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A86112 The grounds of the lawes of England; extracted from the fountaines of all other learning: and digested methodically into cases, for the use and benefit of all practicers, and students. With a commixtion of divers scattered grounds concerning the reasonable construction of the law. / By M.H. of the Middle-Temple. Hawke, Michael. 1657 (1657) Wing H1169; Thomason E1569_1; ESTC R209197; ESTC R209200 362,003 535

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generall words imply no certainty and with that accordeth 21. E. 4. If a man be bound to be nonsued in all Actions that he hath against him in the Common Bench he may say that he hath no action therein otherwise if the condition be particular to wit that he shall be non-sued in a Formedon c. so as that it appeareth that generall words imply no certainty neither do they conclude any person to say that he hath nothing there vide ibidem plura Cok. lib. 8.78 a. Bospols Case In an arbitrament when the submission is generall of all Actions and Demands c. that may well stand with the generality of the words that there was but one cause depending in controversy between them For generall speeches imply no certainty and the awa●d for one is good notwithstanding the generality of the words for though there were many matters in controversy yet if one onely was made known to the Arbitrator he may make an award of it For the Arbitrator is in place of a Judge and his office is to determine secundum alligata probata the duty of the parties which are greived and know their particular greifes is to make known the causes of controversy to the Arbitrator for they are privy to them and the Arbitrator is a stranger and every one is to do that which lyeth in his knowledge but when the condition is in speciall and with a proviso and condition that an award shall be made of the premises or words which amount to so much there the Arbitrator ought to make Arbitrement of all or else the award is void Generalibus semper specialia derogant Reg. f. c. Derg 180. Quando charta continet generalem clausulam posteaque descen●it ad verba specialia quae clausulae generali sunt consentanea interpretanda est charta secundum verba specialia f. 134. b. in Edward Althams Case Which rule is almost word for word put and agreed of by both parties In. 7. E. 3. f. 10. Margery Mortimers Case to wit where a Deede speaketh by general words and then descendeth to special words if the words special agree with the words general the deed shall be understood according to the words speciall As if a man grant a rent in the mannor of P. to be taken in an hundred Acres of Land parcell of that Mannor with a clause of distresse in those hundred Acres the Rent shall issue out of the hundred Acres onely and the generall words shall be construed according to the words speciall so if a man grant a Rent and go no further those generall words shall create an estate for life but if the Hab●ndum be for years that shall qualify the words generall 7. E. 3. So if a man give Lands to one and his Heirs Habendum to him and the Heirs of his body He shall have onely an estate tayle and no fee expectant for the Habendum qualifieth the generall words precedent Ployd f. 541. a. A man maketh a Feoffment by Deede to one to have and to hold to him and his Heirs and if it happen that the feoffee dyeth without heire of his body that then the Land shall revert The generality of that gift to him and his Heires shall be corrected by the speciall branch after so as the Donee shall have but an estate tayle 13. R. 2. in Formedon Dyer 261. b. A man seised in fee deviseth all his Lands in one village and in one of the two Hamlets by name and there were two Hamlets in the said Village The opinion of divers Justices was that none of the Lands in the other Hamlet should passe for it is intendable that the intent and meaning of the devisor was that nothing more should passe then what he had expressed A. acknowledgeth a fine of the mannor of P. with an advowson and regrants the mannor with the Appurtenances the advowson shall not passe Temp. E. 1. F. title grants Ployd 173. b. If I give or lease all my Lands to one and stay there he shall have all my Lands in England but if I say further in the manner of Dale there it is now restrained but if the specialty limiteth a thing which is void and so appeareth it is otherwise as if I lease to one all my Lands in Dale which I have by descent of the part of my mother and in truth I have no Lands in Dale which I have by descent of the part of my mother if the Lessor have other Lands in Dale he shall not have those Ployd 160. a. A man giveth Lands to two Habendum to one for life and after his decease to the other and his Heirs the one shall have the entierly for his life onely notwithstanding the Joynture given in the Premisses by the better opinion in terme M. 8. E 3.427 Generalibus semp●r specialia insunt Reg. f. c. Specialls are alwayes contained in the generals and the universalls allwayes comprehend the particular● Ployd f. 68. a. The plurall number containeth the singular and more and therefore was it resolved by all the Judges That a pretensed right and title was within the penalty of the Statute of 32. H. 8. for the buying of pretensed rights and titles for pretensed rights and titles in the plurall number did containe a pretensed right and title in the singular number And whereas the Statute of 5 R. 2. c. 5. forbiddeth that none make entry into any Lands or Tenements unlesse in case where entry is given by the Law yet if one enter into a Tenement he shall be punished though the Statute speaketh in the plurall number and likewise whereas the Statute of 1. H. 5. speaketh of false Deeds in the plural number yet if one bring but one false Deed he shall be punished by the Statute as it is holden in many Bookes Ployd f. 467. b. The Statute of Gloucester giveth an Action of Waste against him which holdeth for years which is spoken in the plural number yet may it be taken for him which holdeth for a year or half a yeare vide ibidem plura Generalis clausula non porrigitur ad ea quae sunt specialiter comprehenfa Coke l. 8. 118. b. It is a ground and maxime in the Law that a generall clause is not extended to those things which are specially comprehended Doctor Bonhams Case by the Statutes of 10 14. H. 8. it was enactd that no man should exercise the faculty of Physike within the City of London or within seven miles of the said City unlesse he be admitted thereunto by the President and Colledge of the faculty of Physike and there is another speciall clause contained in the said Acts that any who evilly and not well exercise the said faculty c. shall be punished by Fine and imprisonment c. and it was adjudged that the said generall clause that none should exercise the said faculty of Physike unlesse he be admitted c shall not be extended to the speciall clause
words contrary to the simple intent as Tully saith in his Offices is calumnia quaedam ninis callida malitiosa Juris interpretatio ex quo illud summum jus summa injuria a kind of a calumny and malitious interpretation of the law from whence that saying proceeded the rigor of right is the extremity of injury As he putteth the example of one had made a truce for 130. daies with his enemy and in the night he plundered and depopulated his possessions because he said the truce was for daies and not for the nights which Cicero accounteth meere injury and injustice and admonisheth men to avoid the like interpretation of the law and to observe the intent of the words and certainly words are but testimonialls of the intent and therefore Ployd f. 107. b. It is said it is the offices of Judges to take and expound the words as the common people doe use them to express their intent according to their intent As a Lease was made for life and that after his decease the tenements redibunt to a stranger it shall be taken as a remanebunt because to that purpose it was there used and therefore by 18. E. 3. f. 28. It shall be taken by way of remainder So a lease for life the reversion to a stranger shall be taken as a remainder for the reason abovesaid 30. M. 1. ante 157. vide ibidem plura in Hills case And so Ployd f. 291. a. Where a covenant cannot be performed according to the words it shall be performed according to the intent as neere as may bee as in the case of Littleton where a man maketh a feoffment upon condition that the feoffee shall make an estate in speciall taile to the Feoffor and his wife and the heires of their bodies if the Baron dieth before the estate made the estate shall be made as neere to the condition as may be to wit to the feme for life without impeachment of wast the remainder to the issues in taile according to the first limitation and if the feme be dead then the feoffee ought to give the lands to the issues and the heires of the bodie of his father and his mother engendred If the words be performed and not the intent the agreement is not performed Ployd f. 291. b. according to the rule of the civill law leges non ex verbis sed ex mente sunt intelligendae lawes are not to be understood and construed by the words but by sense and meaning of the parties as where the Defendant was obliged upon condition that if his feoffees of his Mannor of W. should grant to the Plaintiff an annuall rent of forty shillings out of the said Mannor that then c. and he had three feoffees and two of them granted to the Plaintiff the rent There the words of the condition were performed for the feoffees had granted the rent and yet he had not performed the condition for all the Justices there held that all the feoffees ought to have granted the rent and so it should be sure for there the third might have the land by survivor and he might avoid the rent and also more then two parts of the Mannor were not charged with the rent and so the intent is not performed though the words be M. 22. H. 6. f. 10. So if a man be bound to enfeoff me of the Mannor of D. and he maketh a feoffment ro another of parcell of it and then enfeoffeth me of the Mannor he hath performed the words but yet he hath not performed the intent which was that I should have had all the Mannor as it then was H. 3. H. 7. 4. So a remainder was limited to B. Si ipse vellet in-habitare residens esse if he would dwell and bee resident on the land during the terme there it is taken that if he was resident one week during the terme he had performed the words of the condition but not the intent for the intent was that hee should be resident all the terme 4. E. 6. ante 23. So an Abbot was Parson Emparsonee of a time c. and he had annuity for the time of which no memory runneth in right of the Parsonage and he as Abbot without naming himselfe Parson brought a Writ of annuity and counteth upon a prescription in him and his predecessors Abbots and the prescription traversed and found for the Plaintiff there every word of the Verdict is true and yet attaint lay against the Jury because he brought the Writ in the name of the Abbey and so claimed the annuity whereas he was not seised by that forme but as Parson and for that he did not claime as Parson they ought not to have found the issue with him and so the words of the Verdict and the intent of the Verdict did not agree in one M. 10. E. 4. f. 16. Ibidem in Chapmans case It is not requisite alwaies that the agreement shall be performed according to words because the intent is performed which is the principall point of the agreement Ployd f. 295. a. b As if a man be bound to pay a lesser summe upon a day certaine if I pay the summe before the day the condition is performed H. 10. H. 7. 24. So if the condition be in a Mortgage that I pay the money at such a place if I shall pay it at another place and the Mortgage accept of it it is well enough for the value is the effect So if a feoffment be made upon condition that if the feoffee doe not pay the Feoffor such a summe at such a day that then the feoffor shall enter If the feoffee before the day make a feoffment over and at the day doth not pay the summe there the second feoffee at the day may tender and pay the summe though the agreement was no other but that the first feoffee shall pay the summe Litt. vide ib. plura If a man make a feoffment on condition to enfeoff two in fee at such a time and before the time one dieth the feoffment ought to be made to the survivor and his heires onely for the intent which appeareth in the condition Ployd f. 345. 4. H. 7. f. 127. Every one who groundeth an Act with discretion hath an intention in the inception and neither beginneth any thing but to some end and in the progression hath the same intent and so in the consummation so as the same intention is the cause of every part and therefore the intention is principally respected in all humane acts and especially in those which concerne the disposition of our estates and in feoffments and grants A feoffment by deed of a Mannor with an advowson appendant and no livery made the advowson passeth not yet an advowson may pass without livery but the intention and the meaning was that the Mannor and it should pass together Finch Nomot 58. A bargaine and sale of Land and a reversion by deed not enrolled the reversion passeth
holdeth his Lands and things by the Lawes of the Land wherein hee liveth and this commonly called the law of proeprty Nihil dat quod non habet Arist nemo potest plus juris in alium transferre quam ipse habet Coke com f. 309. b it is a common erudition in the Law that no man can grant that hee hath not Perkins f 15. for that is requisite that he who by his contract shall make another possessor of any thing should bee the pro●rietor of the thing it selfe otherwise his contract is void Ployd f. 432 b. as if I possessed of an horse sell the Horse upon condition to another that he pay to mee at the feast of Christmas forty shillings for it and before the said feast I sell the horse to another and after the feast the first Vendee failes of payment by which I reseise the horse the second Vendee shall not have the horse for at the time of the second contract I had neither interest nor property nor possession of the horse but onely a condition which is not sufficient to make me able to contract for the property and possession therefore it is meerely void Ployden So if a man grant a rent charge out of the Mannor of Dale and in truth he hath nothing in the Mannor of Dale and after purchaseth the Mannor of Dale yet hee shall hold it discharged Perkins H. 15. So if one not seised of Lands maketh a Lease to another it is a good Plea for the Lessee to say that the Lessor had nothing in the Tenements at the time of the Lease Litt. and the reason of this is for that in every contract there must be quid pro quo for contractus est quasi actus contra actum and therefore if the Lessor had nothing in the land the Lessee hath not quid pro quo nor any thing for which he should pay his Rent and in that case he may plead that the Lessor non dimisit Coke Com. ibidem f. 41. b. vide ibidem plura If the Conusee of a Fine before any Attornement bargaineth and selleth the Signiory to another the Bargainee shall not distraine because the Grantor could not distrain for no man can transfer more right to another then he himselfe hath Coke Com. 309. b. Coke l. 6. f. 57. b. He that hath no seisin in the Land charged cannot give seisin of Rent vide plura Bredimans for no man can give that he hath not The King pardoneth one for making a bridge this is onely good for the fine and he must make up the Bridge because the Kings Subjects have interest in it 37. H. 8.4 Da tua dum tua sunt post mortem tunc tua non sunt Ployd 280. a. when one hath property in goods the property cannot be in him no longer then he liveth for after his death the goods belong unto another Nemo videtur rem amittere cujus propria non fuit Reg. I. C. no man can loose that of which he hath no property and therefore in a Replevin if the Defendant claim property the Sheriff cannot proceed for it is a rule in Law the property ought to be tryed by writ and therefore in this case where the tryall is by plaint the Plaintiff may have a writ de proprietate probanda directed to the Sheriff to trye the property and if thereupon it be found for the Plaintiff the Sheriff shall make deliverance Coke Com. f. 145. b. F. n. b. f. 77. If A. endict B. for stealing of Horses or other goods he must say de bonis catallis cujusdam A. For if there were no property there could be no stealing or injury for nemini vim facere videtur qui suo non alieno utitur Reg. I. c. Nemo reditum invito domino percipere possidere potest Coke Com. 303. b. no man can receive or possesse another mans Rents against the will of the Lord as if one hold of me by Rent which is service ingrosse and another which hath no right claimeth the rent and receiveth it of my Tenant by coertion of distresse or otherwise yet by the payment of my Rent to a stranger I cannot be disseised or ousted without my will or election but that I may distrain my Tenant for the Rent or have an assize against the ●ernor Lit. for a man cannot be disseised of a a Rent-service in grosse Rent-charge or Rent-seck by Attornment or payment of Rent to a stranger but at his election for the rule of the Law is no man can receive or possesse an other mans rent against his will Coke ibidem Quod meum est id amplius meum esse non potest Coke Com. f. 49. b. And therfore if lessee for years enter he is in actuall possession and then Livery cannot e made to him that is in actual possession whereby the Franke-Tenement or fee may inure to him in the remainder for that which is once mine cannot be more mine ibidem Thirdly From the Anteprecedents Aequivocum and Univocum AEQuivocum denoteth words of ambiguous and many significations which as Boetius signifies nothing nisi ad quasque res secundum voluntatem significantis applicetur unlesse they be applyed to the thing according to the will of him that declareth or expoundeth them of which the Law taketh notice and giveth these grounds and maximes Nobiliores benigniores presumptiones in dubijs sunt praeferendae Reg. P. C. And Coke l. 4. f. 13. b. Benignior sententia in rebus generalibus dubijs est praeferenda In doubtfull speeches and sentences the more favorable presumption and opinion is to be perferred As if one doth charge another that he hath forsworne himselfe by the Law it is not actionable for it may be he hath forsworne himself in usuall conversation but an action is onely maintainable against him that hath forsworn himself in Court of Record so ibidem f. 21. An Action upon the case was brought for these wordes for my Lands in Dallinson they seek my life adjudged not actionable because he may seek his life upon just cause which are the more favorable constructions So verba accipienda sunt in meliori sensu Hub. f. 106. Coke l. 4. f. 13. Wordes are to be taken at the best for the speaker though some of them cannot stand with that construction As thou art a Theefe and hast stolen a Tree it shall be adjudged of a Tree standing not felled which is not actionable But as it is said there in Hubberd 106. This rule holdeth not in Deeds and Pleas for in those words are taken more strongly against the speaker of which this reason may be given because commonly words in common language proceed of a sudden from choler and heat whereas words in Deeds and Pleas are grounded upon mature deliberation and consideration and therfore in Deeds this is a general ground Ambiguum pactum contra venditorem interpretandum est Reg. I. C. and Ambigua verba contra
the Counsellor what he should write who took paper and ink and writ notes breifly of his said will and every legacy that he had then declared and also the names of the Executors and went home to his house and immediatly with his own hands did write the last will and testament of B. and when he had written it he came againe to the house of the said B. with the said will to read it unto the said B. but then the said B. was dead and therefore the Counsellor delivered the said will to the Executor of B. who proved the same and after the wife of B. did enter into the tenements devised to her by the said will and the heire entred upon her and upon the generall issue it was the cleere opinion of all the Justices that it was a good will in writing according to the Statute of 32. H. 8. And as in Feoffments Grants Uses and Wills the intent shall be observed so every Statute ought to be taken according to the intent of those that made them where the words are doubtfull not uncertaine according to the rehearsall of the Statute Ployd f. 10. a. b. As in 4. E. 4. there was an information in the Exchequer that one shipped certain sacks of Wooll and had not found sureties according to the Statute of 14 E. 3. C. ultimo to wit to bring plate of Silver of two marks for every sack of Wooll and to take two marks of coyne againe for the bullion and there were two Statutes alledged to bar the said finding of sureties to wit 36. E. 3. C. 11. Where it is recited that the Commons of the Realme had granted to the King a great subsidy of every sack of Wooll for three yeares in consideration of which the King by the same Statute granted that after three years nothing shall be taken of the Commons but onely the ancient custome of halfe a marke of every sack c. and that also by the Statute of 45. E. 3. c. 4. It was established that no imposition or charge shall be put on Woolls other then the custome and subsidy granted to the King without assent of Parliament and if any were it should be repealed and holden for nothing but it was adjudged that the two last Statutes were not to discharge the bullion but onely the great subsidies and great charges upon Wools after the three years and the intents of the makers of the two last Statutes were not to discharge the bullion for all things within the generall words shall not be taken as the purview of the Statute but such thing as the makers of the Statutes meant so as the intent of the makers is judged by the words and shall abridge the generalty of them So the Statute of Wast is if any one make wast in Land which he holdeth ex dimissione c by lease yet if his estate be ex legatione by legacy he shall be punished by equity and the intent of the makers of the act So the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum restraineth men to make tenures of themselves yet there where the words are that every one shall hold of the Lord Paramount secundum quantitatem terrarum according to the quantity of their Lands it is taken and ought to be understood secundum valorem ter●a according to the value of the Lands vide ibidem plura And Ployd f. 57. b. It is an erudition in our Law that where the termes and letter of any Statute be obscure and difficult to be conceived there we ought to resort to the intent of the makers of the Statute vide ibidem plura Where the intent appeareth the Law will include words which are not apt from their proper and common signification to the intent Ployd 154. a. As if the Disseisee agree with the heire of the Disseisor who is by discent to confirme his estate and if he make them a Deed by these words Dedi concessi the Land to him and his heirs that cannot enure in his naturall sense for the nature of a dedi is to give one a thing which he had not before but because it cannot enure so it shall enure as a confirmation and so inclineth the word out of his proper signification to the intent and so 17. E. 3. f. 8. It is holden that a Mannor may passe by name of a fee de chivaler for if the intent was that the Mannor shall passe the Law shall adjudge the better to incline the word de chivaler to it and in 10. E. 4. f. 4. Pasche it was held by the better opinion that a man may plead a demise to him of Land for a yeare by the words to licence him to occupy the Land for a yeare and so may one apply a word out of his apt signification to another signification in performance of the intent of the matter And Ployd f. 142. Words shall be construed according to the minds of the parties where they are directed to a speciall intent and those which doe imply and containe the intent of the parties to be conditionall shall be sufficient to make a condition as well as the usuall words And therefore if a man make a Feoffment ad solvendum to pay 20 ● at such a time it is a condition for the matter sheweth that the intent of the Feoffor was to have twenty shillings for the Land So if a man maketh a Feoffment in fee to one to instruct his Son in such an Art it is a condition because the words purport such an intent and yet they are not usuall words vide ibidem plura in Brownings case But Ployd f. 162. b. Exception Though it be the rule of Bract. that words ought to be inclined to the intent yet non estregula quin fallat for one ought to have words apt for the meaning or else the meaning will be void for if a man will bend the Law to the intent of the party rather then the intent of the party to the Law it would maintaine barbarousnesse and ignorance to the decay of all erudition and diligence for if a man knew that what words soever they are his meaning should onely be thought on he would be more negligent for words and then such an incertainty would rise to discusse what was the meaning that he would bring in great confusion and therefore the phrases of speech commonly declare the intents of persons as if I give you a cup of Wine you shall not have the cup but if I give you an Hogshead of Wine you shall have the Hogshead because the phrase sheweth the intent Ployd f. 86. a. 27. H. 8 27. And therefore we shall see in many cases that the intent shall be destroyed where it accordeth not with the Law as 9. H. 6. f. 45. An Abbot and Covent by deed indented gave a croft to W. in fee and for that guift and grant the said William renunciavit toti communia quam habere consuevit averiorum
shall give notice of the said felony to some of the Inhabitants of any Village or Hamler next the place where the robbery was done and that if in their pursuit they take any of the Offenders that shall excuse them though they do not take all See there in that Statute the reason of the alteration Co. l. 6. f. 50. a. b. At the common Law a man that had once the benefit of the Clergy shall have it another time and so in infinitum which was remedied by the Act of 4 H. 7. So as the burning in the hand was not to other purpose but to notifie to the Judge whether he had had his Clergy before or no ibid. So if one be attainted at the Common Law for forging false Deeds the King cannot pardon it yet the King may pardon the corporall punishment in case of forgery in the Star-chamber because all Suites in the Star-chamber are but informations for the King though the Suit be exhibited by the party ibidem So before the Statute of 18 Eliz. c. 7. the King might in case of Inditement of Man slaughter pardon the Imprisonment 15 H. 7.9 but not in an appeal but after the Statute of 18 Eliz. by which it is provided that after Clergy allowed and burning in the hand the Prisoner shall presently be enlarged and delivered out of prison It was resolved that that Act did extend as well to the case of appeal as to the case of Inditements otherwise the party shall lawfully be discharged of his punishment and yet remain in perpetual prison ib. vide examen legum Angliae f. 29. Cessante ratione legis c●ssat lex Coke com f. 70. b. The reason of the Law ceasing the Law it self ceaseth As he that holdeth his land by Escuage when the King maketh a Voyage royall into Scotland to subdue the Scots then he that holdeth by the service of one Knights fee ought to be with the King conveniently arrayed for the War for forty daies c. yet needeth he not go with the King himself if he will find another man and this seemeth to be good reason for it may be he is languishing so that he cannot go nor ride Also an Abbot or another man of religion or a Feme-sole which hold by such services ought not go in proper person Littleton ibidem Quia multa In jure communi propter rationabilem causam omittenda sunt for many things for a reasonable cause are to be omitted If the King give lands to an Abbot and his Successors to hold by Knights service this had been good and shall do homage and fine a man but there was no wardship or releif or other incident belonging thereunto but if the Abbot and his Heirs had conveyed the land to a natural man and his heirs now the wardship releif or other incident belonged of common right to the King So if the King give lands to a Mayor and Comminalty and their successors to be holden in Knights-service the Patentee shall do no homage neither shall there be any wardship or releif onely they shall find a man but if they convey the land to any naturall man and his heirs now marriage homage ward releif or other incidents belong hereunto for the reason of the Law being changed the Law its self is changed and the immunity which was in respect of the body politique by conveyance over ceaseth Coke ibid. Qui rationem in omnibus quaerunt rationem subvertant Theophrastus Coke l. 2 f. 7.30 who do seek reason in all things overthrow reason As if a man make a Lease of Indenture for life of lands in severall Counties and maketh livery of seisin in one County and divers daies after he maketh livery in the other County yet an intire rent shall issue out of the land in both Counties and yet the livery by which the Estate passed was made at severall times and therefore it may be argued that presently by the first livery the rent issued out of it But the Law shall not adjudge by parcels in subversion of the intent and agreement of the parties but after all Acts are made in performance of the originall contract and agreement of the parties the Law shall adjudge upon all as done at one and the same time So if a man make a Charter of Feoffment with warranty and deliver the Deed to the Feoffee and after at another time make livery secundum formam chartae yet the Warranty is good and yet it may be objected that when the Deed was delivered no estate passed to which the warranty may be annexed nor no estate was in the Feoffee by which the Deed might enure and so by nice construction upon the distinction of time the warranty shall be subverted but the Deed which comprehended the warranty took effect presently by the delivery of the Deed before livery and seisin and therefore the sentence is true that who do seek reason in all things subvert reason ibidem SECT II. A Verbis legis non est recedendum Coke l. 5. f. 118. b. we ought not to go from the words of the Law Edriches casc A. deviseth rent with distress to B. for the life of C. the heire leaseth the land for life to D. the remainder to E. in see the rent is behind in the life of D. D. dieth C. dieth B. distraineth for the arrearages of E. in remainder and resolved that he shall be charged by the second branch of 32 H. 8. c. 37. which giveth a distress for the arrearages upon such lands out of which the said rents were issuing in such manner and form as if Cestuy que vie had been living And the Judges said that they ought not to make any interpretation against the express letter of the statute for nothing can so express the intent of the makers of the act as their direct words themselves for Index animi se●mo and it shall be perilous to give scope to make construction in any case against the express words when the intent of the makers appeareth not to the contrary and when no inconvenience upon it shall arise for we ought not to go from the words of the Law vide ibidem plura Coke l. 10 f. 105. a. b. If in an Assise so many of the Recognitors make default that there be not twelve the Justices of Assise cannot award Tales de circumstantibus for though the Justices of Assise are named in the said Act of 35 H. 8. as well as the Justices of Nisi prius yet insomuch as the said Act doth not give power to Justices of Assise or Nisi prius but where the tryall shall be by twelve men in any Writ of Habeas Corpora or Distringas with Nisi prius and it cannot be in an Assise for Assisae capiamur in proprio Comitatu and can never be taken by Nisi prius in proprio commitatu and no exposition can be made against the express words for that shall be viperina expositio quae
Dower and distraineth the tenant albeit the grant of Mesne was to acquit him against the Lord and his heires onely yet because she continued the State of her husband and the reversion remained in the heire this grant of the acquittall did extend to his wife for Qui haeret Quoties in verbis nulla est ambiguitas ibi nulla expositio contra verba ipsa fienda est Coke l. 7. f. 24. a. So often as there is no ambiguity nor doubt in the words there no exposition against the expresse words is to be made If A. by Deed granteth rent out of the Mannor of D. to have and receive it to him and his heires and further granteth by the same Deed that if the rent be behind that the grant shall distraine in the Mannor of S. both the Mannors are charged the one with the rent the other with the distresse for the rent the one issueth out of the Land and the other is to be taken upon the Land for here a rent is granted expresly to be issuing out of the Mannor of D. and the parties have expresly limited out of which Land the rent shall issue and in which the distresse shall be taken and the Law shall not make any exposition against the expresse words and intention of the parties when it can stand with the rule of Law for where there is no ambiguity in the words there is no exposition to be made contrary to the expresse words ibidem in Calvins case Exception Yet as Mr. Ploydon saith f. 18. b. The words of the Law of nature of the Law of the Realme and the Law of God will yeild and give place to some acts and things done against the words of the same Laws and that is when they are infringed to avoid greater inconveniences or for necessity or by conpulsion For inconvenience It is a rule in the Law that factum unius alteri nocere non debet no mans deed ought to hurt another but there is another maxime that it is better to suffer a mischeife then an inconvenience which is to be preferred before it Coke com 152. b. As if there be Lord Mesne and Tenant and the Tenant holdeth of the Mesne by five shillings and the Mesne holdeth over by the service of twelve pence if the Lord purchaseth the Tenancy the Mesnalty is extinct because when the Lord hath the Tenancy he holdeth of the Lord next parament to him and if he should hold of him that was Mesne then he should hold the same Tenancy immediately of two Lords which should be inconvenient and the Law will that we rather suffer a mischeife then an inconvenience Littleton so as the rule is regularly true res inter alios acta alteri nocere non debet what thing is acted among some must not hurt an other but with this exception unlesse an inconvenience should follow Coke ibidem So it is a Maxime in the Law that a warranty of a collaterall Ancestor if it descend upon him shall bar the heire as if A. disseise B. of Land and selleth the Land and the Alienee obtaineth a warranty of the Ancestor collaterall to the Disseissee after whose death the warranty discendeth upon the Disseissee the Disseissee by descent of the warranty upon him is barred for ever in Law Doctor and Student l. 2. c. 501. but though they all offended in obtaining of the said collaterall warranty yet such an offence is not to be considered in the Law for the inconvenience that thereupon might ensue for it is holden for an inconvenience as Coke saith Com. 152 b. That any of the Maximes of the Law should be broken though a private man suffer losse for that by infringing of a Maxime not onely a generall prejudice to many but in the end a publick incertainty and confusion would follow lex citius tolerar● vult privatum damnum quam publicum malum and Law will sooner suffer a private injury then a publick evil neither in such cases is there any remedy to be had in the Chancery or in conscience for it was resolved in Beverlys case Coke l. 4. f. 124. a. That against an expresse maxime of the common Law no man shall have releife in Chancery for it should be in subversion of a principle or ground of Law Doctor and Student ibidem vide ibidem plura So Ployd 18. b. It is against the Law of nature and the Law of reason to beate the person of any man in any cases yet when a man is mad and of non sanae memoriae and doth much evill a man and his Parents also may take him binde him and beate him with rods and may justify it 22. Ass Pl. 56. And by the Statute of Mar. it is generally prohibited that none shall drive any distresse out of one County into another and yet it is adjudged that if one hold Land of a Mannor in another County that the Lord may distraine and drive the distresse of the Land holden of the Mannor in the County where the Mannor is and that is in avoidance of the inconvenience for it should be a great damage to the Lord if he should not drive the distresse to his owne mannor for the avoidance of which the Law is not offended although the words of the Law be broken M. 1. H. 6. Pl. f. 3. A man priviledged in some Court is sued in London and the Action is actionable no where else yet upon a supersedeas the Court shall surcease Finch Nomot And wee see also that necessity in all Lawes shall be a good excuse and that all Lawes give place to necessity according to the common proverbe necessitas non habet legem necessity hath no Law And therefore in a precipe quod reddat the tenant shall excuse his default by a flood of water and yet every default is abhorred in our Law because it is a contempt of the Court but because by perill of death he could not come the necessity of the chance in such case in regard there was no default in him shall excuse him M. 38. H. 6. 11. So the words of the Law of God may be infringed by necessity without offence to God and therefore in the old Law by the Law of God it was prohibited that none should eate of the shew bread and yet it appeareth that David for necessity of famine did eate the said bread and yet he did not breake the Law as our Saviour Christ declareth in the Gospell so the Apostles of our Saviour did pull the eares of Corne of other persons and did eate them and that for necessity of famine Ploydon f. 19 a. So if a man steale victualls to satisfie his present hunger this is no Felony nor Larceny Stanford because it is for the conservation of life And if diverse be in danger of drowning by the casting away of some Boats or Barge and one of them get to some Planke or on the Beats side to keep him above water and
of a Grant be good in parcels and for parcels not that which is for the advantage of the Grantee shall be taken to be good As if a man granteth unto me an annuity provided that it shall not charge his person the Proviso is void and the Grant good 20 E. 4 8. by Townsend 14 H. 4. 30. by Hank And if an annuity be granted pro consilio impendendo though the Grantee be well skilled in divers professions of art yet counsell shall be given in that faculty onely which was intended at the time of the Grant 4. 1. E. 3. 6. If the King grant to a man that he and his Heirs shall be quit of Tax for the lands which they have this is a good Grant though there be no Tax at the time of the Grant 38 H. 6. 10. And so is the Law of Tenths and fifteens ibidem Ployd f. 29. a. If a man maketh a Lease for life and after the decease of Tenant for life that the lands redibus to A. B. in fee it is held a good remainder because it is held for a principle that the Livery of every one shall be taken more strong against him 18 E. 3. f. 28. If a man give land to one haeredibus it shall be a Fee-simple without the word suis and though he doth not give him a Fee-simple expresly yet every mans livery shal be taken strongest against him Ployd f. 18 b.a. If I make a lease for years upon condition that one moneth after he shall have fee he shall have it after the moneth accordingly for the thing shall pass according to the convention more strong against the Donor Ployd ibidem So if I make a lease to two upon condition that if one doth dye within seven years that then after the death of the other it shall remain to a stranger in fee that remainder is good for the reason of the condition to give the estate to privies or strangers is all one in regard that he had first given an estate to which the condition may be annexed for the livery and limitation shall be taken strongest against him that made it ibidem If I give land to one filio suo primogenito and he hath no Son at the time of the gift and after he hath a Son that son shall have the land by way of remainder and yet the remainder was not out of the Lessor neither did it vest at the time of livery but the Law construeth the livery and limitation more strong against the Lessor P. 17 E. 3. f. 29. Ployd vide ibidem plura If two Tenants in Common grant a rent of ten shillings this is severall and the Grantees shall have twenty shillings But if they make a Lease and reserve ten shillings they shall have onely ten shillings between them So an Obligation to pay ten shillings at the feast of our Lord God it is no plea to say that he did pay it but he must shew at what time or else it will be taken that he paid it after the feast for every act shall be taken more strictly against him that made it Noy Max. f. 15. 2 E. 3. p. M f. 140 b. 161. b. A generall pardon ought to be taken more beneficially for the Subject against the King 37 H. 8. f. 21. Coke l. 4. Vaughans case If I. S. submit himselfe to arbitrement of all Actions and Suites between him and I D. and I. N. it shall be intended collective of joynt Actions and distributive of severall Actions also because the words shall be taken stronger against him that speaketh 2. R. 3. 18. 21. H. 7. 29. If I grant 10 l. rent to Baron and Feme and if the Baron dye the Feme shall have three pound rent it shall be strongest taken against me the grantor for three pounds addition to the ten 8. Ass Pl. 10. So if I sow all my Land with Corne and let it for yeares the Corne passeth to the Lessee if I except it not So if I have a free Warren in my owne Land and let my Land for life not mentioning the Warren yet the Lessee by implication shall have the Warren discharged and extracted during the Lease 8. A. 7 32. H. 6. If I. give Lands to I. S. and his heires males this is a good Fee-simple and the words males is void Bac. Max. f. 12. vide ibidem plura Yet this rule also faileth when another which the Law holdeth worthier cometh in place and which is of more equity and humanity It is a rule in the Civill Law valeant eo modo quo valere possunt and at the Common Law Benignae faciendae sunt interpretationes chartarum propter simplicitatem laicorum ut res magis valeat quam pereat Coke com f. 30 b. The interpretations of Deeds and charters because of the simplicity of the people are favorably to be made that the thing may rather stand and subsist then fall and perish and let all things stand by the same meanes they may stand And therefore if I give Lands to I. S. and his heires rendring five pounds yearly to I. D. and his heires this implyeth a condition to me that am the grantor Littleton yet were it a stronger exposition against me to say that the limitation shall be void and the Feoffment absolute So if a man make a lease to A. for yeares and after by his Deed the Lessor voluit quod haberet teneret terram pro termino vitae willeth that he should have and hold the Land for terme of his life this is adjudged by the word volo to be a good confirmation for life Coke com f. 301. b. Though it were stronger to say those words are void because they are not proper words of confirmation So if the Disseisor granteth a rent to the Disseisee and he by his Deed granteth it over and after doth re-enter in this case one and the same words doe amount to a grant and a confirmation So if the Disseisor maketh a Lease for life or in taile the remainder to the Disseisse in fee and the Disseissor by his Deed granteth over the remainder and the particular tenant atturneth the Disseissee shall not enter upon the tenant for life or in taile for then he should avoid his own grant which amounteth to a grant of the estates and a confirmation also ne pereat Coke ibidem 302. So if A enfeoffeth another upon condition that he and his heires shall render to a stranger and his heires a yearely rent of twenty shillings although this reservation be meerly void for that no estate moveth from the stranger and that he is not party to the Deed and therefore can be no rent yet shall it be taken for a penalty or for an annuall summ in grosse so as if they will not pay it according to the forme of the Indenture they shall loose the Land by the entry of the Feoffor and his heires which is to be observed that
was incertaine when the Lessee would doe the act to make the Lease to begin and in the other it was incertaine when the coverture would bee dissolved for a lease certainely lymited might begin and determine upon uncertainety well enough Ployd ib. If a man maketh a Lease for twenty one yeares if I. S. live so long this is a good Lease if I. S. so long live yet it is certaine in incertainty for the life of I. S. is incertaine Coke com f. 25. b. It is a Maxime in the Law that no distresses can be taken that are not put into certainty nor can be reduced to any certainty for id certum est quod certum reddi potest as the Lord cannot distraine them which hold their Tenements in Frankalmoine if they will not doe such divine service because it is not put in certaine what service they shall do neither can it bee reduced to a certainty for upon an avowry damages cannot bee recovered for that which neither hath certainty neither can bee reduced to any certainty and yet in some cases there may bee a certainty in uncertainty As a man may hold of his Lord to sheare all the sheep depasturing in his Mannor although the Lord hath sometimes a greater number and sometimes a lesser number yet this is certaine enough the incertainty being referred to the Mannor which is certaine and the Lord may distraine for this incertainty Coke com f. 96. a. Incertainty may bee reduced to a certainty by matter ex post facto Ployd f. 6. a. b. Raingers case As a Lease for yeares rendring for every acre twelve pence though the number of Acres bee not certaine by the Lease yet by admeasurement or other triall may the rent reserved bee certainely knowne by which he may bring his action of debt So if one gives two Acres to one Habendum one for life and the other in fee it is incertaine in which he shall have the fee and which for life yet if after hee make Feoffement of one acre it shall bee said to have fee in the other ab initio so if one sell W. Acre and B. Acre for life the remainder of one of them in fee it is incertaine which Acre hee in the remainder shall have but if hee licence the Tenant for life to cut downe the trees in white Acre then hee shall bee adjudged to have the remainder of that Acre ab initio So 14. H. 8. f. 17. A grant of a terme upon condition that the Grantee shall obtaine the favour of the Lessor and pay so much as I. S. should arbitrate was good when the condition was performed and the second grant adjudged void So 17 E. 4. f 1. in trespasse for corne taken there the Defendant the Plaintiff had bargained agreed that the Defendant should go to the place where it grew and see the corne and if it pleased him upon the sight that then hee might take it paying to the Plaintiff forty pound for every Acre and it was holden a good contract notwithstanding the incertainty and quantity of the Corne and of the grosse sum shall bee paid for it because upon the circumstance the certainty might appeare Ployd ibidem Dyer f 91. b. If I bargaine with you that I will give you for your Land as much as it is reasonably worth and it is referred to the judgement of a third person hee shall ajudge it and then it is good so if I sell trees which then may easily be spared and refer the judgement of the sparing to a third person if hee give judgement of it it is good enough because by him it is reduced to a certainty with the Vendors consent In our law the time the estate the thing and the person not being sufficiently expressed by necessary coherence and relation to matter precedent they are sometimes made certaine enough first for the time if I. S. is bound to mee in twenty pound upon condition that I infeoffe him of B. Acre that then hee will pay mee ten pound if I infeoffe him presently after hee ought to pay the ten pound notwithstanding there is no time limited when it should bee paid for Perkins puts the rule if a condition hath a relation to the Act precedent and no time is limited when it shall bee done it ought to be done when the Act precedent is done Secondy for the thing though it bee put incertainly yet the communication precedent makes it certaine Dier 42. a. where one was bound to warrant I. G. and doth not shew what thing hee should warrant the Law shall make construction that hee should warrant the land of which communication was made Thirdly for the estate though it bee uncertaine yet sometimes it is made certaine by the matter precedent as steward-ship was granted for life and afterwards an annuity was granted for the exercise of that office without declaring what estate hee should have in the annuitie and resolved that he should have the annuity for life because he had the Office for life Coke l. 8. Fourthly for the person the consideration sometimes ascertaines the person and therefore if lands be given to one by deed Habendum sibi una cum filia donatoris in frank marriage this shall enure to both because the feme is causa donationis and by devorse shee shall have the whole Land and shall bee given together to the man for the advancement of the woman Dier 126. a. A man by intendment of Law the Land and the woman deviseth that his lands shall bee sold for the payment of his debts and doth not say by whom they shall be sold by his Executors because they are lyable for the payment of his debts Licet id certum est quod certum reddipotest id tamen magis certum est quod de semetipso est certum Coke l. 9. 47. a. The Patents of the King ought to be extended certainely to the thing of which the Patentee will take advantage as 2 R. 3. 7. If the King grant to me that I shall not be High-Sheriff without shewing of what County it is void for the incertainty Quia concessio per Regem oportet fieri de certitudine but if the grant was that he should not be Sheriff of such a County there such a grant is good Ployd f. 395. a. If a Lease be of the mannor of Sale in Dale which he had by descent of the mother and he had the mannor of Sale by purchase and not by descent of his mother in this case the Lessee shall have it because the mannor of Sale in Dale is enough without further certainty expressed and his saying that he had by descent is not requisit in that it was sufficiently certaine before for it is rather super-abundance then certainty so M. 2. E. 4. f. 27. If one release all his right in white Acre in Dale that he had by descent but had it by purchase there he shall not avoid the release by saying
election may be by voyces or hands or in oth●● sort and it is hard to discerne the certaine number and yet easy to see who had the greatest number 2. M. 128. vide Ployd f. 121. b. Coke Com. f. 303. c. Every Plea must be direct and not by way of argument or rehersall and an argumentative Plea is not good Ployd f. 122. a. b. for there is a ground in the Law that in declarations certainty ought to be alledged by apt words of affirmation otherwise the declaration is not good As in debt upon an obligation I declare that it appears by the obligation that the Defendant is bound to me in twenty pound the declaration is not good because it was alledged in matter of fact quod tenebatur mihi in twenty pound for bond is alledged for recitall onely So 11. H. 6. In an action of debt against a goaler who had let one at large who was in execution under guarde for the sum in demand and declareth that he let him at large by which the Plaintiff exclusus fuit de debito suo and the declaration not good because he did not say that he was not satisfied when he let him at large which is the cause of the action which he hath not alledged but by implication for by implication it is alledged for if he let him go at large by which he is barred of his debt against the prisoner by it is implyed that the debt was not then paid but the count was not good because it was not affirmed by precise words and 38. H. 6. f. 14. The Plaintiff in an action of debt counts that the Defendant retained him in his service for eight years to serve him in all occupations taking for every yeare 20 s. and the Defendant gageth his Law and though the Plaintiff was retained in husbandry and the service of husbandry was implyed in the words all occupations yet the Defendant was received to his Law because it was not fully expressed that he was retained in husbandry but onely by implication which would not suffice So Ployd f. 143. b. The Covenant in the Indenture was if one moyety of the Rent was behinde and unpaid after two moneths since the Feast c. that then c. and in the rejoynder it was alledged that one moyety was behinde per duos menses by the space of two moneths which was no answer because the Indenture is if it be behinde after two moneths post duos menses and he said it was behinde per duos menses which is no affirmation that it was behinde after two moneths but by implication and argumentation and not otherwise and therefore not good Every Recovery had in our Law must be pleaded certainly to every intent Ployd 65. a. as in 22. E. 4. f. 8. in a Scire facias to have execution of two hundred Acres of Land the Tenant pleaded that since the Scire facias sued that I. B. brought a Formedon of one hundred Acres inter alia and recovered and had execution judgement of the breif for parcell and there the opinion was the Plea was not good for every Recovery ought to be pleaded certianly to every intent and those words inter alia are certaine to no intent and it is good reason for every Recovery is entire and there is one originall and one judgment upon it and so the judgement is one and entire and therefore to say that inter alia he did recover is not good but ought to plead certainly If a Bar hath matter of substance and is good to a common intent it shall suffice although it be not good to every speciall intent Ployd Colthersts Case f. 26. a. and as Coke Com. 303. There are three sorts of certainties first to a certaine intent in generall as in counts replications and other pleadings of the Plaintiff 2. A certaine intent to every particular as in Estopples 3. A certainty to a common intent and this is sufficient in a Barr which is to defend the party and to excuse him and of this certainty it is said the Bar shall be good if it be good to a common intent Ployd f. 31. a. but this common intent is not such an intent which may be indifferent but such an intent that hath more vehement presumption in intendement then any other intent hath as fully to administer all the goods which were to the testator the day of his death is a good Bar yet it may be he had other goods which were never in the hands of the Testator which are Assets as debts paid after or goods which come in liew c. but that is not the most common intent but the more common intendement is that he had not any other goods but those which were the Testators So in a Formedon in descender ne donna pass is a good Barr yet it may be he hath recovered in value in which case other Lands were given and yet the Formedon lyes but that shall not be intended but the common intendement is to expresse the plaine guift by livery but if I pleade in Bar a lease for anothers life there the Bar is not good without averring the life of cefis que vie for it was indifferent whether he was in life or no and hath no more stronge intendement the one way then the other therefore his life must be averred by expresse words so in debt upon an obligation if the Defendant pleade in Barr a release bearing date since the obligation made that Bar is not good if he doth not shew by expresse words that it was delivered since the obligation made for prima facie one will presume that it was delivered when it bore date but of the other part it shall be presumed also that the other would not bring an action of debt if the release was delivered since and so one way it hath as vehement presumption as another and for that the intendement is indifferent it is not good unlesse it be shewen by the Plea that it was delivered since the obligation made Ployd ibidem vide plura f. 26. Grounds and Maximes proceeding from the Predicaments From the Predicament of substance SVbstantia prior dignor est accidente Arist 2. de anima the substance is more worthy and before the accident and therefore doth the Law prefer matters of substance before forme and circumstance as 21. H. 7. 24. b. Pleas in Barr and replications though the Plaintiff be afterwards non-suit make an Estopple for they are expresse allegations and substantiall as in debt upon an obligation if the Defendant pleade in Barr an acquittance made at D. or if the Defendant pleade an acquittance and the Plaintiff replyeth that it was made by duress of imprisonment at D. now in another action neither the Defendant shall pleade that the acquittance nor the Plaintiff that the duress was at another place because they were materiall But the matter in the writ and the count maketh no Estopple for they are
amercement is pardoned vide ibidem The husband and wife make a lease by Deed the husband dyeth the wife accepteth the rent if the Lessee lose the Deed of the Lease the wife shall avoid it 15. E. 4. 17. Coke l. 1. f. 2. Buchu●sts case If the Feoffor make a Feoffment with warranty the Feoffee shall not have the Charters unlesse by expresse grant but the Feoffor shall have all the Charters and Evidences which are materiall for the maintenance of the title of the Land and upon which he may maintain his warranty paramount but if the warranty be determined he shall have them no longer Ployd f. 382. a. Nevills case The King grants to two for their lives and the life of the survivor of them the Sheriff-wike of Chester and one of them was attainted of high Treason all the Office was forfeited because the Office was entire and could not be severed ibidem The King granteth the Office of the keeper of a Parke to two and the one faileth in discharge of his duty the whole fee shall determine so it is if an annuity be granted to two for Counsell and one of them refuse because the Office and Grant is entire and cannot be severed and the cause ceasing but in one the whole annuity shall cease Exception Dyer 320. Pl. 13. An Arbitrement was between two of diverse things and among others there was one article that one party should have yearly for the space of six yeares twenty shillings toward the keeping and honest education of A. B. and A. B. dyeth before the fourth year of the sixth yeare yet the payment of the 20 s. shall not cease during the six years which is a certaine terme and is a duty to the party himselfe towards the finding of A. B. Dier 141. Pl. 44. King Ed. 6. granteth to the Lady Mary his Sister the Mannor of D. for terme of her life according to the Tenor and effect of the last Will of H. 8. which was that shee should have it so long as she was unmarried afterwards she granted a rent charge out of that Mannor after which grant K. E. dieth by whose death the reversion came to her being Queene and afterwards shee married Philip King c. and it was doubted whether the rent charge should remaine or no. Davis 3. a. b. In ancient times a great part of tenements were holden of their Lords by Socage which was that the Tenants ought to come with their sokes by certaine daies by the yeare to plow and sow the demesne of the Lords and because such workes were made for the livelyhood and sustenance of their Lords they were quitted of all other services and after such services were changed into monies by consent of the Lords though the Lords did alien their demesnes and had no lands to plow or sow yet payed they their rents yearely to the Lords so the Church and religious houses after the procuration of Victualls was reduced to a certaine sum did pay it to the Ordinary yearely though he made no visitation so as the rule The cause ceasing the effect also ceased held not in those cases So Coke l. 4. in Capels case it was resolved that where a man held certaine land by rent for Castle-guard though the Castle was ruined or decayed yet the rent remained and pro doth not import a condition as in the case of an annuity granted pro consilio impendendo but a full and perpetuall recompence and satisfaction Vide Davis plura ibidem In jure non remota sed proxima causa spectatur Bacon Max. f. 1. 2. In the Law the next and not the remote cause is respected For it were infinite for the law to judge of the cause of causes and therefore judgeth of acts by the immediate and next cause as Bar. Empsons case f. 2. An annuity is granted pro consitio seu impendendo and the grantee committeth treason whereby hee is imprisoned that the grantor cannot come unto him for counsell yet the annuity is not determined by this non fesans for the law looketh not on the remote cause to wit the grantors offence which was the cause of the imprisonment but excuseth it because his not giving of counsell was compulsory and not voluntary in regard of the imprisonment which was the immediate cause So if a parson maketh a Lease and be deprived or resigneth the successors shall avoid the Lease for the law regardeth not the cause of the deprivation or the resignation which is the act of the party but the act of the Ordinary in the admission of the new incumbent 2. H. 4. 3. 26. H. 8. 2. A foeffment in fee upon condition that the Feoffee shall enfeoff over and if the feoffee bee disseised and a dissent case and then the feoffee bindeth himselfe in a statute which statute is discharged before the recovery of the Land this is no breach of the condition because the land was never lyable to the statute and the possibility which was the remote cause that it should bee lyable upon the recovery the law doth not respect Coke l. 2. Winningtons case This rule faileth in covenous act where the law taketh heed to the corrupt beginning and also in criminall acts where the law principally regardeth the first motive vide ibidem plura Nihil magis consentaneum est us iisdem modis res dissolvatur quibus constituitur Reg. I.C. and Bracton Nihil tam conveniens est naturali aequitati unumquodque dissalvi eo ligamine quo ligatum est Cok. l. 2. f. 53. a. There is nothing more agreeing to naturall equity then that every thing should be dissolved by the same meanes it was bound As no estate can be vested in the King without matter of record so no estate can be devested out of him without matter of record Ployd f. 553. Walsinghams case and 180. Nevils case 12. H. 7. and many other bookes for nothing is so convenient to naturall equity then that every thing should be dissolved by the same band it was tied and Coke l. 4. f. 57. b. In case of attainder and office the King is entitled by double matter of record and therefore the party grieved ought to avoid it by double matter of record and not by single travers or Monstrans de droit but is driven to his petition vide ibidem plura But when a man avoideth the Kings title by as high a matter of record as the King claimeth though the King be entitled by double matter of Record he may have it by way of Plea as one is attainted of treason by Parliament an office findeth his lands by which the King seiseth them the party may alledge restitution by Parliament and a repeale of the former Act 4. H. 7. 7. b. Finch Nomot 12. Coke l. 5. f. 26. a. Indentures being made for declaring of the uses of a subsequent fine recovery or other assurance to certaine persons and within a certaine time and to certaine uses are but
a directory and doe not bind the estate or interest of the land yet if the fine or recovery or other assurance be pursued according to the Indentures there cannot be any bare averment against the Indentures to be taken in such case that after the making of the Indentures or before the assurance by mutuall agreement of parts was concluded and agreed that the assurance shall bee to other uses but if other agreement or limitation of uses bee made by writing or by other matter so high or more high then the last agreement shall stand for every contract and agreement must be dissolved by a matter of as high a nature as the other was vide ibidem plura in the Earle of Rutlands case Coke l. 6. f. 43. b. Blakes case A writ of Covenant and the breach was for not reparing of the house and the Defendant pleaded accord betweene him and the Plaintiff with satisfaction and though it be regularly true that arbitrement or accord with satisfaction is no plea where the action is founded upon a deed for every thing is to be discharged by a matter of as high a nature as it is obliged yet there is a diversity where the duty accrueth by the deed in certainty tempore confectionis as by covenant bill or obligation to pay a sum of mony there it is a certaine duty and ought to bee discharged by a matter of as high a nature but where there is no certaine duty accrueth by deed but onely a wrong or default subsequent together with the Deed which onely giveth an Action to recover damages as for default of reparations there an accord with satisfaction is a good Plea because the end of the action is onely to have damages in the personalty for the action is not meerely grounded on the deed but also from the deed and the wrong subsequent and generally in all Actions where damages are only to bee recovered arbitrement or accord with satisfaction is a good plea vide ibidem plura Vnum quod que dissolvitur eo modo quo constituitur Nay Max. f. 4. As an obligation or matter in writing cannot be discharged by an agreement by word but by writing and though in abatement as a receipt of part upon a deed it shall not bee admitted without a deed of it 19. E. 4. 1. b. In an annuity growing by prescription rien arreare is a good plea for a prescription is no matter in deed but in an annuity by deed it is no good plea without shewing an acquittance 3 H. 7. 33. An Act of Parliament cannot bee avoid but by Parliament The submission of an arbitrement by deed must be countermanded by deed Things may bee avoided and determined by the ceremonies and Acts like unto those by which they were created Bacon uses c. as Livery and Seisin by entry a grant by claime and charge by discharge and an use which is raised by declaration and limitation may cease by words of declaration and limitation Non impedit clausula derogatoria sine clausula de non obstan●e de futuro quo minus ab cadem potestateres dissolvantur a quibus constituuntur Bacon Max f. 67. Acts which are in their nature revocable cannot by strength of words be fixed or perpetuated the law judgeth it to bee idle and of no force to deprive men of that which is most incident to humane condition and that is alteration and repentance As if I make my will and in the end thereof adde this clause Also my will is if I shall revoke this present will or declare any new will unless it bee in writing subscribed with the hands of two witnesses c. that such revoration shall he void any such pretended will to the contrary notwithstanding yet may I by paroll without any writing repeale the same and make a new one So if a statute bee made that no sheriff shall continue in his office above a yeare and if any patent be made to the contrary though it bee with a clausula de non obstante it shall be void yet notwithstanding such a Patent of the Sheriffs Office made by the King with a non obstante will be good in law because it is an inseperable prerogative of the Crowne to dispence with politike statutes and of that kind notwithstanding any derogatory clause 28. E. 3. c. 7. 24. E. 3. c. 9. 2 H. 7. 6. If the Parliament should enact that there should be no Parliament but that the King should have the authority of Parliament and rule by the ancient lege regia it were good in Law quia potestas suprema seipsum dissolvere potest because the highest power may dissolve it selfe Bacon From the matter DEbile fundamentum fallit opus Noy Max. f. 5. when the foundation faileth all goeth to the ground As when an estate to which a warranty is annexed is defeated the warranty also is defeated as if Tenant in taile discontinue and the discontinuee is diseised or maketh a Feoffment upon condition in whose possession a collaterall ancestor of the issue in taile releaseth and dieth the issue is barred but if the discontinuee enter upon the disseisor or upon the Feoffor for the condition broken the issue is restored to his formedon Lit. Coke l. 6. f. 14. a. Burton was deprived for adultery and afterwards by a generall pardon adultery was pardoned and though the deprivation was in force and that he that after the deprivation was admitted instituted and inducted remained Parson yet by force of the said pardon is hee become Parson againe without any sentence declaring the deprivation to bee void for by the pardon the adultery which was the foundation of the deprivation was discharged and by consequence all that was depending on the said foundation is discharged for sublato fundamento corruit opus So if an execution bee sued upon a statute and then the connusee maketh a defeasance upon the statute upon the payment of twenty pound if the twenty pound be paid the execution shall be defeated as well as the statute 20. Assize Pl. 7. If there be a disseisor of Lands in ancient demesne and the Lord confirmeth to him to hold at the common Law the disseisee reentreth now the land shall be ancient demesne again for the estate wherupon the confirmation should enure is defeated 49 E. 3. 8. A Church appropriated to a spirituall corporation becommeth disappropriate if the corporation be dissolved 3. E. 3. 74. b. Licet tenenti vetus opus reficere non novum facere Febl 2. f. 51. A Tenant may repair an old work but not make a new one As by our law the Tenant may cut downe trees for the amendment of houses or reparation of them 44. E. 3. 21. and 44. 11. H. 4 32. But if the necessity of a new house commeth in question as to build a Stable or no house be built upon the Land at the time of the Lease the Lessee may not cut downe trees to make a
in possession by the antient Law the entry of the disseisor for his negligence had bee● taken away which now is onely by descent many a●● continuall are the mutations of the Law according to the changes of the time For the rule and ground holdeth quod perpetua lex est nullam begem humanam ac positivam esse perpetuam that it is a perpetuall Law that no humane or positive Law is perpetuall Bac. Max. f. 70. Tempus edax rerum Coke l. 3. f. 21. A. maketh a lease for years to B. and when the Terme is ended the remainder to C. the reversion is good for it is certaine enough that every terme shall end for time is the consumer and divourer of things Distingue tempora concordabis leges the times being distinguished the Law will be reconciled Coke l. 9. f. 16. b. The King by the Statute de bigammis 4. E. 1. when the heire was of full age had nothing but primam seisinam capiendo exitum the profits of the Land in effect for one yeare but could not endow the Feme because after the Heire was of age he was not guardian and for that reason he could not endow the Feme at the common Law no more then guardian in chivalry might who though after the Heir was of full age did hold the Land further for the value of the marriage no Writ of dower did lye against him because he was not guardian yet afterwards by the Statute de praerogativa regis 17. E. 2. the King had power to endow the Feme although the Heire were of full age si vidua illae voluerint so as the Statute leaveth it to the election of the Feme whether shee will be endowed in the Chancery or at the common Law so as by distinguishing the times the difference of those Laws are apparently agreed and reconciled Omnia tempus habent haben● sua tempora tempus Coke l. 10. f. 82. a. All things are subject to time and time it self hath also its times as by the Statute of 34 H. 8. three severall Times ought to concurr in a devise whereby the King may have the value of the third part the first is tempus habendi every person having the 2d is tempus tenendi holding of the King the third is tempus disponendi may ●ive and dispose as if a man be seised of one acro●●f Land in fee in chiefe by Knights service and of two other acres in fee holden in socage and the Tenant infeoffe his youngest Son of the acre holden in chief and of one of the other acres to have to him and his heirs and afterwards purchaseth Lands holden in socage he may devise all his Lands newly purchased holden in sooage because he had no Lands holden of Knights service in Capite at the time of the devise for the acts have made a conjunction of the Lands which the Tenant holdeth in socage with the Land which he holdeth of the King by Knights service in Capite so as when the Tenant hath conveyed the Land holden in Capite to his youngest Son now when he made his Will of the Lands so newly purchased he had no Lands holden of the King in Capite at the time of the devise and the Statute restraineth only those Lands in socage which he had at the time of having of the Lands holden in Capite vide ibidem plura in Loveys case For Judicis officium est ut res ita tempora rerum Quaerere quaesit● tempore tutus eris A Judges part it is to ponder things with time And by the square of time sure Judgment so to finde Coke Com. f. 202. a. If a rent be granted payable at a certaine day and if it be behinde and demanded that the Grantee shall distraine for it in this case the Grantee needeth not to demand it at the day but if he demand it at any time after the day he shall distraine for it for the Grantee hath election in this case to demand it when he will to inable him to distraine But upon a Lease for years reserving a rent upon condition that if the rent be not paid at Michaelmas or within one and twenty dayes after that then he may re-enter the tenant is not bound to pay the rent or tender the mony before the last instant of the last day but if he do not then the Lessor may re-enter and have the Land and the rent also but if the Lessor be not at the time there to receive the rent he cannot re-enter though he demand the rent before Brook Intender 41. unlesse before the Lessee meets the Lessor upon the Land and tender the Rent on the same day Coke Com. f. 22. a. Ployd f. 392. 393. a. Where a thing is referred to a time which declareth certainly if it be mistaken all shall be void as Trin. 7. E. 3. 26. One bringeth a Writ and reciteth that it is contained in the Articles made in the time of Edward the second and declared further according to the statute and the writ was abated by award for that those Articles articuli super chartas C. 9. were made in the time of Edward the first So Tr. 18. E. 3. f. 25. A statute Merchant was made to be paid in the sixteenth yeare of E. 3. and the party sued execution and the Writ supposed the sum to be paid in the fourteenth yeare of E. 3. and by the suit the Feoffee was outed whereupon he sued a Writ of error in the Kings Bench and the writ was abated and it was said that the time declared certainty for it might be that there were two statutes payable at diverse severall daies and therefore the day of payment was materiall ibidem So if a defeasance be made of a statute which reciteth it to be made the tenth day of May where it beareth date the first day of May the defeasance is void for the misprision of the time for the law saith that it may be that there was two statutes the one bearing date the first day and the other the tenth day vide ibidem plura in the Earle of Leicesters case A loco from the place LOcus pro solutione reditus aut pecuniae secundum conditionem dimissionis aut obligationis est stricte observandus Coke l. 4. f. 73. a. in Burchers case The place for the payment of money or rent according to the condition of a Lease or obligation is strictly to be observed As if a common person maketh a Lease of Lands in R. reserving a rent to be generally paid at such a feast upon condition of re-entry if it be not then paid the demand must be upon the land for the land is the debtor and therfore that is the place of demand appointed by the law and if there be an house upon the land he must demand the rent at the house and not at the back doore but at the fore doore because the demand must be made at the most notorious
f. 13. a. If two four or more men being severally seised of land joyne in a recognizance all their lands must be equally extended because they are in an equall condition and case 26 Assi Pl. 37. Now custome hath created inheretances in copy-holds and that the lands shall be descendable the law doth direct the descent according to the Maxims and rules of the common law as incident to every estate descendable Coke l. 4. f. 22. So now uses have the reputation of inheritances descendable the common law shall direct the descent of those and that there shall be possessio fratris of an use as of other inheritances at the common law 5. E. 4. 7. And of lands in Burrough English the use shall descend to the puisne and now also these uses being turned into estates shall be determined in all respects as estates in possession 23. H. 8. Finch Nomot But this difference is put between inheritances in copy hold lands and inheritances in uses in that such c●stomary inheritaners shall not have by the Law any other collaterall quallities which concerne not the descent of inheritance which uses and other inheritances at the common law have as tenancy by courtesie or asse●s to charge the heire in an Action of debt upon an obligation made by his Ancestor for him and his heirs Coke l. 4. f. 22. a. or descent to take away entry as if a copyholder in right of his wife surrender it to the use of another in see and dieth that shall not be any discontinuance to the feme but that she and her heires may enter Ib. f. 23. Neither shall the feme of customary tenant be endowed unless it be by speciall custome Ib. f. 30. b. and generally copy-hold estates shall not have such qualities which estates at the common Law have without speciall custome Ib. f. 23. a. A Simili from the like NVllum simile currit quatuor pedibus Coke l. 7 f. 34 no like thing runs upon four feet and Coke l. 4. f. 18. b. Nullum simile est idem nothing that is like is the same Sir Gilbert Gerrards case upon an action of slander the Plaintiffe counteth that he was seised of a Mannor c. in fee and that he was in communication to demise the said land to R. E. and that the Defendant not ignorant thereof said I have a Lease of the said Mannor for ninety yeares and that by reason of the said words the said R. E. did not accept of the said Lease to the damage c. The Defendant pleaded that t●lis indentura qualis in the Count was alledged came to the hands of the Defendant by finding and it was resolved that that manner of pleading was not a direct answer to the indenture mentioned in the Count for talis indentura is not eadem indentura for no like is the same Eadem simili ratione suadente idem jus statuendum est Reg. I. C. Vbi eadem est ratio ib● est idemjus Coke com f. 191. a. It is one of the Maximes of the common Law cited by Littleton that in all cases where there is the like reason there is the like law for reason is the soule of the law and ratio potest allegari deficiente lege and reason may be alledged where the Law is wanting and then as B●act●n De similibus ad similia eadem ratione p●o●●dendum est From the like unto the like by the same reason we are to proceed and so argumentum a simili i● good in law Et quod in uno similium valet valebit in altero what availeth in one of the likes shall availe in the other as one shall recover in value against the heire upon the Ancestors warranty Lands which the heire tooke in exchange for Lands descended 1● H. 3. rec va 26. for the similitude of the same reason A Mannor is given by Fine A Sc●●e facias lyeth of a tenancy that after escheated to the said Mannor 48. E. 3. 11. If a Mannor descend to an heire within age and after a tenancy escheateth he shall have his age of it in a praecipe of the mannor it shall be assets by descent and he may vouch of this tenancy by reason of a warranty made of the Mannor for the same reason 6. H. 4 1. And for the same reason a Lease for a thousand daies is a Lease for yeares 14. H. 8. 13. And a Lease for years and a release amounteth to a feoffment Brook The Maxime of a Bastard is eigne that the mulier puisne must make an entry upon him or else he gaineth the right yet a continuall claime made by the mulier puisne destroyeth his right for it is all one as if he had entred 14. H. 4. 9. If a man licenceth one to occupy his Land for a yeare this is a Lease for a yeare 5. H. 7. 1. And this is also according to the rule of the civill law ubi est eadem ratio eadem equitas ibi debet esse eadem juris dispositio where there is the same reason and the same equity there ought to be the same disposition of right Coke com f. 10. a. As in Feoffments and grants the word heires maketh an inheritance so doth it in exchanges releases and confirmations which enure by way of enlargement of an estate as also in warranties bargaine and sales by deed indented and enrolled and the like in which the word heires is also necessary because they stand upon the same reason that feoffements and grants doe for where there is the same reason there is the same law Coke com f. 55. 56. If Lessee at will soweth the Land and the Lessor after it is sown before the corne is ripe put him out yet the Lessee shall have the corne and shall have ingresse egresse and regresse to cut and carry away the Corne and if the corne be ripe and ready to cut downe and the Lessor before the Lessee reapeth it enter and putteth out the Lessee without all question the Lessee shall have the corn for by the same reason that he shall have it where he is put out before it is ripe he shall have it where he is put out after it is ripe for where there is the same reason there is the same law A majori minori From the greater and the Lesser IN eo quod plus est semper inest minus Reg. I. C. Omne majus continet in se minus Coke l. 4. f. 46. a. The greater alwaies containeth in it the lesse as whereas by the statute of 3. H. 7. c. 1. It is provided that if Murderers and accessaries or any of them be acquitted upon inditement or the principall is attainted c. the wife or heire to him slaine may have their appeale against the persons so ac●uitted or against the principall so attainted and that the benefit of his Clergy thereof before be not had It was resolved that the word Attaint of murther in that act
the obligation is good and the Obligee may declare upon a Solvendum to himselfe 4. E. 4. 29. for contraria non possunt simul esse in eodem subjecto Arist 5. Phys contraries cannot be together in the same subject Omnis privatio presupponit habitum every privation presupposeth an habit Coke com f. 341. b. and l. ●0 f. 86. b. To many purposes a Parson hath in effect but an estate for life and to many a qualified fee but the entire fee and right is not in him and that is the reason that he cannot discontinue the Fee-simple that he hath not nor ever had for every privation presupposeth an habit From authority and example ARgumentum ab authoritate firmissimum est in lege an argument from authority is the strongest in Law Coke com 254. a. our Book cases are the best proofes what the Law is and after the example of Littleton Booke cases are principally to be cited for deciding the cases in question and not any privat● opinion according to the rule Nulla hominis authoritas tantum apud nos valere debet ut meliora non sequeremur si quis attulerit no mans authority ought to prevaile so much with us as that we may not follow the better whosoever shall alledge it as Littleton here rejecteth the opinion of Newton and followeth the better authorities in Law Coke com f. 383. a. And whereas by the Civil Law as Sir John Davis observeth every Doctors opinion is vouched and cited of them as good authority it must needs breed distractions of opinions and variations according to which sense the logicall axiom is to be taken locus ab authoritate est infirmissimus Boethius An argument from authority is most weake and prevaileth little or nothing in resolving the question as the Poet pressely Nil agit exemplum litem quod lite resolvat to cleere a quaere example stands for nothing whereas our Law arguments are deduced from the strength of cases apt to the purpose and presidents of former times founded on the discourse of reason and consideration of the wisest and sagest Judges and are no inartificiall arguments as ipse dixit or teste me ipso but are drawn out of the termes and bowells of the issue by arguments and conclusions of reason Nullum exemplum est idem omnibus Coke com 212. a. 317. b. No example is the same to all and therefore it is the best meanes in all assurances to take counsell of learned and well experienced men and not onely to trust without advise to presidents for as the Aphorisme holdeth in the state of a mans body nullum medicamentum est idem omnibus no salve is the same to all so doth the rule in the estates and assurances of Lands no example or president is the same to all Periculosum existimo quod virorum bonorum non comprobatur exemplo Coke com f. 81. b. I deeme it dangerous that is not approved by the president of good men and therefore it appeareth how safe it is to be guided by judiciall presidents Littera scripta manet Coke com f. 115. a. A written word remaineth and therefore a record or sufficient matter in writing is a good memoriall whence it is said when we will by any record or writing commit the memory of any thing to posterity tradere memoriae and for this reason it is that regularly a man cannot prescribe a custome against a statute because it is matter of record and is the highest proof and matter of record in Law yet a man may prescribe against an Act of Parliament when by prescription and custome it is saved by an other Act of Parliament Nihil in lege intolerabilius est eandem rem diverso jure teneri Coke l. 4. f. 93 in Slades case There is nothing more intollerable in law then that the latter judgement should contradict the former and therefore 37. H. 6. f. 22. Aske said such Charters have beene allowed in the time of our Predecessors who were as sage and learned as wee and Markham 5. E. 4. f. 41. It is good for us to doe as it hath been used in former times and not to keepe one way one day for one party and another day the contrary for another party The former presidednts are enough for us to follow So 11. E 3. Title Formedon 22. It was holden that ancient formes and manner of presidents are to be maintained and observed and 34. Ass Pl. 7. That which hath not been according to usage shall not be permitted and in 2. E. 3. 29. The ancient forme and order is to be observed and 39. H. 6. 30. The opinion of Pris●t and all the Court was that they would not change their use notwithstanding that their opinion was to the contrary and 4. E. 4. 44. All the Justices said we cannot change the course hath been before for it should be inconvenient and it is said 3. E. 4. 1. That the course of Courts maketh a law And therefore all the Justices in ancient times and from time to time being as well in matters of forme as in deciding of doubts and questions and as well at the common law as in construction of Acts of Parliament have given great regard to the ancient presidents and judgements of the preceding judges as Ployd f. 99. b. It was advised by the Court according to the book of 7. H. 4. That an accessary shall not be arraigned as an accessary to one principall untill the other principals may be attainted because it did seeme the better way to the Court to pursue the same order that the Sages before had used And so here in Slades case in respect of the infinite presidents which the Secondary of the Prothonotaries of the Kings Bench did shew to the Court it was resolved before all the Judges of England in the Exchequer chamber that though an action of debt lyeth upon a contract yet the Bargainer may have an Action of the case or an Action of debt at his election Coke ibidem Mos retinendus fidelissimae vetustatis quae praeter consuetudinem morem majorum fiunt neque placent neque recta videntur frequentia actus multum operatur The ancient manner of the most faithfull antiquity is to be retained and what are contrary to the custome and use of the Elders doe neither please nor seem right and the frequency of acts worketh much Coke l. 4 f. 74. and therefore it was there resolved by the chief justices Popham Anderson and by Pyriam chiefe Baron and other justices that the ancient and usuall elections of Mayors Bayliffs c. by a certaine selected company of the principals of the commonalty and Burgesses commonly called the common councell c. were good and well warranted by their Charters and by their lawes also Multa ignoramus quae nobis non laterent si veterum lectio nobis fuit f●miliaris Coke l. 10. 73. We are ignorant of many things which would not be
and a Law was that thereby there might be certainty of titles and a peaceable possession without contradiction and as a Civilian saith ut sit finis litium that there might be an end of suits and therefore were the Statutes of limitation made within which the demandant that bringeth the action must prove himselfe or some of his Ancestors to be seised and in antient time the limitation in a Writ of right was from the time of H. 1. after that by the Statute of Merton the limitation was from the time of Henry the second and by the Statute of Westminster the first the limitation was from the time of Richard the first but because that limitation of the writ of right was for so long time passed the limitation of a writ of right was changed by the Statute of 32. H. 8. and reduced to threescore years next before the Teste of the Writ and so of other actions Coke com f. 115. a. vide ibidem plura And afterwards another Act was made 21. Jacob. that for the avoiding of suits all writs of Formedon in Descender Formedon in Remainder and Formedon in Reverter for any Mannors c. shall be sued and taken within twenty years and that after the twenty years expired none such or any of their heires shall have any such writ and that no person that hath right or title of entry into any Mannors c. shall thereunto enter but within twenty years vide ibidem cap. 6. plura But it is to be observed that time of limitation is twofold first in writs that is by diverse acts of Parliament the second is to make a title of inheritance and that is as hath been said to pleade a prescription de tempore cujus contrarium memoria hominum non existit Coke com f. 14. 15. which is by the common Law And this also accordeth with the rule of Bracton Longa possessio sicut jus parit jus possidendi tollit actionem a vero domino l. 2. f. 52. Long possession as right begetteth a right and taketh away an action from the true Lord and owner And so in antient times if the disseisor had been long in possession the Disseisee could not have entred upon him neither could the Disseisee have entred upon the Feoffee of the Disseisor if he had continued a yeare and a day in quiet possession and though the Law be now changed yet at this day the Disseisor dying seised being an act in Law barreth the disseisee of his entrance upon the heire and for that many advantages follow the possession and tenant the law taketh away the entry of him that would not enter upon the Ancestor who is presumed to know his title and driveth him to his Action against the heire that may be ignorant thereof Coke com f. 237. b. And for the above said reason the law yieldeth diverse utilities and advantages to the possessor for it is better to be a possessor then to complaine of others who are possessors because it imposeth the burden of proving on the Plaintiff so as if he can prove nothing he which possesseth shall be acquitted neither can possession be avoided but by possession Ployd 137 b. As if I make a lease for years of the lands of my wife and die the lease is not void before entry made by the wife for possession must be avoided by possession and such possession must be gained by entry But if my father die and his land descend to me a Lease for yeares made before my entry is good because I have possession in law and none hath possession in deed but if a stranger abate a lease made by me after is void for the stranger hath possession indeed before my entry upon him Ployd ibid. If an Executor bring an Action of trespasse for goods taken out of his possession it is not needfull to shew the Testament but if hee not ever was possessed of them but doth demand the thing then hee ought to have shewn the testament Ployd f. 46. a. And regularly it holdeth true that when the naked right of Land is released to one that hath jus possessionis and the other by a meane title recovereth the land from him the right in possession shall draw the naked right with it and shall not leave a right in him to whom the release is made as if the heire of the disseisor being in by descent is disseised by A. and the disseisee release to A. now hath A. the meere right to the land but if the heire of the disseisor enter into the Land and regaineth possession that shall draw with it the meere right to the land and shall not regaine the possession onely and leave the meere right in A. but the recontinuance of the possession the meere right is therewith vested in the heire of the disseisor Coke com 266. a. If a woman possessed of a terme for yeares take an husband and the wife dieth though during the life of the wife the terme was not devested out of the wife yet by her death it is vested in the husband and it is given to him by Act in law because it is a thing in possession and not in Action Pl f. 192. b. In pari causa possessor potior haberi debet Reg. I. C. In aequali jure ●elior est conditio possidentis Coke l. 4. f. 90. a As the Lord who is allowed but three Chaplaines retaineth six by his letters testimoniall at one and the same time and all the six are prefe●red to six severall plurallities the three which are first promoted are warranted by the statutes and yet the retainer was not according to the statute for in aequali jure melior est conditio possidentis In equall right better is the condition of him who is in possession ibidem If a man purchaseth severall lands at one time which are holden of several Lords by Knights service and dieth the Lord who first seiseth the ward shall have him because they are in aequali jure and there is no priority betweene them which if there were the elder Lord shall have him Perk. f. 6. If ten Mannors be conveyed to two severall persons by one deed which of them happeneth to get the Deed first may detaine it Two Attorneys are retained conjunctim divisim joyntly and severally the plea of him that first pleadeth shall stand because they are in aequali jure to plead If there be two joynt-tenants and one of them taketh all the profits of the land or all the rent the other hath no remedy Coke l. 2. f. 68. a. So the release of all Actions personall by one barreth the other but otherwise it is if the personalty be mixed with the realty and if there be two joynt-tenants Lords and the tenant holdeth by Knights service and the tenant dieth his heire within age and one Lord seiseth the Ward and the other distraineth for the services he that first seiseth or distraineth shall bind the other And
remainder is appointed in fee to the right heires of I. S. who dieth having a daughter which entreth after the death of tenant for life there the son after borne shall not recover the lands before vested in the daughter as purchased for thereit is a fee simple to which the son after born hath no right for the lands were in none of his Ancestors before But where the estate is an estate taile the son ought to have it per formam doni As if a feme which suffereth a recovery by covin contrary to the Statute of 11. H. 7. is defeated by entry of the daughter tenant in taile the son borne may enter and oust the daughter for that the title in taile is in him because the statute saith he shall enjoy it according to the title which is in taile and therein the common proverb is verified One shall beat the bush and the other have the bird As if a man hath land by descent of the part of the mother and maketh a feoffment on condition and dieth without issue and the heire of the part of the father entreth the heire of the part of the mother may oust him Ployd 56. b. and 57. a. In Wimbish case quod vide Infinitum injure reprebatur Coke l. 6. f. 45. What is infinite is reproved and rejected in law As if a man have a debt by simple contract and taketh an obligation for the same debt or any part of it the contract is determined 3. H. 4. 17. 11. H. 4. 9. and 9. E. 4. 50. 51. So if a man have a debt upon an obligation and by course of law hath a judgement upon it the contract by specialty is changed into a thing of record for if he that recovereth should have a new Action or a new judgement he may have infinite Actions and infinite judgements to the perpetuall charge and vexation of the defendant and he shall not have a new Action or a new judgement for what is infinite is rejected in law So upon every judgement the defendant shall be amerced and if he bee a Duke Marquess Earle Viscount or Baron he shall be amerced 100 l. and so the defendant should be infinitely amerced upon an obligation which shall be mischievous Ibid. And lib. 7. f. 45. b. It was resolved in the Court of Wards by the greater part that a Bill of reviver upon a bill of reviver shall not be admitted by reason of the infiniteness which is rejected in law And lib. 8. f. 16. b. When the first office is found against the King and the melius inquirendum also the King is bound nor to have any melius inquirendum for the same matter because there should be no end of it and that such writs might issue infinitely and infinity is condemned in law Nihil tam conveniens naturali aequitati quam voluntatem domini volentis suam rem in aliam transferre ratam haberi Bracton f. 18. God hath given to man all the land terram dedit filiis bominum So men by Gods endowment are made Lords of the land and what property a man hath in lands by law by the law of God also he hath dominion of it and therefore every man who is the lawfull owner of land may grant to what person in what manner and for what time it pleaseth him for if the land be subject to man then is it subject to his will for the will cometh from the mind which is the principall part of man because it directeth the body and all things he hath and if his land be subject to his will this his will is a sufficient consideration by which his land may pass as his will is and there is no greater consideration then the will Ployd f. 308. b. And nothing is more agreeable to naturall equity then to ratify the will of the Lord willing to transferr his substance and estate over to another And therefore at the common law the intention and will of the parties was the direction of uses for they were onely determinable and to be adjudged by the Chancellor which is the Court of conscience and equity and there is nothing more agreeable to equity then that the will of the Lord or owner and the meaning of the parties should direct the uses 31. H. 16. Tit. subpaena Fitz. 23. A man being ceste que use and having one sole daughter declared his intent and meaning to the Feoffees that after his decease his daughter should have his land and for it question was made in the Chancery whether the limitation of that use made to the daughter might be revoked and in reasoning of that case Fortescue held opinion that if ceste que use had issue a daughter and being sick declared his intention to his feoffee that his daughter shall have his land after his decease and after hee recovered his health he had issue a sonne now saith hee it is good conscience the sonne should have the Subpaena because hee is heire for conscientia dicitur a conset scio quasi simul scire cum Deo that is to know the will of God so neere as reason will and the intention of the parties is to direct the uses according to a conscionable and benigne construction Coke l. 1. f. 100. a. b. vide ibidem plura As a gift in taile may bee made upon condition that tenant in taile may alien for the profits of his issue and good and hee may alien notwithstanding the Statute of W. 2. because in that case voluntas donatoris observatur The will of the Donor is observed Coke com 224. b. If Lands be given to B. and his heires Habendum to him and the heires of his body or if given to him and the heires of his body Habendum to him and his heires he hath estate taile and a fee expectant but if Lands bee given to B. and his heires if B. have heires of his body and if he die without heires of his body that it shall revert to the Donor it is an estate taile and the reversion in the Donor for voluntas donatoris in charta doni sui manifeste expressa est observanda The will of the Donor manifestly expressed in the Charter of the gift is to be observed Coke com f. 21. a. If a common person doth without consideration give to I. S. his goods indefinitely all his goods doe pass 21. E. 4. 25. Alba of Waltams case by Brown and Genny If the King doe grant to one lands ex mero motu and though his Highnesse doth rehearse some consideration in the patent of his grant which is not true as if the consideration bee that whereas the Grantee hath done his Majesty good service on the Sea or beyond the Sea or in his Wars though the consideration bee meerely supposed and therefore no good consideration in Law yet the words ex mero motu doe make the Grant good 26 H. 8. 1. by Fitz. And if a common person doe by deed
if he be an honest man Swimb f. 210. It is an observation of a Divine that oathes ex officio had their birth from Caiphas Math. 26. who who first imposed it on our Saviour in the name of the living God saying I adjure or charge thee in the name of the living God that thou tellest us whither thou be'st Christ the Son of the living God And Mr. Pryn saith that Cardinall Woolsy the highest Priest in England was the first that invented oathes ex officio in England and that they were much inveighed against by Latimer in his Sermons and condemned by the expresse words of the petition of right providing against such oathes Prin. Vind. f. 42. Impotentia excusat legem impotency excuseth the Law Coke com f. 29. a. The Law tendreth the weaknesses and debilities of others execuseth their un-abilities ultra posse non est esse because no man is able to doe more then he can do As if a man dyeth seised of Lands in fee-simple c. and these Lands descend to his Daughter and shee taketh an husband and hath issue and dyerh before any entry the husband shall not be tenant by courtesy because it was in the power of the husband to have entred but if a man be seised of an advowson or a rent in f●e and hath issue a daughter who is married and hath issue and dyeth seised the wife before the rent became due or the Church became void dyeth he shall be Tenant by courtesy because he could by no industry enter or attaine to any other seisin then a seisin in Law or bring it to an actuall seisin And f. 258. b Though an Hermite or an Anachorite be shut up himself so as by his order he is not to come out in person yet to avoid a descent he may command one to make claim and such a recluse may allwayes appeare by an Attorney in such cases where others must appeare in proper person and f. 263. b. An Abbot of a Monastery dyeth and during the vacation one wrongfully entreth into a certaine parcell of the Land of the Monastery claiming the Land to him and his heirs and dyeth seised and the Land descendeth to the heire and then one is elected Abbot the Abbot may enter upon the heire for by the death of the Abbot no person is able to make continuall claime and therefore a descent in that kind shall not prejudice the succession Coke l. 1. f. 98. a. If the Lessee Covenant to leave wood in the same plight the wood was at the time of the lease and afterwards the trees be sub-verted by tempest hs is discharged of his covenant by reason of his impotency and l. 4. f. 11. a. If the Lord release to the Tenant so long as I. S. hath heire of his body and sixty years passe and then I. S. dyeth without heire of his body in this case though the sixty years be passed yet the Lord may distraine for it was impossible that she should attaine to any seisin within that time and therefore the act of limitation made in 32. H. 8. doth not extend to such rent or service that by common possibility could not happen or become due within sixty years and so if Land holden by Homage and Fealty be conveyed to a Mayor and Commonalty c. in this case they cannot doe their Homage and Fealty yet though they have enjoyed the Land above sixty years if they alien the Land the Lord may distraine for Homage and Fealty 33 H 8. Br. Tit. Fealty 15. vide ibidem pluta in Bevills case and lib. 6. f. 21. b. in Butlers case It was resolved that legall imprisonment without Covin is a good excuse of non-residency in any Parson by reason of his impotency Quod remedio destituitur ipsa revalet si culpa ab sit the thing which is destitute of remedy availeth in the matter it selfe if there be no fault or laches in the party Coke l. 6. f. 68. a. As if a man be seised of a manner part of which is in lease for life and part in lease for yeares and levieth a f●ne to A. to the use of B. in tail with diverse remainders over in this case B. shall avow for rent or have an Action of Wast without any Attornement for when the reversion is setled in any one in judgement of Law and he hath no meanes to compell the tenant to attorne and no laches or fault is in him there he shall avow or have an Action of Wast without Attornment As if the Lord in Mortmaine or if a villaine claimeth a reversion by this claime the Law vesteth thiS reversion in him and he hath no meanes to compell the tenant to attorne and therefore he shall avow or have an Action of Wast without Attornement the same Law is of Letters Patents and of the devise of a reversion for in all those cases culpa abest there is no fault 9. H. 6. vide ibidem plura in Sir Moile Finches case And Coke l. 8. f. 172. b. in Hales case If the heire at full age tender his livery and dyeth within three months before he hath accomplished it so as the making of his homage or suing out of his livery without default in him is become impossible by the act of God he shall have as much advantage by his tender as if he had made homage or sued out his livery for impotency in this case excuseth the Law and in the judgement of the Law the interest of the King by the said limitation is determined as if the Lord had taken homage of the heire when he made his tender vide ibidem plura Coke l. 10. f. 139. b. If tenant for life or for years doth not repaire a wall of dirt so as by his default the Land is surrounded and becometh unprofitable that is Wast but if the Land be surrounded by the extraordinary rage and violence of the Sea without any default in him that is not Wast no more then if an house was burnt by lightning or subverted by the rage of the wind or tempest without default of the Lessee for impotency excuseth the party vide ibidem plura in Kighleys case So as it is regularly true that the Law tendreth the infirmities of unable persons and excuseth their impossibilities as of men illiterate out of the Realme in Prison Infants Idiots out of their sound minde as also of blind and deafe dumbe and blind If a man illiterate be bound to make a deed he is not bound to seale or deliver any writing that shall be tendred unto him and if it be Latine or other Language which he understandeth not he may demand that one read it and expound it unto him and if none be there present to read and expound it the party may refuse to deliver it for his ignorance excuseth him Coke l. 2. f. 3. Mansers case And for that reason if the Deede be read unto him in other words then are contained within
yeare and the right descendeth to the heire within age he shall be bound to that yeare commenced in his Father and his nonage shall not availe him there because his Father was of full age Ployd 372. a. So non-claime of a villaine of an infant by a yeare and a day who hath fled into ancient demesne shall take away the seisure of the infant And if an infant bringeth not an appeale within a yeare and a day he is barred of his appeale for ever for the Law respecteth more liberty and life then the priviledge of infancy If the King be seised of Lands and the Land descend to the successor this shall bind an infant for that the priviledge of the infant in this case holdeth not against the King Coke com f. 246. a. Though it be regularly true that no laches shall be adjudged in infants for not entry or claime to avoid descent yet laches shall be accounted in him for not performing a condition annexed to the State of Land for the laches of an infant for not performing a condition annexed to an estate either made to his Ancestor or himselfe shall bar him of the right of the Land for ever as if either of them be enfeoffed reserving a rent and for default of payment a re-entry the laches of either of them in not paying the rent shall disinherit either of them for ever But if a man maketh a feoffment in fee to another reserving a rent and that if he pay not the rent within a month ne shal double the rent and the feoffee dyeth his heir within age and the infant payeth not the rent he shall not for this laches forse it any thing for that the infant is provided for by the Statute non current usurae contra aliquem infra aetatem existentem Merton C 31. An infant is impleadable in Law and for his contempt shall be punished as a man of full age as an outlawry returned against an infant is good and not erronious so as he hath passed the age of fourteen years 2. H. 5. Dyer 104. b. and 3 H. 6. An infant was forced to answer upon breach of a prohibition in an estreapment An infant is bound by any Statute Law if he be not expresly excepted in it as in fore-judger recovery in Cessavit and fines with proclamations Doctor Student c. 45. 147. And that if he had not been excepted in those Statutes they should have bound him an infant prayeth to be received and it is traversed he shall find sureties of the meane profits as an heire of full age Dyer 104. b. An infant under the age of fifteen cannot wage Law either for a debt or default of any reall action Office of Exec. f. 346. If an infant be garden of a prison and suffereth a prisoner to escape he shall pay the debt because the Statutes are generall and by that reason he may by a penall Statute loose his Goods Doct. and Stud. C. 46. 147. If one enter into a freehold of an infant with his consent this is a disseisin because an infant cannot consent to an entry An infant under one and twenty cannot be a Bayliff receivor for want of skill or ability nor yet sworn in any Enquest or Jury and is uncapeable of a Stewardship of the Court of a Mannor in possession or reversion or any office concerning the administration of Justice Coke com f. 3. b. 157. a. And not capeable to performe grand Serjeanty at the coronation ibidem 107. b. Actus non facit reum nisi mens fit rea Coke com f. 247. b. The act doth not make one guilty unlesse the mind be guilty and therefore if an infant under the age of discretion commit an act amounting to a Felony shall stand free from the attainder and punishment incident to a Felon but if he be of the age of discretion though he be not of full age he shall suffer as a felon and regularly the age of discretion accounted by the Law is fourteen yeares and therefore shall such an one incur the like attainder os felony as one of full age Office of Executor f. 244. and Coke com f. 247. b. But non est regula quin fallit for one of much lesse yeares having attained the maturity of discretion if he commit any felonious act shall suffer as a Felon as it was resolved in the time of King Henry the seventh in the third yeare of his reigne f. 16. touching an infant but of the age of nine yeares who killing another boy of the like age with a knife and then hiding the slaine boy and excusing the blood found upon him by saying that his nose had bled it was held by the Judges that he was to be hanged as a Felon his such nonage notwithstanding and by King Ina's Law puer decem annos natus surto conscius arguatur an infant of the age of ten years shall be attainted of theft if guilty thereof but Doctor and Student applyeth an infants discretion to the knowledge of the Law so that if an infant doe a murther at such yeares as he hath discretion to know the Law he shall have the punishment of the Law as if he were of full age and this is by a maxime in the Law for eschuing of murthers and felonies and so it is of trespasses cap. 46. f. 148. If a dumbe person bring an action he shall plead by procheine amy Finch Nomot It was a time when Idiots and mad men and such as were deafe or dumb were disabled to sue because they wanted reason and understanding but at this day they all may sue but the suite must be in their names and it shall be followed by others Coke com f. 135. b. A man that is borne dumb may make a grant by delivery of his hands or signes and a man borne deafe and dumb may make a guift if he have understanding and though it be an hard matter that a man shall have understanding without hearing yet there are diverse such persons as have understanding by their sight and a man borne dumb and blind may have understanding but a man borne dumb deafe and blind cannot have understanding Perk. f. 6. Furiosus furore suo punitur Coke com f. 247. b. The Law favoreth a mad man by reason of his disability in criminall causes and because he is amens s●ne mente without his mind and discretion he shall not suffer for any felonious fact for the intention is the forme of Felony that is if it be done felleo animo with a bitter and mischeivous mind and therefore is he punished onely with his madnesse there are foure sorts of mad men the first is an Idiot which from his nativity by a pertuall infirmity is non compos mentis 2. is he that by sicknesse or other accident wholly loseth his understanding 3. A Lunatick who hath sometimes his understanding and sometime hath not aliquando gaudens lucidis intervallis and is called non compos mentis
therefore the Law favoureth right and construeth all things according to right from whence proceedeth the ground Constructio juris non facit injuriam Coke com f. 183. a b. The construction of right or Law doth no injury As though it be a maxime in the Law that every mans grant shall by construction of Law be taken most strongly against himselfe yet is it so to be understood that no wrong be thereby done for it is another maxime in the Law that the construction of the Law doth no injury and therefore if tenant for life maketh a lease generally this shall be taken by construction of Law an estate for his own life that made the Lease for if it should be taken for the life of the Lessee it should be a wrong to him in the reversion and so it is if tenant in tail maketh a Lease generally the Law shall contrive this to be such a Lease as may be lawfully made and that is for terme of his own life for if it should be the life of the Lessee it should be a discontinuance and consequently the State which should passe by construction of Law should work a wrong Ibidem When two are in one house or tenement and one layeth claime by one title and another by another the Law shall adjudge him in possession that right hath to have the house or tenement Littleton Coke com f. 206. a. b. It is a generall rule that whensoever the words of a deed or of the parties without deed shall have a double intendement and the one standeth with Law and Right and the other is wrongfull and against Law the intendment which standeth with Law and Right shall be taken As if tenant in Fee-simple maketh a Lease of Lands to B. to have and to hold for terme of life without mentioning for whose life it shall be deemed for the life of the Lessee for it shall be taken more strongly against the Lessor for an estate of a mans owne life is higher then for the life of another but if tenant in tail maketh such a lease without expressing for whose life this shall be taken for the life of the Lessor for the reason abovesaid and also because the Law which abhorreth injury and wrong shall never so conster it as it shall work a wrong and in this case if it should be for the life of the Lessee the estate should be discontinued and a new reversion gained by wrong ibidem Where tenant in tail maketh a Lease to another for terme of life generally and after releaseth to the Lessee and his heires albeit between tenant in tail and him a Fee-simple passed It hath been adjudged that after the death of the Lessee the entry of the issue in tail was lawfull which could not be if it had been a Lease for the life of the Lessee for then by the release it had been a discontinuance executed Coke com f. 42. b. The Law more respecteth a lesser estate by right then a larger estate by wrong as if tenant for life in remainder disse●se tenant for life now he hath a Fee-simple but if tenant for life dyeth now is his wrongfull estate in fee by judgement in Law changed into a rightfull estate for life Coke com f. 41. c. If a man retaine a servant generally without expressing any time the Law consters it to be for one yeare according to the Statute 23. E. 3. C. 1. And for the same reason what is contrary to right and good manners is void in Law according to the rule of the Civilians Contra jus bonos more 's conventiones hominum non valent which accordeth with the ground of the common Law quod contra legem fit proinfecto habetur whatsoever is done contrary to to Law or right is accounted not done Coke l. 3. f. 74. quod vide As if a man maketh a Feoffment in fee upon condition he shall not alien this condition is repugnant and against Law and the state of the feoffee absolute Coke com f. 206. b. A Feoffment to A.B. his Heires and assignes with proviso that he shall not alien to no person is void but that he shall not alien to I.S. is good for upon the matter he hath given the Land to him and his Assignes except to I. S. Ployd f. 77. a. So if a man maketh a Feoffment in fee upon condition that the feoffee shall not take the profits this condition is repugnant and contrary to Law and the State is absolute Ibid. If a man be bound with a condition to enfeoff his wife the condition is void and against Law Ibidem A man giveth Land to two sisters and the heirs of their bodies under this forme that she which lived longest should hold the Land wholly which is void because it is contrary to Law for if the joynture be severed by fine the survivor shall not have the other part 8. Ass Pl. 33. Coke l. 1. in Corbets case So if a man maketh a Lease upon condition that if the Lessor granteth the reversion he shall have fee if the Lessor granteth the reversion by fine he shall not have fee because it is repugnant to Law 6. A. 2. Pl. 28. Pletingtons case The Testator maketh a Lease of his house and certain implements in it for years rendring Rent to him and to his Heirs and Assignes The Executors received the Rent continually after the death of the Testator The question was whether it was Assets or no and by the Judges adjudged no assets because the whole rent appertained to the heire Dier 360 b. An obligation taken by the Sheriff colore officij of any one in their custody by course of Law with a condition then for the appearance at the day mentioned in the processe is void because it is against the Statute of 23. H. 6. Coke l. 10. in Beawsages case vide ibidem plura And it is commonly holden that if the condition of a bond be against Law the bond it selfe is void Coke com 206. b. But herein the Law distinguisheth between a condition against Law for the doing of any act is malum in se and a condition against Law because it is either repugnant to the State or against some maxime or rule in Law and that common opinion is to be understood of conditions against Law for the doing of some act is malum in se As if a man be bound upon condition to kill I. S. the bond is void for an unlawfull condition is not of effect to gaine any thing by doing of it in our Law Ployd f. 34. b. But otherwise it is in a Feoffment upon condition for a Feoffment upon condition that the Feoffee shall kill I. S. the Feoffment is good and absolute and the condition void Ployd Brownings case 135. And though all Feoffments upon conditions repugnant to Law are void in bonds it is otherwise for a bond upon such conditions is good As if a Feoffee be bound in a bond that the Feoffee
remotissime vana which by the intendement of the Law never cometh into act Coke l. 2. f. 5. 2. n. b. in Sir Hugh Chomleys case vide ibidem plura And hereby the way may pertinently be observed that a possibility cannot be released as if before judgement the Plaintiff in an action of debt releaseth to the baile in the Kings Bench all demands and after judgement is given this shall not bar thee to have execution against the baile because at the time of the release he had but a meere possibility and neither jus in re or jus ad rem but the duty is to commence after upon a contingent and therefore could not be released presently So if the Conusee of a Statute release to the Conusor all his right in the Land yet afterward he may sue execution for he hath no right to the Land till execution but onely a● possibility and so have I known it adjudged Coke com f. 265. b. So if A. grant to B. that if he doe such an act he shall have an annuity of twenty pounds during his life before the Act done he cannot release the annuity Coke l. 1. in Albanys case Lex semper dabit remedium the law so favoreth right that it will suffer things against the principles of Law rather then a man to be without his remedy As a man who is outlawed may bring an action to reverse it an outlawry there is no Plea 4. H. 7. 40. The Tenant shall have a replevin against the Lord that did wrongfully distraine though the beasts be come back to himself because he can have no action of trespasse against him for that prisall and shall recover damages for the tortious prisall F. n. b. f. 69. H. A man after judgement is passed against him shall plead against the King a Charter of pardon or any such thing done in the meane betwixt the verdict and the judgement because against the King he can have no Audita querela 11. H. 7.10 otherwise it is against a common person And therefore is it a principle in Law cuicumque aliquis quid concedit concedere videtur id sine quo res ipsa esse non potest Coke l. 11. f. 52. a. Which Ploydon thus expresseth that it is held as a maxime in 2. R. 2. in trespasse that if any man hath interest to any thing by the grant and assent of another and the party who hath such interest cannot have the principall thing without doing the other thing that he may doe the said other thing and justify it because it is a meanes to come to his profit for there it is holden That if one grant to me all his Trees growing in his Woods I may cut them down and carry them through all his Land and though his Grasse be spoiled with the carriage he shall not have a Writ of trespasse of it for Trees are such things that if they be not carryed by Carts he cannot have them nor make his profit of them But if one sell all his Fish in his Pond and the Vendee dig a trench so as the water may run out that by such meanes he may take the Fish an action of trespasse will lye against the Vendee because he might take the Fish by Nets or other Engines but if there had been no other meanes to take them it had been otherwise and to come to the banks to fish he may well justify it for without it he cannot take them by any meanes so as a man shall alwayes justify the necessary circumstance where he hath title to the principall thing Ployd f. 15. 16. a. vide ibidem plura in Renigers case So when a Lessor in the Lease except the Trees and after hath an intention to sell them the Law giveth to him and to those who will buy them power as incident to the exception to enter and shew the Trees to those who will have them for without entry they cannot view and without view they cannot buy Coke l. 11. f 52. in Lisords case So 19. H. 6.29 A man seised of a mese in a Burrough c. devisable deviseth it to his wife in taile and that if his wife dye without issue that his Executor may sell it and it dispose for his soule in this case the Executor may by the Law enter into the house to see whether it be well repaired or no to the intent to know at what valew he may sell the reversion And the Law giveth power to him who will repaire a Bridge to enter in the Land and to him who hath a Conduit within the Land of another to enter into the Land for it to mend as cause shall require as it is resolved in 9. E. 4.35 Coke ibidem vide plura And Coke l. 5. f. 12. a. If a man hath Mines hidden within his Land and leaseth his Lands and all his Mines in it there the Lessor may dig for them for quando aliquis quid concedit c. and this accordeth with 9. E. 4.8 that if a man lease his Land to another in which there is a Mine to wit an hidden Mine he cannot dig for it and if he doe it is wast but if he lease his Lands and all the Mines in it it is otherwise for the reason aforesaid vide ibidem plura in Saunders case If tenant at will soweth Corne on the ground and the Lessor out him he shall have free entry egresse and regresse to carry it away for when the Law giveth any thing to any one it giveth implicitly whatsoever is necessary for the taking and enjoying of the same and the Law driveth him not to an action for the Corne but giveth him a speedy remedy to enter into the Land and to take and carry it away and compelleth not him to carry it at one time or to carry it before it be ready to be carryed and if the Lessee be disturbed of this way the Law doth give unto him he shal have his action upon the case and recover his damages for whensoever the Law giveth any thing it giveth a remedy for the same Coke com f. 56. a. If there be Lord Mesne and Tenant and the Lord purchaseth the tenancy in fee the mesnalty is extinct but whereas the tenant held of the meane by five shillings and the mesne of the Lord by twelve pence so as he hath more in advantage by foure shillings he shall have the foure shillings as a rent-seck yearly of the Lord and yet he shall distraine for it for seeing the mesnalty is extinct the Law reserveth the distresse to the rent for quando lex aliquid concedit c. And therefore if a man maketh a Lease for life reserving a rent and bindeth himselfe in a Statute and hath the rent extended and delivered unto him he shall distraine for the rent because it cometh to him by course of Law Multa constituuntur in lege ne curia Domini Regis deficeret in Justitia
are included because it concerneth the scandall of government and by the civill Law in generall this diffamatory crime is made capitall as if any man doe devise any slanderous Libell against one and it happeneth that another find it and he doth not cancell it and teare it in peeces but doth publish it to others he is punished with capitall punishment and so is the author likewise punished Fulb. l. 2. f. 27. Which description of a Libell accordeth with ours at the common Law as in Lambs case it was resolved Coke l. 4. f. 59. b. That every man who shall be convicted for the publication of a Libell either he ought to be contriver of the Libell or the procurer of the contriving of it or a malitious publisher of it knowing it to be a Libell and saith it is a great evidence that he doth publish when as he knowing it to be a Libell doth write a copy of it unlesse that afterwards he can prove that he delivered it to a Magistrate to examine it for then the act subsequent explaineth the condition precedent and though our Law be a charitable dealing mother and in all cases favoreth the life of man even above the other two which are most favored in the Law There are three things most favored in the Law life liberty and Dower Coke Com. so as it doth not punish this offence with capitall punishment yet doth it detest condemne and punish it as a step dam to rancor and violent speeches the abortive children of malice and as a more odious and perilous crime then other open scandalls For as Coke l. 5. f. 125. b. The nature of Libelling is secret and robbeth a man of his good name which ought to be more precious unto him then his life and it is a very difficult matter to finde out the Author and therefore when the offendor is known he ought to be severely punished as one who poisoneth another secretly is a greater offendor then he that killeth a man openly because the offendor cannot be so easiy prevented or inverted it mattereth not whether it be true or if the party against whom it is made be of good fame or evill fame for in a setled state of government the party greived ought to complaine for every injury done to him in the ordinary course of Law and not by any meanes to revenge himselfe either by the unlawfull course of Libels or otherwise and it is not materiall whether the Libell be in writing or without writing or whether in rime or prose or whether by Picture as to paint the party in any shamefull or ignominious manner or by signes as to fix a Gallowes or any other reprochfull or d●shonorable signes at the house of the party or elsewhere and therefore for the reasons abovesaid and that though the Libell be made against one yet doth it incite those who are of the same family or society to revenge and so tendeth to the breach of peace and may be the cause of effusion of blood It was resolved that a Libeller shall be punished by enditement at the common Law or by bill if it be denied or ore tenus by confession in the Star-Chamber and according to the quality of his offence he may either be punished by fine or imprisonment and in an exorbitant case by Pillory and losse of his eares vide ibidem plura Veritas nihil veretur nisi abscondi Coke l. 9. f. 20. b. Truth feareth nothing but to be hid and concealed Truth considered principally appertaineth to the Metaphysicks materially to naturall Phylophy instrumentally to Logick but practically to the Ethicks or morall Phylosophy and is nothing else but an affection of our speech and actions agreeing with the mind and is properly called veracitas that is a speaking of truth and of this truth is the ground to be understood that it is afraid of nothing then to be obscured for covin is so mixt with truth or truth with covin that it often deceiveth a prudent observer But though truth be so mixt with covin that evill herbe as Ploydon phraseth it such a conjunction and mixture will prove unsavorie and the goodness is turned to mischeivousnesse and the law wil never permit covin and falsity to suppresse verity and fidelity but in all cases laboureth to discover and censure them As if there be Lord and Tenant by fealty and rent and the tenant maketh a Lease for yeares and the Lessor hath made fealty and paid the rent continually and yet the Lord distraineth the Cattle of the Lessee for the rent where in truth nothing is behind and avoweth upon a meere stranger who never had any thing as if he were his very tenant for the arrearages of rent this false avowry of the Lord upon a stranger that is not his tenant shall not hurt the Lessee against the truth of the case but upon speciall matter disclosed he shall have aid of his Lessor who is the true tenant and therefore if the Lessee in such case alledge that his Lessor was and still is seised of the tenancy in his demesne as in fee and so holdeth it of the Lord by the services c. of which services the Lord hath been and yet is seised by the hands of the Lessor and that the tenant hath leased the Land to him and that the Lord hath charged the Plaintiff unjustly to avow upon one who hath nothing in the tenancy and therfore he prayeth in aid of the Lessor in this case upon the speciall matter he shall have aid for that without his Lessor he cannot plead this matter in abatement of the avowry neither shall the Lord be compelled to avow upon the Lessor and the false avowry of the Lord upon a stranger that is not his tenant shall not hurt the tenant contrary to the truth of the case for truth feareth nothing but to be concealed and the Law will never permit falsity to suppresse a truth Coke ibidem vide plura The Statute of W. 2. c. 3. giveth a Cui invita upon recovery by default before which such recovery was a wrong to the feme and an hard thing as the Statute saith and therefore a Cui ante devortium is given by the equity of that Statute for it goeth in oppression of falsity and advancement of verity so the Statute of Marlebridge cap. 6. maketh an ordinance against those who use to enfeoff their first borne and heires within age and yet if his first Son dyeth and he enfeoffed his second Son who is his heire it is within the equity of the Statute or if he levy a fine to him which is matter of record it shall be within the equity of the Statute and yet the Statute speaketh of a Feoffment and the cause is for that covin is allwayes abhorred in our Law and states made in suppression of it are for the publick good and therefore shall be extended by equity And therefore the Statute of 1. H. 7. c. 1.
Which giveth a Writ of Formedon in the remainder against the pernors of the profits was made for oppression of covin for the Feoffment made to persons unknown to defraud them who had right to the Land was a great covin and deceite in Law and therefore a Scire facias to execute a remainder shall be maintainable against pernors of the profits Ployd f. 59 b. in Wimbishes case So in Twins case l. 3. f. 82. It was resolved by the whole Court that Statutes made against fraud shall be liberally and favorally expounded to suppresse fraud because fraud and deceite abound more in these days then in former times where you may finde in Pennyfoots case and diverse other cases to that effect and purpose Quod alias bonum justum est si per vim vel fraudèm petatur malum injustum est Coke l. 3. s 78. a. what otherwise is good and just if it be acquired by force or fraud is evill and unjust and as Ploydon saith Covin may alter the marter though the title be good and covin to have recovery may be as well where the title is good as where it is faint and bad And therefore the Book is M. 15. E. 4.4 If a feme have cause of dower and is of Covin that the tenant shall be ousted by A. against whom shee recovereth and hath execution that her estate shall be adjudged against the Disseissee by disseisin and shall not hold it but shall be a Disseiseresse and yet the title of recovery is good and true but the Covin is the cause of it Ployd f. 59. Coke l. 3. f. 78. a. So if issue in tail who hath good cause to have a Formedon in the Descender upon discontinuance be of Covin that A. shall disseise B. against whom he doth recover he shall not be remitted although his title is good but shall be adjudged a Disseisor by reason of the Covin M. 10. H. 8. And in 19. H. 8. Where one disseised tenant in taile by Covin to the intent to enfeoff the issue in taile within age who had no cognisance of the Covin and he enfeoff him he shall not be remitted by the better opinion notwithstanding his good title and the covenous intent is the cause onely Ployd f. 51. 54. And so is it there holden by six Justices Coke l. 3. f. 78. in Fermors case And the reason there given is because he that is in by him that made the Covin shall be in the same plight as he that made the Covin and yet infants are much favored in Law It was found by office that one F. that had good cause of action of ad terminum qui praeterij● against an infant in by descent caused one H. to disseise the Heire by Covin against whom he recovered by his Writ of Entry ad terminum qui praeterjit whereupon this Office found the King of whom the land was holden had restitution to the Land during the nonage of the heires notwithstanding the plea and averment of F. in maintenance of his title so as though the title was good yet if covin was practised by him who had title to come to it he shall not be remitted Ployd f. 48. b. 41 Ass 28. For the common Law so abhorreth fraud and covin as all acts as well judiciall as others and those who of themselves are just and lawfull yet being mixed with fraud and deceit are in judgment of Law injurious and unlawfull Coke l. 3. f. 78. a. And so Coke l. 4. f. 113. a. in Adams case A man deviseth Tenements to superstitious uses and to good and charitable uses as to teach a Grammar Schoole yet because the good and charitable uses were mixt with superstitious uses and nothing in certaine was limitted to a good use in such case the commixture of the evill use with the good use infecteth the good use as a little poyson commixed with a great quantity of Wine or as truth mixed with covin turned the goodnesse of the one into the naughtinesse of the other And 19 H. 8. 12. If a man make a disseisin with the intent to make a Feoffment with warranty although he make the Feoffment twenty moneths after yet it is a warranty commenceth by disseisin Ployd f. 51. So if one make a gift in taile to another and the Uncle of the Donor disseise the Donce and maketh a Feoffment with warranty and the Uncle dyeth and the warranty descendeth upon the Donor and then the Donee dyeth without issue the Donor bringeth a Writ of Formedon in reverter and the Tenant pleadeth the Feoffment with the warranty the Demandant shall avoyd it because it commenced by disseisin and yet the disseisin was not immediately made to the Donor but to the Donee but by it his reversion was devested and yet warranties are much favoured in Law It is a rule in the Civill law Neminem ex suo dolo calliditate relevari that no man is releived by his fraud and deceite And it is an erudition in the common Law Fraus dolus nemini patrocinari debent Fraud and deceit ought not to be patronized in any Coke l. 3. f. 78. b. There is dolus bonus and dolos malus say the Civivilians dolos bonus is when a man doth devise any plot to entrap a theef or offendor and this cannot properly be called fraude but solertia and cunning and such a kind of cunning is practised in war-fare by which more victories are atcheived then by maine force as Tacitus plura consilio L. 1. An. quam vi geruntur But dolus malus is a subtile devise used to the deceiving another or the Law and this deceit doth not in out Law escape punishment but affordeth a double remedy against such who endamage others by deceit either a Writ of deceite or action upon the case As if I. present one to a Church being Patron and one T. disturbeth me and another in my name purchaseth a Quare impedit without my knowledge against the said T. and after causeth the Writ to be abated or I non-suite in the action I may have a Writ of deceit against him 55. E. 3. Quare impedit 37.20 H. 6.20 And an action of the case is maintainable against him who sueth an originall in the name of the Plaintiff against his will 7. H. 6.45 So if any one forge a Statute Merchant in my name and sue a Capias thereupon whereby I am arrested and had in execution a writ of deceit lyeth against him 19. H. 6.44 So if the guardian of an infant vouch one by covin who is not sufficient or pleadeth a bad plea whereas he might have pleaded a better the infant shall have a writ of deceit against him and recover the full value in damages 9. E. 4.34 A writ of deceit was brought against an Attorny for acknowledging satisfaction whereas his Master was not in truth satisfied 11. H. 6.34 In a Praecipe quod reddat if the Sheriff returne the
enfeoffed him long before the judgment in fee absque hoc that he was seised at the time of the judgement or any time after whereupon issue was taken and the Jury found the Feoffment and further sayd That it was made by covin to defraud the Plaintiff and other Creditors and it was judged for the Plaintif vide ibidem plura and fol. 166. Fraus praesumitur si insolitae clausulae apponantur Reg. J. C. and Coke l. 3. f. 81. Clausulae insuetae semper inducunt suspicionem As there in Twins case A Deed of gift was in part adjudged fraudulent because an unusuall clause was inserted in it and for that the Deed contained that the gift was made honestly truely and bona fide vide ibidem plura Dona clandestina sunt semper suspiciosa Coke l. 3. f. 81. Gifts in secret are alwayes subject to the suspition of fraud which there in Twins Case was one of the reasons alledged to prove a Deed of gift fraudulent to wit that it was made in secret And so in Burrels case l. 6. f. 72. the assignment of a Lease was taken to be fraudulent because it was delivered in a secret manner to a person of meane quality And for the same reason by livery and seisin in one County the Lands in another County will not passe Noys Max f. 3. Jus fraus nunquam cohabitant simul Coke l. 10 f. 49. a. Right and fraud never cohabit or dwell together As a Recovery cannot be sayd to be by collusion where tenant in taile is in the Recovery whether he be tenant in Deed or tenant in Law as a Vouchee For the Law hath made all the reversions and remainders as incidents to his estate subject to his pleasure and he hath right and power to bar them all ibidem And Coke l. 8 f 132 b. Covin cannot be alledged in doing of a lawfull act As in a Writ of Dower against a disseisor if the Tenant plead in abatement of the Writ entry by the disseisee the demandant shall not be received to aver the entry to be by covin to abate the writ because the entry is congeable and lawfull and mixed with no wrong as it is holden in 15. E. 4. f. 4. and if a disseisor or an abator endow a feme who hath title of dower it is good because it is a lawfull act Coke l. 5. f. 30. b. Fraus meretur fraudem Ployd f. 100. and the Poet Fraus est concessa repellere fraud●m Fraud and subtilty deserveth fraud and subtilty and it is a lawfull deceit to repell a deceit As in 19 E. 4. f. 27. In appeale of many who pleaded not guilty a Venire facias was awarded against them all and the Court perceiving that the prisoners were in opinion to sever in the challenge of the whole pannell of subtilty to stay the tryall at that time and that every prisoner would challenge as many as they might without danger to wit twenty and that every of them shall have his entire number of twenty so that one shall not be excluded of his number by the challenge of the other and that there was but a small number of men of sufficiency then in the City to be sworne so as by that subtilty the tryall should be stayed for the present The Court agreed that the first pannell and the Tales should be divided and made severall for every one of the prisoners And accordingly said to the prisoners We perceive your subtilty well enough which deserveth little favour of the Court and therefore tell us whether you will agree in your challenges for if you will not the Clarke shall sever the pannell and then they all agreed in their challenges and after the inquest was full evidence was given and there found and one subtilty prevented and repelled by another And this fraud by the Canonists is called Benus dolus of which they have this rule Frangenti fidem fides frangetur eidem To him who breaks his faith no faith is to be shewne And instance in the example of Salomon who did use such cunning betweene the two Harlots in searching out who was the true and naturall Mother of the childe Fulb. 2. l. f. 23. Vendens eandem rem duobus falsarius est Reg. I.C. Coke l. 1. f. 45. a. A man selling the same thing to two is a falfe dealer and therefore in the grant of the King it is dishonourable for him to grant the same possession to one that he or his Progenitors had granted to another for he that selleth the same thing to two persons is a deceiver Fraudis interpretatio non semper ex mente duntaxat sed ex consilio quoque desideratur Reg. I. C. Dolus circuitu non tollitur Coke l. 11. f. 74. a. nec purgatur Bacon Max. f. 3. The interpretation of fraude is not allwayes to be gathered out of the mind but also from the councell and consent and crafty dealing and deceite is not taken away nor purged by the circuity of shifting it from one to another and though covenous acts be conveyed through many hands and mediations yet the Law taketh hold of the corrupt beginning and proceeding As if I make a Feoffment of Lands held in Knights service to I. S. upon condition that within a certaine time he shall enfeoff I.D. which Feoffment of I. D. shall be to the use of the wife of the first feoffor for her joynture c. this Feoffment is within the Statute of 32. H. 8. Bacon ibidem So if one who hath an intention to sell his Land by fraud conveyeth it by deed enrolled to the Queen with an intent to deceive the purchasor and after selleth that Land to another for a valuable consideration and maketh a conveyance accordingly in this case the purchasor shall enjoy the Land against the Queene by the Statute of 27. Eliz. c. 4. For though the Queene be not excepted yet the act being generall and made for the suppression of fraud sh●ll bind the Queen and whosoever maketh the Queen who is the Fountaine of Justice to be an Instrument of covin and fraud and upon it obtaineth Letters Patents such Letters Patents are void or if the Queen be indeavored to take away another mans right and to that end a man obtaineth Letters Patents they shall be repealed though such covin and fraud be not contained in the grant made to the Queen but appeareth onely by averrement dehors for fraud and deceite is not taken away or diminished by the subtility of alienations Coke ibidem in Magdalens Colledge case Non facies malum ut inde fiat bonum it is the Law of God thou shall not doe evill that good may come thereof Coke l. 5. f. 30. b. lib. 11. f 7. 4 a. What hath been said of truth and falsity may be said of good and evill and are so semblable that an apparent good is often mistaken for that which is reall Jun. s 14. Fallit enim vitium
by misadventure as by an Arrow at Butts this hath a pardon of course but if a man be hurt or maimed onely an Action of Trespass lyeth though it be done against the parties will and he shall be punished in the Law as grievously as if he had done it of malice Stanf. 16.6 E. 4.7 So if a Chyrurgion authorized to practise do through negligence of his cure cause the party to dye this Chyrurgion shall not be questioned for his life yet if he do onely hurt the Wound whereby the cure is cast back and death ensueth not he is subject to an Action of the Case for it Stanf. 16. So if Baron and Feme commit Felony together the Feme in regard of the subjection of her will to her husband shal neither be principal not accessary but if they joyn in committing a Trespass upon land or otherwise the Action may be brought against them both So if an Infant wanting discretion or a mad-man kill another he shall not be impeached thereof but if they do him any corp●rall hurt he shall be punished in Trespass 35 H. 6. 11. So in Felony if the principall dye or be pardoned the proceeding against the accessory faileth But in a Trespass if one commandeth his man to beat you and after the Battery the Servant dyeth yet you may have an Action of Trespass against the Master 17 H 4.19 Aestimatio praeteriti delicti post facta nunquam crescit Bac. Max f. 32. In penall Lawes and Facts the Law considereth the degree of the offence not as it standeth at this time when it is committed but for any circumstance or matter subsequent the Law doth not extend or amplifie the same As if a man be wounded and the Percussor is voluntarily let to go at liberty by the Goalor and after the party wounded dyeth yet it is no Felonious escape in the Goaler 11 H. 4.12 So if one conspire the death of one who after cometh to be King not being within the Statute of 25 E. 3. this is high not high Treason but otherwise it is in civill and common cases vide ibidem Plur. Ipsae etenim leges cupiunt ut jure regantur Co. l. 2. f. 25. In omnibus quidem maxime tamen in jure aequitas est Reg. I. C. In all things but especially in the Law there is equity and the Lawes themselves desire to be ruled by equity For inasmuch as no Legislators can foresee all things which may happen it was therfore convenient as Ploydon saith that that fault should be reformed by equity And is either an amplification or diminution of the Law and no part of the Law but a morall vertue which reformeth the Law for dirigens and directum are diverse things and equity is not a Law but the emendation of the Law and therefore the Lawes themselves desire to be ruled by equity As whereas the Debtor after he is become Bankrupt may prefer one and defraud others the Act of 13 Eliz. c. 7. hath appointed certain Commissioners of indifferency and credit to releive the Creditors of the Bankrupt equally and that there shall be an equall and rateable proportion observed in the distribution of the Goods of the Bankrupt among his Creditors having regard to the quantity of their severall debts so that one shall not prevent the other but all shall be in aequali jure and so we see in many cases as well at the Common Law as upon the like statutes such constructions have been made for as Cato said Ipsae etenim leges cupiunt ut jure regantur and therefore is it holden 35 H. 8. Title Testaments V. de plura in Herberts case lib. 7. Bro. 19. A man holdeth three Mannors of three severall Lords by Knights-service every Mannor being of equall value he cannot devise two Mannors and leave the third to descend according to the generality of the Acts of 32. 34. H. 8. of Wills for then it shall prejudice the other two Lords but by equall construction he cannot devise but two parts of every Mannor and so as equality shall be observed among them and so at the Common Law an equality is required as in 11 H. 7. 12. b. a man is bound in an Obligation and his Heirs and he hath Heirs and hath lands of the part of his Father and part of his Mother both the Heirs shall be equally charged vide ibidem plura Co. Com. f. 10. a. If partition be made between Parceners of lands in Fee simple and for novelty of partition one granted a rent to the other generally the Grantee shall have a Fee-simple without this word Heirs because the Grantor hath a Fee-simple in consideration whereof he granted the rent Ipsae etenim leges c. And Co. Com. f. 271. a. b. when a Feoffment is made to a future use as to the performance of his last Will the Feoffee shall be seised to the use of the Feoffor and his Heires in the mean time for the Lawes desire to be ruled by right and equity And reason would that seeing the Feoffment is made without consideration and the Feoffor hath not disposed of the profits in the mean time that by construction and intendment of Law the Feoffor ought to occupy the same in the mean time And so it is when the Feoffor disposeth the profits for a particular time in presenti the use of the Inheritance shall be to him and his Heires as a thing not disposed of Co. ibidem Co. l. 5. f. 100. a. The Commissioners of Sewers by the Statute of 6 H. 6. c. 5. and 23 H. 8. c. 5. ought to tax all equally which are in danger to be endamaged by not repairing the Banks and not him onely who hath land adjoyning to the River for otherwise the rage and force of the water may be so great as the value of the land adjoyning shall not serve to repaire the Banks and therefore the Statutes will have all who be in the same perill and are to receive commodity by it to be contributory and the statutes require equality which well standeth with the rule of equity for equitas in Bracton est quasi aequalitas and though the Owner of the Land next adjoyning to the River was bound by prescription to repaire the banks of the River yet the Commissioners ought not to charge him only with all but to take all those which have lands in danger for otherwise it may that all the country shall be surrounded before that one person onely can repaire the Banks vide ibidem plura In Fooks case Coke l 7. f. 123. b. When the King granteth any Land without the reservation of any Tenure or without any thing from thence to be rendred or the like that land by the operation of Law shall be holden of the King in Capite by the service of Chivalry according to the rate and proportion of land that affereth to one fee of Chivalry and so of more more and of lesse lesse for the
stranger tendreth them mony for the Land and they intending to sell it more deere defer the sale for two yeares and take the profits themselves the heire for the laches and long delay may enter and put them out of the Land 38. Ass Pl. 3. 39. Ass Pl. 3. A man indebted by specialty or upon an account determined tendreth the mony to the Debtee after the day in which it was due and payable and it is refused and after mony is embased it seemeth to many that the debtor shall beare the losse although he had made tender at the very day of payment because he must say vncor prist Dyer f. 83. Pl. 76. Caveat Emptor Coke Com. f. 102. a. Let the the buyer be vigilant and wary what he buyeth for though by the Civill Law every man is bound to warrant the thing that he selleth and conveyeth yet the Common Law bindeth him nor unlesse there be a warranty either in Deed or in Law Ibi. Coke l. 4. f. 26. a. A Copy-holder who is out of possession ought not to sell his Land untill he hath gained the possession and if any one will purchase any title he is not to be favored but in such case Caveat Emptor let the buyer take heed for if any one hath a pretended right and title to Copy-hold Land bargaine and sell it to another it is within the Statute of 32. H. 8. c. 5. vide ibidem plura If I take an horse of another mans and sell him and the owner taketh him againe I may have an action of debt for the mony for the bargaine was perfect by the delivery of the horse Caveat Emptor Nay Max f. 94. If I sell my Horse to another man for ten hundred pounds who taketh his horse againe I shall have all the mony Ibidem f. 95. Qui timent caveant vitent Offi. of Exe. 251. They who feare are wary to shun dangers as an Executors office is dangerous and therefore ought to feare what encombrances fall on him and to keep goods to pay all debts if any should be concealed Non temere credere nervus est sapientiae Coke l. 5. f. 114. b. Not hastely to beleive is the sinew of wisdome and therefore the Law hath appointed the last time in the day to pay mony upon a condition that both parties may certainly meet together which is founded on the experience of the sages least any of the parties should be constrained to make a Letter of Attorny or repose confidence or trust in any other to pay it for him when he will doe it for himselfe And it is wisdome not rashly to trust any Caveat actor Reg. I. C. Let the actor beware what he doth One entreth into Bond to A. that he and A. shall stand to the Arbitrement of I. S. If A. refuse he him-himselfe shall take the forfeiture of the Bond. If a man have a Chappell which is his donation by Letters Patents and he presenteth me his clerk to the Ordinary he shal not make collation afterwards If a Parson impropriate presenteth one to a Church it maketh it disappropriate If he who holdeth his Land by homage and fealty taketh his Land of the King by office found that he holdeth it by forty shillings per annum he shall pay the rent hereafter Abundans cautela non nocet Coke l. 11 f. 6. b. An abundance of circumspection doth not hurt vide ibi Qui sentit onus sentire debet commodum Coke l. 1. f. 99. a. He who beareth the burden and taketh the paines ought to receive the profit as if a Feoffment be upon condition that if the Feoffor or his Heirs pay the sum of 20 l. or to doe any act before a certain day that they shall re-enter in this case if the father dye before the day of paymenr and the daughter for the safe-gard of the inheritance pay the mony or satisfieth the condition in this case the Son after borne shall not devest it for if the daughter had not performed the condition the Land had been utterly lost and therefore in this case a good argument may be made that the daughter shall detaine the Land for Qui sentit onus sentire debet Commodum ibidem vide Hobart Rrep fo 4. in Youngs and Radfords case Ployd f. 514. Trevilian was Tenant in tail of Tenements and he being only seised of such an estate a common recovery was had against him and Avice his wife who vouched over according to the course of common recoveries and it was found that the wife had nothing in the Tenements the husband dyeth the wife shall have nothing of the intended recompence in the case because she had nothing in the Tenements and so could lose nothing If Tenant for life or in Dower do devise the Corn growing on the ground upon the land at the time of their death this is a good Devise and he in the reversion shall not have it 4 H. 3. Devise 26. And the Statute of Merton which saith Omnes viduae possunt legare sua blada is but an affirmation of the common Law which was used in the time of H. 3. 19 H. 6. 6. A man seised of land in see in right of his wife leaseth the land to a stranger and the Lessee soweth the land and after the wife dyeth the Corn being not ripe the Lessee may devise the corn and yet his estate is determined 7 E. 3. 67. A man seised of land in the right of his wife and soweth it and deviseth the Corn growing on the ground and dyeth before it is severed the Devisee shall have it and not the wife 7. Ass pl. 19. One seised of lands in fee hath Issue a Daughter and dyeth his wife Privement Ensaint with a Son the Daughter entereth and soweth the land and before the severance a Son is born and his next friend entereth yet the Daughter may devise the Corn growing on the land If a Mannor be put in execution upon a Statute-merchant and the Conusee sow the land he may well devise the Corn growing on the ground Perkins f. 100. vide ibidem plura Qui sentit commodum sentire debet onus Cok. l. 5. f. 24. He that feeleth or reapeth the profit must bear the burthen and the charges A man leaseth an house by Indenture for years and the Lessee covenanteth for him and his Executors to repaire the house at all times necessary The Lessee assigneth it over to H. who suffereth it to decay the Lessee bringeth an action of Covenant against the Assignee and it was adjudged the action did lye in that the Lessee had taken upon him to bear the charges of reparation the annuall rent was the less which trenched to the benefit of the Assignee and he that enjoyeth the profit must bear the burthen and charges vide ibidem plura Co. l. 5. f. 100. a. The Statutes will have all those which are in perill and which are to take comodity by the
Quare Impedit 54. but at this day it is remedied by the act 1 E. 3 c. 12. by which it is declared that because that many people may be grieved for it that Lands and Tenements held in chief of the King as all those which hold by grand Serjanty are and alien without leave have been held as forfeited hereafter in such case let a reasonable fine be taken So since that Statute at all times when Lands holden by grand Serjanty have been aliened without licence a fine hath been taken and no seisure ever made for the forfeiture and therefore no forfeiture to be taken for Custome is the best Interpreter of the Law vide etiam L. 10. f. 70. b. Consuctudo manerii est observanda Co. com f. 63. a. consuetudo loci est observanda Brac. l. 2. f. 76. l. 4. f. 28. The custome of the Mannor and the custome of the place is to be observed for there are different customes in many Mannors and places and the customes of one Mannor in some particulars commonly varieth from another And these diversities of customes have grown by reason of the severall Nations who have had government over this Kingdome Britans Romans Saxons Danes Normans which have left part of their Language and part of their usage which difference of usage and custome is to be observed in every place and Mannor for what a Copyholder may or ought to do or not to do the custome of the Mannor must direct it and if there be no custome to the contrary wast either premissive or voluntary of a Copyholder is a forfeiture of his Copyhold Co com f. 63. a. If a Copyholder for life surrender to another in fee it is no forfeiture for that passeth by surrender to the Lord and not by Livery And Copyhold Estates shall not have the collaterall qualities that the estates of the common Law have without especiall custome for the custome of the Mannor is to be observed Coke l. 1. f. 22. a. 23. a. vide ibidem plura f. 28. b. Coke l. 6. f. 67. a. In a common recovery which is had by agreement and consent of parties of acres of land the acres shall be accounted according to the customable and usuall measure of the Country and not according to the Statute De terris mensurandis made in the 33 of Ed. 1. Sir John Buntings case 1 Eliz. So if a man bargain and sell so many acres of wood they shall be measured according to the usage of the Country and that is according to twenty foot to the Rod and not according to the said act for the custome of tho place is to be observed 47 E. 3. 18. Coke l 10. 140. a in Kighleys case It was resolved cleerly that the severall Commissioners of Sewers throughout England are not bound to pursue the Lawes and Customes of Romney Marsh but in case where any particular place within their Commission have such Lawes and Customes as Romney Marsh hath there they may pursue them for the custome of the place is to be observed Consuetudo vincit communem legem coke l. 4. f. 21. Custome overcometh and mastereth the common Law and will not alwaies be ruled by its grounds for a custome and usage of time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary may create and consolidate Inheritances Coke comm f. 185. b. If a man be seised of an house and possessed of divers Heir Looms that by custome have gone with the house from Heir to Heir and by his Will deviseth away the Heir-looms this devise is void for the Wil taketh effect after his death and by his death the Heir looms by ancient custome are vested in the Heir and the Law preferreth the custome before the devise 1 H 5 Executors 108. And so it is if the Lord ought to have an Heriot when his Tenant dieth and the Tenant deviseth all his goods yet the Lord ●●all have his Heriot for the reason aforesaid And it hath been anciently said that an Heriot shall be paid before a Mortuary wherein the Lord is preferred because the Tenure is in him Co. ibidem Ployd f. 36. b. Whereas the Statute of 1 R. 2. c. 12. doth ordain that the Warden of the Fleet shall not suffer any one who is in execution to go out of Prison by main-prize bail or baston yet it is taken by equity of the said Statute th●t if any other Goaler who lets such a one in execution to go out of prison with mainprize bail or baston that it shall be said to be an escape But notwithstanding that it extendeth to all other Goalers so fully as though it had been expressed by plain words yet those of London use to let such go at large with baston in any place within their jurisdiction and shall not be judged an escape in them and the reason of that is not because the statute in equity doth not extend to them but the reason of it is their prescription in that point and all their customes and prescriptions are confirmed by the Statutes by which they may prescribe against the equity and words of the statute which are contrary to their customs and prescriptions as against the statute of Silva caedua and to hold Leet at other times then the statute appointeth and such others ibidem Obtemporandum est rationabili consuetudini tanquam legi coke l. 4. 38. b. Littleton Sect. 170. consuetudo ex certa causa ratienabili usitata privat communem legem We ought to obey a reasonable custom as a Law and a custom used upon a certain reasonable cause depriveth or over cometh the common Law but a custome introduced against reason is rather an usurpation then a custome coke comm f. 113. a. and it is a Maxime in our Law that all customs and prescriptions which be against reason are void coke comm f. 140. a. As if the Lord of a Mannor prescribe a custome in generall that every Tenant in his Mannor that marrieth his Daughter to any man without the licence of the Lord shall pay a fine and have paid a fine to the Lord for the time being this prescription is void for none in such case ought to pay fines but Villains vide ibidem plura So if the Lord of a Mannor do prescribe that for the time being he hath used to distraine Cattell were upon the demeans of his Mannor for Damage-feasant and the distresse to retain till fine were to him for damages at his will this prescription is void for it is a Maxime in Law Aliquis non potest esse judex in propria causa no man can be a Judge in his own case ibidem 141. a. And therefore a Fine levied before the Bayliffs of Salop was reversed because one of the Bayliffs was a party to the fine because he cannot be a Judge and a party coke ibidem So a custome that the Lord shall take for Heriot the beast of a stranger levant and couchant upon the
sub eo ipse sub nullo nisi tantum sub Deo Bract. l. 1. c. 8. The King is the Vicar and Minister of God upon earth every one is under him and he under none but onely under God and therefore the Lands which are in the Kings possession are free from tenure for a tenant is he which holdeth of some superior Lord by some service so as the King cannot be a tenant because he hath no superior but God for as Coke l. 8 f. 118. It would be against common right and reason that the King should hold of any or doe service to any of his Subjects and therefore all Lands holden of him mediately or immediately Co. com f. 1. and for which reason Cowell thought it not so proper in the Kings case to say that he is seised in dominico suo ut de feodo as if feodum in our Law was taken as it is in the fendall Law onely for the Lands held in Services whereas feodum as Bracton Britton Fleta and Littleton tels us idem est quod haereditas Davis case of Tenures f. 30. Neither can the King be a Joynt-tenant with any though it be of land or other things that he had in his body naturall for none can be equall with him And therefore if two purchase lands to them and their heirs and one be made King they are no more Joynt-tenants but Tenants in Common 3 Eliz 339. Nay Acts of Parliament do not bind him unless they concern the Common-wealth or he be specially named 4. E. 4 21. 1 Eliz. 223. And no man can declare against the King but he must sue by way of Petition Ployd f. 241. b. 18 Eliz 498. He hath the property of all Goods that are nullius in bonis and shall have all Tythes out of Forrests and places out of any Parish for rex est persona mixta cum sacerdote In a Writ of Error upon false Judgment given for the King no Scire facias shall go forth ad audiendum errores for the King is alwaies in Court and that is the cause that the form of Entry is in all Suits for the King in the name of his Attorney generall F.N.B. 21. b. Rex semper praesumitur attendere ardua negotia regni pro publico bono omnium Coke l. 5. f. 56. a. It is alwaies presumed that the King doth attend the weighty and hard things of the Kingdome for the publick good of all And therefore have the Grants of the King a more beneficiall interpretation then the Grants of the Subject that may attend their private Affaires which are alwaies taken more strongly against them As if the King do grant lands to I.S. and his Heirs and in truth I. S. is the Kings Villain that shall not enfranchise the Villain by Implication The same Law is of an Alien born 17. E. 3. 39. The Advowson of Pravondry holden of the King was aliened to an Abbot and his Successors and that the Successors shall hold the Provandry to their own use The King shall seise the Advowson for Alienation in Mortmain and destroy the Appropriation for he shall not be ousted of his right of Advowson by Implication So 2 R. 2. 4. If two be indebted to the King and the King release to one it shall not discharge the other for no prejudice shall accrue to the King by construction or implication upon his Grant more then he truly intended by it ibidem So if a release be made by him of all demands the right of Inheritance shall not be released 6 H. 7. 15. If the King granteth lands in fee upon condition that they do not alien it is good but in all these cases it is otherwise in the case of a common person And in many cases the King who claimeth by a Subject shall be in a better case in respect of the Prerogative incident to his Royall person then the Subject himself by whom he claimeth As if the King have a Rent-seck by Attainder of Treason or by Grant he shall distrain for it not onely in the land charged but also in all his other lands and yet the Subject by whom he claimeth shall not distrain If a Subject have Recognizance or an Obligation and after is outlawed or attainted the King shall seise all the land of the Conusor or Obligor where he himself can have but the Moyety the King shall take advantage of a Condition broken without demand whereas a common person who claimeth under the King cannot re-enter for non payment of Rent without demand made And if the King purchaseth a Lordship of which land is holden by posteriority the King shall have the priority vide ibidem plura in Knights case Davis f. 45. If a common person grant rent or any other thing which lieth in grant onely without limitation of any estate by the delivery of the deed only a Frank-tenement shall passe 17 E. 3. 43. a. If the King grant rent or land without the limitation of any estate the Grant is meerly void for the incertainty 7 Ass pl. 1. and the Grantee shall not be Tenant at Will as it is ruled in the case of Alton Wood. Ployd f. 243. The Grant of the King is taken more strongly against a stranger and more favourable to the King although the thing granted come to the King by purchase or descent Whereas it is otherwise of a common person As a grant of a Mannor by the King the Advowson shall not passe without speciall words So the King may grant a thing in action which another cannot So if the part of an entire thing commeth to the King the Common Law hath given him all As if an Obligation be made to two and one is outlawed the King shall have all the duty So he shall have an entire Horse or Oxe which one who is outlawed holdeth in Common ibidem So Coke l. 9. f. 129. b. Quando jus domini regis subditi in simul concurrunt jus regis preferri debet when the right of the King and the Subject concur and meet together the right of the King ought to be preferred as in Dame Hales case Baron and Feme Joynt tenants of a term for years the Baron is felo de se the Baron shall forfeit all Ployd Com. 262. vide ibidem plura in Quicks case The King may mend his Declaration that term that it is put in p. 13 E. 48. So the King may wave his Demurrer and traverse the plea of another M. 28 H. 6. f. 2. So if the King grant lands in fee with Warranty against all the Patentee shall not have value in recovery without express words to have value So the King may make a Lease to a stranger this reservation is good and the stranger shall distrain for it or have an action of debt after the Lease determined M. 35. H. 6. f. 36. Ployd f. 243. a. So for arrearages of Rent-charge granted to the King he may distrain in all other
of false imprisonment because that he is Iudge of the Cause 14 H. 8. 16. Factum a Judice quod ad ejus officium non pertinet ratum non est Reg. I. C. Coke l. 10. f. 76. b. Judicium a non suo Judice datum nullius est momenti An act done by a Iudge which doth not appertain to his Office is not allowed and a Judgment given by him is not his proper Iudge is of no weight nor moment As if the Sheriff who is prescribed by the Law to hold his Turn within a month after Michaelmas holdeth his Turn after the moneth and taketh an Indictment of robbery at the same Turn and the Indictment is by a Certiorari removed into the Kings Bench by advice of all the Iustices the party so indicted was discharged because the Indictment was utterly void coram non judice because at that time the Sheriff had no authority to hold it And if a man have a Leet which is holden at a day certain if he hold it another day such Court so holden is void and without Warrant but it is otherwise of a Court Baron Coke ibidem but if the Court of Common Bench holdeth plea without an Originall it is not void for they are Iudges of those pleas and it cannot be said that the proceeding is coram non judice 19 E. 4. 8. Iudgment in the Marshalsey when none of the parties be of the houshold of the King may be avoided by plea without any Writ of Error which proveth that it is void 6 N. 2. So in Trespass before the Marshall if none of the parties be of the houshold of the King it is coram non judice because they passe their power 29 E. 4. 16. If one of the Queens houshold sue another of the same houshold and the Plaintiff is put out of service the plea depending the other may shew this and abate the Writ but otherwise it is if the Defendant be put out of service Lib. de divers des Courts f. 102. b. And if a man be impleaded in the common place for lands within the Cinque-ports the Tenant may shew to the Court that the land is within the Cinque-ports and by this plea the Court shall be outed of iurisdiction but if the Tenant doth plead in bar which is found against him and the Demandant haue judgment to recover the land t● is judgment shall bind the Tenant for ever Ib. 107. b And so it is of land in ancient Demesne if a Writ be brought for them in the common place if the Tenant appear and plead the bar and taketh no exception to the jurisdiction and the plea is found against him so that the Demandant recovereth he shall not reverse this by a Writ of Error because he might have taken exception to the jurisdiction of the Court and that should have been allowed ibidem But the Lord may reverse this judgment by a Writ of Deceit and make the land ancient Demesne as it was before If a man devise to one lands devisable the Devisee cannot sue for these lands in the Ecclesiasticall Court but if he make a devise of goods and chattles reall as a terme of years or of a ward he may for such sue in that Court F. N. B. f. 43. b. Jurisdictio est potestas de publico introducta cum necessitate juris dicendi Coke l. 10 f. 73. Iurisdiction is a power introduced by the publick for the necessity of decreeing and doing right The Iurisdiction of the Court of the Marshally was first instituted for the necessity of the rule and governance of the Servants of the Kings house-hold and therefore was it anciently stiled placita corona aulae hospiti● domini regis the Pleas of the Court of the house-hold of the Lord the King by which words it is proved that the one or the other party ought at the least to be of the house-hold of the King for how can these words stand when neither of the parties be of the house-hold of the King and that is the reason that it is not necessary in suites before the Steward and Marshall to alledge that the Plaintiff or Defendant were of the house-hold of of the King for the stile of the Court doth the same imply ibidem So the jurisdiction of the Court of Py-powders was introduced for the necessity of doing right in suits and matters concerning Markets and as that Court hath not jurisdiction but for things concerning the Market so hath it not Iurisdiction for matters concerning the Market unlesse they be done in the same Market M. 42. 42. Eliz in B. R. Hall brought a Writ of Error against Jones of a judgement given in the Court of Py-powders of the Market c. for Jones one of the Registers of the Bishop of Gloucester because Hall had published slanderous words of him c. and the judgement was reversed for two errors because those words did not concerne any matter concerning the Market and therefore the Court had no jurisdiction of it but if one slander any that shall come into the Market in any thing which concerneth his trade an Action well lyeth against hims and 2. it appeareth in the count that the words were spoken before the Market and not in it for the Court hath onely jurisdiction of those things which are done and said in the Market ibidem a. b. Where there is no colour to hold Plea as in a Court Baron of Land not holden of a mannor all is void but where there is colour to hold Plea though it be by plaint where it should be by originall yet the Iudgement rendred is onely voidable by a Writ of Error ibidem Non pertinet ad judicem secularem cognoscere de ijs quae sunt spiritualibus annexa Bract. l. 5. c. 2. It doth not appertaine to the secular Iudge to take cognizance of those things which are annexed to spirituall things And therefore the branches of Trees which are priviledged from Tithes shall be also priviledged but the suite for the Tithe branches of Trees which are not priviledged shall be in the spirituall Court as well as the suite for the Tithe of Trees themselves Res judicata pro veritate accipitur Coke com 103. a. The thing adjudged is taken for truth As in an Action of debt upon an Obligation against an Abbot the Abbot acknowledgeth the Action and dyeth the successor shall not avoid execution though the Obligation was made without the assent of the Covent for he cannot falsify the recovery in an higher Action and the thing judged is taken for truth and this is but a Chattle and so is it of a Statute or Recognizance acknowledged by an Abbot and Prior ibidem And therefore doth the Law so much respect the certainty of Iudgement and the credit and authority of Iudges as it will not permit any error to be assigned that impeacheth them in their trust and office and in wilfull abuse of the same but onely
within a Mannor time out of minde of man used was to grant parcell of the said Mannar in Fee-simple and never any grant was made to the heir of his body for life or for yeares and the Lord of the said Mannor did grant to one by copy for life the remainder over to another and the heires of his body and was adjudged that the grant and remainder over was good because the Lord having a custome and interest withal might grant a lesser estate for in this custome which enableth him to doe the greater enableth him to doe the lesse Coke com f. 52. b. for omne majus continet in se minns and regularly it is true that where a man doth that which he ought to doe and more there it is good for that which is warranted and void for the rest Coke com 258. a. As if a Letter of Attorney be made to I. S. to make livery of seisin in white acre and he maketh livery in white acre and black acre there he doth idem aliud and therefore it is good for white acre that is according to his authority and void for black acre which is aliud from his authority Perk. 38. But otherwise it had been if the Letter of Attorny were to make livery of one acre and he maketh livery of two acres there it is void for both because it is not named in certaine in the Feoffment of which acre livery shall be made according to 4. H. 7. And so regularly it is true that where a man doth the same thing he is authorized to doe alio modo in another manner then the authority doth warrant there it is void for the whole Davis in case of tenures f. 21. As if I command a man to make a Feoffment in my name according to a copy shewed in Latine and he maketh a Feoffment to the same effect in English it is without warrant because he doth not pursue the authority in the same Mannor 10. H. 7. 9. So a Letter of Attorney is made to deliver seisin after the death of I. S. and the Attorney maketh seisin during the life of I. S. all is void 40. Ass 38. Authorities by Deed are to be pursued strictly and precisely both for matter and manner Davis ibidem f. 17. The Plaintiff did make a charter of Feoffment to the tenant and a Letter of Attorny to deliver livery of seisin the Attorney delivereth seisin upon condition this livery is void for the authority is not pursued in the same manner 12. Ass 24. 26. So on the contrary if the Letter of Attorney had been to deliver seisin upon condition and the Attorney maketh livery without condition this is void Co. Just 258. 11. H. 4. 3. So where an authority is given to enfeoff and he levieth a fine 10. H 7. 15. It is void Omne mandatum est temporaneum Reg. I. C. all commands are temporary and are extinguished by death which is the difference that the Civilians put between an authority and a command and that the commande is determined by the death of him that commandeth but not the authority as by these verses is signified Praeceptum non pracipitat mors praecipientis Mandatum mandatore cadente cadit But some hold opinion that they both expire by the death of him that commandeth or giveth authority which Fulbech saith is more agreeable to our Law especially in matters of Bailship of which notwithstanding these diversities may be observed A man deviseth all his lands to his Sister except one Mannor which he appointeth to pay his debts and he made two Executors and dieth the one Executor dieth yet the other may sell the Mannor and pay his debts Dyer 371. But if a Letter of Attorney be made to deliver Livery of Seisin after the death of the Feoffor the Letter of Attorney is void Coke com f. 52. b. And if a Mayor and Comminalty maketh a Charter of Feoffment and a Letter of Attorney to deliver Seisin the Livery and Seisin is good after the death of the Mayor because the Corporation dieth not But if the Lessor by his Deed licence the Lessee for life or for years to alien and the Lessor dieth before the Lessee doth alien yet is death no countermand of the licence but that he may alien for this licence was executed on the part of the lessor as much as may be M. 3. Jac. c. 23. And so if the King doth licence to alien in Mortmain and dieth the Licence may be executed afterward Coke ibidem There is a diversity between authorities created by the party for private uses and an authority created by Law for execution of Iustice As for example if a man deviseth that his two Executors shall sell his land if one of them dyes the Survivor shal not sell it but if he had devised his lands to his Executors to be sold there the Survivor shall sell it coke com f. 181. b. And if a man make a Letter of Attorney to two to do any Act if one of them dye the Survivor shall not do it But if a Venire facias be made to foure Coroners to impanell and return a Iury and one of them dye yet the other shall execute and return the same vide ibidem plura And if there be two joynt Attorneys to return Livery for another and livery of Seisin is made to one of them in the name of both this is void unless the Warrant be joyntly and severally Coke com f. 49. l. vide ibidem plura Mandata licita strictam recipiunt interpretationem sed illicita latam extensam Bacon Max. 60. lawfull Commands receive a strict interpretation but unlawfull large and extensive In committing of lawfull authority to another a man may limit it as strictly as he pleaseth and if the party authorised do transgress his authority though it be in circumstance expressed it shall be in most cases void in the whole act as hath before been demonstrated and distinguished But when a man is the Author and advisor to another to commit any unlawfull act then he shall not excuse himself by circumstances pursued Therefore if I make a Letter of Attorney to I. S. to deliver Livery and Seisin in the capitall Messuage and he doth it in another place of the land or between the hours of two and three and he doth it after or before in these cases the act of the Attorney as to execute the estate is void Or if I express the Seisin to be delivered to I.D. and my Attorney deliver it to I.B. it is void but if my Attorney maketh it to his Attorney it shall be intended for it is a Livery to him in Law But on the other side if I command I. S. to rob I. D. on Shooters-hill and he doth it on Gads-hill or to rob him such a day and he doth it not himself but procureth another to do it or to kill by poyson and he doth it by violence in all these cases he
their Predecessors but excuse themselves and answer for their proper fact and demeanor for it is a common erudition that the Defendant in his answer and bar ought either to traverse or confess and avoid the Plaintiff vide ibidem plura Yet in Treasons and Felonies one shall be punished for anothers offence and by our Law and not without good reason the Sons of them which are disloyall Subjects and Traytors to their Prince are barred from the Inheritance of their Ancestors that their Fathers infamy may alwaies accompany them and that their life should be a punishment to them and their Fathers fault a continuall corasive and that is done because their Fathers Ulcers are feared in them and that being bred and brought up of naughty Parents they will be prone to do the like and this penalty is used in the nature of a medicine that by suffering shame he may be deterred from crime and therefore as Coke com 5. f. 391. l. by his attainder of Treason or Felony is the blood so stained and corrupted that his Children cannot be Heires to him nor to any other Ancestor And therefore where the Tenant is outlawed of Felony it is in the Lords election to have a Writ of Escheat supposing that his Tenant was outlawed of Felony or that he died without Heir for by the attainder the blood is corrupted 48 E. 3. 2. But it seemeth by Nichols case that the party attainted ought to be dead before the land can escheat for according to Dyer and Brian in the Kings case after the attainder and till Office be found the Fee-simple shall in facto be in the person of the attainted so long as he shall live for as he hath a capacity to take lands of a new purchase so he hath power to hold his ancient possessions and he shall be Tenant to a Praecipe and if he died before Office found and the land be held of the King the land shall go to the King in nature of a common Escheat Ployd 477. Nichols case but in case of Treason the King shall be presently after the attainder in actual possession without Office found by the Statute of 33 H. 8. c. 20. If the Father purchaseth land and his eldest Son is attainted of Felony and dieth the next in degree of descent and worthiness of blood unto the Son attainted shall not have the land but it shall escheat to the immediate Lord of whom the land is held for the blood is corrupted otherwise it had been if he had died in the life of the Father having no Issue Dyer 48. An account is brought against two the one entreth into an account and it is sound against him it shall bind both 44 E. 3. 18. One is imprisoned in the Marshalsey and a stranger breaketh the Prison and the prisoner escapeth the Marshall shall be charged for the whole debt If I have a way over the lands of twenty men and one of them stoppeth the way in his land I shall have an action against all those over whose lands the way was 33 H. 6. 26. by profit A rate is put upon a Town for the fees of a Knight of the Parliament The Beasts of him hath paid his part are taken for the residue he shall not have a Replevin but the beasts shall be sold to pay his duty 11 H. 4. 2. In quo quis delinquit in eo de jure est puniendus Co. com f. 233. b. In what one offendeth in the same by right he is to be punished As if any Keeper kill any Deer without warrant or fell or cut any Trees or under-woods and committeth them to his own use it is a forfeiture of his Office for the destruction of the Deer is by a mean the destruction of the Venison And so it is if he pull down the Lodge or any house within the Park for putting of Hay into for feeding of the Deer or such like it is a forfeiture and the reason why the Office shall in such and the like case be forfeited because in what one offendeth in that he shall be punished Dispensatio mali prohibeti est de jure Domino regi concessa propter impossibilitatem providendi de omnibus particularibus dispensatio est mali prohibiti provida relaxatio utilitate seu necessitate pensata Coke l. 11. 88. a. The dispensation of a prohibited evill is by right granted or allowed to the King because of an impossibility for providing for all particular things and a dispensation is a provident relaxation of an evill prohibited recompensed with profit and utility As where an Act of Parliament which generally prohibiteth a thing upon penalty which is popular or where it is onely given to the Queen may be inconvenient to divers particular persons in respect of the person place or time c. therfore in such causes the Law hath given power to the Queen to dispense with particular persons But when the wisdome of Parliament hath made an Act to restrain pro bono publico the Importation of any forrein Manufactures to the intent that the Subjects may apply themselves to the making of the said Manufactures c. and by it maintain themselves and families Now for private gaine to grant the importation of them to one or divers against the said Act is a Monopoly and against the Common Law and against the end and scope of the Act it self vide ibidem plura in the case of Monopolies Coke l. 5. f. 28. Cawdrys case By the Ecclesiasticall Lawes of this Realm a Priest cannot have two Benefices nor a Bastard be a Priest but the King by his Ecclesiasticall power and jurisdiction may dispense with both these because they are mala prohibita and not mala in se The King by a clause of non obstante may dispense with the Statute-law and that if the Statute saith that dispensation shall be meerly void 2 H. 7. Grants 73. Finch f. 82. Coke comm f. 120. a. A party or Minister disabled by reason of any corrupt Contract c. by the Act of 13 Eliz. which is an absolute and direct Law cannot be dispensed withall by any Grant c. with a non obstante as it may be when any thing is prohibited sub modo● as upon a penalty given to the King Coke l. 4. f. 35. b. in Bozums case when the King by the common Law cannot in any manner make a grant there a non obstante of the common Law will not make the grant good against the reason of the common Law as if the King granteth a protection in an assize or Quod impedit with a non obstante of any Law to the contrary that grant is void for by the common Law a protection doth not lye in any of these cases 39. H. 39. But when the King may lawfully make a grant but the common Law requireth that he may be so instructed that he be not deceived there a non obstante may supply it as when the King
when we apprehend the reason of the Law that is when we bring the reason of the Law to our own reason that we may perfectly understand in as our own ibidem and therefore we use to say in argument that reason will that such a thing be done or that reason will not that such a thing be done Noy max. f. 1. for as Ployd f 34. our Law hath reasonable constructions in all things As if I be bound to perform the Covenants in such an Indenture it shall be intended all the Covenants or that my Feoffees shall make an Estate it shall be intended all my Feoffees Lex est summa ratio Coke com 97. b. the Law is the chiefest reason that is an artificiall and legall reason warranted by authority in Law ibid. 62. a. and therefore Littleton saith Semper quaere de dubiis quia per rationes pervenitur ad legitimam rationem Alwaies enquire of doubts for by reason you shall come to a lawfull reason for reason is radius divini luminis and by the reasoning and debating of grave learned men the darkness of ignorance is expelled and by the light of legall reason the right is discerned and thereupon judgment given according to Law which is the perfection of reason Coke com f. 232. b. Nay the Common Law it self is nothing but reason which is to be understood of an artificiall perfection of reason gotten by long study observation and experience and not of every mans naturall reasons for Nemo nascitur artifex No man is born an Artist This legall reason is summa ratio And therefore if all the reason that is dispersed into so many severall heads were united into one yet could he not make such a Law as the Law of England is because by many successions of ages it hath been fined and refined by an infinite number of grave and learned men and by long experince grown to such a perfection as the old rule may be verified Neminen oportet esse sapientiorem legibus No man ought out of his own private person to be wiser then the Law which is the perfection of reason Co. com f. 97. b. And though the Jurisdiction of the Court of Parliament is so transcendent that it maketh enlargeth diminisheth repealeth and reviveth Lawes Statutes Acts and Ordinances concerning matters Ecclesiasticall Capitall Criminall Common Civill Martiall Maritine and the rest Coke comm f. 110. a. yet cannot a Parliament confirm any thing which is against Law and reason And therefore if a Town hath customes which are against Law and reason and their customes be confirmed by Parliament Danby chief Justice in such case saith M 5. E. 4. f. 40. 41. That such confirmation shall not extend to such customes For a thing used meerly against Law and reason is not custome notwithstanding the usage as the Law saith and therefore the Act of Parliament which confirmeth their customes is referred to that which is not for they are not customs and therefore shall be void Ployd f. 399. b. vide ibidem plura Quod est contra rationem est illicium Coke com f. 97. b. what is contrary to reason is unlawfull And therefore Tenant in Franck-marriage shall do fealty to the Lord before the 4th degree passed for it should be inconvenient and against reason that a man shall be Tenant of an an Estate of an Inheritance to another and yet the Lord shall receive no manner of service of him and therefore he shall do fealty for all service ibid. And all positive Lawes which are contrary to the Lawes of nature and the Law of reason lose their force and are no Lawes at all Such was that of the Aegyptians to turn weomen to Merchandizes and Common-wealth affaires and to keep men within doors And such was the Law of the Thracians who accounted stealing very commendable and idleness an honest thing Finch Nom. l. 75. Quod est inconveniens contra rationem non est permissum in lege Whatsoever is convenient and contrary to reason is not permitted in the Law Coke com 178. a. If a man be seised of lands in Fee-simple and hath issue two daughters and the eldest is married and the Father giveth parcell of the lands to the Baron with his Daughter in Franck-marriage and dieth seised of the remnant which are of the greater value by the year then those lands given in Frank-marriage In this case the Baron and the Feme shall have nothing for their pur-party of the said remnant unless they will put their lands given in Frank-marriage in hotch pot with their remnant of the land with the Sister And if they will not do so then the younger may hold and occupy the same remainder and take to her the profits only for if the other partner should have nothing of it is given in Frank marriage of this a thing would ensue an inconvenience and a thing against reason which the Law will not suffer and therefore if the Baron and Feme will not put their lands in Frank-marriage in hotch pot they shall have nothing of the remnant because it shall be intended by the Law that she is sufficiently advanced to which advancement she agreeth holdeth her self content Littleton ibidem Mutata legis ratione mutatar lex Coke l. 7. f. 7. The reason of the Law being changed the Law it self is changed As though by the Common Law a man cannot distrain for rent or service in the night 12 E. 3.17.11 H. 7.5 accord yet for damage-feasant a man may distrain in the night for the necessity of the case for otherwise peradventure he shall not distrain at all for before the day they may be taken or strayed out of the ground 10 E. 3. f 37. In the Statute of Winchester it is provided that in Cities or great Villages which are inclosed the gates ought to be shut from the setting of the Sun to the Sun rising and since that Statute if in such Village or City inclosed any murther or manslaughter be done in the day or in the night and the Offender escape such City or Village shall be amerced which Act changed the reason of the Law for at the common Law if a man was slain in the night and the Offender escape there it was not any default in the City and Village but now if they do not guard their Gates strongly according to the Statute by which the Offendor escapeth then it is a default and negligence in them 3 E. 3. tit Coronae 290. So if divers commit a robbery by the Statute of 13 E. 3. those of the hundred ought to apprehend all the Felons and though they apprehend any of them that is not sufficient to excuse them for the words of the Act are that they shall answer for the bodies of the Offenders but now by the Statute of 27 Eliz. c. 13. it is provided that none shall have an action upon the said statute if not that the party robbed so soon as he can
words in a condition shal be taken out of their proper sense ut res magis valeat quam pereat Coke com 213. a. If one giveth Lands to two and the heires of their two bodies ingendred the Donees have joynt estates for life and severall inheritances for if one of the Donees hath issue and dyeth the other shall have all by survivor during his life but if the Survivor hath issue and dyeth then the issue of the one shall have the one moiety and the issue of the other the other moiety of the Land and shall hold the Land together in common and the cause why they shall have severall inheritances is for that they cannot by any possibility have an heire between them engendred and when the grant is impossible to take effect by the letter there the Law shall-make such const●uction as the guift by possibility may take effect Co. 83. b. If Lessor of an house for twenty yeares maketh a Lease for two yeares rendring rent and after granteth all his terme and interest to another if the Lessee atturne the Reversion shall passe and if no Atturnement be had yet the ieterest in the Reversion shall passe so as the Grantee shall have the Land after the two yeares determined for the grant of one shall not be adjudged void if to any intent it may take effect Coke l. 4. f. 53. b. If a Termor grant his Terme Habendum immediate post mortem suam the Grantee shall have it presently ut res magis valeat quam periat Noy Max. f. 16. So if a man make a Lease for ten yeares and after for twenty yeares the latter shall be a good Lease for ten yeares after the first is expired Ibidem A release of all Actions against a Prior and Covent shall be construed all Actions against the Prior for an Action cannot be brought against the Covent Coke l. 1. f. 76. Gardiner and Bredons case Tenant for life of Land the Remainder in taile Tenant for life and he in the first Remainder in taile joyne in a fine sur conusans de droite come ceo c. to another in fee who granted a Rent charge of forty pounds to tenant for life it was agreed by all the Justices that the fine levied by tenant for life him in the first Remainder was no discontinuance of the first Remainder in taile nor of the second because every of them did only give that they may lawfully give and no forfeiture in the case be cause the law which abhorreth all wrong shal conster it first to be the grant of him in the Remainder in taile and then the grant of Tenant for life ut res magis valeat quam pereat but if a Feoffment had been made by word then it is the surrender of Tenant for life and the Feoffment of him in the Remainder Ibidem Coke l. 1. f. 45 a. In 2. R. 3. 4. it is holden by Starky and others that if the Patent of the King may be taken to two intents good then it shall be taken more beneficially for the King but if it may be taken to one intent good and to another intent void then it shall be taken to that intent to make the grant good and not to that intent to make it void ut res magis valeat c. vide ibidem plura in Alton Woods case Coke l. 5. f. 8. a. In Cessavit where the Tenure is alledged by Homage Fealty and Rent and the Demandant counteth that in doing the said services he did cease it shall be taken by construction to such services onely of which a man may cease 6. H. 7. 7. as of Rent and not of Homage and Fealty and the reason of this is ne res destruatur least the thing should perish vide ibidem plura Ployd f. 197. b. Anthony Browne Justice said that it is an office of a Judge to expound the thing ut res magis valeat quam pereat and to make all parts of the Deed and intention of the parties also to agree together Coke l. 4. f. 4. If I grant to you that you and your heires shall distraine for a rent of forty shillings to wit within my Mannor of S. that by construction of Law shall amount to a grant of a Rent out of my Mannor of S. for if it shall not amount to a grant of a rent the grant would be of little force or effect if the Grantee shall not have but a nude distresse and no rent in him for then he shall never have an Assize of it and for that reason it hath been often times ruled that it shall amount to the grant of a Rent by construction of Law ut res magis valeat 3. E. 3. 12. c. Benedicta est expositio quando res redimitur a destructione Coke l. 4. f. 25. b. Blessed is the exposition when the thing is redeemed from destruction every Mannor which consisteth of Frank-tenements and Copy-holders hath two severall Courts the Court of Frank-tenements wherein the Suitors are Judges and is called the Court Baron and the Court of Copy-holders wherein the Lord or Steward of the Mannor are Judges and if all the Tenements escheate or the Lord release the tenure and service of his Frank-tenements yet the Lord may hold his Court of Copy-holds and make admittance and grant of them ne res destruatur it is a ground in Law verba debent intelligi ut aliquid operetur Coke l. 8. f. 24 words must so be understood that they must worke some thing and not be idle and frivolous in Edward Foxes case wherein it was resolved that a demise and grant upon consideration of fifty pound for ninty nine yeares amounted to a bargaine and sale for the said yeares for when a Frank tenement or tenement passeth by Deed indented and inrolled it is not necessary to have those precise words of bargaine and sale but words which amount to so much are sufficient as if a man covenant in consideration of mony to stand seised to the use of his Son in fee if the Deed be enrolled it is a good bargaine and sale and yet there are no words of a bargaine and sale but amount to as much Coke l. 7. f. 40. So if a man for mony alien and grant Land to one and his heires or in tail or for life by Deed indented and enrolled it shall amount to a bargaine and sale and the Land shall passe without any livery and seisin It is a ground in Law verba sunt accipienda cum effectu Coke l. 4. f. 51. a. b. Words are to be taken with effect as if a man hath in the right of his wife any estate in Fee-simple Fee-taile or for terme of life c. the Baron shall have all the arrerages as well before marriage as after the death of his wife by the Statute of 10. H. 6. 11. for though by the Common Law the Executors c. of the wife might have an Action
re-entry is good if the other party confesse the condition If twelve be sworn and one depart another of the pannell by consent may be sworn and with the eleven give verdict The Court in a Quare impedit by consent may give longer day then is limited by the Statute of Marlebridge The Statute of 2. E. 3. 20. E. 3. provide that neither for the great Seale or the petty Seale Justice shall be delayed yet when the matter concerneth the King onely if he command it it may be stayed F. N. B. 21. b. Tenure at this day may be created by consent of all notwithstanding the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum 27. H. 8. By speciall consent of parties re-entry may be made for default of payment of the rent without demande of it Dyer 78. vide by all which cases it appeareth that consent of parties altereth the forme and course of Law ibidem Coke l. 5. f. 40. Electio semel facta placitum testatum non patitur regressum 20. H. 6. 24. Coke com f. 146. a. An election once made and testified by pleading suffereth no returne As if a Rent-charge be granted to A. and B. and their heires and A distraineth the Beasts of the Grantor and he sueth a Replevin A. avoweth for himselfe and maketh conusance for B A. dyeth B. surviveth B. shall not have a Writ of Annuity for in that case the election and the avowry for the rent of A. barreth B. of any election to make it an Annuity ibidem Coke l. 4 f. 5. b. in Vernoms case If the Baron discontinue the Land of his wife and dyeth and the wife bringeth a Writ of dower against the discontinuee and recover the third part shee is by it estopped to bring a cui invita for by the Writ of Dower shee claimeth Title of Dow●r onely and therefore shall be estopped to claime any other right by a cui invita 10. E. 3. double Plea 8. 10. E. 3. Scire facias 13. F. N. B. 194 17 Ass Pl. 3. For when shee bringeth her Writ of Dower and hath judgement to have the third part of all by it shee affirmeth that shee hath but title of Dower and by consequence no estate and therefore shee shall be estopped to claime any part of it of which shee hath demanded by her Writ to be endowed and an acceptance of rent by her Deed indented concludeth the feme of her right 11. H 7. 10 vide ibidem plura in Christians case But here a diversity is to be observed that a man may have several remedies for a thing that is meerly personal or meerly reall As if a man may have an action of account or an action of debt at his pleasure he bringeth an action of account appeareth to it and after is non-suite yet he may have an action of debt afterwards because both actions charge the person the like case is of an assize of a writ of entry in the nature of assize and the like Coke com f. 146 a. Multa conceduntur per obliquum quae non conc●duntur de directo Coke l. 6. f. 47. a. Many things are granted by the by which are not directly granted As when a Bar is pleaded in a reall or personall Action as a release c. in a forrain County there the Jurors which try it shall assesse damages according to the profits of the Land in another County so by that meanes enquire of things locall in another County for many things are granted by the by c. And when they try the matter of the Bar upon good and pregnant evidence they ought to finde all dependants upon it as damages c. vide ibidem plura Dispositio ●e interesse facturo lest inutilis Bacon f. 56. The grant of a future interest is vaine and void for the Law doth not allow of grants unlesse there be a foundation of an interest for the Law will not accept of Grants of Titles or of things in Action which are imperfect interests much lesse will it allow a man to grant or incumber that which is no interest at all but meerly future As a Writ of Annuity was granted by a prebend after collations admissions and institutions but before installation or induction which though it was confirmed by the ordinary who was the Patron also was adjudged void because he had but jus ad rem and a future interest but not in re for he shall not be said a prebendary to all intents nor at the Common Law without the reall possession which is by induction Dyer 221. Pl. 18. A. maketh a Lease of Land for years to B without reservation of the Woods and Trees the Lessor cannot sell all the Woods and Trees for the Woods and Trees are parcell of the Lease and passe to the Lessee as well as the Land if they be not excepted upon the Lease for all the fruites and profits coming from the fruitfull Trees belong to the Lessee and the shadow and also the branches and loppings for fire or enclosure of fences Dyer 90. Pl. 8. If I grant unto you that if you enter into an obligation to me of one hundred pounds and after procure me such a Lease that then the same obligation shall be void and you enter into such an obligation unto me and afterwards doe procure such a lease yet the obligation is simple because the defeasance was made of that which was not 20 Eliz. 19. H. 6.62 So if I grant unto you a rent-charge out of white-acre and that it shall be lawfull for you to distraine in all my other Lands whereof I am now seised and which I shall hereafter purchase although this be but a liberty of distresse and no rent save onely out of white-acre yet as to the Lands after to be purchased the clause is void 27 E. 3. If I covenant with my Son in consideration of naturall Love to stand seised to his use of the Lands I shall hereafter purchase the use is void 25. 27. Eliz. So if I devise the Mannor of D. by speciall name of which at that time I am not seised and after I purchase it except I make some new publication of my will my devise is void Ployd Rigdens case vide Bacon ibidem plura f. 57.58 Non refert an quis assensum praebat verbis an rebus factis Coke l. 10 f. 52. b. It mattereth not whether a man giveth his assent by words or by things themselves and Deeds Whereas the assent of an Executor is necessary before any legancy can be had for that debts are first to be paid and that the Executor must look to it at-his perill Offi. of Exec. 234. the assent consent and agreement of John Morris the Executor to the Legacy of William Taylor and Elizabeth his wife did appeare in that at the speciall instance and request of the said Morris the said William Taylor and Elizabeth his wife did release the said Legacy to the said Morris
first because he requested it which implyeth an assent secondly because he accepted it which also implyeth an assent for it mattereth nor whether one giveth his assent by words or by things themselves and deeds vide ibidem in Lampeis case As if the Baron accept the Grant of a reversion that amounteth to an Attornement 44. E. 3. Fines 37. Littleton so 37. H. 6. 17. he which hath interesse termini to wit a future interest cannot by expresse words surrender it but the acceptance of a new Lease shall drowne it and in 7. E. 3. 50. The Lord demanded an heriot and the heire delivereth a Beast in which himselfe hath property in his own right to the Lord that amounteth to a guift Ibidem N.S. seised of Mannors for the preferment of Winif●id his wife and Anne his Daughter covenanteth to stand seised to the use of himselfe c. for life the remainder in taile to A. his Daughter with a proviso that if he shall be disposed to determine c. the said uses it shall be lawfull for him so to doe by writing indented under his hand and seale subscribed by three witnesses and to limit the said uses to any other and N. S. after by indenture subscribed by three witnesses in consideration of a joynture to his second wife covenanted to stand seised to the use of himself his second wife and it was resolved though there was no expresse signification of his purpose to determine c. the former uses yet his last Indenture to stand seised to himself and his second wife should enure to the determination of the former uses c. and that by it ipso facto the former uses did cease and also inure to the raising of other uses c. quia non refert an quis intentionem suam declaret verbis an rebus ipsis vel factis because it is no matterwhether one declareth his intention in words or in the things themselves or deeds for by the limiting of other uses he did declare his intention and purpose to determine and alter the uses before Coke l. 10. f. 144. a Scroops case Conditio beneficialis quae statum construit benigne secundum verborum intentionem est interpretanda odiosa tamen quae statum destruit stricte secundum verborum proprietatem est accipienda Coke l. 8. f. 90. b. Provisoes and conditions which goe in destruction and defeasances of estates are odious in Law and are to be taken strictly and shall not be construed to make void any other use or state which is not within the words of the proviso but beneficiall conditions which make an estate are favorably to be taken according to the intention of the words As if a Feoffment be made upon such condition that the Feoffee shall give the Land to the Feoffor and the wife of the Feoffor and to the heires of their two bodies engendred the Remainder to the right heires of the Feoffor if the Baron dye living the Feme the Feoffee by the Law must make the estate to the Feme so neer the condition that he can make it as Littleton saith to wit to lease it to the Feme for terme of her life without impeachment of wast and after her decease to the right heirs of the Baron and of her ingendred the remainder to to the right heirs of the Baron and so if the Baron Feme dye before the deed made And with it accordeth the 2. H. 4. 5. But when conditions enure to the destruction of estates then they shal be taken strictly as if a man make a Feoffment in fee of certaine Lands upon condition that the Feoffee shall not give the Land to Baron and Feme and to the heires of their bodies engendred if the Baron dyeth without issue and the Feoffee maketh a lease for the life of the Feme without impeachment of waste that is no breach of the condition for it is taken strictly because it runneth to the destruction of the Feoffment vide ibidem plura in Frances case A lease made to one upon condition that the Lessee shall not alien to A. B. and he alieneth to R. B. and it seemed that the Condition was not broken for every Condition must be taken strictly for if a man maketh a Feoffment on condition that he shall not enfeoff I. S. and dieth and his Heire enfeoffeth I. S. that is no breach of the Condition Dyer f. 45. Pl. 1. A man is bound to another in an hundred pounds that he shall discharge the Obligee and ●ave him harmlesse of all Suits and Incumbrances against I.S. and after the said I. S. sued the Obligee and proceeded unto Judgment and the Defendant pleaded non damnificatus and Beaumon Serjeant sayd That in the eye of the Law untill his Goods or Lands were actually charged he was not damnified But Walmesley Justice held that there were two sorts of damages executory and executed executory which a man may in future time sustain executed as if the Land or the person should be in present execution As if the Disseisee maketh a release to the Disseisor and a stranger cancelleth the the Deed of the Release the Disseisor may have an action of trespasse against him and yet the Disseisor doth continue in possession and is not actually damnified And the Justices said the Land in some sort was actually charged for who would buy the Land of the party but only under value because of the Judgment executory 33 Eliz. Ridgleys case If a man be bound to make a sufficient estate in Land to one according to the advice of I. S. if he make an estate according to his advice whether it be sufficient or no he is excused 7 E. 4.13 A TABLE of the grounds and RULES contained in this Treatise A. ABundans cautela non nocet An abundance of circumspection doth not hurt fol. 323 Actus Dei nemini facit injuriam The act of God doth injury to no man 6 Actio personalis moritur cum persona A personall action dieth with the person 48 Actori incumbit onus probandi stabilitur praesumptio donec probetur in contrarium The burthen of proving lyeth on the Plaintiff and the presumption is confirmed untill it be proved to the contrary 46 Accessorium sequitur suum principale An accessory followeth the principall 56 Accusare nemo se debet nisi coram Deo No man ought to accuse himself unlesse it be before God 222 Actus non facit reum nisi mens fit rea The act maketh not a man guilty unlesse the mind is guilty 231 Actus repugnans non potest in esse produci A repugnant act cannot be brought into being 124 Actus me invito factus non est meus actus An act done against my will is not my act 434 Actus legis nemini facit injuriam The act of Law doth no man injury 463. 317 Ad libitum Regis sonuit sententia legis The sentence of the Law soundeth according to the Kings
a Bond or a Deed Coke com 253 b for the Law hath a speciall regard to the safety and liberty of man If one make me swear to surrender my estate unto him and I do so afterwards this is a Disseisin to me 14 Ass pl. 20. One imprisoned untill he maketh an obligation at another place and after he doth so when he is at large it is by duresse of imprisonment 21 E. 4. 28. If I threaten you in one County to make an Obligation of twenty pounds and after I find you in another County and demand the Obligation the Obligation is avoidable because it hath respect to the first threatning Kelleway f. 52. b. vide ibidem 2 marriage procured by duresse to be avoidable If a stranger threaten A. to make a Deed to B. A. shall avoid the Deed by such threatning Coke l. 2. f 9. B. as well as if B. himself had made the threatning but it is no plea without making the Obligee party to the plea. If the hand of any man be drawen by compulsion and the weapon in his hand killeth another it shall not be felony Ployd f. 18. a. Modus conventio vincunt legem Coke com f. H. 41 b. Manner and Covenant overcome the Law As to every Tenant for life or for years by Law are incident three kinds of Estovers House-boot which is twofold aedificandi ardendi Plow-boot estoverium arandi and lastly Hay-boot that is estoverium claudendi and these Estovers must be reasonable and therefore are they ca●●ed rationabilia estoveria and those the Lessee may take upon the land without any assignment unless held or restrained by a speciall Covenant for Modus conventio vincunt legem ibidem Coke l. 2. f. 73. b. Though Recoveries and Fines do extinguish all other Rights and Titles yet the Covenants and Conditions shall be saved for modus c. vide ibidem plura in Cromwels case Coke l. 7. f. 28. a. In Maunds case a rent granted to one and his Assignes pro consilio impendendo it may be assigned over by the expresse words of the Grant which granteth it to him and his Assignes though otherwise it could not for modus c. The Law doth not determine to whom the tender shall be made when the parties themselves expresly agree to whom it shall be made Dy. As it is resolved in Goodales case l. 5. f. 97. a. That the payment to the Assignee had not been good because the Heires Executors and Administrators are expresly named and not Assignes as Littleton upon a Mortgage upon condition that he pay to the Feoffee or his Heires the tender ought to be made to the Heir and not to the Executors because the Heir was expresly named Glanvil saith Generaliter est verum quod conventio vincit legem Magna Charta conventio legi dorogat An agreement overcometh and barreth the Law and Ployd f. 29. a. the manner and form of the Gift altereth the Law As if houses let for years be overthrown by tempests and wind the Law will excuse the Lessor in wast but if he had covenanted to repair them and leave them well repaired at the end of the term an action of Covenant will lye against them A Termor did covenant and agree pro se executoribus to repair and maintain the houses and to find principall Timber which is decayed by the default of him or his Executors and dieth and the house is burnt in default of the Executors and it was adjudged ●hat a Writ of Covenant in this case will lye against the Executors and that damages should be recovered of the Goods of the Testator and yet this hapned by casualty Dyer 324. but the reason is Modus c Fulb. l. 2 f. 52. And Dyer 33. The Lessee of a Meadow did covenant and agree to keep and maintain the banks in good repair and the said banks were drowned or overflowen by high water or suddain flood yet the Lessee is bound to repair and maintain them because of his Covenant but according to the opinion of Fitz. and Shelley because the decay of the banks were the act of God he ought to have convenient time to repair them If I be bond to I. S. to entermarry with such a Daughter before such a day and before the day often tender my self to the Daughter of the Obligee to marry her and she refuseth yet I have forfeited my Obligation Perk. f. 146. b. vide ibidem plura Sheep are letten and the Lessee covenanteth to render the poles at the end of the tearm if they dye of Murren he shall answer for them 40 E. 3. 2. Et sic interpretari concordare leges legibus est optimus interpretandi modus And so to expound and to make Lawes to agree together is the best manner of expounding is the generall rule given by Sir Edward Coke when the grounds and authorities of the Law seem to be at difference and variance between themselves Coke l. 8. f. 169. a. and which Mr. Ployden also declareth that Maximes by reason ought to be conferred and compared the one against the other although they do not vary or by reason ought to be discussed what thing is more neer to the Maxime or the mean between the Maximes and what not Ployd f 29 a. Verba fortius acciptuntur contra proferentem Bac. Max. f. 9. words are to be taken strongest against the Speaker which rule as he saith is drawn out of the depth of reason for first it maketh a man watchfull in his own business and grants And secondly it is the Author of much quiet and certainty because it favoureth conveyances executed taking them beneficially for the Grantees and Possessors as also because it maketh an end of many doubts concerning the construction of words for if the intention of the parties should only be picked out every Judge would have a severall sense wheras by this rule they may know the Law more certainly And this rule hath a speciall force in Grants according to the ground Quaelibet concessio for●issime contra danatorem interpretanda est Coke com 183. a. As if lands be letten and a rent granted the generall intendment is that an estate for life passeth but if the Habendum limit the same for years or for life or at will the habendum doth qualifie the generall intendment of the Premises and the reason is because every mans grant shall be taken by construction of Law most forcible against himself and the reason thereof given by the Civilians is because the Grantor might have expressed his meaning in more full large and manifest words and therefore when the Grant is incertain and the words of the Grant ambiguous the Grant must be taken most strongly against the Grantor As if a man grant an Annuity out of certain land and he hath no land at the time of the Grant yet the Grant shall charge his person T. 9. H. 6. 12. by Babington And if a Deed