged 14. Eliz. Rot. 340. that they were Tenants in tail by this Devise in Mich. 37 38. Eliz. 42. Mich. 14 15. Eliz. And Michaelmas 18. Jacobi Judgment This Case was argued by Montague cheif Iustice Doderidge Haughton and Chamberlain who all agreed that by this Devise the youngest Son had not an Estate-tail but a limited see so that by his dying without issue living the elder Son his estate was quite determined and all except Doderidge agreed that the Recovery could not hurt the future Devise But Doderidge was much against this opinion by reason of great mischeif that might ensue by making of Perpetuities in Devises and cited Archers Case and Capels Case but notwithstanding Iudgment was affirmed as aforesaid De Termin Trinitat 18 Jacob. Rot. 1198. Dawtree against Dee and others IN an Action on the Case wherein the Plaintiff Declared That he the fifth of July 16 Jacobi was and is seised in Fee of a Capital Messuage called Moor-place with the appurtenances and of 600 Acres of Land meadow and pasture in Petworth with the said Messuage used of the annual value of 100 l. which Messuage he and those whose Estate he hath in the said Messuage and Tenements therein Farmors and Tenants have time out of minde used to keep good hospitality for the relieving of the Poor in Petworth aforesaid and that in the Church of Petworth aforesaid on the said fifth of July and also time out of minde there hath been and is a little Chancel on the North part of
Also the Bar is not good because the Defendant says he was possessed of five Steers and doth not say of the aforesaid 9 H. 6. 16. In a Quare Impedit brought by the King of a Chantery in the Chappel of St. Thomas in D. and made title to it and the Defendant pleaded that there was a Chantery in the said Chappel and made title to it and traversed the title of the King and adjudged to be no plea because he did not answer to the Chantry whereof the King had declared And Pasch 14 Elizab. Downing against Hayward In a false imprisonment in Suffolk the Defendant did justifie as servant to A. to whom a Commission of Rebellion of Chancery was directed and the Plaintiff pleaded De son tort Demesne and found for the Plaintiff and reversed again by Error in the Star Chamber because that when the matter of justification is upon matter of Record and matter in fact or of matters done in two Counties that cannot joyn the Issue ought to be upon one only And Pasch 15 Jac. Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff by the opinion of Mountague Crook and Doderidge because that all that was done after Sir Thomas Buriets Warrant was illegall but they agreed that the Plaintiff might have an Action for the charging of Felony and for all that was done before the said Warrant But Haughton disagreed who conceived that Iudgment should be given for the Plaintiff because the Plea of the Defendant was no justification for what was done before the warrant but at last Iudgment was given for the Defendant Judgment Mills against Marshall IN a Writ of Error to reverse a Iudgment given for the now Defend●nt against the Plaintiff in the Common Pleas upon an Action of Debt on a Bond of twenty pounds Hil. 11 Jac. Ror 1109. And the Bond was made the twentieth of Jan. in the sixth year of King James and it was on Condition to stand to the Award of George Cockrell Edward Sureton and William Wasse to arbitrate of and concerning all matters then depending between ●hem so that the said Award be made and delivered to the parties under the hands and Seals of the said Arbitrators before the twenty ninth of January next The Defendant pleaded that the Arbitrators the twenty fourth of January in the sixth year of King James did make their Award of the Premisses by Indenture under their hands and Seals 1. That all Controversies and Suits between them unto the date of the written Arbitrement should cease and that the Plaintiff should have liberty to drive his Cattell to the River E●ke c. and that the Plaintiff and Defendant should work and maintain at all times from thence forward a sufficient Hedge by the top of the Scar Sicut terrae praedicti Querentis Defendentis extendunt Anglice as their own Ground goes for security of the Cattell and Sheep which said Hill doth extend to the Land of Henry Facherly unto the Pale which then was between the Land of the Defendant and if any Trees or Woods growing in or neer the Woods of either party shall fall in controversie at any time that it shall be arbitrated by the said Arbitrators three or two of them which Arbitrement was delivered to the parties the same day and the Defendant pleaded that he had performed c. The Plaintiff replyed that the Defendant did not make a sufficient Hedge upon the top of the Scarr Prout terra sua extendit the Defendant said that before the Writ purchased viz. the fourth of April 12 Jacob. at Eshdayle in the County aforesaid he did make a sufficient Hedge upon the top of the Hill aforesaid prout terra sua extendit and so they were at Issue and found for the Plaintiff and Iudgment given and the Defendant brought this Writ of Error And I conceive Iudgment ought to be affirmed Coke 5 Rep. Slingsbles Case If one let white Acro to I.S. and B. Acre to I. D. and covenant with them Et quemlibet eorum that he is Owner each of them may have an Action and Coke 5. Rep. Hurgots Case Submission to an Award so as it be delivered to either of the parties ought to be delivered to each of them 39 H. 6. 7. And all the Court did agree that each of them ought to inclose against his own Land only and so the breach was well assigned wherefore the Iudgment was well assigned wherefore Iudgment was affirmed Hilar. 13 Jac. Crawley against Marrow IN an Ejectment upon a Lease by Robert Faldoc dated the one and thirtieth day of August the thirteenth year of King James of two Houses two Orchards forty acres of Land ten of Meadow and fifty of Pasture in Bridgenorth Habendum from the tenth day of the said month for three years whereupon the Plaintiff was possessed untill the Defendant the eighth of October in the same year did enter and eject him ad damnum c. Vpon not guilty pleaded The Iury found the Defendant not guilty for all except one House and five acres of Land and found further that before the said time the twentieth day of Decemb. 11 Eliz. Rowland Hayward Knight was seised in Fee of the said one house and five acres of Land and ten of Meadow and being so seised thereof did enfeoff John Day and Robert Marshall in Fee to the use of John Whitbrooke and Margaret his Wife in Taile the remainder to the right Heirs of John Whitbrooke and that the last of January 12 Eliz. John Whitbrooke did enter into a Recognizance of a thousand pounds in the Chancery to Richard Faldoe which money was not paid to Richard in his life time That John Whitbrooke and Margaret had issue John Whitbrooke Knight and after and before the fourteenth of January 8. Jacob. died and before the said day Richard Faldoe made his Will and did make Amphillis his Wife his Executor and died and Amphillis did make Robert Faldoe Esquire and Thomas Shepheard Knight her Executors and died who undertook the Executorship 14. Jan. 8. Jac. Robert Shepeard and Faldoe had a Scire facias to the Sheriff of Middlesex to have execution of the Recognizance whereupon John Whitbrook was returned dead whereupon they had a Scire facias against the Heir and the Ter-tenant whereupon John Whitbrook was returned Heir and Ter-tenant who pleaded that he had no Land that was the Conusors at the time of the Recognizance or ever since by hereditary descent from the Conuzor in Fee and said that he ought not to be charged as Ter-tenant because he hath no Freehold that was the Conusors The Plaintiff replyed that the said John Whitbrook had divers lands by descent from the said Conuzor viz. A house called the Hospitall thirty seven Tenements or Messuages five Cottages one Tost one Dove-house thirty nine Gardens six Barns fifty four acres of Land thirty nine of Meadow and thirty six of Pasture in Bridgnorth and that the said John Whitbrook was Tenant of the Premisses
been granted with a fee of five marks from time to time by the Bishop grantor and his Predecessors to whom they pleased Cooks 9 Rep. Earl of Shrewsburies Case The Earl of Rutland was made Steward of a Mannor for life without any words to make a Deputy yet it was resolved that he might make a Deputy because it was not convenient for him to exercise such an Office So if an Office doth descend to an Infant he must of necessity make a Deputy And so if a Bishop be seised of a Mannor he may ordain a Steward of the said Mannor and may grant to the Steward a fee for the execution of the said Office according to the resolution in the said Case of the Bishop of Chester Object But it may be objected that here is a greater Fee granted then was before viz. Pasture for two Horses and therefore the Grant is not good to bind the Successor Respons And I do agree that the Grant of the said Pasture is void yet that shall not at all prejudice the Grant of the said Office with the ancient Fee for they are severall and distinct Grants so that the one viz. The Grant of the Office with the ancient Fee is good by the Law against the Successor and the other void against the Successor but it cannot hurt the grant of the Office and ancient Fee no more then if a Bishop should grant an old Office with an ancient fee and also a new Office which was never granted before and all this by one Deed of Grant and this is duely confirmed although this be void against the Successor as to the new Office yet it is good for the ancient Office and the ancient see for although these fees are contained in one Deed yet are they severall and distinct so that one may be good and the other void 33. H. 8. Dyer 48. One seised of a Mannor to which a Villain was reguardant did grant one acre and also the Villain the Villain did pass in gross and the reason there given is because there be severall Gifts contained in one Deed. Also the Averment of the Plaintiff is insufficient viz. That the pasture was never granted by any of the Predecessors of the Grantor so that it may be that they were granted by himself being Bishop many times before the said Statute and then the Successor may well grant it and in the said case of the Bishop of Salisbury it is averred that the Grant was not by the Bishop Grantor nor any of his Predecessors William Whitton Clerk Plaintiff Sir Richard Weston Defendant in an Action of Debt The Case THe Pryor of S. Johns of Jerusalem did hold certain Lands discharged of Tythes by reason of their order Quandiu propriis manibus excolebant the Statute of 31. of H. 8. for discharging of Tythes is made the 32. of H. 8. it was enacted that the King should have to him his Heirs and Successors all the Lands Priviledges and Hereditaments of the said Pryory the King dies and the Lands by Mesne descents doe come to Queen Elizabeth who grants the Land to Sir Henry Weston Grandfather to the Defendant who died seised and the same descended to Sir Richard Weston Father to the Defendant and so from him to the Defendant And If the Land should be held discharged of Tythes as the Pryor held it was the question And I conceive that the Defendant shall hold the land discharged of Tythes in the same manner as the Pryor held the same For the argument of which two things are to be considered 1. Whether the King or his Patentee shall have the same priviledge which the Pryor had by the Statute of the 32. H. 8. or not 2. Admitting that they shall not have this priviledge by generall words of this Statute then Whether they be discharged by the clause of the Statute of 31. of H. 8. of Monasteries or not And I conceive that by each of these Statutes or at least by one of them the King and his Patentees shall hold this Land discharged of Tithes Quamdiu propriis manibus c. And as to the first point I conceive that the Statute of the 32. of H. 8. hath sufficient words to give this priviledge to the King for it gives to the King not only all their Mannors Lands and Tenements but also all their Priviledges belonging to them or to their Religion or Order and this discharge of Tythes is a Priviledge belonging to their Religion or Order for whereas Pope Pascall did order that no Monk or religious Order should pay Tithes afterwards Pope Adrian did grant this priviledge Solis Hierosolimariis Hospitulariis Cistersiensibus Templaribus and did take away that priviledge from all other Orders And I conceive it will not be denied but that the Pryor himself hath this priviledge and if he had it then it will follow that the King and his Patentee hath it also for all their priviledges are given to the King But it may be objected Object that these priviledges are given in respect only of their Order and the Order bring gone the priviledge is gone also I do agree that all personall priviledges concerning their Order are gone by reason of their dissolution Respons but such priviledges as concern the Land and will make the Land most profitable to the King are remaining and are given to the King for the intent of the Statute was to give it to the King in as ample and beneficiall manner and with all such priviledges concerning the Land as they themselves had And although Tythes are not issuing out of the Land nor shall be extended for unity of possession of the land as in the 42. Ed. 3.13 Where a Pryor having Tythes did purchase the Land and made a Feoffment yet shall he have the Tythes and so if a Parson makes a Lease for yeares of his Glebe-land yet he shall have Tythes thereof yet the priviledge to hold the Land discharged of Tythes is a priviledge concerning the land and is not like to the case of the appropriation of a Rectory to the Templars which was disappropriate by the dissolution of their Order for the reason there is because the appropriation was made to a body corporate which body being dissolved it is impossible they should retain the same and no body else can have it without a new appropriation or an Act of Parliament and for Appropriations to Abbeys c. the clause in the 31. of H. 8. was necessary for otherwise the Patentees of the King being Lay-people and not capable of an Appropriation they cannot have it but by speciall provision by Act of Parliament but any man may hold Land discharged of Tythes But it may be again objected that in the same Parliament an Act was made to revive temporall Liberties Priviledges and Franchises Object 2 of Monasteries and therefore all those had been lost if it had not been for this Statute and Sprituall priviledges are not revived by
and after dyeth or decayeth in his Estate his Co-trustees shall not be charged or be compelled in this Court to answer for the receits of him so dying or decayed unless some purchase fraud or evil dealing appear to have been in them to prejudice their trust for they being by Law Ioyntenants or Tenants in common every one by Law may receive either all or as much of the profits as he can come by And it being the case of most men in these days that their personal Estates do not suffice to pay their debts prefer their children and perform their Wills they are enforced to trust their friends with some part of their real Estate to make up the same either by the sale or perception of profits and if such of these friends who carry themselves without fraud should be chargeable out of their own Estates for the faults and deficiencies of their Co-trustees who were not nominated by them few men would undertake any such trust And if two Executors be and one of them waste all or any part of the Estate the Devastavit shall by Law charge him onely and not his Co-executor and in that case Equitas sequitur Legem there having been many presidents resolved in this Court that one Executor shall not answer nor be charged for the act or default of his companion And it is no breach of trust to permit one of the trustees to receive all or the most part of the profits it falling out many times that some of the Trustees live far from the Lands and are put in trust out of other respects then to be troubled with the receit of the profits But his Lordship and the said Iudges were of opinion that if two Trustees were and one of them without warrant of the party that trusteth him or of a Court of Equity assigneth his Estate and the Assignee doth receive the profits and becometh non-solvent he that made the Assignment shall answer it for him but the other original Trustee shall answer for no more then what he receiveth himself because the Assign cometh not in by him or his assent or appointment and that in case if the original Trustee that did not make the Assignment receive the whole profits and become non-solvent neither the Assignor nor the Assignee shall be answerable for them and if an Obligation be made to two in trust and one of them release the whole debt as by law he may this shall not charge his companion for any part and albeit in all presumption this case hath often happened yet no president hath been produced to his Lordship or the Iudges that in any such Case the Co-trustee hath been charged for the act or fault of his companion and therefore it is to be presumed that the current and clear opinion hath gone that he is not to be charged it having not till of late been brought in question in a case that by all likelyhood hath frequently happened But his Lordship and the said Iudges did resolve that if upon the proofs or circumstances the Court be satisfied that there be Dolus malus or any evil practice fraud or ill intent in him that permitted his companion to receive the whole profits he may be charged though he received nothing And his Lordship and the said Iudges did declare that in this particular Case they did not finde any material proof against Mr. Townley to make his case worse then the general case aforesaid but rather better except onely for the three half years Rent which he joyned in acquittance with Mr. Forster for the receit of the profits alone by Mr. Forster is no breach of trust in Mr. Townley and Mr. Challoner when he came of full age took Mr. Forster for his Debtor And therefore it is ordered and decreed That so much of the said Decree as chargeth Mr. Townley with any more of the profits then the three half years for which he joyned in acquittance shall be reversed but as for those three half years profits if the same were not disbursed or imployed for the use of Mr. Challoner then for so much thereof as hath not been so disbursed or imployed the said Complainant Mr. Townley ought to be answerable and the Defendant may call the Plaintiff before Mr. Page one of the Masters of this Court to audite the account touching these three half years if any difference be thereabouts And lastly it is ordered that the Recognizances given on the Plaintiffs part to perform the Order of this Court be discharged Trinit 13 Jacob. Allen against Wedgwood IN an Action of Debt on a Bond of 100 l. made the 23 of April 1610. The Defendant demands Oyer of the Obligation and Condition which was That if the Defendant did perform all and every such Article and Articles of Agreement and every parcel and particular point thereof being dated the day of this Obligation taken between the Defendant and Plaintiff with the consent of both parties concluded and agreed upon and sealed with the seal of the Defendant that then the Oligation to be voyd And he demanded also Oyer of the Articles which were as followeth Memorandum It is agreed between the Defendant of the one part and the Plaintiff of the other part and the Defendant doth condescend and agree for him his Heirs Executors Administ c. with the Plaintiff his Heirs Executors c. in manner and form following Impr. The Defendant for him his Heirs c. doth demise set and to farm let to the Plaintiff his Heirs Executors c. the Mannor-house or Messuage called Sowdley Hall with all the Lands which were sometimes in the Tenure of Reynold Sowdley with all the appurtenances thereunto belonging being in great Sowdley in the Parish of Chosendine in the County of Salop. Item The Defendant is to make a Lease of the said Mannor for term of three lives to the Plaintiff or his Assigns and they to enter after the expiration of such Lease or Leases as are lawfully made by Iohn Sowdley if any be Item If there be any Lease or lawful bargain made thereof that then at the expiration thereof the Plaintiff is to nominate the names of three such persons as shall be expressed in the aforesaid Lease which is to be made to the said Plaintiff by the said Defendant Item If there be none made thereof that then the Plaintiff is to enter upon the said Mannor at the Anunciation 1612. Item The Plaintiff is to have and enjoy the same paying yearly during the three lives for and according to the Rent it was set for in the time of the Father of Iohn Sowdley Item The Plaintiff is to pay the Defendant when the said Plaintiff or his Assigns shall enter upon the said Mannor 20 l. for a fine Item The Defendant may at any time so long as he is unmarryed resort unto the said Mannor at such time as the Plaintiff shall inhabit there or have the profit thereof and finde good entertainment for
and Iudgment was given therein whereupon the Tenant to the Assise brought a Writ of Error the 5. Eliz. in Easter Term which did abate by reason of his death and after in the time of King James the new Plaintiff brought a Writ of Error in Recordo quod coram nobis refidet which did also abate by reason of variety between the Record and the second Writ of Error whereupon Mich. 13. Jac. the said Plaintiff did purchase this new Writ of Error And the Defendants did plead in abatement of the said Writ of Error that the now Plaintiff before the purchasing of the said last Writ of Error and since the purchasing of the second Writ of Error viz. the 19th of September the 10. Jacob. did enter into the said Land and the same day and year at the place aforesaid did devise the said Tenements to one Thomas Alport Habendum from the Feast of S. John Baptist then last past for four years next ensuing by vertue of which Demise the said Thomas Alport into the said Tenements did enter and was and yet is possessed Vpon which Plea the Plaintiff demurred and the Defendants joyned And I conceive that the Plea is insufficient Yet I do agree that if he who hath cause to have a Writ of Error to reverse a Iudgment of Land does make a good Lease for years he hath suspended his Writ of Error for the Term as he does quite extinguish it by his Feoffment But here it appears that there is no Lease made for it is pleaded only that the Plaintiff did enter into the Land and it appears by the recovery that his entry was taken away by the Iudgment in the Assise whereby he gains nothing by his Entry but the Freehold and possession does remain alwaies to the Defendants being Heirs to the Recovery as appears by Litt. Warrant 158. If one be seised of Land and another who hath no right doth enter into the Land and continues possession yet doth he gain nothing thereby but the possession doth alwaies continue in him that hath right and so in the 3. Ed. 4. 2. Woolocks Case and in the Comment 233. Barkleys Case Execution is taken to be no plea in Bar to an Ejectment because it was shewed that the Lord Barkley did enter as in his Remainder and was seised in Fee untill the Lessor of the Plaintiff did eject him and did demise to the Plaintiff which is not good because it is not alledged that he disseised the Lord Barkley for otherwise he had no Estate to make the Lease and the Entry doth not imply any disseisin or doth gain any possession and 11 Edw. 4. 9. B. 12 H. 6. 43. B. And the Court did agree that the plea was insufficient But then it was moved that the Writ of Error was nought for the Writ was that Quidem Recordum processus Dom. Regina Elizabeth nuper Regina Angliae causa erroris interven venire sec and it appears by the Record that although the Recovery was removed by Writ of Error the 5. Eliz. at the Suit of the Father of the Plaintiff yet the Plaintiff did purchase a new Writ of Error Mich. 9 Jacob. and had a Scire facias against the Heirs of the Recover or who appeared Mich. 10. Jacob. and also the Writs of Habeas Corpus tales Distringas wherefore the Writ is naught for all the Recovery was not in the time of the Queen but part in her time and part in the Kings time But I conceive that it is good enough for first the Recovery and Processe is satisfied by transmitting the body of the Recovery as it is proved by the usuall form of all Writs of Error which is to certifie the Record and Processe and yet they do certifie only the Declaration and the Pleas omitting the Writs Also the Record shall be intended the principall Record and not the Writ and Proces Coke Rep. 11. Metcalfes Case the words of the Writ of Error Si judicium inde redditum sit this shall be taken to be the principall Iudgment 39 Ed. 5. 1. In a Scire facias brought by John Duke of Lancaster and Blanch his Wife to execute a Fine levied to them in the time of Ed. 2. and the Writ did recite the Fine to be levied Tenendum de nobis c. but it was adjudged good by Iudgment of Parliament and 2 R. 3. 4. Bough brought an Action of Debt against Collins who pleaded a forreign Attachment in L. by custome and did mistake the Custome and it was traversed that there was no such Custom and the major certified it so and all this was in the time of King Edw. the first and it was adjourned over to another Term before which time the King died and resumed in the time of King Richard the third and Iudgment given whereupon Collins did bring a Writ of Error which was Rex Dei gratia c. quia in Recordo processu in redditione Judicii loquela quae fuit coram nobis per breve nuper inter B. c. error c. And the question was if it was good And some said that there was no Warrant for such a Writ and some said that the Writ ought to have been speciall reciting how c. But the Masters of the Office said that in a Writ of Error before the Iustices of the Bench there is but a generall form in the Writ And after it was adjudged that the Writ of Error was good John Vandlore Plaintiff Cornelius Dribble Defendant Trinit 14 Jacob. Rot. 1062. IN an Action of Debt on a Bond of two hundred pounds made the eleventh of Febr. the 12th of King James upon condition that the Defendant shall perform the agreement of William Holliday Thomas Moulson Robert de la Bar and Humphrey Burlemacke Arbitrators elected c. to arbitrate of and for all Actions Suits Accounts and Demands had moving or depending in variance between the parties before the date of the said Obligation so that the agreement of the premisses be made and put into writing before the twentieth of March next The Defendant pleaded that there was no such Arbitrement The Plaintiff replyed that the eighteenth of March 12 Jacob. they did make an Arbitrement c. of and concerning the Premisses that the Defendant should pay the Plaintiff fifty pounds viz. twenty pounds at April next and twenty five pounds at _____ and the twentieth of July next twenty five pounds in full satisfaction and discharge of all such monies as the Plaintiff did claim or demand of the Defendant by reason of the administration of the Goods c. of John Stadsell or by any other means whatsoever And that each of the parties upon payment of the said fifty pounds shall make generall Acquittances one to the other of all Actions Debts and Demands unto the day of the making of the said Acquittances And alledged breach to be made in the payment of the said twenty five pounds the twentieth of
Court of the Kings Bench was on the contrary But afterwards the case was resolved upon another point viz. That the Lease was voyd because that the words a die confectionis c. were razed by the Lessee himself But admitting that in this case the Lease should not begin until the end of the first Lease yet that is no proof that in our case the Lease shall not begin presently for in this case of the 9 of Elizab. the true Grant in the premisses does shew the intent of the parties to make a Lease in Reversion and that shall controul the words in the Habendum a die confectionis also these words are qualified by other words in the Habendum viz. termino praedict finito Thirdly the former Lease is recited as a good Lease without doubt but in our case the first Lease is not received as a Lease in truth but is termed a pretended Lease and yet in this case there were diversities of Opinions if the Lease shall commence presently or not And Mich. 10 Jacob. Thomas Moor brought an Ejectment against John Musgrave upon a Lease made to him by William Moor the fifth of May 10 Jac. of a Messuage c. in C. in the County of Cumberland habendum from the Feast of the Anunciation last past for 21 years whereby he entred and was possest until the Defendant the same day did eject him To which the Defendant pleaded Not guilty And the Iury found that William Moor was seised in Fee and made a Lease to the Plaintiff habendum from the Anunciation of the Virgin Mary last past for the term of 21 years next ensuing the date hereof c. And Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff whereby it appears that the term shall begin from the first limitation And after the Case was argued on the Bench by all the Iudges Judgment and Denham Bromley and Tanfield were of Opinion for the Defendant wherefore Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff Michaelm 14 Jacob. Standish against Short in the Exchequer IN an Ejectment on a Lease made by George Walker Parson of the parish of S. John Evangelist in London 14 Junii 14 Jac. of a Messuage called the Swan in the said Parish habendum from the Anunciation last past for three years whereupon the Plaintiff was possest until he was ejected by the Defendant the 15 Junii in the same year And upon Not guilty pleaded the Iury found That the said Messuage did lie within the City of London and that it was an ancient City and that by the Custom every Citizen being a Freeman of London by his Will in writing may devise all his houses and Lands and any part thereof in the said City as well in Mortmain without license as in any other manner in Fee in Tayl for life or for years c. and that the said Custom and all other Customs of the said City the 7 of Richard the second were confirmed by Act of Parliament And they found that William Daringre Citizen and Freeman of London the tenth of May 34 of Ed. the third was seised in Fee as well of the said Messuages as of other Lands in London in Fee and the tenth of May 1360. and in the 34 of Ed. 3. made his Will in writing and thereby did devise the said Messuages by the name of his Tenements in these words following And first he devised a Quit Rent of 40 s. a year to the Parson of St. John Evangelist and his successors to pray for Souls and he did devise to the said Parson and his successors a Chamber with two Cellars thereupon lying on the North-side of his Tenement to pray for Souls And then followed this clause Item lego ordino quod unus capellanus celebret in Ecclesia Sancti Johannis praedict statim post decessum meum pro anima mea animabus praedictis quod idem capellanus percipiet annuatim de Tenemento meo 8 Marks pro stipendio volo quod idem capellanus ad matutinas missas omnibus aliis horis Canonicis in Ecclesia praedict intersit per dispositionem Rectoris ejusdem qui pro tempore fuerit de residuo si quod clarum fuerit ultra solutionem dict tenementi Volo quod Richardus filius Elizabethae uxoris meae scolatizando adjuvetur quousque ad legitimam aetatem pervenit ad ordines Sacerdotales percipiend cum Sacerdos fuerit volo quod idem Richardus dictum cantarium occupet pro termino vitae suae si voluit si non de residuo praedicti tenementi neque de cantario nihil percipiet sed Rector antedictus qui pro tempore fuerit 4 magistri sufficient Parochiam praesentent invenient unum capellanum ad dictum Cantarium occupandum in perpetuum de tenementis meis in dominica Parochia non legatis salvo quod lego de dictis tenement meis Rectoribus Successor suis illam mansionem quam Johannes Sherman modo tenet reddend inde annuatim tot quiet reddit de omnibus tenementis meis exeunt Item volo quod si dominica Cantuaria pro defectu dicti Rectoris vel Successor suorum retardavit ultra 40 dies inoccupat fuerit quod dict camer solarii mansiones erunt Gardianis de ponte Et id quod clarum fuerit residuum ultra solutionem reparationem praedict volo quod ponatur sub custode Rectoris 4 Parochianorum ad providend ornamentum libros dominicae Ecclesiae And the Devisor dyed the same day seised of the said Tenements And they further found that the Messuages wherein c. is parcel of one of the Tenements in the Will out of which the Testator did ordain that the said Chaplain should have eight Marks for his stipend and that Henry Tyting was Parson of the said Church at the time of the death of the Devisor and that the Church was voyd by his death and that the Lessor was presented admitted instituted and inducted and that he entered into the said Messuages upon the Defendant and did expel him and made the Lease to the Plaintiff who entered and was possest until the Defendant ejected him And whether the Defendant was guilty or not they prayed the Opinion of the Court. And I conceive that the Plaintiff ought to have Iudgment And the Question is Whether the Parson by this Devise shall have the houses the said eight Marks are limited to be payd to the Chaplain or not And I conceive that the Parson shall have it In the Comment 4136. It is taken for a Rule that in expounding of Wills the Law shall interpret the words of the Devisor and shall direct their operation according to the intent of the Devisor so that to the matter form and order limited in last Wills the Law does submit to them and wills that they should be observed And although that in Conveyances or Deeds executed by men in their life-times the Law doth require apt words to make
inter vicinos suos apud Edmunton praedict which is not sufficient for that it ought to be alledged in fact that he made or caused lites discordia and not that he was like to make them And if an Indictment be insufficient although that the party does plead Not guilty and be acquitted yet he shall not have a Conspiracy or an Action on the Case for by such Indictment he cannot be in any danger and 9 Ed. 4. 12. If one be indicted on an insufficient Indictment and he does not take advantage thereof but pleads not guilty and is acquitted and brings a Writ of Conspiracy the Defendants may show how that the Indictment was insufficient so that the Plaintiff was not duly arraigned and they shall have advantage thereof Vide Cook 4 Rep. Vaux Case And 34 H. 6. 9. If the party indicted be misnamed and be acquitted he shall not have a Conspiracy because the Indictment was voyd as to him And Dyer 286. If the offence in the Indictment be pardoned by a general pardon and yet the party pleads Not guilty and is acquitted he shall not have a Conspiracy because he was in no jeopardy And this Case being moved by Chilborn Serjeant and George Crook for the Plaintiff the fourth of February 15 Jacob. I shewed to the Court that the Plea was good for the reasons and authorities afore cited and also that the Indictment was insufficient for the Reasons afore shewed Judgment And therefore Iudgment was given Quod querens nihil caperet per Billam Michaelmas 15 Jacob. Thomas Muschamp Knight and Margaret his wife and Thomas Lock Esq and Jane his wife against Colan Bluet Michael Sampson Edward Jenny and Elizabeth his wife In the Exchequer IN an Action of Trespass for that the Defendants the first of January 14 Jacob. by force and arms the Close of the Plaintiff at Tottenham did break and enter possessionem tenementorum praedict a praedicto primo Januarii usque diem billae scil 20 Maii 15 Jacob. habuerunt tenuerunt custodierunt ad damnum 40 l. Quo minus c. The Defendants pleaded Not guilty The Iury found that before the Trespass Sir William Lock Knight was seised in Fee of the said Tenements and held them in Socage and that he and Matthew Lock his son were Ioynt-tenants in Fee of other Copyhold Lands in Tottenham and that he had issue Thomas Matthew John Henry and Michael That the 15 Martii 1549. Sir William made his Will in writing and thereby did devise these Tenements to Henry and Michael in these words I give to Thomas Matthew Iohn Henry and Michael my five Sons my dwelling House in Bow-lane and my House at the Lock in Cheap and my House at the Bell in Cheap to the intent that they or some of them may dwell in them and keep the Retaining Shop still in my name to continue there Item I give to Iohn Lock my House that Paris dwelleth in I give to Henry Lock my House that Iohn Edwards dwelleth in I give to Michael Lock the three Houses wherein W. B. and P. dwell I give to Henry Lock the House that Kew dwelleth in I give to Matthew Lock the two Houses wherein S. and T. dwell I give to Henry and Michael Lock all my Houses in the Poultry Bucklersbury and St. Iohns and a House that Goodman dwelleth in I give to Matthew Lock all my Houses at Dowgate and in the Vintry I give to Thomas Lock all my Houses in Cheap lying in St. Peters Parish I give to Thomas Lock my Land at Martin and Wimbleton that I may give him except one Farm called Martin Holts which I give to Henry and Michael Lock I give to all my five Sons the half of the Leg Entry which I purchased of late And as touching my Lands at Tottenham my Son Matthew is joyned Purchaser with me of the most and the rest of all my Houses and Land there which is Freehold I give to Henry and Michael Lock upon this condition that if they shall sell it to any man but to Matthew Lock my Son then he to enter upon it as of my Gift by this my Will Item All the Houses and Lands that I have given joyntly betwixt my Sons is That they shall bear part and part-like going out of all my Houses and Lands upon my Blessing as well Freehold as Copyhold to pay to my Wife Elizabeth for Dowry 40 l. every year during her life out of all my Lands and Houses as well Copyhold as Freehold for which Sum I am bound as appeareth by certain Indentures c. and which of my Sons refuseth to bear his part of the aforesaid Sum of 40 l. I will that he or they shall enjoy no part of my Bequest by me to them given in this my Will but my Gift given to him o● them to go to the rest of my well-willing Sons which be content to fulfil this my Will and Bond that I am bound in to be performed Sir William Lock dyed seised and Elizabeth his Wife did survive him Henry and Michael did enter into the said Tenements and payd their parts of the said 40 l. to the said Elizabeth Henry dyes and Michael payd his part of the said 40 l. Thomas Lock was Son and Heir of the said Sir William and had issue Matthew Lock his Son and Heir and dyes Matthew the Son of Thomas deviseth the said Tenements to the Plaintiffs habendum from the death of the said Michael for seven years The 28 of July 15 Jacob. Michael Lock dyed seised of the said Tenements And the said Colan Bluet Michael Sampson and Elizabeth Jenny the Defendants are the next Heirs of the said Michael and that the said Bluet Sampson and Jenny in the right of the said Elizabeth his Wife after the death of the said Michael Lock did enter upon whom the Plaintiffs did enter upon whom the Defendants re-entred and made the Trespass But whether the Entry of the Plaintiffs was legal or not the Iury did doubt and if legal they found for the Plaintiff if not for the Defendants And I conceive that Iudgment ought to be given for the Plaintiffs for I conceive that Henry and Michael Lo●k had but an Estate for their lives by this Devise which by their deaths is ended so that nothing can descend to the Heirs of Michael being the survivor and by consequence the Lease made to the Plaintiffs by Matthew Lock the Heir of the Devisor is good and the Entry of the Plaintiffs is lawful The Case And the Case upon the whole matter I conceive to be this Sir William Lock being seised of certain Land in Fee and being Ioynt-tenant with Matthew Lock one of his Sons of Copyhold Land within the same Town had issue Henry Michael Thomas and two other Sons and by his Will did devise to his Sons divers Lands severally And after says Touching my Lands at T. my Son Matthew is joyned Purchaser with me already
REPORTS OF THAT GRAVE and LEARNED JUDGE Sir JOHN BRIDGMAN KNIGHT Serjeant at LAVV SOMETIME CHIEF JUSTICE OF CHESTER To which are added Two Exact Tables the one of the Cases and the other of the Principal Matters therein contained LONDON Printed by Tho. Roycroft for H. Twyford Tho. Dring and Jo. Place and are to be sold at their Shops in Vine Court Middle Temple the George in Fleetstreet and at Furnivals Inn Gate in Holborn 1659. TO THE STUDENTS OF THE COMMON LAWS OF ENGLAND Gentlemen THese Ensuing Reports being brought to me in Manuscript in the peculiar Dialect of our Common Law I discovered the same to be the Hand-writing of that late Judicious and Honorable Person Sir John Bridgman Knight deceased Serjeant at Law heretofore Chief Justice of Chester the memory of whose great Learning and profoundnesse in the Knowledge of the Laws of England still liveth although himself be dead and thereupon bestowed some pains in the perusall thereof wherein I found many things in my weak apprehension worthy of observation which induced me to encourage the Translation thereof into our Native Idiome the Language enjoyned by the present Authority onely to be Used in things of this Nature whereby the same might become of publike Use if any well acquainted with the Authors Character shall doubt the Credit of this Copy they may have the sight of the Originall the better to satisfie themselves by the help of the Stationer The Cases are not placed in time as the same were adjudged but Printed in that order as they were found under the Authors own Hand For this Defect it is hoped that the Table may make amends which you will finde to be a perfect Repertory as to each materiall thing contained in this Book What faults have escaped the Presse will lye in the power of the judicious Reader to correct Mr. Bracton in his first Book Cap. 2. saith Si aliqua nova inconsueta emerserint quae prius usitata non fuerint in Regno Si tamen similia evenerint per simile judicentur cum bona sit occasio a similibus procedere ad similia Let this serve to Apologize for such encouragement as hath been given by me for the publishing of these Reports I having no other aim herein then the Publike good Farewell J. H. Middle Temple 5 Nov. 1658. THE NAMES of the CASES A ALlens case 13 Iac. 39 Ashfields case 14 Iac. 99 Adams case 15 Jac. 107 Agards case 15 Jac. 130 B Bassets case 8 Bishop of Chichesters case 1 Car. 29 C Crockers case 27 Coopers case 60 Crawleys case 13 Jac. 64 D Dawtrees case 18 Jac. 4 Davisons case 5 E Evans case 16 Jac. 118 F Frossets case 14 Jac. 49 G Garths case 22 Gouges case 12 Jac. 52 H Harris and Lewess case 56 Hollands case 69 K The King against Sir John Byron 23 The King Allen against Newton 15 Jac. 113 The King Parker against Webb 14 Jac. 120 L Loyds case 56 Lightfoots case 14 Iac. 88 Lees case 15 Jac. 116 Lingens case 15 Jac. 128 M Moores case 6 Meskins case 16 Mills case 63 Masons case 14 Jac. 87 Mandes case 13 Jac. 92 Mittons case 123 Muschamp and Lock against Blewit Sampson and Jenny c. 132 N Norris case 13 Iac. 47 Newshams case 14 Iac. 100 P Pets case 17 Iac. fo 1 Ponesleys case 18 Iac. 12 Perimans case 14 Sir Thomas Palmers case 11 Iac. 46 Pensons case 66 Parkers case 14 Iac. 89 Perryns case 12 Iac. 90 R Robinsons case 13 Iac. 79 Robinson against Greves 12 Iac. 81 S Samborns case 19 Iac. 9 Smalmans case 13 Iac. 42 Smith for the King against Boynton 13 Iac. 48 Smiths case 13 Iac. 59 Standishes case 14 Iac. 103 Southerns case 13 Iac. 125 T Townleys case 35 U Vanlores case 14 Iac. 58 W Whittons case 32 Weals case 14 Iac. 60 Webbs case 13 Iac. 84 Webb and lucks case 14 Iac. 110 Woods case 16 Iac. 139 THE REPORTS OF Serjeant BRIDGMAN Hill 17 Jac. Rotulo 170. Petts against Browne A Man is seised of Land in Fee and having two Sons doth devise his Land to his younger Son and his Heirs and if he dye without Issue living the eldest Son then the elder shall have the Land to him and his Heirs the Devisor dies the younger Son had issue a Daughter that dyed without issue then the younger Son suffers a common recovery with Voucher to the use of him and his Heirs and after deviseth to another and his heirs and then dies without issue living the elder Son Whether the Devisee or the elder Son should have the Land was the question And the Counsell for the Devisee raised three points 1. Admitting that these words in the Devise were omitted viz. living the eldest Son whether the younger Son had an Estate-taile or not 2. Whether these words do make such alteration of the Estate as to make the Estate a Fee-simple determinable upon this contingency viz. if he die without issue living the elder Son 3. Admitting that there were such a Fee in the younger Son yet whether this Estate devised to the eldest Son be not destroied by the recovery And as to the first point it was argued that if these words of limitation living the elder Son had been omitted the younger son had had an Estate-tail by this Devise the remainder in fee to the eldest Son For although the Devise to the younger Son was to him and his heirs which in case the Devise had stayed there had made a very good Fee-simple to the younger Son yet when the Devisor goes and declares further and deviseth that if he dye without issue that the elder son shall have the Land this last limitation if he dye without issue doth restrain the generality of these words his heirs to the heirs of the body of the younger Son only so that the last Devise to the eldest Son doth declare and exemplifie wh●t kind of heirs the Devisor intended in the first Devise to the youngest Son and in the 5 H. 6. and the 5. where Land was given to R. and K. his Wife and their heirs and to the heirs of the said R. if the heirs of the said R. and K. his wife issuing should dye and this was adjudged a good Estate in tail And there it was said by Hall that if Land be given to a man and his Heirs for ever Et si contingit ipsum Obire sine haeredibus de corpore suo this is a good estate in tail and in the 19 H. 6. 74. by Vampage If I give land to another and his heirs for ever in the beginning of the Deed and then after I say Quod si contingat that if he die without heirs of his body that it shall remain to another in this case the Law intends by the Si contingat that it is but an Estate-tail And in the Book of Assises 14. Land was given to B. and his heirs to have and to hold to
the day is excluded by this word Quousque Crook contra Who said that the Declaration was insufficient for it ought to have been Tam pro Domino Rege quam pro seipso because here is a contempt to the King But upon full debate of the Case and upon shewing a President to the Court which was Plt. Jacobi Rot. 308. in the Common Pleas between King and Monlenax where the Declaration was for the party onely and all the Prothonotaries did certifie the Court that the greater part of Presidents of such Actions brought in the Common Pleas were for the party only and not Tam pro Domino Rege quam seipso whereupon it was adjudged that it was good either way Judicium and Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff And note that in this case the Iudgment was Quod Defendans sit in misericordia and not Quod capiatur vide 27. Assise 11. 42. Assise 17. Dyer 238. 40 41. Eliz. New Book of Entries 44 45. Bassett against Jefiock and Johnson IN an Ejectione the Iury gave a speciall Verdict to this effect That Queen Elizabeth was seised in fee in Jure coronae of the Mannor of Watton in the County of York and that King James the 15. Martii 2. Jac. did grant the same to William Brown and Robert Knight and their Heirs who the twenty seventh of April 3. Jac. did bargaine and sell the same to Michael Feilding and his heirs who entred and died seised and after whose death the same descended to Basill Feilding as his Brother who made a Lease to the Plaintiff Bridgman It seemeth to me that the Plaintiff hath made a good Title But it was objected that there was no good Title for that it is not found that the Queen died seised or that the Lands descended to the King But it was answered that when the Queen was seised in Fee in Jure Coronae that shall be intended to continue untill the contrary be shewed for when an Estate of Inheritance is once alledged it shall be intended still to continue till the contrary be shewn Plow Com. 193. 43 1. and 202. Judicium And afterwards viz. 19. Jacobi Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff without any argument at the Bench. Trin. 19. Jac. Samborne against Harilo IN an Action of Trespasse for that the Defendant 10. Octob. 44. Eliz the Plaintiffs free Warren at Mouldford in certain places there called Harecombe Harcombe Coppice and the Down did break and enter and did therein hunt without the license of the Plaintiff and three Hares and three hundred Conies did take and carry away Continuando as to the said Hunting and taking and carrying away the said Hares and Conies from the said tenth day of October to the first of November And further declared that the tenth of April 1. Jac. the Defendant the said Warren in the said places did break and enter and therein without the license of the Plaintiff did hunt and twenty Hares did take and carry away continuing the said hunting untill the first of March next after c. And further declared that the tenth of April 2. Jac. the said Defendant the said Warren in the said places did break and enter and therein without the license of the Plaintiff did hunt and forty Hares and four hundred Conies did take and carry away continuing the said hunting untill the first of March following contra pacem c. ad damnum c. The Defendant as to the Vi armis and to the first Trespasse except the entring and hunting in the said place called the Down and the taking and carrying away the three hundred Conies pleaded not guilty And as to the entry hunting and carrying away the said Conies he saith that the said place called the Down is and hath been time out of mind Communis fundus containing by estimation two hundred acres of Land and Pasture and that before the said tenth day of September and before the said Trespasse and at the said time the Defendant was seised of a Messuage and six Yard Land containing a hundred and sixty acres called the Mannor of Southbery in Mulford aforesaid and that the Defendant and all those whose estate he hath in the premisses time out of mind have had Common of Pasture in the said Down for 200. and 40. Sheep Levant and Couchant upon the said Messuage and six Yard Land and that the Defendant and all those whose Estate c. have used for preservation of the said Common as often as the said Common hath been oppressed and troubled with Conies have used of custome to have liberty to hunt and to take the Conies wherefore the Defendant the aforesaid time of the aforesaid first Trespasse and for preservation of the said Common from such oppression and diminution aforesaid into the said Down did enter and there hunted and the said Conies did take and carry away according to the said custome and continuing the said hunting all the said time And as to the second Trespasse besides the entry and hunting in the said places called Harecombe Harecombe Coppice and the Down and the taking and carrying away two hundred Conies he pleaded not guilty And as to the entry and hunting in the said places c. he saith that the said places called Harecombe and Harecombe Coppice are Woodland containing by estimation ten acres and that he was seised in Fee of the said Messuage and six Yard Land and made the same prescription as aforesaid for all his Horses Cowes Heifers Bullocks and two hundred and forty Sheep levant and couchant upon the said Tenements viz. for the Horses Cowes c. at the Feast of S. George and from that time untill the Corne growing in the Feilds of Moulford were carried away and after the Corne carried away for the Sheep untill the fourth of March next after and made the former prescription for the Sheep in the Down And the same prescription also for hunting and taking away the Conies as abovesaid and so did justifie the taking of the said two hundred Conies And as to the third Trespasse besides the entry and hunting in the said places and the taking and carrying away of the said four hundred Conies he pleaded not guilty and as to this plea he made the same prescription as before upon which plea the Plaintiff demurred in Law And if this matter pleaded in Bar was sufficient to bar the plaintiff of his Action was the question And it seemeth to me that there is nothing in the Defendants plea to hinder the Plaintiff from having Iudgment And the better to argue upon this matter I will first endeavour to shew what interest a Commoner hath in the Soile and what things he may do upon the Soile for preservation of the said Common 2. Whether this be a good usage and custome to enable the Defendant to hunt and kill Conies in the Plaintiffs free Warren And as to the first I conceive that he that hath Common in
173. Judicium And after many arguments in this Case Hillar 20 Jacob. the Court agreed that the Demise was good and Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Periman against Pierce and Margaret his Wife TEnant in Socage had issue by his first Wife Joan Elizabeth and Agnes and Alice and Elizabeth by his second Wife Katherine Mary William and Joan by his third Wife and by his Will did Devise his Land to Joan the younger for her life rendering 13 s. 4 d. Rent to William the remainder to William in Tayl the remainder to Elizabeth and Mary for life the remainder propinquo sanguinitatis of the Devisor for ever William dyes without issue Joan the younger dyes without issue Elizabeth had issue William Stokes and dyes Mary had issue William Pierce and dyes Joan the elder dyes having issue John Periman and William Periman Agnes and Alice dye without issue John Periman had issue John Periman the Lessor and dyes Elizabeth and Mary dye Katherine dyes without issue Elizabeth had issue George Dean and John Dean Elizabeth deviseth her Land to John Dean and his Heirs and dyes John Dean hath issue John Dean and dyes the Lessor enters and makes a Lease to the Plaintiff who enters and is ejected by the Defendants by commandment of the said John Dean the son upon which the Plaintiff brought an Ejectment And it seemeth to me that judgment ought to be given for the Plaintiff for all the Land or at least for part thereof And therefore in the first place I conceive that when William the son dyed without issue the remainder in fee did vest in John Perriman who was the eldest son of Joan the elder who was the eldest daughter of the Devisor for although the Devisor had many daughters yet his intent appeared in the Will to a single person and not to divers also it appears that he doth not intend that this remainder should vest in William his son for he deviseth to him a Rent during the life of Joan the younger and afterwards an Estate Tail cannot be in Joan the younger or any of her issues because that an express Estate for life is limited to her nor in Elizabeth or Mary for he deviseth a remainder to them for life nor in any other of his daughters for then he would have named them either by their proper names or as his daughters and not by such circumlocution as is pretended in this Case Also the words of Remainder in fee cannot extend to those daughters for they are proximae consanguinitatis which does clearly exclude his own sons and daughters for they cannot properly be termed to be of consanguinity of the blood of the father as it is said in Sir William Herberts Case Cooks Rep. 3. that filius est pars patris and this is proved by the usual pleading of a Descent for if the Plea be by any except son or daughter the form is to say That the Land descends to him as Cosin and Heir and shall shew how but if by the son or daughter then to plead as before And 30 Assis 47. Land was devised to one for life the remainder to another for life the remainder propinquioribus haeredibus de sanguine puerorum of the Devisor there it is agreed that the sons and daughters are excluded by that Devise And so here in this Case neither William the son nor any of the daughters of the Devisor can take any thing by this Devise for they cannot be said de Consanguinitate de sanguine of the Devisor but the Issues of the Children of the Devisor are comprized within these words And then I conceive that the limitation being in the singular number viz. proximo consanguinitat all the issues of those Children shall not take but one onely and that as I conceive shall be the eldest son of the eldest daughter of the Devisor which was John Periman father of the Lessor of the Plaintiff as in the 20 H. 6. 23. In an Account supposing the Defendant to be his Receivor from the Feast of St. Michael it shall be taken to be the principal Feast of St. Michael the Archangel and not the Feast of St. Michael in Monte Teneb And 13 H 4. 4. 21 H. 68. 37 H. 6. 29. If father and son be of one name scil of J. S. If J. S. be named generally in a Writ Recovery or Deed it shall be intended the father for that he is most worthy And so Pladwels Case in this Court Mich. 38 and 39 Eliz. If a woman hath a Bastard and two legal issues and Land be given to one for life the remainder to the eldest issue of the woman the eldest legal issue shall take and not the bastard although he be the eldest issue for general words shall always be taken in the most worthy sence And so here the Devisor did dispose of his Estate to Joan the younger rendering Rent to William his son the remainder to William in Tail the remainder to two of his daughters scil to Elizabeth and Mary for life the remainder proxim consanguin c. in fee By which words it is apparent that the Devisor intended that for the default of the issues of William and after the death of Elizabeth and Mary the Estate should remain to one who was next of blood to him and that is John Periman the eldest son of his eldest daughter But admitting that all the issues of the daughters shall be in equal degree to take by this remainder as well as the eldest son of Joan the eldest daughter yet I conceive that those daughters who had an Estate devised to them by Will are excluded Cooks 8 Rep. 95. B. Always the intention of the Devisor expressed in his Will is the best Expositor and Director of his words and therefore if Land be devised to one in perpetuum this shall pass a fee although it be otherwise in a Grant So if one deviseth Land to another to dispose of or sell at his pleasure this is a fee to the Devisee Litt. 133. 19 H. 8 9. B. And so in our Case the intent of the Devisor appears to dispose of his Land among his Children and their issues as in Trin. 38 Eliz. Ewre and Heydons Case Heydon was seised of a Messuage in D and of three houses and certain Land in Watford did devise his Messuage in D and all his Land in Watford it was judged the houses in Watford did not pass in regard of the express mentioning the houses in D. and this was affirmed in a Writ of Error Edmund Meskin against John Hickford Administrator of Henry Machin IN an Audita Querela because that the 11 Ed. 1. it was Enacted That in regard that Merchants which heretofore had lent their goods to divers persons were fallen into poverty because they had not such speedy remedy provided for them for the Recovery of their Debts Ac ratione inde multi Mercatores desistebant venire in hanc terram cum Merchandizis
Defendants Father was seised in Fee of divers Lands and made a Feoffment to the use of himself for life the remainder to the Defendant his Son in Tail with divers remainders over with power of revocation by writing under his hand and Seal and publisht in the presence of three Witnesses And then for the consideration of four hundred pounds did enter into this Recognizance to the Plaintiff and dies And whether this Land were extendable or not against the Son was the question And I conceive that by the Statute of the 27. Eliz. this Recognizance may be extended against the Son the words of which Statute are And be it further enacted by the Authority aforesaid that if any person or persons have heretofore sithence the beginning of the Queens Majesties Reign that now is made or hereafter shall make any conveyance Gift Grant or Demise Charge Limitation of Use or Uses or Assurance of in or out of any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments with any Clause Provision Article or Condition of Revocation Determination or alteration at his or their will or pleasure of such Conveyance Assurance Grants Limitation of Uses or Estates of in or out of the said Lands Tenements or Hereditaments or of in or out of any part or parcell of them contained or mentioned in any Writing Deed or Indenture of such Assurance Conveyance Grant or Gift and after such Conveyance Grant Gift Devise Charge limitation of Use or Assurance so made or had shall or do bargaine sell demise grant convey sell or charge the same Lands Tenements or Hereditaments or any part or parcell thereof to any person or persons bodies Politick or Corporate for money or other good consideration paid or given the said first Conveyance or Assurance Gift Grant Demise Charge or Limitation not by him or them revoked made void or altered according to the power and authority reserved or expressed unto him or them in and by the said secret Conveyance Assurance Gift or Grant That then the said former Conveyance Assurance Gift Grant or Demise as touching the said Lands Tenements and Hereditaments so after sold bargained conveyed demised or charged against the said Bargainees Vendees Lessees Grantees and every of them their Heirs Successors Executors Administrators and Assigns and against all and every person and persons which have shall or may lawfully claim any thing by from or under them or any of them shall be deemed taken and adjudged to be void frustrate and of none effect by vertue and force of this present Act. So that this Statute doth not only aide Purchasors of the Lands but those who for a valuable consideration have any charge out of the Land or upon the Land But it may be objected that the Statute doth make the revokable Conveyance void only against the Bargainees Vendees Grantees Object and Lessees but does not speak of any Conuzee But I answer that it appears by the foregoing words Respons that the Statute intends to aide not only Bargainees c. but also all that have any charge out of the Land or upon the Land and although the last words of the Statute doe not speak expresly of Conuzees yet the Statute sh●ll be expounded to extend to them and the Statute of West 2. cap. 1. Quod illi quibus tenementa data sunt in Taile potestatem alienandi c. which words seem only to restrain the D●nee in Tail yet in the 5. Edw. 2. Form 52. the issue is thereby restrained and 3. Edw. 3. Formedon 46. that Tenant in tail cannot charge the Land no more then alien can forfeit the Land so that if he grant a Rent or acknowledge a Statute or Recognizance or commit Felony or Treason and dies the Issue shal have the Land discharged And this Statute hath alwaies been taken as to the equity thereof to releive Purch sors and those who have and therefore in Coke R. 3. 82. B. Standen and Bullocks case Mich. 42. 43. Eliz. where a man had conveyed his Land to the use of himself for life and then to the use of divers others of his blood with future power of revocation as after such a Feast or after the death of such a one and after and before the power of revocation commenc'd he for a valuable consideration did bargain and sell the Land to another and his Heirs this bargain and sale is within the remedy of the Statute for although the Statute saith the said first Conveyance not by him revoked according to the power by him reserved which seems by the literall sense to be intended of a present power of revocation for no revocation may be made by force of a future power untill it comes in esse yet it was holden that the intention of the Act was that such a voluntary Conveyance which was originally subject to the power of revocation be it in present or in future shall not be good against a Purchasor bona fide upon valuable consideration and if other construction be made the Act will signifie very little and it will be easie to evade such an Act. And so if A. hath reserved to him a power of revocation by the assent of B. and then A. bargains and sells the Land to another this bargain and sale is good and within the remedy of the said Act. The King against Sir John Byron Knight IN a Quo Warranto for that the Defendant for a year past hath used and yet doth use without any Warrant within the Mannor of Colswick in the County of Nottingham within the bounds of the Kings Forest of Sherwood and within the reguards of the said Forest to have a Park within the said Mannor with a Pale Hedge and Ditch inclosed being two hundred acres of Pasture and a hundred acres of Wood within the said Park Et ad venandum capiendum occidendum apportandum in the said Park and two hundred acres of Pasture and a hundred acres of Wood omnes omnimodas damas Domini Regis Forrestae suae praedict in parcum praedict praedict 200. acr pasturae 100. acr Bosci aliquo tempore venand occidend Ita quod Forrestini Domini Regis forestae pra●dict nec aliquae aliae personae quaecunque intromittantur ad venandum fugandum intra parcum praedictum 200. acr pasturae 100. acr Bosci sine licentia defendentis The Defendant pleaded that John Biron Knight the Defendants Grandfather was seised in Fee of a Messuage of a hundred acres of land two hundred acres of Meadow three hundred acres of pasture and a hundred acres of wood in Colwick in the County aforesaid now and time out of mind called the Mannor of Colwick within the meets and bounds of the For●st aforesaid And that the said John Byron the Grandfather and all those whos● Estate the said John Byron hath in the aforesaid house and a hundred acres of land two hundred of Meadow and three hundred of Pasture and a hundred of Wood in Colwick aforesaid have had
against Humphrey Bigges And Manwood fol. 1. A Forest is a certain Territory of Ground priviledged for wild Beasts and Fowles of the Forest to rest and abide in the safe protection of the King for his Princely delight and pleasure and doth consist of four things 1. Vert. 2. Venison 3. Particular Laws and Priviledges 4. Certain Officers But by this pretence of the Defendant the Forest of the King is priviledged for wild Beasts to rest in protection of the King but they are subject to being destroyed by the Defendant for by such pretence none can enter there but he or his Keepers And I conceive that no body can pretend to have any profit or pleasure in the Forest which tends to the destruction of the Forest and that is the reason that one cannot prescribe to have Common in a Forest for Sheep Geese Goats or Hoggs for to suffer them to Common there is Ad magnum nocumentum ferarum forestae and such a prescription the Defendant maketh which is not only Ad magnum nocumentum but to the utter destruction of the Forest And if it be objected that this Park claimed by the Defendant is but a little part of the Forest this is no answer for as in the Case of a Common no man may prescribe to have Sheep c. in the Forest so cannot he in any part of the Forest and if the Defendant may prescribe to have such an irregular Park in part of the Forest so may others claim such like prescriptions in other parts of the Forest and so the King shall lose all the Franchise of his Forest and the Defendant may make his Fence or Ditch so low without-side and so high within that the Kings Deer cannot get out again when they are come in and so this Park shall be in the nature of a Trap to catch the Kings Deer And further he that will prescribe to have any common profit or pleasure in the Freehold or Inheritance of another ought to make his prescription in such manner so that he must leave the residue of the profits to the Owner and cannot utterly exclude the Owner and therefore if one doth prescribe to have all the Herbage Pannage and Profits of the Land of I. S. no man can conceive that this prescription is good Neither can a Commoner prescribe that the Lord of the Soile cannot put in any Cattell into the Land But in our case the very Franchise of the Kings Forest doth consist of Vert Venison Lands and Officers of the Forest for the King may have a Forest although he hath no Land there And in the Commentaries 332. If a Mannor within the Forest of Waltham do escheat to the King and the King grants the Mannor to one in fee yet shall not he have the liberty of the Forest And the same Law is where the King grants all the Land which he hath in the Forest But notwithstanding I agree that one may have a Park within a Forest by prescription or by grant but then the same ought to be kept so inclosed that the Beasts of the Forest cannot enter into the Park which if not done it is a forfeiture of the liberty of the Park and so it is if he have a Salterie or Deer-leap for the nature of a Park is to be inclosed and in the 10. H. 7. 6. it is said that a Park consists of Soile Inclosure and Game and in the 15. Ed. 3. closure and game And in the 15 Edw. the 3. Thomas Earl of Lancaster Lord of a Forest did grant leave to one John Harrington to make a Park within the said Forest and there it is adjudged that if the Grantee does so sleightly inclose the Park so that the Forest-beasts may get in there that it is a forfeiture and the Lord of the Forest may enter and take the Deer But by the pretence of the Defendant the King shall not have so much power in this Land being in the midst of the Forest as he hath in the Lands of any of his Subjects which do lie without the Forest for if Forest Beasts stray or wander into the Land of a Subject out of the Forest the Foresters may enter into this Land and rechase them into the Forest again Crocker against Kelsey HVsband and Wife Tenants in Tail of the Gift of the Husband the remainder to the Husband in fee The Husband dyes the Son and Heir of the Husband and Wife does levy a Fine with proclamations to the use of him and his Heirs the Wife does let a Lease of the Land for 21 years and dyes the Son deviseth his Land to E and his Heirs and dyes And Whether this Lease made by the Wife were good to binde the Devisee was the Question And I conceive that the Lease is good For although that by the Fine the Estate-tail is barred as to the Conusor and all his issues yet does the Wife remain Tenant in Tail as before and therefore this Lease made by her is a good Estate derived out of her Estate-tail and shall binde all except the issues in Tail who may claim per formam Doni And so is it in the 33 H. 8. Dyer 51. B. Tenant in Tail before the Statute of the 27 H. 8. does make a Feoffment to the use of himself in fee and then he and his Feoffees make a Lease for years rendering Rent and then is the Statute made the Tenant in Tail dyes and then the issue aliens by Fine before any entry or receit of the Rent and holden by all the Iustices except Sanders that the Alienee shall not avoyd this but otherwise of a Rent granted And suppose the Fine had not been levyed by the issue he shall not avoyd the Lease without entry and if he had aliened after the death of his Mother and before entry the Alienee should never avoyd the Lease And in the 29 Assis 51. and the Comment 557. Tenant in Tail acknowledgeth a Statute-Merchant the issue is attaint of Felony and pardoned the Tenant in Tail dyes the issue enters and the Conusee sues out Execution And because the issue was disabled to inherit the Estate-tail therefore he had it as an Occupant and so it was subject to the Execution And although the remainder in Fee does pass by way of interest by the Fine yet that cannot come in possession so long as any issue in Tail is living and therefore if a stranger had entered after the death of the Wife the Son could not have had a Formedon in the remainder for that must suppose the death of the Donees in Tail without issue the which cannot be in our Case Comment 560. Austens Case Sir Thomas Wyat Tenant in Tail of the Gift of the King made a Lease for years rendering Rent and dyed Sir Thomas his son accepts the Rent and after was attaint of Treason and executed having issue and adjudged that the King should have the Land in point of Reverter discharged of the Lease
any Lands Tenements or Hereditaments parcel of their Bishopricks or any charge or incumbrance out of the same or of any other thing in their disposition to binde their Successors except onely Leases for 21 years or three lives of such Lands Tenements and Hereditaments which have been usually demised or whereupon the usual Rents have been reserved according to the said Act. And although such Lease be made of such Lands usually demised reserving the usual Rent according to the said Statute yet unless all the limitations prescribed by the Statute of the 32 of Hen. 8. be not pursued as if it be not all in possession or that the old Lease be not expired or surrendred within one year which is not prohibited by the first of Eliz. as it was adjudged in Foxes Case then such Lease will not binde the Successor unless it be confirmed by the Dean and Chapter And such construction as aforesaid hath been made to disable a Bishop to make any Estate except Leases for 21 years or for three lives as is aforesaid as concerning the binding of the Successor as the Grant of the next avoydance by a Bishop to another although it be confirmed by the Dean and Chapter is restrained by the said Statute of Elizabeth to binde the Successor as it hath often been judged and the reason is because it is such an Hereditament whereon no Rent may be reserved for all in the Statute that is not permitted in the Exception is restrained as to the Successor by the general purview of the said Act but yet such Grant will binde the Bishop himself although the Statute says that it shall be voyd against all intents and purposes for the makers of the said Act did intend not onely the advancement of Religion but also increase of good Hospitality and avoyding dilapidations and ruine of the Church which the Successor if the Acts of his Predecessor should binde him were not able to remedy and therefore the makers of that Act did rather regard the Successor And these words in the Act viz. Parcel of the possessions of his Archbishoprick or Bishoprick or united belonging or appertaining to the said Archbishoprick or Bishoprick may be very aptly construed That the Gift of this Office and all other such like things that are belonging to the Archbishoprick or Bishoprick for although the Bishop cannot exercise this Office himself yet hath he an inheritance in the gift and disposing thereof and so it is adjudged in Cooks 8 Rep. Earl of Rutlands Case And these words Belonging to the Archbishoprick or Bishoprick shall be expounded for Concerning the Archbishoprick or Bishoprick And therefore if a Writ of Annuity be brought against a Bishop upon a title of prescription or otherwise and Iudgment be given against him upon Verdict or confession this is restrained by this Act because the Bishop is charged with this Annuity in respect of his Bishoprick and therefore the Successor shall be charged with the arrears incurred in the life of the Predecessor 21 H. 7. 4. 48 Ed. 3.26 33 H. 6. 44. and yet is not the Annuity issuing out of the Bishoprick as appears in the 10 H. 6. 10. and 10 Ed. 4. 10. But because this does concern the Bishoprick and does tend to the diminution of the revenues and the impoverishing of the revenues this is restrained by the said Act of the first of Eliz. And therefore to answer to the Objection Wherefore such an Office should be granted to one solely I answer and it was also agreed to by all the Court That if the Office be ancient and necessary the Grant thereof with the ancient fee is no diminution of the Revenue or dispoverishing the Successor and therefore of necessity such Grants are exempted out of the general restraint of the said Act of Elizabeth For as Bracton saith Illud quod alias licitum non est necessitas facit licitum necessitas inducit privilegium quod jure privatur And if Bishops have not power to grant such Offices of service and necessity for the life of the Grantees but that their estates shall depend on incertainties as on the death or transmutation of the Bishop then no able or sufficient persons will be willing to serve them in such Offices or at least will not discharge their Office with any cheerfulness or alacrity if they may not have such estate in certain for the term of their lives as their Predecessors had but when an ancient Office is granted to one it is not of necessity to grant the same to two and therefore such Grant is not exempted out of the general restraint of the Statute no more then if the Bishop should grant an Office with the ancient fee to one and then he grants the Reversion to another this is restrained by the Statute because it is not of necessity and if the Bishop may grant such Offices to two he may grant them without any limitation of lives and by consequence ad infinitum and so if he may grant a Reversion to one so he may to others also without any limitation and by the same reason he may grant them in Tail or in Fee which is quite contrary to the intention of the said Act. And of such opinion was Popham Chief Iustice Michaelm 44 45 Eliz. in Stumblers Case and Dyer 23 Eliz. 370. where Horn Bishop of Winchester did grant to Dr. Dale during his life a Rent out of the Mannor of Waltham pro concilio impendendo the Bishop dyed and because the Rent was arrear Dr. Dale brought an Action of Debt for the arrears incurred in his life against the Executors In which two points are to be observed 1. That the Grant was not voyd against the Bishop himself The other That although the Rent was issuing out of the possessions and not parcel this was voyd by his death And Trin. 30 Eliz. Rot. 346. in this Court The Bishop of Chester after the Statute of 1 Eliz. did grant to George Boulton an Annuity of five marks per annum pro concilio impenso impendendo which was confirmed by the Dean and Chapter and then the Bishop dyed and Boulton brought a Writ of Annuity against the Successor and in his Count did aver that the Predecessors of the said Bishop had granted reasonable Fees but did not aver that this Fee had been granted before and did aver that he was homo consiliarius in lege peritus and the Opinion of the Court was against the Plaintiff But there it was resolved that although the said Bishoprick was founded but of late times to wit in the time of Hen. the eight yet a Grant of an Office of necessity to one in possession with reasonable fees the reasonableness whereof is to be decided by the Court of Iustice wherein the same doth depend is good and is restrained out of the general words of the said Act. And in our Case the avowant hath averred this Office to be an ancient Office and which hath
the Statute and therefore they are gone The reason of making of this Act was Answer because divers priviledges which they had as Bona Catalla Fellonum c. were extinct by the accession to the Crown and therefore it was necessary to revive them but if the Statute had not been made yet shall the King have all those Priviledges which were not extinct as Parks Chases Warrens Markets Fairs c. And that this priviledge is given to the King may be proved by a Proviso in the Statute whereby it is provided that all priviledges of Sanctuaries before used or claimed in houses or other places commonly called S. Johns Hold and all other Sanctuaries before used and appertaining to the said Hospitall shall be void and of none effect whereby it appears that if that Proviso had not been made the priviledge of Sanctuaries had been in the King and his Patentees in the same Mannor as had been used before the dissolution and that by force of this word Priviledge and yet this priviledge of Sanctuary does not concern the Land as discharge of payment of Tythes doth Object 3 But it may be again objected that the Statute of the 31. H. 8. hath an expresse clause for discharge of the payment of Tythes which needed not to have been if the generall words would have served Answer I answer that there were two reasons to put this Clause into the said Statute 1. To induce purchasers to buy the said Land and at a greater price 2. For the infinite manners and means of discharge which the Abbots had so that it would be very hard for Purchasers to know them and this appears in Coke Rep. 2. Bishop of Canterburies Case but in our Case the means is very well known and therefore such clause was not necessary And as to the second point I conceive that the clause for discharge of the payment of Tythes doth extend to the possession of this Pryory and yet I do agree that their Lands are given to the King not by the Statute of 31. of H. 8. but by the 32. of H. 8. And to prove this the Statute of 31. H. 8. does extend to all Abbies Pryories Hospitalls and other Religious and Ecclesiasticall houses and this Pryory was Religions and Ecclesiasticall for they vowed Obedience and Chastity and the case in the 27. H. 8. 16. in the case of Martin Dockwray where it is holden that Fryers are dead persons in the Law be they of an Abby or any other Pryory and that appeares by the Statute of 32. of H. 8. of their dissolution by which it is enacted that the Fryers shall sue and be sued by their proper names and that they shall have such capacities liberties and freedomes as were given to other Religious persons in an A●● at the first Session of this Parliament And in further proof hereof divers Rectories were appropriate to them and Tythes given to them and they enjoyed them and the Statute gives them to the King by which it does appear that they were Religious and Ecclesiasticall Object 4 But it may be likewise objected that the Statute of the 31. of H. 8. does not discharge Chanteries or Colledge lands given to King Edward the sixth of Tythes Answer I answer That the reason of that is that because Colledges although they were Ecclesiasticall yet they were not regular And Coke 2. Rep. 48. B. but the Fryers of S. John of Jerusalem were Ecclesiasticall and Regular And it is not inconvenient that the King and his Patentees should have the benefit of the clause of the Statute of 31. of H. 8. in those lands given to the King by the Statute of the 32. of H. 8. as the Statute of Acton Burnell does provide that if the Extender upon a Statute Merchant does extend the Lands too high they shall answer this to the Conusee and the Statute of 23. H. 8. does order a new form of Recognizance to be taken before any of the cheif Iustices yet the Conusee shall have the said benefit of the Statute of Acton Burnell although it was made two hundred years before the other Statute And for Authority in this point Dyer 277. The Pryor of S Johns of Jerusalem with the Fryers two or three years before the dissolution did make a Lease of a Mannor for years which Lessee did pay Tythes to the Church of Rochester proprietary and after the dissolution the King did grant the reversion of the Mannor to one Stathome and to his Heirs in such ample manner as the Pryor had the same c. the Lease does expire If he and his heirs having the Mannor in their own possession shal be discharged of Tythes or not was the question in Chancery and on consideration had of the Statute of the 31. of H. 8. cap. 13. it seemed by the Lord Keeper Sanders Southcott and Dyer that they be discharged untill they let the same out to others to Farm And Pascha 11. Jac. in the Common Pleas in the case of Weney this case did come into question and argued by Coke Warburton Winch and Nicholls and they were divided in their Opinions Saturday the sixth day of June in the ninth year of the Reign of King Charles Between Francis Townley Esquire Plaintiff Edward Sherborne Executor of Richard Mountford deceased Executor of Thomas Challoner deceased Defendant Vpon hearing and debating of the matter as well on the fifteenth as the eighteenth of June last the Court being assisted with Mr. Iustice Hutton and Mr. Iustice Jones upon the Plaintiffs Bill of Review for the reviving and reversall of a Decree made in a Cause wherein the said Richard Mountford deceased Executor of Thomas Challoner was Plaintiff against the now Plaintiff and Thomas Foster Esquire concerning the summe of one thousand seven hundred pounds raised out of the Rents and Profits of certain Lands and Tenements in Linsted Ardingley and Worth in the County of Sussex in trust for the said Thomas Challoner during his Minority and which the now Plaintiff by the Decree of this Court was to pay in case the said Foster should fail to pay the same severall matters were offered by the Plaintiffs Councell for the reversall of the said Decree as namely that the now Plaintiff was decreed to pay the summe of one thousand seven hundred pounds as raised out of the profits of the Infants Lands settled upon an account made up by the said Forster with the said Thomas Challoner the Infant after he came to age whereto the Plaintiff Townley was neither party nor privy nor ever consented nor ought to be bound thereby And secondly that the said Plaintiff is by the said Decree made lyable to the payment of all the profits raised out of the said Infants Estate whereas he never received any profits at all and although he gave some Acquittances yet the same were onely for the three first half yeares and no more and were but to ballance an account the monies disbursed amounting to as much as
Bartons Case Two Ioynt-tenants are for life and one lets his moyety for years to commence after his death and dies and agreed to be a good Lease against the Survivor for as Litton saith every Ioynt-tenant is seised Per my per tout and hath an Estate in one moyety not only for his own life or his own time but also for the time and life of his Companion and therefore every Estate made by him is good for a moyety so long as the Estate of himself and his Companion continues but a Rent-charge shall not bind his Companion because he claimes by the first Conveyance which is above his Companions Estate And as to the second point it is cleer that when Husband and Wife Part. 2 make a Feoffment in Fee or a Lease for years of the Land of the Wife rendring Rent the Wife after the death of her Husband may accept the Rent and make the Lease good as in 26 H. 8. 2. the case of the Feoffment is agreed and if a Woman after the death of her Husband does accept the Rent she shall be barred in a Cui in vita 11. H. 7. 13. 15. Ed. 4. 17. and Dyer 91. B. Husband and Wife make a Lease for years by Indenture and the Husband dies and she accepts the Rent she shall be bound thereby and shall not avoid the Lease Vpon which two things being as I conceive unquestionable it follows that this Lease at the time of the making thereof is not void but voidable And therefore the sole question will be how this Lease is voidable and if it may be avoided by the surviving Ioynt-tenant or not And I conceive that it is avoidable by the Wife only if she survive her Husband and not by the other Ioynt-tenant and that for two reasons First Because the Survivor comes in above the Lease and therefore cannot take advantage of any imperfection or defect to avoid the Lease 14. Ed. 4. 1. B. If a Feoffment or a Lease for life be made to two and one dies the other may plead the Estate to be made to him only for he is not in by him that is dead but by the Feoffor or Lessor and Dyer 187. a. Two Ioynt-tenants for life one makes a Lease for yeares rendring Rent and dies the Survivor shall not have the Rent And if Tenant for life makes a Lease for years rendring Rent and surrenders to the Lessor the Lessor shall not have the Rent for he is in by his Reversion which is above the Lease for years and 28. H. 8. 96. a. An Executor had Iudgment to r●cover a Debt and died intestate whereupon Administration is committed to another he shall not have a Scire facias upon this Iudgment because that he being Administrator immediately to the Testator is above the recovery Secondly There is no privity between the surviving Ioynt-tenant and the Lessor to make him avoid the Lease which is voidable as in 8. Rep. Whittinghams case Privies in blood as Heir generall or speciall shall avoid a voidable estate made by the Ancestor as if an Infant make a Feoffment in Fee his Heir may well enter and avoid the Feoffment but Privies in Law as Lord by escheat Lord of a Villain or Lord who enters for Mortmain shall never take benefit of the Infancy because they are but strangers And therefore if an Infant make a Feoffment in Fee and dies without Heir the Feoffment is unavoidable 49. Ed. 3. 13. 6. H. 4. 3 7. H. 5. 9. 39. H. 6. 42. And as to Privies in Estate as Ioynt-tenants Husband and Wife Donor in Tail and Donee Lessor and Lessee it is there also resolved that they shall not take advantage of Infancy unle●●e it be in some speciall cases And therefore if Tenant in Tail within age makes a Feoffment in Fee and dies without Issue the Donor shall not enter contrary to the opinion of Rick and Frisby 6. H. 4. 3. because that here is only a Privity in Estate between them and no right does accrue to the Donor by the death of the Donee So if two Ioynt-tenants in Fee be and one of them being within age makes a Feoffment in Fee and dies the Survivor shall not enter but if two Ioynt-tenants within age do make a Feoffment one joynt Right remains in them and therefore if one dies the Right will survive and the Survivor may enter in all and the same Law of Covertue or non sanae memoriae as it is said also in Whittinghams case and in Fitzherb N. B. 192. K. If two Ioynt-tenants within age do alien in Fee they must sue severall Writs of Dum fuit infra aetatem because that the cause of their Action is their nonage which is severall for the nonage of the one is not the nonage of the other But if Husband and Wife within age do make a Feoffment of the Wifes land and the Husband dye the Wife shall have a Dum fuit infra aetatem 14. Ed. 3. Dum fuit infra aetatem 6. and 12. H. 7. 18. B. Kelloway In a Formedon by the Lord Brook against the Lord Latimer if an Infant does make a Feoffment none shall avoid this but the Infant himself and his Heirs and no stranger and the same Law of a Feme Covert And as to the case of Harvey and Thomas 33. Eliz. cited in the Lord Cromwells case Where the Husband made a Lease of his Wifes Land for years and then he and his Wife aliened by Fine and the Husband dies the Conusee shall avoid this Lease which I agree to for the Lease being made by the Husband only is utterly void against the Wife and cannot be made good by any Act done by the Wife and the Land passeth all from the woman by the Fine and therefore the Lease cannot bind the Conusee The Survivor in one case cannot make the Lease good by the acceptance of the Rent because that the Rent does not belong unto him and therefore he shall not be received to avoid this Lease as in Nat. B. 138. B. the Heir shall not have a Cessavit for ceasing in the time of his Ancestor for he shall not have the Rent or the arrearages incurred in the life of his Ancestors and the reason is as I conceive because that the Law does give this benefit to the Tenant for the saving of his Tenancy for the tender of arrearages the which cannot be to the Lord because that the Rent is not due to him and therefore the Lord shall lose his action rather then the Tenant shall be deprived of his advantage of saving the land by his tender And by this case also the Aunt and the Neice shall not joyne in a Cessavit for a ceasing made before the Title of the Neice accrued but in Nat. F.B. 139. it is otherwise there of joynt-tenants as I conceive the reason whereof is because as I conceive the Survivor shall have all the Rent and therefore the tender may be made to him
13. H. 4. 17. B. If one makes a Feoffment in Fee rendring Rent upon condition to re-enter for non-payment and dies the Rent being arrear the Heir cannot demand the Rent or enter for non-payment because that the Rent is not due to him and as he cannot dispence with the Condition for acceptance of the Rent so cannot he enter for non-payment thereof And I argued this Case again on Fryday being the first day of Trinity Term 14. Jac. 31. Maii at which day Daston did also argue for the Defendant but the Court did not then give any direct Opinion but seemed to incline very much for the Plaintiff And Hil. 14. Jac. the case was argued by Chilborne Serjeant for the Plaintiff and Davenport for the Defendant at which time all did agree that the Lease continued But Davenp took exceptions to the replication For he said that the marriage of Jane with Rob. Hawkins is alledged to be 21. of No. 39. Eli. and the death of William Agborrow her first Husband the 20. of Febr. 39. Eliz which is after the marriage but that was held not materiall for it is said that William Agborrow died the twentieth of Febr. 39. Elizab. and that atferwards viz. the one and twentieth of Novemb. 39. Eliz. Jane did marry Thomas Hawkins so that the afterward is sufficient Trin. 37. Eliz. Rot. 206. Butler against Wallis In a Trespasse the Defendant justified by vertue of an Extent upon a Statute and did shew the Extent and that the 28. of Febr. a Liberate was awarded by vertue whereof the Sheriff the 27. of Octob. delivered the land to him c. yet adjudged sufficient for when he said Virtute brevis the mistake of the day afterward is not materiall And at last in the said Term of S. Hillary Judgment all the Court agreed that the Lease continued good against the Survivor and cannot be avoided by him and that the acception to the pleading was not materiall And thereupon Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Rot. 668. Pasch 11. Jacob. Between Thomas Palmer Knight Plaintiff Richard Greenwill and Edward Greenwill Executors of John Greenwill Defendants IN an Action of Debt on a Bond of fifty pound entred into by the Testators the 20. of Novemb. 5. Jac. The Defendant demanded Oyer of the Bond and Condition which was that if the Testator his Heires Executors and Assignes did perform all the Covenants comprised in certain Indentures bearing date with the Obligation made between the Plaintiff on the one part and the Testator of the other part that the Obligation shall be void And the Defendant pleaded that the Plaintiff by the said Indenture did let to the Testator a House and the moyety of his land amounting to about thirty Rods of land in Pollicote to have c. from Michaelmas last past for seven years rendring twenty pounds Rent and shewed that the Testator did covenant by the same Indenture for him his Executors and Assignes with the Plaintiff his Heires and Assignes within two years after the beginning of the said Lease to deliver or cause to be delivered to the Plaintiff or his Assigns a Map or Plot made in distinct manner by men of skill as well of all the land in little Pollicot as was then in his occupation and in the occupation of Thomas Cocker and John Crooke parcell of the Demise of the Plaintiff in Pollicot aforesaid as of all the land in the occupation of the Testator by a lease of Lincoln Colledge in Pollicot aforesaid which are all the Covenants c. And pleaded that the Testator in his life time and the Defendants after his death had performed all the Covenants c. Replication The Plaintiff replied that the Testator within two years after the beginning of the Lease did not deliver or cause to be delivered to the Plaintiff or his Assignes a Map or Plot made in distinct manner by Surveyors and men of skill of all the land in little Pollicot aforesaid in his occupation and in the occupation of the said Thomas Cocker and John Crooke parcell of the aforesaid Demise of the Plaintiff in Pollicot aforesaid Secundum formam effectum Indenturae praedict Vpon which Replication the Defendants demurred in Law And I conceive Iudgment ought to be given for them against the Plaintiff First the Plaintiff replies that the Testator did not deliver the Plot and it may be that it was delivered by the Defendants who were his Executors which is a good performance of the Covenant and if so then the Plaintiff has no cause of action and where the matter is left doubtfull in the Replication it shall be taken most strongly by the Plaintiff who pleads it And in the Comment 104. a. Fulmerstone against Steward If a man be bound to pay twenty pounds about Christmas it is no plea for him to say he hath paid it but he must shew when or otherwise it shall be intended that he paid it after the Feast and before the Suit And so in a Dum fuit infra aetatem if the Tenant do plead a Release of the Demandant it is no plea without saying that he was of full age for the plea shall be taken most strong against himself and that is that it was made when he was within age and 3. H. 7. 2. If the Defendant in a Trespasse does plead a release it is not sufficient without shewing that it was made after the Trespasse for otherwise it shall be taken to be done before And 26. H. 8. Pleading 147. If in a Praecipe quod reddat the Tenant does plead Warranty collaterall of the Ancestor of the Demandant and he replies that he entred and so does avoid the Warranty it is not good without saying that he entred in the life of the Ancestor for otherwise it sh●ll be intended that he entred after the descent of the Warranty and in Dyer 89. and 96. The Plaintiff in an Ejectment declared on a Lease for years to begin at Michaelmas after the death of Thomas Boydon and M. his Wife and set forth that they died and he entred and adjudged insufficient for it might be that he entred after this death and before Michaelmas and Dyer 28. H 8. 27. A Covenant that the Lessee and his Assigns shall pay all Rents pleading that the Lessee hath paid them is not sufficient because the Assignes are omitted In his Occupation are words uncertain sc whether they shall be referred to the Plaintiff who i● last named or to the Testator 7 H. 7. 7. Ed. 6. Dyer 84 a. In a Trespasse brought by the Husband and Wife for breaking their Close bona sua capt and pleaded of a Trespasse made to the Woman Dum sola fuit for which the Writ abated The Plaintiff ought to shew that ●ome land was in the possession of Kocker and Crooke for otherwise it is impossible that a Map should be made thereof 12. H. 7. 8. a. 6. H. 7. 6. a. If I am bound to
Taverners Case The Lord is but an instrument to make admittance and he that is admitted shall not be subject to the charge of the Lord. And 4 Rep. Buntings Case who surrendered out of Court and dyed before the surrender was presented yet it was resolved and adjudged that the surrender was good and that it may be presented after his death but if it be not presented according to the custom then it becomes voyd And so in Kite and Queintons Case If he to whom the surrender was made dyes before the admittance yet his Heirs shall be admitted And Periams Case The Feoffment is not good unless it be presented in Court according to the custom yet if the Feoffor or Feoffee dye and after it is presented this is good as in case of a Deed delivered as an Escroul upon condition The second is that the two Tenants to whom the surrender was Object 2 made are dead also But this will not avoyd it for nothing at all does pass from them Answer for they are but only witnesses of the surrender and therefore it may as well be presented after their deaths as in their life-time as in 1 H. 7. 9. If a Iustice takes a note of a fine although he dyes before it be certified yet may it be certified by his Executors and the Fine shall be good and it is also resolved in Buntings Case that th●ir death shall not hurt the surrender but upon good proof it may be surrendered after their deaths as in 27 H. 6. 7. If a Feme sole does make an Obligation and delivers it as an Escroul to a stranger to be delivered upon condition and she marries or dyes and then the Condition is performed and the Bond delivered it is a good Bond and so it is resolved in Brags Case and Butlers Case also and it is not like to a Feoffment with warranty of Attorney to make Livery or the Grant of a Reversion and the Feoffor dyes or takes husband before Livery or Attornment for there nothing passeth until the Livery or Attornment according to Littleton and the Feoffee if he enter is but Tenant at will and it lies in the power of the Grantor to countermand it but so cannot he that makes a surrender out of Court Note Perimans Case was here objected That if the Tenant would not present the Feoffment the Feoffee should have his Action on the Case and the same Law if the Lord will not hold his Court within the time but there is no such matter in the Book But in our Case no Action can be against the two Tenants to whom the surrender was made having done no wrong for they can make no presentment before a Court be held neither can any Action be brought against the Lord for the not holding his Court because he is not limited to a certain time to hold his Court neither does the custom refer the presentment to any time but onely to the next Court and admitting he may have an Action on the Case yet is not that any reason that he should lose his customary Inheritance and be contented onely with a personal Action wherein he shall onely receive damages and it may be also that the party is insufficient or may dye whereby the Action will become fruitless And it shall be a very great inconvenience if the not keeping of a Court by the Lord shall hinder the surrender when no time is limited when the surrender shall be but onely at the next Court for then those who argue against this surrender ought to limit another time then the custom doth limit to make this presentment and what time will he limit peradventure he that made the surrender will say that the next Court ought to be holden the next day or within a month but this lies not in his power for when the Custom which is the very being and life of a Copyholder hath limited the next Court no man can shorten that time and the length of time cannot be material and no time is material until the time be past that is limited by the Custom And although it hath been said that Customs shall be taken strictly yet not so strictly but they shall have a reasonable time of exposition according to the reason of the Common-Law as in the 9 Rep. Sir Richard Lerchfords Case where the custom was that if the Heir of the Copyholder did not come to any of the three Courts upon proclamation to claim his Copy it should be forfeit And Thomas Copley did dye the 27 of Elizabeth William his son being then beyond the Seas and the three Courts were holden and the proclamations made and he came not into England until the first of King James But in our case we are within the Custom and although the surrender here is not perfect until the presentment made in Court yet the Plaintiff being Heir to him who made the surrender is bound as his Ancestor was for he cannot countermand or avoyd the surrender and therefore his entry was illegal And therefore Iudgment ought to be given against the Plaintiff And upon the Argument of this Case Michaelm 14 Jacob. Crook Doderidge and Haughton did agree that the Estate did remain in him who made the surrender until he to whose use the surrender was made be admitted by the Lord and this they agreed the Lord might do out of Court and Haughton said that the acceptance of the Rent by the Lord that was found by the Iury does amount to an admittance but the other on the contrary Judgment Wherefore Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Rot. 832. Trinit 12 Jacob. John Gouge Plaintiff Nicholas Hayward and Jane his wife Defendants IN an Action of Trespass wherein the Plaintiff declared that Stephen Bishop of Winchester the 13 of March 24 H. 8. did demise to Thomas Windham two houses one now in the tenure of the Plaintiff and the other in the tenure of the Defendant in the parish of St. Saviours in Southwark Habendum from Michaelmas last p●st for the term of 99 years And that the 16 of March the 24 H. 8. the Prior and Chapter of the Cathedral Church of St. Swithin in Winchester in the life of the Bishop did confirm the said Lease that the 10 of May 10 Eliz. Thomas Windley assigned over to Francis Westby who assigned to William Fryth who assigned to John Butler who the last of September the first of King James by his Will did Devise to Ellinor his Wife all his Lands and Tenements in the said Parish and all Rents arising out of the premisses to come from the day of the date of the said Will for 28 years if she shall so long live unmarryed and after devised it to Thomas Butler his Nephew to have to him and his Children from the day of the death of the said Ellinor during the whole term And further devised that in case his Wife Ellinor should marry then during the residue of the said 28
years not expired at the time of her marriage she should have the Messuage then in his tenure being his Mansion-house which house now is in the tenure of the Plaintiff and an Annuity of 20 l. out of all his other Lands Tenements and Houses of the Devisor in the said Parish with a clause of distress and to detain the same until the said Annuity were payd to the said Ellinor and if Ellinor did marry he did devise all his said Lands except the said Mansion-house to the said Thomas Butler and his Children and made the said Ellinor his Executrix and dyed possessed And the said Ellinor entered claiming the Devise and the 16 of January 1606. marryed the Plaintiff and the 30 of April 1606. the Plaintiff and his Wife did agree to have the said Mansion-house and the said Annuity and Thomas Butler by their assent did enter into the residue And the 12 Jan. 1606. Elianor dyed And at our Lady-day 12 Jacob. 10 l. of the said Annuity was behinde wherefore the Plaintiff the 26 of May 12 Jacob. did enter and take certain goods for the said 10 l. and would have deteined them in the name of a Distress and the Defendants rescued them ad damnum 40 l. The Defendants pleaded Not guilty The Iury found the Lease made by the Bishop and the confirmation with the several Assignments and the Devise as in the Declaration is set forth saving the Devise to the said Thomas Butler from the day of the death of the said Ellinor which clause was not found and they found also that John Butler the 3 Novemb. 3 Jacob. dyed and that Ellinor did enter claiming by the Devise and that she married the Plaintiff and also their agreement to have the Mansion-house and Rent as a Legacy and the entry of Thomas Butler in the residue by the assent of the Executor and the death of Ellinor and that the 10 l. was behinde and that the Plaintiff took the goods and would have detained them as a Distress and that the Defendants rescued them And if the Defendants were guilty they found for the Plaintiff if not they found for the Defendant c. And I conceive Iudgment ought to be given for the Defendants For first I conceive that the Wife of John Butler had not any Rent at all out of the house in which the Distress was taken If she had any Rent yet it is determined by her death And I conceive the Case to be thus Lessee for years of two houses does devise them to his Wife for 28 years which is all the term if she live so long unmarryed and after her death to Thomas Butler and if the woman marries that she shall have one Messuage for the residue of the term and 20 l. Rent ex omnibus aliis terris suis with a clause of Distress and then Thomas Butler shall have the other Messuage The Devisor makes his Wife Executrix and dyes and the Wife enters claiming by the Devise and then marries the Plaintiff and then they agree to have the house that was devised to her after her marriage with the Rent and Thomas Butler by their assent does enter into the residue the Wife dyes and the Plaintiff distrains for Rent behinde after her death and the Defendants rescue the Distress whereupon the Plaintiff brings his Action And as to the first I conceive that the Wife can have no Rent by this Devise and that for three Reasons Because the Wife did take the entire term as Executrix and therefore she cannot have a Rent out of the same term and therefore I conceive it will not be denyed that if Lessee for years deviseth a Rent to I. S. and makes him his Executor and dyes I. S. shall have no Rent for in as much as he hath the term as Executor he shall have no Rent as Legated for it is extinct in the term and although he hath one in his own right and the other as Executor yet cannot he have both together 4 Ed. 6. B. Surrend 52. If one hath a term as Executor and purchase the Reversion the Lease is extinct And although the term in our case is devised to a stranger yet by the Law it does first vest in the Executor and the Devisee cannot have it without the delivery or consent of the Executor And if a Devisee does enter into a term or takes goods without the delivery of the Executor the Executor may have an Action of Trespass against him 20 Ed. 49. 2 H. 6. 16. 11 H. 4. 84. 37 H. 6. 30. although in the 27 of Henry the 6. 8. a. diversity is taken between a thing certain and uncertain for it is there said that if the thing devised be certain and a stranger takes it the Executor shall have an Action of Trespass but in old Nat. Bre. 87. there is no diversity So that it is clear that the term first vesteth in the Executor and so the Rent which the Executor had is extinguished by unity of possession Object And whereas it hath been objected That although the term does first vest in the Executor yet when he assents to the Devise he is then immediately in by the Devisor and therefore the Rent is not extinct Answer I answer That there the agreement does divest all the Estate that the Devisor had gained by his entry but in our case the woman hath as high and right an Estate in the Land as she hath in the Rent and although there be a possibility of severing the Land from the Rent yet that cannot revive the Rent being extinct as if one hath Land of the part of his Father and hath a Rent out of the said Land of the part of his Mother the Rent is extinct and cannot be divided although he dye without issue And that the Wife hath as high Estate in the Land as she hath in the Rent appears in Cook 6 Rep. Sanders Case where if an Executor commits waste before he assent to the Legacy an Action of waste lies against him which proves that the Executor hath the term And although the Devisee after his assent is in by relation by the Devisor yet this will not ayd the Rent no more then if a Son having Rent out of his Fathers Land and the Father dyes and the Son endows his Wife this shall not revive the Rent which was extinct before yet is the Wife in as of the Estate of her Husband and the Estate and possession of the Son is utterly defeated But admit that the Rent be not extinct yet here is no agreement to have the Rent for here are two Devises 1. Of the Land to the Wife if she continue unmarryed the remainder to Thomas Butler and the other of twenty pounds Rent to commence after her marriage wherefore the assent of the Executrix to the Devise of the Land is no execution of the Devise of the Rent Comment 5. 21. B. Welden and Elkingtons Case If a Termor deviseth a Rent or a
Common t●●ne and the Term to another and dies and the Executor payes the Rent or suffers the Devisee of the Common to put in his Cattell this is no assent as to the Term for the Term is one thing and the profit out of it is another thing but there in the principall Case the assent of the Executor of the Devise to occupy the Land was a sufficient assent to the Remainder of the Term because the occupation of the Land and the Land it self is all one and Comment 541. the same agreed and that the first assent doth go to all And it is no assent to the Term neither can it be taken by Implication to be any assent to the Devise of the Rent for every Act that does enure to another Act by Implication ought to be such as of necessity ought to enure to the other Act which cannot be taken to be otherwise and therefore 2 R. 2. Attornment the 8th A Woman grants a Reversion to which a Rent was incident and afterwards marries the Grantee to whom the Tenant payes the Rent this is no Attornment for it is indifferent whether he payes the Rent to him as Grantee or in right of his Wife Dyer 302. Vivors Case que recover Rents of severall Tenants as Bayly and then they be granted to him and after the Grant they be paid to him this is no Attornment for they may be paid to him as he is Baily as well as he is Grantee But if the Lessee do surrender to him in the Reversion then it is a good Attornment for a Surrender cannot be to any but to him that hath the Reversion And so in our Case it is cleer that the assent to the Legacy of the Land it self is not any expresse assent to the Rent nor any implyed assent for there may be an assent to the one and not to the other and where the Wife had assented to the Devise of the Term she hath utterly dismist her self of the Term as Executor notwithstanding the assent to the Rent but having once assented to the Devise of the Term she hath no more to do with it and therefore in such Case the Legatee of the Rent ought to sue in the Court Christian for his remedy against the Executor in the same manner as if a Term were devised to one and the Executor will not assent to it but sells the Term to another And in this case if the Testator were indebted after this assent to the Devisee of the Term the Term cannot be put in execution for this Debt but the assent of the Wife is in her a Devastavit 21 Ed. 4. 21. 37 H. 6. 30 2 H 6. 16. Also here is no Rent devised out of this house for the Devise is Ex omnibus aliis terris suis which word all excludes all the Lands wherof any mention was made before And Coke Rep 1. Mildmayes Case There Sir H.S. did covenant for a Ioynture for his life and for the advancement of his Issue Male if he had any and for advancement of his three Daughters and for continuance of his Land in his blood to be seised to the use of himself for life and then of part to the use of his Wife for her life with other remainders to his Issues Males and Females Proviso that it should be lawfull for him to limit any part to any person for life or years for payment of Debts or Legacies preferment of his Servants or other reasonable considerations And then he did limit the part of one of his Daughters to another for the term of a thousand years and this was adjudged a void limitation and one principall reason was because that the word other cannot comprehend any consideration mentioned in the Indenture before the Proviso and the advancement of his Daughter was mentioned before Object 2 But it may be objected that other Lands shall be understood such as shall be demised after her marriage and so will not relate to the house whereof there was mention made before Answer That this Obligation is against the recited resolution for it may as well be said in this Case that other considerations shall be other then what are mentioned in the said Proviso but it was resolved that other shall exclude all considerations mentioned before the said Indenture and so he excludes in this case all mention before in this Writ And this Case was argued at the Bench Pasch 14. Jac. And all the Iustices did agree that all the exceptions taken by the Counsell of the Defendant as well to the matter as to the pleading to be of no force saving the principall point sc If the Rent shall be determined by the death of the Wife or not and herein the Court was divided viz. Haughton and Crook held that it was determined but Coke and Doderidge on the contrary Et sic pendet c. Hillar 12. Iac. Iohn Harry and Lewis Howell against Grace Harry IN a Writ of Errour brought to reverse a Judgment given in a Writ of Dower brought by the said Grace of the endowment of Richard Harry her Husband And the Error assigned was because the demand amongst other things was De tertia parte de uno Horreo uno pomario and the Tenants pleaded Ne unques accouple in legall matrimony which was certified against them whereupon Judgment was given against them whereupon the Demandant did surmise that her husband died seised and so prayed her Dower with damages Et petit breve tam de habere facias seisinam quam de inquirendo de damnis and the Writ of Error was purchased before the return of the said Writ or any Judgment given thereupon And I conceive that it is Error for the Demand ought to be as certain and formall as a Writ for the Writ of Dower being generall De libero tenemento the Demand ought to make it certain and therefore it is of the same nature as the Writ is 8. Ass 29. 13. Ass 2. 13. Ed. 3. br 265. A Chappell or an Hospitall shall not be named but by the name of a Messuage and 8 H. 6. 3. Praecipe quod reddat does not lye of a Cottage and Cokes 11. Rep. Serbes Case in an Ejectione firmae of a Close called Dumote Close containing three acres adjudged insufficient for the name and quantity will not serve without the quality and certainty ought to be comprised in the Court because the possession is to be recovered And it was adjudged that the Error would not lye Loyde against Bethell HUmphrey Loyde brought a Writ of Error in the Kings Bench against Bechell and others to reverse a Recovery had at Cardiff in the County of Flynt by Nicholas John ap Robert Loyde to whom the Defendants are Heires against John ap De ap Robert Loyde for the now Plaintiff of Land in the County of Flynt which Assise did begin in the time of Queen Mary and did continue untill the Reign of Queen Elizabeth the third year
as of his Freehold whereupon Issue was joyned and found for the Plaintiffs and adjudged that they should have execution against Sir John Whitbrook whereupon the Sheriff was commanded to deliver the said lands to the Plaintiffs in execution and the sixteenth of June 12 Jacob. the said Tenements were found to the value of eighty shillings and were delivered to the said Executors in execution The twenty seventh of March 11 Jacob. Hanging the Writ of Scire facias the said Sir John Whitbrook did demise to the Defendant one Messuage and ten acres of Meadow parcell of the premisses Habendum from the said twenty seventh day for the term of three years by force whereof he entred and was possessed The sixteenth of June 12 Jacob. the said Executors did enter into the Tenements in the Inquisition mentioned whereof the said Messuage five acres of Land and ten of Meadow are parcell and did out the Defendant The one and thirtieth of August 13 Jacob. Robert Faldoe made the Lease to the Plaintiff and they found the Ejectment and prayed the advice of the Court. And I conceive Iudgment ought to be given against the Plaintiff For that a Tenant in Taile cannot charge the Land no more then he can alien 3 Ed. 3. 46. so in the 18 Ed. 4. 5. 21. If Tenant in Taile do sell the Trees and dye the Vendee cannot have them and the 17 Ass 21. Tenant in Tail acknowledgeth a Statute and dies the Issue enters and the Conusee does sue execution and enters and the Issue brings an Assise and recovers because this is a Disseisin to him and 11 H. 7. 21. 31 Ed. 3. 22. 14 Ass 3. Tenant in Tail grants a Rent and dies and the Issue enfeoffs a stranger adjudged that he shall hold the Land discharged for it was discharged by the entry of the Issue and 26 Ass 38. If Tenant in Tail doth charge the Land and dye and the Issue enters and p●yes the Rent and then after confirms the Rent this is good But in Brook Grants 73. contrary for the charge was avoided by the entry of the Issue But admit that this Recognizance shall bind the Issue in Tail yet it shall not bind the Termer but he shall avoid it 1 H 7. 9 7 H. 7. 11. and in the 30 Assise 10. the Tenant pleads recovery by Action tryed against a stranger and did aver the Estate of the Ancestor of the Demandant to be between his Title and the Recovery the Demandant said that the stranger was enfeoffed with Warranty and did not plead this and so did Fauxesie and Iudgment was awarded for him And although that this Lease was made after the Teste of the Scieri facias it is not materiall because the Lessor had good power to make a Lease and the Land was not subject to the execution and therefore the Lease here is good and cannot be avoided but only by the default of the Lessor in not pleading the Estate-tail and that is especially aided by the Statute because the Statute does aid the Lessee against such f●igned Recoveries against the Lessor and it is no Recovery untill the Iudgment had at which time the Lessee had a good Lease not subject to the execution 21. H. 6. 13. 14. He who comes to the Reversion hanging the Praecipe quod reddat against the Tenant for life shall be received by the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 3. and 16 H 7. 5. In a Writ of Entry or Disseisin he in the remai●der does pray to be received the Demandant traverseth that he hath nothing in Reversion at the time of the Writ purchased and could not for if he purchased the Remainder hanging the Writ he shall be received And Hill 14 Jacob. All the Court did agree Judgment that the Lessee for the Lease made after the Verdict against the Issue in Tail could not falsifie wherefore Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Penson against Mootham IN an Action of Covenant for that by Indenture Tripartite dated the fifth Decemb. 12. Jacob. It was between Abraham Baker by the name of Abraham Baker Owner of the moyety of a Ship called the Grissell of L. and of the Ship called the Peregrine of L. and of a Pinnace called the Hopewell of L. on the first part and the Plaintiff by the name of H. P. Ow●er of the other moyety of the said Ships and Pinnace on the second part and the Defendant by the name of Ja. Mortham Nautestrategi dicti Itineris Anglice generall of the said Voyage N. N. B. W. and D. E. by the names of N.G. Naute magister dictae navis vocat le Peregrine B. W. Naute magister dict navis vocat the Grissell and D. E. Naute Magister of the said Pinnace and severall persons named in a Schedule annexed to the said Indenture on the third part It is testified and doth appeare that the said Owners had furnished and set forth and the said Victualer had victualed the said Ships as well for Trade as for Discovery and had delivered them to the said Generall Masters and Officers pro itinere faciend in such manner and to such an Island in the West-Indies or otherwise as it should be most profitable to the said parties at the discretion of the said Generalls and according to certain Articles of the Commissioners bearing date with the said Indenture and after their Voyage to return to the Port of London And that the said Generalls and each of the said Masters and Officers severally for each ones proper and severall part and not the one for the other did Covenant for themselves their Executors and Administrators with the said Owners severally and their severall Executors c. in manner c. and that they the said Generalls or the severall Masters and Officers their Executors or Assignes at any time during the said Voyage should go beyond the Cape of Good hope nor should do or commit any spoyle or losse to any of the Subjects of our Lord the King nor to any other person or persons being subject or in subjection to any Prince or Principality being in league or amity with our King nor shall do any thing whereby any detriment prejudice trouble or damage may come to the said Ships or Pinnace or any of them or to the said Owners or any of them respectively Breach 1 And that although the Plaintiff had performed all c. yet the said D.E. and the Commissioners aforesaid in the said Ship called the Hope-well during the said Voyage to wit the eighth day of March upon the high Sea neer the Isle of Saint Jago by force and armes did take and spoyle one Spanish Frigot laden with Rice c. which Sip and Goods were the Ship and Goods of divers persons who were Subjects to the King of Spaine the which King then was and yet is in amity and league with the King and the Defendant and the other Commissioners comming to the said Island did divide the said Goods amongst
themselves Breach 2 And that after Viz. the ninteenth day of June 13 Jacob. at a Port called Cape Corants beyond the Seas one Matthew Navale did joyne with the Defendant and the sayd Commissioners and they together did saile to the Coast of Champeach in the West-Indies and did there put a shoare the said Hope-well and three other Ships and there then upon the high Sea by force and arms did take and spoyl another Spanish Frigot laden with 100 Hides which Ship and the goods in her was the Ship and goods of divers persons subject to the King of Spain then and yet in league with the King And that after to wit the 20 Junii 13 Jacob. at the Town of River Breach 3 de Garta in the West-Indies the said Defendant and the others c. by force and arms did take and spoyl another Spanish Frigot laden with 150 Hides which Ship and goods were the Ship and goods of divers persons subject to the King of Spain then and yet in league with the King And that also then the said persons by force and arms did take and Breach 4 spoyl a certain Town beyond the Seas and from thence did take and carry away twenty Iars of Hony of the Goods and Merchandize of the Inhabitants of the said Town being subjects of the King of Spain and then and yet in league with our King And also there by force and arms did take and spoyl another Spanish Breach 5 Frigot laden with 63 Chests of Coucheneal and 700 Hens c. of the goods of divers persons being subjects of the said King of Spain then and yet in league with our King And that the Defendants did not come to the Port of London after their return c. And concluded that the Defendant did not keep his Covenant to make no spoyl or to do any act whereby any detriment should come c. ad damnum 3000 l. c. The Defendant as to the said five first Breaches did demur in Law because they were not alledged in such manner as any issue or tryal may be had And as to the other he pleaded that the Plaintiff did prohibit him from coming to London And it seems that Iudgment ought to be given upon the demur against the Plaintiff For first there is no covenant to binde the Defendant for the words are praedictus State-General doth covenant and there is no other name in the Covenant given to the Defendant and that is not sufficient to binde him 1. Because he is not named State-General before but Naute Stratageneral 2. This is no parcel of his name before or addition but is as his title or is a pronomen and that is not sufficient for the pronomen is but as an alius dictus 5 Ed. 4. 141. Alexander Cock Clericus alius dictus A. C. nuper de D. in Comitatu c. Clerico is no good addition because there is no addition but in the alius dictus And Dyer 119. Robert Thrower brought an Action of Debt upon a Bond by the name of Robert Thrower otherwise called Robert Throner Keeper of the Kings Gaol at Ludgate and the Defendant pleaded the Statute of 23 H. 6. 1. And it was adjudged that it shall not be presumed that he was Gaoler for it may be false As a Bond of I. S. Son and Heir of I. S. yet he may be a Bastard and a Bond by A. the Wife of I. S. who is sole is good notwithstanding And Dyer 304. B. in an Ejectment the Plaintiff declared of a Lease of 100 acres of Land by the name of the Mannor of D. habendum the Mannor and the premisses c. whereupon he entered into the Mannor and premisses Quaere If it be good and agreed to be sufficient by the word premisses There is no breach assigned for as to the first breach that is onely that D. E. and his company did take c. a Spanish Frigot and that is no breach of covenant in the Defendant for that the covenant is not several as in the 5 Rep. Slingsbies Case If a Lease be made of W. acre to I. S. and a Lease of B. acre to I. D. and the Lessor covenants with them and either of them that he is owner c. each of them shall have an Action of Covenant according to their several interests so in case of a warranty but otherwise where the interest is joynt Vide 5 Rep. Mathewsons Case And so here the Covenant of the Defendant doth extend onely to himself and his Ship and not to D. E. and his company and the allegation that the Defendant and his company did come to the said Island and divided the goods is nothing to the purpose for it may be they bought a moyety thereof or any part of them and so they might l●wfully divide them 27 Assis 69. In an Appeal for that one did receive stoln goods knowing of the Felony adjudged not good And as to the second breach it is not alledged that the spoyl was made during the Voyage and if it were not during the Voyage it is no breach and in as much as the Plaintiff hath not set forth that it was done during the Voyage it shall be taken most strongly against himself 26 H. 8. Pleadings 6. 3 H. 7. 2. Dyer 89. And so in all the other three breaches it is not alledged that it was done during the Voyage It does not appear that these goods thus taken were the goods of the Subjects of the King of Spain at the time of the taking of them but onely quod fuerunt bona which doth denote a time past and doth not import any present property and it may be very probable that they were their goods and that they were bought of them by some persons under the obedience of a King not in amity with our King and then it is no breach for fuerunt is so uncertain that it may be 20 or 40 years past Also it is declared Quod fuerunt bona diversarum personarum existentium subditorum Regis Hispaniae the which word existens doth refer to the time of the Declaration and not to the time of the taking for although in the 27 of H. 8. 15. and 28. that the word existens in Deeds may in respect of the subject matter be applyed to the future time yet in all course of pleading it shall be taken for the present time as in an Indictment upon the Statute of 8 H. 6. for forcible entry into Land Existens liberum Tenementum I. S. is not good because it doth refer to the time of the Indictment and not of the entry And so in the 21 H. 7. 30. A condition to discharge one of all Escapes of all Prisoners in the Goal this shall extend onely to Prisoners at the time of the Oligation made And it may very well be that they were the Subjects of one who was not in league with the King at the time of the taking and yet may be
at the time of the Declaration the Subjects of the King of Spain I conceive that the Plaintiff ought to alledg that these spoyls were to the damage of the Plaintiff I conceive that he ought to have named one of the Subjects of the King of Spain and not to leave it so uncertain to the Iury as to have them charged to enquire of all his Subj●cts for the Plaintiff takes notice of the persons that they were the Subjects of the King of Spain and therefore he may as well know their names Dyer 99. 285. An Indictment of Murder of one unknown or stealing the goods of one unknown is good because he may be discovered And after the Plaintiff discontinued his Suit Holland and others against Jackson and others RIchard Holland and Margaret his wife one of the daughters and heirs of the body of Sir Robert Langley Knight and William Dausey and Ann his wife the other daughter of the said Sir Robert brought a Writ of Error to reverse a common Recovery had at Lancaster die Lunae 13 Elizab. In a Writ of Entry sur Disseisin in the Post between the said Francis Jackson and Henry Oyden Plaintiffs and Robert Leigh and James Haye Tenants of 22 Messuages 10 Cottages 20 Tofts 22 Gardens 20 Orchards 300 acres of Land 200 of Pasture 40 of Wood 500 of Furze 100 of Turbary c. with the appurtenance in Alkerington and Prestnitch wherein the Tenants did vouch Thomas Leigh and Katherin his wife who did appear by George Butler their Attorney who entred into warranty and did vouch William Forster present in Court who did warrant c. ad damnum c. for that before the purchase of the said Writ of Entry and since the 27 H 8. Sir Robert Langley was seised in see of the said Tenements and thereof did infeoff Thurston Tilsley Fitton and Hopwood in fee to the use of himself for life and after to the use of the said Katherin in T. the remainder to the use of the right heirs of the body of the said Sir Robert the remainder to the use of his heirs Sir Robert was seised for life with remainders over c. and then Sir Robert dyed seised after whose death the said Tenements did remain to Katherin in Tayl the remainder to Katherin and the Plaintiffs Margaret and Ann and one Dorothy as daughters and heirs of the body of Sir Robert the Reversion to the said daughters and their heirs whereupon Katherin did enter and was seised in Tayl with Remainders as aforesaid and did marry Thomas Leigh whereupon the said Recovery was had in manner and form as aforesaid after which Recovery Thomas Leigh and Katherin did dye without issue of the body of Katherin and Dorothy dyed also without issue whereby the right of the said Tenements did remain to the said Margaret and Ann as daughters and heirs of the body of the said Sir Robert The Writ of Recovery was certified and the Plaintiffs assigned Error for that Katherin was within age at the time of the appearance of her and her Husband by the said Attorney and was within the age of 21 years at the time of the Iudgment to wit of the age of eighteen years and no more Hereupon a Scire facias was awarded against the Recoverors who being returned dead a Scire facias was awarded against the heirs and Ter-tenants whereupon Ambrose Jackson was returned son and heir of the said Jackson and Thomas Hulm and Margaret his wife and Isabel Ogden daughters and heirs of the said Ogden and William Ogden and others were returned Ter-tenants and the heirs and Ter-tenants did appear and pleaded several Pleas some to the Writ and some in Bar and after the Writ of Error was discontinued Hillar 11 Jacob. The Plaintiffs purchased a new Writ of Error of the said Tenements omitting the Rent and assigned the said Error whereupon a Scire facias was awarded against the Heirs and Ter-tenants which was returned to wit that Margaret Hulm was dead without issue and thereupon a Scire facias was directed to the said Jackson and Ogden the Heirs c. and Katherin Leigh and Robert Leigh and fourty other Ter-tenants who did appear and thereupon Whereupon the said Error was assigned The Ter-tenants did plead that John Chatterton was Tenant of a Cottage c. in A. aforesaid parcel of the said Tenements The Heirs pleaded in null est errat The Plaintiff did acknowledg the Plea of the Ter-tenants and thereupon a Scire facias was awarded against John Chatterton who did appear and the Plaintiff did assign the said Error whereupon Jane Jackson one of the Ter-tenants did plead that Katherin was of full age c. whereupon issue was joyned And George Chatterton and ten others of the Ter-tenants did plead non-tenure And the Heirs of the Recoverors did plead in null est errat And Mary Taylor did plead that before the Recovery a Fine was levyed the 4 Septemb. 13 Elizab. between the said Robert Leigh and James Haye Plaintiffs and Thomas Leigh and Katherin his Wife Deforceators of the said Tenements whereupon the said Thomas and Katherin did acknowledg the said Tenements to be the right of the said Robert c. with warranty against them and the Heirs of Katherin which Fine was proclaimed c. and was to the use of the Conusees and their Heirs until the Recovery should be perfected and then the seventh of March the 13 Eliz. the Writ of Entry was pursued which was to the use of Thomas and Katherin his Wife in Tayl the Remainder to Thomas and his Heir● Thomas and Katherin did demise to the said Mary a Cottage and three acres of Land parcel of the said Tenements for life c. wherefore she did demand Iudgment of the Writ against the Fine with proclamations Robert Leigh and 28 others of the Ter-tenants did plead the said Fine with warranty and that Katherin dyed without issue and that Thomas was seised in fee whose estate they have and that Thomas dyed and that after the death of Katherin the said warranty did descend to Margaret and Ann as sisters and heirs of Katherin and did demand Iudgment if they should maintain this Writ against the said Fine and against the warranty The Plaintiffs as to the said several pleas of non-tenure in null errat the fine with proclamations and the warranty did severally demur in Law to which the Defendants did severally joyn And I conceive that the Writ of Error does well lie and that the Recovery is erroneous and therefore ought to be reverst And for the Argument of the Case I shall divide it into three parts If the Writ of Error will lie 1. In respect of the Plaintiffs 2. Notwithstanding the plea of non-tenure pleaded in abatement thereof by Chatterton and ten others of the Ter-tenants Whether there be any Error in the Recovery and if it be such an Error as the Plaintiffs may assign If the Plaintiffs be barred thereof by the pleas
in Bar to wit the Fine with proclamations pleaded by Mary Taylor and the warranty pleaded by Robert Leigh and 28 others of the Ter-tenants or by any of these pleas or not And as to the first If he in remainder depending upon an estate in Tayl may maintain a Writ of Error to reverse a Recovery against the first Tenant in Tayl after his death without issue And I conceive clearly that he in the remainder shall have a Writ of Error for the Writ of Error doth always pursue the nature of the Land and not the privity of the blood And therefore 5 H. 8. the Writ of Error shall go with the Land and therefore the Heir in special tayl shall have it although there be another Heir at the Common-Law And so in Fitz Herb. N. B. 21 K. He who is Heir to the Land that is lost shall have a Writ of Error and not the Heir at Common-Law as if Land in Borough-English be lost by erroneous Iudgment the younger Son shall have a Writ of Error and 3 H. 4. 19. The Heir in special tail shal have the Writ of Error although there be another Heir at the Common Law And 1 Mariae Dyer 90. Verneys Case The Writ of Error shall be brought by him who had the thing whereon erroneous Iudgment was given And as the especial Heir shall have the Writ of Error so shall he also in remainder or reversion upon an Estate for life after the death of the Tenant for life 4 H. 8. 21 H. 6. 29. But the sole Objection that hath any coulor against this was Object that this Writ of Error ought to be given to him in remainder by the Common-Law for it is not given by the Stat●te of the 9th of Rich. 2. and then there can be no remainder upon an Estate tail at the Common-Law and therefore he in such remainder cannot have any Writ of Error But this is easily answered for the Common-Law being Answer that when an erroneous Recovery is had against a p●rticular Tenant that he in the Reversion or Remainder shall have a Writ of Error after the determination of the particular Estate it follows that when this new particular Estate is made by the Statute of Westm 2. he in the remainder shall have the same remedy And this is proved by the case of the Tenant in Tayl for although that his Estate was not at the Common-Law yet now he shall have all Actions which the Common-Law gives to a Tenant in fee which may stand with his Estate and therefore he shall have a Writ of Escheat a Quod permittat Nat. B. 124. 4 Ed. 5. 48. Nat. B. 212. and so he shall have an Assize and many other Writs which lie for a Tenant in fee at the Common-Law And for Authorities in this point Dyer 188. That he in the remainder after the Estate-tail spent shall have a Writ of Error and so is it in Dyer 40. in Verneys Case And in the 3 Rep. fol. 3. B. if is resolved that he who hath a remainder expectant upon an Estate in Tayl shall have a Writ of Error upon a Iudgment given against the Tenant in Tayl although there were no such remainder at the Common-Law for when the Statute de Donis Conditionalibus does enable the Donor to limit a remainder upon the Estate-tail all actions which the Common-Law doth give to the privies in Estate are by the same act as incidents tacitly given also according to the rule of the Common-Law and therefore as he in Reversion or Remainder upon an Estate for life shall have a Writ of Error by the Common-Law upon a Iudgment given against a Tenant for life although that they were not parties by Hyde Pryer Voucher c. so since the Statute de Donis conditionalibus shall he have who hath a Reversion or Remainder expectant upon an Estate in Tayl. And therefore I conceive the Writ of Error is good notwithstanding that Objection But now it is to be considered if this Plea of non-tenure shall avoyd the Writ of Error and I conceive it will not for three Reasons 1. I conceive that it is no plea to abate the Writ for the Plaintiffs might have reversed the Recovery against the Lessors of the Reversion onely without having made the Ter-tenants parties for the Writ of Error being grounded upon the Recovery does always lie against the parties to the Iudgment and their Heirs and may be reversed against them although they have nothing in the Land and this is clear by Nat. Brev. 107. and 26 Assis 12. A Writ of Error does lie against him who recovers and after the Error found a Scire facias shall issue against the Tenant and 42 Assis 22. and 44 Ed. 3. and 10 Ed. 4. 13. Non-tenure is no plea in a Writ of Error for the party to the Iudgment or his Heir And here in this case if those who have pleaded Non-tenure are not Tenants they are at no loss for they can lose nothing but this plea does discharge themselves onely and the Scire facias remains good against the Heirs and the other Ter-tenants 2. If Non-tenure could be a good Plea for the Ter-tenants in a Scire facias yet at the least it ought to be in such a Scire facias wherein the Ter-tenants are named and not in such a general Writ as this is For here the Plaintiffs have pursued their Scire facias in as good a form as may be viz. generally against the Heirs and the Ter-tenants and if there be any default it is in the Sheriff who hath returned those to be Tenants who indeed are not so and it shall be very hard if the Writ should abate for default of the Sheriff 20 Ed. 3. Scir facias 121. In a Scire facias on a Recognizance against the Ter-tenants it was said that one of them that ware warned had but a Lease for years of such a one who had the Freehold Iudgment of the Writ c. And there Birton said That the Sheriff had a general command to warn the Ter-tenants wherefore this is no Plea to the Writ And Hill and Wilby answered that it was otherwise for that the Plaintiffs at their peril should name the Ter-tenants in their Writ whereupon there was a new Writ Whereupon I observe that if the Writ be special naming the Ter-tenants as it was anciently then it ought to be so but of late such course hath been changed as appears by the 8 of H. 4. 18. and the Writ awarded generally and therefore such special Non-tenure shall be a good Plea for it is the default of the Plaintiff to pursue his Writ against one who is not Tenant but when the Writ is general Non-tenure is no Plea to the abatement of the Writ 48 Ed. 3 15. 8 H. 18. 48 Assis 2. and the 2 H. 4. 18. B. In a Writ of Account against the Sheriff of Northumberland of a Receit in Newcastle upon Tine and it was pleaded that Newcastle was
of age or not 29 Assise 67. In an Assise against Husband and Wife the Husband did answer as Tenant and the Wife would not but the Husband said that his Wife was within age and that she was taken away but did not say by whom and he did appear for himself and his Wife as her Guardian and pleaded in Bar and one of the Counsell said that the Wife had made default which is the default of the Husband and because that he answered as Guardian without Warranty by Record in this Court to do the same Iudgment c. And there Tho●● said that he ought to have a Warranty in such case wherefore the Assise was awarded 35 H. 8. 56. In a Writ of Right by the Husband and Wife the wife being within age and she appeared by her next of Kin and was admitted by the Court. New Book of Entries 256. In a writ of Error to reverse a Fine by Maurice Pierce and Joane his wife and John Pierce and Elizab. his wife the three first appeared in person and Elizabeth being within age by one Laurence Gibson her Guardian and admitted by the Court. And so in this Case forasmuch as the Land is the Inheritance of the wife which is demanded which she will lose by this Recovery she ought to appear by her Guardian notwithstanding the full age of the husband who is joyned only for form sake with his wife 30 31 Eli. Morseby against Charnock The husband and wife levied a Fine and after this was reversed by Error because that the wife was within age the husband shall not have the Land for all the Estate passeth from the wife and the husband joyned only for conformity Coke 2. Rep. Cromwels and Beckwiths Case But it may be objected also Object that this Error concerning the nonage of the wife is so appropriated to her person in privity that no stranger can take any advantage thereof I conceive not so Answer for the constituting of an Attorney is utterly void as to the wife and therefore every stranger shall take advantage there as is not like the Case where an Infant makes a Feoffment which is but voidable and therefore the Lord by escheat nor any stranger shall not avoid it 22 H. 6. 31. The Plaintiffs within age did sue by an Attorney and there it was ruled that the Defendants might have a Writ of Error and placit 37. Eliz. Rot. 253. Bartholomew brought a Writ of Error against Dighton for that Dighton recovered against him in an Action of false Imprisonment in which he being within age did sue by an Attorney and adjudged that Iudgment should be reversed And this Case is not to be resembled to the Case of a Fine levied by an Infant which cannot be reversed by any but by the Infant himself and the same Law is of a Recognizance by an Infant and the reason of these Cases is because it is the Act of the Court to admit him to levy a Fine or to acknowledge a Recognizance and therefore this ought to be reformed by the Court and that must be by inspection of the Infant and therefore it ought to be done during nonage But the nonage in this Case ought to be tryed per pais as it was adjudged in the said cases of Bartholomew and Dighton and the case of Hobbs in which case the Infant was brought to the Bar to be inspected but adjudged by the Court that it should not be so because the matter was tryable per pais and 10. Rep Mary Portingtons case A common Recovery against an Infant although he appears by his Guardian shall not bind him for an Infant hath not such a disposing power of his Land as the Husbands wife have but is utterly disabled by the Law to transfer or convey his Inheritance or Freehold to others during his minority And of late daies a common Recovery does appear to be a common conveyance and assurance of Land The third part of the Case is If the two matters pleaded in Bar of Part. 3 the Writ of Error or any of them be sufficient or not I conceive not And first as to the Fine with Proclamations levied before the Recovery had which is the Plea of Mary Taylor one of the Ter-tenants I conceive that it is utterly insufficient as well for the manner as the matter of the Plea for she hath disabled her self to plead this Plea for she sets forth that the twentieth of May 31 Eliz. Thomas Leigh and Katherine his wife did let to the said Mary a Cottage and three acres of Land parcell of the Tenements expressed in the Fine and Recovery for life but doth not shew in what Town the said Cottage and three acres do lye wherefore the Plea is altogether uncertaine and insufficient for the Tenements in the Recovery do lye in two Towns viz. In Alkington and Prestwick and it doth not appear by this Plea in which of these the Cottage and three acres do lye 5 Ed. 4. 116. b. In a Formedon in Discender of a house and forty acres of Land and six of Wood in three Towns and the Issue being to be tryed the Tenant said that the Demandant had entred into the house and thirty acres of Land and three of wood And by the Court the Plea was naught because it did not appear in which Town the Entry was And in Moore and Hoskins case in the Exchequer 8 Jacob. In an Ejectment of Land in Overkiddington and Netherkiddington the Defendant pleaded not guilty and when the Issue came to be tryed by Nisi prius in the County of Oxon the Defendant pleaded an Entry of the Plaintiff in three acres of the Land contained in the Declaration since the last Declaration whereupon the Plaintiff demurred and adjudged that the Plea was insufficient and thereupon the Plaintiff had Iudgment to recover Secondly for the matter this Fine being precedent to the Recovery whereby the cause of this Action is given cannot extinguish it for it is a Rule in Law that one cannot give or grant that which one hath not 22 H. 7. Kelway 84. If the eldest Son in the life-time of his Father infeoffs another it is void as to bind the Land and Littleton Releases 106. These words in a Release Quae quo vis modo in futuro habere potero are void in Law for no Right doth passe but only the Right which the Releasor had at the time of the Release as if the Son release to the Disseisor of his Father all the right which he hath or may have and the Father dye the Son may enter because that he had no right in the life of his Father but only a descent to him after the Release by the death of his Father 13 Ed. 1. 10 Ed. 2. and 4 H. 7. cap. 24. It is enacted that Fines with Proclamations shall conclude as well Privies as Strangers saving to the strangers such right claim and interest as they had at the time ingrossed so as they
James of a house in the Parish of St. Mary Abchurch in the Ward of Candlewick-street Habendum from Michaelm last past for three years and layd the Ejectment to be the 28 Octob. in the same year The Defendant pleaded Not guilty And the Iury found that William Say was seised in Fee of the said Messuage and of two other Messuages in the Parish of St. Johns in Walbrook London and held them in Socage And that the 8 Octob. 1562. the said William having issue Francis his Son and Margaret Agnes and Alice by his Will in writing did devise the said Messuage in these words I bequeath to Francis my Son all my three Houses after the death of my Wife Barbara and his Mother and if Margaret Agnes and Alice and either of them do out-live their Mother and their Brother Francis and his Heirs then they to enjoy the three Houses for their lives and the three Houses then I give freely to my Sisters Sons Iohn Wittinbury and Roger Wittinbury and they to pay unto the Wardens of the Batchelors Company of the Merchant-Taylors 6 l. 10 s. yearly to be given to the poor and needy Brethren of the same Company for ever and if the said Iohn and Roger and their Successors do deny the said payment of 6 l. 10 s. it shall be lawful that the said Wardens to enter into the three Houses and to discharge them for ever William Say the Devisor dyes Barbara enters Francis Agnes and Alice dye without issue Barbara dyes Margaret enters John Wittinbury dyes without issue Roger Wittinbury dyes without issue and the Lessor is Cosin and Heir to him viz. Son of Margaret Pierson Sister of the said Roger. The 18 of August 13 Jacob. Margaret dyed seised having issue John Savage her Son and Heir who entered which Son the 17 February 13 Jacob. did infeoff Edward Jackson in Fee who the second of September 13 Jacob did infeoff Richard Slydhurst in Fee who the third of September 13 Jacob. did make the Lease to the Defendant for four years who entered upon whom the Lessor did enter and made the Lease to the Plaintiff upon whom the Defendant did enter And prayed the Opinion of the Court c. And I conceive Iudgment ought to be given for the Defendant But first as to the Question that hath been made scil What Estate John and Roger Wittingbury shall take if they shall take any Estate at all by this Will I shall not argue for I agree that if they have any Estate it is a Fee-simple in respect of the continual and perpetual charge imposed upon them for the payment of 6 l. 10 s. to the Wardens c. for that is to have a perpetual continuance in respect of the persons to whom it is to be payd scil the Poor And also the persons to pay are the two Wittingburies and their successors who in the Exposition of the Will shall be taken for their Heirs and Assigns and also in respect of the limitation of the payment scil for ever which in a Will makes a Fee-simple and ●●●●s much as the charge is to continue for ever it follows also that the Estate ought to continue for without the Estate the charge cannot be But I conceive that John and Roger shall take nothing by this will or at least that they shall take but a future Estate to begin after the death of Francis without Heir and then their time will never come for John Savage under whom the Defendant doth derive his Estate is Heire to Francis and therefore the Plaintiff nor his Lessor being Heire to Robert Wittingb the Survivor cannot have this house And to prove this here is an Estate limited by expresse words to Francis and his Heirs and no apparent intent by the Devisor that the word Heirs shall be restrained to the Heirs of his body unlesse by reason of the limitation of the Remainders afterwards which cannot be as hath been said if Francis had a Fee-simple But as to this I say that the same reason may be given when a man deviseth Land to A. and his Heires and if he die without Heire that it shall remain to B. and his Heires in which case if the Devise to A. shall be restrained to an Estate in Taile the Remainder to be is good but no such intent can be collected against expresse words and therefore the Remainder is utterly void as in 19 H. 8. 8. B. where the Rule is given that when the intent of the Testator does not agree with the Law his intent shall be void and this is a certain Rule And West 2. cap. 1. where it is provided Quod voluntas donatoris observetur yet it ought alwaies to agree with the Rules of Law as is proved by the 8. Assise 33. where was a Gift in Taile to two and if one dies that the Survivor shall have all to him and the heirs of his body now doth the Law say that they have severall Inheritances but the will of the Donor was that the Survivor should have all which being repugnant to the Rule of Law was adjudged to be a void Clause 35 H. 8. 6. Estates 75. Estates given to the husband and wife for their lives the Remainder to the heires of their bodies is an Estate-taile executed notwithstanding the expresse will of the Donor because an Estate for life and of Inheritance cannot be distinct in one and the same person without a mean Estate in another So that in Wills if the intent be against Law they are void And so is it if the intent be ambiguous and not manifestly to be collected out of the words of the Will And in our Case no manifest intent does appear to make the Estate of Francis an Estate in Tail C●ke 6. Rep. Wildes Case One devised land to A. for life the Remainder to B. in Taile the Remainder to R. and his wife and after their deaths to their Children who then had two Children the Devisor dies and A. dies and B. dies without Issue and and it was adjudged that the Children of R. and his wife should have only an Estate for life because that by Iudgment of Law they have but an Estate for life and if R. and his wife should have an Estate in Taile it ought to be by the intent of the Devisor which intent ought to be manifest and certain and so expressed in the Will and in this case no such intent does appear for perhaps his intent was to accord with the Rule of Law 15 16 Eliz. 9. a. A. having three Houses having three Sons and a Daughter did devise to B. his first Son a House paying ten pounds to his Sister and he to enter after the death of the wife of the Devisor and did devise to his second Son another Houses paying to the Daughter ten pounds and he to enter at the age of one and twenty years and did devise the third House to the third Son paying ten pounds to his
Sister and he to enter at the age of one and twenty years and if any of his Sons died before the age of one and twenty years his part should be divided amongst the S●●vivors and so every one should be heire to the other and all of them came of age and paid the money and it was holden that each of them had an Estate in Fee and not in Taile and Dyer 357. Chick did devise the Fee-simple of a Messuage to A. his wife and after her death to W. his Son which W. was his Heir apparent A. did enter and married again and dyed having Issue by him and adjudged that A. had an Estate for life the Reversion to W. for life the Remainder to A. in Fee and 14 Eliz. a. One seised of Lands in Fee devised them to B. and the heirs of his body and if he died that it should remain to A. in fee yet B. shall have an Estate in Taile by the first words and shall not be restrained by the last words And Trinit 37 Eliz Rot. 382. Bacon against Hill and having three Tenements did devise them to his wife for life and then one of them to each of his three Sons and if any did die his part should remain to the Survivors and if any had Issue and died before he entred his Issue should have it and R. one of the Sons had Issue the wife died and R. died and adjudged that his Issue should have nothing Object But it may be objected that Francis cannot die without heire so long and his Sisters are living and therefore it shall be construed that the Devisor did intend only the heires of his body Answer But it does not appear that the Daughters were of the whole blood to Francis so that they may be heires to him for although where a Brother or Sister is spoken of in pleading it shall be intended of the whole blood because a Brother of the half blood is but half a Brother yet here when the Father onely does call them his Sons and Daughters and is so found by the Iury that they were his Sons and Daughters yet this is no proof that they were of the whole blood for they are daughters to the Father by what ever wife they were had And so I conceive upon the whole matter that the wife does take an Estate for life by the devise and that the Son shall have a Fee-simple but yet subject to this future devise sc if he die without heire that the Wittingb shall have it and so all the Will shall be good except the limitation to the Daughters for their lives and it cannot be intended that the Devisor did intend to prefer the Wittingb being his collaterall Cosins before the Issue of his Daughters which Issues are of his owne body Judgment And before that I argued againe Hillar 14 Jacob. Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff for they all agreed that Francis had but an Estate-tail by these words of the Will viz. If M. A. and A. do out live their Mother and their brother Francis and his heires and Francis cannot die without heire so long as his Sisters are living and therefore the word Heirs shall not be intended Heires generall but heires of his body wherefore Iudgment was entred ut supra c. Mich. 14 Jac. Mason against Manning IN an Ejectment upon a Lease made by John Crooker and Christopher Crooker the two and twentieth of May 14 Jac. of two houses forty acres of Land forty of Meadow and forty of Pasture in S. Needs Habendum from the Annunciation last past for three years The Ejectment was the twenty third of May in the same yeare The Defendant as to the force and armes c. pleaded not guilty and as to the residue he said that Queen Elizabeth was seised in Fee of the Mannor of S. Needs whereof the said Tenements are and time out of mind were parcell and that the Queen the ninth of March in the one and thirtieth year of her Raign by her Letters Patents shewed here under the Exchequer Seal did devise the said Tenements to Robert Croker for life the Remainder to Edward Bett for life the Remainder to Edward Adams for life the Queen dies whereby the Reversion does descend to the King Robert Croker dies and the thirtieth of March 14 Jacob. Edward Bet doth devise the said Tenements to the Defendant from the Annunciation last past for three years whereby he entred and was possessed untill the said John and Christopher Croker did oust him and did disseise the said Edward Bet whereby they were seised in fee by disseisin and made the Lease to the Plaintiff upon which the Defendant claiming his term did enter and did out him and the Defendant was and yet is possessed of the said Tenements the Reversion to Edward Bet for life the remainder to Edward Adams for life the Reversion to the King unde non intendit quod curia domino Rege inconsulto ulterius procedere vellet aut debeat and prayed ayd of the King and did aver the life of Edward Bet. And I conceive that ayd is not grantable in this case 1. Because that it is but an Action of Trespass 4 H. 6. 10. Tenant for life of a Lease from the King shall not have ayd of the King for that no Freehold is to be recovered and he is able to plead to all matters in a Trespass 2. The Defendant shall not have ayd of the King because he is not his immediate Tenant but he may pray in ayd of Edward Bet his Lessor and he of the King 1 H. 4. 18. In a Scire facias to execute a Fine the Tenant said that the Land was given to him for life the remainder to N. in Tail the remainder to W. in fee who was attaint of Treason whereby his remainder came to the King and he prayed ayd c. And the Court said that he ought to pray ayd of N. and he of the King and after he said that W. was also attaint of Treason whereby he had ayd of the King 33 H. 6. 29. In a Trespass where the Defendant justified as Baily of a Hundred to distrain for amercements and prayed ayd of the King and by Prisot he could not have it for the Sheriff is the immediate Officer to the King and to this agrees 11 H. 6. 39. where such justification was for taking of Toll and 9 H. 6. 26. In a Replevin the Defendant made Conusance as Baily of I. who held of the King for life and prayed ayd of the King and adjudged he should not have it for there is no privity betwixt the King and him because he is not immediate and 28 H. 6. 13. A man shall not have ayd of the King and Queen or of the King and his Tenant for life but first of the Queen or Tenant for life and they of the King and a man shall not have ayd of the King but where he is Baily or Servant
Estates yet in Wills the intent of the Devisor is sufficient either to limit the Estate or to describe the person that shall have it And therefore if Land be given to one in perpetuum if it be by Grant or Feoffment yet there passeth but an Estate for life but if it be given by Will it is an Estate in Fee and 4 Ed. 6. Estates 78. If one deviseth his Land to another paying 10 l. to his Executors or any other person the Devisee hath an Estate in Fee so if one deviseth his Land to give or dispose of or sell at his will this is a Fee-simple 19 H. 8. 96. 7 Ed. 6. Devise 38. And the reason in all these cases is because that by these words the intent of the Devisor doth appear that a Fee shall pass and therefore the defect of words shall not defeat his intent And as the intent is sufficient without apt words to make an Estate so is it also to describe the person who shall take the Devise although he be not formally named according to the precise rule in Grants as in 21 R. 2. Devise 17. where one devised Land to one for life the remainder to another for life the remainder to the Church of St. Andrews in Holborn and it was adjudged that after the death of the Devisees for life the Parson of the Church shall have the Land for in as much as the Church was not capable it shall be taken that the intent of the Devisor was that the Parson who is as it were the Father of the Church and so the Head of it should have the Estate And in the 13 H. 7. 17. In every Devise the intent of the Devisor shall be taken for if a man deviseth all his goods to his Wife and that after his decease his Son and Heir shall have his House although that no Devise of the House be made to the Wife by express words but by implication because the Heir is not to have the House during the Wifes life yet because the intent of the Devisor was that the Son should not have it during the life of his Wife she shall have the House for her life To which all agreed Then in our case 1. The Devisor willeth that a Chaplain shall celebrate for his Soul and that he shall have eight Marks out of his Tenements yearly for his stipend but if he had stayed there the Devise should have been voyd for the Chaplain is not such a person as may take these eight Marks as a Rent and therefore he goes further and first he limits what service the Preist shall do and this he appoints to be done by the disposition of the Parson 2. He doth dispose of the residue of the profits of the Tenement for such a time viz. until R. shall be 24 years of age and be a Priest and doth devise that he shall be preferred to the Chantery before any other if he will accept it and if not that he shall have nothing 3. He makes provision for the perpetual continuance of the Chaplain in these words scil That the Parson and four of the best of the Parishioners shall present and finde a Chaplain to perform the said Chantery for ever de tenementis meis superius non legat which is the said Tenement out of which the said eight Marks are limited to be payd 4. He doth inflict a penalty upon the Parson if the Chantery should be voyd scil That the other Land devised by him to the Parson shall go to the Wardens of L. Bridg for the reparation thereof 5. He makes a perpetual disposition for the residue of the profits of the Tenement viz. That they shall be put into a Chest under the custody of the Parson and four of the Parishioners to buy ornaments and Books for the Church And these parts of the Will being well considered as I conceive it will be clear that the intent of the Devisor was that the Parson should have this Tenement for here the main scope of his Will is that a Chaplain shall be maintained perpetually and that he shall have eight Marks stipend out of that Tenement and that it shall be provided and found by the Parson and four of the Parishioners and that the residue of the profits shall be bestowed by them to buy ornaments and Books for the Church so that a perpetual charge is imposed upon the Parson scil to finde the Priest and to buy ornaments c. and this charge is to be defrayed with the profits of the Tenement and that can be done by none but by him that shall be owner of the Tenement and therefore it follows that the Parson shall have the Tenement And that such implication in a Will is sufficient to make an Estate is proved by the 15 H. 7. 126. If one devises his Land to be sold for payment of his Debts the Executor shall sell the Land for because the charge to pay Debts lies upon the Executors his intent shall be taken to have them sell the Land and 22 and 23 Elizab. Dyer 171. A man seised in Fee of divers Mannors doth devise them to his Sister in Fee except my Mannor of D. which I do appoint to pay my Debts and makes two Executors and dyes and one Executor dyes and the other sells th● Mannor and adjudged good for so his intent shall be taken and not to relinquish it to his Sister and 19 H. 6. 24 and 25. and 1 Edw. 6. Devise 36. If one devise that his Executor shall sell his Land this is no devise of the Land to them but an authority for they may perform the Devisor to sell the Land although they have no Estate therein and the Vendee shall be in by the Devisor but if one devise that his Executors shall grant a Rent-charge out of his Land or that they shall give the Land in Fee or in Tayl to I. S. this is an implyed Devise to them for otherwise they cannot perform the intent of the Devisor Trin. 9 Eliz. 516. and so in the 40 Assis 26. One did devise his Land in L. to A. and his Heirs to finde twelve Marks for two Chaplains and grants that the Parson and the Parish may distrein for this if it be behinde and there it is debated whether the King shall have the twelve Marks or not and it is agreed there that the Chaplains have no Estate in it because they are removable at the will of A. but because the Distress is given to the Parson who is perpetual it was adjudged that the King shall have the twelve Marks whereupon I do observe that by this Distress limited to the Parson and the Parishioners the twelve Marks were vested as a Rent in the Parson and so made it a Mortmain Object But it may be objected That the last clause in the Will for the disposing of the residue of the profits does go onely to the Land devised to Wardens of the Bridg. Answer But this
50 l. for every month after such conviction and if default shall be made in any such payment that the Queen may by Proces out of the Exchequer take seise and enjoy all the goods and two parts as well of the Lands Tenements and Hereditaments Leases and Farms of such Offendor as of all other Lands Tenements and Hereditaments liable to such seisures or penalties leaving a third part onely of the said Lands Leases and Farms for the relief of such Offendor his Wife Children and Family And for the more speedy conviction of such Offendors it was enacted That upon the Indictment of such Offendor proclamation shall be made at the Assises or Gaol-delivery where such Indictment shall be made whereby it shall be commanded that the body of such Offendor shall be rendered to the Sheriff of the same County before the next Assises and Gaol-delivery and if such Offender does not appear at the said next Assises and Gaol-delivery that then upon such default recorded the same shall be sufficient conviction of such Offendor as if a Tryal by Verdict had been had and recorded And the Defendants further said that the 19 of March the first of King James the Iustices of Assise and Gaol-delivery at the Assises and the Iustices of Peace at the Quarter Sessions have authority to enquire and determine of all Recusants as well for not receiving the Communion as for not repairing to Church according to the form of the Lawes in such manner and form as the Iustices of Assises and Gaol-delivery may do and also shall have power to make proclamation whereby a Precept shall be had for the rendring the body of the Offender to the Sheriff before the next Assises or Gaol-delivery or the next quarter Sessions c. And they said that before the Information viz. at the Assises and Gaol-delivery held at Westminster 8. August 12 Jac. before Sir Henry Hobard chief Iustice of the Bench and Sir Laurence Tanfeild chief Baron of the Exchequer Iustices of Assise and Gaol-delivery in the County of Southampton the said Katherine by the Oath of Robert Pawlet Esquire c. scil nineteen in all which were sworn and charged to enquire for the King and the body of the County was indicted for that the said Katherine the first of April 11 Jac. was of sixteen years of ago and did not repair to the Parish Church of Porthchalford nor to any other Church Chappell or usuall place of Common Prayer and was there at the Common Prayer and Divine Service at any time within one month next ensuing the said first of April 11 Jac. but did abstain from the same from the said first of April for amonth contrary to the form of divers Statutes c. upon which Indictment at the said Assises and Gaol-delivery publick Proclamation was made that the said Katherine should render her body at the next Assises and Gaol-delivery to render to the King according to the Statute c. at which next Assises and Gaol-delivery the sixth of March 12 Jac. before the said Iustices the said Katherine did not render her body according to the said Proclamation nor appear upon Record whereupon the said Katherine of the Premisses whereof she was indicted was lawfully convicted and yet stands convicted according to the Statute And the Defendants further said that they the aforesaid Term of Easter next after the conviction aforesaid the said Katherine did not pay nor any of them did pay into the Exchequer according to the rate of twenty pounds for every week contained in the said Indictment nor did after the conviction in the said Exchequer so much as then did remain not payd according to the rate of twenty pounds for every month after such conviction but thereof made default which conviction afterwards viz. in the Term of S. Michael then next after the conviction as aforesaid by the said Sir Henry Hubbert and Laurence Tanfeild Iustices c. was extreated and certified into the Exchequer and so there did remain according to the form of the Statute c. and the said conviction yet does remain in full force and this they are ready to aver with that also that the said Katherine named in the Information and the said Katherine named in the Indictment are one and the same person Vpon which Plea Mr. Attorney demurred in Law and the Defendants did joyn And I conceive that Iudgment ought to be given for the King and the Informer against the Defendants In which first it is to be considered that neither the Statute of 28 Eliz. nor the Statute 35 Eliz. which give severall remedies to the King for the monthly forfeiture of twenty pounds given by the 23 Eliz. doe not restrain the Informer but that notwithstanding those Statutes any one may inform against any Recusant for not repairing to Church against the Statute of 23 Eliz. unlesse the King hath first taken his remedie against him for the same offence for that was adjudged by all the Court in Dr. Fosters Case 11 Rep. And as I beleive this will be granted and by the Defendants Councell so I will agree with them that if the Recusant be once convicted and punisht at the suit of the King he shall not be punisht for the same offence again at the suit of the Informer or otherwise for it is unjust to punish an Offender twice for one Crime And therefore the chief matter to be considered in this Case is the nature and force of this conviction against the wife and whether it be such a conviction as will bar the Informer of his Information or not And as to that first the woman is indicted here of Recusancy and proclaimed according to the Statute of 28 Eliz. and she did not render her body whereby she is convicted by this Statute but this conviction is not any Iudgment for the true words of the Statute are That if the party indicted shall not appear but make default after such Proclamation that then upon such default recorded this shall be a sufficient conviction in Law of such Offender as if a Tryall by Verdict had been had and recorded so that such default of appearance is made equivalent to a Verdict by that Statute but not to a Iudgment so that now it is to be understood that the woman in this Case is convicted by Verdict of Recusancy but no Iudgment is given And I conceive that such conviction is no Bar to the Informer For that this is a fruitlesse conviction and such a one as the King can take no advantage of and every conviction that shall make a discharge to the person convicted ought to be a legall and absolute conviction and such a one as thereby the party convicted may suffer the penalty imposed by the Law for such offence And that the King can have no benefit of this conviction is apparent for the remedy given to him by the 28 Eliz. for the penalty is to seise all the Goods and two parts of the Lands and
for a year rendering forty shillings Rent at Michaelmas and before the Feast does release to the Lessee all Actions yet after the Feast he shall have an Action of Debt for non-payment of the forty shillings notwithstanding the Release And 40 of Ed. 3. 48. Hillary By such Release to the Conusor of a Statute-Merchant before the day of payment the Conusee shall be barred of his Action because that the Duty is always in demand yet if he release all his right in the Land it is no Bar 25 Assis 7. And Althams Case Cokes Rep. 153. By a Release of all Demands not onely all Demands but also all causes of Demands are released And there are two manners of Demands viz In Deed and in Law In Deed As in every Praecipe quod reddat there is an express Demand In Law As in every Entry in Land Distress for Rent taking and seising of goods and the like acts in Pais which may be done without words are Demands in Law And as a Release of Suits is more large and beneficial then a Release of Complaints or Actions so a Release of Demands is more large and beneficial then any of them for by that is released all those things that by the others are released and more for thereby all Freeholds and Inheritances are released as in 34 H. 8. Releases 90. 6. He who does release all Demands does exclude himself of all Entries Actions and Seisures And Littl. 170. By the Release of all Demands Warranty is released and yet that is Executory and the reason hereof is that by the Release of Demands all the means remedies and causes that any hath to Lands Tenements Goods or Chattels are extinct and by consequence the right and interest in all of them And in 40 Ed. 3. 22. It is debated there whether a Release of all Demands by the Lord to the Tenant to hold onely by Rent and Fealty shall bar the Lord to demand reasonable ayd to marry his Daughter but it was agreed there that such Release shall bar the Lord of his Rent for as it is there said that is always in demand And 13 R. 2. Avowry 89. One gives Land in Tayl to hold by Rent Homage and Fealty for all Services and Demands this does discharge the Tenant of Relief but 18 Ed. 3. 26. contrarium tenetur And 7 Ed. 2. Avowry 211. Suit at a Leet by reason of Residency is not discharged by a Feoffment to hold by Rent for all Services and Demands for this service is not in respect of the Land but of residency of the person And 14 H. 4. 2. Gilbert de Clare Earl of Glocester before the Statute of Quia Emptores Terrarum did give Land parcel of the Honor of Glocester to hold of him as of the Honor to hold by Homage Fealty and Rent for all Services and Demands And after long argument it was agreed and hereby the Lord was excluded to have a Fine for alienation which otherwise was due from every Tenant of the Honor. And as the Fine was discharged there by the Feoffment so it might have been by Release of all Demands And the whole Court agreed Judicium that by this Release of all Demands the Rent is released and so the Plaintiff ought to be barred and so Pasch 16 Jacob. Judgment was given accordingly Hillar 13 Jacob. Southern against How IN an Action on the Case for that the Defendant the first of April 5 Jacob. was possest de quibusdam Jocalibus artificialibus contrefectis Anglice artificial and counterfeit Iewels viz. two Carcanets one pair of Ear-rings one pair of Pendants and one Coronet as of his proper goods and the Defendant there and then knowing the said Iewels to be artificial and counterfeit and fraudulently intending to sell them for true and perfect Iewels there and then did deliver them to one William Sadock his servant to whom at that time the said Iewels were known to be counterfeit and artificial and did command the said William to transport the said Iewels beyond the Seas into Barbary where the Defendant well knew that the Plaintiff was residing and did further command the said William that he should conceal the counterfeitness and falsness of the said Iewels and that after his arrival he should repair to the Plaintiff and shew him the said Iewels for good and true Iewels and there require the Plaintiff to sell the said Iewels for good and true Iewels for the Defendant to the King of Barbary or to any other that would buy them and that he should receive a price for them as if they were good and true Iewels That the 20 of April 5 Jacob. the said William did sail from London to Barbary and there the 22 June 5 Jacob. arrived and did then repair to the Plaintiff and knowing the said Iewels to be artificial and counterfeit did shew them to the Plaintiff for good and true Iewels and there and then did require the Plaintiff to sell them for good and true Iewels to Mully Sydan then King of Barbary and there then did affirm to the Plaintiff that the said Iewels were worth in value 14400 Dunces of Barbary Mony amounting to 810 l. of English Mony And the Plaintiff not suspecting the said Iewels to be counterfeit but conceiving them to be good and true did receive them of the said William and afterwards scil the 22 of August 5 Jacob. did offer them to the said King of Barbary as good and true Iewels and there and then did procure the said King to buy the said Iewels not being of the value of 3000 Ounces of Barbary Mony amounting to 168 l. 15 s. English for 14400 Ounces of Barbary Mony amounting to 810 l. which mony the Plaintiff the 22 of August 5 Jacob. received of the said King for the said Iewels for the Defendant and did pay the said sum then there to the said William for the Defendant and the said William immediately after the receit thereof did secretly withdraw himself out of Barbary and did return into England to the Defendant with the said sum and the first of October 5 Jacob. did pay the same to the Defendant That the 30 of May 6 Jac. the said King perceiving the said Iewels to be counterfeit caused the Plaintiff to be arrested and imprisoned for them and retained him in prison three months and until the Plaintiff out of his proper goods did repay to the said King the said 14400 Ounces of Barbary Mony That the first of October 6 Jac. the Plaintiff gave notice to the Defendant of the repair of the said William to him and of all the premisses and requested him to pay to the Plaintiff the said sum which yet he hath not payd ad damnum 2000 Marks The Defendant pleaded Not guilty The Iury found that the first of April 5 Jac. the Defendant was possest of the said Iewels and knowing them to be artificial and counterfeit and intending fraudulently for good and true Iewels
of the most and the rest of all my Land there which is Freehold I give to Henry and Michael upon condition that if they sell it to any but to Matthew my Son then he to enter as of my Gift and then he declares That of all these Bequests his Sons shall bear part and part-like out of all his Copyhold Lands and Free to pay to Elizabeth his wife for her Dowry 40 l. a year during her life and that Son which shall refuse to bear his part shall not enjoy any part of his Bequest but it shall be to the residue c. Sir William Lock dyes Henry and Michael enter and pay their parts of the 40 l. Henry dyes and then Michael dyes And now the Question is Whether the Defendants being Heirs of Michael shall have the Land or the Plaintiffs who claim under the Devisor And for the better arguing of this Case I will first observe that here is not any express words of limitation of an Estate to make any greater Estate to pass then an Estate for life and then I will shew that here are no words in any part of this Will to signifie any certain intention in the Devisor to make an Estate of Inheritance to pass by this Devise And as to the first the Devise is onely to his two sons viz. The rest of all my Houses and Lands there which is Freehold I give to Henry and Michael Lock and these are all the words of limitation of the Estate and these without question in a Deed or Feoffment will not make a greater Estate then for life And so is Littleton 1. If one purchase Land in perpetuum or to him and his Assigns in perpetuum this is but an Estate for life because it wants these words his Heirs which words make the Inheritance in all Feoffments and Grants and this is an infallible Rule in Grants unless it be in some special Cases as in Frankmarriage or Frankalmoine which being words of art do pass an Inheritance with these words Heirs And in Cases of Grants no intention of the Grantor although it be apparent in the Grant will make an estate of Inheritance to pass as in 19 H. 6. 73. 20 H. 6. 36. A Gift to B. and C. haeredibus with Warranty to them and their Heirs is no Fee-simple because the words of limitation are incertain to whom haeredibus shall be referred and so all one as if it were omitted and then the clause of Warranty although it does declare a certain intent to give an Estate in Fee will not amend the matter in a Grant And so in the 1 Rep. Shelleys Case if one gives Land to one liberis or eitibus suis or semini suo it is but an Estate for life and not an Estate in Tayl yet there is an apparent intent but that will not suffice in a Grant But I agree that in Case of a Devise although the apt words to make an Estate of Inheritance to pass are omitted yet if the intent of the Devisor does appear by any express matter contained in the Will an Estate of Inheritance shall pass for it is sufficient to pass the Inheritance And so Litt. 133. 6. 19 H. 8. 9. 6. If one deviseth Land to another in perpetuum the Devise by these words shall bar an Estate in Fee so if one devise Land to another to give dispose or sell at his pleasure this is an Estate in Fee-simple 19 H. 8. 9. 6. 7 Edw. 6. B. But yet the Law hath restrained such intent For first it ought to be agreeable to Law and not repugnant to it for although in Scholasticas Case in the Comment it is said that a Will is like to an Act of Parliament yet a Will cannot alter the Law or make a new form of an Estate which is not allowed by the Rules of Law as an Act of Parliament is and so adjudged in the Common Bench Hillar 37 Eliz. between Jermin and Ascot Cooks 1 Rep. 85. in Corbets Case That by a Devise a man cannot give an Estate and determine part thereof by a condition and make the residue to continue And if Land be devised to one in Tayl he cannot determine the Estate as to the Devisee himself and yet preserve the Estate to the issue as was endeavoured in this Case And 28 and 29 H. 8. Dyer 33. If Land be devised to one in Fee and if he does not perform such an Act the Land shall remain to another the remainder is voyd for no such remainder can be limited by the Rules of Law This intent ought to be exprest in the Will and collected out of the words of the Will and cannot be averred or supplyed by any forreign matter as in Matthew Mannings Case 8 Rep. 95. 6. Always the intention of the Devisor expressed in his Will is the best Expositor Director and Disposer of his words And Lord Cheyreys Case 5 Rep. 68. Sir Thomas Cheyrey devised certain Land to Henry his Son and the Heirs males of his body the remainder to Thomas Cheyrey of Woodley and the Heirs males of his body upon condition That he or they or any of them shall not alien and the Question was whether there could be an averment that the intent of the Devisor was to restrain H. and his Heirs from aliening and resolved that no such averment could be received for construction of Wills ought to be collected out of the words of the Will The intent of the Devisor ought to be manifest and certain and not dubious as in a Devise of Land to one for ever here the intent is to give an Estate in Fee-simple for no other Estate can continue for ever so if the devise be to one and his Heirs and if he dyes without Heir that it shall remain to another his intent ●y t●ars that the word His in the first Devise shall be taken for the Heirs of his body for the Law will sooner presume him to be dead without issue then to be dead without Heir And now to examine our Case with the Rules of Law There are three clauses in this Will as I conceive upon which the pretences of the Defendants are founded to have an Estate in Fee pass by this Devise to which I shall make answer severally The precedent clause to the Devise And as touching my Lands at T. my Son Matthew is joyned Purchaser with me of the most and the rest of all my Houses and Lands there which is Freehold I give to Henry and Michael Lock c. And as to this I conceive that here is no colour to enlarge the Estate to the Devisees but this clause is onely a description of Land which he does not intend to devise and which in truth he cannot devise because that Matthew ought to have it by survivor and is principally named therein because of preventing any question between Matthew and the two Devisees after his death for otherwise they might perhaps have pretended that all
held and have accustomed to have in the aforesaid two hundred acres of pasture and a hundred of wood parcel of the aforesaid Tenements called the Mannor of Colwick belonging to the said Mannor of Colwick enclosing ditching and hedging at their will and pleasure with all liberties priviledges and Franchises to the said Park belonging and in the said Park from the time aforesaid have used to have and to keep Deer and from time to time to constitute and appoint a Keeper of the said Deer in the said Park who from the aforesaid time have used to keep the same ac ad venandum fugandum occidendum capiendum asportandum omnes omnimodas damas in eodem parco de tempore in tempus existentes ita quod nullus forestarius Domini Regis Forestae praedictae nec aliquae aliae personae quaecunque intromittantur ad venandum fugandum in parco praedicto sine licentia praedicti Johannis avi And set forth that the said John the Grandfather died seised whereby the said Mannor c. descended to Sir John Byron his Son And that Hillary 3. Jacobi a Fine was levied between Sir Peter Leigh and other Plaintiffs and Sir John Byron the son Defendant of the said Tenements to the use of the said Sir John for life the remainder to the Defendant in tail And that the seventeenth of December 10. Jac. did let the Premisses to the Defendant for eighty years if the Lessee should so long live wherby the Defendant the 26. Mar 11. Jac was and is thereof possessed did aver that the Mannor of Colwick in the information and the said Messuage a hundred acres of Land two hundred of Meadow three hundred of Pasture and a hundred of Wood to be the same and did also aver the life of the Lessor The Attorney Generall for the King did reply that before the information sc 9 Octobr. 19. Jacobi and long before and continuing after untill the exhibiting of this information the Defendant the Park and Tenements aforesaid with Ditches Hedges and Fences had so sleightly inclosed that the Kings Deer of the aforesaid Forest for defect of sufficient inclosing of the Park and Tenements aforesaid through the default of the Defendant did enter and the Deer of the King into the said Park and Tenements aforesaid for the cause aforesaid entring the Defendant did very unjustly kill the said Deer in the said Park and Tenements aforesaid The Defendant did maintain his Bar and traversed without that that the Defendant the Park and Tenements aforesaid with such sleight Fences Hedges and Ditches inclosed did keep the same Quod Damae Regis de forresta praedicta de tempore in tempus intra tempus praedictum in parcum tenementa praedicta pro defectu sufficientis inclusurae parci tenementorum praedictorum in defectu defen intraverunt absque hoc quod Defendens Damas Regis de forresta praedicta in parco tenementis praedictis pro defectu sufficientis inclusurae parci tenementorum praedictorum in defectu defendentis minus juste interfecit modo forma prout c. Whereupon the Attorney demurred And I conceive that Iudgment ought to be given for the King First Because the plea in Bar and the Rejoynder made by the Defendant is altogether insufficient for divers causes Secondly As to matter in Law And as to the first The Quo Warranto doth suppose that the Defendant did use the liberties there mentioned within the Mannor of Colwick being within the meets and bounds of the Forest of Sherwood and within the Reguards of the said Forest and the Defendant did know this to be within the meets and bounds of the said Forest but does not answer whether it be within the Reguards or not for it may be within the meets and bounds of the said Forest and yet not within the Reguards as if the Mannor were disforested by Carta forestae because it was a Subjects Mannor and not the Kings yet it remains within the meets and bounds of the said Forest but not within the Reguards for now by the disforesting it is made purlue and not subject to the Reguards and Lawes of the Forest as to the Owner of the Mannor Vide Carta Foresta fol. 1. and yet notwithstanding this Statute if the King had granted this Mannor to be free of the Reguards or out of the Reguards yet is it still within the meets and bounds of the said Forest Secondly The Dendant makes Title to the liberties whereof Sir John Byron his Grandfather was seised in Fee viz. of a Messuage a hundred acres of land two hundred of Meadow three hundred of Pasture and a hundred of Wood in Colwick now and time out of mind called the Mannor of Colwick Quodque ille omnes illi Quorum statum idem Johannes habuit in tenementis praedictis habuerunt tenuerunt habere consueverunt in praedictis 200. acris pasturae 100. acris bosci parcellis praedictorum tenementorum vocat mannerium de Colwick praedictum parcum tenementa praedicta vocat mannerium de Colwcik spectant pertinent c. So that the Defendant doth not prescribe but doth alledge only that Sir John Byron and those whose estate he hath have used to have a Park the which is no Title to the Park for that ought to be time out of mind Thirdly The Defendant doth claim to have a Park in the aforesaid two hundred acres of pasture and a hundred acres of wood whereas there is no speaking of two hundred acres of pasture before and therefore he ought to have said in two hundred acres of pasture parcell of the said three hundred acres Fourthly The Defendant doth not answer to the killing of the Kings Deer of the Forest but doth only justifie the killing of all Deer time out of mind being in the said Park Fifthly The Rejoynder is a manifest departure from the Bar for in the Bar he claimeth to have a Park ditched and hedged Per voluntatem eorum inclusum so that by this pretence he may keep the Park with such low Hedges as he will and yet in his Rejoynder he doth traverse absque hoc that he kept the Park adeo parvis sepibus Fossatis quod Damae Regis de foresta praedicta in parcum praedictum pro defectu inclusurae intraverunt absque hoc c. So that the Defendant by his Rejoynder doth make an Issue upon that which he doth justifie in his Bar and doth upon the matter deny in his Rejoynder the matter alledged by him in his Bar. And as to the matter in Law I conceive that the Defendant cannot prescribe to have a Park in such manner as he pretendeth for that such prescription is quite contrary to the nature of his Royall Franchise of his Forest and is to the destruction of it for a Forest is a Royall Franchise so that regularly none can have it but the King as it was adjudged in this Court in a Quo Warranto