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A85670 Bouleutērion, or A practical demonstration of county judicatures. Wherein is amply explained the judiciall and ministeriall authority of sheriffs. Together with the original, jurisdiction, and method of keeping all countrey courts. / By Will: Greenwood, philomath. Greenwood, Will. William. 1659 (1659) Wing G1870; Thomason E1789_1; ESTC R209680 323,562 484

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shall well and truly serve his Highness the Lord Protector c. and the Lord of this Leete in the office of Hayward Beadel or Greve for this ensuing year and you shall duly and truly execute all Attachments and other process to you directed from the Lord or Steward of this Court and you shall present all pound breaches which shall be made within your office and also all Chattels Strayes and Waifes and in every other thing well and truly hold you in the same office So help you God c. It is usuall with Lords to grant their office of Bayliwick taking good securities in this manner A grant of a Bayliwick TO all to whom this present writing shall come A. B. of C. in the County of Y. sendeth greeting Know ye that I the said A. B. in the fidelity circumspection and due diligence of my beloved servant E. F. to me and my posterity hereafter to be done and performed very much relying and confiding Have made ordained and by this my present writing constituted the said E. F. of Town Mannor or Lordship of S. in the said County of Y. Collector and Receiver of all and singular my Rents Revennues Fines Amerciaments and Estreates of Court Leets or viewes of Frank-pledge there And of all other profits by reason of the said Court Leet or view of Frank-pledge any way arising emergent or coming to have hold exercise and occupie the said office to the said E. F. by himself so long as he shall well behave himself towards me and shall a true and just account of his Receits make unto me and the same shall well and truly pay and satisfie Takeing of me for his yearly wages 5l at the Feasts c. by equal portions by mine own hands after his account and full payment at every half year and the gifts rewards and emoluments to the same office due and accustomed In testimony whereof c. Curia Dominicalis OR COURT-BARON Of the first Original and Institution of Mannors and of this Court IF we labour to investigate the Antiquitie of Court-Baron we shall finde them as Ancient as Mannors themselves therefore we will inquire what a Mannor is together with the first institution of Mannors The word Mannor Manerium est nomen collectivum generale it comprehends Houses Lands Gardens trees c. and hath its Etimologie as some derive it a Manendo and then it taketh its name either from the Mannor House which the Lord maketh his dwelling place or else a manendo quia Dominus ac tenentes in Manerii sui circuitu cobabitant ac manent others compute its denomination from the Latin Manerium quasi Manurium because it is laboured with handy work by the Lord himself or which the Tenants are obliged to manure or else from the Lands remaining in the Tenants hands which are likewise tilled and manured others would have its appellation from the French word Manoir i. e. Mansions because the Lord remaineth there and hath his house which is called the principal house of the Mannor or from the French word Mesner which signifies to govern or guide because the Lord of a Mannor hath the guiding and directing of all his Tenants within the limits of his Jurisdiction and this is holden by some to be the most probable Etimologie and most consentaneous to the nature of a Mannor for a Mannor hisce diebus signifieth the Jurisdiction and Royaltie incorporate rather then the Lande or Scite When the pristine Kings of this Commonwealth who had all the lands of England in Demesne did conferr great quantities of land upon some great Personages with liberty to parcel the land out to other inferior Tenants reserving such duties and services as they thought convenient Such lands were called Mannors a Mannor consisting of two parts viz. 1. Demesne 2. Services And neither of them can make a Mannor without the other for a Messuage or Lands cannot be called demesnes without Tenants belonging to them to pay Rent and do services so on the other part though a man have Tenants to pay him Rents and do him service and no Messuage or lands whereupon to keep his Court. and to receive his Rents and services this cannot be called a Mannor but onely a Signtory ingrosse F. N. B. 3. 8. Likewise a Mannor must be by prescription and the services by continuance time out of minde and therefore a Mannor cannot be created at this day by the Protectors Patent it being an hereditament consisting of many real things and incorporated together before time of memory then a multo fortiori a subject cannot creat one yet may he in some sort enlarge a Mannor by adding some services unto it 9. Ass pl. 24 Br. tit tenure 26. A Customary Mannor what it is and what may be a good Mannor to maintain Coppy-holders NOw though a Mannor by his proper nature ought to consist of Demesnes and Services Yet in some cases that may be a Mannor and maintain Coppyholders and a Court Baron by usuage and custome which otherwise by Common law is no Manor nor can be so called c. As if diverse do hold lands by Coppy of the Mannor of Dale and so have done time out of minde and the like time there hath been no Freeholders to the said Mannor although this be no Mannor in his proper nature yet by usuage and custome it is a good Mannor to maintain Coppyhoders Carthrops Readings 12. And in Coo. 11. 17. 18. Sr. Henry Nevils case it is cleerly resolved by the whole Court that there may be a Customary Mannor and held by Coppy and that such a Customary Lord may hold Courts and grant Coppies and that such a Customary Mannor may passe by Surrender and Admittance and that Fines shall be paid upon admittance as well upon alienation as upon discent and there may be also a Customary Lord Mesne and a Customary Tenant as in case where the Mesnalty is a Tenancy at will at the common law of a Mannor and also if such a Customary Mannor be forfeited the Lord shall have the customes and services as appertaining unto the same and it is there said that the Mannor of Aylesham in the County of Norff. is held by Coppy By what names a Mannor may passe A Mannor may pass by several names as it may be known by the name of Priory or Chantery as appeareth by the book of 17. E. 3. fo 8. where a feofment was made of a Mannor by the name of Knights fee and this is there held to be good this having usually carryed the name of Knights fee and the same may well pass by this name either by Fine or by Feofment and in another place a Mannor was cognitum vocatum by the name of seven yard land as well as by the name of Mannor and passed How Court Barons were first Instituted At the Creation of Mannors the King delegated Courts to the Lords where
Mannor which shall be a detriment to the Inheritance of the Lord of this Mannor which ought to be enquired and presented for the Lord And that you be the more diligent and carefull in enquiring and presenting the same I have ministred a corporall oath unto you which is an Invocation or taking to witnesse the name of God to confirme the truth of that you shall say and present minding neither fraud nor deceit but only the truth not partial but seeking the glory of the Almighty the commodity of your neighbours and the whole Common wealth Thus much of exhortation in briefe and now to your Charge The Charge 1. FIrst you shall enquire of the Suitors which owe any Suit to this Court whether they be heires or no and present their names that make default for they which be absent ought to be present here as well as you except they have some lawfull impediment to the contrary for they hold their lands aswell to do their suit as to pay their rent so that if they do not theīr suit they shall be amerced or the Lord may have good remedy for the same Also you shall understand that every common Suitor is bound by the Lawes to appeare at the Lords Court-Baron every three weeks notwithstanding the Lord for your ease which he esteemeth more than his own profit suffereth it to be kept but seldome as appeareth for which cause every of the Tenants ought to be more willing to come unto his Court at such times as are appointed for the holding of it for if they voluntarily absent themselves then they render evil for good for when they did their Fealty they were sworne to be true tenants unto their Lord and to pay and doe all manner of suits customes and services due for their Tenements at their day assigned and therefore let every man remember his oath and duty and doe his suits and services according to the same otherwise he shall fall into the danger aforesaid 2. Next you shall enquire whether there be any tenants dead since the last Court-day or before whose death as yet is not presented and you shall present the same also what lands and tenements he holdeth of the Lord of this Mannor at the time of his death and by what services to wit whether it were by Knights-service Soccage tenure or Copyhold and what advantage the Lord shall have by his death as Reliefe Escheat Fine Heriot c. and who is his next heire and what age he is of and in whose custody and present it You shall understand there be divers manner of Tenures but most men do hold by Knights service or Soccage Tenure Knights service is when the Tenant holdeth of the Lord by Escuage that is to say by the service of the Shield also to hold by Castle-guard to wit to keep a Castle or Tower or other place of his Lords upon reasonable notice when the Lord heareth that enemies come into England that is Knights service Also he that holdeth by Homage fealty and Escuage holdeth by Knights service Also he which holdeth of his Lord to blow a Horne to warne the men of that Courtrey when Enemies do invade England holdeth by Knights service and Knights service ought always to be done by a man in his proper person which formerly drew unto it Ward and Marriage and at this day reliefe for when such a Tenant died seised and his heir male within age and unmarried the Lord and the Land holden of him and also the marriage of him untill he were of full age viz. the age of 21 yeares But if such a tenant died seized his heire female being of fourteene yeares or more then the Lord should neither have had the Wardship of the Land nor of her body for the Law intendeth that a woman of that age may have a Husband able to do Knights service and if she were within fourteene yeares of age and unmarried then the Lord had the Wardship of her Land and also of her body until she attained the age of sixteen years and this at this day is extinct of which see more in the Act of Parliament for the taking away of the Court of Wards And some such Tenants do hold by halfe a Knights service and some by halfe a Fee and some by more and some by lesse and if such a Tenant dieth which holdeth by one Knights fee and his heir being of full age then the Lord shall have Homage and Fealty and also five pounds for a Reliefe of this fee the said Act of him that holdeth by halfe a Knights fee two pounds ten shillings and he that holdeth by more shall pay more c. you shall therefore present whether any such Tenant died seized of any such Lands and Tenements so holden yea or no. 3. Also you shall enquire whether any Tenant which held by Knights service made any Feofment to his Heire and after died his Heire being within age 4. And whether any such Tenant made any Alienation of any such Land so holden to any person by collusion to defeat the Lord of his profits and present that 5. Also you shal enquire whether any such Tenant which held by Knights service did make any Feofment by Deed to his use or any Recognizance by fine to his use or suffer any Recovery against him to his use and after died and no will by him declared and present it for in those cases also the Lord shall have Reliefe of his Heire being of full age and other duties as well as if his Tenant had died seized 6. Also you shall enquire whether the Heire of such Tenant entred into any such Lands so holden for any condition broken being made by any of his Ancestors and present it 7. Also you shall enquire if any Tenant which held by Knights service was disseized of Lands so holden that is to say put out of them by one who had no right or title to them and after died before any re-entry or any legall recovery had and present it 8. Soccage-tenure is where the Tenant holdeth of the Lord by Fealty and certaine rent for all manner of services or by Homage and Fealty for all manner of services or to pay a summe of money for Escuage or to pay a certain summe of money for Castleguard All such Tenures are Tenures in soccage and all other Tenures which are not Tenures by Knights service are Tenures in soccage and where such tenants die seized of any Lands so holden the Lord of whom the Land is so holden after the death of his Tenant can have no more profit but only his Fealty and Reliefe that is to say as much money and service as one years rent doth amount unto As if the Tenant held by Fealty and ten shillings for a Reliefe over and besides the ten shillings which he shall pay for his Rent and in such case after the death of the
tenant such reliefe is due to the Lords maintenance so that the heire be of the age of fourteen yeares and he ought to tarry for his reliefe untill the day of payment of the Rent but he ought to have his reliefe maintenant and for that he may distrain immediately after the death of his Tenants 9. Also if a Copyholder die sole seized of any Lands or Tenements so holden his heire being of the age of fourteene yeares then he shall pay a fine unto the Lord and do Fealty and be admitted Tenant but if the heire be within the age of fourteene yeares then some Guardian shall be admitted to occupy his Copyhold and to pay and doe his service due for the same viz. If Lands descend from the Father then the Mother or some of her next kindred shall have the occupation of the same Lands untill the Heire be at age and they shall a little fine for the Guardianship and the Heire at his entry shall pay the whole fine you shall enquire thereof and present the same 10. Also you shall enquire whether any Tenant which held by Soccage Tenure did make any Feofment in fee to his use and died seized of the use his Heire being within age and no will by him declared of the use and present it for that the Lord shall have his Reliefe as well as if he had died seized of the same Lands 11. Also you shall inquire whether any Freeholder hath aliened or sold away his Free hold Lands or Tenements or any parcel of them and present it for he which hath purchased the Land before he enter ought to come and give notice unto the Lord that he hath purchased the same and so the Lord shall know his Tenant and the service which the former paid unto the Lord shall be apportioned according unto the value of the Lands 12. Also you shall enquire whether any that held by Herriot service or Herriot custome died seized of any Lands or Tenements so holden and present it for their service shall be apportioned also the Lord shall have of every of their severall parts divers Herriots at their severall deaths Also if one man have two severall parcels of Lands holden by Herriot-service and by two severall titles and dieth seized of the same the Lord shall have after his death two Herriots 13. Also you shal enquire if any Copyholder died seized of any Lands so holden and present it also whether any Copyholder hath made any Lease of his Copyhold or otherwise aliened or sold the same and present it for it is a forfeiture of his Copyhold for if a Copy-holder will alien or sell away his Copyhold he ought to come into the Court and surrender the same into the hands of the Lord to the use of him who shall have the Estate or else out of the Court he ought to surrender it unto the Bayliffe or to some of the Tenants of the Lord-ship to the use of him who shall have the estate and they to whom the surrender is made ought to present the same at the next Court and then pay his fine for the same and take it to his use in the Court and do his endeavour to be admitted and if he be not at the same Court then the Lord shall have the meane profits of the same Lands all the rent-services and repairations being deducted until he be amerced of his fine according to his duty 14. Also you shall enquire if any Copyholder hath made any Surrender of his Copyhold or any part thereof since the last Court-day or before and present it and into whose hands it was made and in whose presence or to whose use for at every surrender the Lord ought to have a fine and the party into whose hands the surrender is made ought to come to the next Court and present the same and to yield up his right into the Lords hands to the use of the alienee according to the trust reposed in him or otherwise he forfeiteth his Copyhold except he have a treasonable excuse for that he doth as much as in him lies to defeat the Lord of his Fine and also to defeat the other party to whose use the surrenderd was made 15. Also you shall enquire if any Tenant of the Lordship have given any lands into Mortmain and present it Mortmain is if a man give or sell any lands to any House of Religion or to any other which be corporate by the Knights grant also if one make a Foefment upon trust to the use of a Religious House or to the use of a Fraternity corporate that is Mortmain Also if one exchange Lands with a body corporate this is Mortmain Also if a Religious person or other body corporate doth hold of any man by Knights service and he release unto him this is Mortmain and then the Lord may enter and shall hold the same by force you shall therefore present them that have given any Lands or tenements in Mortmain 16. Also you shall enquire whether any tenant for term of life or years or any Copiholder of this Lord-ship hath committed any waste or suffered any waste to be committed upon their Lands or Tonements Waste is when any tenant for terme of life yeares or any Copyholder pulleth downe any house or cutteth down any timber trees or suffereth the house willingly to fall being on their Copyhold Tenements or if any of the Tenants plow up any Meadow ground or if they suffer any wall or pale which were covered to be uncovered by reason whereof the same wall or pale falls into decay or if any of them dig coals chalk or sand or make any Mines in their grounds this is waste Also if they cut downe a tree to the value of three shillings four pence this is admitted waste but if a man cut down timber to repair the old houses that stand upon parcel of the same ground and therewith doth repair them then it is no waste but if he with the timber build a new house then the cutting down of such timber is waste Or if he cut down any timber to sell to repaire such houses which are fallen into decay such is waste But if waste be done with a tempest no tenant shall be punished for such waste but if waste be done by any danger the tenant shall be punished for such waste Also it is no waste to sell in a reasonable time such trees as have been selled within twenty yeares before But if Tenants cut downe such trees to burn upon their Tenements where they have wood sufficient this is waste Also a Copyholder may not cut down wood to sell but he may to burne upon his tenement or to make reparations as aforesaid 17. Also you shall enquire whether any tenant in possession or reversion died seized of any Land or Tenements holden of this Lordship having no heire at the time of his death yea or no
or Idiot cannot be a Copyholder because they cannot do the service themselves nor depute any other and the Lord shall retain the Copyhold of an Ideot Carthrop fo 52. Nor a man cannot be a Copy-holder unto a Mannor whereof he himselfe is Lord although he be but Dominus pro termino annorum or in jure Vxoris ibidem Let us enquire what interest Copyholders have in their estates and that will appeare to be very strenuous for although Customary Tenants are termed in Law Tenants at will yet are they not simply so nor meerly Tenants at will for every Copyholder is but only Tenant at will secundum consuetudinem Manerii which custome warrants his possession and therefore it is a more certaine estate then an estate at will for the Copyholder may justifie against his Lord so cannot a Tenant at will whose estate is determined at the will and pleasure of his Lessor And although his estate is but by custome and by no conveyance the state is raised it is as materiall so as it be an estate and this estate being supported by custome is known in Law an estate and so attainted in Law and the same Law hath notably distinguished Copyhold Tenancies by custome and Tenancies at will by the Common Law for a Copyholder shall do fealty shall have ayde of his Lord in an Action of Trespasse shall have and maintaine an Action of Trespasse against his Lord his Wife shall be endowed the Husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesie without new admittance And it was adjudged in the Common Pleas 8 Eliz. That if a Copyholder surrender to the use of another for yeares the Lessee dieth his Executors shall have the residue of the terme without any admittance Mic. 14 and 15 Eliz. A Copyholder made a Lease for yeares by Indenture warranted by the custome it was adjudged that the Lessee should maintain Ejectione firmae although it was objected that if it were so then if the Plaintiff doth recover he shall have Habere facias possessionem and then Copyholds should be ordered by the Lawes of the Land 10 Eliz. Lord and Copyholder for life the Lord grants a Rent-charge out of the Mannor whereof the Copyhold is parcell the Copy-holder surrenders to the use of A. who is admitted accordingly he shall not hold it charged but if the Copyholder dyeth so that his estate is determined and the Lord granteth to a stranger de Novo to hold the said lands by Copy this new Tenant shall hold the Land charged Leonards rep first part fo 8. Mich. 25. 26 Eliz. Tenant by Copy of Court Roll hath an Inheritance by the custome but when he doth that which is contrary to the Custome he shall be then in no better condition then a bare Tenant at will Bolstrod 1 part fo 51. so that performing the duties and services according to the Custome doth so establish and fixe the estate that the same by the Custome of the Mannor is descendable and his heires shall inherit the same and therefore his estate is not meerly as I have said before ad voluntatem Domini but ad voluntatem Domini secundum consuetudinem Manerii so that the custome of the Mannor is the soule and life and also the chiefe basis upon which stands the whole fabrick of Copy-hold estates for without custome or if they break their custome they are subject to the Lords will And by custome a Copyholder is as well inheritable to have his land according to the Custome as he who hath a Free-hold at the Common Law for consuetudo est altera lex custome and usage time out of minde c. may create and consolidate Inheritances Consuetudo vincit legem 7 E. 4. Danby chiefe Justice said that a Copyholder is aswell inheritable to have his Land according to the Custome as he who hath Free-hold at the Common Law Co. 4. 21. If Tenant by custome paying his services be ejected by his Lord he may have an action of Trespasse 21 E. 4. 80. Co. 4. 22. If a woman Copyholder in Fee have a Husband who hath Issue and the Wife dyeth the Husband shall not be Tenant by the Courtesie without speciall custome Co 4. 22. If a Copyholder dye his heire within age the heire is not obliged to come to any Court during his non-age to pray admittance or to tender his Fine Also if the death of the Ancestor be not presented nor Proclamation he is not at any detriment although he be of full age Leonards rep first part fol. 128. Pasch 30 Eliz. B. R. Brownloes Rep. first part fol. 231. Swain and Becket a question was that whereas there is a Mannor wherein are Copyholders for life who used to lop Trees growing upon the Copyholds for their necessary fire and repaire of their customary Tenements the Lord of the Mannor maketh a Lease of the Mannor for yeares excepting the Trees The Lessee of the Mannor granteth a Copy for life the Copyholder loppeth his trees growing in his Copyhold whether or no he might doe it by Law was the doubt of the Iury. And it was held by all the Court Hill 6 Jac. that the Copyholder might lop the Trees because he is in by the custome which is above the Lords estate after he is admitted and that the Copyhold depends not upon the Lords interest And that the trees excepted and the soyle remained parcel of the Mannor because the Lease was but for yeares but if the Lease had been for life it had been otherwise because it had been severed from the Mannor But note that in Justice Crooks Rep. first part fol. 160. That a Copyholder for life may cut downe and sell Timber trees and dispose of them at his pleasure is a voyd and unreasonable custome and not allowable by Law for it is a destruction of the Inheritance and against the nature of a Copyholder for life For a Copyholder hath but a particular estate in the Land and so he hath in the Trees And it is unreasonable that he should cut downe sell and destroy the Inheritance and it would be to the great prejudice of those who succeeded for they should not have to maintain the house and the plough And it is against the nature of the estate of a Copyholder that he should do Acts in destruction of his estate therefore customs which maintaine them are allowable but not è converso Vide 24 E. 3. Barr. 77. 21 H. 7. 40. 11 H. 7. 14. 9 H. 4. Wast 59. If a Copyholder of inheritance grant his Copy-hold to one and his heires this shall descend and no Tenant by the Courtesie nor yet Dower shall be thereof without a speciall custome for the same Bolstrod second part fo 275. Mich. 12 Jac. If I give all my Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in D. my Copyholds do not passe Leonard Rep. first part 126. An estate tayle cannot be of Copyhold Lands unlesse it be in case where it hath
all and singular the aforesaid premises that is to say to two peeces of land Copyhold lying in the field called R. containing by estimation eight acres one peece of land lying next the land called D. on the South part and the lands c. which said two peeces of land the aforesaid A B. lately had and took up to him and his heires of the Surrender of S. T and M. his wife at the general Court with the Leete here holden on Thursday the 18th day of August in the year c. more at large appeareth to which said E. seisin is delivered to him thereof to him and his heires under the Condition and in manner and form as in the said last Will is specified by the Rod at the will of the Lord by the service and rent of 2. s. by the year and suite of Court saving the right c. and he doth give the Lord for a Fine c. and doth therefore Fealty c. The finding of the death of a Tenant ITem they say upon their Oathes that A. B. after the last Court dyed seised of and in two Roods of land lying in a Pightel called R. holden of this Mannor by Fealty and the yearly rent of 4d by the year and that E. F. is the Son and next heir of the said A. B. and of full age who now doth therefore to the Lord Fealty Paines found and set upon Tenants for want of suite of Court Item they say upon their Oathes that I. W. S. and I. I. c. Copyhold Tenants of this Mannor do owe suite to this Court and now at this day have made default and therefore every one of them in mercy six pence The like ANd that A. B. and C. D. are Tenants of the Lord of the Mannor by demise and do owe suite to this Court now at this day and have made default thereof therefore either of them are in mercy as over their heads 3. d. The like ANd that E F. G. H. and I. K. are Free Tenants of this Mannor and owe suit of Court and now at this day have made default thereof therefore each of them are in mercy as over their heads 6. d. The presentment of a Surrender made out of Court into tenants hands with the admission of the tenant accordingly ANd that L. M. the younger out of the Court after the last Court did surrender into the hands of the Lord of this Mannor by the hands of N. O. Copyholder tenant of this Mannor in the presence of L. M. and P. R. likewise Copyhold tenants of this Mannor all their Copyhold lands and tenements holden of this Mannor with the appurtenances to the behoof and use of S. T. the elder and his heires and assignes And now came the aforesaid S. T. the elder and craveth of the grace of the Lord to be admitted tenant to all and singular the premisses that is to say to one parcel of pasture containing half an acre be it more or less with the apurtenances late parcel of one Customary tenement and eleven acres of land called C. tenement in C. aforesaid which the said L. M. did lately take up to him and his heires after the surrender thereof made by one S. T. at the Court general with the Leet here holden on Munday next after c. more plainly appeareth And he is admitted Tenant thereunto and seisin is thereof delivered to him to hold to him his heires and assignes by the Rod at the will of the Lord according to the custome of Mannor c. by the services and customes c. and the rent of six pence by three years saving the right c. And doth give to the Lord a Fine c. and hath done to him therefore Fealty c. The finding a Surrender made into Tenants hands to the use of a mans will ANd that A. B. Copyhold Tenant of this Mannor out of Court after the last Court that is to say the 24th day of May last past before the Title of this Court did surrender into the hands of the Lord of this Mannor by the hand of C. D. Copyhold Tenant of the same Mannor in the presence of I. A. S. A. likewise Copyhold Tenants of the said Mannor all his Copyhold lands and tenements holden of this Mannor to the behoof and use of his Testament and last Will. The finding of the death of a Tenant and of the lands and that the youngest son is next heir according to the custome c. with his admission ANd that W. D. Copyhold tenant of this Mannor dyed after the last Court solely seised of and in onetenement inclosed called L. containing by estimation five acres lying in F. which the said W. late took up to him and his heires of the Surrender of I. S. as at a Court here holden on Munday in the morning of St. John the Baptist in the year c. appeareth And of and in five acres of Copyhold land with the appertenances holden of the same Mannor called B. which c. And that W. D. his younger son is next heir of the said W. according to the custome of this Mannor who now doth come and craveth of the grace of the Lord to be admitted to the premises with the appurrenances according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid and he is admitted thereto Tenant to whom seisin is thereof delivered by the Rod at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the same Mannor by the services and customes and rents for five acres c. at 4. s. by the year and for the other said five acres of land at the rent of 5. s. by the year c. saving the Right c. And he doth give the Lord for a Fine c. And doth Fealty to the Lord c. The finding of a Sale made of Freehold lands with a distress to the Bayliff to distrian for want of taking it up ALso they say upon their oathes that I. A. after the last Court did sell to R. A. one tenement called T. with the Apurtenances containing by estimation two acres holden free of this Mannor in Free Soccage by Fealty and the yearly rent of 3d. by the year and suit of Court which said R. A. doth not come c. Therefore it is commanded to the Bayliff that he distrain the aforesaid R. A. against the next Court to do Fealty c. The acknowledgment in the Court of a Legacy paid ANd that I. B. in full Court did acknowledge himself to be satisfied and fully paid by N. B. his Brother of his Legacy of ten pounds to the said I. B. by the Testament and last Will of his Father bequeathed according to the form and effect and the true intent of the said Testament and last Will of his father A presentment of a Surrender made out of Court with the admission of the tenant THE Quest of Office do present upon their oathes that I. S. Copyhold Tenant of this Mannor out of
and the same F. W. present here in Court doth surrender into the hands of the Lord by the hands of the Steward of the same Mannor the aforesaid seven acres of Land in one Close now in two parts divided with hedge and dike to the behoofe and use of I. VV. Widdow his Mother and of her assignes in form aforesaid for terme of the natural life of her the said I. VV. to whom seizin thereof is delivered to the said I. VV. and her assignes in forme aforesaid the reversion thereof to the said F. VV. and of his heires and assignes by the rod c. at the will of the Lord c. according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid saving right c. And he doth give to the Lord for a fine c. And doth therefore fealty to the Lord c. A Release of Land made in Court AT this Court came S. B. and present in Court did surrender remise and release into the hands of the Lord according to the Custome of this Mannor all his right title state possession interest and demand of and in all those parcels of the land parcel of the Orchard of the said N. called the old or further Orchard next adjoyning to the Pightel or Close of Pasture of him the said S. called the Bean-close as it is now divided from the said Pightel or Close with the door-stakes put upon the Front of the Dike of the said old Orchard to the behoofe and use of N. B. his Brother in full and peaceable possession thereof now being and to his heirs and assignes for ever so that is to say that neither the said S. nor his heires from henceforth may challenge crave or demand any right title state claime or demand of or in the said piece of land But from all action right title state use interest and demand thereof to be had from henceforth shall be utterly barred and excluded and every of them shall be for ever barred and excluded by this present inrollment And the said N. for the said remise and release doth give to the Lord a fine c. A Lease made by the Lord of parcell of his Lands AT this Court the Lord here in full Court did demise to farme to I. A. one Garden containing halfe a Rod lying c. and halfe an acre of land in F. of the Demesnes of the Mannor to hold to him his Executors and assignes for the terme of five yeares next following after the title of this Court paying therefore yearly for every yeare during the said terme one penny at the Feast c. And he doth give to the Lord for a fine c. And doth therefore Fealty to the Lord c. The Admission of the yonger Son to Lands according to the custome AT this Court came F. W. the yonger Son and next heire of I. W. deceased and did crave of the grace of the Lord to be admitted tenant to one parcel of land containing in length twenty perches and in bredth three foot late parcel of one piece of Copyhold land called B. containing by estimation three acres of land of which said parcel of late there is made a dike which said parcel of land I. W. the Grandfather of the said F. W. lately had to him his heires and assignes of the surrender of L. A. as at a Court for the Mannor aforesaid holden the 24. day of May in the yeare c. appeareth as to his right and inheritance for that the said I. VV. died thereof seized and the same parcel of land by and after the death of the said I. VV. according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid did descend to the said F. VV. the Father of the said F. VV. and from the said F. VV. the right of the said parcel did descend to the said F. VV. the yonger and he is thereunto admitted tenant to whom seisin is thereof delivered to hold to him his heirs and assignes by the rod at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid by rent of two pence c. and the services c. saving right c. And he doth give to the Lord for a fine c. And doth therefore fealty to the Lord c. A License by a Lord of a Mannor to a Copy-holder to pull downe houses standing on Copyhold lands TO all and singular Survayors Bayliffs and other Officers whatsoever within my Mannor of Skipton in the County of Y. I E L. of B. send greeting Whereas I am informed that H. G. hath lately purchased of T. C. certaine old houses within my said Mannor being Copihold and that the said T. C. hath surrendred the same houses to the use of the said H. G. and his Heires according to the custome of the said Mannor Now my will and pleasure is and I do by these presents give and grant unto the said H. G. his heirs and assignes full license and absolute liberty power and authority to pull downe and to take and carry away the said houses and every of them or any part of them to and for the use of the said H G. and his heires and assignes from time to time as to him or them or any of them shall seeme meet Any custome or usage whatsoever within the said Mannor if any such be or heretofore hath beene had or used to the contrary thereof in any wise notwithstanding And I will and command you and every of you that the said H. G. and his assignes may quietly have and enjoy the full and whole benefit of my said grant and license without any deniall let or impediment of you or any of you In witnesse whereof c. A Letter of Attorney to surrender a Copyhold BE it knowne unto all men by these presents that I A. B. one of the customary or Copyhold tenants of the Mannor of H. in the County of M. have made ordained constituted and appointed and by these presents do make ordaine constitute and appoint my trusty and well beloved friends C. D. and F. F. two customary or Copyhold Tenants of the Mannor aforesaid my lawfull Attorneys and Attorney joyntly and severally for me and in my name joyntly and severally by lawfull wayes and means to surrender into the hands of the Lord or Lords Lady or Ladies Farmers owners or proprietors of the said Mannor of H. aforesaid all that customary or Copyhold Messuage or Tenement with the appurtenances scituate lying and being in H. aforesaid parcel of the customary lands of the said Mannor And all my estate right title interest claim possession and demand of in to and out of every part and parcel thereof to the use and behoofe of T. VV. his heires and assignes for ever and I the said A. B. do hereby give and grant unto them the said C. D. and E. F. joyntly and severally and to either of them full power and authority to do execute and performe any other lawfull act and acts whatsoever needfull or
sealers of leather Vnlawfull games Shooters in handguns Croshowes c. Fry of fish Phesant and Partridges Hawking or hunting with spaniels c. Tracing of hare Breaking of ponds Evesdropers Musters Horses infected Watch and Ward Mortmaine Treasure trove Waifes Estrayes c. Conclusion Proclamation The Oath Adjournment What a Mannor is L. Dyer How Mannors were created F. N. B. 3. 8 Leonards Reports first part 33. Marsh against Smith Customary Mannor what Co. 11. 17. 18. Sr. Henry Nevils case 17. E 3. fo 8. Bolstrod first part fo 54. Mich. 8. Jac. Lamb fo 128. 146. Cambden Brit. 1216. Britton fo 274 Mirror cap. 1. Sect. 3. 12 Eliz. Dyer 288. Brownlows rep 175. Bolstrod 1. part fol. 54. Bolstrod 1. part fol. 57. Of the Lord. Of the Steward The Freeholders The Copyholders The Bayliff Fleata lib. 2. cap. 73. Mag. Char. c. 35. 31 E. 3 cap. 15. Coo. l. 4. 26. 6. 27. Owens Reports fol. 35. Mic. 13. 14 Eliz. Leonards Rep. 133. Marsh against Smith Co. 4 fol. 24. Murrell and Smith and fo 27. Cliftons case The Stile of the Court. Proclamation Essoyn Plaint Amerciament Jurrors The Foremans oath The oath of the rest Proclamation The tenants are obliged to appeare at every three weeks end at the Lords Court-Baron What tenants are dead since the last Court What lands he held and by what service Who is his next heire Knights service what it is Homage fealty and Escuage Knights service Knights service is done by a man in propria persona In Scobels acts in Wards c. See the Act of Parliament for the taking away of the Court of Wards If Tenant by Knights service made any Feofmēt to his heir Alenation by collusion holding by Knights service Feofment to his use the land holden in Knights service Entry for Conditions broken Disseizin of the Tenant and death before any re-entry What Soccage tenure is Reliefe is as much money as one years rent Copyholder If tenant by Socage made any feofment to his use Whether any Freeholder hath aliened any of his freehold Lands Herriot service Herriot custom Whether any Copyholder died seized of any such Lands How a Copyholder ought to surrender his Copy-hold Whether any Copyholder hath made any surrender Mortmain What Mortmain is Waste What waste is and how the same is committed Whether any tenant in possessiō or reversion died seized without any heir A Bastard may not inherit Whether any tenant died being put out of his land by one that had no right to Petty Treason felony or murder committed of any Tenant for which he was hanged or had judgment to be hanged Whether there be any rents lost or services with-drawn Whether the Tenants do uphold and repair their tenements Whether any tenāt hath with-drawn his services Waife and stray Rescous What it is Breach of pownd Whether any Tenant hath let any Farm fall to decay viz. not maintained for husbandry as before If any have overcharged the common or high wayes or put Cattel in them before the dayes agreed upon If any persons have made pits in the high wayes breaking of hedges c. Stopping of wayes waters c. Whether any have encroached Whether any have removed any marks Whether any have stalked with bush or beast Whether any have or do keep away any Evidences Whether any have fished fowled c. Whether any have taken any Feasants c. Swans or swans eggs Concealed land Trespass in the corne grass c. For inclosing in several grounds without the L. licence c. A Copyholder may not let longer then a yeare and a day Granting greater estates Whether the Baylifs c. do execute their office Whether the defaults plaints be amended Conclusion Adjournment The discharge of the Court. A Copyhold granted by a Disseisor may be avoyded by the Disseisee But admittance upon surrenders c. good Owen Rep. fol. 115. Trin. 1 Iet rot 853. None can passe it larger estate then he hath Copyhold estates not to be avoyded for dower What person is sufficient to be a Copyholder Eliz. Dyer 301. What interest a Copyholder hath in his estate 8 Eliz. Leonards rep first part fo 8. Mich. 25. 26 Eliz. Copyholder and Tenant at will Bolstrod first part fo 51. 7 E. 4. Tenant may have an action of Trespass against the Lord. Husband to a woman Copy-holder shall not be tenant by the Curtesie without speciall custome The heire of a Copyholder not bound to come to any Court during his nonage Whether or no a Copyholder may lop trees Copyholder for life cannot claim custome to cut downe and sell trees No tenant by the Curtesie nor Dower shall be of Copyhold lands Leonard rep 1 part 126. An estate tayle cannot be of Copyhold lands without use Crook 1 part fo 31. 32. Poph. fol. 38. A Copyholder may assigne one to essoyn for him but not to do his service Copyhold not extendible by Stat. Stap. but it is upon the Stat. of Bankrupts not lyable to any charge of the Lord c. Upon a surrender action lies not against the Lord for refusing admittance In ministeriall offices action lies against him that will not do his office but not so in cases of trust A surrender to the Lord good A surrender to the use of another c. In a surrender it matters not if the party to whom it is be precisely expressed c. Surrender to the Lord c. Surrender to A. B. until be marry C. D. c. Surrender to the use of a stranger c. Surrender to A. B's use if he pay 20 l. at a day c. Surrender to the Lord to the use of I. S. paying 100 l. c. Surrender to the use of one for life c. Copyhold may be extinguished without an actual surrender Huttons Rep. fo 65. Blemerhassets case Leonard first part 133. Leonard first part 124. Poph. fol. 39. Lanes Rep. 20. A surrenderer of a Copyhold cannot surrender before admittance Poph. fo 128. No surrender by an Attorney without deed but an admittance may be Crook first part fo 142. 28 H. 8. Dyer fo 24. pl. 151. Plow fo 273. b. in Say Fullers case 14 H. 8. fo 14. b. Coo. 6. 35. Bolstrod first part so 50. A forfeiture to build and pull down again No good custom to pull downe houses or cut down trees c. Bolstrod first part fo 51. 52. A Copyholder by the common law without special custome cannot make a Lease for one yeare but it is a forfeiture Crook first rep fo 169. A lease for one year by a Copy-holder c. a forfeiture Bolstrod rep first part f. 215. Lutterels case Mich. 8 Jac. B. R. rot 602. Hetleyes rep fo 122. A Copyholder may inclose where it hath been formerly inclosed and may digg Ma●l but it must be laid upon the some land Winches rep fo 8 The heir may take the profits before admittance and make a lease c. Poph. rep fo 39 To refuse to pay a Fine certain is a forfeiture Or refuse to appear at his Lords Court Some excusive reasons why he may not appear at the Lords Court A general warning of the Court within the parish is sufficient Leonards first part fo 133. Hetleys rep fo 7. One seised in the right of his wife surrenders it and dyes no discontinuance to the wife Co. rep 4. 23 Co. super lit fo 61. a. b. Fleta lib. 2. cap. 26. How he may be retained Co. rep 4. 30. Dyer 8. Eliz. 248. Leonards first part fo 309. Co. 4. of Copy-holds fo 143. Carthrop sc 47. 2 H. 4. 24. Leonards first part fo 299. How he may forfeit his office Co. 4. rep of Copyholds fo 146 c. Mr. Kitchin in his Jurisdiction of Courts c. A pain set for an incroachment A pain set for the amending of the same c. The finding of a pain forfeited The verdict of homage touching their former charge A Surrender and remise of lands made in Court before the Steward and the examination of the wife A Surrender made by one to his mother of lands for her life the reversion to the Son againe and his heires The definition of Pypowder 8 H. 7. fol. 4. b. St. 17. E. 4. c. 2. 1. R. 3. c. 6. Bolstrod 2. part fol. 21. Cro. 1. part fol. 33. Prescription 13 E. 4. fo 8. b. Hil. 33 Eliz. Rot. 124. Pypowders by way of grant confirmation 12 H. 7. fo 16. b. 13 H. 7. fo 19. 13 E. 3. fo 8. b. Old book of Ent. 168. Fit dette en Gailor pl. 1. fol. 18. Fit account in Execution pl. 3. 6 E. 4. fol. 3. b. The Steward is Judge 7 E. 4. fol. 23. This Court is incident to a Fare or Market and by a grant of them it passeth 19 H. 8. Brookes case fol. 2. pl. 7. Brook tit incidents pl. 34. 2 3 Phil. and Mar. Dyer fol. 133. pl. 80. Co. 10. fol. 73. Bracton lib. 5. fol. 335. De brevi de recto 1. 17 E. 4. cap. 2. No plea shall be holden in this Court unlesse the Plaintiffe or his Attorney do sweare that the contract was made during the time of the Faire Stat. 1. R. 3. cap. 6. Note
and governed himselfe Notwithstanding the said A. B. not ignorant of the premisses out of his meer and wicked malice preconceived indeavouring the name and same of the same W. B. to hurt detract make worse darken and utterly to destroy and also into perturbation vexation and insamy to lead and induce certain salse and scandalous words and lies of the same W. B. the 8. day of April in the yeare of our Lord 1656. at c. and within the liberty and jurisdiction of this Court in the presence and hearing of many faithfull subjects of the said Commonwealth said repeated and spread abroad in these English words following to wit W. B. meaning the same W. B. hath stoln my horse out of my Close which I will prove By pretext of speaking and spreading abroad of which said salse scandalous words the same W. B. not only in his good name and same is hurt but also in performance of his businesse with honest persons with whom the said W. B. in buying selling and lawfull bargaining is much hindred and damnified and also some subjects and people of this Common-wealth for that occasion will draw themselves from the company of the same W. B. and to converse with him or any wayes to intermeddle refused and yet do refuse whereupon c. damages to 39 l. And thereof he bringeth suit c. And the said A. B. by S. D. his Attorney cometh c. And saith that the said W. B. his action aforesaid against him ought not to have because he saith that he is not guilty of the speaking and spreading abroad of the words in the Declaration aforesaid specified nor of any part of them in manner and form as the said W. B. above against him complaineth And this c. Therefore according to the custom it is commanded to the Bailiff of the Weapentake of Ouze and Dar that c. that he cause to come before the Steward of the same Court at the next Court of the County aforesaid such a day 12. c. And that he then have there the same Precept together with the pannel of the names of the Jurors aforesaid the same day c. At which County Court held at the Castle of Y. aforesaid according to the custom before the Steward there upon Monday the 2. day of April came as well the same W. B. by his Attorney aforesaid as the same A. B. by his Attorney aforesaid c. and the same Bailiff of the Weapentake aforesaid returned the precept to him directed in all things served together with a Pannel of the names of the Jurors Annexed to the precept to wit in the same pannel are named L. M. N. R. c. to make a Jury between the parties aforesaid in the plea aforesaid who to speak the truth of the premisses being elected tried sworn say upon their oath that the said A. B. is guilty of the speaking spreading abroad of the said words in the said Declaration specified and they assessed the damages of the said W. B. by occasion of the speaking of the same words besides his costs and expences by him about his suit in this behalf laid out to 4 l. 5 s. for those costs expences to 8 d. Therefore at the same Court that the said W. B. should recover against the said A. B. his said damages by the Jury aforesaid in form aforesaid assessed and also 3 s. 8 d. for his costs and expences which said damages in the whole do amount unto 5 l. 17 s. 4 d. In witness whereof the seal of the Steward of the Court aforesaid is put Dated at the Castle of Y. the 12. day of March in the year of our Lord 1657. And hereupon the same VV. B. prayeth that the same A. B. may shew to the Court here and assign the defects wherein false Judgment is made in the said plaint if any be done to him whereupon the same A. B. saith that the same Record is vitious and much defective to wit in that it doth not appear by the Record before whom the first Court was held and in this that the said VV. B. by his Declaration did complain himself to be damnified and made worse to the value of 40 l. whereas by the law of the land that Court cannot hold plea of 40 s. In this also that the same Court held the 12. of March was held before the Steward whereas it ought to be held before the Suitors of the same Court and the Sheriff of the County for the time being so that the same Judgment was given Coram non Iudice Also in this that by the same Record it appeareth that the same VV. B. appeared by P. P. his Attorney and the same A. B. appeared by S. D. his Attorney but in the Record is not mentioned any Warrant of Attorney for the same VV. B. or for the same A. B. in the said plaint And to the same A. B. saith that divers manner of ways in the County Court aforesaid false Judgment is made to him in the said plaint And hereupon prayeth that the said Judgment for the said defects and others being in the same Record as false and erroneous may be adnulled and altogether taken for nothing And the same A. B. to the said 5 l. 17 s. 4 d. which the said A. B. by vertue of the same Judgment for his damages by occasion of the premisses recovered against him and unto all things which he by occasion of the same Judgment lost may be restored c. And the same W. B. saith that in the Record aforesaid there is no errour nor to the same A. B. in the same County Court held at the Castle of Y. aforesaid false Judgment is made in the same plaint and prayeth that the Justices here proceed to the examination of the same Record and to resorm and correct the false Judgment if any be found therein proved or can be made appear And because the Justices here will advise themselves of and upon the premises before they further proceed therein day is given c in Oct. pur to hear thereof what the Court hereof and upon the premises shall consider because the Justices hear thereof not as yet c. At which day here came aswell the said A. B. as the said W. B. by their Attorneys aforesaid And because the Justices here further will advise themselves of and upon the premisses aforesaid before they proceed further therein further day is given c. in Mens Pas to hear thereof what the Court hereof and upon the premisses aforesaid shall consider for that the Justices hear thereof not as yet c. If any errors and defects be found in the proceedings then will the Judgement be reversed and a Writ of Restitution awarded It was commanded the Sheriff if A. B. and C. D. should secure the same Sheriff of prosecuting their complaint then in his full County he should make to be recorded the plaint which was in
Replication ANd the aforesaid T. N. and E. say that they by any thing before alledged ought not to be debarred from having their action aforesaid against the said I. H. because they say that the aforesaid I. H. at the time of the making of the bill aforesaid was of the full age of one and twenty years and not within age as the aforesaid I. H. hath above alledged and this they pray may be inquired of by the Countrey and the aforesaid I. H. in like manner Therefore c. Vpon retainder for suing of Horses c. A. B. by S. D. his Attorney complains of C. D. of a plea c. for that whereas the aforesaid C. D. such a day and year at S. c. retained the said A. B. to set on upon the horse feet of the aforesaid C. D. forty new Horse-shooes and to remove forty horse-shooes and to mend one pair of plough-Irons and to make one fire-shovel to take of the said C. D. for the setting on of the aforesaid forty new Horse-shooes and forty removes 21 s. and so of the other parcel to contract to be paid to the said A. B. when he should be thereunto required by vertue of which retainer the said A. B. the said forty new Horse-shooes and forty removes upon the Horse-feet of him the said C. D. did set on c. by which action accrewed c Hill 37. Eliz. Rot. 517. Vpon an account E. B. complains of T. A. of a plea that he should render unto him 12 l. of c. which she owes and unjustly detains from him for that whereas the third day of May 1651. at c. the said E. B. and the said T. A. accompted together for and concerning divers sums of money then and before that time due and owing by the said T. A. unto the said E. B. and upon that accompt the said T. A. then and there did acknowledge himself to be in arrear and owing unto the said E. B. the sum of 12 l. to be paid unto the said E. B. when he the said T. A. should be thereunto requested Yet notwithstanding c. Money lent by joynt partners for a certain time and to be paid to the Survivor R. K. by c. complaineth of W. A. upon a Plea that he render unto him 20 s. of lawful English money which he oweth unto him and unjustly detaineth c. For that whereas the last day of February 1651. at the Castle c. the said R. K. and one R. W. now deceased being joynt partners of moneys and other commodities did lend unto the said W. A. 3 l. of lawfull c. to be paid to them or the Survivor of them on Easter Monday then next following of which said 3 l. the said W. A. paid to the said R. K. and R. W. in his life time the sum of 40 s. and there then remained unpaid the sum of 20 s. since which and about the Nativity of Christ 1652. the said R. W. died and the said R K him survived wherby action doth acrew to the said R. K alone to have and demand of the said W. A. the said 20 s. notwithstanding the said W. A. though often thereunto requested the said 20 s. to the said R. K. hitherto hath not rendred but the same to render hitherto hath refused and yet doth refuse whereupon the said R. K. saith that he is worse and hath damage to the value of 39 s. and 11 d. And thereupon produceth this suit For Rent in arrear R. M. by c. complains of H. D. of a Plea that he render unto him 30 s of c. which he owes unto him and unjustly detains from him For that the same R. M. the 10 day of Apr. c. year c. at the Castle c. demised granted and to farm let unto the said H. D. one Cottage or dwelling house one garth and four acres of arable land Meadow or Pasture with the appurtenances be they more or lesse lying and being at W. in the County oforesaid to have and to hold the said Cottage or dwelling house garth and arable land Meadow or Pasture with the appurtenances unto the said H. D. and his assigns from the Annunciation of the blessed Virgin Mary commonly called Lady day then next past for and during the term of three years then last following fully to be compleat finished and ended yielding and paying therefore yearly rent for the said premisses to the said R. M. for the first year of the said 3 years the rent of 3 l. present money and in hand to be paid to the said R. M. and 3 l. 10s of c. yearly to be paid to the said R. M. for the other two years residue of the said term at the feast of S. Michael the Archangel and the Annunciation of the blessed Virgin Mary by even and equal portions By vertue of which demise the said H. D. entred into the said Cottage or dwelling house and was and still is possessed of the same and because 35 s. for the half year rent ended at the feast of S. Michael the Archangel in the year c. is in arrear and unpaid unto the said R. M. therefore an action doth accrew to the said R. M. to have and demand of the said H. D. the said 35 s. nevertheless the said H. D. although he hath been often required the said 35 s. the same to the said R. M. he hath hitherto denyed to restore and pay and as yet doth deny to restore and pay to the damage of the said R. M. of 39 s. And therefore he brings this Suit c. For Seruants wages A W. by c complains of R. S. of a Plea that he render unto him 24 s. of c. which he ows unto him and unjustly deteynes from him For that whereas the said J. D. that is to say the day year c. at the castle c. retained the said A. W. to serve the said I. S. in the place of a Man-servant till the Feast day of St. Martin the Bishop in Winter then next to do and execute the lawfull occasions and commands of the said I. S. by the time aforesaid paying the efore the said A. W. 12 d. of c. which the said I. S. then and there paid to the said A. W. and also 24 s. more of c. for his sallary during the said time at the said Feast of St. Martin in the year c. aforesaid And the said A. W. in fact saith that he according to the said retainder did serve the said I. S. in the place of a man-servant and did and executed the lawfull commands and occasions of the said I. S. by the time aforesaid and that 24 s. for his salary for his said service by the time aforesaid due at the Feast of St. Martin the Bishop in Winter in the yeare c. above mentioned is yet arrear and unpaid by the said I. S.
if he hath Assets there 16 E. 3 Execution 49. and a man may well pray Execution of the body in one County and an Elegit of the land in the other County Execution 38. If a Statute Merchant be sued of parcel of the Lands of the Conusor in the name of all his Lands he shall never extend on the rest of the lands Mic. 22. E. 3. f. 14. If three are bound to one in a Statute Merchant and every one of them by themselves quemlibet eorum perse I may sue Execution against one of them only or against them all at my pleasure If an Infant bind himselfe in a Statute-Merchant or Statute-Staple he may avoid this during his Non-age by Audita Querela and also he may have his Audita Querela after his full age to avoid this Statute by matter of fait and the like law if the Statute be acknowledged by dures of imprisonment Statute Staple WE now come to the laying open a Statute-Staple which is duplicate to use the words of Mr. West viz. either 1. Properly so called or 2. Improperly 1. A Statute-Staple properly so called is an Obligation acknowledged before the Major of the Staple in the presence of one or two Constables of the same Staple And by vertue of such Statute-Staple the Creditor or Recognisee may forthwith have execution of the body lands and goods of the Debtor or Recognisor and this is founded upon the Statute of 27 E. 3. c. 9. 2. A Statute-Staple improper is an obligation of Record founded upon the Stat. of 23 H. 8. c. 6. of the nature and validity of a proper Statute-Staple as touching the form and Execution thereof and acknowledged before one of the chief Justices and in their absence before the Major of the Staple at Westminster and Recorder of London You have the forms of all these Obligations or Statutes in West part 1. Symb. L. 2. Sect. 152. 153. 154. 155. It is sealed with three seals viz. with the seal of the Conusor with the seal of the Protector and of one of the said Iustices or of the Major and Recorder 23 H. 8. c 6. And note that all Statutes Staple and Merchant shall be brought to the Clerk of the Recognisance within four months and inrolled within six months otherwise such Statute shall be void against Purchasors c. 27 Eliz. c. 4. The maner of the proceeds upon it are the same with the Statute-Merchant saving that in a Statute-Staple presently after the Certificate into the Chancery the Conusee shall have a Writ to take his body and extend his Lands and goods returnable in Chancery and this writ is a Commission directed to the Sheriff of the County where the Lands and goods lie for the valuing of the same whereby all the lands goods and chattels of the Conusor shal be apprised and valued at a reasonable rate by a Jury of men sworn charged by the Sheriff for that purpose which Inquisition so taken is to be returned by the Sheriff and thereupon the lands goods and chattels are to be taken into the Sheriffs hands and by him to be delivered to the Conusee which the Sheriff may do if he will without any Writ to hold unto the Conusee until he be satisfied his debt and damages And if the Sheriff refuse so to do the Conusee shall have a writ out of the Chancery called a Liberate to compell him to deliver to the Conusee the lands goods and chattels so found by inquisition and taken into his hands upon the Extent which the Sherif need not return Fitz. Accompt 97. Execution in toto Broo. Stat. in toto Stat. Acton Burnel de Mercat 27 E. 3. 9. F N B. 130. 131. 132. Dyer 180 Coo. 4. 67. Plow 61. 62. 82. Co. super Lit. 290. Coo. 5. 87. c. See more of the proceeding in Statute-Merchant It was adjudged in B. R. Hil. 42. Eliz. that a debt recovered in the Kings Court by Judgment shall be paid before a Bond in nature of a Statute-Staple or Merchant because the Judgment is a matter of a more high and worthy nature then private portable pocket Records also it shall be preferred before a Recognisance acknowledged in any Court by assent which may also be privately done and a Judgment so given in the Kings Court upon ordinary and judicial proceedings which remain in the custody of a sworn Officer are Records which are preferred in Law before such Statutes non refert whether the Judgment or Recognisance or Statute be first for be the Judgment first or last it shall be first satisfied c. And so it was holden per totam curiam in the Common Pleas in Pemberton and Bartams case Plow 32. El. Rot. 235. which see in the end of Sadlers Case in the 4. Reports Dyer 80 53. Recognisance what it is WE now come to the third which is Recognisance and that is an Obligation or Bond of Record acknowledged in a Court of Record testifying the Recognisor to owe to the Recognisee a certain summe of money and is acknowledged in some Court of Record or before some Judge or other Officer of such Court having authority to take the same as the Master of the Chancery the Judges of either Bench of the Exchequer Justices of Peace c. And those that be meer Recognisances are not sealed but inrolled And yet some are sealed with the seale of the party and may be with condition annexed or may be single and then to have Indentures of defeasance If the money be not paid at the day the Conusee proceeds upon it after this manner The Conusee his Executor or Administrator is to bring a Scire facias against the Conusor or if he be dead against his heirs when they be of full age or if the Lands the Conusor had at the time of the entering into the Recognisance be sold against the Purchasors of those Lands which the Conusor had at any time after the Recognisance entred into to warn them to come into that Court whence the Scire facias cometh and to shew cause why Execution should not be done upon the said Recognisance And if the party or parties cannot be found to be warned or being warned do not appear at the time or appearing shew no cause why the debt should not be levied then the Conusee shall have Execution of a moyty of his Lands by Elegit or if the Conusor be living of all his goods by Levari or Fieri facias at his Election but he cannot have Execution of his body unlesse he bring an action of debt upon the Recognisance or it be by course of the Court as it is in the Upper Bench upon a Bail in which case a Capias doth lie Dyer 360. 315 West 2. 18. Broo Execution 129. Co. 3. 11. 15 H 7. 16. Kitch 117. And the proceeds against Sureties in Statutes shall be as the
to the Sheriffe to take a party and to enquire what Lands and Tenements he had and the Sheriffe findes by Inquisition that he is seised of many Lands and continues possession in them and the Sheriffe do out me I may have an Action of Trespasse against him Winch. fol. 78. Capias utlegatum enquiras de bonis catallis is a Writ of the same nature with the precedent but that it giveth a further power to the Sheriffe over and besides the apprehension of his body to enquire also of his goods and chattels Minsh fo 111. b. Capias ad Valentiam Is a VVrit of Execution and lyeth where the Tenant is impleaded of certain lands and he voucheth to warranty another against whom the summons Ad Warrantizandum hath beene awarded and the Vouchee cometh not in at the day given Then if the Demandant recover against the Tenant he shall have this Writ against the Vouchee and shall recover so much in value of the Vouchees Lands if he have so much And if he have not so much then the Tenant shall have Execution by this Writ of so much Lands and Tenements as descend to him in Fee-simple or if he purchase afterwards the Tenant shall have against him a Re-summons and if he can say nothing he shall recover the value Old Natura Brevium fol. 161 162. Termes of the Law 45 46. Fieri Facias what it is AFIERI FACIAS is a judiciall Writ and lyeth for him that hath recovered in an Action of Debt or Damage directed to the Sheriffe commanding him to levie the debt or damages of the Defendants goods it must be brought within the yeare and day This Writ hath beginning from West 2. Cap. 18. Anno 13 E. 1. Old Nat. Br. fol. 150. See great diversity thereof in the Table of the Register Judiciall Ver. Fieri Facias The Sheriffe or Bayliffe ought to be very cautious in executing this VVrit For if the Goods or Lease which shall be taken be the Goods of a stranger though they be found in the possession of the Defendant Yet if it be found upon Tryall that the Defendant hath no property in those Goods or Chattels then the Sheriffe or Bayliffe that executed that Writ shall be a trespasser to the right owner of the Goods and shall recover damage to the value of the Goods so taken with costs of suite although the Officer hath delivered them to the Plaintiffe in Execution Dalton office of Sheriffes fol. 60. Therefore the safest course for the Sheriffe or Bayliffe is not to take any goods in Execution unlesse they plainly appeare to them to be the proper goods of the Defenfendant For the Officer is bound at his perill to take knowledge whose Goods they be Ibidem If a Fieri Facias be awarded for twenty pounds to the Sheriffe upon which he takes an entire Chattell and sells it for forty pounds and returns the Fieri Farias with the twenty pounds in Court he may detaine the surplusage untill the Defendant comes to demand it of him for he is not obliged to search out the Defendant but if a Fieri fac be awarded for 40 s. by force of which the Sheriff takes five Oxen every one at the value of five pounds and sels them all the Defendant may have an action of Trespasse against the Sheriff Noy fol. 59. Woodby against Coles c. Sale by the Sheriff upon a Fieri fac shall stand albeit the judgment afterwards was reversed and the Plaintiff in it restored to the value Dyer 363. 24. Coo. 8. 76. b. Mat. Mannings case Upon a Judgement against an Executor or Administrator the Plaintiffe cannot have a Capias ad satisfaciendum against the body but a Fieri facias de bonis Testatoris and if the Sheriffe returne a Devastavit then a Capias ad satisfaciendum against the body or a Fieri facias de bonis propriis And if there be two Executors and the Sheriff réturns a Devastavit against one of them and he dies the other shall not be charged for that Devastavit for the one shall not prejudice the other but a gift by one of them is good against the other A Scire facias after the year for damages recovered in waste and a Nihil returned he shall not have an Elegit untill the tenants be warned but he may have a Fieri fac without warning of them 4 E. 3. 23. Execution 99. Old N. B. 168. The Sheriff returned upon a Fieri fac mandavi ballivo who said that he had seized to the value but he could not finde buyers and because the Court cannot send to the Sheriff to have the money here as they might upon his own extent therefore they awarded a Writ to the Sheriff to levy the money of the lands and goods of the Bayliff to the value of that which he had seized the same Law is upon a seizure of an ancient Sheriff 5 E. 3. Execution 101. Fieri fac for damages recovered in waste upon a Lease for years it was returned that the Lessee had no goods but the remnant of the same Lease and it was holden that by Sicut alias that the Sheriff might sell the Lease as well as pots and pans in the Execution for the Fieri facias is de terris catallis of the Lands and Chattels c. 19 E. 3. Execution 148. A Fieri fac to the Sheriffe to levy the expences of the Knights of the Parliament the Sheriff may sell the Beasts of one of the Hundred for the whole or the beasts of any person he shall finde within the precinct 11 H. 4. 2. Avowry 52. The Sheriffe returned upon a Fieri fac that he had levied the money and that he had the same in Court whereas he had not the money at the day and then a new Sheriff is chosen and because it was upon Record that the old Sheriffe had levied the money a Scire facias issued forth against him to pay it and if he cannot or will not otherwise discharge and pay the money the party shall have a Fieri fac or an Elegit against the Sheriffe of his proper goods c. 9 E. 4. 50. Scire fac 2. Mich 10. Jac. Upon a motion at the bar it was resolved that an obligation to the Sheriff upon a Fieri facias for the payment of the money in Court was not void by the Statute of 23 H. 6. cap 10. For the first branch of that Statute is that he shall let to bayl by Writ or Bill c. which he could not do before as appeares 19 H. 6. 43. The second shewes the form of the bond c. The third contains a penalty that if the Sheriffe take an Obligation in any other form c. than is there prescribed that it shall be void so that upon consideration of all the branches together and upon their coherence and dependance one upon another it plainly appears that the said
Yorkshire to 02 00 00 For Petitions upon the account for each 00 04 00 For another writ of assistance 00 05 06 For entring the view of the accompt and in the alienation Office for viewing of the accompt and for a note of the charge there 00 09 08 For every Schedule of issues upon general pardons and to the Clerk of the extracts man 00 15 00 To a Baron for allowing of them and to the Barons man 00 17 04 In the alienation Office for making of the Bond and Acquittance with the Scedules of seizures against such as have sold land held of the Commissioners without license of alienation 10 06 00 For a Warrant for a day to finish the accompt until Mich. Term 00 10 00 To the Attorney in the Pipe Office for setting off from the Accompt six amerciaments and to his man 01 10 00 For discharging the amerciaments for a warrant to set off and discharge 01 12 06 For another Writ of assistance 00 05 06 If the Sheriff cannot go thorow with his accompt in Trinity Term then to the Marshall for liberty to his man 04 13 04 For ruling and making the Petitions and to his man 09 00 00 To the Master of the Pipe for his fee 00 13 04 To the Controller of the Pipe for his fee and to his man 02 12 00 The fee of the Attorney of the Pipe and to his man 06 02 06 For the Acquittances of two tallies in the receit and for striking off those tallies 00 05 04 To two Auditors for casting up of the Sheriffs accompt in Court when he is to be cast out of the Court 00 10 00 To the Baron then and to his men 01 07 00 To the Marshal Tipstaves and Criers then 00 16 08 To the Clerk of the Pipe for Recusants and for allowing and joining of the talley for Recusants Debts 01 16 00 To the Baron for respects for Recusants Debts 01 10 00 To the Clerk of the Pipe for Recusants for allowing of that Warrant and to the Master of the Pipe for the same 00 13 04 To the Bag-bearer 00 01 00 For the Quietus est to the Sheriffs Attorney of the Pipe and to his man 04 06 08 For the Quietus est for the Recusants Cum multis aliis c. 01 00 00 But the Sheriff is at much more charge which is laid out and is disbursed during his Sheriffwick as experience will better inform him The Return of a Devastavit I R. S. Sheriffe of the County within named do certifie the Justices within mentioned that the within named A. B. hath before the coming of this Writ wasted to his own use converted divers goods and Chattels which were of the within named F. G. at the time of his death to the value of the debt and damages within specified and which came to the hands and possession of the said A. B. Executor of the same F G. to be administred So that the debt and damages or any parcel thereof of the goods and chattels of the aforesaid Testator F. G. I could not levy And I further certifie the aforesaid Justices that the within named A. B. hath no goods or Chattels of his own in my Bailywick whereof I may levy the damages aforesaid R. S. Esquire Sherif THe within named A. B. hath no goods or Chattels which were of the within named C. D. at the time of his death in her hands to be administred in my Bailywick whereof I may levy the debt and damages within mentioned or any parcel thereof nor any of her own proper goods or Chattels in my Bailywick whereof I can levy the damages aforesaid or any part thereof And I further certifie the Justices within specified That by T. I. and E. R. honest and lawful men of my Bailywick that I have made known to the said A B. that she be before the aforesaid Justices at the day and place within contained to shew c. as within it is commanded The residue of the execution of this Writ appeareth in a certain Inquisition hereunto anexed R. S. Esquire Sheriff AN Inquisition indented taken at A. N. in the County aforesaid the two twentieth day of Ian in the year of our Lord 1658. before me R. S. Sheriff of the County aforesaid By vertue of a Writ of his Highnesse the Lord Protector to me directed and to this Inquisition annexed by the Oath of G. H. and so to the number of twelve honest and lawfull men of my Bailywick who say upon their oaths that A. B. in the aforesaid Writ named wasted and to her own use converted divers goods and chattels which were of the within named C D. at the time of his death to the value of the debt and damages in the same Writ specified and which came to the hands of the same A. B. to be administred In witnesse whereof aswell I the said Sheriffe as the aforesaid Jurors to this present indented Inquisition have interchangeably set to our seals the same day and yeare first above written R. S. Esquire Sheriff BY vertue of this writ to me directed I have levied of the goods and chattels of the within named A. B. the whole sum of 80 l. which said moneys before his Highness at the day and place within mentioned I have ready to render to the within named C. D. for his debt and damages within specified as by this Writ it is commanded R. S. Esquire Sheriff By vertue of this writ I have levied of the goods and chattels of the within named A. B. the value of eight pounds sixteen shillings four pence which said moneyes before his Highness at the day and place within mentioned I have ready to render to the within named C. D. in part of his debt and damages within specified And I hereby further certifie his said Highnesse that the said C. D. hath no other or more goods or Chattels in my Bailywick whereof at present I may levy the residue of the aforesaid debt and damages according to the exigence of this Writ R. S. Esquire Sherif By vertue of this Writ to me directed I have taken of the Lands and Chattels of the within named A. B. that is to say one Messuage with the appurtenances in C. in my County of N. now in the tenure of one G. D. which the aforesaid A. B. at the time of my taking thereof held to him and his assignes for a certain term of years yet to come of the demise grant or assignment of one R. B. to the value of ten pounds which said Lands and Chattels as yet remain in my hands unsold for want of Buyers by reason whereof those moneyes before the Justices within mentioned at the day and place within contained I cannot have to render to the within named C. D. As within it is commanded R. S. Esquire Sherif I hereby certifie the Justices within mentioned that after the execution of this Writ and
HEe cannot enquire of the Statute of Labourers or indict one feloniously committing a Rape yet such Indictments must be delivered to the Justices of the Peace according to the Statute of 1 Ed. 4. Bract. praesent 16. Fitz. Tourne 3. 4 Edward 4. 8 Edw. 4. 5. He cannot commit any man to prison for his contempt neither can he take recognizance or binde a man to good behaviour as formerly he might and as the Sheriffe in his Tourne may do Yet Co. Instit 4. fol. 263. holdeth that he may take a Recognizance for the peace He cannot hold plea of any thing appertaining to the Crown nor touching Free-hold or Lands nor debt trespasse or otherwise This Court cannot take Indictment of any Felons for the death of any man or in any other case wherein it hath no cognizance If it doe it is Coram non judice and voyd neither can it take a presentment of an offence done to a Parish or a particular man Such things as are Trespasses by the Statute or offences against any Statute the Sheriffs Office doth not extend to it here except the Statute doth give in it an expresse authority to the Tourne or Leet for Nulla est generalis regula sed admittit exceptionem Nothing but Nusances and Grievances Offences or Trespasses as are popular and common to many persons And therefore Trespasses for breaking of Closes nor Assaults made to a sole and particular person is here inquirable except there be blood-shed It was the occasion of a very learned Contest or Argument Pasch 24 Car. B. R. whether a Court Leet may enquire of private Assaults and Batteries if there be no blood-shed in the case Bacon Justice and Walker an Apprentice of the LAW in the Inner TEMPLE held that a Court Leet might enquire of them But Justice Roll held the contrary because they are actionable at the COMMON LAW onely by the party injured and are not publique offences against the publique Upon all Presentments and Indictments taken before the Sheriffe in his Tourn he hath not power to attach arrest or put in prison nor to levy nor take any Fines or Amerciaments of any person so indicted or presented betore them by reason or colour of any Indictment or presentment taken before them in their Tournes but the Sheriffe shall bring and deliver all such Indictments and Presentments to the Justices of Peace at the Sessions that shall be holden for the said County if not a forfeiture for every one not delivered 40 l. What things are considerable in holding Tourns or Leets HAving demonstrated what things are to be enquired of here and what are not Now three things are considerable in the holding of Tourns or Leets viz. 1. Time 2. Place 3. Persons 1. As to the time it must be kept twice a yeare according to ALFRED quotannis celeberimus bis conventus agetur one moneth after EASTER and one moneth after MICHAELMAS At the Tourn after EASTER no Actions popular are to be enquired after c. but onely to take their suite who are Suitors and to take the view c. And at the Tourne after MICHAEELMAS then to enquire of such as are enquirable 2. Now to the place where it is to be holden and that must be within the Precinct and Libertie in loco debito consueto and if it be done otherwise what ever is acted in it is voyd coram non judice 3. Thirdly what persons are to appeare in this Court they are all the Freeholders within the Precinct or Liberty are obliged to come by the service of their Fees and all other people above the age of 12 years and under 60. only Ecclesiasticall and religious men all Earles Barons Tenants in ancient demesne and all women are excepted because they are never sworn upon any Inquest Jury What. THere must be at the Court twelve at the least of the most discreet and sufficient Freeholders such as are of repute and estimation and have Freehold Lands within the same County of the value of twenty shillings at the least who ought to be impannelled and sworn by the Sheriff to enquire of and present all things there inquireable and presentable who ought to take all Indictments by their oathes and must deliver in their rolls and inquisitions indented and sealed between the Sheriff or Steward and the Jurors And if there be not twelve to be sworn the Sheriffe or Steward may cause strangers that come within the view to be of the Inquest How Amerciaments are forfeited and what shall be causes to amerce c AMerciament in Latine is called misericordia because it ought to be assessed mercisully and ought to be moderated by affeerement of his equals otherwise a Writ de moderata misericordia lieth or because the party offending putteth himselfe on the mercy of his Highnesse And the difference betwixt a Fine and an Amerciament is That a Fine is assessed by the Court but Amerciament by the Countrey Of Amerciament BUT to demonstrate the cause of Amerciament viz. The not appearing of a Leet is a good cause to amerce a Re●iant and the Lord who distrains for the amerciament needs not shew for what he distraineth before the tenant hath tendered something for amends although the tenant doth not know the cause 45 E. 3. 9. Avowry 80. vi 11 H. 4. 89. 12 H. 7. 15. If a man be amercied for a thing done in a Towne wherein he dwelleth he may be distrained for it in any place within the Hundred or Leet 11 H. 4. 88. A Suitor at a Leet may be amercied for not presentting things presentable being sworne with others and a generall Avowry but he may say that there was nothing to be presented 11 E. 3. 9. Avowry 155. 10 H. 6. 7. Coo. lib. Enteries Det. 149. Coo. part 8. Griesleys case A Resiant was amercied for not clensing of a Ditch and a paine levied upon him that he clensed it after and a distresse taken for not doing of it c. 29 E. 3 36. 41 E. 3. 26. Resiants and tenants may be amercied in the Leet for refusing to swear 38 E. 3. 18. Conusance 23. The Lord of a Leet shall not prescribe to amerce the petty Jury for their false verdict the same being sound by the grand Jury for it is no good custome but they may be amercied for concealing of any thing which is presentable there and this is by custom M. 9. H. 6. 42. Custome An amerciament in a Leet may be well levied by an action of debt 12 H. 2. Ley 43. 10 H. 6. 7. One was amermercied for brewing Ale and selling it contrary to the Assize within the Hundred and it was holden that although he was resiant within another Leet yet the amerciament is good where it is made so it is where one sels Bread and Ale in a Market which is in another Leet then where it was brewed
walls houses or pales be made and erected or thrown downe or any wayes or paths opened or stopped to the damage of the people or if any waters be stopped or diverted out of their right course or if the common Rivers or watering places for Beasts be corrupted and annoyed with Hemp Hay and such like or if any encroachment be upon the Kings high way or any carrion or unwholsome thing be cast into the same The party offending for every time so doing forfeiteth 20 s. 33 H. 8. c. 17. 23 Inquiry is to be made of the defect of Bridges or Causwayes decayed and broken downe and who ought to repaire them The penalty is according to the discretion of the Iury upon the view 24 Inquiry is also to be made if Common Pounds be good and close to retain such distresse as shall be brought to them untill they be delivered thence by order of Law and to present such as ought to keep them in such order if they be taken This is also referred to the Iuries discretion 25 And forasmuch as high wayes especially in winter are very troublesome to travell in it was enacted the 1. 2. Ph. M. c. 8. That the Constable and Church-wardens of every Parish within this Common wealth should yearly upon Tuesday or Wednesday in Easter week assemble a number of the Parishioners and elect two honest men of them to be Surveyors of the high ways for one yeare and that they shall have authority to direct the persons that shall be appointed for the mending and repairing of them according to their discretion faithfully executing their office Every Surveyor neglecting his office and making default forfeits 20 s. Every person for every plowland in tillage or pasture within the parish and every person there keeping a draught or plough shall send every day that the ways are in mending one Waine or Cart with all necessaries convenient to carry things and also two able men with the same The penalty for every draught making default is 20 s. Every other Housholder Cottager Labourer not being an hired servant by the year shall by themselves or one sufficient Labourer upon every of the said dayes work there The penalty for every one making default every day 8 d. 26 You shall enquire if any Heyes Fences Dikes or Hedges next adjoyning on every side to any high or common wayes be not from time to time ditched scoured repaired and kept and all trees and bushes growing in the high-wayes be cut down by the owners of the ground or soyle whereby the wayes are opened and the people may have a more easie passage Every person not so doing forfeiteth 20 s. 18 Eliz 9. 27 You shall further enquire if any ancient bounds or Land-marks be withdrawn and taken away such as distinguish or divide Hundreds Parishes Tythings Commons Common-meadows and Common fields to avoid confusion and consequently dissention 18 Eliz. 2. Fined according to the discretion of the Jury 28 You shall further enquire if any common breakers of hedges or sences by which their neighbours ground is made subject to the incursions of Cattel which are the grounds of many actions of Trespasse to the disturbance of the peace of the Comonwealth Such offenders are to be stocked and whipped 29 You shall also enquire of the breach of any common Pownd to take away distresse out of it though the distresse be without cause Or if any shall rescue or take away by force any cattell which is distrained for any rent amerciament or other cause before it be in custodia legis in the custody of the Law or impounded it is presentable Fineable according to the discretion of the Iury. Or a Writ de pareo fracto lyeth against him as Common Law F. N. B. 139. 30 You shall also enquire if any assaults be committed whereby blood-shed ensueth to the disturbance of the people of this Common wealth is here inquireaable 1 R. 3. fo 1. The fine for the offence is accoding to the discretion of the Iury but commonly it is 3 s. 4 d. 31 You shall further enquire if any Rescous were committed upon the Sheriffe or his Baylifs in disturbance of them from the taking and detaining any person arrested An action lyeth against the offender at the Common Law 32 You shall enquire if there be within the precincts of this Leet any Common Barretors such as are common incendiaries of strife and discord amongst their neighbors and are ever fishing in troubled waters they are of both fexes scoulds brawlers inventers and dispersers of calumnies and reports whereby discord and inquietude ariseth in the Countrey Such persons must give sureties for their good behaviour being disturbers of the peace 33 You shall enquire if any Alehouse-keeper c. have permitted any Inhabitant or Townsman except labourers and handicrafts men or persons invited by Travellers to continue tipling or drinking in any such house The paine or forfeiture of the Alehouse-keeper for every such offence to the use of the poore of the Parish 10 s. 34 You shall enquire if any buy or cause to be bought any victuall or other thing coming towards any Fair or market to be sold in the same or shall make any bargain contract or promise for the having or buying of the same before it shall be in the Market c. such shall be judged a Forestaller He that is convict thereof is for the first time to be imprisoned for 2 moneths and losse of the value of the thing sold The 2d time imprisoned by the space of halfe a year and shall loose the double value of the goods c. The 3d time during his Highnesses pleasure and judgement of the Pillory forfeiting all his goods and chattels See Stat. 5 E. 6 cap. 14. 35 You shall enquire if any regrate any corne butter cheese or other dead or quick victuals whatsoever that shall come to any Fair or Market to be sold and doth sell the same againe in any Faire or Market holden in the same place or within four miles thereof shall be judged a Regrator The judgement of a Forestaller 36 You shall enquire if any do ingrosse and get into their hands or promise taking unlesse it be by demise grant or lease of Land any Corne growing in the Fields or otherwise butter cheese or other dead Victuall to the intent to sell again shall be reputed an illegall Ingrosser The same judgement of a Forestaller and Regrator 37 You shall enquire if any Baker shall make and put to sale any bread which is not of good and sufficient weight and assize according to the rate and prices of come and graine in the Markets adjoyning or such as is not wholsome nourishment for Man And that he set his owne signet upon every loafe of bread that he vends to the end that if it want weight it may be known in whom the fault lyes For the
Court by force and Armes c. willfully and feloniously of malice by him pretended did burn the house of one E. F. against his Highnesses peace and the peace of the Commonweall therefore the Bayliff is commanded to seise all his lands and tenements goods and chattells that he may answer for them to the Lord of this Mannor A Presentment of a Felon ALso they present That A. B. of c. Yeoman ' such a day c. at S. within the Jurisdiction of this Court by force and arms c. and against the publick peace the Close of C D. at S. aforesaid broke and entred into and one silk coat called Tabby of an Ash colour of the goods and chattels of the said C. D. then and there found feloniously took and carryed away Therefore it is commanded the Bayliff c. A Presentment of an Accessary ALso they present that A. B. of S. aforesaid gent. such a day c. at S. aforesaid within the Jurisdiction of this Court did councel provoked procured encouraged and abetted one C. D. c. one Cow of black colour c. of the chattel price c. of one c. then and there found feloniously to steal take and drive away and the said C. D. by vertue of the councel provocation procurement encouragment and abetment the aforesaid c. the said black Cow such a day c. year c. felloniously stole took and drove away c. The Oath of the Steward YOu shall swear that you well and truly shall serve the Lord of this Mannor of S. in the office of Steward and truly to see all plaints actions processe and matters in the Courts to be holden before the Lord of this Mannor and by you or your sufficient deputy according to the custome and Libertyes of the said Mannor to be entered and recorded as they ought to be after the best of your cuning skill and power taking for the same your due fees and the perquisites issues profits and amerciaments of the same Courts you shall justly and truly write and yearly extract for the levying and gathering thereof and you shall truly and diligently do and accomplish all other things appertaining to your said office after the best of your knowledge as near as Gods grace shall direct you So help you God c. The Oath of the Bayliff YOu shall swear that you shall well and truly serve his Highness the Lord Protector c. And the Lord of this Leete in the office of Bayliff for this year ensuing and shall well and truly collect all rents Revenues and other annual profits as shall be chargeable issuing out to you And of that you shall make and give a lawful account at the end of the same year and in every other thing appertaining to your office well and truly to discharge in your year ensuing So help you God c. The Oath of the Constable YOu shall swear that you well and truly shall serve his Highnesse the Lord Protector c. in the office of Constable-ship and as Constable of this Town of S. for and during the space of one whole year now next ensuing you shall endeavour your self to the utmost of your power to see the Publicke Peace kept and Watch and Ward observed and kept in this Town as hath been accustomed and as it ought to be likewise you shall endeavour your self to learn and understand the contents of the Statute of Winchester and diverse other Lawes and Statutes of this Nation made for the punishment of rogues vagabonds and sturdy beggars haunting and resorting within the precinct of your office and punish the offenders accordingly Also you shall punish all such persons as do or shall play at any unlawful games according to the Statute in that case made and provided You shall also have regard for the maintenance of Artilery within your said office and that you shall do and accomplish to the utmost of your power So help you God c. The Tithengman or petty Counstables Oath is after the same manner mutatis mutandis onely the Tithingman is sworn to attend on the Constable if he be required when he shall execute his Office Of the Affeerer and his Oath But first let us inquire what he is and from whence his name is derived Minsh saith that Affeerer cometh of the old French word Affeur'er which is to tax or fine and in Latine they are called Affidati as it were men put in trust and appointed to this Office which do affirm upon their Oathes what penalty they think in their conscience the offenders have deserved so that they may mulct such as have committed any fault which is arbitrably punishable and for which no expresse penalty is prescribed by statute The Oath is as followeth You and either of you shall swear that you will truly and indifferently tax assesse and affeer all such Amerciaments as are presented at this Court wherein you shall spare no man for love favour affection or corruption nor raise nor inhance upon any man of malice more grievous amercements then shall be thought reasonable according to the quality of the offence and the faults committed and not otherwise So help you God c. The Oath of the Ale-taster YOu shall well and truly swear that you shall well and truly serve his Highnesse the Lord Protector c. and the Lord of this Leete in the office of Aletaster or Assizor of this Liberty or Hundred for this year to come you shall duly and truly see from time to time that the bread brought to be sould be duly weighed and that the same to continue such weight according to the prices of wheat as by the Statute in that behalf is provided likewise you shall have diligent care during the time of your being in office to all the Brewers and Tiplers within your office that they and every of them do make good and wholesome Ale and Beer for mans body and that the same be not sould before it be assayed by you and then to be sold agreeable to the prices limitted and appointed by the Justices of Peace and all faults committed or done by the Bakers Brewers or Tiplers or by any of them you shall make known and present the same at this Court whereby due and condigne punishment may be inflicted upon them for their offences accordingly and in every other thing you shall well and truly behave your self in the said office for this year to come So help you God c. Of the Hayward Beadel or Greve and his Oath HAyward hath its derivation from the French word Haye i. e. sepes a hedge and Garde i. e. custodia a keeper of the hedges With us it signifies one that keepeth the Common heard of the Town and yet one part of his office is to look that they break not the hedges of inclosed grounds He is called by the Latines Bedellus i. e. oppidi vel civitatis servus You shall swear that you
and present it for then the Lord shall have the Land holden of him by Escheat You shall understand that none shall have Lands in Fee-simple as heirs unto any man unlesse he be heire of the whole bloud for if a man have issue two sons by divers women and dieth seized of the same Land and the eldest entereth and dieth without issue the yongest shall not have the Land as heire unto his brother because he is of the halfe bloud but another heire of the fathers side shall inherit the same Land and if he have no heire on the Fathers side then the next hiere on the Mothers side shall not have the Land but the Lord of whom the Land is holden shall have it by Escheat and so when Land descendeth on the Mothers side the heir on the Mothers side shall inherit and not the heirs of the Fathers side Also you shall understand that filius in adulterio conceptus viz. a Bastard can never be heire unto any man nor have heire unto himselfe Therefore if any Bastard or any other Tenant have died seized without heirs you shall present 18. Also you shall inquire if any Tenant was seized of any Lands or Tenements and was put out of his Land by one who had not a right title and afterward died without any heire the Lord shall have his Escheat as well as if his Tenant had died seized 19. Also you shall enquire whether any Tenant of this Lordship hath committed any Petty treason felonies or murthers for the which he was hanged or for the which he had Judgement to be hanged though afterwards he payd his Charge and was delivered to the Ordinary and present it And whether any Tenant hath committed any Petty treason felony or murther for the which he hath abjured the Land for which he was outlawed or by death and present it For in all those cases the Lord of whom the Lands are holden shall have them by Escheat and also the evidences concerning the same 20. Also you shall enquire if there be any Rents Customes or Services withdrawne from the Lord-ship which of right ought to be done and present it and what Rents Customes and Services they are and by whom they are withdrawne and where the Land lieth that the Lord may have the remedy for the arrearages thereof Also you shall enquire whether the Copyholders or Fermers of this Lordship do uphold and repair their Tenements yea or no and present them You shall understand that every Tenant is obliged to three things viz. 1. That he be a true tenant to his Lord. 2. That he sufficiently repair his tenements 3. That he pay and do all suits Customes and Services at his dayes assigned for he tooke upon him to do so when he did Fealty and if he do not pay his Suits Customes and Services the Lord shall have good remedy and recover the same with his damages and if he be a Copyholder and do the contrary he forfeits his Copyhold 21. Also you shall enquire if any tenant of this Lordship which is obliged by reason of his tenure to do suit unto the Lord will do the same yea or no and present it and whether any have used to with-drawn their suit from the Lords Mill in not grinding their corn there and present it 22 You shall also enquire whether any Waif or Stray is or was within the Lordship and whether the Lord be answered of the same if not present by whom they are conveyed away Also you shall enquire if any Heriot be conveyed away and by whom and present it 23. You shall also enquire whether person have made Rescous against the Lord or any other Officer and present it Rescous is when the Lord distraineth in the land holden of him for his Rent or services in arrear or if the Lord come upon the lands and would distrain and the Tenant or some other will not suffer him this is Rescous Likewise if the Lord distrain for service behinde or for damage-Feasant and in driving cattell to pownd the Beasts enter into the house of the owner if he that distraineth pray deliverance and the possessor will not deliver them this is a Rescous therefore if Rescous have been made you shall present it 24. Also you shall enquire whether any person hath broken the Lords pownd that is to have taken away a Distresse put in and present it You shall understand that if the Lord do distrain any Tenant for Rent or Service in arrear he may impownd the same Distresse in a Common pownd if he will or in his owne ground or in his neighbours if he will by the licence of his neighbour and all those places in which the Lord doth impound any Cattell are called the Lords pownd but not so when another doth impound any Distresse in his own pownd or in his neighbours It behoveth him to give notice to the other party for that if the Distresse be quick he may give it meate and then if the Beast die for want of sustenance he that was distrained shall be at the losse and then he that distrained before may distrain againe for the same rent or duty 25. You shall also enquire if any Tenant within the precincts of this Mannor hath suffered any Farme or House to fall to decay which at any time since the first yeare of the Reigne of Henry 7. hath beene let with twenty acres of land and present it For if they suffer their houses to fall to decay the Lord may take and distrain for halfe of the issues and profits of the same and keep to his owne use untill such time as the houses shall be sufficiently builded and repaired viz. maintained again for husbandry 26 Also you shall inquire if any inhabitants or Commoners have over-charged the Common or High wayes or your Common fields by putting in more Cattell then they ought to do and whether any of them have put their Cattel in any the Commons aforesaid before the dayes agreed upon and present it for the Lord as it seems may distrain the surplusage damage feasant or else you may make among your selves orders and lawes for your owne profit that none shall do upon certaine penalties c. and by such Lawes the Inhabitants and Commoners shall be bound c. 27 You shall also enquire if any persons have made any pits in the high wayes and whether any person do commonly break hedges and suffer any Hogs to go unyoaked or unringed to the annoyance of their neighbors 28 You shall also enquire whether any persons have drained or stopped any wayes waters ditches paths or turned any of them into a wrong course and present it 29 Also if any have incroached any Land of the Lords viz. Land Meadow Pasture Wood Heath Moor or any other vacant land without license of the Lord by setting of his hedge pale or otherwise and present the same Note that
all the vacant and waste land within the Mannor belongeth to the Lord of the Mannor 30 You shall also enquire whether any person hath plowed up or removed away any Mere marks baulks or limits between one piece of Land and another and present it 31 Also you shall enquire if any have stalked with a bush or beast to kill Deere which is in the Lords Close or Parke and present it 32 You shall also enquire if any person hath concealeth or keepeth away any Evidences Charters or Court Rolls Customary terres or any other evidence which concerns the Lordship or any parcel thereof and present it 33 Also you shall enquire if any person have fished fowled hawked or hunted in this Lordship or Lords Warren and present it 34 You shall enquire also if any person have taken any Feasant Partridges with net snare or other Engine upon the Free-Hold of the Lord of this Mannor and present it 35 Also you shall enquire if any have taken away any Swans Signets or eggs of the Lords Swans out of their nests and present it 36 You shall likewise enquire if any lands of the Lord be concealed or kept back or occupied by any without the license of the Lord Also what land it is and how much land hath been so occupied and of what value by the yeare the same is and present it 37 Also you shall enquire if any Trespasse be done in any of the Lords liberty viz. in his Corne Grasse Meadows Pasture Woods Hedges Waters or Pounds or if any take Hawks or ayre of Hawks or such like trespasse and present them 38 You also shall enquire if any Land be inclosed and the same kept in severalty which ought to lye open without licence of the Lord and other Free-holders you shall present it for no Tenant of the Lordship shall loose the Common in the same 39 Also if any Copyholder let his Copyhold Land for longer time then a yeare and a day without licence except it be by Custome that he may let for longer time and if he do it is forfeiture and present the same 40 You shall also enquire whether any Tenant for yeares or life have granted any greater or larger estate then they had in their Lands or Tenements and present it for that is a forfeiture of their estate 41. Likewise you shall enquire if the Bayliff Headborough Constable and Hayward and all other Officers have well and truly executed their offices and present it 42. You shall likewise enquire whether all the defaults and plaints that were prosecuted at the last Court be sufficiently amended and whether all the orders and Lawes heretofore made be observed and kept and present it 43. To conclude you shall enquire of all other things by me omitted which you know to appertain to your charge and by the Oaths that you have taken you shall truly and diligently enquire of all the premisses and plainly without concealing of any fault and make a return of your presentment subscribed with your hands and sealed with your seals by three a clock in the afternoon Then command the Bayliffe to make proclamation O yes and adjourn the Court till after dinner in this manner All manner of persons that have any more to do at this Court may for this time depart and keepe their hour here at two of the clock in the afternoon After your return from Dinner if any surrenders or admittances be to be made or Actions to be tried let them be done Otherwise call the Jury for their presentments if they be ready and swear two affeerers to affer them as before at the Leet Then discharge the Court the Bayliffe making an O yes thus All manner of persons that have any more to do at this Court holden here this day let them come forth and they shall be heard otherwise they every one else may for this time depart and keep their day here upon a new warning And so God save the Lord Protector and the Lord of this Mannor Some select cases out of the new Reports and others concerning the Lord Copyholder and Copyholds Surrenders Forfeitures c. First of the Lord. HEe that is a Lord to grant and allow a Copyhold must be such a one as by Littletons definition is seised of a Mannor so that he must be in possession at the time of the grant for though he have good right and title yet if he be not in possession of the Mannor it will not serve And on the other side if he be in possession of the Mannor though he have neither right nor title thereunto yet in many cases the grant and allowance of such a Copy is good as he is Dominus de facto sed non de jure Calthrop 48. A Copyhold granted by a Disseisor or any other who hath the Mannor of which it is parcell by wrong shall be avoyded by the Disseisee or any other who hath right to the Mannor by his entry or recovery of the Mannor Pophams Rep. fo 71. Yet it was agreed that admittance upon surrenders of Copyholders in fee to the use of another or if an heire in case of a dissent of a Copyhold were good being made by a Disseisor of a Mannor or any other who hath it by Tort because these are acts of necessity and for the benefit of a stranger viz. of him who is to have the Land by the surrender or of the heire And also Grants made by Copy by the Feoffee upon Condition of a Mannor before the Condition broken are good because he was lawfully Dominus protempore ibid. If a Lord grant a Copy in Fee having but an estate for life in the Copyhold no larger estate shall passe then he himselfe hath Quia nemo potest plus juris in altenum transferre quam ipse habet Co. of Copy-holds fol. 96. If the Lord of a Mannor taketh a Wife and after maketh Copyhold estates according to the Custome and dyeth though the Feme hath this Mannor assigned unto her for her Dower yet cannot she avoyd the Copyhold estates because the Copyholders are in by a title paramount the title of the Feme viz. by Custome Co. of Copyholds 45. Secondly of the Copy-holder HE is Tenant by copy of Court-roll being admitted of Lands or Tenements within a Mannor that time out of minde by use and custome of the said Mannor have been demiseable and demised to such as will take the same in Fee in Fee-taile for life yeares or at will according to the custome of the said Mannor by Copy of Court roll of the same Mannor West part 1. Sym. lib. 2. sect 646. And that person is sufficient to be a Copyholder who is of himselfe able or by another to do the service of a Copyholder as an Infant may be a Copyholder for his Guardian and prochein amy may doe the service But a Lunatick
been used for the Statute De donis conditionalibus shall not enure to such customary Lands but to Lands which are at Common Law and therefore an estate tayle cannot be of these customary Lands but in case where it hath beene used time out of minde Popham fol. 34. And it was holden afterwards that an estate tayle is wrought out of Copyhold Land by the equity of the Statute De donis conditionalibus for otherwise it cannot be that there can be any estate taile of Copy-hold land for by usage it cannot be maintained because that no estate tayle was known in Law before this Statute but all were Fee-simple and after this Statute it cannot be by usage because this is within the time of limitation after which an usage cannot make a prescription as appeareth 22 and 23 Eliz. in Dyer And by 8 Eliz. a custome cannot be made after Westminst 2d And what estates are of Copyhold land appeareth expresly by Littleton in his Chap. of Tenant by Copyhold c. And in Brook tit Tenant by Copyhold c. 15 H. 8. In both which it appears that a Plaint lyeth in Copyhold land in the nature of a Formedon in the Discender at the Common Law and this could not be before the Statute De donis conditionalibus for such land because that before that Statute there was not any Formedon in the Discender at Common Law and therefore the Statute helps them for their remedy for intayled Land which is but customary by equity And if the Action shall be given by equity for thy land why shall not the Statute by the same equity worke to make an estate in tayle also of this nature of the land Poph. ibidem And Copyholds are now become by usage by such estates that Law allows them to be good against the Lords themselves they performing their customes and services and therefore are guided by the guides and rules of the Common Law Dyer Trin. 12 Eliz. And to say that estates of Copyhold land are not warranted but by custome and every custome lyes in usage and without usage a custome cannot be is true but in the usage of the greater the lesser is alwayes implyed Omne majus in se continet minus As by usage three lives have been granted by Copy of Court Roll but never within memory two or one alone yet the grant of one or two lives onely is warrantable by this custome for the use of the greater number of lives warrants the lesser number but not è converso If the Copyholder by his letter of Attorney appoint the son of his Farmer his Attorney to do the services for him due for his Copyhold Such a person so constituted and appointed may Essoyne for the Copyholder but not do the services for him for none can do the same but the Tenant himself Leonard first part fo 139. Copyhold land is not extendable upon a Statute-Staple but upon the Statute of Bankrupts it is extendable Brownlows first part 34. As long as a Copyhold of Inheritance is in the Tenants hands it is not lyable to any estate or charge of the Lord as Dower Curtesie Elegit Statute c. But when it is in the Lords hands it is liable Co. 4. 22. But a custome in this case may make it chargeable Calthr 88 89. 92 93. We will now declare something of Surrenders Of Surrenders what are good and what not LOrd and Tenant Copyholder by Surrender or by nomination by force of a Custome precedent desires his Lord at his Court to admit him to the Copyhold estate and offers him his Fine the Lord refuses he cannot take the profits before admittance here is damnum injuria whether for refuall he may have an action of the Case or not And it was resolved Pasch 13 Jac. P. R. That an Action of the Case lies not against the Lord for his refusall to admit him without a speciall custome or prescription for the same Omnis innovatio plus novitate perturbat quam utilitate prodest for if upon every such refusall an Action shall be brought this will introduce many inconveniencies C. 4. 22. in Brownes case But note that in all cases of Ministeriall offices if they refuse to do their offices Actions upon the case shall well lye against them as against the Clarke of the Inrollments if he refuseth to inroll a Deed an Action upon the case lyeth against him for this but it shall not be so in cases of trusts Bolstrod second part fol. 337 338. Foords case Hill 12 Jac. If a Surrender be to the Lord generally without saying to whose use it is good enough Kitch 81. If the Copyholder surrender to the use of another and the Lord grant it to the Cestuy que use not naming the surrender this is good enough by Calthr fo 99. In a surrender it matters not if the party to whom it is be precisely expressed if by any circumstance he may be known And therefore to surrender to the Major of Yorke next of his kin or next of his blood his Brother Sister or his sonne may be good and it may be made certaine by averment So if it be to a mans Wife without warning of her or the High Sheriffe of Yorkeshire But a surrender to the use of ones Cousin or Friend is voyd for incertainty so it is if it be to the use of A. B. or C. Coo. 4. 29. of Copy-hold 96. If a surrender be made to the Lord in generall without expressing to what use it shall be taken to the Lords use Kitch 81. If a Copyhold be surrendred to the use of A. B. and his heires till he marry C. D. and then to the use of them two in speciall tayle this is valid and shall enure accordingly Calth fo 22. If a Copyholder surrender to the use of a Stranger in consideration that the stranger shall marry his daughter before such a day In this case if the marriage succeeds not the stranger shall take nothing by the surrender But if the consideration be that the stranger shall pay such a summe of money at such a day although the money be not paid yet the surrender is valid Calth fo 37. If the Copyholder surrender his land to the use of A. B. so that A. B. pay 20 l. at such a day if he please this is an absolute not a conditionall surrender Calth fol. 39. If a Copyholder surrender his Coyphold of Inheritance into the hands of the Lord to the use of I. S. paying one hundred pounds to his Executors within such a time after his death he to whose use this surrender is made takes by force of this presently Bolstr 2d part fo 275. Mich. Jac. 12. If a Copyholder surrender to the use of one for life who is admitted and dyeth he in the Reversion may enter without a new admittance Leonard first part Rep. 144. If a Copyholder bargain and sell his
Copyhold to the Lord of the Mannor which hath the Mannor in lease for yeares the Copyhold estate is thereby extinguished And if a Copyholder come into Court and sayes that he is weary of his Copyhold and requests the Lord to take it this is a surrender for between the Lord and the Tenant a conveyance shall not need to be according to the custome for the Copyholder hath no other use of the Custome but onely to convey the Land to another Vide Co. 4. in his Copyhold cases that a Release by him who hath right to a Copy-hold to one who is admitted Copyholder extinguisheth the right of the Copyhold by Deed And if a Copyholder release to the Lord that extinguisheth the Copyhold although it be contrary to the nature of a release to give a possession Huttons Rep. fo 65. Blemerhassets case If the Copyholder surrender to the use of his right heires the Land shall remaine in the Lord untill the death of the Copyholder for then his heire is known c. See Dyer 99. Leonards first part rep 133. If a man seised of Copyhold land in the right of his Wife or Tenant in taile of a Copyhold doth surrender to the use of another in Fee the same doth not make any discontinuauce but that the issue in tayle and the Wife may respectively enter Leonards first Rep. fo 124. An Insant who surrenders his Copyhold land within age may enter at his full age without being put to any suit for it Poph. Rep. fol. 39. It was resolved by all the Barons of the Exchequer Pasch 4. Iac. That if a Copyholder surrender to the use of a younger sonne and dyes that this younger sonne cannot bring an Action till admittance but if the Copyhold be discended to the heire he may have an Action before admittance See Co. 4. fol. 22. Copyhold cases it was likewise said That all Copyholders of the KINGS Mannors may now have admittance into their Copyhold estates well enough and the order for the stay of their admittances which was made heretofore is now dissolved and quashed Lanes Rep. fol. 20. A Copyholder surrendred out of Court according to the Custome of the Mannor which at the next Court was presented and entry thereof made by the Steward viz. Compertum est homagium c. but no admittance and afterwards Cestuy que use surrenders before admittance and the first Copyholder surrenders to the Plaintiffe and in this case there was two questions First whether he may surrender before admittance The second was who shall have the land whether the Copyholder or the Lord and it was held that he could not surrender before admittance and the entry of the surrender doth not make admittance for this being the sole act of the Steward shall not binde the Lord and it is not like to the usuall forme of an admittance viz. Dat domino de Fine fecit fidelitatem admissus est inde tenens and it was agreed to and said that in Hare and Bricklegs Case the admittance of a Copyholder was compared to the induction to a Benefice which gives the possession Poph. fol. 128. A Copyhold cannot be surrendred to another by an Attorney without Deed but one may be admitted to a Copyhold estate by Attorney without a Deed. For there is a difference betwixt the passing of an estate and the receiving of an estate passed Prac. Regist tit Surrender 2. Apr. 1650. B. R. VVhat shall be said a reasonable Fine for a Copyholder to pay upon his admittance HIl 5 Car. Rot. 125. Dow and others against Golding in trespasse upon a Demurrer and the question was whether the Lord of a Mannor may assesse two years and a half value of land according to racked Rent for a Fine upon grant of a Copyhold and for non-payment entry for forfeiture And all the Court conceived that one yeare and a halfe of Rent improved is high enough and the Desendant assessing two yeares and a halfe it is unreasonable and therefore the Plaintiffe might well refuse the payment thereof and consequently the entry of the Defendant for a forfeiture not justifiable Crook 1 part fol. 142. VVhat shall make a Forfeiture of Copyhold estates and what not WEe now descend to Forfeitures of Copyhold estates both what shall be and what shall not be forfeited First In a Forfeiture of a Copyhold estate by making of a Lease of his Copyhold land contrary to the custome there ought to be very direct and certaine proof made of a certaine Lease with a certaine beginning and ending of it and likewise of any other thing supposed to be acted and done by a Copy-holder and contrary to the custome of the Mannor thereby to make a forfeiture of his Copyhold estate it must also appeare certaine to the Court for if a stranger shall come and make oath to this purpose it shall not be of any force or effect to prove a forfeiture especially if the Copyholder still continue in possession and so dyes seised of his Copyhold estate and never came in question till after his death And if such a presentment shall be allowed in the Lords Court upon an oath made by a stranger as to make a Copyhold estate every Copyholder might be in danger to lose his Copyhold estate Or if a Copy-holder did promise to make a Lease and it is not proved in facto that he did make the same this is no forfeiture of his Copyhold estate Or if a Copy-holder do make a lease of his Copyhold land and so a forfeiture being contrary to the custome of the Mannor if after this he continues still in possession and the Lord of the Mannor dyes and afterwards his Widow or he who hath the Mannor doth receive Rent from the Copyholder he shall never after acceptance of Rent take any benefit or advantage of the forfeiture Bolstrod first part fo 50. If a Lessee for life build a house upon his land and afterwards pulls it downe again this is a forfeiture of the Copyhold ibid fol. 50. If a custome be that a Copyholder may pull downe houses such a custome is not good if the custome be for a Copyholder to cut downe trees in this for the warranting of such a custom the difference will be this if he be a Copyholder of inheritance then such a custome to cut down trees for such a Copyholder will be a good custome but otherwise it is if he be a Copyholder for life there such custome is not good Ibid. fol. 51. If a Copyholder erect a house and pull it down again it is a cleare forfeiture of his Copyhold estate Ibidem 52. By the Law of the Land every Copyholder may make a Lease for a yeare without forfeiture Yet admit it be a forfeiture if the Lord take a surrender and enters not for the forfeiture but makes a Lease for yeares his Lessee shall not enter for the forfeiture for the Lessee cannot when
he must be attended by the property of Knowledge as to be expert in the lawes of the Countrey and the customes of the Mannor and have ability to instruct and direct the Bayliffs and other ministers in dubious things Let us now descend to demonstrate his retainer into office c. A Lord of a Mannor may by parol retain one to be Steward of his Mannor and to hold the Courts thereof as well as a Bayliff may be and that by word and this retainer shall be as effectual in all points before discharge as the most effectual institution by Patent yet most commonly they have patents for their offices Co. 4. 30. and therewith accorderh 8 Eliz Dyer 248. Likewise it was adjudged in the common pleas in the Lady Julian Holcrofts case that whereas one was generally retained by the Lord of a Mannor by parol to be Steward of a Mannor and to keep his Courts that such Steward may take surrender of customary tenants out of the Court or make voluntary admittances or any other act incident to the office of a Steward for till such Steward be discharged he is Steward of the Mannor as well by the retainer by word as if he had a grant thereof by Patent Leon. fo 309. He represents the person of the Lord in many things for in the absence of the Lord he sitteth in Court as Judge to punish offences to determine controversies redresse injuries c. he acts some things in the Lords name and not in his own name for if the Steward admit any Copyholder or by special Authority or particular custome licence a Copyholder to Alien this admittance and licence shall be made in the Lords name and the entery in the Roll shall be Quod dominus per senescallum admisis licentiavit c. Co. of Copyholds fo 143. He must take care to Record and Enrol all the Conveyances of estates for it hath behn holden by some That if the Lord in open Court grant a Copyhold estate and no entry is made thereof in the Court Rolls that the grant is inavlid and that no collateral will make it valid Carthrop fo 47. But if the tenant have no Copy or lose his Copy the roll of the Court is a good evidence And if the wills be lost it is thought cleerly it may be supplyed by proof ibidem At every Court he is to swear some of the Tenants which is called the Homage these he chargeth with the Articles before mentioned and upon them they do present and upon this presentment the Steward is to proceed as upon the presentment in a Leet save onely that as it is said the Lord cannot bring an action of debt but is onely to distraine for the amerciament in this Court 2 H. 4. 24. For by the Common Law he hath no authority to assesse amerciaments or Fines in a Court-Baron but the suitors for they are the Judges and not the Steward Leonards rep first part 299. If the Steward take a bribe or use partiallity in any case depending before him of which crime many are too culpable or if by his Patent he be obliged to keep Court at certain times of the year and failes thereof the Lord receiving prejudice thereby not otherwise or if he be by his Patent obliged to keep Court upon demand or request to be made by the Lord and upon request and demand by the Lord he refuseth these and the like cases will make him subject to a forfeiture Co. of Copyholds fo 146. c. Of the Fees of the Court-Baron AS for the Fees of this Court they much differ and are by Law what they have been by custome time out of minde For some take the same Fees as are taken in the County court And other Courts take the Fees which follow The Stewards Fees FOr entring every Essoyne 00-00-02 Entering every action 00-00-02 Every Order entered 00-00-04 Entering a Declaration if it be large then more 00 00-04 Every Processe 00 00 04 Entering every plea or answer 00-00 04 Every Continuance 00-00-02 Every wager of Law and entry 00 00-02 Warrants for witnesses and summoning Juries 00-00-04 Every Non-suite and detraxit 00 00-04 Entering the Judgement 00 00-04 Satisfaction acknowledged 00-00 02 For removing and certifying a cause 00-06-08 The Bayliffs Fees FOr every Summons and entrance 00-00-08 For executing every Processe 00-00-04 For every shilling upon Judgment 00-00-01 For summoning the Jury 00-01-00 For summoning of Witnesses upon a Warrant 00 00-04 For every Oath 00 00-02 If there be Attorneyes then their Fees are FOr every cause if it be heard 00-01-00 For drawing the Declaration 00-00-06 For every Court the cause dependeth after he is reteined 00-00-06 See more in the Fees of the County Court The Oath of the Bayliff of a Mannor YOu shall swear that you shal well and truly serve his Highness the Lord Protector and the Lord of this Monnor for the year to come in the Office of Bayliff of the same Mannor and you shall duly and truly gather all such rents revenues or other yearly profits as shall be extracted out unto you and therefore you shall make and yield up a true account at the end of the said year and in every thing you shall well and honesty behave your self in the said office during the time aforesaid So help you God c. The Bayliff must be sworn before the Court end The form and method of Presentments which are to be drawn by the Steward I shall not trouble you with being copiously performed by Mr. Wilkinson in his office of Sheriffs fo 218 219 220 c. onely take these subsequent for methods sake The finding of the death of a Tenant and of a Surrender made to the use of his Will with an admission of the Tenant according to the Will THe Homage do further present that A. B. the elder Copyhold tenant of this Mannor dyed after the last Court and that he the said A. B. before his death that is to say the tenth day of May in the year c did surrender into the hands of the Lord of this Mannor by the hands of C. D. Copyhold Tenant of the said Mannor all and singular his Copyhold lands Tenements and Hereditaments holden of this Mannor to the behoofe and use of his Testament and last Will. And now at this Court came E. F. the eldest son of the said A. B. and doth bring here into the Court the Testament and last Will of the said A. B. bearing date c. before G. H. Deputy Commissary of I. A. in and through the whole Arch Deaconry of W. approved the tenor of which said Will as to the Copyhold lands doth follow in these words that is to say Item I give unto E. my Son c. as by the said Testament and last Will of the said A. B. more at large appeareth And he doth crave of the grace of the Lord to be admitted to
Court that is to say the tenth day of May in the year c. did surrender into the hands of the Lord of this Mannor by the hands of S. N. Copyhold Tenants of this Mannor in the presence of I. G. and G. F. likewise Copyhold Tenants of the said Mannor all his Copyhold lands and tenements with the appurtenances holden of this Mannor to the behoof and use of R. K. and of his heires assignes for ever who now came here into Court craveth of the Grace of Lord to be admitted to all and singular the aforesaid premisses with the appurtenances that is to say to one Messuage decayed with certain lands in C. containing by estimation four acres be it more or lesse with the appurtenances parcel of one Cottage and three acres of Land of the Tenement of H. with the appurtenances in the same of Skipton in the Tenement of Maydens late W. K. which the same I. S. lately took up to him his heires and assignes at a Court for the Mannor aforsaid holden after the surrender thereof made by I C. as at a Court for the Mannor aforesaid holden on Thursday the 17th day of May in the year c more plainly appeareth And he is admitted thereto Tenant to whom seisin is thereof delivered to hold to him his heires and assignes by the Rod at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid by the services c. and Rent of 2 s by the year saving the Right c. And he doth give to the Lord for a Fine c and doth do to the Lord Fealty c. A Presentment made in Court of an agreement made between a son and his mother touching her Dower and the mothers release of her Dower AND afterwards in this Court came the said N. B and E. B. widow relict of the said R B. and do give here intelligence to the Court that they are agreed between themselves of and for the Dower of the said E B. in the premises according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid whereupon the said E B. present here in Court doth remise and release into the hands of the Lord aforesaid all her Dower and title of Dower and demand which to her doth belong according to the custome of the Mannor of and in all and singular the Copyhold land and tenements holden of this Mannor which late were the said R B. sometimes her husband to the behoof and use of N B. in his full and peaceable possession thereof now being and of his heires and assignes for ever so that is to say that the said E B. from henceforth may not require claim and challenge any Dower of in or to the premises or any parcel thereof according to the custome of the said Mannor but thereof and of and from all action and demand of such Dower concerning the premises shall be for ever barred and excluded by this inrolment And for this remise and release the said N B. doth give to the said E B. 210 l. of lawful money of England And he gave to the Lord for a Fine c. for the release aforesaid c. The Quest of Office do say upon their Oath that T G. hath incroached with his ditch upon the Common of H. G. towards the milking yard of his Messuage therefore he is in mercy as it is over his head And it is commanded him to reform the said incroachment on this side the Feast of St. Michael the Archangel next coming upon pain as over his head Also they say that S. A. hath forfeited his pain of 5 s. upon him imposed at the last Court for that he after the last Court and after notice to him to the contrary given by the Bayliff of this Mannor hath suffered his swine to go out and pasture upon the Common pasture of H. against command thereof to him to the contrary given A presentment for an offence done and a charge to the Jury to enquire and further day given for giving their verdict WHereas W. S. and G. B. Lords of the Mannor of R. have lately cut down one Oak lately growing at the West end of a certain Pightel called B. Pightel of the Demesne of this Mannor in the Copyhold tenure of F. W. and at this Court it was given in charge to be enquired of by the homage and they to give their verdict of and upon the premises The same homage do desire day for giving in their verdict until the next Court for that they are not yet thereof advised c. And they have c. I. A. Copyhold Tenant of this Mannor doth desire to be admitted to a Fine for respite of Suite of Court to be done and he is admitted for 4. d. A Fine desired for respite of suite to be done WHereas at the last Court it was given in charge to the homage to enquire and give their verdict of and concerning the cutting down of one oak lately before then growing at the West end of a certain pightel called B. pightel of the Demesnes of this Mannor in the Copyhold tenure of F. W. by W. S. and G. B. Lords of the Mannor of R. late before that time cut down and at the said Court day was further given until this Court the Jurors of this Inquisition do now say upon their oathes that as well by the testimony of R. A one of the Tenants of this Mannor to this specialy sworn as of the certain knowledge of some of the homage now sworn that the aforesaid F. W. and all those whose estate the said F. hath in the aforesaid Copyhold pightel from time to time by the space of sixty years now last past have quietly and without contradiction cut taken carryed away and enjoyed all the wood from time to time by the space of sixty years growing on the part of the way and at the West end of the said pightel and that the hedges of the said pightel aforesaid by all the said space were placed and did adjoyn to the said Oak and that the greater part of the thickness of the Oak did reach it self towards the said way and further they say that there never was any ditch where the Oak aforesaid did grow And they further say of the testimony of the said R. A. that the said R. A. in times past having in his occupation the pightel aforesaid from time to time by diverse years did gather and had the Acrons of the Oak aforesaid without any contradiction To the Court came I. W. and R. his Wife and present here in Court in their proper person and the said R. by the Steward of the said Court being solely and secretly examined and consenting did surrender into the hands of the Lord of the same Mannor and did remise release and altogether for them their heires and assignes quit claim to the behoof and use of S. N. and his heires all their right title state use interest and demand
whatsoever which they ever had now have or hereafter may have or they or either of them may have according to the custome of the same Mannor of in or to seven Acres of land with one Messuage parcel of the tenement called S. and of in and to two acres of Copy-hold land of the Tenement of W. c. which said premises the said S. lately had and took up and now holdeth to him and his heires after Surrender thereof made by I. W. as at the Court there holden on Wednesday the 21. day of March in the year c. more at large appeareth to the behoof and use of the aforesaid S. N and of his heirs so that is to say that neither the aforesaid I. W. and R. nor either of them nor their heirs nor the heirs of either of them from henceforth may require claim or challenge any estate Right title Dower and demand thereof to be had from henceforth shall be altogether barred and excluded and either of them is barred and excluded by this present surrender release and quit claim and for this surrender remise and release the said S. doth give a Fine to the Lord c. A Surrender of Copyhold in Court with the admission of the tenant accordingly TO this Court came A B. gent. Copyhold Tenant of this Mannor and present here in Court did surrender into the hands of the Lord of the same Mannor two acres and a half of land lying in two pieces in C. be it more or less whereof the first peece doth lye between c. and the other peece is accounted for half an acre and lyeth c. which said two acres and a half the said A. B. late in the Court did take up to him his heires and assignes after surrender made thereof by I W. as at the Court here holden on Friday the sixteenth day of May in the year c. more plainly appeareth to the behoofe and use of I. W. and R. his wife and the heires of the said I. W. which said I W. and R. present here in Court do desire of the grace of the Lord to be admitted to the aforesaid two acres half of land according to the form and effect of the Surrender aforesaid and they are thereunto admitted tenants to whom seisin thereof is delivered to hold to the said I. W and R. and to the heires of the said I W. of the Lord of the Mannor aforesaid by the Rod of the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Monnor aforesaid by the services c. and the rent of 2 s by the year saving the Right c. and he doth give to the Lord a Fine and the said I W. hath done Featly to the Lord c. A surrender and Lease made in Court with the examination of the Wife AND afterwards at this Court came the aforesaid I. S. and M. his Wife and present here in Court and the said M. being solely and secretly examined by the Steward of the same Court and consenting did surrender remise and release into the hands of the Lord of the Mannor aforesaid all their right state title possession Dower and demand of them the said I. S. and M. of in and to all and singular the premisses aforesaid with the appurtenances to the behoose and use of the said R. K. and his heires and assignes for ever in his full and peaceable possession of the premisses now being so that is to say that neither the said I. S. and M. or either of them from henceforth shall require claime or challenge any right title Dower or demand of in or to the premisses or any part or parcel thereof but of and from all action right title Dower or demand thereof to be had for ever hereafter shall be barred and excluded by this inrollment And the said I. S. for the said remise and release doth give to the Lord a fine c. A Surrender of Lands made in Mortgage upon condition for the payment of money with the admission of the Mortgagee by her Attorney and the Fealty respited AND immidiatly after the same Court the aforesaid N. B. present here in Court did surrender into the hands of the Lord aforesaid by the hands of his Steward of the same Mannor one piece of Land containing by estimation two acres of arable Land lying between the Lands of the Mannor of R. late of N. B. of the West part and the lands c. together with the wayes and pathes to the same belonging and used which said piece of Land R. B. the Father of the said F. whose heire he is late had to him his heires and assignes amongst other things after the Surrender thereof made by W. B. and E. his Wife as at a generall Court with a Leet there holden on Thursday next after c. in the yeare c. appeareth to the behoofe and use of F. D. one of the daughters of N. D. Gent. and of the heirs and assignes of the said F. under this forme and condition that if the said N. B. his heirs executors or administrators or any of them shall pay or cause to be payd to the said F. D. her heires executors administrators or assignes at the mansion house of the said R. B. in H. in the County of York Gent. the summe of twenty pounds of good c. in or upon the twenty eighth day of October next following after the title of this Court that then the said surrender shall be void and of none effect or vertue and that then also it shall be lawfull for the said N. B. his heires and assignes to re-enter into the said piece of Land and the same as in his former estate to have againe repossesse and re-enjoy the said surrender or any thing to the contrary notwithstanding and upon this the said F. by C. W. her Attorney in this behalfe is admitted thereto tenant and Seisin is delivered to the said F. her heires and assignes under the condition aforesaid and in manner and forme aforesaid by the Rod at the Will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid by the services c. saving the right c. And he doth give the Lord for a fine c. and Fealty is respited untill c. A Surrender of Lands made presently in Court ANd afterwards sitting in the same Court the aforesaid F. W. present in Court did surrender into the hands of the Lord of the same Mannor in the aforesaid Close containing by estimation five acres called L. to the behoofe and use of C. W. his Brother and to the heires and assignes of the said C. to which said C. seisin thereof is delivered to hold to him his heires and assignes by the Rod at the will of the Lord according to the Custome of the same Mannor by the services c. saving the right c. And he doth give to the Lord for a fine c. And doth therefore Fealty to the Lord
b. A Bayliffe need not shew his precept when he cometh to execute it upon any man Yet upon the arrest he ought to declare the contents of it But if a Bayliffe be specially deputed or one that is not a known Officer he must shew the warrant to the party Co. 9. 69. 21 H. 7. 23. 37. Yet the special Bayliff is not obliged to shew it without demand 8 E. 4. 14. 14 H. 7 9. Co. ibidem If a Bayliffe by vertue of a Precept from the old Sheriffe after his discharge shall arrest a man this arrest is tortious and an Action of false Imprisonment lyeth both against the Sheriff and the Officer Cromp. 205. b. Notwithstanding the ground or maxime of Law that Dies dominicus non est juridicus and that no judiciall Act ought to be done on that day yet ministeriall Acts as to arrest and execute Processe are tollerated and allowed for an Officer ought to execute his office whensoever he can finde the party otherwise peradventure they shall never be executed and God forbid that things necessary should not be done on that day for bonum est bene facere Die Sabathi but this distinction and exception is taken away by a late Act made in the long Parliament In all cases where the Processe concerns his Highnesse the Sheriffe or other Officer upon refusall after demand to open the doore may breake open the door of the house or use other meanes to get in to do execution But in case of a common person the Law doth not permit the Sheriffe c. upon request made and denial to break into the house of the Defendant to execute any Process at the sute of any subject for the great inconvenience that might ensue thereupon because if men aswell in the night as in the day should have their houses which in revera are their Castles and fortresses broken open upon pretence thereof it would incur great mischief and damage for by colour thereof upon any seigned suite the house of any man at any time might be broken open when the Desendant might be arrested elsewhere and so men should not be in safety and repose in their owne houses And although the Sheriff be an Officer of great authority confidence yet it appears by daily experience that his Highness Writs are served and executed many times by Bailifs who are generally persons of little or no value or credit and therefore not to be trusted with the breaking open and ransacking of houses upon every slight occasion See Co. 11. 82. a. Lewis Bowles Case He ought In propria persona foure times a yeare to proclaime the Statute of Winchester within every Hundred of his Bayliwick and in all Faires and Markets by his Bayliffs 7 R. 2. cap. 6. 13 E. 1. cap. 1. 28 E. 1. cap. 17. The Statute provided against unlawfull games is likewise to be proclaimed foure times in the yeare in every Market and Faire within the County 33 H. 8. cap. 9. We will now handle the other Ministeriall part of his office and that as he is Custos vitae legis which extends to his doing Execution after a tedious and long spun sute which is the very life and spirit of the Law And this is divided into severall branches or kindes of Executions viz. Statute Merchant Statute Staple Recognizance Elegit Capias ad satisfaciendum Fieri facias c. Levari facias Of the last foure Executions two are by the Common Law viz. 1 Fieri Facias 2 And Levari facias And two by the Statute viz. 1 Elegit And 2 Capias ad satisfaciendum 22 Assize 47. And note that Execution by the Statute doth not oust Execution by the Common Law no more then the Execution by one Statute ousts the Execution by another We are determined to insist upon all the seven in discovering their natures manner of executing them c. And first of the Statute Merchant Statute Merchant IT is defined by West part 1. Symb. L. 2. Sect. 151. to be a Bond or Obligation of Record acknowledged before one of the Clerkes of the Statutes Merchant and Mayor and chiefe Warden of the City of London Yorke c. or before the Bayliffs of any Borough or other sufficient men for that purpose appointed sealed with the seale of the Debtor or Recognizor and of the Protector which consists of two parts the greater is kept by the said Major or chiefe Warden c. And the lesser part thereof by the said Clerks The forme of which you may see in Fleta lib. 2. cap. 64. c. And if the Debt be not paid at the day the proceeds upon it to have the fruits and effects thereof is not like to the procceeding in other cases or suits upon Obligations c. to reduce them to judgement but as they are in their owne nature much like to the nature of a Judgement so is the proceeding and Execution thereupon much like to the proceeding and execution upon a Judgement And therefore the Conusee may bring an Action of Debt upon a Statute or he may assoon as the same is forfeited have a present execution of it after this manner He must bring his Statute to the Mayor and Clerke or other Officer before whom it was acknowledged And there if they finde the Record of it and the day to be past for the payment of the money they are to apprehend and imprison the body of the Conusor if he be a Lay person and can be found within their jurisdiction and if he cannot be found there they are to certifie the Record into the Chancery which also if they refuse to do they may be compelled unto by a Certiorare And if that Certificate be faulty or Execution be not done upon it by reason of the death of the Conusee or otherwise the Conusee or his Executor or Administrator may have another Certificate And thereupon he shall have a Writ of Capias out of the Chancery directed to the Sheriff of the County where the Conusor lives to apprehend and imprison him if he be not a Clergy man and this is to be returned into the Common Pleas or Vpper Bench. And when the Conusor is taken he shall have time for a Quarter of a year to make his agreement with the Conusee and to sell his lands or goods to satisfie the Conusee And for that purpose he may sell his lands or goods although he be in prison and his sale is good and lawfull And if in that time he do not satisfie the Conusee or if upon the Capias the Sheriff return a Non est inventus then by a Writ or by divers Writs if the Lands or goods lie in divers Counties called an Extendi facias then all his Lands and goods shall be delivered by the Sheriff to the Creditors upon a reasonable Extent to hold untill the debt be paid And if the Jurors
or Appraisors upon the Extendi facias over-value the Lands or goods in favour to the Debtor the Conusee hath no remedy but by motion in that Court where the Writ is returnable at the Return day or at least the same term wherein the Writ is returnable to desire that the Appraisors may take the Lands or goods at the rate they have valued them in the same manner as the Conusee is to have them But if the Conusee accept of the Lands and goods from the Sheriff or suffer the term to passe wherein the Writ is returnable he is too late and hath no remedy at all And if the Appraisors do under-value the Lands or goods in savour to the Debtee it seems the Conusor hath no remedy at all for he may at any time pay all or the residue of the debt and damages unlevied and have his Lands again if he please Yet neverthelesse the body of the Debtor shall remain in prison until the Debt be paid And if there be Sureties they shall receive no damage so long as the Debt may be fully levied of the goods of the Debtor Note that upon the Statute-Merchant or Staple all the Fee-simple lands which the Conusor had at the time of the said Statute acknowledged or at any time after shal be liable to the said Statute to whom soever they be afterwards sold by alienation Feofment or otherwise Stat. de Mercator 13 E. 1. 27. c. 9. 23 H. 8. Co. 3. 12. But if the Debtor die the body of his heir shall not be taken but his Lands in Fee that descend to him by the Conusor shall be taken as aforesaid if he be of full age or when he shall attain full age until the said debt be levied Stat. ibid. Copyhold Lands are not liable nor shall be extended Nor lease for term of life But Lease for term of years and all other goods and chattels of the Conusor or Debtor are liable and shall be extended which the Conusor hath in his own possession and to his use at the time of the Execution sued or awarded But goods demised pawned or pledged may not be taken in Execution for his debt that demised or pledged them during the time or term that they were demised or pledged 22 E. 4. fo 10. 34 H. 8. Br. Pledg 28. also goods distrained for rent amerciament damage feasant c. and are impounded in custodia legis during the time that they are so may not be taken in Execution See Br. Pledg 28. If the Conusor of a Statute-Merchant or Staple c be taken and die in Execution yet the Conusee shall have execution of his lands and goods Co. 5. 86 87. Fitz. 246 b. or if the Conusor be taken in Execution and escape yet his goods and lands shall be taken and extended upon by the said Statute for the escape and the action that the Plaintiff had against the Sheriff for the escape is no satisfaction of the debt Certificate of a Statute-merchant was sued forth and Execution sued in the same County the Sheriff returned Non est inventus for which the Plaintif sued another Certificate to the Major by reason of which the party was taken it was holden that the second Certificate was not grantable yet the party taken would not be set at liberty by 28 E. 3. 91. Execution 93. Where there are several Certificates in divers Courts upon one Statute Execution sued in the one shall not stay that in the other because they are intended severall Statutes but it seems he may sue to the Major to certifie if there be another Statute or not and so be helped 29. Ass 29. and because where a Certificate is sued in the Common Pleas and the same Plaintiff sues another in the Vpper Bench and the Iustices were certified by the Major that all was but one Statute the parties caused the Record to come out of the Common Pleas into the Vpper Bench and then a Capias shall issue out against the Conusor and yet one Conusor was taken before in the Common Pleas but it appeared that he afterward escaped 29 Ass 41. A Statute which was certified for the Testator shall by a speciall Writ be certified for the Executor F N B. 132. so where it is not sufficiently certified before so where the party keeps it in his hands so where the first Certificate is lost and if the Major will not certifie it a Certiorari shall be directed unto him F N B. 244. The Major of the Staple hath power to hold plea of things done in the Staple and upon a Statute acknowledged before him execution may be sued or in the Chancery at the pleasure of the party 9 H. 6. Iurisdiction 6. Upon a Statute Merchant a Capias issued out of the Chancery returnable in the Common Pleas the Sheriff did return Non est inventus Now Capias extendi facias shall not issue out of the Common Pleas without shewing the Statute to the Justices although he had shewed the same in the Chancery before and if the Sheriff hath returned Cepi corpus and hath the body here if he do not shew the Statute the party shall be discharged although it be lost but upon a Statute Staple he must shew the same upon the Capias awarded but not afterwards because in the same place 37 H. 6. 6 7. It was holden that if a Statute be certified the Plantiff shall have Execution without shewing of it but if he doth not shew it at the day of the return the other shall be at large although he have Execution of the body of one or of all the Defendants 26H 6. Execution 6. See the Stat. of 5 H. 4 cap. 12. Vavasor said that he saw where the Recognisee died and a stranger came in his own name and shewed the Statute and had Execution although the other came not in proper person and upon a Statute made to two if one come with it he shall have Execution in both their names and it is a common course that every stranger who comes with the Statute shall have Execution upon it in the name of the Recognisee 12 E. 4. 10. 11. Execution 14. And upon Non est inventus returned upon the Certificate where the Plaintiff died his Executors shewed the Statute and had Execution of it 17 E. 3. 31. But see 18 E. 3. 10. he shall not have it without a Scire facias vide Eliz Dyer c. Conusee of a Statute Merchant had it certified in the Chancery and thereupon had a Capias upon it and died upon the shewing of the Statute his Executors had a Scire facias The opinion was that if a man sue Execution of a Statute Merchant in divers Counties and in each for the portion viz. 20 l. in the one and 20 l. in the other County yet upon Nihil returned in one County he shall have Execution of the whole in the other
the heire of the Lands and Tenements of the said A. Co. 3 15. Usually the omission of words make the return invalid as where the returne was The residue of this Writ appeares in a certaine schedule c. For the residue of the Execution of this Writ this is insufficient and vitious 19 H. 6. Fitz. Ret. 14. For by 3 H. 7. 11. a. Brook Ret. 88. the returne of the Sherif ought to be certaine to every intent and he is obliged to take knowledge of the Law in making his returne And therefore in a Scire facias to L. B. Master of the Free Grammer-school of Skipton c. and to the Scholars of the same c. he returned That he made knowne to the Master c. And did not say that he made known to L. B. Master c. And likewise he omitted Scholars which return was insufficient and void See Coo. 8. 127. 128. 10. E. 4. 15. The Sherif upon a Capias returned that he arrested the Defendant at S. and would have carried him to the Goal and that A. B. rescued him which return was holden invalid because he did not shew at what place A B. made the rescue for it shall not be intended the place where the arrest was ret 97. By the opinion of Iennie 3 E. 4. If a Writ be returned thus The answer of the Sheriff of C. and sheweth not the Sherifs name it is no good return 9 E. 4. 19. Br. 54 and by the 11 H. 7. 10. a. b. the name of the County ought to be entred in the margent or over the head of the return In a Scire facias the Sherif returneth I have made known to A. B. in manner and form as this Writ exacteth and requires and said not To the within named A. B. c. and yet this was holden per curiam to be good for note these words as this writ exacteth c. doth amount to the within named or the within mentioned or written See 2 H. 4. 13. and 3 H. 4. 9. Br. 28. Fitz. 44. Habere facias seisinam Upon a grant and render at the Plures the Sheriff did returne mandavi ballivo who did nothing because the parties to the Fine had nothing and the Writ of covenant was not sued in the Liberty nor came to him to be executed upon which a non omittas was awarded 8 E. 3. 12. upon the like writ the Sherif returned that he could do nothing by reason of the resistance of A B. others and he was amerced twenty marks because he did not take posse comitatus and an alias awarded and also a Writ to attach A. B. who was taken and pleaded not guilty and prayed a Writ against the Sheriffe to answer his false return Hil. 19 E. 2. Execution 147. Waste was assigned in W. the returne must not be That he came unto W. but that he came to the place wasted 27 H. 8. Br 2. The Sherif returned That by vertue of a Precept c. he took the body of A. B. c. and exception was taken because the return was not by vertue of a Writ c. yet it was holden to be a sufficient return for the Sherif may take one in Westminster Hall by the mandate of the Justices without any Writ The Sherif returned I have not found the party c. for he is not to be found and the party thereupon outlawed assigned this for Error and not to be amended Fitz 19. The Sheriff returned that he hath commanded the Bayliff of Slaincliff in the third person for I have commanded the Bailiff c. in the first person and was amerced for it 21. Ass 17. If a Sherif do not return a Capias in Processe the arrest is tortious and an action of false imprisonment lieth against him by him that was arrested and likewise the Plaintif shall have an action against him Littleton 18. E. 4. 9. Br. Trespass 339. Br. false imprisonment 5. 7. 12. But if a Capias ad satisfaciendum be not returned it is sufficient if the execution be duly executed and the Plaintif satisfied yet if he levy the money or debt but neither returneth the Writ nor payeth the money to the Plaintif he is chargeable to the Plaintif in an action of accompt c. and to the Defendant in an action of trespass Co. 5. 90. And the Plaintif may have his Execution renewed against the Defendant and the Defendant is left to his action against the Sherif Where a man hath liberty to return Writs as in the Honour of Pontefract in Yorkshire c. and to execute them c. if there the Sherif or his Officer shall enter the Liberty and execute any processe there the Lord of the Liberty shall have an action of the case against him Fitz. 95. b. In a Scire facias to execute a Judgment or Fine the Sherif must return the names of the Summoners 3 H. 7. 8. Br. Ret. 86. Upon the return of a Jury he is to return issues upon every person impannelled and returned by him ibidem Upon a Replevin the Sherif returned that the cattel were in such a strong place that he could not make deliverance for which return he was amerced because he might have taken Posse comitatus and so made deliverance Br. 119. or if he should return a resistance the like 13. E. 3. c. 39. In a Scire facias against the Husband and Wife the Sherif returneth that they are divorced and therefore amercied for Persons that are divorced may have garnishment quaere vide 1 H. 6. 2. Br. 63. Upon a Fieri fac against Executors the Sheriff returneth that they had sold the goods of the party deceased before the Writ purchased c. for which he was amerced for he should have taken other goods of the Executors to the value thereof c. 14 H. 4. 12. Br. 41. Upon a Fieri fac against Executors the Sheriff returned nulla bona c. and upon this return an entry was made in the Roll because that testatum est that the Executors had sold divers goods of the Testator and converted the money to their own use a Writ was awarded to the Sherif to enquire by the oaths of good men of his Bailiwick what goods which were the Testators the day of his death were wasted by the Executors by force of which Writ the Sherif had an Inquisition by which it was found that divers goods of the Testator to the value of the debt recovered were wasted by the Executors And this was returned in Court upon which the Plaintif sued a Scire facias against the Defendant to shew cause wherefore execution should not be awarded against the defendant of his own proper goods And upon two Nihils the Court awarded Execution Co. 5. 32. An Outlawry returned in London in these words At the Hustings holden in Guild Hall in the City of London such a day A.
B. exacted was and appeared not this is no good return because there are two Hustings in London the one of Common Pleas the other is of Pleas of Land and therefore in such case the return must be at the Hustings of the Common Pleas c. otherwise it is invalid for that the same may have double intendment An Exigent was returned At my County held at the Castle of Y. the first time exacted was c. And because the County was not set downe it was holden erroneous If the Sheriffe returne that the party hath rendered himselfe upon the Exigent and hath not the body he shall be amerced If the Sheriffe return a Cepi Corpus upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum and hath not the body he shall not only be amerced but the Plaintiff may have his Action against the Sheriff for an escape for so is he concluded by his return Br. ret 107. If upon processe against the Husband and Wife and the Sherif returns that he hath taken them and the husband appears at the day but not the wife the Sherif shall be amerced Upon a Writ to enquire of Damages the Sherif returneth that the Enquest or Jury gave or found no damages the Sherif shall not be amerced for this default of the Jury for the Sherif is but amerced where he returneth the Writ falsely or insufficiently of himselfe whereas here he returned it as the Jury had presented it 44 E. 3. 3. Br. 20. If the Sherif in a writ of Account or Debt shall returne upon one that he is not found nor hath lands c. by which he may be distrained c. whereupon a Capias is awarded against him and he thereupon taken whereas he had sufficient lands or goods and chattels then the party may have his action upon the Case against the Sherif directed to the Coroners for such false return It is not good to returne upon a Replevin that there is no such goods or chattels 5 H. 7. 27. Or in a writ to deliver goods upon a Detinue it is insufficient to say that there are no such goods Or upon a Habere fac seisin that there is no such lands Ibid. If the Sheriffe returne upon any person I have taken the body of c. or he hath rendered himselfe c. the Sheriffe shall be charged to have the bodies of the said persons at the dayes of the Returns or the Writs of Precepts c. 23 H. 6. Cap. 10. And so was the pristine Common Law of this Nation Note that all processe against any person directed to the Sheriffe ought to be duely and truly executed fifteen dayes before the return of the Writ Br. attach 15. 6. and returned into such Courts out of which such processe shall be awarded I shall not trouble you with many formes of Returnes being already amply performed by Master Kitching in his Jurisdiction of Courts onely take these few select ones which follow THe within named A. B. is not found in my Bayliwick R. S. Esq sheriff By vertue of this Writ I have taken the body of the within named A. B. whose body before the Justices within mentioned at theday and place within contained I have ready as within it is commanded R. S. Esq sheriff By vertue of this Writ I have taken the body of the within named whose body before his Highnesse at the day and place within contained I haye ready c. as within it is commanded R. S. Esq sherriff By vertue of this Writ I have taken the body of the within named A. B. whose body before the Justices within mentioned at the day and place within mentioned I have ready as within it is commanded And I further certifie the same Justices that the other Defendants are not found in my Bayliwick R. S. Esq Sheriff By vertue of this Writ I have taken the body of the within named A. B. whose body remaineth so sicke weake and infirme in prison under my custody that for fear of the death of the same A. B. his body before the Justices within mentioned at the day and place within contained I cannot have as by this Writ it is commanded R. S. Esq Sheriff For the execution of this Writ to me directed to be done I have commanded the Baylif of the liberties of the hundred of B. in my County of Suff. who hath full execution of all VVrits Warrants Mandats and Precepts executable within the said Libertie and retorne thereof within which Liberty the execution of this VVrit wholly resteth to be done which Bailif to wit I. W. Knight if there be no retorne of the Sherifs warrant or an insufficient retorne made then thus scil hath given me no answer But if the Bailif of the Liberty retorne that he hath taken the body of C. D. then thus scil answereth me that he hath taken the body of the within named C. D. whose body before the Justices within mentioned at the day and place within contained he hath ready as by this writ it is commanded R. S. Esq Sherif By vertue of this VVrit to me directed by T. G. and J. H. honest and lawfull men of my Bailiwick I have given notice to the within named A. B. that he be before the Justices within mentioned at the day and place within contained to shew c. as within it is commanded R. S. Esq Sherif The within named A. B. hath nothing in my Bailiwick by which I may give him notice neither is he found in the same R. S. Esq Sheriff By vertue of this VVrit to me directed by T. G. and I. H. honest and lawfull men of my Bayliwick I have given notice to the within named A. B. that he be before the Justices within mentioned at the day and place within contained to shew c. As within it is commanded And I further certifie the same Justices that the other Defendant hath nothing in my Bayliwick by which I may give him notice neither is he found in the same R. S. Esq Sherif The within named A. B. is not found in my Bayliwick And in all places within my Bayliwick as well within Liberties as without I have made publique proclamation that the above named A. B. personally appeare before his Highness in the high Court of Chancery at the day and place within contained to answer his Highnesse touching a contempt and further to do and receive what the said Court shall thinke fit in this behalfe as by this Writ I am commanded R. S. Esq Sheriff The within named A. B. hath nothing in my Bayliwick by which he may be attached R. S. Esq Sheriff The within named A. B. is attached by pledges Iohn Doo and Rich. Roo R. S. Esq Sheriff The Manucaptorie of the within named A. B. Iohn Doo Rioh Roo Issues 10 s. R. S. Esq Sheriff The execution of this