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A47718 The third part of the reports of severall excellent cases of law, argued and adjudged in the courts of law at Westminster in the time of the late Queen Elizabeth, from the first, to the five and thirtieth year of her reign collected by a learned professor of the law, William Leonard ... ; with alphabetical tables of the names of the cases, and of the matters contained in the book.; Reports and cases of law argued and adjudged in the courts at Westminster. Part 3 Leonard, William. 1686 (1686) Wing L1106; ESTC R19612 343,556 345

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shall be taken in Iudgment of Law That the Executors have Assets to the value of the whole 100 l. And although the Executors were compelled by the Award to make the release yet it was their own act to submit themselves to the Arbitrament LXXVIII Mich. 15 Eliz. In the Court of Wards NOte It was Ruled by Kellaway and Wilbraham in the Court of Wards That where the Kings Tenant of Lands holden by Knight service in Capite made a Feoffment of the same Land to the use of himself for life and after to the use of his younger Son in tail the remainder to the right Heirs of the Feoffor and died the eldest Son within age That the Queen should have the Wardship of his body and of the third part of the Land and when the eldest cometh at full age the younger shall sue Livery and pay Primer Seisin according to the rate of the value of the whole Land viz. of the third part as in possession and of the two parts as a Reversion For the remainder to the right Heirs of the Feoffor is in truth a Reversion For the Feesimple was never out of him because there was not any Consideration as to that nor any use expressed And also because that Livery shall not be by parcels the younger Son shall not be suffered to sue Livery of the third part presently and respite the residue as to the two parts in Reversion until the Reversion fall but shall sue Livery presently as well of the two parts in reversion as of the third part in possession And if the eldest Son had been of full age at the time of the death of his Father the younger Son should pay Primer Seisin as to the third part of the full value of it for one year as in possession and as to the two other parts the moyety of the value of a year as a Reversion And at that time Breers Case was vouched which was Oliver Breers Tenant in Chief by Knights Service made a Feoffment in Fee to the use of himself for life and after to the use of A. his Son and Heir for life and after to the use of the first begotten Son of A. in tail and after to the use of the second Son of A. c. and for default of such Issue to the right Heirs of the Feoffor Oliver died the said A. his Son being of full age It was ruled by the said Council of the said Court of Wards That he should pay for his Primer Seisin a third part of the Land in possession and two parts as a Reversion LXXIX Mich. 15 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Post 56. THe Case was A Man was seised of a Pasture in which was two great Groves and a Wood known by the name of a Wood And also in the same Pasture were certain Hedge-Rowes and Trees there growing Sparsim Leased the same by Indenture for years And by the same Indenture bargained and sold to the Lessee all Woods and Vnderwoods in and upon the Premisses And further That it should and might be lawful to the Lessee to cut down and carry away the same at all times during the Term. Harper Iustice The Hedge-Rowes did not pass by these words Hedge-Rowes sparsim Dyer The Hedge-Rowes shall pass for the Grant is general All Woods Mounson contrary For the words of the Grant may be supplyed by other words It was moved further If by these words the Lessee may cut them oftner than once And by Harper Manwood and Mounson He can cut them but once Dyer contrary And so it should be if the words had been Growing upon the Premisses And this word Growing although it sounds in the present Tense yet it shall be also taken in the future Tense if the word tunc had not been alledged for it is a word of restraint The Case which was argued in the Chancery 27 H. 8. where I was present was such The Prior of St. John of Jerusalem Leased a Commandry Provided That if the said Prior or any of his Brethren there being Commanders will dwell thereupon then the said Lease to be void It was doubted If that did extend to the Successors for the word Being is in the present Tense And yet it was holden by Fitzherbert That it should be taken in the future Tense and so extend to the Successors Otherwise if the words had been Nunc Being LXXX Mich. 15 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. A Man seised of Lands in Fee devised 1 Len. 101. That his Wife should take the profits of his Lands until Mary his Daughter and Heir came to the age of 16 years And if the said Mary died That J.S. should be her Heir Manwood The Daughter after she hath attained the age of 16 years shall have the Land in tail For Devises ought to be construed according to the intent of the Devisor so far forth as any certainty with reason may be collected but no intent shall be taken against all reason and certainty It is certain That the Daughter shall not have the Land in Fee for that shall descend to her without any Devise And these words If she dieth cannot be intended a Condition for it is certain she shall die But if the words had been That after the death of Mary J.S. should be his Heir in such case Mary had had but an Estate for life for there it is limited what Estate she should have And when it is said J.S. shall be his Heir it shall be meant his Collateral Heir so as the Estate tail remains in the Daughter Mounson and Harper to the contrary and that she shall have but for life And by Mounson If Mary had been a stranger to the Devise she should take nothing And this Case was put by Barham Serjeant A Man deviseth 100 l. to his youngest Daughter 100 l. to his middle Daughter and another 100 l. to his eldest Daughter and that all these sums shall be levied of the profits of his Lands It was holden by the better Opinion of the Court in this Case That the youngest Daughter should be first paid and then the middle and then the eldest Daughter and that was said to be Coniers Case LXXXI Mich. 15 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. THe Case was The King granted to the Bishop of Salisbury That he should have Catalla felonum fugitivor ' and Fines and Amercements of all Tenants and Resiants within the Mannor of D. which Mannor the Bishop Leased for years and that the Lessee should have all profits and hereditaments within the same Mannor Manwood Iustice conceived That the Lessee should have the Post Fines For all things have a being somewhere although they be not visible As Rents Fines have their being in the Lands out of which they are issuing and that is in the Son of a Fine levied of the Land within the Mannor which is due by Land of him who ought to pay the Fine And this Fine is due be reason of the
Len. 55. 1 Len. 333. The Abbot and Covent of D. 29 H. 8. makes a Lease of certain Lands for 3 Lives to begin after the death of one J.S. if they shall so long live And afterwards 30 H. 8. within a year before the Dissolution they make another Lease to JS If the first Lease in the life of J.S. be such an Estate and Interest which by vertue of the said Statute shall make the second Lease void was the Question For it was not in esse but a future Interest Manwood All the reason which hath been made for the second Lease is because the first Lease is but a possibility for J.S. by possibility may survive all the 3 Lives and so it shall never take effect But notwithstanding be it a possibility c. or otherwise It is such a thing as may be granted or forfeited and that during the life of the said J.S. And Note also the words of the Statute If any Abbot c. within one year next before the first day of the Parliament hath made or hereafter shall make any Lease or Grant for years life or lives of any Mannors c. whereof and in which any Estate or Interest for life or years at the time of the making of any such Lease or Grant then had his being or continuance or hereafter shall have his being or continuance and then was not determined c. shall be void c. And here is an Interest and that not determined at the time of the making of this Lease to J.S. And of that Opinion was the whole Court and all the Barons and divers other of the Iustices And therefore a Decree was made against that Lease c. CCXVII The Master and Chaplains of the Savoy's Case Mich. 29 Eliz. In the Exchequer THe Master and Chaplains of the Savoy aliened a parcel of their possessions unto another in Fee and afterwards surrendred their Patents and a Vacat is made of the Enrollment of them It was now moved How the Alienee should be adjudged to make title to the said Lands claiming the same by the Letters Patents For the Clerks would not make a Constat of it For the Patents were cancelled and a Vacat made of the Enrolment And the Case of Sir Robert Sidney was vouched in which Case the Statute of 3 E. 6. was so expounded upon great advise taken by the Lord Chancellor who thereupon commanded That no Constat be made in such case Manwood If Tenant in tail by Letters Patents of the King surrendreth his Patent and cancelleth it and a Vacat be made of the Enrollment by that the Issue in tail shall be bound For no other person at the time of the cancelling hath Interest But in the Case at Bar a third person scil the Alienee hath an Interest And therefore he was of Opinion That he should have a Constat c. CCXVIII Inchely and Robinson's Case Hill. 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. IN an Ejectione Firmae It was found by Verdict That King E. 6. was seised of the Mannor and Hundred of Fremmington 2 Len. 41. Owen Rep. 88. and granted the same by his Letters Patents to one Barnard in Fee rendring 130 l. per annum and also to be holden by Homage and Fealty And afterwards Queen Mary reciting the said Grant by King Ed. 6. and the Reservation upon it granted unto Gertrude Marchioness of Exeter the Mannor of Fremmington and the said Rent and Services and also the Mannor of Camfield and other Lands and Tenements Tenendum per vicesimam partem unius feodi Militis Gertrude being so seised Devised to the Lord Mountjoy the Mannor of Fremmington the Mannor of Camfield c. And also bequeathed divers sums of Monies to be levied of the premises And further found that the said Rent of 130 l. was the full third part of the yearly value of all the Lands and Tenements of the Devisor The Question was If by these words of the Devise of the Mannor of Fremmington the Rent and the Services pass i.e. the Rent Homage and Fealty reserved upon the Grant made by King Ed. 6. of the Mannor and Hundred of Fremmington And if the said Rent and Services are issuing out of the Mannor For if the Rent doth not pass then the same is descended to the Heir of the Marchioness and then being found the full third part of the value the King is fully answered and satisfied and then the residue of the Inheritance discharged and is settled in the Devisee And if the Rent doth not pass then is the Heir of the Marchioness entituled by the Statute to a third of the whole c. And Shuttleworth conceived That if the Marchioness had Devised by express words the said Rent and Services they could not pass For as to the Services they are things entire as Homage and Fealty they cannot pass by Devise in case where Partition is to follow for such things cannot receive any partition or division therefore not divideable For the Statute enables the Proprietary to give or devise two parts of his Inheritance in three parts to be divided As Catalla Felonum cannot be devised for the reason aforesaid Quod fuit Concessum per totam Curiam But as to the Rent the Court was clear That the same was deviseable by the said Statute and in respect of that the mischief of many distresses which the Common Law abhors is dispensed with and is now become distrainable of common right And as to the Devise he argued much upon the grounds of Devises and put a ground put by Fineux 15 H. 7. 12. Where every Will ought to be construed and taken according as the words purport or as it may be intended or implyed by the words What the intent of the Devisor was so as we ought to enquire the meaning of the Testator out of the words of the Will. And see also a good Case 19 H 8. 8 9. And he much relyed upon the Case of Bret and Rigden Plow Com. 343. See there the Case So in this Case for as much as such Intent of the Devisor doth not appear upon the words of the Will that this Rent shall pass It shall not pass for there is not any mention of any Rent in the whole Will. Fenner argued to the contrary and he argued much upon the favourable Construction which the Law gives to Wills. 14 H. 8. by Reversion for remainder e contra 17 E. 3. 8. A Man may make a Feoffment in Fee of a Mannor by the name of a Knights Fee a multo fortiori in the Cases of Devises And in our Case the Marchioness conceived That the Rent and Services reserved out of the Mannor of Fremmington was the Mannor of Fremmington and that the Law would give strength to that intent Walmesley conceived That the Rent did not pass by the name of the Mannor c. for this Rent noc in veritate nec in reputatione was ever taken for a Mannor
case there is no person to take it and therefore he conceived That the Lease was void Mounson Iustice The Case is as it is recited And he said That the Premisses of a Deed is to limit the person who shall have the Lease and the Habendum shall not declare the person who shall have it or the Lease but to declare the Estate which shall be in the Lease and it is but a limitation of the Estate and if the Premisses do not limit the person who shall have it the Habendum shall not give any thing to the person unless it be expressed in the Premisses what person shall have it and therefore when he saith Habendum to his Executors and Assigns these words Executors and Assigns are void But when a Man makes a Lease to one Habendum to his Executors and Assigns the same is not void for if Livery be made his Heir shall take it after his death Harper By the Lease of the same Land by a new Deed as the Case is here nothing shall pass without an Habendum And if a Lease be made to the Lessee Habendum to his Executors he himself hath no Estate and when no Estate is limited the person in the Premisses gains not any thing and without the Habendum he cannot have any thing Lovelace If I may declare my Opinion This new Lease shall be a Lease in possession as a Confirmation of the first Lease and shall be taken to be a Lease for life and the Habendum shall be void and therefore he prayed the Opinion of Manwood Iustice therein Who said That in every Lease there are 3 Principals as he had said of Lessor Lessee and thing Let And by the Premisses the Lessor and Lessee are expressed and by the Habendum the Interest which the Lessee shall have ought to be set forth and if no Habendum be in the Deed to express any certainty of time the Lessee by the same shall be Tenant of your Opinion Brother Lovelace That the same shall be a Lease for life unless that in the second Deed the words had been That he Leased and Granted by which word Grant it might enure and amount to a Lease for life but if the Deed had been Demise and Grant that cannot be intended for the life of the Lessee And as I have said before by apt words it might enure to a Confirmation and make it a Lease for life but by the Premisses it is not so and by this Deed it is not expressed that the Lessee shall take a Freehold for by the Habendum his mind appeareth to be otherwise by agreement betwixt the parties that his Executors and Assigns should have it for a certain time after his death and that he himself would not have it for he hath sufficiently provided for himself to have if for 40 years if he liveth so long although it cannot be intended that he should live beyond the Term which he hath so as it cannot be taken to be the meaning of the parties that he should have it as a Lease for life and when by the Premisses of the Deed the parties are not named the Habendum shall never bring in a strange person As where a Lease is made to the Husband Habendum to the Wife the Habendum to her is a void because it shall not introduce one who is a stranger to the Premisses of the Deed. And as my Brother Mounson hath said The Office of the Premisses of a Deed is to limit the persons who shall have it and the Office of the Habendum is to limit the Estate of the thing which is granted and therefore when the Habendum is to such a person as was not named in the Premisses of the Deed it is but a Nugation As if he had Leased to J.S. Habendum to the Moon for certain years there the Habendum to that thing is a Nugation and void and therefore then if the words be in the Premisses that he Leaseth to J.S. for 20 years and doth not say that he shall have it for 20 years it shall be intended that the person named in the Premisses shall have it for the Habendum waits upon the Grant before and when he gives an Estate in the Habendum without limiting of the person in it then the person named in the Premisses shall have it and then when he names a strange person who was not named before in the Premisses or which hath no Capacity as the Moon or such like who are not in rerum natura as his Executors of the Lessee or his Assigns these persons or things named in the Habendum are but Nugations and void and then it is like unto the Case where no person is limited in the Habendum And where apt words are there the Law shall construe them strong against the Grantor and therefore the Law couples the Habendum and the Premisses together that the intent of the parties may if by any means it may have a reasonable Construction And therefore if a Man maketh a Lease to two Habendum to one of them and a third person there as to the third person he gets nothing by the Habendum because he was not named in the Premisses and therefore the naming him in the Habendum is but a Nugation And so here the naming of the Executors and Assigns by the Habendum is but a Nugation and so there is no person named in it But I conceive that the Habendum when the years are expressed and the Estate limited by it shall have reference to the person who is named in the Premisses of the Deed and so the Lease shall be good to him to begin after the first Term expired Harper It appeareth that it was the meaning of the parties that he himself would not have any thing but that his Will was That his Executors should have it and the Law shall frame his intent and meaning and shall not subject the Law to his intent and when he doth not so but overthwarts the Law and frames such an Instrument the Law shall be first served and not their meanings when the same doth not agree with the Law. And therefore as to the Case which my Brother Manwood hath put Where no person is named in the Habendum by Construction of Law he who is named in the Premisses shall have it But when the Habendum makes express mention of his intent what person shall have it and another than was named in the Premisses then if those cannot have it the Estate limited shall not be carried over to him who was named in the Premisses And as to the Case put where a Lease is made to two Habendum to one of them and a third person there I well agree That as to the third person it is but a Nugation and the other two who are named with him in the Habendum and have a Capacity to take it shall have it although the other getteth nothing but that is not like to the Case at
force of the first assurance by way of Bargain and the Relation is utterly gone So in our Case The Grant of the Queen mean between the Award of the Commission and the Retorn of it hath destroyed the force and effect of the Commission so as no appearance shall be had of it And he agreed That here are several Rents but the Condition is entire and admit that a Condition may be apportioned in some Cases yet in some Cases it cannot And the Statute of 32 H. 8. gives the Condition and the Reversion to which it is annexed to the King in such sort as it was in the Prior But the Condition in the Prior was not capable of Apportionment and therefore no more it shall be in the Case of the King. As where a Recognizance is acknowledged whic● cometh to the King by the Attainder of the Conusee Now if the King will sue Execution upon it he shall not have the whole Land of the Conusor in Execution but only the moyety by Elegit c. This Case afterward Trin. 28 Eliz. for Difficulty was adjourned into the Exchequer-Chamber and there argued before all the Iustices and Barons of the Exchequer And Shuttleworth Serjant argued for the Plaintiff And first he said Here are several Rents and so several Conditions especially when all the things demised are of such a Nature that they may yield a Distress but if any of the things demised cannot yield Distress then it shall be one entire Rent and shall issue out of the Residue c. Which see 17 Ass 10. An Assise was brought of 20 s. Rent and the said Rent was reserved upon a Lease for life made of 100 Acres of Lands and 15 Acres of Wood scil for the Land 10 s. and for the Woods 10 s. And by the Assise it was found the Disseisin in the Wood but not in the Land. Wherefore it was awarded That the Plaintiff should recover seisin of the 10 s. and for the residue that he should take nothing And although these words reddendo inde Trench unto all the things demised entirely yet this word viz. is a distributive and makes an Apportionment And the viz. is not contrary to the premisses scil to the reddendo inde As if I enfeoffe A. and B. of an Acre of Land Habendum the one moyety thereof to A. in Fee and the other moyety to B. in Fee this is good for it well stands with the premisses But if I enfeoffe A. and B. of two Acres of Lands Habendum the one Acre to A. and the other to B. the same Habendum is void because contrary to the premisses for each of them is excluded out of one Acre which was given to him in the premisses And in our Case If the Rent set forth in the Viz. had been greater or less than that which is reserved upon the Reddendo then the Viz. should be void for the contrariety and the Reddendo stand Walmesley contrary And that here is one entire Rent Which see to be so by the close of the Condition Si Redditus praedict ' aut aliqua inde parcella c. And the Lessor may distrain in any part of the Land demised for the whole Rent notwithstanding the Viz. And it was moved by Shuttleworth That admit the Rent and Condition be entire Yet now when the King grants the Reversion of one of the things demised in Fee to a stranger the Condition remains and not determined by the destruction of the Reversion as in the case of a Subject For the King hath divers Prerogatives by which he is exempted and protected from such Mischiefs and Inconveniences which happen to Subjects by their own Acts and their Laches and Folly which shall not be imputed to the King And the reason of Extinguishment of a Condition in such case in the case of a Common person is his own Folly that he will distrahere his Reversion And Folly shall never be imputed to the King And as the Case is here the King is not bound to take notice of a Condition made by a Common ●erson For it is not matter of Record and by this Grant of the King the Rent doth not pass for the Grant is only of the Reversion without any mention of the Rent And the King hath divers Prerogatives in a Condition As in the creating of a Condition 35 H. 6. 38. The Abbot of Sion's Case Ad effectum is a good Condition in the Case of the King by Prison And where the King grants Lands in Fee to one upon Condition That the Grantee shall not alien the same is a good condition So for a Rent-Seck the King may distrain And the King may reserve a Rent and a Condition to a stranger and if he doth reserve a Rent and a Condition to himself he may grant the same over to a Subject 2 H. 7. 8. And the Condition in the case of a Common person may be apportioned As if Lessee of two Acres upon Condition alien one of them in Fee and the Lessor entreth for the forfeiture or recovereth part in an Action of Waste c. but of a surrender it is otherwise Walmesley contrary The Condition is gone For a Condition in the hands of the King is of the same Nature as in the case of a common person impatient of any Division Partition or Apportionment As if the King hath a Rent out of 3 Acres of Land and afterwards purchaseth one of them the Rent is utterly gone and shall not be apportioned as well as in the Case of a common person So of a Common And as this Case is If the Condition doth remain then upon the breach of it the King shall enter into the whole for the words of the Condition are Wholly to re-enter and so he should defeat his own grant And he cited a Case adjudged at the Assizes at York The King gave Land in Fee-Farm rendring Rent with Clause of re-entry The King granteth the Rent over to a stranger And after the Rent is behind The King cannot re-enter nor the Grantee It was also moved If the Iurors of Middlesex might enquire of the usual Feast days in London Shuttleworth That they might do so See 5 H. 5. 23. Where a Commission issued out to enquire in the County of Surrey of Escheats words c. who found that A. held of the King in Chief and took to Wife one E. Cosen of A. within the Degrees they then knowing of it and had Issue betwixt them and afterwards they were Divorced in the County of Kent c. And Exception was taken to that Office Because the Enquest of Surry had found a Divorce in the County of Kent Another matter was Because the Iurors have found the breach of the Condition And before the Iurors had put their Hands and Seals to the Inquisition the Queen granted part of the things demised in his hands to Fortescue After which Grant the Inquisition was sealed and Retorned into the Exchequer If
no judgment can be given C. 14. Where as to part a Plea is pleaded which is tryable by Certificate or otherwise than by Jury if the other which is tryable by Jury be not continued the whole is not discontinued C. 268. Conuzance de Pleas. Not grantable if the Plaintiff be priviledged in the Courts at Westminister C. 149. Copulative Disjunctive Where a Copulative shall be taken as a Disjunctive e converse A. 74 244 251. Where a thing is to be done Copulative both the matters must be averred A. 251 252. Corporation Upon a grant to them of an Acre in a great Field how they must make election A. 30. Must acknowledge Deeds and levy Fines c. by Warrant of Attorny A. 184. Where the names of the Heads of what Corporations must be shewed in pleading A. 306 307. How they must make a Lease by Attorny where they are out of possession B. 97 98. Cannot be Feoffees to Uses B. 122. Leases by them must be made by their true name of Incorporation as to substance A. 159 to 163 215. B. 97 165. C. 220. Corpus cum Causa See Habeas Corpus Covenant To assure Lands the Covenantor is not bound to seal a Deed with Covenants A. 29. To repair upon warning Action lies by Grantee of the Reversion though the House was ruinous before his Title A. 62. That the Premisses should be exonerated De omnibus oneribus c. how broken A. 93. C. 44. That the Lessee shall take Fireboot super dicta premissa extends not to Lands excepted A. 117. To help and assist the Plaintiff in a Suit in the Defendants name and not to abate it the Defendant being a Feme Sole takes Husband yet is the Writ but abateable A. 168 169. Upon the words Dedi Concessi A. 179 278. B. 104. By Lessor to repair the Lessee in his default repairs if the Lessee may retain Rent for it A. 237. What Covenant makes a Condition and shall defeat an Estate A. 246. Upon the words absque impetitione denegatione Covenant lies if the party himself disturb A. 277. For quiet enjoyment from all claiming under the Covenantor the breach must say how he claimed A. 318. Performance of Covenants in the Disjunctive must be especially pleaded A. 311. Where it lies upon a Proviso A. 318. To make an Estate or repair a House how performance must be pleaded B. 38 39 53. To make assurance binds not to release with Warranty B. 130. One Covenants to assure such Lands as shall descend to him the same to be yearly worth 40 l. If all the Lands by descent are to be assured C. 27. That the Lessee shall enjoy without interruption of any If interruption by one who hath no Title be a breach C. 44. Covenant to leave the Houses in as good plight as he found them C. 44. If upon a Covenant to repair a Recovery be had the Lessor can sue no more C. 51. If one be interrupted by a Decree in Chancery that is no breach of a Covenant to enjoy without lawful Eviction C. 71. Who shall do the first act where the Covenant is reciprocal C. 219. B. 211 212. That he hath made no former Assurances but that the Land shall descend raises no Uses C. 7. Count. Where in a Quare Impedit the Writ may be general and the Count special A. 226 227. Where in a Writ of Entry Sur disseisin brought by Tenant in tail A. 231. How to Count where one of two Debtors or Trespassors are Utlawed C. 202. Countermand In what case the Bailor of Goods may Countermand the authority of the Bailee B. 31. Courts and Offices of the Court. The Common Bench cannot write to the Kings Bench for a Record A. 90. If upon pleading a Title be found or confest for the King the Court ex Officio must prosecute for the King A. 194 323. A Court to admit Copyholders may be held out of the Mannor A. 289. In what case the Kings Bench may hold Plea under 40 s. A. 316. What duty due by a Subject to the King gives the Subject priviledge in the Court of Exchequer B. 21. How and by what authority Nisi Prius are tryed out of the Exchequer B. 87. All the Courts except the Common Bench are variable as to the place and must be shewed where they sit B. 102 103. Courtesie of England In what case the Husband be where the Wives Estate is defeasible by condition A. 167 168. By custom of Mannor B. 109. If the Husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesie of the Seigniory of the Wife where he himself was Tenant C. 247. Court Christian Their Sentences there are good until revoked by other Sentence B. 169 to 172 176 177. Cui in vita What is a good Bar therein A. 53. Custom Of free Bench within a Mannor A. 1. That the Lord may seise for conviction of his Tenant of Felony A. 1. Where it shall be taken strictly A 1●2 B. 109. Of Bristol that a Covenant shall bind by Parol is good A. 2. That a Copyholder may Lease for years ad pasturand non ad colend ' A. 16. What Customs are void being unreasonable A. 217. C. 81 82 226 227. What are good and reasonable A. 217 328. C. 227. That the Lord may take the profits during the Nonage of the Infant Tenant good A. 266. Customs of the Kings Courts are Laws B. 85 86. Custom alledged infra Regnum Angliae if good B. 114 115. A good Custom that Robbers at Sea shall share the Goods though one Ship did but stand by and look on B. 182. D. Damages INcreased by the Court super visum vulnerum A. 139. No costs upon discontinuance by original Stat. 32 H. 8. 15. A. 115. Intire assessed upon one promise to perform an Award of two matters whereof one void how adjudged A. 170 171. An Action upon the Stat. of 8 H. 6. of Forcible entry treble Costs and Damages A. 282. B. 52. If the Jury ought to assess any Damages in Account A. 302. In what Actions Costs by the Statute 32 H. 8. vide tit Stat. B. 9 52. C. 92. In account the Plaintiff hath Damages B. 118. The Plaintiff shall have Costs assessed but by one Jury though several Trials by several Juries B. 177. Grantee of a Reversion shall recover Damages in Covenant but for things done since the Grant C. 51. The first Jury which tries the first Issue may assess Damages for the whole Trespass C. 122. If the Plaintiff in Replevin be non-suited after Avowry for Rent the Court may assess Damages without a Writ of Enquiry C. 213. If joynt Damages be assessed for two Trespasses one of which lieth not the Plaintiff cannot have Judgment C. 213. Where the Court will abridge Damages C. 150. Dean and Chapter hujusmodi An Arch-Deacon Prebend what they are A. 13 205. What places have two Chapters and if Leases confirmed by one be good A. 234 235. The Chapter must be party to a