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A33621 An abridgement of the Lord Coke's commentary on Littleton collected by an unknown author; yet by a late edition pretended to be Sir Humphrey Davenport, Kt. And in this second impression purged from very many gross errors committed in the said former edition. With a table of the most remarkable things therein.; Institutes of the laws of England. Abridgments. Coke, Edward, Sir, 1552-1634.; Littleton, Thomas, Sir, d. 1481. aut; Davenport, Humphrey, Sir, 1566-1645, attributed name. 1651 (1651) Wing C4906; ESTC R217258 305,227 456

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Roy de rend al Roy annualment un arke ou un Espee c. petit choses touchant le guerre Et tiel service ne forsque Socage en effect If one holdeth Land of a common person in gross as of his person and not of any Manor c. and this Seigniory escheateth to the King yea though it be by Attainder of Treason he holdeth of the person of the King and not in Capite because the original Tenure was not created by the King And therefore it is directly said That a Tenure of the King in Capite is when the Land is not holden of the King as of any Manor Castle Honor c. but of his Crown Nota. A man may hold of the King in Capite or of his Crown as well in Socage as by Knights service fol. 191. 4. CHAP. X. Tenure en Burgage Sect. 162. ESt lou les tenants deins le Burgh sont tenus del seignieur del Burgh per cert ' rent c. tiel tenure ne forsque tenure en Socage Burgh is an ancient Town holden of the King or any other Lord which sendeth Burgesses to the Parliament fo 109. a. l. 10. 123. Major de Lynns C. A City is a Borough incorporate which hath or within time of memory have had a Bishop and though the Bishoprick be dissolved yet the City remaineth as Westminster Cambridge an ancient City Mich. 7. R. 1. Rot. 1. vide libr. fo 109. b. Cities were instituted for three purposes 1. For conservation of Laws whereby every man enjoyeth his own in peace 2. For tuition and defence of the Kings Subjects and for keeping the Kings peace in time of sudden uproar And 3. For defence of the Realm against outward and inward hostility There is lex consuetudo Parliamenti quae quidem lex quaerenda est ab omnibus ignorata à multis cognita à paucis Of the Members of this Court of Parliament some be by descent as ancient Noblemen some by creation as Nobles newly created some by succession as Bishops some by election as Knights Citizens and Burgesses fol. 110. a. ante Sect. 3. The Jurisdiction of this Court is so transcendent that it maketh enlargeth diminisheth abrogateth repealeth and reviveth Laws Statutes Acts and Ordinances concerning matters Ecclesiastical Capital Criminal Common Civil Martial Maritine c. None can begin continue or dissolve the Parliament but by the Kings Authority Of this Court it is said Que il enim de tresgrand honor justice de que nul doit imaginer chose dishonorable Habet Rex Cur ' suam in Concilio suo in Parliamentis suis praesentibus Praelatis Comitibus Baronibus Proceribus aliis viris peritis ubi terminatae sunt dubitationes judiciorum novis injuriis emersis nova constituuntur remedia unicuique justitia prout meruerit retribuetur Pl. c. 398. b. d. Pet. St. c. 55. fo 164. Flet. l. 2. c. 2. The King of England is armed with divers Counsels as first Commune Concilium and that is the Court of Parliament 2. Magnum Concilium and this is sometime applied to the Upper House of Parliament and sometime out of Parliament time to the Peers of the Realm 3. The Privy Councel And 4. the Kings Councel for Law matters and they are his Judges of the Law Sect. 165 c. Ascun Burghs ont tiel Custome que le puisne fits inherita c. Consuetudo quandoque pro lege servatur in partibus ubi fuerit more utentium approbata vicem legis obtinet longae vi enim temporis usus consuetudinis non vilis authoritas Longa possessio sicut jus parit jus possidendi tollit actionem vero domino Bracton Of every Custom there be two essential parts Time out of minde and Continuance and peaceable usage without lawfull interruption If Lands be within a Manor Fee or Seigniery the same by the Custom of the Manor c. May be devisable or of the nature of Gavelkinde or of Borough English 21. Ed. 4. 53. 54. otherwise is it In an upland Town c. Nota That in special Cases a Custome may be alleadged within a Hamlet a Town a Burgh a City a Manor an Honour an Hundred and a County but a Custom cannot be alleaged generally within the Realm c. For that is the Common Law Fo. 110. b. F.N.B. 122. Dyer 54. By some Customes the youngest brother shall inherit Sect. 166. and 167. Item en asc ' Burghs per le oustom feme avera pur sa Dower touts les tenement que feront a sa baron c. And this called Franke Banke Here is imployed by c. that in some places the Wife shall have the moity of her Husbands Lands so long as she lives unmarried as in Gavelkind And of Lands in Gavelkind a man shall be Tenant by the Curtesie without having of any issue In some places the Widdow shall have the whole or halfe Dum sola casta vixerit c. F.N.B. 150. Item home poit deviser ses terres qui il ad en Fee simple deins mesme le Burgh c. A devisor per son Testam is to speake by his Testament what his mind is to have done after his decease Testamentum est duplex 1. In Scriptis 2. Nuncupatinum seu fine scriptis The devisee cannot take goods c. without the assent of the Executors otherwise it is of Lands devised by Custome If a man hath Lands holden by Knights service in Capite and lands in Socage he can devise but two parts of the whole But if he hold lands by Knight-service of the King and not in Capite or of a meane Lord and hath also Lands in Socage he may devise two parts of his Land holden by Knights service and all his Socage Lands Vide lib. quaere Fo. 111. b. If a man make a Feoffment in Fee of his Lands holden by Knights service to the use of such person and persons and of such Estate and estates c. As he shall appoint by his Will in this case by operation of Law the use and State vests in the Feoffor and he is seised of a qualified Fee In this Case if the Feoffor limit Estates by his will by force and according to his power there the use and the Estates growing out of the Feoffment are good for the whole and the last will is but directory Vide Lib. c. If a gift in Taile or a Lease for life be made the remainder in Fee this remainder is not within the Statute Sect. 168. Fo. 112. By no conveyance at the Common Law a man could during the Coverture either in possession reversion or remainder limit an estate to his Wife But a man may by his Deed Covenant with others to stand seised to the use of his wife or make a Feoffment c. to the use of his Wife and now the state is executed to such uses by the Statute of 27 H. 8.
him and his heirs 1. By Feoffment 2 By Grant 3. By Fine which is a Feoffment of Record 4. By common recovery in nature of a Feoffment of recovery 5. By Exchange 6. By Release to a particular Tenant 7. By confirmation c. which are in nature of Grants c. 9. By bargain and sale by Deed c. Ordained by Statute 10. By devise by custome of some particular place and by Will in Writing generally by authority of Parliament 27 H. 8. ca. 16. 32 H. 8. ca. 2. 34 H. 8. cap. 5. If a disseisin abatement or intrusion be made to the use of another if cesty que use agreeth thereunto in pays by this bare agreement he gaineth a Fee Simple without any livery of seisin c. Sect. 2. Linea recta semper praefertur transversali Proximus excludit propinquum propinquus remotū remotus remotiorem fol. 10. b. Proximum Sumitur duplici sc Jure propinquitatis and he that is thus next c. is mediately inheritable Jure representationis and so one is immediately inheritable and accounted in Law next of bloud A Lease for life is made to A. the remainder to his next of bloud in this case he that is next of bloud and capable by purchase shall have the remainder though he be not legally next to take as heir by discent note the diversity Sect. 3. Maxime so called quia maxima est ejus dignitas certissima autoritas atque quod maximè omnibus probetur Pl. com 27 Lineal ascent is prohibited by the law but not Collateral c. fo 11. a. Littletons proofs and arguments drawn from the common law are first from the maxims rules intendment and reason of the common law 2. Ab autoritate pronūciatis 3. A rescriptis valet argumentum 4. From the form of good pleading 5. From the right entry of judgments 6. A praecedentibus approbatis usu 7. A non usu 8. Ab artificialibus argumentis consequentibus conclusionibus 9. A communi opinione jurisprudentium 10. Ab inconvenienti 11. A divisione vel ab enumeratione partium 12. A Majore ad minus à minore ad majus à simili à pari 13. Ab impossibili 14. A fine 15. Ab utili vel inutili 16. Ex absurdo 17. A natura ordine naturae 18. Ab ordine religionis 19. A communi praesumptione 20. A lectionibus jurisprudentium From Statutes his Arguments and proofs are drawn 1. From the rehearsal or preamble of the Statute 2. By the body of the law diversly interpreted sometimes by other parts of the same statute which is benedicta expositio ex visceribus causae Sometime by reason of the common Law But ever the general words are to be intended of a lawful act and such interpretation must ever be made of all statutes that the innocent may not be damnified c. fol. 11. b. There be divers laws in England As first lex Coronae 2. Lex consuetudo Parliamenti 3. Lex naturae 4. Lex communis Angliae 5. Statute Law 6. Consuetudines 7. Jus belli in republica maximè conservanda sunt jura belli 8. Ecclesiastical or Canon Law in Courts in certain cases 9. Civil Law in certain cases only in Courts Ecclesiastical but in the Courts of the Constable and Marshal and of the Admiralty 10. Lex Forestae 11. The Law of Marque or Reprisal 12. Lex Mercatoria 13. The Laws and Customs of the Isles of Jersey Gernsey and Man 14. The Law and priviledge of the Stannery 15. The Laws of the East West and middle Marches which are now abrogated A man that claimeth as heir in fee simple to any man by discent must make himself heir to him that was last seised of the actual freehold and inheritance where the unckle cannot get an actual possession by entry or otherwise there the Father cannot inherit c. Warranties shall descend to him that is heir at the common law Fol. 12. a. And a warranty shall not go with Tenements whereunto it is annexed to any special heir but to the heir at the common law Sect. 4. None shall inherit any lands as heir but only the bloud of the first purchaser Plow 447. refert à quo fiat perquisitum Fleta l. 6. c. 1. 2. Bract. l. 2. fo 65. 67. Multa transeunt cū versitate quae par se non transeunt vid. libr. fo 12. b. 5 E. 2. Avowry 207. Whensoever lands do descend from the part of the Mother the heirs of the part of the Father shall never inherit è converso 39 E. 3. 29. fol. 13. a. Escheat i.e. cadere excidere vel accidere quod accidit duobus modis aut perfectū sanguinis aut per delictū tenentis atque illud est Per judicium 〈◊〉 modis aut quia suspensus per collū aut quia abjuravit regnū aut quia utlegatus In an appeal of death c. hanging the Process the defendant conveyeth away the land after is outlawed the conveiance is good shall defeat the Lord of his escheat but otherwise is it if a man be indicted of felony c. for in the case of Appeal the Writ containeth no time when the felony was done and therefore an escheat can relate but to the outlawry pronounced but the indictment containeth the Time when the Felony was committed and therefore the escheat upon the outlawry shall relate to that time If lands holden of I. S. be given to a Dean and Chapter Major and Commonalty and to Their successors c. And after such body politick or incorporat is dissolved the donor shall have again the Land for that the cause of the gift or grant faileth and not the Lord by Escheat But no such condition is annexed to the estate in see simple vested in any man in his natural capacity but in case where the donor or feoffor reserveth to him a tenure and then the law doth imply a condition in law by way of escheat fol. 13. b. Sect. 5. Descent is a means whereby one doth derive him title to certain lands as heir to some of his Ancestors Quod prius est dignius est qui prior est tempore potior est jure Sect. 6. Nul aūa trē de fee simp per discent come heir c. Si non que il soit heir dentier sanke The half bloud is no bloud inheritable by descent being not compleat and perfect Fol. 14. a. Sect. 8. Lands c. shall descend to him that can make himself heir to him that was last actually seised of the Freehold of the land c. Fol. 15. a. Whether the seisin of a rent reserv'd upon a seise for life be such an actual seisin of the land in the eldest son as the sister in a writ of right may make her self heir of this land to her brother admitting there be son and daughter by one venter and a son by another venter Vid. lib. Qu. 7 H.
assigned over without Deed the wardship of an Advowson cannot be granted without Deed. Causa qua supra Vide Divers CHAP. V. Socage Sect. 117. OMnium rerum ex quibus aliquid exquiritur nihil agricultura melius nihil uberius nihil dulcius nihil libero homine dignius Cicero lib. 1. offic Virg. Lib. 1. Georg. O Fortunatos nimium sua si bona norunt Agricolas quibus ipsa procul discordibus armis Fundit humo facilem victum justissima tellus Nullum laborem recusant manus quae ab aratro ad arma transferuntur c. Fortior autem Miles ex confragoso venit sed ille unctus nitidus in primo pulvere deficit Seneca in Epist In the Book of Doomesday Land holden by Knights service was called Taniland and Land holden by Socage was called Reveland Fo. 86. a. Nota that the legall signification of agium in composition termineth service or duty as Homagium the service of the man c. Vide Libr. a woundy mistake fignum pro termino Ex donationibus autem feoda militaria vel magnam serjeantiam non continentibus oritur nobis quoddam nomen generale quod est socagium It is a presumption where homage is due that the land is holden by Knights service Sect. 118. and 119. Home poit tener per fealty tantum est a tener en Socage Car chescun tenure que nest pas in Chivalry est tenure en Socage Here Littleton speaketh of Tenures of common persons for grand Serjeanty is not Knights service and yet is not a Tenure in Socage Vide c. And note That some Tenures in Socage are named à causa and some and the greater part ab effectu Socagium idem est quod servitium Socae Soca idem est quod caruca s un soke ou un carve As carucata terrae a plough land may contain houses mils pasture meadow wood c. as pertaining to the plough so under the service of the Plough all services of tillage or husbandry are included Although the cause whereupon the name of Socage first grew be taken away yet the name remains the same it hath been and is used to distinguish this Tenure from a Tenure by Knights service Nomina si perdas certè distinctio rerum perditur Sect. 120. and 121. Escuage certain is not in rei veritate servit ' scuti which is to be done by the body of a man but it is servitium Crumenae of money which is to be drawn out of the purse and that is in effect a Tenure in Socage If a rent be paid for Castlegard it is clear a Socage Tenure but if a sum in gross or other thing be voluntarily paid or given by the tenant and voluntarily received by the Lord in lieu of Castlegard yet the Tenure by Knights service remaineth vide lib. 4. fo 88. in Lutterels Case Rent service is accompanied with some corporal service as fealty at the least Sect. 122. Sect. 123. If lands holden in Soccage be given to a man and the heirs of his body and he dieth his heir within age the next Cosin of the part of the father albeit he be worthier shall not be preferred before the next Cosin of the part of the mother but such of them as first seiseth the heir shall have his Custody fo 88. a. If A. be Guardian in Soccage of the body and lands of B. within age of 14 years A. shall be Guardian per cause de gard But an Infant c. that is not in the custody of another cannot be Gardian en Soccage because no Writ of Account lieth against an Infant Alium regere non potest qui seipsum regere non novit Bract. lib. 2. fo 88. Minor minorem custodire non debet alios enim presumitur male regere qui seipsum regere nescit Fleta lib. 1. cap. 10. Haeres sokmamii sub custodia capitalium dominorum non erit sed sub custod ' consanguineorum suorum propinquorum hoc est eorum qui conjuncti sunt jure sanguinis non jure successionis ex parte quor ' non descendit haereditas c. Hereby not only an immediate descent but all possibility of descent is excluded Vide lib. fo 88. b. The father Guardian in Soccage must by law be accountable to the son both for his marriage and also for the profits of his lands which he should not if he had the custody c. in this case as father in respect of nature And the act of the law never doth any man wrong sic vide diversitatem c. Guardian in Soccage shall not forfeit his interest by outlawry or attainder of Felony or Treason because he hath nothing to his own use but to the use of the heir Legitima aetas as the Statute of Merlebridge 52 H. 3. speaketh or plena aetas as the Writ of Account doth render it are to be understood secundum subjectam materiam that is of the heir of Soccage land whose lawfull and full age as to Guardianship is 14 years And as to the recitall of the Statute it is evident That an action of Account did lie against Guardian in Soccage at the Common Law Vide lib. fo 89. a. * If the Guardian receive the rents and profits c. and he be robbed without his default or negligence he shall be discharged thereof But otherwise it is of a Carrier for he hath his hire and thereby implicitely undertaketh the safe delivery of the goods delivered to him H. 38. Eliz. inter Woodlief Curteis Note it is necessary for any that receiveth goods to be kept to receive in this special manner viz. To be kept as his own or to keep them at the peril of the owner To be kept and to be safely kept is all one in Law sic vide diverfit ' Pascha 43 Eliz. Southcote and Bennet The Gardian en Socage shall account for the marriage of the heir so for so much as any man bona fide had offered for the marriage unto him Le enfant al age de 18 years poit faire son testament c. Nota Executors could not have an action of Account at the Common Law in respect of the privity of the account but the Statute of Westm. 2. cap. 23. hath given the action of account to Executors the Statute of 25. E. 3. cap. 5. to Executors of Executors and the Statute of 31 E. 3. cap. 11. to Administrators The Gardian en Socage is bounden by Law That the heir be well brought up and that his Evidences be safely kept Sect. 124. and 125. Sed quaere si apres lage de 14 ans c. This quaere came not out of Littletons quiver for it is evident That after the age of 14 years Gardian en Socage shall be charged Bayliff at any time when the heir will either before his age of 21. years or after Gardian en Chivalry ad le gard a son proper use Gardian en Socage nad
Ante fol. 83. 69. Sect. 138. and 139. Nihil quod est inconveniens est licitum fol. 97. b. It is better saith the Law to suffer a mischief that is peculiar to one then an inconvenience that may prejudice many 42 Ed. 3. 5. 28 E. 3. 395. 20 H. 6. 28. There is no Land that is not holden of some Lord or other by some service Spiritual or Temporal Nihil quod est contra rationem est licitum For Reason is the life of the Law nay the Common Law it self is nothing else but Reason which is to be understood of an artificial perfection of Reason gotten by long study observation and experience and not of every mans natural Reason for Nemo nascitur artifex Neminem oportet esse sapientiorem legibus Si un Abbot c. alien his lands holden in Frankalmoigne to a secular man in fee simple In this case albeit the Alienor held not by fealty nor any other terrene service but only by Spiritual services and those incertain yet the Alience shall hold by the certain service of fealty fol. 98. a. Sect. 140. Il est ordeigne per lestatut Quia empt terrum fait 18 Ed. 1. que nul poit alien ne grant terres c. en fee simple a ten de luy mesme Alienatio licet prohibeatur consensu tamen omnium in quorum favorem prohibita est potest fieri quilibet potest renunciare juri pro se introducto Praesumitur rex habere omnia jura in scrinio pectoris sui Dispensatio est mali prohibiti provida relaxatio utilitate seu necessitate pensata vide libr. quaere fo 99. a. By Prescription the successor of an Abbot may pay relief Sect. 141. Nul poit tenure terres c. en frankalm forsprise del grantor on de ses heires Here or hath the sense of and c. For the heir cannot take any thing in the life of the ancestor neither can the heire take any thing by discent when the ancestor himself is secluded Vide c. As a man cannot grant lands in Taile and reserve a rent to his heirs 15. E. 4. The tenure in frankalmoigne is an incident to the inheritable bloud of the grantor and cannot be transferred or forfeited to any other But it is not an incident inseparable c. For the Lord may release to the Tenant in frankalmoigne and then the tenure is extinct and he shall hold of the Lord Paramount by Fealty As in Littl. S. 139. And if the Seigniory be transferred by act in Law to a stranger thereby the privity is altered and the tenure changed Fo. 99. b. And a Bishop with assent of his Chapter c. may give Lands in Frankalmoigne to hold of them and their successors by licence c. Alwaies the Seigniory neerer to the Land drowns the Seigniory that is more remote c. Sect. 142. L●mesne est tenus de acquiter son Tenant en frankal de Chesc ' manner de service que asc ' Seignior Paramount de luy void demand He is also to aquitt him of improvement of services as if he be distrained for relief aid per file mar c. Also for suit service to a hundred but for suit reall in respect of resiance within any hundred c. it is otherwise There be three kindes of Acquitals 1. An acquitall by Deed. 2. An acquitall by prescription 3. An acquitall by tenure and that is four manner of waies 1. By owelty of service for service acquites service 2. Tenure in Frankalm 3. Tenure in Frankmar 4. Tenure by reason of Dower F. N. B. 135. c. There be six Writs in Law maintainable before any molestation c. As 1. A man may have his Writ of Mesne before he be distreined 2. A Warr. Cartae before he be impleaded 3. A Monstraver before any distresse or vexation 4. An Aud. quer before any execution sued 5. A Curia claudend before any default of inclosure 6. A ne injuste vexes before any distresse or molestation and these be called brevia anticipantia Nota the Plaintiff in a Writ of Mesne may chuse either processe at the common Law or upon the Statute of West 2. And upon processe given by the said Statute viz. Summons Attachment and grand distresse if the Mesne cometh not he shall be fore-judged and the judgement is quod T. le mesne amittat servitia de A le Tenant de tenemtis praedictis quod omisso praedicto T. praefat R. le Seignior Paramount modo sit attendens respond per eadem servit per quae T. tenuit Also if the Tenant be not acquitted after he hath recovered in a Writ of Mesne he shall have a Writ of Distringas ad acquietand Fo. 100. Vide c. F.N.B. 138. If two joyntenants bring a Writ of Mesne and the one is summon'd and severed the other cannot fore-judge the Mesne for he ought to be attendant to the Lord Paramount as the Mesne was and that cannot he be alone And so if there be two joyntenants Mesnes and in a Writ of Mesne brought against them one maketh default and the other appears there can be no fore-judger Vide Libr. quaere If the Daughter the Son being in venter sa mere before judged it shall binde the Son that is born afterwards for he had no right at the time of fore-judgement CHAP. VII Homage Auncestrel Sect. 143. c. HOm. Aunc est lou un tenant tient sa terre de Sō Seigper Homage m. le tenant ses Ancestors que heire il est ont tenus m. la terre del dit Seignior de ses ancestors c. de temps dont memorie ne court per homage on t st a eux homage Tiel Seignior doit garrant son tenant queunt il ē implede de la terre c. Auxi●il doit acquiter le tenant envers touts Seigniors Paramount luy de chesi manner de service Mes si le Seignior navoit recieve pas homage del tenant c. Nede asc ' de ses ancestors il poit disclaimer en le tenancy quānt il est vouch issint oust le tenant de son garrantie Sect. 145. Est tanta talis connexio per homagium inter dominum tenentem quod tantum debet dominus tenenti quantum tenens domino praeter solam reverentiam Bract. Fo. 78. Glan li. 9. ca. 4. Brit. Fo. 170. a. Ancient continued inheritance on both parties hath more priviledge and account in Law then inheritances lately or within memorie acquired Fol. 101. a. Warrantus vouchee is either to defend the right against the demandant or to yeeld him other Land c. in value and extendeth to Lands c. of an estate of Freehold or inheritance and not to any Chattell real personall or mixt saving only in case of a wardship granted with warrant for in the other cases concerning Chattels c. The voucher shall have his action of Covenant if
of any debt due to the Testator he may make an Acquittance but in tha● case a Release without payment is voyd and generally what soever an Infant is bound to doe by Law the same shall binde him albeit he doth it without sute of Law 2 M. Dyer 104. An action of account doth lie against a Bayliff that hath administration and charge of lands goods c. for the profits which he hath raised or made or might by his industry or care have reasonably raised or made his reasonable charges and expences deducted Brit. fol. 62. 70. 41 E. 3. 39. An Account against a Receiver is when one receiveth money to the use of another to render an account but upon his account he shall not be allowed his expences and charges Except in some cases As if two joynt Merchants occupy their Stock c. in common one of them naming himself a Merchant shall have an account against the other naming him a Merchant and shall charge him as Recep ot denariorum ipsius B. ex quacunque causa contractu ad comm unem utilitatem ipsorum A. B. provenient sicut per legem mercatoriam rationabiliter monstrare potuit 43 E. 3. 31. 30 E. 1. Account 127. 10 H. 7. 16. lib. Intrat 17 18 19. F.N.B. 118. So as there be but three kindes of Writs of Account viz. 1. Against one as Guardian 2. Against one as Bayliff And 3. as Receiver F. N. B. 219. d. And to maintain an action of account there must be either a privity in deed by the consent of the party 2 Mar B. Account 89. F. N. B. 117. Pl. Com. 542. 2 H. 4. 12. 4 H. 7. 6 c. or a privity in law ex provisione legis as against a Guardian c. Minor surare no potest Bract. l. 5. f. 340. b. For an infant cannot make his Law of Non-Summons 13 E. 3. Ley 50. and therfore the default shall not prejudice him 2. Mar. Dyer 104. 105. But an infant of the age of 12 yeares shall take the oath of allegiance Vide Sect. 85. 91. An infant cannot upon his oath make his Law in an actio● of debt 1. H 7. 25. 15. E. 4. 2. and the husband and wife of full age for the debt of the wife before the converture shall make their Law 9. E. 4. 24. 15 E. 4. 2. Grant is a conveyance of a thing which cannot pass without Deed as advowsons rents c. Lib. 3 f. 63. Lincol. Coll. c. Sect. 260 261. The reversion expectant upon an estate taile is of no account in Law for that it may be cut off by the Tenant in Taile Tres. in fee S. and fee Taile discend al 2. files c. If the youngest daughter alien part of the Lands in Fee simple and dyeth so as a full recompence for the lands entailed descends not to her issue she may waive the taking of any profits thereof and enter into the Land entailed for the issue in taile shall never be barred without a full recompence though there be a warr in Deed or in Law descended Fo 173. a. If a man be seised of three Manors of equall value in Fee and taketh wife and chargeth one of the Manors with a re●● charge and dyeth she may by the provision of the Law take a third part of all the Manor and hold them discharged b● if she will accept the entire Manor charged it is holden that she shall hold it so 26. E. 3. Dower 133. 18. H. 6. 17. A partition of lands intailed between perceners if it be equall at the time of the partition shall bind the issues in taile for ever albeit the one doe alien her part Dyer 1. Mar. 98. Sect. 262. When the privity of the estate is destroyed by the Feoff of one parcener upon eviction of a moity by force of an entaile against the other she shall not enter upon the alienee But in the case that Littleton putteth of disseisin of an Infant c. when the privity of the estate remaineth and the part of one is evicted she shall enter and hold in Coparcenary with her other copercener and so it is in the case of an ex●hange 15. E. 4. 3. a. per. Littleton Lib. 4. 221 c. Bastards c. If the whole estate in part of the p●●p●●ty be evicted that shall avoid the partition in the whole be it of a Manor that is entire or of acres of ground c. that be severall for the partition in that case implyeth for this purpose both a warr and a condition in Law and either of them is entire and giveth an entry in this case into the whole 13. E. 4. 3. 42. Ass 22. Lib. 4. ante c. Also if any estate of freehold be evicted from the Coparcener in all or part of her p●●p●●ty it shall be avoided in the whole vide libr. nota Fo. 170. a ex grat If but part c. be evicted as an estate in taile or for life leaving a reversion in the Copercener Where one Copercener taketh benefit of the condition in Law she defeateth the partition in the whole But when she vouched by force of the warr in Law for prrt the partition shall not be defeated in the whole but she shall recompence for that part Sic nota diversit 5 E. 3. Tit. Voucher 249. Also there is another diversity between a recovery in value by force of the warranty upon the exchange upon the partition for upon the exchange he shall recover a full recompence for all that he loseth but upon the pahtition she shall recouer but the moity or halfe of that which is lost to the end that the losse may be equall There are more and greater privities in case of partition in persons bloud and estates than there is in exchanges 19. H. 6. 26. 18. E. 2. t. aid 171. When the whole Privity between Coparceners is destroyed there ceaseth any recompence to be expected either upon the condition in Law or warranty in Law by force of the partition Fo. 174. a. If one coparcener maketh a Feoffment in Fee and after her Feoffee is impleaded and voucheth the Feoffer she may have aid of her coparcener to deraign a Warrant Paramount but never to recover pro rata against her by force of the warrant in law upon the partition for by her alienation she hath dismissed her self to have any part of the land as Parcener And as parcener she must recover pro rata c. 31. E. 3. 24. 11. H. 4. 22 23. And yet in some case the Feoffee of one coparcener shall have aid c. and therefore if there be two coparceners and they make partition and the one of them infeoffs her Son and Heir apparent and dyeth the Son is impleaded he shall pray in aid c. for that the warranty between the Mother and the Son is by Law adnulled and therefore the Law giveth the Son albeit he be in by Feoffment to pray in aid
of a grant of a rent service the attornment of the disseisee sufficeth 21 H. 6. 9. b. It was holden by Dyer and Mounson in the Argument of Brace bridges case that if he that hath a rent charge granteth it over for life and the Tenant of the Land attorn thereunto and after he grant the reversion of the rent charge that the grantee for life may attorne alone and that these words of Littleton are to be understood when a rent charge or rent seck is granted in possession and a quid juris clamat in that case did lye against the grantee for life 46 E. 3. 27. 2 H. 6. 9. Vide Littleton Sect 549. and 553. A man maketh a Lease for life and after grants to A. a rent charge out of the reversion A. grants the rent over he in the reversion must Attorne and not the Tenant of the freehold for that the freehold is not charged with the rent for a release made to him by the grantee doth not extinguish the rent and Littleton is to be understood that the Tenant of the freehold must attorne when the freehold is charged Vide fo 312. a. Littleton speaketh of five kindes of inheritances whereto an Attornement is requisite 1. Of a Seignory rent service c. 2. Of a rent charge 3. Of rent seck 4. Of a reversion 5. Of a remainder of Lands For the Tenant shall never need to Attorne but when there is tenure attendance remainder or payment of a rent And therefore if an annuity common of pasture common of estovers be granted for life or years c. the reversion may be granted without any Attornment 21 H. 7. 1. 1 H. 5. 1. 37. Ass 14. 36. Ass p. 3. 31 H. 8. Attorn Br. 59. Sect. 557. Fol. 312. b. In this case of Littleton by this escheat of the remainder the Seigniory is extinct for the fee simple of the Seigniory being extinct there cannot remain a particular estate for life thereof in respect of the tenure and attendance over 3. 3 H. 6. 1. old tenures 107. 15 E. 4. 15. a. per Littleton But otherwise it is of a rent charge in fee for if that be granted for life and after he in the reversion purchase the Land so as the reversion of the rent charge is extinct yet the grantee for life shall enjoy the rent during his life for there is no tenure or attendance in this case Sect. 558 559. Fo. 313. a. Littleton now commeth to speak of Atornments in Law or implyed 3 E. 3. 42. 15 E 3. Attorne 11. If the Lord grant his Signiory to the Tenant of the land and to a stranger and the Tenant accept the Deed this acceptance is a good Attornment to extinguish the one moity and to vest the other moity in the grantee Suspense is when a Seigniory Rent profit apprehend c. by reason of unity of possession of the Rent Seigniory c. of the Land out of which they issue are not in esse for a time and they are said to be extinguished when they are gone for ever and can never be revived that is when one man hath as high and perdurable estate in the one as in the other Sect. 560. 561. Fol. 313. a. b. Note that albeit a grant may enure by way of release and a release to the Tenant for life doth work an absulute extinguishment whereof he in the remainder shall take benefit yet the Law shall never make any construction against the purport of the grant to the prejudice of any or against the meaning of the parties c. Vide lib. c. Sect. 562. Fo. 314. a. Note a diversity when the whole estate in the Seigniory is suspended and when but part of the estate in the Seigniory is suspended but for terme of life and therefore as to all things concerning the right it hath its being but as the possession during the particular estate the grantee shall take no benefit therefore during that time he shall have no rent service Wardship Relief Heriot c. because these belong to the possession but if the Tenant dyeth without heir the Tenancy shall escheat unto the grantee for that it is in the right and yet when the Seigniory is revived by the death of the Tenant there shall be wardship as if the Tenant marry with the Seignioresse and dyeth his heire within age they shall have the wardship of the heire Also in the case that Littleton here putteth albeit the Seigniory be suspended but for life yet some hold that he cannot grant it over because the grantee took it suspended and it was never in esse in him but if the Tenant make a Lease for years or for life to the Lord there the Lord may grant it over because the Seigniory was in esse in him and the fee simple of the Seigniory is not suspended but if the Lord disseise the Tenant or the Tenant infeoffe the Lord upon condition there the whole estate in the Seigniory is suspended and therefore he cannot during the suspension take benefit of any escheat or grant over his Seigniory 34. Ass p. 15. 16 E. 3. vouch 83. 5 E. 3. Twongs case Sect. 563. 564. Fo. 314. Attornment for part cannot be void for that and good it cannot be unlesse it be for the whole 4 E. 3. 55. Malmans case 5 E. 4. 2. 7 H. 4. 10. 35 H. 6. 8. per prisot And payment of any parcell of the services is an agreement in Law to the grant 40 E. 3. 34. Intentio inservire debet legibus non leges intentioni 20 H. 6. Judgement in scire facias pur parcell de le services est bone attorn en ley commit que il est presume quod judicium redditur in invitum 48 E. 3. 24. 37 H. 6 14. per Moyle 17 E. 3. 29. Note that in case of Deed nothing passeth before attornment In the case of the fine the thing granted passeth as to the State but not to distraine c. without Attornment In the case of the King the thing granted doth passe both in estate and in privity to distreine c. without Attornment unlesse it be of Lands or Tenements that are parcell of the Dutchy of Lancaster and lye out of the County Palatine Sect. 565. Fo. 315. b. Note a diversity between money given by way of Attornment and where it is given as parcell of the Rent by way of seisin of the Rent And therefore a payment in name of seisin is more beneficiall for the grantee because this is both an actuall seisin and an Attornment in Law and yet being given before the day in which the Rent is due it shall not be abated out of the Rent 39 H. 6. 3. 26. 5 E. 4. 2. Vide S. 235. 7 H. 4. 2. Attorny Br. 97. Sect. 566. As of an Attornment so a seisin of a rent by the hands of one joynt-tenant is good for al and a seisin of part of the rent is a good seisin
of the whole Lib. 2. fo 67. Bookers case If either the grantor or grantee dye the Attornment is countermanded but if the Tenant dye he that hath his Estate may Attorn at any time If the Tenant grant over his estate his Assignee may attorn Lib. 4. fo 8. l. 6. fo 57. l. 9. fo 34. 4 H. 6. 29. 18 E. 4. 10. If an Infant hath Lands by purchase or by discent he shall be compelled to Attorn in a per que servitia 42 E 3. Age 33. 18 H. 6. 2. l. 9. fo 84. 85. Coyns case 4. M. Dy. 137. 7 E. 2. Age 140. If an infant be lessee he shall be compelled to Attorn in a quid Juris clamat the Attornment of an Infant to a grant by Deed is good and shall bind him because it is lawfull albeit he be not upon that grant by Deed compellable to Attorne Sect. 567. Fol. 315. b. The grant of the reversion by Deed with the attornment of lessee for years do countervaile in Law a feoffment by livery as to the passing of the freehold and inheritance And Tenant by statute Merchant or Staple or by Elegit must also attorn for the grantee may have a venire facias ad computat or tender the mony c. and discharge the Land and if the reversion be granted by Fine they shall be compelled to attorn in a Quid juris clamat 6 E. 3. 53. 25 E. 3. 53. Br. Attor 48. 32 E 3. scire facias 101. Dy. 1. a. And so the Executors that have the Land untill the debts be paid must attorn upon the grant of the reversion although they have not any certain terme for years Sect. 568. Fo. 316. a. If Tenant in Dower or by the curtesie grant over his or her estate and the heire grant over the reversion the Tenant in Dower or by the Curtesie may attorn because at the time of the grant made they were attendant to the heire in reversion and the grantee cannot be Tenant in Dower or by the Curtesie and if the reversion be granted by Fine the Fine must suppose that the Tenant in Dower or by the Curtesie did hold the land albeit they had formerly granted over their estate and albeit the reversion doth passe by the Fine yet the Quid juris clamat must be brought against him that was Tenant at the time of the note levied and the grantee of the reversion must bring an action of waste against the Assignee of Tenant in Dower or by the Curtesie for they themselves cannot hold of any but of the heire and therefore in respect of the privity they shall attorn and be subject to an action of waste as long as the reversion remaineth in the heire albeit they have granted over their whole estate and note that if the grantee of the reversion doth bring an Action of wast against the Assignee of Tenant by the Curtesie the plaintiffe must rehearse the Statute which proveth that no prohibition of waste in that case lay at the common Law as it did if the heir had brought it against the Tenant by the Curtesie himselfe and therefore some doe hold that if the heir do grant over the reversion that the Attornement of the Assignee of the Tenant by Curtesie or of Tenant in Dower is sufficient because they afterward must be attendant and subject to the Action of waste 10. H. 4 Attornment 16. 11 H. 4. 18. F.N.B. 55 E. Reg. fo 72. 4 E. 3. 26. If the reversion of lessee for life be granted and lessee for life Assigne over his estate the lessee cannot attorne but the attornment of the Assignee is good because it behoveth that the Tenant of the land doe attorne and after the Assignment there is no tenure or attendance c. between the lessee and him in reversion 18 E. 4. 10. b. 26 E. 3. 62. 5 H. 5. 10. Sect. 569 570 571 552 573. Fo. 316. b. No Quid juris clamat lyeth against Tenant in taile but if a man make a gift in taile the remainder in fee and the Seigniory or rent charge issuing out of the land be granted by Fine the Conusee shall maintaine a per que servitia or a Quem redditum and compell him to Attorne for herein his estate of inheritance is no priviledge to him for that a Tenant in fee simple as his Estate was at the Common Law is also compellable in these cases to attorne Lou le reversion est dependant sur lestate del franktenement suffist que le tenant del franktenement attorn sur grant del reversion c. Si lease pur terme dans c. ou done en le taile soit fait reserve un rent per le grant del reversion en tiel case le rent passara pur ceo que tiel rent est incident al reversion nemy è converso If a man let land to another for his life and after he confirme by his Deed the estate of the Tenant for life the remainder to another in fee and the Tenant for life accept the Deed c. Albeit he in remainder in this case hath no remedy to come to the Deed during the life of Tenant for life yet because he is privy in Estate he shall not maintaine an action of waste without shewing the Deed but when the remainder is once executed he shall not need to shew the Deed Vide Pl. Com. Colthirsts case D St. Ch. 20. fol. 93 94. Pl. Com. 149. Throckmortons case 45 E. 3. 14. 15. 11 H. 4. 39. 14 H 4. 31. As in Physick nullum medicamentum est idem omnibus so in Law one forme or president of conveyance will not fit all Cases Sect. 574. Fo. 318. a. If one joyntenant make a Lease for years reserving a rent and dye the survivor shall not have the rent therefore Littleton here addeth materially for the privity that was betwen the Tenant for life and them in the reversion 2 Eliz. Dyer 176. Tenant for life shall not be compelled to attorn in a Quid juris clamat upon the grant of a reversion by Fine holden of the King himselfe without licence For it is a generall rule that when the grant by fine is defeasible there the Tenant shall be compelled to attorne 45 E. 3. 6. b. 13 Eliz. Dy. 188. Lib. 3. fo 86. Justice Windhams case 36 H. 6. 24. As if an Infant levy a Fine this is defeasible by Writ of Errour during his minority and therefore the Tenant shall not be compelled to attorn So if the land be holden in ancient Demesn and he in the reversion levy a Fine of the reversion at the Common Law this is reversible in a Writ of Deceit c. 5 E. 3. 25. 3 E. 3. Ancient Demesn 16. So if an Alienation be in Mortmain the Lord Paramount may defeat it c. 17 E. 3. 7. 22 E 3. 18. So if a Tenant in Tail had levied a Fine it was defeasible by the issue in Tail 24 E 3. 25. b. 37
PRVDENS QVI PATIENS Juris prudentium eloquentissimus et Eloquentium Juris prudentissimus AN ABRIDGEMENT OF The Lord COKE'S COMMENTARY on LITTLETON Collected by an unknown Author yet by a late Edition pretended to be Sir Humphrey Davenports Kt. AND In this Second Impression purged from very many gross ERRORS committed in the said former Edition With a TABLE of the most remarkable things therein LONDON Printed for W. Lee D. Pakeman and G. Bedell 1651. To the READER Courteous Reader THis little Book was lately sent abroad with many grosse Errours as an Abridgement of the Lord Cokes Comment on Littleton under the Name of Sr Humphrey Davenport Kt long since deceased though indeed many very materiall things in the Lord Cokes Comment is not in the late Edition or Abridgement at all hinted or mentioned If thou art curious to understand the Law bee pleased to consult the large Volume which is an exact learned Work and curiously corrected and approved by all learned in the Common Laws but if thy leasure for the present will not permit thee to read that learned Work at large know that thou mayest for Twelve-pence have this Compendium and be welcome to the carefull Publishers hereof who desire thy benefit and the publike good W. Lee. D. Pakeman G. Bedell From our Shops in Fleetstreet Nov. 24. 1651. Munday The true portraiture of Iudg Littleton the famous English Lawyer CAP. I. De Feodo Simplici FEodum simplex idem est quod haereditas legitima vel pura Tenant in fee simp 1. He hath the estate in the land 2. He holdeth the land of some superior Lord. 3. He is to perform the services due and 4. Hee is thereunto bounden 5. By Doom and judgement Praedium domini regis est directum dominium cujus nullus Author est nisi Deus Subjectus habet utile dominium Bract. l. 1. c. 8 Fee ex feif i praedium beneficiarum Fee divided into 3 parts viz. simple or absolute conditional qualified or base Bract. 263. 207. Pl. Com. Walsing c. Di. 252 253. Fee signifies that the land belongs to us and our heirs and in this sense the King is said to be seised in fee. It is also taken as it is holden of another by service and that only belongeth to the subject Brit. 205. 207. Item dicitur feodum alio modo ejus qui alium feoffat quod quis tenet ab alio ut sit qui dicat talis tenet de me tot feoda per servitium militare and Fleta saith poterit unus tenere in feodo quoad servitia sicut dominus Capitalis non in dominico alius in feodo dominico non in servitio sicut libere tenens alicujus and therefore if a stranger claim a Seigniory and distrain and a vow for the service the Tenant may plead that the Tenancy is extra feodum c. Of him that is out of the surrendry or not holden of him that claimeth it but he cannot plead hors de son fee unlesse he take the Tenancy that is the State of the land upon him 2 Ass p. 4. 12 Ass 38. 12 E. 3. tit hors de son fee 28. i. b. ignoratis terminis ignoratur ars Si un annuitie soit grant al home à ses heirs ceo est fee simple personal Simplex idem est quod purum purum dicitur quod est merum solum sine additione Simplex donatio pura est ubi nulla addita est conditio sive modus simplex enim datur quod nullo additamento datur every fee is not legitimate for a disseisor abator intruder usurper c. hath a fee but not a lawful fee fo 2. a. Si un alien purchase trēs c. Le roy sur office trove eux aura home attaint de felony and capacity de purchaser sinon pur le benefit del roy Dier 283. An Alien Merchant whose King is in league with ours may take a lease for years of a hous for habitation as incident to commercery and as necessary to his trade and tratfique but not for the benefit of his Executors or Administrators for if he die possessed of the lease or relinquish the Realm the King shall have it 5 Mar Br. tit-denizen 22. If a man commit felony and after purchase lands and is attaint the Lord of the fee shall have the Escheat 49 Ass p 2. 49 E. 3. 11. If any sole corporation or aggregate of many religiosus vel alius ecclesiastical or temporal purchase Lands in fee without licence they cannot retain for if the mesn Lords make default and do not enter c. the King shall have the Lands c. 7 E. 1. De Relig. per alienation in Mortmain les Seignors perdont lour escheats and in effect the service de chivaler per defence del royalm ward marriage relief c. Et pur ceo fut dit mortmain quod rend nul service Stat. delig 7 E. 1. per quod quae servitia ex hujusmodi feodis debentur quae ad defensionem regni ob initio provisa fuerunt indebite subtrahuntur capitales domini eschaet suas ammittunt M. Ch. c. 36. Praelatus ecclesiae suae conditionem meliorare potest deteriorare nequit Est enim eccle ejusdem conditionis quae fungitur vice minoris Sed nullum simile quatuor pedibus currit 2. b. Brac. l. 2. f. 12. 32 Si feme covert purchase Lands c. Le baron poit disagreer devest tout lestate but albeit her husband agreed thereunto after his death she may wave the same and so may her heires also if she her selfe agreed not c. After the decease of her husband The Queen is an exempt person by the common law from the King and may purchase and grant c. Vxor is a good name of purchase without a Christen name and so it is if a Christen name be added and mistaken V●ile enim per inutile non vitidtur 1. H. 5. 8. Purchases are good in many cases by a known name or by a certain description of the person without either surname or name of Baptisme as uxor I S or primogenite filio I.S. or rect hered I. S. But regularly in writs the demandant or plaintiff is to be named by his Christen name surname unlesse it be the case of some corporations or bodis politique 3. a. 8. E 3. 437. qui ex damnato coitu nascuntur inter liberos non computentur Bastardus est quasi nullius filius A man makes a Lease for life to B. the remainder to the eldest issue male to be begotten of the body of Jane S. whether the same issue be legitimate or illegitimate B. hath issue a bastard on the body of I. S. this Son or issue shall not take the remainder because in Law he is not his issue M. 38. 39. el. in bre de err A Bastard may purchase by his reputed name to him and his heires
although he can have no heire but of his body 39. E. 3. 11. 24. 17. E. 3. 42. 35. As 13. 41. E. 3. 19 An office which concernes the benefit or safety of the commonwealth c. granted to a man which is unexpert and hath no skill or science to exercise or execute the same the grant is merely void and the party disabled by law to take the same pro commodo regis populi Dier 150. An infant or minor is not capable of an office of Stewardship of the Court of a Mannor either in possession or reversion No man though neven so skilful c. Is capable of a judiciall office in reversion but must expect untill it fall in Possession l. 11. 2. Sect. 378. The King is capable of an office not to use but to grant A purchase is c. when one cometh to lands by conveiance or title and not by tort as by disseisin c. Note that purchasers of lands tenants leases and hereditaments for good and valuable consideration shall avoid all former fraudulent and convin conveiance estates grants charges and limit of uses of or out of the same Stat. 27 El. cap. 4. 3. b. 13 El c. 5. l. 3. 80. Twines c. States of inheritances of lands are either certain or unmoveable whereof Littl. here speaketh or incertain and moveable as if partition be made between two Co-partners of one and the self same land that the one shall have it the first year and the other the second year alternis vicibus c. 4. 2. l. 1. 87. F. N. B. 62. Between pastura pascuum the legal difference is this that pastura in one signification containeth the ground it selfe called pasture and by that name is to be demanded Pascuum is wheresoever cattel are fed of what nature soever the ground is and cannot be demanded in a praecipe by that name 4. b. many things may pass by a name that by the same name cannot be demanded by a praecipe for that doth require a more perscript form but whatsoever may be demanded by a praecipe may pass by the same name by way of grant Ibid. 5. b. If the feoffor be bound to warranty and so to render in value then is the defence of the title at his peril and therefore the Feoffee in that case shall have no deeds that comprehend warranty whereof the Feoffor may take advantage Also he shall have such charters as may serve him to deraign the warranty paramount but other evidences which concern the possession and not the title of the land the Feoffee shall have them 6. a. l. 1. 1. 2. There have been eight formal or orderly parts of a deed of feoffment viz. 1. The premises 2. Habendum 3. Tenendum 4. Reddend 5. The clause of warrant 6. The in cujus rei testimonium sigillum c. 7. The date 8. The clause of his testibus The office of the premise of the deed is twofold 1. Rightly to name the feoffor and the feoffee and 2. to comprehend the certainty of the lands to be conveied c. Either by express words or which may by reference be reduced to a certainty for certum est quod cert reddi potest c. Vide libr. The Seal is of the essential part of the deed The date many times antiquity omitted for that the limitation of prescript or time of memory did often in processe of time change and the law was then holden that a deed bearing date before the limited time of prescript was not pleadable and therefore they made their deeds without date to the end they might alledge them within the time of prescription The date was commonly added in the Reign of Ed. 2. 3. 6. a. quae sunt minoris culpae sunt majoris infamiae Reg. he that loseth liberam legem becometh infamous and can be no witness As if a Champion in a writ of right become recreant or coward But oftentimes a man may be challenged to be of a Jury that cannot be challenged to be a witness and therefore though the witness be of the nearest alliance or kinred or of counsel or tenant or servant to either party or any other exception that maketh him not infamous or to want understanding or discretion or a party in interest though it be proved true shall not exclude the witness to be sworn 22 Ass 12. 41. If a witnesse be outlawed in a personal act hee cannot be joyned to the Jury but yet that is no exception against him to exclude him to be sworn as a witnesse to the Jury for that he with others should join in verdict with the Jury in affirmance of the deed the party should be barred of his attaint because there is more then twelve that affirm the verdict But note there must be more then one witnesse that shall be joyned to the enquest Inst 6. b. Max. Witnesses cannot testifie a negative but an affirmative when a trial is by witnesses the affirmative ought to be proved by two or three witnesses as to prove a summons of the Tenant or the challenge of a Juror c. But when the trial is by verdict of 12 men there judgement is not given upon witnesses c. but upon the verdict c. Probatio duplex viva sc per testes mortua par chartas c. presumptio triplex 1. Violenta 2. Probabilis 3. Levis seu temeraria Many time Juries together with other matters are much induced by presumptions In case of a Charter of feoffment if all the witnesses be dead c. Then violent presumption which stands for a proof is continual and quiet possession for ex diuturnitate temporis omnia praesumuntur solenniter esse acta Also the deed may receive credit per collationem sigillorum scripturae c. Glan l. 10. c. 12. A wife cannot be produced either against or for her husband quia sunt duae animae in carne una In some cases women are by law wholly excluded to bear testimony as to prove a man to be a Villain Mulieres ad probationem Status hominis admitti non debent Fleta l. 2. c. 44. In an information upon the statute of usury the party to the usurious contract shall not be admitted to bee a witnesse against the usurper for in effect he should be testis in propria causa and should avoid his own bonds c. Smiths case T. 8. J. in C.B. Brit. 134. He that challengeth a right in the thing in demand cannot be a witness for that he is a party in interest Britton fol. 134. 6. b. Tenementum is a large word not only to passe lands and other inheritances which are holden but also offices rents commons profits apprehender out of lands c. wherein a man hath any franktenement and whereof he is seised ut de libero tenemento But haereditamentum is the largest word of all in that kind for whatsoever may be inherited is an haereditamentum be it corporeal or
5. 34. per Hals Lodington * 35 Ass p. 2. When an entry shall vest or devest an estate there must be several entries into several parcels of land c. but wher the possession is in no man but the freehold in law is in the heir that entreth there the general entry into one part reduceth all into his actual possession Fol. 15. b. Possessio fratris de feodo simplici facit sororem esse haeredem 11 H. 4. 11. l. 3. Ratcliffs case All the lands and possessions whereof the King is seised in Jure Coronae shall secundum jus Coronae attend upon and follow the Crown The quality of the person doth alter the discent Sect. 9. Inheritance is not only intended where a man hath Lands c. By descent of inheritage but also by purchase Fol. 16. a. 7. H. 4. 5. * 6. E. 3. 30. A man may have inheritance in title of Nobility by creation by descent and by praescription By Creation by Writ and by Letters Patents If he be called by Writ to the Parliament he hath a Fee simple in the dignity c. Without any words of inheritance but if he be created by Letters Patents the state of inheritance must be limited by apt words or else the grant is void The creation by Writ is the ancienter by Letters Pattents the surer for he may be sufficiently created by Letters Pattents and made noble albeit he never sit in Parliament Simulier nobilis nupserit ignobili de sinit esse nobilis that is if she gain her Nobility by marriage But if a woman be noble by discent c. It is otherwise Fol. 16. b. l. 4. 118. Actons Case Littleton citeth no Authority but when the Case is rare or may seem doubtfull Prespecua vera non sunt probanda Vide Librū c. Sect. 10. Placitum á placendo quia bene placitare super omnes placet Fol. 17. a. Seised is properly applyed to Freehold possessed to Goods and Chattells Bract. lih 4. f 263. Demain of the hand i.e. manured by the hand or received by the hand Seisitus c. in dominico suo ut de feodo sc de tres c. D● qūx home poit aver un manuel occupation c. Seisitius ut d● feodo sc de Advowson c. Vt de feodo is to be understood positively where ut denotat ipsam veritatem non similitudinem rei Idonea persona for the discharge of the Cure should be presented freely c. By the Patron Guardian in Socage shall not present to an Advowson because by the Law he can meddle with nothing that he cannot account for Fol. 17. b. Advocatio is an advowing or taking into protection est jus patronatus 7 E. 3 4. 45 E. 3. 5. Two coparceners one of them shall have a writ of right of Advowson de medietate advocationis for in truth she hath but a right to a moity but where there be two Patrons and two Incumbents in one Church each of them shall have a Writ of Advowson de advocatione medietatis Two fee simples absolute cannot be of one and the self-same land fo 18. a. Sect. 11. And yet the several persons by Act in law a reversion may be in fee simple in one and a fee simple determinable in another by matter ex post facto as if a gift in tail bee made to a Villain and the Lord enter the Lord hath a fee simple qualified and the donor a reversion in fee but if the Lord infeoff the donor now both fee simple are united and he hath but one fee simple in him but one fee simple cannot depend upon another by the grant of the party as if lands be given to A so long as B hath heirs of his body the remainder over in fee the remainder is void Sect. 12 A purchase is always intended by title and most properly by some kind of conveiance for money or some other consideration or freely of gift An heir-loom is called principalium or haereditarium Si un monument soit deface in lesglise le heir del Ancestor poit aver son action c. 9 E. 4. 24. CAP. II. De Fee Tail Sect. 13. TAllium derived of tailler scindere Modus conventio vincont legem Fol. 19. a. Before the statute of West 2. De donis conditionalibus the heir in Tail had no Fee simple absolute at the common law though there were divers discents Annuities and such like inheritances as cannot be intailed within the said Stature remain at the common law If the King before the statute c. had made a gift in tail c. in this case if the Donee had no issue and before the statute had aliened with warranty and died and the warranty had descended upon the King this should no● have bound the King of his reversion without assets b● otherwise it was in the case of a common person fol. 19. b. 6 E. 3. 56. 45 Ass p. 6. The King can do no wrong Pl. c. 246. Sect. 14 15. Not only all corporate inheritances which are or may b● holden but also all inheritances issuing out of any of those inheritances or concerning or annexed to or exercisible within the same though they lie not in tenure may be intailed As Rents Estovers Commons c. Or Uses Offices Dignities which concern lands or certain places c. But if the grant be of an inheritance meer personal or to be exercised about chattels and is not issuing out of land c As the grant of an annuity of the office to be faulconer master of horse c. Such inheritances cannot be intailed because they savor nothing of the reality Fol. 20. a. 7 E. 3. 363. In these cases the grants c. hath a fee conditional and by his grant or release he may bar his heir as he might have done at the common law viz. In grant de personal inheritances Pl. C. Manxels c. Idem semper proximo antecedenti refertur fol. 20 b. These words de son corps are not so strictly required but that they may be expressed by words that amount to as much 5 H. 5. 6. Voluntas donatoris in Charta doni sui manifestè expressa observetur Quer. c. If a man make a charter of feoffment of an acre of land to A. and his heirs and another Deed of the same acre to A and the heirs of his body and deliver seisin according t● the form and effect of both deeds it shall enure by moities i.e. to have an Estate Tail in the one moity with the Fee Simple expectant and a Fee Simple in the other moity c. Fol. 21. a. 2 H. 6. 25. 45 E. 3. 20. Sect. 17. Robert gave the reversion of lands which Agnes his wife did hold for life to Stephan de la More Habendum post mortem dictae Agnetis in liberum Maritagium cum Johanna filia ejusdem Roberti and it is adjudged that is a good Estate Tail 5 E. 3.
to her it is commonly taken for the third part which she hath of her husbands lands c. After his decease lib. rub c. 70. Bract. l. 2. s 92. To the consummation of this dower three things are necessary viz. Marriage seisin and the death of her husband s 31. a. Secundum consuetudinem regni mulieres viduae c. Debent esse quietae de tallagiis c. doti ejus parcatur quia praemium pudoris est Ockam f. 40. Where lands or tenements descend to the husband before entry he hath but a seison in law and yet the wife shal be endowed for it lieth not in the power of the wife to bring to be an actuall seison as the husband may doe of his wifes land when he is Tenant by the Curtesie F. N. B. 149. Grandfather Father and Son the Grandfather and father die c. In this Case dos de dote peti non debit if lands descend to the Father otherwise is it in a purchase if the Grandfather infeoffe the Father c. Vide lib. 5. E 3. t. Douch 249. Paris c. Non debent mulieribus assignari in dotem castra quae fuerunt virorum suorum quae de guerra existunt vel etiam homagia servitia aliquorum de guerra existentia Fo. 31. b. Pat. 1. E. 1. Part. 1. m. 17. Tenant in Fee Taile generall maketh a feoffment in Fee and takes back an estate to him and to his wife and to the heirs of their two bodies and they have issue and the wife dieth the husband taketh another wife and dieth the wife shall not be endowed for during the Coverture he was seised of an estate Tail special and yet the issue which the second wife may have by possibility may inherit Vide lib. 41. E. 3 30. Dier 41. Albeit of many inheritances that be entire whereof no division can be made by metes and bounds a woman cannot be endowed of the thing it selfe yet she shall be endowed thereof in a special and certain manner As of the third part of a piscary tertium piscem vel jactum retis tertium c. Fo. 32. a. 17. E. Dow. 104. A woman shall not be endowed of a common sans nomber en grosse nor of an annuity c. Nor of Rents c. If the freeholds of the Rents were suspended before the coverture But a woman shall be endowed of Tithes of the third part of profits of Courts Fines Heriots c. De nullo quod est sua natura indivisibile secationem sive divisionem non patitur nullam partem habebit sed satisfaciat ei ad vi●lentiam Brac. 97. Brit. 146. If the heire improve the value of the Land by building c. And on the other side if the value be impaired in the time of the heire she shall be endowed according to the value at the time of the assignment and not according to the value as it was in the time of her Husband 30. E. 1. Vouch. 298. It is not necessary that seisin should continue during the coverture for albeit the husband alieneth the Lands c. or extinguisheth the Rents c. Yet the woman shall be endowed But it is necessary that the marriage continue for if that be dissolved the Dower ceaseth Vbi nullum matrimonium ibi nulla dos but this is to be understood when the husband and wife are divorced à vinculo matrimonii as in case of precontract consanguinity affinity c. And not à mensa thoro onely as for Adultery In case of elopement shee shall lose her Dower but shee is not barred of her appeal Sponte virum mulier fugiens adultera facta dote sua careat nisi sponso sponte retracta Fol 32. b. Mirr ca. 5. Sec. 5. li. Intract 224. If a man seised of Lands in Fee took a wife and infeoffed eight persons Writ of Dower was brought against these eight persons and two confesse the action and the other six plead in Barre and descend to issue the demandant shal have judgment to receive the third part of two parts of the land in eight parts to be divided and after the issue being found for the demandant against the six the demandant shal have judgement to recover against them the third part of six parts of the same land in eight parts to be divided and so in some cases where the husband was sole seised the wife shall not be endowed in severalty by metes and bounds M. 2. and 3. Eliz. Dier 187. b. Nota. The endowment by metes and bounds according to the common right is more beneficiall to the wife then to be endowed against common right for there shee shall hold the land charged in respect of a charge made after her title of Dower It is necessary for the wife after the decease of her husband as soon as she can to demand Dower before good testimony for otherwise she may by her own default lose the value after the decease of her husband and her dammages for detaining of her dower Vide lib. Et Dotes suas habere non possunt sine placito The mean values and dammages are to be recovered against the Tenant in a Writ of Dower M. 8. and 9. Eliz. Rot. 904. conj Banco Vid. c. If the wise be past the age of 9 years at time of the the death of her husband albeit he were but 4 years old she shall be endowed quia minor non potest dotem promereri neque virum sustinere nec obstabit mulieri petenti minor aetas viri So that albeit concensus non concubitus facit matrimonium and that a woman cannot consent before twelve nor a man before fourteen Yet this inchoate or imperfect marriage from the which either of the parties at the age of consent may disagree after the death of the husband shal give Dower to the wife Fo. 33. a. Est uxor de facto de jure Fol. 33. b. Vid. c. Onely she that is a wise de jure in favorem vitae shall have an Appeale c. But a wife de facto shall have Dower if divorce be not had c. 50. E. 3. 15 10. E. 3. 35. Sect. 37. Rationabilis dos est cujuslibet mulieris de quocunque tenemento tertia pars omnium tium c. quae vir suus tenuit in dominico suo ut de feodo c.. By the custome of Gavelkind the wife shall be endowed of the moity so long as she keep her self sole and without child which she cannot wave and take her thirds for her life for consuetudo tollit communem legem Stat. de consuet Canciae c. And as customs may inlarge so it may abridge and restrain it to a fourth part c. Senentia signifieth widowhood fo ●3 b. in fine marg Sect. 39. Affidare est fidem dare sponsalia dicuntur futurarum nuptiarum repromissio conventio But this Dower ad ostium ecclesiae is ever after marriage
Consensus tollit errorem fol. 37. a. Sect. 43. Lou le certainty appiert queux terres c. Feme avera per la Dower la le feme entra apres la mort sa baron sans assignment de nulluy Sect. 45. The wife shall not be endowed of lands c. which her husband holdeth jointly with another at the time of c. Of his death for the jointenant which surviveth claimeth the land by the feoffment and by the survivorship which is above the Title of Dower c. But Tenants in common have several freeholds and inheritances and their moities shall descend to their several heirs and therefore their wives shall be endowed fol. 37. b. Sect. 46. Lissue en le Tail poit enter sur la possession la feme endowe ad ost eccles apres la mort sa baron The husband is seised c. being within age he cannot by a voluntary Act bind himselfe but otherwise is it where he doth an act whereunto he is compelled by Law Fo. 38. a. And so an Infant cannot endow his wife aed osti eccl but he may endow her ex Ass patris because the Father is sole seised c. And the Son hath nothing c. Sect. 48. Guardian in chivalry c. Is not possessed of the Land untill he doth enter because it is permanent of the wardship of the body he is possessed before seisure because it is transitory After the guardian hath entred c. A Writ of Dower lieth against him and not against the heire who is Tenant of the Freehold because the Law hath trusted him to plead for the heire within age that is in his custody and also for his own particular interest c. Fo. 38. b. Vide quaere 44. E. 3. 13. 4. H. 6. 11. If the heire before the gardein enter endow the wife of more than she ought and the gardein assigne over his Estate his Assignee shall have no Writ of Admesurement because it was a thing in action But the gardein himselfe shall have a Writ c. Stat. West 2. ca. 7. And so shall the heire have a Writ c. At full age and some have said that in that case he may have it within age Fo. 39. a Vide c. F.N.B. 149. Judicium quasi juris dictum the very voyce of Law and right and therefore judicium semper pro veritate accipitur In every judgement there ought to be three persons actor reus judex Fo. 39. a. The common Law giveth this priviledge to the Land holden by Knights service viz. That it shall not be dismembred but the whole Dower taken of the Lands holden in Socage for that the Knights service is for the defence of the Realm which is pro bono publico and therefore to be favoured Sect. 49. Sect. 50. Lou le judgment est fait en Court le roy ou en aut Court c. le feme poit perender ses vicines en lour presence endow luy inper metes bounds de la pluis beale c. que el ad come gardein en socage cei ē solvāon del Gardein en Chivelry durant le nonage lenfant Lect. 52. If a man taketh a wife seised of Lands c. In Fee hath issue and after the wife is attainted of Felony so as the iss●● cannot inherit to her yet he shall be Tenant by the Curtesie in respect of the issue which he had before the Felony and which by possibility might then have inherited But if the wife had been attainted of Felony before the issue albeit he hath issue afterwards he shall not be Tenant c. Fo. 40. a. Except the wife be actually seised the heire shall not make himselfe heire to the wife and this is the reason that a man shall not be Tenant by the Curtesie of a seisin in Law Lib. 8 fo 34. in Paines Case Sect. 53. Si Teniments sont dones a un home a les heires quae il engendera de corps sa feme en tiel case la feme nad riens c. Vnc'si le baron devie sans issue me la feme ser endowe per ceo que lissue que el per possibility puissoit aū per. me le baron puit enheriter A man seised of land in generall Taile taketh wife and after is attainted of Felony before the Statute of 1. E. 6. The issue should have inherited and yet the wife should not have bin endowed For the Statute of West 2. ca. 1. relieveth the issue in taile but not the wife in that case But at this day if the husband be attaint of Felony the wife shall be endowed and yet the issue shall not inherit the lands which the Father had in Fee simple If the wife elope from her husband c. she shall be barred of her dower and yet the issue shall inherit Sect. 55. The Law hath inflicted five punishments upon him that is attainted of Treason or Felony 1. He shall lose his life by an infamous death of hanging c. 2. His wife shall lose her Dower 3. His bloud is corrupted his children made ignoble if c. And cannot be heirs to him 4. He shall forfeit all his Lands and Tenements 5. All his goods and Chattels But the wife of a man attaint of Felony shall be endowed by force of the statute in that case provided If the heir be vouched by the Tenant in the Writ of Dower in the gard of the gardein The gardein shall plead it as well when he comes in as vouchee as when he is Tenant Also if the Lands holden in socage be not equall to the lands holden in chivalry some say that the defendant in the Writ of dower must have assets in her hands to the value of her Dower so as he shall not be partly indower against the gardein and partly retain in her own hands 18. E. 3. 4. But by 25. E. 3. 52. b. auterment est que est melior opinion c. CHAP. VI. Tenant a Terme de vie Sect. 56. IF Tenant per terme dauter vie dyeth living cesty que vie he that first entreth shall hold the land during that other mans life and he is in Law called an Occupant because his title is by his first occupation And so if Tenant for his own life grant over his Estate to another if the grantee dyeth there shall be an Occupant so it is if Tenant by the Curtesie or Tenant in Dower grant over his Estate or hers c. Fo. 41. a. l. 6. 37. nullum tempus occurrit regi in this case There can be no occupant of any thing that lyeth in grant and that cannot passe without deed because every Occupant must claime by a que estate averr the life of Ce ' que vie It were good to prevent the incertainty of the estate of the Occup to add these words to have and to hold to him and to his heirs during the life of Ce ' que
vie and yet the Lessee may assigne it to whom he will or if he hath already an Estate for another mans life without these words then it were good for him to assign his Estate to divers men and their heirs during the life of Ce ' que vie Lit. 167. Dier 253. If a Lease be made to A c. For terme of his owne life and the lives of B. and C the lessee hath but one freehold which hath this limitation during his own life and the lives of two others and here note a diversity between several estates in severall degrees and one Estate with several limitations for in the first an Estate for a mans owne life is higher then for another mans life but in the second it is not l. 5. Rosses case If Tenant for life infeoffe him in the remainder for life this is a surrender and no forfeiture and albeit an Estate for term of a mans own life be but one Freehold yet may severall Freeholds in certain Cases be derived out of the same Vide libr. A. and B. joyntenants A. for life and B. in Fee joyne in a Lease for life A. hath a reversion and shall joyn in an action of Waste Tenant for life and he in the reversion joyne in a Lease for life it is said that they shall joyn in an action of wast and that the lessee for life shall recover the place wasted and he in reversion dammages Fo. 42. a F.N.B. 59. F. 13. H. 7. 15. If a man make a Lease of a Mannor worth 20. l. per annum to another until 100 l. be paid in this case because the annuall profits of the Mannor are incertain he hath an estate for life if livery be made determinable upon the levying of a 100 l. Fol. 42. a. And yet in some Cases a man shall have an incertaine interest in Lands c. and yet neither an Estate for life for years or at will As if a man by his will in writing devise his lands to his executors for payment of debts and untill his debts be paid in this Case the executors have but a chattell and an incertain interest in the land untill his debts be paid for if they should have it for their lives then by their death their estate should cease and the debts unpaid but being a Chattell it shall go to the executors of executors c. And so note a diversity between a devise and a conveiance at the common Law in his life time l. 8. Mannings The Law which abhorreth injury and wrong will never so construe any Act c. as it shall work a wrong whensoever the words of a Deed or of the parties without Deed may have a double intendment and the one standeth with Law and Right and the other is wrongfull and against Law the intendment that standeth with Law shall be taken Fo. 42. b. The Law more respecteth a lesser estate by right than a larger estate by wrong Tenant in taile made a Lease to another for terme of life generally and after released to the Less●e and his heires albeit between the Tenant in Taile and him a Fee simple passed yet after the death of the Lessor 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 fo● then by the release it had been a discontinuance executed Sect. 57. Tenant per vie ad franktenement null auter de meind Estate Many that have capacity to take have no ability to infeoffe c. As Aliens borne Tratiors Felons c. Ideots madmen a feme covert an infant a man by dures c. For the feoffement c. of these may be avoided Brit. fo 88. In judgment of Law the King as King cannot be said to be a minor for when the Royall body politique of the King doth meet with the naturall capacity in one person the whole body shall have the quality of the Royall politique c. omne majus trabit ad se quod est minus A Licence for alienation grew by the Statute of the 20. H. 3. 20. Ass pl. 17. by Skipwith vide lib. By the Statute 1 E. 3. ca. 12. 34. Ed. 3. cap. 15. Although the Kings Tenant in chiefe c. do alien all or any part without Licence yet is there not any forfeiture of the same but a reasonable fine therefore to be paid The Statute of 18. E. 1. De quia Emptor c. hath in effect as to the common persons taken away the Statute of Mag. Charta cap. 32. for thereby it is provided Quod liceat unicuique libero homini trans suas c. Seu partem inde ad voluntatem suam vendere ita quod Feoffatus teneat c. de capitali domino Note first that this word liceat proveth that the Tenant could not or at least was in danger to alien parcell of his Tenancy c. upon the said Act of Mag. Charta 2. That upon the Feoffment of the whole the Tenant shall hold of the chief Lord. 3. That the Tenant might enfeoffe one part to hold pro particula of the chief Lord. But this Act the King being not named doth not take away the Kings Fine due to him by the Statute of Mag. Charta Tenant by Statute Merch. Statute Staple or Elegit are said to hold land ut liberum Tenementum untill their debt be paid and yet they have no Freehold but a Chattel c. But ut is similitudinary because they shall by the Statutes have an Ass as the Tenant of the Freehold shall have and yet nullum simile est idem 28. Ass p. 7. w. 2. c. 18. St. Merc. 13. E. 1. 27. E. 3. c. 9. 23. H. 8. c. 6. F.N.B. 178. CHAP. VII Tenant for Term of yeers Sect. 58. THere be three kinds of persons who at this day may make leases for three lives or XXI yeers c. which could not so doe when Littleton wrote viz. 1. Any person seised of an estate tail in his own right 2. Any person seised of an estate in Fee simple in the right of his Church 3. Any husband and wife seised of any estate of inheritance in Fee simple or Fee taile in the right of his wife or joyntly with his wife before the coverture or after And these are made good by the Statute of 32. H. 8. But the Statute of 1. Eliz. 13. El. 18. El. and 1. Reg. Jac. are disabling Vide libr. c. l. 5. fo 6. If two severall Tenants of severall Lands joyne in a lease for years by Deed indenture these be severall leases and severall confirmations of each of them from whom no interest passeth and work not by way of conclusion in any sort because severall interests passe from them Fol. 45. a. Vide quaere Whensoever any interest passeth from the party there can be no estoppell against him H. 44. El. R. 1459. ca. 8. Leases for lives or years are of
succedunt res humanae ubi negliguntur divinae Fol. 64. b. Sex horas somno todidem des legibus aequis Quatuor orabis des Epulisque duas Quod superest ultro sacris largire camenis Sect. 86. and 87. Nota in old Books and Records the Homage which a Bishop Abbot or other man of Religion doth is called fealty for that it wanteth these words cieo deveign vostre home But yet in judgement of Law it is Homage because he saith I do to you homage c. and so of a Woman Argumentum ab inconvenienti plurimum valet in lege Non solum quod licet sed quid est conveniens est considerandum nihil quod est inconveniens ē licitum Sect. 89. and 90. Nul fer homage mes tiel que ad estate in fee simple ou en fee taile en son drt. dem ou en droit dun auter Si un home ad severall tenancies queux il tient de severall seignieurs per homage donques quant il ft. homage a un des seignieurs il dirra en le fine de son homage fait salve la foy que ido doy a nature seignieur le Roy a mes auters seignieurs Non Corporation aggregate of many persons capable shall do homage because that homage must be done in person and a Corporation c. cannot appear in person But an Abbot in nature of a sole Corporation shall do homage because the Covent are all dead persons in law Vide c. fo 66. b. * lib. 4. 11. l. 7. 10. Contra negantem principia non est disputandum A Parson or Vicar of a Church that hath a qualified fee and yet to many intents upon the matter but an estate for life can neither receive homage nor do homage as a Bishop c. that a fee absolute may Tenant per le Curtesie c. ne ferre homage c. per ceo que il adonque nad estate forsque per terme de vie Et Nota. He that cannot receive homage in respect of the weakness of his estate in the Seigniory shall not do homage if he hath a like estate in the tenancy fo 67. a. vide lib. c. Primogenita filia tantum faciet homagium Domino pro se omnibus sororibus suis Quia omnes sorores sunt quasi unus haeres de una haereditate 14 H. 3. tit Praerog 5. Every tenant in common shall do severall services If homage be parcell of a Tenure it is a presumption that the Tenure is by Knights service unless the contrary be proved CHAP. II. Fealty Sect. 91 92 93 and 94. TEnant for years shall do Fealty Littl. fo 29. nu 132. Sciendum est quod non per procuratores nec per literas fieri poterit homagium sed in propria persona tam domini quam tenentis capi debet fieri Bract. lib. 2. fo 8. Mes le Seneschal del Court le Signieur ou Baylife poit purender fealtie pur le Seignieur Item tenant a terme de vie ferre fealty encore il ne ferre homage Sic vide diversitatem The tenant must do fealty in person because he must be sworn unto it and no man can swear by the Common Law by Attorney or Proctor fo 68. 8. Whosoever is above the age of 12 years is to take the Oath of Allegiance and he is to be sworn in the Tourne unless he be within some Leet and then in the Leet CHAP. III. Escuage Sect. 94. SCutagium id est servitium scuti Nomina si nescis perit cognitio rerum Bracton saith Item scutagium dicitur quòd talis praestatio pertinet at scutum quòd assumitur servitium militare fol. 68. b. Every Tenure by Escuage is a Tenure by Knights service Sed non è converso But note here the wisdom of Antiquity Mavult enim princeps domesticos quam stipendiarios bellicis apponere casibus lib. rub Quant le Roy fait royall voiage en escoce c. donque il que tient per un fee de Chivaler c. covient erre oue le Roy per 40. jours bien convenablement array pur le guerre sic de caeteris c. In the ancient Treatise De modo tenendi Parliamentum tempore Regis Edw. filii Regis Etheldredi it appeareth That Comitatus to wit an Earldom constat ex viginti feodis unius militis quolibet feodo computato ad viginti libratas Baronia constat ex 13. feodis 3. parte unius feodi militis secundum comput ' praedictam unum feodum militis constat ex terris ad valentiam 20. l. fol. 79. a. A Marquisdome consists of the Revenue of two Baronies which amount to 800 Marks And a Dukedom consists of the Revenues of two Earldoms viz. 800 pounds per annum fol. 79. b. Note That the relief of a Knight and all above him which be Noble is the fourth part of their yearly revenue as of a Knight 5l which is the fourth part of 20l c. Edward the eldest Son of King Edw. 3. called The Black Prince was the first Duke in England after the Conquest and Robert Vere Earl of Oxford in the reign of R. 2. was the first Marquis Et Dominus de Bellomonte was the first Viscount created by King H. 6. A voyage Royal is not only when the King himself goeth to War as Littleton here saith but also when his Lieutenant or Deputy of his Lieutenant goeth He that holdeth by Castle gard or Cornage holdeth by Knights service and yet he shall pay no Escuage because he holdeth not to go with the King to War Sir Richard Rocgesly Knight did hold Lands at Seaton by Seargeanty to be vantrarius Regis the Kings fore Footman when the King went to Gascoigne donec per usus fuit pari solutarum precii 4d. that is untill he had worn out a pair of shooes of the price of four pence And this service being permitted to be performed when the King went to Gascoigne to make war is Knights service See an ancient Record Rot. de finibus Termino Mich. 11. Edw. 2. If the tenant peravaile goeth with the King it excuseth all the means c. For one tenancy shall pay but one Escuage F.N.B. 83 84. Sect. 96. Albeit the Tenure is That he which holdeth by a whole Knights fee ought to be with the King c. to do a corporal service yet he may finde another able man to do it for him But it may be objected That in some particular cases the tenant might finde a man but not when he himself is able without all excuse or impediment To this it is answered That sapiens incipit a fine And the end of this service is for the defence of the Realm and so it be done by an able and sufficient man the end is effected 2. Seeing there are so many just excuses of the tenant it were dangerous and tending to the hindrance of the service if
these excuses should be issuable Multa in jure communi contra rationem disputandi pro communi utilitate introducta sunt 3. Both Littleton and the book in 7 Ed. 3. giveth the tenant power without any excuse to be shewed to finde an able and sufficient man and oftentimes Jura publica ex privato promiscue decidi non debeut Praepostera lectio praepropera praxis are enemies to learning fol. 70. b. Cessante ratione legis cessat ipsa lex If Mayor and Commonalty convey over their Lands holden by Knights service to any natural man and his heirs now Homage-ward c. belong to the Tenure c. Note That every Bishop in England hath a Barony and that Barony is holden of the King in Capite and yet the King can neither have Wardship or relief Nemo militans Deo implicetur ' secularibus negotiis Ferdwit in Saxon ' significat quietanciam murdri in exercitu Worscet signifieth Liberum esse de oneribus armorum fo 71. a. Fleta lib. 1. cap. 42. Miles haec tria curare debeat corpus ut validissimum perniciosissimum habeat arma apta ad subita imperia caetera Deo Imperatori curae esse Livius Sapiens non semper ita uno gradu sed una via non se mutat sed aptat Qui secundos optat eventus dimicet arte non casu In omni conflictu non tam prodest multitudo quam virtus Vegetius Est optimi ducis scire vincere cedere prudenter tempori Multum potest in rebus humanis occasio plurimum in bellicis Polibius Quid tam necessarium est quam tenere semper arma quibus tectus esse possis Vegetius Concerning the point in Law demurred in judgement in the 7 Ed. 3. here mentioned by Littleton The Law accounteth the beginning of the 40 daies after the King entreth into the Forrein Nation for then the Warre beginneth c. Vide c. The knowledge of the Law is like a deep Well out of which each man draweth according to the strength of his own understanding And as the Bucket in the depth is easily drawn to the uppermost part of the water for nullum elementum in suo proprio loco est grave but take it from the water it cannot be drawn up but with great difficulty for albeit the beginnings of this study seem difficult yet when the Professor of the Law can dive into the depth it is delightfull easie and without any heavy burthen so long as he keep himself in his own proper element Justiciari de banco c. Communia placita non sequantur Cur ' nostram sed teneantur in aliquo certo loco Mag. Charta He which demurreth in law Moratur or Demoratur in lege Matters in Law are decided by the Judges and matters in fact by Juries Now as there is no issue upon the fact but when it is joined between the parties so there is no Demurre in law but when it is joyned c Vide quaere fol. 71. b. In some cases a man shall alledge special matter and conclude with a Demurre as in an action of Trespass brought by I. S. for the taking of his Horse the defendant pleads that he himself was possessed of the Horse untill he was by one I.S. dispossessed who gave him to the Plaintiff c. the Plaintiff saith that I. S. named in the Barre and I.S. the Plaintiffe were all one person and not diverse and to the Plea pleaded by the Defendant in the manner he demurres in law and the Court did hold the Plea and Demurrer good for without the matter alledged he could not demurre Now as there may be a demurre upon Counts and Pleas so there may be of Aid Prior Voucher Resceit Waging of Law c. There is a generall Demurre that is shewing no cause and a speciall Demurre which sheweth the cause of his Demurrer Also there is a Demurre upon pleading c. and there is also a Demurre upon Evidence Vide Lib. fol. 72. a. Sect. 97 98. and 99. No escuage was assessed by Parliament since the eighth year of the reign of Edw. 2. fol. 72. b. Quemadmodum incertitudo scutagii facit servitium militare ita certitudo scutagii facit socagium Si home parle generalement descuage il ser entend ' c. descuage noncertaine que est service de Chivaler tiel escuage trait a luy homage fealty car fealty est incident a chesc ' maner de service forsque a le tenant in Frankalmoigne Verba equivoca in dubio posita intelliguntur in digniori potentiori sensu Tenure in capite ex vitermini is a Tenure in Gross and it may be holden of a subject but being spoken generally it is secundum excellentiam intended of the King for he is caput reipublicae fol. 73. a. Escuage can be assessed only by Parliament and not by the King Sect. 101. Les seignieurs poient distrein per Escuage assess per Parlament ou ils en asc ' cases purront au breve le roy direct ' as viconts de in les counties c. de levier tiel Escuage per eux Vide de Regist Writs are the foundations whereupon the whole Law doth depend Fitzherbert in his Preface to his Nat. Br. Breve sicut regula juris rem quae est breviter enarrat non tamen ita breve esse debeat quin rationem vim intentionis contineat Bract. lib. 5. fo 413 c. Of Writs some be Original and some be Judicial Also of Originals Quaedam sunt formata sub suis casibus de cursu de communi consilio totius regni concessa approbata quae quidem nullatenus mutari poterint absque consensu voluntate eorum quaedam sunt Magistralia saepe variantur secundum varietatem casuum factorum quaerelarium As Actions upon the Case which vary c. Item brevium originalium alia sunt realia alia personalia alia mixta Item c. alia sunt patentia sive aperta alia clausa Certain it is that the Original Writs are so artificially and briefly compiled as there is nothing redundant or wanting in them of which one said That it was impossile to comprehend so much matter so perspicuously in fewer words Brevia judicialia saepius variantur secundum varietatem placitorum proponentis respondentis Sect. 102. Mareschallus exercitus in Saxon Marischalk i.e. equitum Magister Marshal is either derived of Mars or of Marc an horse which signifieth in the Saxon tongue a Master or Governor I reade of six kindes of Certificates allowed for Tryals by the Common Law The first whereof Littleton speaketh in time of War out of the Realm by the Marshal c. 2. In time of Peace out of the Realm As if it be alleaged in avoidance of an Outlawry That the Defendant was in Prison at Bourdeaux c. it shall by tryed by the Certificate of the Mayor c. 2
E. 4. 1. b. 4 E. 4. 10. 3. For matters within the Realm 5 E. 4. 30. the Custom of London shall be certified by the Mayor and Aldermen by the mouth of the Recorder 4. By Certificate of the Sheriff upon a Writ to him directed 10 H 10. in case of Priviledge if one be a Citizen or a Forreiner 5. Tryal of Records by Certificate of the Judges in whose custody they are by Law All these be in Temporal causes 6. In causes Ecclesiastical as loyalty in Marriage general Bastardy Excommengment Profession c. which are to be tried by the Certificate of the Ordinary Also if a Subject of the King be killed by another of his Subjects out of England in any Forreign Country the wife or he that is heir of the dead may have an Appeal for this Murther or Homicide before the Constable and the Marshal whose sentence is upon the Testimony of Witnesses or Combate fo 74. a. vide lib. Stat. 1 H. 4. cap. 14. 13 H. 4. fol. 5. c. Anno 25 El c. CHAP. IV. Knights service Sect. 103. TEnure per homage fealty escuage est a tener per service de Chivaler trait a luy gard mariage reliefe Si haereditas teneatur per servitium militare tunc per leges infans ipse haereditas ejus c. per dominum feodi illius custodientur c. Fortesc ca. 44. Audacter quilibet facit quod se scire non diffidit Amongst the Lawes of St Edward the Confessor it is thus provided Debent enim universi liberi homines c. secundum foedum suum sciendum tenementa sua arma habere illa semper prompta conservare ad tuitionem regni servitium dominorum suorum juxta praeceptum domini Regis explendum peragendum Lambert fo 135. a. And William the Conqueror confirmed that Law c. And therefore if after the Lord hath the Wardship of the body and land the Lord doth release to the Infant his right in the Seigniory or the Seigniory descendeth to the Infant he shall be out of Ward c. for he was in Ward in respect he was not able to do those services which he ought to do to his Lord which now are extinct cessante causa cessat causatum fol. 76. a. Regularly there be six incidents to Knights service viz. Two of Honor and Submission as Homage and Fealty and four of Profit as Escuage Ward Marriage and Relief Also these be other incidents to Knights service besides these as aid per faire fitz Chivalrer and aid per file marier c. Relevium is derived from Relevare Quia haereditas quae jacens fuit per antecessoris decessum relevatur in manus haeredum propter factam relevationem facienda erit ab haerede quaedam praestatio quae dicitur relevium Bract. lib. 2. ca. 36. fo 84. By custome the heires of him that holdeth in Socage may be in a word * By the common Law the heir shall not be in ward unlesse he claime as heire by discent Vide Libr. In many Cases the heire shall be in ward albeit the Tenant died not seised c nor in the Homage of the Lord. But if one levy a fine executory as fur grant and render to a man and his heires and he to whom the Land is granted and rendred before execution dieth his heire being within age entreth he shall not be in ward for his ancestor was never * tenant to the Lord. Vide c. If the disseisie die his heire being within age the Lord shall have the wardship of the heir of the body of the disseisee and if the disseisor dieth seised and his heire within age the Lord may seise the wardship of his heire also and of the Land also c. Vide c. For the ease of the heire and for avoiding of danger c. The heire for the most part after his full age sueth out a speciall livery which containeth a beneficiall pardon c. Fo. 77. a. Vide quaere A common person shall have nothing in ward but that which is holden of him But the King by his Prerogative shall not only have such Lands c. which the heire of his Tenant by Knights service in Capite holdeth of others but such inheritances also as are not holden at all of any as rent-charges rent-seck Fayres Markets Warrens Annuities c. Fo. 78. a. Stamf. pr. Fo. 8. * The Law is changed since Littleton wrote in many Cases both for the marriage of the body and for the wardship of the Lands and a farre greater benefit given to the Lords then the common Law gave them and some advantage given to the heires which before they had not As if the Father had made an estate for life or a gift in taile of Lands holden by Knights service to his eldest Son or other heir apparant within age the remainder in Fee to any other and dyed the heir should not have been in ward for this was out of the Stat. Merlebridg But at this day the heir shall be in that case in ward for his body and a third part of his land So if the Father had infeoffed his eldest Son within age and a stranger and the heirs of the son and died the son should have been out of ward but at this day he shall be in ward for his body and for a third part of his moity Fo. 78. a Vide c. The benefits that grew to the subject by acts of Parliament were that Tenants in Fee simple might devise their lands in such manner and form c. Also that the Father might infeoffe his eldest Sonne or other heir lineal or collaterall holden by Knights service and two parts of the Land shall be out of ward Lib. 8. fo 83. fo 163. And both the Statute of 32 and 34 H. 8. Concerning Wills and Wardships are many waies prejudiciall to the heirs as if Tenant by Knights service make a Feoffment in Fee to the use of his wife and heir heirs or to the use of a younger Sonne and his heirs or wholly for the payment of his debts In these cases although nothing at all of the Lands so holden descend to the heir but he is disherited of the same yet his body shall be in ward In facto quod se habet ad bonum malum magis de bono quam de malo lex intendit Lex intendit vicinum vicini facta scire Nulla impossibilia aut inhonesta sunt presumenda vera tamen honesta possibilia Lex semper intendit quod rationi convenit By intendment of Law the heir is not able to do Knights service before his full age of 21. years and therefore hath a gardian c. A woman hath seven ages for several purposes appointed to her by Law as seven years for the Lord to have aid pur file Marr. Nine years to deserve Dower 12. years to consent to marriage
untill 14. years to be in ward 14. years to be out of ward if she attained thereunto in the life of her ancestor 16. years for to tender her marriage if she under the age of 14. at the death of her Ancestor and 21. years to alienate her Lands goods and Chattels Fo. 78. b. 35. H. 6. 40. Bract. l. 2. c. 37. A man also by the Law for severall purposes hath divers ages assigned unto him viz. 12. years to take the oath of Allegiance in the Torn or Leet 14. years to consent to marriage 14. years for the heir in socage to chuse his gardian and 14. years is also accounted his age of discretion 15. years for the Lord to have aid pur faire fitz Chivaler under 21. to be in ward to the Lord by Knights service under 14. to be in ward to guardian in socage 14. to be out of ward of Guardian in Socage and 21. to be out of ward of Guardian in Chivalrie and to alien his Lands Goods and Chattels 34. E. 1. St. 3. F. N.B 202. But put case the Lord cannot have the wardship of the Land as if the Lord before the age of 14. grant over the wardship of the body the grantee cannot have the two years because he cannot hold over the Land and the Lord which hath the wardship of the land only should lose the benefit of the two years because he hath the lands only and cannot tender any marriage therefore in this cause the heir female shall enter into her land at her age of 14. years Cessante causa cessat effectus cessante ratione legis cessat beneficium legis Vide c. If the Lord tender a convenable marriage to the heir within the two years and she marry elsewhere within those two years the Lord shall not have the forfeiture of the marriage for the Statute giveth the two years only to make a tender Lib. 6. fo 71. Lord Darcies Case And if after such tender c. the heir female refuseth then the Lord shall hold the Land untill her age of 21. years and further untill he hath levied the value of her marriage Statute of West 1. 31. Ass p. 26. The tender of a marriage to an heir female before the age of 14. is void i.e. where the Lord may hold the Land for the said two years for then the Statute appointeth the time of tender but where the Lord cannot have the two years he may tender c. At any time after the age of 12. and before 14. for so he might have done at the common Law L. 6. 71. Darcy Le Seignor naūa les 2. ans apres les 14. ans mes lou l' heire female est dens l' age de 14. ans nient marrie al temps de Mort son Ancestor Sect. 104. and 105. The time of agreement or disagreement when they marry infra annos nubiles is for the woman at 12. or after and for the man at 14. or after and there need no new marriage if they so agree but disagree they cannot before c. But if a man of the age of 14. marry a woman of the age of 10. at her age of 12. he may as well disagree as the may though he were of the age of consent because in contracts of Matrimony either both must be bound or equal election of disagreement given to both and so è converso if the woman be of the age of consent and the man under Dominus non maritabit minorem in custodia sua nisi semel Fo. 79. b. Vide c. Sect. 107. and 108. Per le stat de Merton ca. 6. nul disparagement est mes lou celuy que est en gard ē marie deins lage de 14. ans There be four kindes of disparagements 1. propter vitiū animi 2. Sanguinis 3. Corporis 4. propter jacturam privilegii Vide Libr. Of disparagements at large Vide Libr. in Fo. 80. c. Magna Charta is Charta libertatum magnum in parvo Et magna fuit quondam magnae reverentia Chartae Periculosum existimo quod bonorum viror non comprobatur exemplo Usage is a good interpreter of Laws non usage is an intendment that the Law will not bear it Sect. 110. and 111. It is in the election of the Lord whether for the single value the Lord will tender a marriage or no for he shall have the single value without any tender Lib. 6. fo 70. L. Darcies Case If the heir male before any tender marrieth himself within age he shall pay but the single value of the marriage Fo. 82. b. Vide Libr. He that holdeth by Castlegard holdeth by Knights service but not by Escuage for Escuage is due when the King maketh a voyage royall out of this Realme and the Tenant maketh default but Castlegard is to be done within the Realm c. l. 4. Luttrels Case and l. 6. Gregories Case Relief is no service but an improvement of the service or an incident to the service for the which the Lord may distrein but cannot have an action of debt but his executors or Administrators may have an action of debt and cannot distrein A Knights Fee consisteth of 20l land and he payeth for his relief for a whole Knights Fee the 4th part of his Fee viz. Five pound and so according to the rate In some case the heir shall pay relief when he was within age at the time of the death of his Ancestor The Lord upon every discent ought to have either wardship or relief Fo. 83. b. Vide c. And in some case one Lord of the heir of one Tenant shall have both wardship during his Minority and relief at his full age Vide lib. c. Sect. 114. Nul ser ingard de son corps a asoū Seignior vivant son pier c. Fo. 84. a. Where the Lord hath a double interest in the wardship of the body one as Lord and another as Father in that case the wardship by reason of nature cannot be waived and claim made in respect of the Seigniory Vide lib. c. 35. H. 6. 55. l. 7. fo 13. Calvins Case Sect. 115. and 116. L' estatute de ann 4. H. 7. ca. 17. done le Gardianship del use sicome del seisin in demesne Gardian en droit en chivalry est lou le Seignior ē seise de gard de terre de heire per cause de lon Seigniory Mes ore si il grant le gard c. le grantee est appell gardian en fait Fol. 85. a. Br. t. grant 85 Dyer 371. 381. If a man make a Lease for years of a villeine this cannot be done without Deed neither can the Lessee assign it over without Deed because it is derived out of a Freehold that lieth in grant but the warship of the body is an originall Chattell during the Minority derived out of no Freehold and therefore as the Law createth it without Deed so it may be
le gard a son use mes al use del heir Et si Gardian en Socage devie devant asc ' account fait per luy al heire de ceo le heire en sans remedy per ceo que nul bre de accompt gift tenus les execut ' sinon pur le roy tautsolement For albeit in an action of account against a Guardian in socage c. the defendant cannot wage his Law yet in respect of the privity of the matters of account and the discharge resting in the knowledge of the parties thereunto an action of account lieth not c. but that is holpen by Statute Vide c. fo 90. b. Rot. Parl. 50. E. 3. nu 123. The Kings Treasure is Firmamentum belli Ornamentum pacis Nullum tempus occurrit Regi Prerogative extends to all Powers Preheminences and Priviledges which the Law giveth to the Crown Stans Praer 5. 10. Sect. 126 127 128 129. Le snr aūa del heire son tenant pur reliefe tant come le rent amount que il paya per an ouster le rent c. Of corporal service or labour or work of the tenant no relief is due but where the tenant holdeth by such yearly rents or profits which may be paid or delivered Et le snr poit incontinent distreine per reliefe sinon que il soit tiel service que nest donques an esse sicome le tenant tient per un prose devie en yuer c. For Flowers that are fructus fugaces cannot be kept and therefore are not to be delivered till the time of growing otherwise it is of corn c. Lex spectat naturae ordinem non cogit ad impossibilia Impossibile est quod naturae rei repugnat Sect. 130 131 132. Il est reason que le snr ses heires ont asc ' service fait a eux per proū testifier que la terre est tenus de eux fol. 92. b. An Escheat is a casual profit quod accidit domino ex eventu ex insperato Of incidents there be two sorts s Separable as rents incident to Reversions c. Inseparable as Fealty to a Reversion or Tenure Where the Tenure is by Fealty only there is no relief due fol. 93. a. vide lib. Lessee per ans ferra fealty al lessor per ceo que il tiel de luy auterment est de tenant a volunt car il nad asc ' sure estate And because the matter of an oath must be certain therefore tenant at will shall not do fealty CHAP. VI. Frankalmoigne Sect. 133. OF Ecclesiastical persons some be Regular and they live under certain Rules and have vowed three things True Obedience perpetual Chastity and Wilfull Poverty Secular as Bishops Deans and Chapters Archdeacons Prebends Parsons Vicars c. All Ecclesiastical persons may hold in Frankalmoigne be they Secular or Regular but no Lay person c. By the ancient Common Law of England a man could not alien such lands as he had by descent without the consent of his heir yet he might give a part to God in Free-almoigne or with his daughter in free marriage or to his servant in remuneratione servitii fol. 94. b. Glanville l. 7. cap. 1. fo 44 45. acc Lands must be given to a Corporation aggregate of many by deed and they have a Fee simple without these words Successors for the body never dies Otherwise is it of a sole Corporation But yet out of the general rules the case of Frankalmoigne is excepted And there is a diversity when the head and body both are capable as Dean and Chapter and when one as in case of Abbot or Prior and Covent Ancient Grants shall be allowed as the Law was taken when such Grants were made Sect. 134. Decanus is derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth Ten for that he is an Ecclesiastical secular Governour and was anciently over ten Prebends or Canons at the least in a Cathedral Church and is head of his Chapter Capitulum est Clericorum congregatio sub uno Decano in Ecclesia Cathedrali And Chapters be twofold viz. the Ancient and the Later The ancient Deans come in in much like sort as Bishops do for they are chosen by the Chapter by a Conge de estier as Bishops be and the King giving his Royal assent they are confirmed by the Bishop but they which are either newly translated or founded are Donative and by the Kings Letters Patents are installed fo 95. a. Ecclesiastical persons have not capacity to take in Succession unlesse they be bodies Politique as Bishops Archdeacons Deans Parsons Vicars c. or lawfully incorporate by the Kings Letters Patents or Prescription Sect. 135. Of Tenures some be Spiritual and some be Temporal and of Spiritual some be incertain as Tenures in Frank-almoigne and some be certain as Tenures by Divine service Again Divine service is twofold either Spiritual as Prayers to God or Temporal as distribution of Alms to poor people Since Littleton wrote the Book of Common Prayer c. is altered yet the Tenure in Frankalmoigne remaineth and such Prayers and Divine service shall be said and celebrated as now is authorized for the change is by generall consent c. of Parliament 2 E. 6. c. 1. 5. 6. c. 1. 1 El. c. 2. whereunto every man is party And as Littleton hath said before in the case of Soccage Sect. 119. The changing of one kinde of Temporal services into other Temporal services altereth neither the name nor the effect of the Tenure so the changing of Spiritual services c. altereth neither the name c. Frankalmoigne est le pluis haute service fuit haec sapientia quondam Publica privatis secernere sacra profanis Tant solement divine spiritual service en destr fait per terres c. tenus en Frankalmoigne Sect. 136. and 137. No distress can be taken for any services that are not put into certainty nor can be reduced into any certainty Oportet quod certa res deducatur in judicium And yet in some cases there may be a certainty in uncertainty as a man may hold of his Lord to shear all the sheep depasturing within his Manor and the Lord may distrain for this uncertainty 7 E. 3. 38. Ordinarius so called Quia habet ordinariam jurisdictionem in jure proprio non per deputationem as a Bishop c. Where the right is Spiritual and the remedy thereof onely by the Ecclesiastical Law the conusans thereof doth appertain to the Ecclesiastical Court fo 96. a. And so where the Common or Statute Law giveth remedy in foro seculari whether the matter be spiritual or temporal the conusance of that cause belongeth to the Kings Temporal Courts only c. fo 96. b. There were within this Realm 118 Monasteries founded by the Kings of England So all Bishops c. which hold of the King by Barony and are Lords of Parliament called by Writ c.
7. fo 8. Calvins Case 5. In some actions Protection shall not be allowed by the Common Law as appeales of Felony and Mayhem so it is where the King is sole party c. And in a Decies tant where the King and the subject are plaintiff But in late acts of Parliament Protections in personoll actions are expressely ousted Bract. Lib. 5. 139. c. In a Writ of Dower unde nihil habet in a qu. imp or ass of Darr presentment in ass of no diss In a qu. non misit c. no protection is allowable Vide. By act of Parliament no protection shall be allowed in attaint nor in action against a Gaoler for an escape nor in pleas of trns. or other contract made c. after the date of the same protection 23. H. 8. ca. 3. Note in judiciall Writs which are in nature of actions where the party hath day to appear there a protection doth lie as in Writs of Scire fac upon Recoveries Fines Iudgements c. So it is in a quid Iuris clamat c. But in Writs of execution as habere fac Scis Elegit execution upon a Statute cap. ad Satisf Fieri fac There no protection can be cast for the defendant causa qua supra 13. E. 3. Prot. 72. 6. No Writ of protection can be allowed unless it be under the great Seal and it is directed generally Libr. 2. fol. 17. Lanes Case lib. 8. fol. 68. Trallops Case 35. Hen. 6 2. 7. The Courts of Justice are to allow or disallow of the Protection c. be they Courts of Record or not and not the Sheriff or any other Officer 43 E. 3. Prat. 96. 8. The protection may be cast by a stranger or by the party himself an Infant seme convert c. may cast a Protection for the tennant or Defendant And the Defendant or tenant casting it he must shew cause wherefore c. but a stranger need not shew any cause but that the tenant or Defendant is here by Protection 21. E. 4. 18. 38. H. 6. 131 9. A protection may be avoided 1. By the casting of it before it be allowed 2. By repeal thereof after it be allowed by disallowing of it mnny waies as for that it lieth not in that action or that he hath no day to cast it or for materiall variance between the Protection and the Record or that it is not under the Great Seal c. 3. After it be allowed by innotescimus as if any tarry in the country without going to the service c. over a convenient time after he had any Protection or repair from the same service upon information thereof to the Lord Chancellor he shall repeal the Protection by Innotescimus 13. R 2. cap. 16. 21. E. 4. 20. vide lib. fo 131. a b As to the third Protection cum clausula volhmus the King by his prerogative is to be preferred in payment of his duty or debt by his Debtor before any Subject Register 281. b. Thesaurus Regis est fundamentum belli firmamentum pacis By the Statute of 25 E. 3. cap. 19. the other creditors may have their actions against the King debtor and proceed to Iudgement but not to Execution unless he will take upon him to pay the Kings debt and then he shall have Execution for both the two debts But in some cases the Subject shall be first satisfied viz. where the King is intitled to any fine or duty by the suit of the party as in a decies tantum And so if in an action of Debt the Defendant deny his Deed and it is found against him he shall pay a fine to the King but the Plantiff shall be first satisfied 41. E. 3. 15. 4. E. 4. 16. 17. E. 3. 73. 29. E. 3. 13. The fourth Protection cum clasula volumus is when a man sent into the Kings service beyond Sea is imprisoned there so as neither Protection Profection or Moration will serve him and this hath no certain time limited in it F. N. B. 28. c. Of Protections cum clausula nolumus that are of Grace vide lib. 7. fo 9. Calvins Case Regist 280. The protection cum clausula nolumus that is of Right is That every Spirituall person may sue a Protection for him and his goods and for the Fermors of their lands c that they shall not be taken by the Kings Purveyor not their carriages or cattells taken by other Ministers of the King Which Writ doth recite the Statute of 14. E. 3. F. N. B 29 30. Albeit Queen Eliz. maintained many wars yet she granted few or no Protections and her reason was That he was no fit Subject to be employed in her service that was subject to other mens actions lest She might be thought to delay Iustice fol 131. b. Sect. 200. Vn home que est enter professe religion est civiliter mortuus or mortuus seculo To three purposes Profession i. e. the civill death hath not the effect of a naturall death 1. This civill death shall never derogate from his own grant nor be any mean to avoid it for if tenant in tail make a Feoffment in fee and enter into Religion his issue shall have no Formedon during his life 2. It shall never give her a vail without whose consent he could not have entred into Religion and therefore his wife shall not be endowed untill his naturall death But if the wife after her husband hath entred into Religion alien the land which is her own right and after her husband is deraigned the husband may enter and avoid the alienation 31 E. 1. Dower 176. 21. E. 4. 14. 3. It shall not work any prejudice to a stranger that hath a former right If a disseisor is professed so as the lands descends to his heir this discent shall not toll the entry of the disseisee A woman cannot be professed a Nun during the life of her husband 5 E. 4. 3. But if a man holdeth lands by Knights service and is professed c. his heir within age he shall be in Ward 31 E. 3. Collusion 29. If one joynt-tenant be professed c. the land shall survive to the other 21 R. 2. Judgement 263. An Abbot c. may sue and be sued c. for any thing that concerns the house of Religion Bract. fo 415. A wife is disabled to sue without her husband as much as a Monk is without his Soveraign 4 H. 3. Br. 766. And yet the wife of Sir Ro. Belknap Justice of the Common Pleas who was exiled beyond Sea did sue a Writ in her own name without her husband he being alive whereof one said Ecce modo mirum quod faemina fert breve Regis non nominando virum conjunctim robore legis 2 H. 4. f. 7. a. And King E. 3. brought a qu. imp against the Lady of Maltravers 10. E. 3. 53. And King H. 4. brought a Writ of Ward against Sibel B. 1. H. 4. 1. b. And Tho.
joyntenant or copercener shall distreine for his or her moity 27. E. 3. 88. Concerning the apportionment of rents there is a difference between a grant of a rent and a reservation of rent 22 H. 4. 17. A man against his own grant shall not take advantage of the weakness of his own estate in part vide lib c. Fo. 148. 6. And note a diversity between a rent in grosse and a rent incident to a reversion If a man grant a rent charge out of two acres and after the grantee recovereth one of the acres against the grantor by a Title Paramount the whole rent shall issue out of the other acre But if the Recovery be by a feint Title by Covine then the rent is extinct in the whole because he claimeth under the grantor Doct. Stud. l. 2 c. 17. And yet in some cases a rent charge shall not be wholly extinct where the grantee claimeth from and under the grantor As if B. make a lease of one acre for life to A. and A. is seised of another acre in fee A granteth a rent-charge to B. out of both acres and doth waste in the acre which he holdeth for life B. recovers in waste the whole rent is not extinct but shall be apportioned c. for that Nullus Commodum capere potest de injuria sua propria If the King give two acres of land of equall value to * another in fee fee tail for life or for years reserving a rent of Two shillings and the one acre is evicted by a Title Paramount the rent shall be proportioned F. N. B. 234. b. If an entire service be pro bono publico as Knights service Castlegard c. though the Lord purchase part the service remains but when entire services are for the private benefit of the Lord it is otherwise lib. 6. fo 1 2. Bruertons Case Sed vide lib. c. fo 149. a. Sect. 223. and 224. Reg. it holdeth That quae in partes dividi nequeunt solida à singulis praestantur Vide los reports Bruertons Case lib. 6. Talbots Case l. 8. f. 104. It there be Lord and Tenant by Fealty and Herriot service and the Lord purchase part of the land the Herriot service is extinct and yet it is not annual because it is entire and valuable But otherwise it is of Herriot Custome fo 149. b. If the tenant giveth to the father of the grantee of a rent charge part of the rent in tail and this descend to the grantee the rent charge shalll be apportioned and so by act in law a rent charge may be suspended for one part and in esse for another 30. Ass p. 12 fol. 149. b. And so it is if the father be grantee of a rent and the son purchase part of the land charged the father dyeth and the rent descends to the son the rent shall be apportioned and so it is if the grantee grant the rent to the tenant of the land and to a stranger the rent is extinct but for a moity 34. H. 6. 41. b. If a man hath Issue two daughters and grant a rent Charge to one of them out of his land and dyeth the rent shall be apportioned and if the grantee in this case infeoffeth another of her part of the land yet the moity of the rent temaineth issuing out of her Sisters part because the part of the grantee in the land by the descent was discharged of the rent But in all these Cases where the rent charge is apportioned by act in law yet the Writ or Annuity faileth for if the grantee should bring a Writ of Annuity he must ground it upon the grant by Deed and then must he bring it for the whole 9 Ass 22. 5. R. 2. Annuity 21. Annua nec debitum judex non separat ipsum Also in respect of the reality the rent is apportioned but the personality is indivisible c. If Execution be sued c. upon a Statute Merchant or Staple and after the inheritance of part of those lands descend to the Conusee all the Execution is avoyded for the duty is Personall and cannot be divided by act in Law Pl. Com. 72. 15. E. 4 5. If the father within age purchase part of the land charged and alieneth within age and dyeth the Son recovereth in a Writ Dum fuit infra aetat or entreth in this case the act of the Law is mixt with the act of the party and yet the rent shall be apportioned for after the recovery or entry the Son hath the land by descent fo 150. vide c. A relation or fiction of Law shall never work a wrong or charge to a third person but in fictione juris semper est aequitas lib. 3. fo 29. Butler and Bakers Case ●s if the Feoffee grant a rent charge al feoffer son seme al heires del Baron ' feme recover Dower le rent charge ferra apportion ' el distreinam c. Sect. 225. If there be Lord and Tenant by Fealty and Rent and the Lord by his Deed reciting the Tenure release all his Right in the Land saving the said rent the seigniory remains and he shall have the rent as a rent service and the fealty incident to it c. 12 E. 4. 11. 9 E. 3. 1. If the Donee hold of the Donor by fealty and certain rent and the Donor grant the services to another and the tenant attorn the rent shall passe as rent seck fol. 150. b. If there be Lord and Tenant by fealty and certain rent and the Lord grant the rent in tail or for life saving the fealty and further grant That the grantee may distrain for it albeit the reversion of the rent be a rent service yet the Donee or Grantee shall have it but as a rent seck and shall not distrain for it 7 E. 3. 2 3. adjudg Whereas in an Assize for a rent service all the tenants of the land need not be named but such as did the disseisin yet in Assize for the rent seck which sometimes was a rent service all the tenants must be named as in case of a rent charge albeit he was disseised but by one sole tenant 4 E. 2. Ass 449. 26 H. 8. Dyer 31. But if the Lord of a Manor release the Fealty to his Tenant saving the rent or that a Mesnalty become a rent by Surplusage those that are now seck and sometimes were service are part of the Manor but a rent charge cannot be part of a Manor 31 Ass 23. 22 Ass 53. Sect. 226 c. If there be Lord and Tenant by Fealty and Rent the annual rent which is a profitable service is of higher and more respect in Law than the fealty and therefore by the grant of the rent the Fealty shall pass as incident c. but it is an incident separable and therefore may be by a saving as Littleton hath said separated by it And so when the Tenure is by Fealty
and rent and the rent be recovered the Fealty shall includedly be recovered 44 E. 3. 19. 26 Ass 38. 8 E. 4. 28. So long as Homage continues the Fealty cannot be divided from it vide lib. c. 151. a. Note a diversity between these corporeal services of Homage Fealty and Escuage which cannot become seck or dry but make Tenure whereunto Distresses Escheats and other Profits be incident and other corporeal services ast ●o Plough Repair Attend c. And all Rents whatsoever for they may become seek and make no Tenure Rent and Fealty are incident to the Reversion viz. Rent separably and Fealty inseparably 12 E. 4. 3. Doct. Stud. lib. 2. c. 9. The incident shall pass by the grant of the Principal but not è converso Accessorium non ducit sed sequitur suum principale fo 152. a. If the Tenant infeoff the Lord Paramount and his wife and their heires in this case the Mesnalty is but suspended for if the wife survive both Mesnalty and Seignory are revived 7 Ass 2. 7 E. 3. 20. It is said that if there be Lord Mesne and Tenant each of them by Fealty and 6 d. the Lord confirm the state of the Tenant to hold of him by Fealty and 3 d. that the Mesnalty is extinct So it is if ●he Lord release to the Tenant for whether the Lord purchase the Tenancy or the Tenant the Seigniory the Mesnalty is extinct 8 H. 6. 24. fo 152. b. So if there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant make a gift in tail the remainder to the King the Seigniory it extinct 4 5 P. M. Dyer 154. Lex citius tolerare vult privatum damnum quam publicum malum 13 H. 4. 3. 40. Ass p. 27. No man can hold one and the same land immediately of two severall Lords And one man cannot of the same land be both Lord and Tenant It is Reg. true Res inter alios acta alteri nocere non debet Et factum unius alteri nocere non debet which are true with this Exception unless an inconvenience should follow c. Quando lex aliquid alicui concedit concedere videtur id sine quo res ipsa esse non potest And therefore if a man maketh a lease for life reserving a rent and binde himself in a Statute and the Cognisee hath the rent extended and delivered to him he shall distrain for the rent because he commeth to it by course of Law 13 H 4 Avowry 237. La ley voet plus toft suffer un mischiefe que un inconvenience pur ceo si Mesne tient per 12 d. tenant per 5 s. le seignieur purchase le tenancy le seigniory del Mesnalty ē extinct Et le mesne aūa 4 s. come rent seck de le seignieur Sect. 233. Si home que ad rent seck est un foits sei d'asc ' parcel de le rent apurs le tenant ne voile payer le rent aver il aūa ass de novel diss A rent seck or rent charge may be demanded after it is behinde at any time c. for Remedies for Rights are ever favourably expounded M. 41. E. 4 adjudged If the demand be made upon the land and the rent is not paid whether the tenant be present or absent yet this is a denyall in Law c. Disseisina is a putting out of a man out of seisin and ever implyeth a wrong But dispossessing or ejectment is a putting out of possession and may be right or by wrong Bract. l. 4 f. 161. Mirr c. 2. s Disseisin est un personal trespass de tortius ouster del seisin Where the Statute of Merton 20 H. 3. saith Disseisitus de libero tenemento Littleton expounds it to extend to a rent seck or rent charge albeit they be against common rights yet a man hath a Freehold in them 40. Ass 23. ac And he that granteth omnia tenementa sua a rent charge or a rent seck doth pass 14 E. 4. 4. 11 H. 6. 22. Recuperare i. ad rem per injuriam extort ' sive detentam per sententiam Judicis restitui Execution is the obtaining of actuall possession of any thing acquired by Judgement of Law or by a Fine executory levied whether it be by Sheriff or by the entry of the party vide Sect. 504. If the Recovery in Assize c. be had against one and hee and another redisseise the Plaintiff he shall not have a Redisseisin for he●e is alius and hee cannot have a Redisseisin against the former disseisor alone because he is joynt-tenant with another For joynt tenancy in a Writ of Redisseisin is a good plea and a stranger shall not be subject to double imprisonment and double damages 33 E. 3 Redisse●st 17. 9 H. 4. 5. F.N.B. 118. e. A Redisseisin doth lye against the disseisor which doth redisseise and his Feoffee after the second disseisin for otherwise the redisseisor might prevent the Plaintiff of his redisseisin If the Mesne recovereth a rent when it is a rent service and after the rent becommeth a rent seck by surplusage and doth redisseise him of the rent hee shall have a redisseisin for the substance of the rent remains though the quality be altered Sect. 234. He that is of a Jury must be liber legalis homo 9. E 4. 16. First hee ought to be dwelling most neare to the place where the question is moved 2. He ought to be most sufficient both for understanding and competency of estate 3. To bee least suspitious that is to be indifferent as he stands unsworn Vide S. 102. 193. Ad questionem facti non respondent Indices Ad quaestio juris non respondent lu●atores Calumniare to challenge i. e. to except against them in Court that are returned to be Iurors Fo. 155. b. It is most necessary that Iurors be omni exceptione majores forasmuch as mens lives c. are to be tried by them Nota that there is a principall cause of challenge to the array and a challenge to the favour Fol. 156. a. Vide nota The challenge to the array is in respect to the cause of unindifferency or default in the Sheriff or other officer that made the returne and not in respect of the persons returned where there is no default in the Sheriff c. for if the challenge to the array be found against the party that takes it yet he shall have his particular challenge to the Polls that is to the particular persons and these be of four kinds i.e. peremptory principall which induce favour and for default of hundredors fo 156. b. A man may challenge peremptorily without shewing any cause and this only is in case of Felony c. In favorem vitae Vide c. Principall challenges to the Poll may be reduced to foure heads 1. Propter honoris respectum as no Peer of the realme is to be sworn on Juries l. 6. 52. 2. Propter
the reversion to the grantee Vide Westcotes Case lib. 2. fo 60 61. If lessee for life granteth his estate to him in the reversion and to a stranger the joynture is severed and the reversion executed for the one moity by the act of the Law 7 H. 6. If a man make a lease for life and grant the reversion to two in fee the lessee granteth his estate to one of them they are not joynt-tenants of the reversion for there is an execution of the estate for the one moity and an estate for life the reversion to the other of the other moity Si home voet lesser terre a un auter par fait ou sans fait nient fesant mention que estate il avoit fert livery c. en ceo cas le lesse ad estate pur tinere de sa vie Quaelibet concessio fortissimè contra donatorem interpretanda est Legis autem constructio non facit injuriam Pl. Com. in Throgmortons case If a lease be made to two habendum to the one for life the remainder to the other for life this doth alter the generall intendment of the premises Et semper expressam facit cessare tacitum 30 H. 8. tit Joyntenans Br. 53. Dyer fo 361. Pl. Com. 100. Nota where the grant is impossible to take effect according to the letter there the Law shall make such a construction as the gift by possibility may take effect Benignae faciendae sunt interpretationes cartar propter simplicitatem laicorum ut res magis valeat quam pereat fo 183. b. Cognitio legis est copulata complicata Tunc unumquodque scire dicimur cum primam causam scire putamus scire autem propriè est rem ratione per causam cognoscere Arist 1 Metap Virg. 1. Georg. Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas If a gift be made to two men and the heirs of their two bodies begotten the remainder to them two and their heirs they are joynt-tenants for life tenants in common of the estate taile and joynt-tenants of the fee simple in remainder for they are joynt purchasers of the fee simple and the remainder in fee is a new created estate but the reversion remaining in the Donor or his heirs is a part of his ancient fee simple Dyer 14 Eli. 309. Sect. 284. Lou terre ē done a. 2. females a les heires de lour 2. corps ingendres It hath been said that the husband c. should be Tenant pur le Curt ' living the other sister 17 E. 3. 51. 78. and that the issue of the one should recover the moity in a Formedon living the other sister 44 E. 3. Taile 13. 7. H. 4. 16. Corbets c. l. 1. fo 8. 84. 6. 4. Mar. Dyer 145. But Littleton hath resolved this doubt Vid. fo 183. a. If a man give lands to two men and one woman and the heires of their three bodies begotten they have severall inheritances For the Law will never intend a possibility upon a possibility Fo. 184. a. Sect. 285. If a fine be levied to two and to the heirs of one of them by force whereof he is seised he that hath Fee dyeth and after the joint-tenant for life dieth and an estranger abates in this case the heir may either suppose the Fee simple executed and have an Ass of Mordanc ou briefe de droit or he may have a scire fac to execute the fine or maintain a Writ of intrusion by which the heir supposeth that the Fee was not executed 11 H. 4. 55. F.N.B. 196. and 219. and he shall term it a remainder and yet when Land is given to two and to the heirs of one of them he in the remainder cannot grant away his Fee simple Sect. 286. 2 Jointenants de terre c. celuy que survesquist claima ad la terre per le survivor nemy ad ne poit de ceo claimer rien per discent de son compagnon c. Mes auterment est de parceners c. and the diversity is for that the Survivor doth claime above the grant c. and the heir by discent under c. If two joyntenants be of a terme and the one of them grant to I.S. that if he pay to him 10. l. deut Mich. that then he shall have his terme the grantor dyeth before the day I.S. payes the summe to his executor at the day yet he shall not have the terme but the survivor shall hold place for it was but in nature of a communication but if he had made a Lease for years to begin at Mich. it should have bound the Survivor 14 Pl. 8. 22. Pl. Com. 263. b. Hales case Ius accrescendi praefertur oneribus alienatio rei praefertur juri accrescendi If one joyntenant in Fee simple be indebted to the King and dieth no extent shall be made upon the land in the hands of the Survivor 40 Ass 36. F. N. B. 149. Pl. Com. 321. If a recovery be had against one joyntenant who dyeth before execution the Survivor shall not avoid this recovery because that the right of the moity is bound by it If one joynt-tenant in Fee take a Lease for years of a stranger per ft. indent and dyeth the Survivor shall not be bound by the conclusion because he claims above it c. If two joynt-tenants be in Fee and the one make a Lease for years reserving a rent and dyeth the surviving Feoffee shall have the reversion by survivor but not the rent because he claimeth in from the first Feoffer which is paramount the rent Dyer M. 2. 3. El. 187. Lib. 1. f. 96. and Lib. 6. fo 78 79. If one joynt-tenant granteth a rent charge out of his part and after release to his joint companion and dieth he shall hold the land charged because he claimeth not by the survivor in as much as the rel ' prevent the same 33 H. 6. 3 a. 9 El. Dyer 263. fo 185. a. But all men agree that if A. B. and C. be joynt-tenants in Fee and A. charge his part and then release to B. and his heires and dye that the charge is good for ever for B. cannot be in from the first Feoffer because he hath a joynt companion at the time of the release made and severall Writs of praec must be brought against them 37 H. 8. tit alienation Br. 31. 10 E. 4. 3. b. Sect. 287 Jus accrescendi prefertur ultimae voluntati Although an in●ant est unum indivisible tempore quod non ē tempus nec pars temporis ad quod tamen partes temp connectuntur and that instans est finis unius temporis principium alterius yet in consideration of Law there is a priority of time in an instant as here the survivor is preferred before the devise which Littleton distinguisheth by these words post mortem per mortem Pl. Com Fulmerstons case Two femes ioynt-tenants of a Lease for years one of
the profits rising out of the land or doing of Trespasse upon the land as here by the Exam●na●●●●s do appear for the right is several and the taking of the profits in common 21 E. 4. 11. 22. 22 H. 6. 50. 58. 10 H. 7. 16. F.N.B. 117. a. The second diversity is between Chattels reals that are apportionable or severable as leases for years Wardship of Lands Interest of Tenements by Elegit Statute Merchant Staple c. of Lands and Tenements and Chattels reals entire as Wardship of the body and a Villain for years c. for if one Tenant in common take away the Ward or Villain c. the other hath no remedy by action but he may take them again Another diversity is between chattels reals and chattels personals for if one Tenant in common take all the chattels personals the other hath no remedy by action but he may take them again And herein the like Law is concerning chattels reals entire and chattels personals for this purpose But of chattels entire as of a Ship Horse or any other entire chattel real or personal no survivor shall be between them that hold them in common 10 H. 4. Trespasse 178. 11 H. 4. 3. And Tenants in common shall not joyn in an Eject ' firme c. for that such actions concern the Right of Lands which are several 21 E. 4. 11. 12. fo 200. a. If two Tenants in common be of a Dove-house and the one destroy the old Doves whereby the flight is wholly lost the other Tenant in common shall have an action of Trespass and he cannot plead in barre Tenancy in common 47 E. 3. 22. b. And so it is if one Tenant in common c. destroy all the Deer in a Park c. 4 E. 2. Trespasse 233. And so it is if one Tenant in common carry away the meer stones c. 1 H. 5. 1. 2 H. 5. 3. And if two Tenants in common be of a folding and the one of them disturb the other to erect Hurdles c. 13 E. 3. Trespass 212. 18 H. 6. 5. If two several owners of houses have a River in common c. if one of them corrupt the Water River the other shall have an action upon his Case 13 H. 7. 26. If two Tenants in common or joyntenants be of an house or Mill and it fall in decay and the one is willing to repair the same and the other will not he that is willing shall have a Writ de reparatione fac pro bono publico F. N. B. 127. All those Books which affirm that an action of Account lieth by one Tenant in common or joyntenant against another must be intended when the one maketh the other his Bayliff for otherwise never his Bayliff to render an Account is a good plea F.N.B. 118. 1. 10 H. 7. 16. 2 E. 4. 25. Westm 2. cap. 23. If there be two Tenants in common of a Wood Turbary Piscary c. and one of them doth waste against the will of his companion his companion shall have an action of Waste vide lib. fo 200. b. Nota. Some do hold that an action of Waste doth not lie upon the Statute W.C. 23. against Tenant in common c. for destroying the whole flight of Doves 47 E. 3. 22. 50 E. 3. 3. Note that one Tenant in common may infeoff his companion but not release because the Freehold is several Joyntenants may release but not infeoff because the Freehold is joynt but Coparceners may both infeoff and release because their seisin to some intents is joynt and to some several Sect. 324. Quant un home voile merrer un feoffment fait a luy ou un done en taile ou lease pur vie d'ascun terres c. la il dirra par force de quel feoffment c. il fuit seisee c. Mes lou un voile plead un lease ou grant fait a luy de chattel real ou personal la il dirra per force de quel il fuit possesse c. When a man pleads a lease for life c. which passeth by livery he is not to plead an entry for he is in actuall seisin by the livery it self Otherwise it is of a lease for years CHAP. V. Of Estates sur Condition Sect. 325. COnditio dicitur cum quod in casum incert ' qui potest tendere ad esse aut non esse confertur Condic ' est 2 ex 1. Facti i. e. upon a condition expressed by the party in legal terms of Law 2. Juris i. e. Tacitè created by law without any words used by the party Littleton subdivideth Condition in Deed into Condition precedent of which it is said Condic ' adimpleri debet priusquam sequatur effectus and Condition subsequent Again of Condition in Deed some be Affirmative and some Negative and some in the Affirmative which imply a Negative Some make the estate whereunto they are annexed voidable by Entry or Claim and some make the estate void ipso facto without entry c. Also of Condition in Deed some be annexed to the rent reserved out of the land and some to collateral acts c. some be single some in the conjunctive some in the disjunctive Mirror cap. 2. 8. 15. 17. fol. 101. b. Sur Condic ' en fait ē sicome un home per fait indent infeoffa un auter in fee render certain rent c. Here Littleton putteth one Example of six several kindes of Condition 1. Of a * Condition * single in Deed. 2. Of a Condition subsequent to the estate 3. Of a Condition annexed to the rent And 4. a Condition that defeateth the estate 5. A Condition that defeateth not the estate before entry And 6. a Condition in the Affirmative which implyeth a Negative as behind or unpaid implyeth a Negative viz. not paid Bendloes en Trespass 5 Mar. Et en cest case si le rent ne soit pay c. The Land is the principall debtor for the rent issueth out of the Land and that is the place of demand appointed by Law and the demand must ever be made at the most notorious place and the last time of demand of the rent is such a convenient time before the Sun-setting of the last day of payment as the mony may be numbred and received 40 Ass 11. 49. Ass 5. 15. Eliz. Dy. 329. lib. 4. Burroughes c. f. 72. c. Pl. Com. 70. and 172. Hill and Granges c. Lib. 5. f. 114. Wades c. If a rent be granted payable at a certain day and if it be behind and demanded that the grantee shall distrein for it in this case the grantee need not demand it at the day but if he demand it at any time after he shall distrein for it Lib. 7. f. 28. Maundes c. Mich. 40 41. El. Stanly c. Regularly it is true that he that entreth for a condition broken shall be seised in his first estate or of that estate which he had
ft. lease pur vie rend rent c. apres il mor. sans heire c. Note that the Lord by Escheat shall distreine for the rent and yet the rent was reserved to the lessor and his heires but both Assignees in Deed and Assignee in Law shall have the rent because the rent being reserved of inheritance to him and his heirs is incident to the reversion c. The Guardian c. shall in the right of the heir take benefit of a condition by entry or reenter by the common law 21 H. 7. 18. 17. Ass 20. 18. Ass pl. 18. lib. 7. f. 7. Earl of Bedfords Case otherwise it is of Assignees Si terre soit grant a un home pur 2. ans sur condition que sil payroiit al grantor deins les 2. ans 10. l. donques il averoit Fee c. Si livery de fein soit sait en ce case donques le grantee avoit le franktenement le Fee sur●m le condition Note First A condition precedent 2. A condition which createth an estate may be made by parol without deed 3. Livery c. in this case must be made before the lessee enter for after his entry livery made to him that is in possession is void 4. If no livery be made no Fee simple doth passe 5. It is inconvenient that the Fee should passe without livery c. 6. Argumentum ab inconvenienti is forcible in law vide Sect. 60. fol. 216. a. Sect. 350. Si terre soit grant a un home pur terme de 5 ans sur condition que sil paya al grantor deins les 2 primer ans 40 M. que adonque il avant fee ou auterment forsque pur les 5 ans livery est fait c. per force del grant ore il ad fee simple condition c. Many are of opinion a against Littleton in this case and their reason is because the Fee simple is to commence upon a condition precedent and therefore cannot passe untill the condition be performed And that Littleton here of a condition precedent doth before performance make it subsequent and they avouch many Authorities as 31 E. 1. Feoffments Faits 119. 12 E. 2. Voucher 265. 7 E. 3. 10. Pl. Com. 272. Sayes Case 44 E. 3. Attaint 22. 43 Ass p. 41. 10 E. 3. 39 40. 10 Ass 15 Ass 161. Pl. Com. 135. Brownings Case 6 R. 2. tit quid juris clamat 20. And generally the Books are cited that make a diversity between a condition precedent and a condition subsequent 15 H. 7. 1. a. 14 H. 8. 18. 20. 3 H. 6. 6. b. And lastly they cite Dyer 10 El. 281. and in Say and Fullers Case Pl. 272. the opinions of Dyer and Browne vide lib. fol. 217. a. Notwithstanding all this there are those that defend the opinion of Littleton both by Reason and Authority By Reason for that by the Rule of Law a Livery of Seisin must passe a present Freehold and cannot give a Freehold in futuro 2. It cannot stand with Reason that a Freehold should remain in the lessor against his own Livery of Seisin seeing there is a person able to take it A Livery of Seisin can●ot expect And they say further That seeing all the Books aforesaid prove that such a Condition is good and that the Livery made to the Lessee is effectuall by consequence the Freehold and Inheritance must passe presently or not at all and it is not rare say they in our Books that words shall be transposed and marshalled so as the Feoffment or Grant may take effect Pl. 171. Hill and Granges Case 10 Eliz. 3. lib. 8. fol. 74. Seignior Staffords Case Pl. 487. Nichols Case And further they take a diversity in this case between a lease for life and a lease for years For in this case of a lease for life with such a Condition to have fee they agree that the Fee simple passeth not before the performance of the Condition for that the Livery may presently work upon the Freehold But otherwise it is in case of a lease for years Also they take a diversity between Inheritances that lie in grant and that lie in livery fol. 217. b. They also make severall Answers to the Authority before cited for as to the case in 31 E. 1. they say That either the case is misreported or else the law is against the judgment For the case is but this That a man make a lease of a Manour to B. for 20 years and after the 20 years B. shall hold the Manour to him and his heirs by 12. l. rent and as it must be intended maketh Livery of Seisin in this case it is clear say they that B. hath a Fee simple maintenant for there is no Condition precedent c. As for the case in 12 E. 2. the case is That J. de M. made a Charter to J. de Burford of Fee simple and the same day it was covenanted between them That J. de B. should hold the same Tenements for 8 years and if he did not pay 100 Mark at the end of the term that the land shall remain to J. de B. and his heirs In which case say they there is a repugnancy c. for the Covenant being made after the Charter could neither alter the absolute Charter nor upon a Condition precedent give him a Fee simple that had a Fee before To all the other Books viz. 7 E. 3. c. they say that being rightly understood they are good law for in some of those Books as in 10 E. 3. 10 Ass c. it appeareth That there was a Charter made in surety of the Term which say they must be intended thus viz. A man maketh a lease for years the lessee enters and the lessor makes a Charter to the lessee and thereby doth grant unto him that if he pay unto the lessor 100 Mark during the term That then he shall have fee c. In this case say they there need no livery seisin but doth enure as an Executory grant by encreasing of the state and the fee simple passeth not before the condition performed Pl. 487. Nichols Case And therefore Littleton warily putteth his case made all at one time by one Conveyance and a Livery made thereupon And this diversity say they is proved by Books 10 E. 3. 54. 32 E. 3. Garr 30. 43 E. 3. 35. 20 Ass Pl. 20. And they adde That Littleton had seen and considered of the said Books and hath set down his Opinion c. Fol. 118. a. Benigne lector utere tuo judicio nihil enim impedio Conditi● beneficialis quae statum construit benigne secundum verbor ' intentionem est interpretanda odiosa autem quae statum destruit strictè secundum verborum proprietatem est accipienda Lib. 8. fol. 90. Frances Case Note a precedent Condition to increase an estate must be performed and if it become impossible no estate shall rise Regularly when any
by the Common Law are of two natures i.e. the one is founded upon skill and confidence as here the Office of Parkership the other without skill or confidence whereof some by the Common Law and some by the Statute By the Common Law as to every estate of Tenant by the Curtesie Tenant in Tail after possibility c. Tenant in Dower Tenant for life for years Tenant by Statute Merchant or Staple by Elegit Gardian c. there is a condition in Law secretly annexed to their estates that if they alien in fee c. that he in the reversion or remainder may enter c. or if they claim a greater estate in Court of Record c. Pl. Com. 373. a. Sir H. Nevils case 21 E. 4. 20. 93. l. 8. f. 44. Wittinghams case concerning condition in law founded upon Statutes for some of them an entry is given and for some other a recovery by action where an entry is given as upon an Alienation in Mortmain c. and the like where an action is given as for Waste against Tenant for life and years c. As for Example admit that an office of Parkership be granted or descend to an Infant or feme Covert if the conditions in law annexed to this office which require skill and confidence be not observed and fulfilled the office is lost for ever because it is as strong as an express condition But if a lease for life be made to a feme covert or an Infant and they by Charter of Feoffment alien in fee the breach of this condition in Law that is without skill c. is no absolute forfeiture of their estate So of a condition in Law given by Statute which giveth an entry onely As if an Infant or feme Covert with husband aliens by Charter of Feoffment in Mortmain this is no barre to the Infant or feme Covert But if a recovery be had against an Infant or feme Covert in an action of Waste there they are bound and barred for ever And note that a condition in Law by force of a Statute which giveth a recovery is in some case stronger then a condition in Law without a recovery for if lessee for life make a lease for years and after enter into the land and make Waste and the lessor recover in an action of Waste he shall avoid the lease made before the waste done because of necessity the action of Waste must be brought against the lessee for life which in that case must binde the lessee for years or else by the act of the lessee for life the lessor should be barred to recover locum vastatum which the Statute giveth But if the lessee for life make a lease for years and after enter upon him and make a Feoffment in fee this forfeiture shall not avoid the lease for years Reg. A man that taketh advantage of a condition in Law shall take the land with such charge as he findes it And a condition in Law is as strong as a condition in Deed as to avoid the estate or interest it self but not precedent charges to avoid but in some particular cases Vtique fortior potentior est dispositio legis quam hominis Vide S. 419 429 430. fo 234. a. For Offices in any wise touching the Administration or execution of Justice or Clerkship in any Court of Record or concerning the Kings Treasure Revenue Account Customs Alnage Auditorship Kings Surveyor or keeping of any of his Majesties Castles Forts c. Conditions in Law are annexed c. 3 H. 7. c. 11. 7 E. 6. c. 1. 5 E. 6. c. 16. And note that all Promises Bonds and Assurances for such Offices c. as well on the part of the bargain or as of the bargainee are void c. Nulla alia re magis Rom. Respub interiit quam quod Magistratus officia venalia erant M. 13 Ja. R. lib. 3. f. 83. Colshils case Aerod fo 343. Jugurtha going from Rome said to the City Vale venalis Civitas mox peritura si emptorem invenias Salust 12 R. 2. cap. 2. Sect. 379. The Oath of a Beadle or under-Bayliff of a Manor is That he shall duly and truly execute all such Attachments and other Proces as shall be directed to him from the Lord or Steward of his Court and that he shall present all Pound-breaches which shall happen within his Office and all Chattels waved and Estrayes Sect. 380. Si lease soit fait al Bar. feme a aver tenant a eux durant le coverture enter eux en cē case ils ont estate pur terme de lour 2. vies sur condition en ley sc si un de eux devie ou que devorce soit fait enter eux donques bien lirroit a lessor a●ses heires dentr c. Durante dummodo dum quamdiu donec quousque usque ad Tam Diu ubicunque are words of limitation 37 H. 6. 27. 10 Ass 4. 11 Ass p. 8. 7 E. 4. 16. 9 E. 4. 25 26. 14 H. 8. 13. Divorces à vinculo Matrimonii are these causa praecontracti causa metus impotentiae seu frigiditatis Assinitatis consanguinitatis c. Divorce à mensa Thoro dissolveth not the marriage à vinculo Matrimonii for it is subsequent to the marriage as causa Adulterii 18 E. 4. 28. 24 H. 8. 8. Bastards 11 H. 4. 14. 76. Vide S. 399. 32 H. 8. c. 38. A man married the daughter of the sister of his first wife and it was declared by Act of Parliament to be good Tr. 2. Ja. Rot. 1032. Ri. Parsons case fo 235. b. Sect. 381. Logick teacheth a man not onely by just argument to conclude the matter in question but to discern between truth and falshood and to use a good method in his study and probably to speak to any legal question Arg. à divisione Pl. Com. 561. b. Vide S. 345. Sect. 383. Note a diversity viz. when a man deviseth that his executor shall sell the land there the lands descend in the mean time to the heir and until the sale be made the heir may enter to take the profits But when the land is devised to his Executors to be sold there the devise taketh away the discent and vesteth the state of the Land in the Executor and he may enter and take the profits and make sale according to the devise and the mean profits taken before the sale shall not be Assets so as he may be compellable to pay debts with the same and therefore he must sell the lands assoon as he can for otherwise he shall take advantage of his own Laches A man seised of certain lands holden in Socage had issue two daughters A. and B. and devised all his lands to A. and her heirs to pay unto B. a certain summe of money at a certaine day and place the money was not paid and it was adjudged that those words To pay c. did amount in a Will to a Condition because
Case lib. fo 252 b. But if a disseiser had letten severally three acres to three persons for years there the entry upon of the the lessees in name of all the three acres shall recontinue and revest all the three acres in the disseisee for that the disseisee might have had one Assize against the disseisor because he remained Tenant of the Freehold for all the three acres 7 Ass 18. 12 E. 4. 10 36 H 6. 27. 32 Ass p 1 If I infeoffe one of one acre of ground upon Condition and at another time I infe●ffe the same man of another acre in the same county upon Condition also and both the Conditions are broken an entry into one acre in the name of both is not sufficient for that I have no right to the land nor action to recover the same but a bare Title But an entry into one part of the land in the name of all the land subject to one Condition is good although the parcels bee several and in severall Towns And so n●●e a diversity between several rights of entry and several Titles of entry by force of a Condition 11 H. 7. 25. Dyer 16 El. 33● Ennosme de tout c. dont il ad Title d'entry here in a large sence Title of entry is taken for a Right of entry If I b●i●g an Assize of two acres if I enter into one hanging the Writ albeit it shall revest that onely acre yet the Writ shall abate 5 H. 7 7. 4 E 4 19. 12 E 9 11. a Sect. 418 Nota A man may make a feoffment of lands in another County and make livery of seisin within the view albeit he might peacably enter and make actual livery and so may he shew the Recognitors in an Assize the view of lands in another County But a man cannot make an entry into lands within the view where he may enter without any fear for it is one thing to invest and another to devest 3● E 3 11 38 Ass 3 fo 253 a If livery of seisin be made of parcel of the Tenements c. in one Town in the name of all c. All the said Tenements c. pass by force of the said livery c. Agr. à minore ad majus if it be so in a Feoffment passing a new right à multo fortiori it is for the restitution of an ancient right as the worthier and more respected in Law which holdeth Affirmative Vide S. 438. Sect. 419 Fear of imprisonment sufficeth to avoid a Bond or a deed for the Law hath a special regard to the safety and liberty of a man But note a diversity between a Claim or an Entry into Land and the Avoidance of an act or deed for fear of Battery 4 E 4 7. 11 H 4 6 8 Ass 25 vide S 434 10 2 cap 49. 13 H ● Dures 2● If a man hath Title to enter into any Lands or Tenements if he dares not enter c. for doubt of maiming c. if hee goeth and approach as near to the Tenements as he dare for such doubt and by word claim the lands to be his this entry in Law is as forcible i● Law as an entry in Deed and upon such an entry in Law an Assi●e doth lie as well as upon an entry in Deed and such an entry in Law shall avoid a Warranty c. vide S 378. 11 H 6 5● But note a diversity here between an entry in Law and an entry in Deed for that a●●ontinual Claim of the disseisee being an entry in Law shall vest the possession and seisin in him for his advantage but not for his disadvantage And therefore if the diss●isee bring an Assize and hanging the Assize he make Continual Claim this shall not abate the Assize but he shall recover damages from the beginning but otherwise it is of an entry in Deed. Vide S 442. Pl. Com. 93. Parson of Hony lanes Case Arg. ab autor ' est fortissimum in lege 38 Ass p 13 Sect 421 422. Where a Continual Claim shall devest an estate in any other person in any lands or tenements there he that maketh the Claim ought to enter into the land or some part thereof But where the Claim is to bri●g him that maketh it into actual possession there a Claim within the view sufficeth as upon a discent the heir having the Freehold in Law may claim land within the view to bring himselfe into actual possession and in that sense is the opinion of Hull and the Court to be intended 9 H 4 5 c. But yet the entry in to some parcel in the name of the residue is the surest way vide S. 177. 11 H 6. accord with Li●tleton 51. At the Common Law upon a fine or f●●ll judgement given in a writ of right the party grieved had a yeare and a day to make his claime So the wife or heire hath a yeare and a day to bring an appeale of death c. After judgement given in a ●ea●● action the pl●i●tiffe within the yeare and day may have habere sac s●si●am and in an action of debt c. a Capias fieri fac or a L●vari facias A protection shall be allowed but for a year and a day and no longer and in many other cas● Vid. S. 385. 426. 14. H 4. 36. 7. E. 3. 37. Pl. 356. 357. 367 Brit. fo 45. b. Sect. 423 424. 426. Il covient a luy que fist claime c. de faire un cl ' deins chese ' an jour prochein apres chesc ' claime fait durant la vie son adversarie d●●●u●s a quecunque temps que son Adversary mor. Seisee son ●ntry ne ser toll per nul tiel dis cent Brit. fo 209. Dy. 17. Eli. 345. Si disseisor mor. Seise● dein l'an jour c. per que les tenements discend a son heire ●n cē case l'enter le disseisee ē toll car l'an le jour que a●droit le lessee en tiel case ne serre pris de temps de title dent a luy accrue mes tautsolment del temps de claime per luy fait en le maner avantd pur cest causeil serre bo●e pur tiel disseisee pur faire son cla●me en auxi breve temps queil puissoit apres le disseisin c. This in case of a disseisor is now holpen by the Statute of 37. H 8. ca. 33. For if the disseisor dye seised within five years after the disseisin though there be no cont claim made it ●●all not take away the entry of the disseisee but after the five years there must be such continuall claime as was at the Common Law But that Statute extended not to any Feoffee or donee of the disseisor immediate or mediate but they ●maine still at the common Law Vi. S. 385. 422. Sect. 428 429. Item sicome ē dit en les cases mises lou home ad title dent pur caus dun
if the disseisee disseise the heir of the disseisor albeit the heir recover the land against the disseisee yet shall he leave the preceding right in the disseisee So if a woman that hath right of Dower disseis● the heir and he recover the land against her yet shal he leave the right of Dower in her 5 Ass 1 10 Ass 16. 50 E 3 7 30 Ass ● E 3. ●ntry 56. Another diversity is to be noted when the meer right is subsequent and translated by act in Law there albeit the possession be recontinued yet that shall not draw the naked right with it as if the heir of the disseisor be disseised and the disseisor infeof the heir apparent of the disseisee being of full age and then the disseisee dyeth and the naked right descends to him and the heir of the disseisor recover the land against him yet doth he leave the naked right in the heir of the disseisee So if the discontinuee of Tenant in Tail infeoff the issue in Tail of full age and then the discontinuee recover c. yet he leaveth the naked right in the issue 12 Ass 41. 27 E 3 84 488. 23 H 8. Restore al action Br 5. vide S 473 475 478 487 But if the heir of the disseisor be disseised and the disseisee release to the disseisor upon Condition If the Condition be broken it shall revest the naked right And so if the disseis●e had entred upon the heir of the disseisor and made a Feofment in fee upon Condition if he enter for the Condition broken and the heir of the disseisor enter upon him the naked right should be left in the disseisee But if the heir of the disseisor had entred before the Condition broken then the right of the disseisee had been gone for ever 38 E 3 16 9 H 7 24 Sect 448 Naturall seisin is the freehold in deed and the civill the freehold in Law Bract l 4 f 206 236 Brit f 83 b Vide S 680 If a man levy a fine to a man Sur Com c Com ceo c. or a fine Sū conusee de droit tantum these be feoffments of record and the Conusee hath a freehold in Law in him before hee entreth 42 E 2 20 10 H 6 14 17 E 3 7 8 2 E 3 31. Vpon an exchange the parties have neither freehold in Deed nor in Law before they enter so upon a Petition the freehold is not removed untill an entry 11 H 4 61 21 H 7 12 If Tenant for life by the agreement of him in the reversion surrender unto him he in reversion hath a freehold in Law in him before he enter 32 E. 3 Bar. 262 4● Ass ● 13 H 4 Surr. 10 Vpon a livery within view no freehold is vested before an entry 31 E 3 12 Fo 266 b If a man do bargaine and sell land by Deed indenture and intollen●●●● the freehold in Law doth passe presently and so when use are raised by covenant upon good consideration If a Tenant in a praecipe being seised of Lands in fee confess himselfe to be a villaine to a stranger and to hold the land in villenage of him the stranger by this acknowledgement is actually seised of the freehold and inheritance without any entry 17 E 3 77 18 E 4 25 Sect 449 450 451 Fo. 267 a A release of all the right may be good to him in revo●sion or to him in remainder in deed ● E 3 5● albeit he hath nothing in the freehold because he hath an estate in hi● ● E 4 13 14 H 4 32 b 41 E 3 17 49 E 3 28 case ult For he to whom a release is made of a bare right in lands and tenements must have either a freehold in deed or in Law in possession or a state in remainder or reversion in fee or fee taile or for life But note that the state which maketh a man Tenant to the precipe is said to be the freehold 3 E 2 enter 7. F. N.B. 20. E. Sect. 452. Fo. 267. b. Note that as a release made of a right to him in reversion or remainder shall aid and benefit him that hath the particular estate for years life or estate taile So a release of a right made to a particular Tenant for life or in taile shall aid and benefit him or them in remainder Sils ceo peient monstre The one cannot plead the Release made to the other without shewing of it for that they are privy in estate There is a diversity between severall estates in severall Lands and severall estates in one land for if two Tenants in Common of Lands grant a rent charge of forty shillings out of the same to one in fee and the grantee release to one of them this shall extinguish but twenty shillings for that the grant in judgement of Law was severall But if one be Tenant for life of lands the reversion in fee over to another if they two joyne in grant of a rent out of the lands if the grantee release either to him in the reversion or to Tenant for life the whole rent is extinguished for it is but one rent and issueth out of both estates Sect. 454. Fo. 68. a. Note two diversities 1 Between a Seigniory or rent service and a rent charge for a Seigniory or rent service may be released and extinguisht to him that hath but a bare right in the land in respect of the privity betwenn the Lord and the Tenant in right for he is not only as Tennanr to the avowry but if he die his heire within age he shall be in ward and if of full age he shall pay reliefe and if he die without heire the land shall escheat But there is no such privity in case of a rent charge for there the charge lieth upon the Land The second diversity is betweene a Seigniory and a bare right to land for a release of a bare right to land to one that hath but a bare right is void But a release of a Seigniory to him that hath but a right is good to extinguish the Seigniory Nota Seigniory rent or right either in praesenti or in future may be released five manner of wayes and the first three without any privity 1. To the Tenant of the freehold in deed or in Law 2. To him in remainder 3. To him in reversion The other two in respect of privity as 1. Where the Lord releaseth his Seigniory to the Tenant being disseised having but a right and no estate at all 2. In respect of the privity without any estate or right as by the demandant to the vouchee or donor to the donee after the donee hath discontinued in fee. vid. S. 455. l. 10. fo 48. Lampets case If the Lord hath accepted services of the disseisor then the disseiser cannot enforce the Lord to avow upon him though his beasts be taken c 20 H. 6. 9. b. 2 E 4. 6. a. But some do hold that if
there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant be disseised and the disseisee die without heir the Lord accepts rent by the hands of the disseis●r this is no bar to him contrary it is if he avow for the rent in Court of Record or if he take a corporall service as homage or fealty for the disseisor is in by wrong but if the Lord accept the rent by the hands of the heir of the disseisor or of his Feoffee because they be in by title this shall bar him of his escheate which is to be understood of a discent or a Feoffment after the title of escheat accrued for if the disseisor make a Feoffment in Fee or die seised and after the disseisee die without heir then there is no escheat at all because the Lord hat● a Tenant in by title 7 E 6. escheat Br. 18. F.N. B. 1440. 7. H 4. 17 2 H 4. 8. 6 H 7. 9. vid. S. 556. Vpon the Statute 21 H 8. ca. 19. These four points are to be observed 1. That the Lord hath still election either to avow according to the Common Law by force of the Statute by reason of this word May. 2. Albeit the purview of the act be general yet all necessary incidents are to be supplied and the scope and end of the act to be taken and therefore though he need not to make his avowry upon any person certain yet he must alledge seisin by the hands of some Tenant in certain within 40. years 3. That if the avowry be made according to the Statute every plaintiffe in the replevin or second deliverance be he Termor or other may have every answer to the avowry that is sufficient and also have aid and every other advantage in Law disclaymer only excepted for disclaim he cannot because in that case the avowry is made upon no certain person 4. Where the words of the Statute be if the Lord distreine upon the Lands and Tenements holden yet if the Lord come to distraine and the Tenant enchase the beasts which were within the view out of the land holden ● there the Lord distreine c. in judgement of Law the distresse is lawfull and as taken within his fee and Seigniory and the Statute being made to suppresse fraud is to be taken by equity L 9. so 136. Ascoughs case 27 H 8. fo 4. 32 H 8. ca. 2. l. 9. f. 36 ●ackna●● case 34 H 8. Avow Br. 113. l. 9. f. 22 case davow 11 H. 7. 4. 34 H 6. 18. 16 E 4. 10. 21 H 7. 40. Sect. 445. Fo. 269. Note a diversity between a release of a rent service out of Land and a release of right to land As if a Lease be made to F. one for life reserving to the lessor and his heirs a certaine rent If the lessee be disseised and after the lessor release to the lessee and his heirs all the right which he hath in the Land and after the lessee enter albeit in this case the rent is extinct yet nothing of the right of reversion shall passe But admit that the Donee in taile in such case make Feoffment in fee and the donor release unto him and hi● heirs all the right in the Land this shall extinguish the to ●t because the Lord must avow upon him and yet the Tenant in Tail after the Feoffment hath no right in the Land but the reason is in respect of the privity and that the donor is by necessity compellable to avow upon him only c. 1 H. 5. garr 43. 14. H. 4. 38. l. 3. fo 29. l. 6. 58 10. E. 3. 26. 48. E. 3 8. b. 31. E. 3. gard 116. 5. E. 4. 3 7. E. 4. 27. 15. E. 4. 13. Trin. 18. Eliz Sir Tho. Waits case in Com. Banco Nota c. Sect. 457 458. Si veray Tenant que est disseisin reign del fi●gn per service de chivalry mor. son heire eant deius age le siegn avera seisam le gard del heire mes si tiel tenant fist Feoffment in fee c. auterment est 12 H. 4 13. 36 E. 3. gard 10. 6. H 7. 9. 37 H. 6. 1. 32. H. 6. 27. 7. E. 6. gard Br. There be four manner of avowries for rents and services c. viz. 1. Super verum tenentem as in the case here put 2. Supra verum tenentem in forma praedicta as where a Lease for life or a gift in tail be made the remainder in fee. 3. Upon one as upon his Tenant of the Mannor omitting very and this is when the Lord hath a particular estate in the Seigniory and so shall the donor upon the donee or lessor upon the lessee 4. Sur la matter en la terre as within his fee and Seigniory As where the Tenant by knights service maketh a Lease for life reserving a rent and die his heir within age the gardein shall avow upon the lessee 2 H. 4. 24. 12. E. 4. 42. 26. H. 6. avowry 17. 9 El. Dyer 257. 5. H 7. 11. 7. E. 4. 24. 20. E. 3. avow 131. 47. E. 3. fo ult 38. H. 6. 23. Now by the Statute 21. H. 8. ca. 19. The very Lord may avow as in Lands within his fee and Seigniory without avowing upon person in certainty Note a diversity if Tenant in Tail make a Feoffment in fee yet the right of the Tenant in tail remains and shall descend to the issue in tail But when the Tenant in fee simple make a Feoffment in fee no right at all remains of his estate but when the whole is transferred to the Feoffee Also the Lord is not compellable in that case to avow upon the Feoffor but if he will as Littleton here saith he may avow on the Feoffee but so it is not in case of tenant in tail Fol. 269. b. Note a diversity between actions and acts which concern the right and actions and acts which concern the possession only for a writ of customs and services lyeth not against the Feoffor nor a release to him shall extinguish the Seigniory So if a rescous be made an Ass shall not lie against the Feoffor and him that made the Rescous because the Feoffee is Tenant and in Ass the surplusage incroached shall be avoided for these actions and acts concern the right but of a seisin and avowry which concern the possession it is otherwise and if the Lord release to the Feoffor this is good between them as to the possession and discharge of the arerages but the Feoffee shall not take benefit of it for that it extended but to the right But the Feoffor shall plead a release to the Feoffee for thereby the Seigniory is extinct as if the lessee for life doth wast and grant over his estate and the lesser release to the grantee in an action of wast against the lessee he shall plead the release and yet he hath nothing in the land and so in wast shall Tenant in Dower or by the curtesie in the like case and
the Feoffee this release shall take away the entry of the disseisor for the alienation which was made to his disinheritance he having the inheritance by disseisin so as he could have no warranty annexed to it and Tenant for life forfeited his estate But if the entry of the disseisee were not lawfull it is otherwise as the Book of 9. H. 7. 25. is of an estate Tail mutatis mutandis Vide l. fo 277. a. Sect. 475. Abate Vide N.B. 115. Brit. cap. 51. Bract. l. 4. cap. 2. Abatamentum is an entry by interposition A Disseisin is a wrongfull putting out of him that is actually seised of a Freehold and Abatement is when a man died seised of an estate of Inheritance and between the death and entry of the heir an estranger doth interpose himself and abate Intrusion 1. properly is when the Ancestor died seised of any estate of inheritance expectant upon an estate for life and then Tenant for life dieth c. and an estranger doth interpose himself and intrude 2. He that enters upon any of the Kings demesns and taketh the profits is said to intrude upon the Kings Possessions F.N.B. 203. Fleta l. 4. cap. 30. Pl. Com. case de Mynes 3. When the heir in ward enters at his full age without satisfaction for his marriage the writ saith quod intrusit F.N. B. 141. F. Deforciamentum comprehendeth not only these aforenamed but any man that holdeth Land whereunto another man hath right be it by discent or purchase is said to be a deforcer Usurpation hath two significations in the common Law one when an estranger that no right hath presenteth to a Church and his Clark is admitted and instituted 2. When any subject doth use without lawful warrant Royall franchises he is good to usurp c. Purprestura est c. generaliter quories aliquid sit ad nocumentum regii tenementi vel regiae viae vel aliquarum publicar vel civitatis c. Glanv l. 9. ca. 11. Brit. fo 28. 29. And because it is properly when there is a house builded or an inclosure made of any part of the Kings demesne or of an high way or a common street or publike water or such publike things it is derived of the French word Pourpris which signifieth an inclosure but specially applyed as is aforesaid by the common Law Sic nota differentiam inter disseisinam Abatamentum Intrusionem deforciamentum usurpationem purpresturam Sect. 476. Fo. ●77 b. But if the Feoffee upon condition make a Feoffment in fee over without any condition and the disseisee release to the second Feoffee the condition is destroyed by the release before the condition broken or after for the state of the second Feoffee was not upon any express condition as Littleton here putteth his case and he may have advantage of the release because it is not against his own proper acceptance as Littleton speaketh in the next Section L. 1. fo 147. Mayowes case But if it be a wrongfull title such a title is taken away by a release As if A. disseised B. to the use of C.B. release to A. this shall take away the agreement of C. to the disseisin because it should make him a wrong doer as if the disseisor be disseised the disseisee release to the second disseisee this taketh away the right of the first disseisor had against the second and a relation of an estate gained by wrong shall never defeat an estate subsequent gained by right against a single opinion not affirmed by any other in our books 14. H. 8. 11. per Portm Si disseisee release al Feoffee sur condition ceo namendre lestate le Feoffee c. Sect. 477. Fo. 478. a. Home navera advantage per un release que serre enconter son proper acceptance encounter son grant dem compt que asc ' ont dit que lou enier de h●me est congeable sur un tenant sil release a mes le tenant que ceo availoit a le tenant sicom il ust enter sur le tenant puis luy infeoffa c. ceo ne● pas voier en chesc ' cas Car si le disseisee ust enter sur le Feoffee sur condition puis luy infeoffa donques est le condition tout defeat mes il ne pas void per asc ' tiel release sant entry fait c. If A. and B. be joynt disseisors and B. grant a rent charge and the disseisee release to A. all his right A. shall avoid the rent charge because it was not granted by him and so not within the reason of our authour If two disseisors be and they infeoffee another and take back an estate for life or in fee albeit they remain disseisors to the disseisee as to have an Ass against them yet if he release to one of them he shall not hold our his companion because their state in the land is in by Feoffment If there be two disseisors and they be disseised and they release to their disseisor and after disseise him and then the disseisee release to one or both of them yet the second disseisor shall reenter for they shall not hold the land against their own release If a disseisee release to one of the disseisors to some purpose this shall enure by way of entry and Feoffment viz. as to hold out his companion But as to a rent Charge granted by him it shall not enure by way of entry and Feoffment for if the disseisee had entred and enfeoffed him the rent charge had been avoided But it is a certain rule that when the entry of a man is congeable and he release to one that is in by title as here to the Feoffee upon condition is it shall never enure by way of entry and Feoffment either to avoid a condition with which he accepted the land charged or his own grant or to hold out his companion And where it appeareth by our authour that acts done by the disseisor shall not be avoided by the release of the disseisee It is to be noted that acts made to the disseisor himself shall not be avoided by the alteration of his estate by the release of the disseisee as if the Lord before the release had confirmed the estate of the disseisor to hold by lesser services the disseisor shall take advantage of it and so of estovers to be burnt in the house and the like Law is of a warrantty made unto him If an alien be a disseisor and obtain letters of denization and then the disseisee release unto him the King shall not have the land for the release hath altered the estate and it is as it were a new purchase otherwise it is if the alien had been the Feoffee of a disseisor Fo. 278. b. If the Lord disseise the Tenant and is disseised the disseisee release to the second disseisor yet the Seignory is not revived for between the parties the release enures by way
the Confirmation extendeth not to the rent suspended otherwise it is of a release in both cases Est bone sure chose en chesc ' confirmation d'aver ceux parolls a aver tener les tenements c. en fee ou en fee tail ou pur terme de vie ou pur terme dans solonque eo que le case est c. Note the diversity between a Confirmation of the estate for life in the land to have and to hold the said state in the land to him and his heirs this cannot enlarge his estate for his estate being but for life cannot be extended to his heirs But in that case if he confirme the state for life in the land in the premises of the Deed and the habendum is to have and to hold the land to him and his heirs this shall create in him a fee simple 18 E. 3. 40. Sect. 525. If a man letteth land to the husband and wife to have and to hold the one moity to the husband for terme of his life and the other moity to the wife for her life and the lessor confirm the estate of them both in the land to have and to hold to them and to their heirs by this Confirmation as to the moity of the husband it enureth only to the husband and his heirs for the wife had nothing in that moity but as to the moity of the wife they are joyntenants for the husband hath such an estate in his wifes moity in her right as is capable of a Confirmation But if such a lease for life be made to two men by several moities and the lessor confirm their estates in the land to have and to hold to them and to their heirs they are Tenants in Common of the Inheritance for reg the Confirmation shall enure according to the quality and nature of the estate which it doth enlarge and encrease 18 Ass p. 3. 18 E. 3. Confirmation 17. fol. 299. b. If a lease for life be made to A. the remainder to B. for life and the lessor confirm c. A. taketh one moity to him and his heirs and therefore of the one moity he is seised for life the remainder to B. for life and then to him and his heirs of the other moity A. ●is seised for life the immediate inheritance to B. and his heirs because as to the moity which B. takes the same is executed 39 H. 6. 9 If lands be given to two men and to the heirs of their two bodies begotten and the Donor confirm their two estates in the land to have and to hold the land to them two and to their heirs in this case some are of opinion that they shall be joyntenants of the fee simple because the Donees were jointenants for life and the Confirmation must enure according to the estate which they have in possession and that was joynt But others hold the contrary For 1. They say that the Donees have to some purposes severall inheritances executed though between the Donees survivor shall hold for their lives 2. They say that when the whole estate which comprehended severall inheritances is confirmed the Confirmation must enure according to the severall inheritances which is the greater and most perdurable estate and therefore that the Donees shall be Tenants in Common of the inheritance in this case Albeit in this case of Littleton the husband by the Confirmation gaineth an estate for life in remainder yet if the husband doth waste an action of Waste shall lie against him and his wife notwithstanding the mean remainder because the husband himself committeth the wast and doth the wrong 17 E. 3. 68. b. Sir Edward Caries Case lib. 5. fo 76. b. Sect. 526 527. Fol. 300. a. Note a diversity between a lease for life and a lease for years made to a feme covert for her estate of Freehold cannot be altered by the confirmation made to her husband and her as the term for years may whereof her husband may make disposition at his pleasure Chattels reals as leases for years Wardships c. are not given to the husband absolutely as all Chattels personals are by the intermarriage but conditionally if the husband happen to survive her and he hath power to alien them at his pleasure but in the mean time the husband is possessed of the Chattels reall in her right 5 E 3. 17. b. Pl. Com. 418. b. 24. H. 4. 12. Pl. Com. Dame Hales Case 50 Ass p. 15. 4 H. 6. 5. 7 H. 6. 1. 21 H. 7. 29. 21 E. 4. 40. 26 H. 8. 7. Such a thing as I may defeat by my Entry I may make good by my Confirmation 11 H 7. 28. 3 H 4. 10. If the feoffee upon condition grant a rent charge en fee and the feoffor confirm it and after the Condition is broken and the feoffor enter he shall not avoid the rent charge And so it is if the heir of the diffeisor grant a rent charge and the disseisee confirmeth it and after recover the Land he shall not avoid the rent And yet in neither of these cases his entry was congeable at the time of the Confirmation Lib. 1. fo 147. c. Anne Mayowes case Sect. 528. Fol. 300. b. Persona is said to be seised in jure Ecclesiae and the Law had an excellent end herein viz. that in his person the Church might sue for and defend her right and also be sued by any that had an elder and better right and when the Church is full it is said to be plena consulta of such a one person thereof that may vicem seu personam gerere ejusdem Ecclesiae Brit. fol. 234. b. F.N. 48. A. Parson of D. is Patron of the Church of S. as belonging to his Church and presents B. who by consent of A. and of the Ordinary grant a rent charge out of the Gleab this is not good to make the rent charge perpetuall without the assent of the Patron of A. no more then the assent of the Bishop who is Patron without the Dean or Chapter or no more then the assent of the Patron being Tenant in Tail or for life as Littleton saith And Littleton here saith that the Patron that confirms must have a fee simple meaning to make the charge perpetuall And Littleton after saith that in the case of the Parson the fee is in abeiance and seeing the consent of the Patron is in respect of his interest as heir it appeareth by Littleton he may consent upon Condition otherwise it is of an attornment because it is a bare assent Also if the state of the Patron be conditionall and he confirmeth and after the Condition is broken his Confirmation is void Lib. 2. 39 24 l. 1. 153 l. 4 23 24. l. 5. 31. 81. l. 10. 6. l. 11. 19. l. 6. 34. Note a diversity between a sole Corporation as Parson Prebend Vicar c. that have not the absolute fee in them for to their grants
if Tenant in tail make a Lease for life whereby he gaineth a new reversion in fee so long as Tenant for life liveth and he granted a rent-charge out of the reversion and after Tenant for life dyeth whereby the grantor becometh Tenant in Tail again and the reversion in fee defeated yet because the grantor had a right of the intail in him cloathed with a defeasible fee simple the rent charge remaineth good against him but not against his issue which diversity is observable 11 H. 7. 21. Edriches case If the heir apparent of the disseisee disseise the disseisor and grant a rent charge and then the disseisee dieth the granter shall hold it discharged for there a new right of entry doth descend unto him and therefore he is remitted So if the Father disseise the grandfather a grant and rent charge and dyeth now is the entry of the grandfather taken away if after the grandfathet dyeth the Sonne is remitted So as where our authour putteth his example of a fee taile it holdeth also in case of fee simple and Littleton que la terre est discharge del rent c. But the whole grant is not thereby avoided for the grantee shall have notwithstanding a writ of annuity and charge the person of the grantor Lib. 2. fo 36. b. Wards case Also Littleton here puts his case of things granted out of the Land But if the issue at full age by Deed Indent●●● or Deed Poll make a Lease for years of the land and after by the death of tenant in tail he is remitted It is holden that he shall not avoid the Lease because it is made of the Land it self and the Land is become by the Lease in another then it is in the case of a grant of a rent charge 33 H. 8. Dy. 51. b. and vide Sect. 289. * Sect. 661. Fo. 349. b. Regularly a man shall not remitted to a right remediesse for the which he can have no action l. 3. f. 3. Marquesse of Winchesters case Neither an action without a right nor a right without an action can make a remittance As if Tenant in tail suffer a common recovery in which there is errour and after Tenant in tail disseise the recoveror and dyeth here the issue in tail hath an action viz. a writ of error but as long as the Recovery remaineth in force he hath no ●ight and therefore in that case there is no remittance If B. purchase an Advowson and suffer an usurpation and six ●oneths to passe and after the usurper grant the Advowson to B. and his heirs B. dieth his heir is not remitted because his right to the Advowson was remedilesse a right without an action Tenant in tail of a Manor whereunto an Advowson is appendant maketh a discontinuance the discon●●ee grants the Advowson to Tenant in tail and his heirs Tenant in tayl dyeth the issue is not remitted to the Advowson because the issue had no action to recover the Advowson before he recovered the Manour whereunto the Advowson was Appendant 5 H. 7. 35. And so it is of all other inheritance regardant appendant or appurtenant a man shall be remitted to any of them before he recontinueth the Manor c. whereunto they are regardant appendant c. Car nul ne poit claimer droit en les appurtenances ne en les accessories que nul droit ad en le principall Brit. fo 126. But on the other side if a man be remitted to the principal he shall also be remitted to the appendant or accessory albeit it were severed by the discontinuee or other wrong doer and therefore if Tenant in tail be of a Manor whereunto an Advowson is appendant and infeoffeth A of the Manor with the appurtenances A. re-enfeoffeth the Tenant in tail saving to himself the Advowson Tenant in tail dieth his issue being remitted to the Manor is consequently remitted to the Advowson although at that time it was severed from the Manor So it is in the same case if Tenant in tail had been disseised and the disseisor suffer an usurpation if the disseisee enter into the Manor he is also remitted to the Advowson 8 R. 2. Qu. imp 199. 2 H. 4. 18. 14 H. 6. 15 16. FNB. 25. b. 36. f. 33 H. 8. Dy. 48. b. 24 E. 3. discontinuance 16. Sect. 663 664. Fo. 350. If the discontinuee after the death of Tenant in tail make a charter of feoffment to the issue in tail being within age who hath right and to a stranger in fee and make livery to the infant in name of both the issue is not remitted to the whole but to the half for first he taketh the fee-simple and after the remittance is wrought by operation of Law and therefore can remit him but to a moity Vide Sect. 288. Si Tenant in tale infeoffe sou heire apparent l'heire evant de plein age al temps de feoffment puis le Tenant en taile mor ceo nest remitter al heire pur ceo que il fuit sa folly que il evant de plein age voile prender tiel feoffment c. By this feoffment albeit the heir apparent hath some benefit in the life of his Ancestor yet if he thereby besides his own subject during his life to all charges and incumbrances made or suffered by his Ancestors 40. E. 3. 44. 18. E. 4. 25. Sect. 665. Fo. 351. a. Nota that the estate which doth in this case work the Remitter could not have continuance after the decease of the wife and so on the other side if the husband make a discontinuance and take back an estate to him and his wife during the life of the husband this is a Remitter to the wife presently albeit the estate is not by the limitation to have continued after the decease of the husband which case is proved by the reason of the case which our Author here putteth If a man take to wife a woman seised in fee he gaineth by the intermarriage an estate of freehold in her right which estate is sufficient to work a Remitter and yet the estate which the husband gaineth depending upon uncertainty and consisteth in privity 13. H. 4. 6. 18. E. 4. 5. 11. H. 7. 19. 10. H. 6. 11. 7. H. 6. 9. b. For if the wife be attainted of felony the Lord by escheat shall enter and put out the husband otherwise it is if the Felony be committed after issue had 4. Ass p. 4. 4. E. 3. Ass 166. vide S. 58. Also if the husband be attainted of felony the King gaineth no freehold but a pernancy of the profits during the Coverture and the freehold remaineth in the wife 2. If she were possessed of a terme for yeers yet he is possessed in her right but he hath power to dispose thereof by grant or demise and if he be outlawed or attainted they are gifts in Law Pl. Cam. 260. b. Dame Hales case 50. Ass 5. 21. E. 4. 35. 7. E. 4. 6.
years c. in this case if he be ousted by a stranger without being impleaded the Obligation is forfeit But if he be bound to warrant the land c. the bond is not forfeit unlesse the Obligee is impleaded and then the Obligor must be ready to warrant c. 2 E. 4. 15. tit Det. 71. Qui benè distinguit benè docet fol 384. a. A Warranty in Deed is created onely by this word Warrantizo but Warranties in Law are created by many other words they are therefore called Warranties in Law because in Judgement of Law they amount to a Warranty without this Verb Warrantizo As Dedi is a Warranty in Law to the feoffee and his heirs during the life of the feoffor but Concessi in a Feoffment or Fine implieth no Warranty But before the Statute of Quia Emp. ter if a man had given lands by this word Dedi to have and to hold to him and his heires of the Donor and his heirs by certain Services then not onely the Donor but his heirs also had been bound to warrant But if before the Statute a man had given lands by this word Dedi to a man and his heirs for ever to hold of the chief Lord there the feoffor had not been bound to Warranty but during his life as at this day he is Lestat de Bigamis c. 6. 2 H. 7. 7. 6 H. 7. 2. 48 E. 3. 2. 31 E. 1. vouch 290. F. N.B 134. b. 6 E. 2. vouch 258. Dedi doth import a warranty in Law albeit there be an expresse warranty in the Deed. For if a man make a feoffment by Dedi and in the Deed doth warrant the land against I. S. and his heirs yet Dedi is a generall warranty during the life of the feoffor and so was the Statute expounded in both points H. 14. El. in Com. Banc. And if a man make a lease for life reserving a rent and adde an expresse warranty here the expresse warranty doth not take away the warranty in Law for he hath election to vouch by force of either of them and in Nokes Case note a diversity between a warranty that is a Covenant and a warranty concerning a Chattell l. 4. fo 80. 8 E. 3. 69. 3 E. 3. Formedon 44. Also this word axcambium doth imply a warranty Also a Petition implyeth a warranty in Law and homage Aunc ' doth draw to it selfe warranty 4 E. 2. vouch 245. 22 E. 3. 3. 14 H. 6 2. 20 H. 6. 14. l. 4. 122. l. 1. 96. l. 5. fo 17. l. 8. 75. Seignior Staf. case And note that the warranty wrought by this word dedi is a speciall warranty and extends to the heirs of the Feoffee during the life of the donor only But upon the exchange Homage Aunc ' the warrant extending reciprocally to the heires and against the heires of both parties and in none of these cases the Assignee shall vouch by force of any of these warranties but in the case of the exchange and dedi the Assignee shall rebutt but not in the case of Homage Auncestrel And so no man shall have a writ of contra formam collationis but onely of the feoffee and his heirs which be privy to the Deed but an Assignee may rebutt by force of the Deed. 28 Ass 33. 14 H. 4. 5. 11 E. 3. Avowr 100. 30 H. 6. 7. 33 H. 8. Dy. 51. 10 H. 7. 11 b. F. N. B. 163. a. If a man make a gift in Taile or a Lease for life of land by deed or without deed reserving a rent or of a rent service by deed this is a warranty in Law and the donee or lessee being impleaded shall vouch and recover in value and this warranty extendeth not onely against the donor or lessor and his heires but also against his Assignees of the reversion and so likewise the Assignee of lessee for life shall take benefit of this warranty in Law 6 E. 2. vouch 105. 5 E. 3. 67. 3 H. 7. 13. 6 H. 7. 2. 7 E. 3. 6. F.N.B. 134. g. When dower is assigned there is a warranty in Law included that the Tenant in Dower being impleaded shall vouch and recover in value a third part of two parts whereof she is Dowable 4 E. 3. 36. 43. Ass 32. 50 E. 3. 7. F.N.B. 149. m. A warranty in Law and Assets is in some cases a good barre In a Formedon in the discender the Tenant may plead that the Ancestor of the demandant exchanged the Land with the Tenant for other Lands taken in exchange which descended to the demandant whereunto he hath entred and agreed or if he hath not entered and agreed unto the Lands taken in exchange then the Tenant may plead the warranty in Law and other Assets descended 14 H. 6. 2. 15 E. 3. Bar. 255. If Tenant in Taile of Lands make a gift in Taile or a Lease for life render a rent and dyeth and the issue bring a Formedon in the discending the Reversion and rent shall not barre the demandant because by his Formedon he is to defeat the reversion and rent Et non potest adduci exceptio ejusdem rei cujus petitur dissolutio 38 E. 3. 22. 23. 24. 13 E. 3. gar 35. But if other Assets in fee simple doe discend then this wa●ranty in Law and Assets is a good barre in the Formedon 16 E. 3. Age 45. 31 E. 3. gar 29. Here four things are to be observed 1. That no warranty in Law doth barre any collaterall title but is in nature of a lineall warranty wherein note the equity of the Law Fo. 384. b. 2. That an expresse warranty shall never binde the heirs of him that made the warranty unlesse they be named but in case of warranty in Law in many cases the heires shall be bound to warranty albeit they be not named 3. That in some cases warranties in Law do extend to execution in value of speciall Lands and not generally of Lands descended in fee simple lib. 4. fol. 121. Bustards Case 4. That warranty in Law may be in some cases created without Deed as upon gifts in Taile Leases for life eschanges and the life 45 E. 3. 20. b. Also it is necessary to shew who shall take advantage of a warranty as Assignee by way of voucher to have recompence in value If a man infeoffee A. and B. to have and to hold to them and their heires and Assignes with a clause of warranty praedictis A. and B. eorum haered Assignatis in this case if A. dyeth and B. surviveth and dyeth and the heire of B. infeoffeth C. he shall vouch as Assignee and yet he is but the Assignee of the heir of one of them for in judgment of Law the Assignee of the heire is the Assignee of the Ancestor and so the Assigne of the Assignee shall vouch in infinitum within these words his Assignes 14 E. 3. gar 33. 13 E. 1. gar 83. lib. 5. fol. 17. b. Spencers case 38 E. 3. 21.
the Successor but the Executor and the Ward shall be Assets in his hands So it is of Heriots Relief c. 40 E. 3. 14. But if a Church become void in the life of a Bishop and so remain untill after his decease the King shall present thereunto and not the Executor or Administrator for nothing can be taken for a prefentment and therefore it is no Assets 9 H. 6. 58. 11 H. 4. 7. Sect. 741. fol. 388. a. Here the collaterall warranty doth descend upon the issue in tail before any right doth descend unto him wherein this diversity is to be observed vide Sect. 707. where the right is in esse in any of the Ancestors of the heir at the time of the discent of the collaterall warranty there albeit the warranty descend first and after the right doth descend the collaterall warranty shall bind as appeareth in this case of our Author But where the right is not in esse in the heir or any of his Auncestors at the time of the fall of the warranty there it shall not bind As if Lord and Tenant be and the Tenant make a feoffment in fee with warranty and after the feoffee purchase Seigniory and after the Tenant cesse the Lord shall have a Cessavit for a warranty doth extend to rights precedent and never to any right that commenceth after the warranty 7 E. 3. 48. 30 Hen. 8. 42. Also a warranty shall never barre any estate that is in possession reversion or remainder that is not devested displaced or turned to a right before or at the time of the fall of the warranty If a Lease for life be made to the Father the remainder to his next heir the Father is disseised and released with warranty and dyeth this shall barre the heir although the warranty doth fall and the remainder cometh in esse at one time lib. 1. fol. 67. Archers Case If there be Father and Sonne and the Sonne hath a rent service suit to a Mill rent charge rent seck common of pasture or other profit appre●e●●●● out of the Land of the Father and the Father maketh a feoffment in fee with warranty and dyeth this shall not barre the Sonne of the rent common c. quia in tali casu transit terra cum onere and he that is in seisin or possession need not to make any entry or claim and albeit the Sonne after the feoffment with warranty and before the death of the Father had been disseised and so being out of possession the warranty descended upon him that it should not binde him because at the time of Warranty made the Son was in possession Temps E. 1. vouch 296. 31 Ass 13. 22 Ass 36. 41 Ass 6. 33 E. 3. 3. gar 24. .. 10. f. 97. E. Seymors Case So if my collateral Ancestor releaseth to my Tenant for life this shall not binde my reversion or remainder because the reversion c. continued in mee 45 E. 3. 31. 21 H. 7. 11. But if he that hath a Rent Common or any profit out of the land in Tail disseise the Tenant of the land and maketh a feoffment to the land and warranteth the land to the feoffee and his heirs regularly the Warranty doth extend to all things issuing out of the land i.e. to warrant the land in such plight and manner as it was at in the hand of the feoffor at the time of the feoffment with Warranty and the feoffee shall vouch as of lands discharged of the rent c. at the time of the feoffment made Vide S. 698. 21 E. 4. 26. 28 H. 7. 9. 3 H. 7. 4. 7 H. 4. 17. 30 H. 8. Dyer 42. 30 E. 3. 30. 9 E. 3. 28. 45 E. 3. vouch 72. F.N.B. 145. 14 H. 8. 6. A woman that hath a rent charge in fee intermarries with the Tenant of the land an estranger releas●th to the Tenant of the land with Warranty he shall not take advantage of this Warranty either by Voucher or Warrantia Cartae for the wife if the husband die or the heire of the wife living the husband cannot have an action for the rent upon a Title before the Warranty made for if the heir of the wife bring an Assize of Mordanc this action is grounded after the Warranty whereunto the Warranty shall not extend So it is if the grantee of the rent grant it to the Tenant of the land upon condition which maketh a feoffment of the land with Warranty this Warranty cannot extend to the rent albeit the feoffment was made of the land discharged of the rent for if the condition be broken and the grantor be intituled to an action this must of necessity be grounded after the Warranty made But in the case aforesaid when the woman grantee of the rent marrieth with the Tenant and the Tenant maketh a feoffment in fee with warranty and dieth in a Cui in vita brought by the wife as by Law shee may the feoffee shall vouch as of lands discharged at the time of the warranty made for that her Title is Paramount So if Tenant in Tail of a rent charge purchase the land and make a feoffment with warranty if the issue bring a Formedon of the rent the Tenant shall vouch causa qua supra 7 H. 4. ●7 But some do hold that a man shall not vouch c. as of land discharged of a rent service 10 E. 4. 2. b. 28 E. 3. 55. 44 E. 3. 29. Also no warranty doth extend unto meer and naked Titles as by force of a condition with clause of Re-entry Exchange Mortmain consent to the Ravisher c. because that for these an action doth lie and if no action can bee brought there can be neither Voucher Writ of Warrantia Cartae nor Rebutter and they continue in such plight and essence as they were by their originall creation and by no act can be displaced or devested out of their originall essence and therefore cannot by any warranty l. 10. fo 97. 41 Ass p. 46. And albeit a woman may have a Writ of Dower c. yet because her title of Dower cannot be devested out of the originall essence a collaterall warranty of the Ancestor of the woman shall not barre her So it is of a feoffment causa matrim praelocuti 34 E. 3. Droit 72. 21 E. 4. 82. A warranty doth not extend to any lease for years or to any estates of Tenants by Statute Staple Merchant or Elegit or any other Chattell but onely to Freehold or Inheritance And this is the reason that in all actions which lessee for years may have a warranty cannot be pleaded in barre as in an action of Trespasse or upon the Statute of 5 R. 2 c. 21 E. 4. 18. 82. 1 H. 7. 12. 22. 11 H. 7. 15 16. 20 H. 7. 2. b. 14 H. 7. 22. 43 E. 3. 15. per Finchden in Qu. imp 15 H. 7. 9. But in such actions which none but a Tenant of the Freehold can have as
Leafes for three lives or 21 years who may now make them 66 Lease when it shall begin 58 Livery quotuplex quomodo 60 where not necessary in a thing corporeal 61 287 Livery to whom to be made ib. where not necessary 62 Legis Intentiones 94 Lex est Ratio Artificialis 106 Ligeantia quid quotuplex 134 Ley gager 178 Livery must pass in a present Freehold or not at all 221 222 Logick its use in Law 246 Laches of an infant what it effects 260 Of a Feme where binding where not 261 Livery deins view 270 Livery to one absent cannot be sans fait 403 Lyen personal differs from the Lyen real 448 M Mortmain what its effect 2 Maxime why so called 10 Messuagium what it doth involve in the Law 67 Manerium unde 79 Moratur in lege quid est propter quod quotuplex quomodo 89 Marriage tendred and refused the penalty what 95 Monasteriorum quot 105 Mesne 108 Mayhem quid 132 Manumissio quid quomodo efficitur 143 quotuplex ib. Mesualty revived 160 Mesualty extinct ib. Moyety who hath and who hath not how disposable 193 Mortgage duplici sensu 207 Mulieratus filius barred 206 Modo forma when in pleading they are material 309 Mise what 323 Mortmain an affirmation of the alienation where 372 Manutenentia unde 417 Statuto against it explained 418 N Name Christian and Surname when necessary 3 Nobility the inheritance in it how many ways 14 Nonsuit when 145 Nonsuit regularly no barre ib. where it is a barre ib. Nonsuit before appearance not peremptory why 146 Non Compos mentis who shall plead it 262 Nemo potest c. 339 Nobilities suppressed 436 Nonage tryed by inspection 437 O Office granted when void 3 Office who is capable of it ib. Occupant who against whom of what how prevented 53 54 Ordinarius unde ejus authoritas 105 Obligatio quid 177 Offices forfeited by Non-user where 243 where not ib. Office relinquished what it effects ib. Origo Rei c 274 Omnis Ratihabitio c. 275 where it disableth 317 Officium Ordinarii 379 Officium Judicis de fine levando 439 P Plea of Extra Feodum hors de son Fee the difference 1 Purchase who have capacity 2 for what purpose ib. Purchase by what name good 3 Praecipe of land by what name 4 Probatio quotuplex 6 Praesumptio quotuplex ib. Presumption when it moves a Jury ib. Possibility sur possibility not intended 179 Purchase by ten Conveyances what they are 10 Proximum duplici modo ib. Purchases first regarded 11 Professio fratris where 13 Placitum unde 14 Prerogative what 102 Parsons Ecclesiastical 103 Parliamenti jurisdictio membra alia incidentia 114 Praescriptio quid à quibus 118 ejus incidentia 118 de quibus praescribatur 119 Parliamenti Actor ' differ 120 Prescription how pleadable 124 Praemunire the judgment 135 Protectio quibus efficitur ib. Protectio quotuplex ib. observanda quae 136 137 quam diu durat 272 Professio quod consequentia 139 140 Protestatio quid 128 Pleas where tryable 129 Proprietas cui quotuplex 15● Parceners who 170 many One Heir 171 they have but one Freehold in respect of a strangers Praecipe ib. Parcenary vel Arithmetica vel Geometrica proportione 172 Partition when good ib. 179 quotifariam 173 when by Writ how returned 175 who are bound 176 Privities differenced 175 Partitione fac by the Stat. 32 H. 8. against whom 181 Parceners by Custome who 182 Per quae servitia who may have it 269 Prisoner not bound where 275 276 how kept 277 Privity where requireable in a Release 293 Privity quadruplex 294 Purpraestura quid 303 Principles in Law not to be changed 310 Placitum unde quomodo 334 335 336 Placitum ambiguum 335 Possession not lost of things that lie in grant 337 Privation and Translation all one with death where 362 Parson his estate to several respects 374 Parson what actions he may have 374 what he cannot have 374 Parson cannot make discontinuance ib. Parson shall have ayd of whom ib. Parsons Ecclesiastical what estates they may make at this day 375 376 Parson may charge the Land how 378 Plenary what c. 379 Presentation revocable by the King 380 Praecipe lyeth against one that hath but a Freehold in Law 402 Praecipe where damages are to be recovered no Tenure no Pleas 406 Q Quarentina what to whom of what 27 Quia Emptores terrar ' its effect 56 Que estate where in what and how pleadable 125 Queen her Prerogative 141 Quaestio Juris per quos c. 128 Quaestio facti per quos c. ibid. Quis Juris clamat where it lieth and what is effected by it 354 Quod ei deforceat where what it is 395 Quare impedit where it lieth 380 R Rent out of what it may bee reserved and out of what not 58 Reservation differs from Exception how 59 Remanere its signification 61 Relief how much paid 87 97 what it is the remedy for it 97 Relief in Soccage quanti 101 de quibus praestationibus ibid. Ransom quid 132 Retraxit quid quotuplex 145 Retraxit a Barre ibid. Rem what quotuplex 148 out of what 149 Reservation of what and to whom 149 150 Void where 215 216 Rents and Annuity differ ib. Remedium duplex 153 Rents extinct and suspended where 156 157 improved ibid. incident to the reversion 350 Release of a Seigniory 159 160 Reversion its incidents 160 Remedies favoured in Law 161 Redisseisin joyntenancy is a generall plea 162 against whom it lieth ibid. Rents what are disseisins of them 166 167 168 Rent granted sans fait 175 Rescous when it may be made 166 167 Release its severall operations in Law 197 by what words it enureth 207 Rent accepted will not make good a void estate 217 Revocation of uses 247 348 Records what they are 276 Roll alterable ibid. Relaxatio quotuplex ratione subjecti objecti 281 Release in Law ib. what 282 284 290 Release to enlarge an estate requires privity 296 Right favored in Law 298 Release of Right and Action differ 299 300 Release to two disseisors who operateth c. 300 301 Right and Title diverse 301 Release to mesualty suspended 307 Release good to a Tenant in Law 313 Release of actions personals how far it extends or reals onely or both their several extents in barre 315 316 317 Robbery what 317 Remainder good though the particular estate be destroyed where 327 Remainder without a particular estate where 328 Right of Advowson at the Common Law 379 Remitter quid quomodo 383 Remitter to Privity is Remitter to Accessory 386 Remitter to Tenant in Tail 390 Remitters favored in Law 394 and differ from Descent ib. Remitter to them in Remainder 395 Remitter works no Remitter till it falls in possession 402 Recovery by a faint Action worketh a Remitter 404 Remitter and Recontinuance differ 408