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A38736 Tryals per pais, or, The law concerning juries by nisi-prius &c. by G.D. of the Inner Temple, Esquire. G. D. 1685 (1685) Wing E3413A; ESTC R36204 212,735 464

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Fee and part is found in Tail and part in Fée Iudgment shall be given for the Defendant who pleaded the Seisin in Fée If the Plaintiff declares upon a Demise Ejectment made the first of May to Commence at Michaelmas next if the Iury find a Lease made at any other day before the Feast 't is found for the Plaintiff for the day of making is not material Otherwise of a Lease for years ●n Possession As of a Lease made the 5th of May Habend for thrée years from Lady-day before and the Iury find a Lease made the 15th day of May for three years from the same Lady-day for this is a Lease in Possession In false Imprisonment in Middlesex and Imprisonment the Defendant justifie in London to which the Plaintiff saith the Defendant took him in Middlesex de son Tort demesn and Issue upon this and the Iury find the Defendant took him in Middles●x lawfully upon a Writ yet this is for the Plaintiff for the Issue is upon the place and not upon the Tort for that is confessed by the Pleading if the taking was in Middlesex In Debt for 20 l. and the Iury find 40 l. the Debt Plaintiff shall not have Iudgment the reason séems to be because it cannot be the same Debt which is intire but upon another Contract which is mislaid If the Issue be Payment af●er Execution Audita Quaerela and the Iury find payment before yet the Issue is proved for payment before is payment after In Debt upon a Bond bearing date the 25 Obligation of June upon Non est factum if the Iury find it his Déed but that it was delivered 8 days after the ●ate this is found for the Plaintiff If the Issue be that two made the Feoffment Joynt and several or two were Churchwardens c. and the Iury find but one c. the Issue is not found If the breach of Covenant or Wast be Obligation Covenant Wast assigned in cutting 20 Trees and the Iury find but 10 yet the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment If in Replevin c. the Iury find that Totum Pars. part of the Cattel were Levant and Couch●nt and part not and the Issue is upon all the Issue is not found In Ejectment for him who pleaded all Ejectment Void in part of 14 Acres and the Iury find guilty of 20 the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment for the 14 and the Verdict is void for the residue In an Information upon an usurious Contract Information Usury by two 't is not sufficient to find a Contract by one Otherwise where the Tort and offence is several as against two upon the Statute 4 E. 6. P●o emptione butiri and selling it by Retail c. and so in an Action upon the Case in Nature of Conspiracy and for words laid twice in one Declaration This will put in Issue the manner as well Modo forma as the matter where the manner is material as the time of the Fact and other Circumstances The Plaintiff replies That W. made a Replevin Lease Lease to him 30 Martii Habend from Lady-day last and Issue Modo fo●ma and the Iury find a Lease made the 25 Mar●ii Hab●ndum Ex●unc for a year this is good although the time of making and Commencement of the Lease are mistaken inasmuch as Extunc includes the Feast Yet because a sufficient Title and Lease is found for the Plaintiff to put in his Cattel this is sufficient this being the substance and the Modo forma shall not put the Circumstances in Issue So in Trespass if the Defendant justifie the putting in his Cattel for Common which he Claims from Pentecost to a certain time every year which is traversed Modo forma and the Iury find that he had Common in Vigilia Pentecostis in festo and the day next to this to the time this is found for the Defendant But otherwise in these Cases id an Assise of Common because there he ought to recover his Title In Debt for Rent if the Defendant plead an Entry by the Plaintiff before the Rent was due scilicet such a day which was after and Issue upon the Entry Modo forma and the Iury find for the Defendant he shall have Iudgment for the scilicet is void and the Modo forma go to the matter Sée after In Debt upon a Bond and the Defendant Non est factum plead Non est factum and the Iury find the Bond made joyntly by another with the Defendant the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment for the Defendant should have pleaded this If a Devise be pleaded Absolute if the Devise Iury find a Devise upon a Condition Precedent 't is not good In Debt against A. as Daughter and Riens per Discent Heir to B. and the Defendant plead Riens per discent of B. and the Iury find that B. was seised in Fée and dyed having Issue the Defendant his Daughter and his Wife with Child of a Boy who was afterwards born alive and dyed one hour after this Issue is found against the Plaintiff because the Defendant had the Land as Heir to her Brother who was last seised and not to the Father and so the Defendant had not the Land by Discent from the Father but from the Brother and yet this is Asse●s in her hands if it had béen specially pleaded In a Writ of Error brought by him in remainder Error in Tail to reverse a Fine if the Defendant plead in Barr of the Writ of Error a Common recovery by the Tenant in Tail to which the Plaintiff replies That at the time of the Recovery suffered he himself was Tenant to the Praecipe and so the Recovery void Vpon which Issue is joyned Part. and the Iury find that he was Tenant of part but not of other part This Issue is partly found for the Plaintiff and partly for the Defendant so the Court shall procéed to the Examination of the Error for that whereof he was found no Tenant but 't is a good bar of the Writ of Error for that whereof he is found Tenant to the Praecipe In Assumpsit to pay Money upon request Promise and issue upon this if the Iury find the Plaintiff promised to pay the Money but do not say upon request nor Modo forma 't is not found for the Plaintiff In Ejectment of a Manner if the Iury If the Substance of the Issue be found 't is sufficient Manner find that there were no Fréeholders and so 't is no Manner in Law yet being a Manner by Reputation and so the Tenements pass by the Lease Therefore this Verdict is found for him who pleads the Lease of the Manner for the substance is whether any thing was demised or not In an Information of Extortion against Goal the Gaoler of the Goal a Prison of the Castle of Maidston the Iury found there was no
that the Land was held in Socage yet this is good for this shall be intended this being a Collateral thing and this being the most common Tenure If they find that he was seised and made his Will in haec verba c. although they Will. do not find that he Devised the Land as in the former yet this is good by intendment But if a thing is left out and cannot be intended the Verdict is not good If the Issue be whether the Sheriff took J. S. and kept him in Prison in Execution for certain Debt and Damages by force of a Cap. ad Sa. and the Iury find that he took him by force of an alias Cap. ad Sa c. although they do not find that he kept him in Execution for the Debt and Damages aforesaid according to the Issue yet this is a good Special Verdict for it shall be intended for the Consequence is necessary from this which is found for he could not take him but that he must be in Execution Vide several instances of this Roll. tit Tryal 697 c. If the Iury find that J. S. was seised in Fée and made his Will in haec verba and that he afterwards died although they do not find that he died seised yet it shall be Will. intended that he died seised and so good If they find that A. did Bargain and Bargain and Sale Sell c. although they do not find any consideration yet this shall be intended So if they find that such persons Authorizati Letters Patents virtute literarum patentium dominae Elizabethae c. and do not find that the Letters Patents were under the Great Seal yet this shall be intended Verdicts of Lay-men shall be taken according to their intent and néed not so precise a form as in Pleadings lib. 4. 65. Hob. 76. Therefore if the Iury find a Recognizance in nature of a Statute Staple in this manner That the Conusor came before R. O. Recorder of London and T. O. Maior of the Staple Et recognovit se debere to B. 200 l. and do not say Secundum formam statuti c. nor Prescriptum Obligatorium c. although the Statute of 23 H. 8. provide That it shall be by Bill Obligatory sealed with three seals and here it doth not appear that there was any Bond or Seal nor that it was according to the Statute yet these things shall be intended they having found a Recognizance before the Maior and Recorder A Special Verdict may be amended by Notes the Notes If the Iury find a Special Verdict and Where a special Conclusion of a special Verdict shall aid the Imperfections of it refer the Law upon that special Matter to the Court although they do not find any title for the Defendant which is a Collateral thing to the point which they refer to the Court yet the Verdict is good enough for all other things shall be intended except this which is referred to the Court lib. 5. 97. In Ejectment If the Plaintiff declare upon a Lease made by A. and the Iury find a Special Verdict and Matter in Law upon a power of Revocation of Vses by an Indenture and limitation of new Vses and then a Lease for years made to the Plaintiff by the Lessor in the Declaration and another in which there is an apparent Variance but they conclude the Verdict and refer to the Court whether the grant of a new Estate found in the Verdict be a revocation of the first Indenture or not The special Conclusion shall aid the Verdict so that the Court cannot take notice of the variance betwéen the Lease in the Declaration and Verdict because the doubt touching the Revocation is only referred to the Court. And although they refer to the Court whether this be a Revocation of the first Indenture and not of the former Vses and limitation of new Vses as it ought to be yet in a Verdict this is good for their intention appears So Note a difference between a special Conclusion and Reference to the Court and a general Conclusion and Reference to the Court Vide hic apres In Debt for 40 s. for a Horse sold and For whom the Verdict shall be said to be found the Iury find 40 s. Debt for two Horses sold this is found against the Plaintiff for this is not the same Contract So in Debt for 20 l. if the Iury find 40 l. Debt this is against the Plaintiff In Debt for 20 l. for Wood sold and the Iury find the Bargain was for 20 Marks the Plaintiff shall not have Iudgment for this Variance So in Debt for Rent upon a Demise of two Acres and the Iury find it upon the Demise of one Acre the Plaintiff shall not have Iudgment But in Debt for 24 l. 8 s. received for the Plaintiffs use if the Iury fi●● the Defendant owes 24 l. but not the 8 s. the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment for perhaps he had paid the 8 s. In an Action upon the Case against A. if the Plaintiff declares That by Custom c. amongst Merchants c. If two are found in Arrearages upon Accompt and they assume to pay this at certain Days that any one of them may be charged for the whole by himself and then shews the Accompt of A. and B. who were found in Arrear in so much c. and promised to pay this at certain days but paid it not and now he brings his Action against A. although upon non Assumpsit pleaded it be found that the days of payment are mistaken yet the days being past the Action lyes because the Law makes the Duty upon the Accompt for which after the days an Action lyes Where all is to be given in Damages Damages the Iury are Chancellors and may give so much as the Case requires in Equity In Detinue of a Bond of 100 l. if the Detinue Iury find that he received a Bond of a greater or less Sum the Verdict is for the Defendant So in a promise to do two things if the Promise Iury find but one of them 't is for the Defendant Otherwise in Ejectment upon a Demise Ejectment of 10 Acres if the Iury find a Demise of less the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment If the Issue be upon a Prescription for Prescription Common belonging to a Messuage and 200 Acres of Land 50 of Meadow and 50 of Pastu●e if the Iury find Common belonging to the House 20 Acres of Meadow and 20 of Pasture in two of the Vills and not in the rest the Prescription is not found If part of the Trespass or wrong be found Trespass Case 't is sufficient in Trespass or an Action of the Case upon a Tort as by a Commoner for putting and depasturing Cattel in the Common If the Issue be whether all the Lands in Audita Quaerela Execution were the Estate of the Father in Tail or in
may be averred Or what or who was meant where there are two of a name c. lib. 8. 155. The Heir in tail cannot aver against a fine levied by his Ancestors That partes finis nihil habuerint lib. 3. 84 85. Leon 75 76. c. But when Tenant in tayl accepts of a fine and grants and renders the Land by the same fine which is Executory there if no execution be sued in the life of Tenant in tayl his Issue may aver continuance of possession c. in his Father for this stands with the fine and the acceptance of the fine alters not the Estate If a man and his Wife sell her Land for money and after levy a fine to the Vendee and his Heirs it may be averred it was for money and so carry the use to the Vendee without any declara●ion of use which otherwise would result to the Woman and her Heirs and ●o other uses may be proved than what are in an Indenture of uses subsequent to the conveyance c. lib. 9. 8. 5. 26. Tenant in tail with remainder in tail to A. Reversion in see to himself bargains and sells Land c. and levies a fine to him with Proclamation with general warranty The Conusee infeoffs A. Resolved The Bargainee had an Estate determinable upon the death of the Tenant in Tail and also the reversion in fee which the Bargainor had and his Wife shall be endowed but this determines upon the death of the Tenant in Tail Resolved The fine doth not discontinue the remainder for this doth not pass any Estate but makes this Estate of the Bargainee durable c. so that it shall not determine untill the Tenant in Tail die without Issue a●d the conclusion may be confessed and avoided Resolved the Warranty doth not barr the remainder for this was annexed to the fee determinable c. and to the reversion in fee and doth not extend to the remainder for this was not displaced and the Feoffee of the Conusee cannot inlarge c. 'T is a Maxim that a Warranty barrs no Freehold which is in esse possession or remainder c. and not displaced before or at the time of the Warranty although it be devested before the descent Resolved A Warranty cannot inlarge the Estate Resolved the Feoffment of the Conusee was not a discontinuance of the remainder because he was not Tenant in Tail so of the Grantee of totum statum suum c. Resolved A Collateral Warranty may be given in evidence and found by the Jury The Chief Justice held that by the Feoffment of the Conusee the Remainder was not displaced nor put to a right for his Fee simple and his Fee determinate pass and the Feoffment which in it self is not tortious cannot be tortious to another Otherwise it is when Tenant for life or remainder in Tail c. makes a Feoffment for the Feoffment it ●elf is tor●ious Note there are some titles to which a Warranty doth not extend as in the Case of an Eschange condition upon a Mortgage Mortmain consent to a Ravisher c. for in these Cases no action lies in which Voucher or Rebutter may be neither shall a descent take away Entry in these cases and cannot be displaced out of their Original essence Collateral Warranty shall barr dower and yet an action is given for this But a fine c. and five years barr these titles and dower also if an action be not brought in time Seymour's Case lib. 10. 96. Buckler and Harveys Case lib. 2. 55. Tenant for life leases for 4 years and afterwards grants the Tenements Hab. from P. for life after P. the Lessee attorns then the Grantee enters and leases at will to which Tenant at will the Tenant for life levies a fine Come ceo c. Rem in fee enters Resolved The Grant was void for an Estate of Freehold cannot commence in futuro and the Grant being void at the Commencement the Attornment afterwards cannot make it pass and that the Grantee was a Disseisor but if the Grant had been good at the Commencement and was only to have its perfection by a subsequent act as by livery upon a Charter of Feoffment c. and the Grantee enter before the perfection he is not a Disseisor but a Tenant at will Resolved also If the fine had been levyed to the Disseisor himself Come c c. he which had the right of remainder may enter for the forfeiture for it was agreed that the right of a particular Estate may be forfeited and entry given to him who had but a right As if Lessee for years be ousted or Tenant for life Disseised and the Lessee for years brings an assisse or the Lessee for life a Writ of right c. 'T is a forfeiture Resolved also That the fine being levied to the Tenant at will it is a forfeiture and he which had the right of remainder may enter and the Tenants for life and at will also shall be estopped to say quod partes finis nihil hab c. and of such estoppels which are by matter of Record and trench to the disherison of them in reversion c. they shall take advantage although they are strangers to the Record for they are privies in Estate Resolved also If the Disseisee levy a fine to an estranger the Disseisor shall retain for ever for the Disseisee against his own fine cannot claim the Land and the Conusee cannot enter for the right of the Conusor cannot be transferred to him but by the fine the right is extinct whereof the Disseisor shall have advantage But in Crok 1. part 482. 13 Car. it was moved if the Disseisee not knowing of the Desseism levied a fine to a stranger whether that should barr his right and move to the benefit of the Disseisor according to Bucklers Case and said if admitted would be of very mischievous consequence and by two Judges held that it should not enure to the benefit of the Disseisor but to the use of the Conusor himself for otherwise a Disseisin being secret may be the cause of disherison of any one who intends to levy a fine for his own benefit for assurance of his Lands upon his Wife and Children or otherwise 1. Inst 277. Not against such Certificates as are a definitive Against a Certificate Tryal of the thing certified As the Bishops Certificate of Excommunication Bastardy lawful Marriage c. so Certificates of the Marshal of the Host which is a Tryal but against Certificates only of information it may be As against Certificates upon Commission out of any Court or of the Commissioners that affirm a man a Bankrupt which are not Tryable in a course of Law but informations lib. 7. 14 lib. 8. 121. So of a return if it is a definitive Tryal of the Upon a Return thing returned no averment lyeth against it As the retorn of a Sheriff upon some Writs as a Writ of Partition
and the Judges of the Kings Bench in an Appeal of Felony It séems they seldom or never killed one another in this tryal of Battel for their Weapons were but Batoons and he that was vanquished was presently upon Proclamation made to acknowledge his fault in the Audience of the people or else to cry Cravent in the name of Recreantise c. and upon this Iudgement was to be given and after this the Recreant should amittere liberam legem that is should become infamous c. 2 Institutes 247. Finch 421. lib. 9. 31. Mirror of Justice 161 162 c. 1 Inst 294. Glanvil saith the tryal by Grand Assise Grand Assise came by the Clemency of the Prince Est autem saith he Magna Assiza Regale quoddam beneficium Clementia Principis de consilio Procerum populis indultum For the Tryal of Treason Murther and Felony as well upon Appeals as upon Indictments see Stamford's Pleas of the Crown By Glanvil cap. 1. lib. 14. it appeareth the tryal of these Crimes by the old Law was this If there were no direct proof nor accuser or if there was any accuser or direct proof yet if the party denyed the same then the tryal was by Wager of Battel if the party accused was not 60 years old and of sound Limbs but if he was older or not sound then he Per judicium Dei was to be tryed per judicium Dei namely per calidum ferrum vel aquam that is if he was a Freeholder he was to run bare foot and bare legg'd over a row of hot Iron Barrs and if he passed three times without stop or fall he was acquitted And if he was a meaner person called Rusticus he was to run through vessels filled with scalding water 20. In a Writ of Disceit upon a Recovery Recovery by default Summoners pernors veiors by default the Tryal shall be if the Iudgment was given upon the Petit Cape by the Summoners if upon the Grand Cape by the Summoners pernors or veiors and not per pais So if a Recovery by default in a real Action be pleaded to which the other saith Nient comprise this shall Nient Comprise not be tryed per pais but by the Summoners and Veiors lib. 9. 32. En Assise if the issue be whether the Land was extended in an Elegit c. This shall be tryed by the extendors joyned with the Assise 31. Ass 6. vide Rolls tit Tryal 581 582. Of Tryals per L'escheator per Examination vide ib. In an Appeal if the Exigent be awarded Escheator Sheriff and the party pray a Writ to inquire of the goods and Chattles and to seise them this may be awarded to the Escheator or Sheriff at the Election of the Court. 41. Ass 13. vide hic cap. 24 27. 21. In debt upon a simple Contract Detinue Wager of Law c. The tryal may be by Wager of Law or per pais at the Defendants Election But when the Defendant wageth his Law he ought to bring with him Eleven of his Neighbours who will avow upon their Oath that in their Consciences he saith true so as he himself must be sworn de fidelitate and the Eleven de credulitate Ib. Finch 423. and 1 Inst 295. you may read excellent Learning concerning this Tryal 22. If Profession be denyed it shall be Profession tryed by the Court Christian But if the time of the Profession be in issue this shall be tryed by the Country lib. 4. 71. So though an Inrollment or other matter of Inrollment Record cannot be tryed per pais yet the time when the Inrollment was made may be tryed per pais So whether the party Appearance appeared in such a Court or on such a day c. shall be tryed per pais Cro. 3. part 13. So whether one was Sheriff Sheriff Admission c. Plenarty such a day or not Cro. 1. part 421. Admission Institution Plenarty and Ability of the Parson shall be tryed by the Bishop But Induction shall be tryed by the Country and so shall Avoydance by resignation Dyer 229. Moor 61. And voyd or not voyd shall be tryed per pais 1 Inst 344. And Plenarty if the Clerk be dead Mirror of Justice 324. li. 6. 49. The cause of refusal of a Clerk by the Bishop shall by tryed by the Metropolitan● if the Clerk be living but per pais if he be dead l. 5. 58. Ability shall be tryed by the Ordinary if Per spiritual Law Vide hic cap. 16. the Clerk be alive but if dead then per pais Institution resignation full or not full Profess●on unless alledged in a Stranger Prior removeable at will or perpetual general Bastardy the Right of Espousals Divorce c. shall be tryed by the Bishops but in many cases these matters being mixed with other circumstances shall be tryed per pais As if the Church be void by Resignation Per pais For although Institution resignation c. are Spiritual yet avoidance induction c. are notorious to the Country or void or not void Induction Institution and Induction together because the Common Law shall be preferred Prior or not Prior. Bastardy alledged in a stranger to the Writ or in one dead or Abatement of the Writ Whether a feme be a feme covert in possession c. in trespass by Baron and feme Nient Son feme shall be tryed per pais And see in Rolls tit Tryal 584. c. Many cases where Bastardy Marriage c. shall be tryed per ley spiritual or per pais The time c. of Consecration of a Bishop and of other spiritual matters shall be tryed per pais By what spiritual person the tryal shall be and for what cause vide ib. 23. An Ideot found so from his Nativity Ideoty by Office may come in person in the Chancery before the Chancellor and pray that before him and such Iustices or Sages of the Law which he shall call to him who are called the Council of the King he may be examined whether he be an Ideot or no or by his friends he may sue a Writ out of Chancery retornable there to bring him into the Chancery Ibidem Coram nobis concilio nostro examinand lib. 9. 31. 24. If it be in question whether the Sheriff Sheriff made such a retorn or not It shall be tryed by the Sheriff If whether the Undersheriff made such a Retorn or not it shall be tryed by the Undersheriff If Retorn the question be whether such a one be Sheriff or not he is made by Letters Patents of Record and therefore it shall be tryed by the Record ib. Cro. 1. part 421. 25. If an Approver say that he Commenced Dures his Appeal before the Coroner per dures this shall be tryed by the Record of the Coroner and if it be found that he did it without dures he shall be hanged ib. Corone br 75. 26. The Tryal
if that be Album breve and no return if the Venire facias be Right Rolls tit 204. In Cases where there are several Defendants who plead several Pleas the Plaintiff Several Venire facias may chuse either to have one Venire facias for all or several for every one of the Defendants But if you will be ruled by Stamford the surest way is to have a Venire facias against every one and then one cannot have benefit of the others Challenge neither shall the death of one abate the Venire facias against the other This he speaks of in Appeals But if the Court once award a joynt Venire facias you cannot have several Venires afterwards though there be nothing done upon the first except it be upon matter de puisne Temps as the death of one of the Defendants c. lib. 8. 66. lib. 11. 5 6. Stamf. 155. Bro. tit Venire facias 2. 35. But now it is the usual course to have but one Venire facias upon several issues though against several Defendants Cro. 3. One Venire facias in several issues Vide Rolls tit Trial 596. 620. 667. Hob. 88. 51. part 866. Hob. 36. 64. And so usual that the Court declared Cro. 2. part 550. That there never shall be several Venire facias to try several Issues in one County For what need the Plaintiff trouble himself and the Country with several when one Iury will serve his turn Et frustra fit per plura quod fieri potest per pauciora But otherwise if it be in two Counties Cro. 3. part 866. After issue joyned by two Defendants Venire facias between the Plaintiff and 2 Defendants where one is dead if one of them die and then a Venire facias is awarded betwixt the Plaintff and both the Defendants and so in the Hab. Corpora and Distringas yet this shall not Vitiate the Venire facias c. to make Error because though one of the Defendants be dead yet the other being alive it is sufficient And there needs be no surmise in Iudicial Writs that one of the Defendants No surmise in Judicial Writs of death in one of the parties is dead It is time enough to shew it to the Court at the day in bank Cro. 1 part 4. 26. But if there be two Defendants and the Venire facias be but against one of them 't is Error 7 H. 4. 13. and Bro. tit Ven. fac 11. Cro. 1. part 426. If the Venire facias bears date before Venire facias dated before the Action brought the Action brought or varies from the Roll yet it is aided by the Statutes of Jeofailes Cro. 1. part 38. 90 91. 203 204. Miscontinuance or discontinuance or Jeofailes misconveying of Process is aided by 32 H. 8. 30. The want of any Writ Original or Jud●cial defaults in their form and insufficient Returns thereupon are aided by 18. Eliz. 14. Cro. 3. part 259. But you must have a care the Venire facias be not faulty in any other matters of Substance for if the parties names be mistaken or the issue Parties names mistaken in a Venire facias as if the issue be ne unques Execuor and the Venire facias be in placito debiti c. this is a Mistrial Cro. 2. part 528. So it is if the Venire facias be in placito transgressioni● Mis-tryal where the Action is in placito transgressionis ejectionis firmae This misawarding of Process is not aided by any of the Statutes and better it were that there had been no Ven●re facias at all in No Venire facias holpen such a Case for then the Statutes would have holpen it Cro. 3. part 622. If a Venire facias be directed to the Coroners Return of Process all the Coroners ought to joyn in the return they being Ministers not Judges and so both of the Sheriffs of London ought to joyn or else the Return is not good Hob. 97. Note the Principal Statutes of Jeofailes are 8 H. 6. cap. 12. and cap. 15. 32 H. 8. cap. 30. 18 Eliz. cap. 14. 21 Jac. cap. 13. and 16 and 17 Car. 2. 8. Intituled an Act to prevent Arrests of Judgements and superseding Executions And the three first of these Statutes do not extend to Appeals nor to Pleas of the Crown or to any proceedings upon them for these are excepted nor to the amendment of any Exigent to make any one Outlawed As you may see at large lib. 8. 162. Blackamors Case And the four last of the said Statutes do neither extend to them nor to Actions or informations upon Penal Laws Only in the last of them viz. 16 17 Car. 2. there is a limitation in the negation of the Extent scil Other than concerning Customs Subsidies of Tonnage and Poundage to which it doth extend If the Venire facias be directed Vicecomiti London Salutem c. praecipimus tibi and not vobis after Verdict this is Amendable 39 Eliz. B. R. Adjudge Rolls 200. And so it is if after habeas ibi hoc breve Nomina Juratorum be left out ib. and 204. But if the date of the Teste be after the return this was held not amendable 32 33 Eliz. B. R. ib. sed vide hic ante But if the Award of the Ven. fac upon the Roll be right and the Writ wrong it may be amended by the Roll as the Misprision of the Clerk ib. 201. If the words quorum quilibet habeat be left out or duodecim or qui nulla affinitate attingunt or Vicecomiti be left out these are amendable as mistakes of the Clerk Rolls 204 205. In some Cases a Venire facias shall be Venire facias between a party and a stranger awarded to make an Enquest betwixt a stranger to the Writ and issue and the party I will instance but in one and that is upon the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 6. If a Tenant being impleaded vouch to warranty and the Vouchee denieth the Deed or other cause of the Warranty c. That the Demandant may not hereby be delayed he may sue out a Venire facias to try the issue between the Tenant and Vouchée Inquests in Pleas of Land shall be as Inquest at whose request well taken at the request of the Tenant as of the Demandant 2 Edw. 3. cap. 16. If the Plaintiff or Demandant desisteth in prosecuting his Action and bringeth it Venire facias by Proviso not to Tryal then the Defendant or Tenant may sue forth a Venire facias with a Proviso which is to no other end but that the Sheriff should summon but one Iury if the Plaintiff also should have brought him another Writ to the same purpose And although as my Lord Dyer saith fol. 215. the granting of this Venire facias c. with a Proviso depends much upon the discretion of the Court yet for the greater part it is not grantable for the
to wit the number two things are to be observed 1. That in all Cases the Tales ought to be under the number of the principal in the Venire facias unless in Appeals as in Attaint under 24. and in other Actions where the Venire facias is of 12. under 12. And the reason wherefore more than the number may be granted in Appeals of the Plaintiffs part is because the Defendant may challenge peremptorily and if default be in the Plaintiff then the Defendant may pray a Tales and the Reason is in favorem vitae and that he may expedite and free himself from vexation and the question of his life for fear that his Witnesses should die 2. That the number ought always to be certain as 10. 8. 6. or 4. c. But now by the Statute of 35 H. 8. a Tales de circumstantibus may be granted as well of an uncertain as a certain number and that by force of these words in the Stat. 35 H. 8. So many c. as shall make up a full Jury As to the third to wit the Order It is to be known that always in every new Tales the number shall be diminished as if the first be 10. the second shall be 8. and so always less But if the Tales awarded be quashed by Challenge you may have another of the same number As to the fourth to wit the manner of Tryal that is commonly by them with others but by them only when after the granting the Tales the principal Pannel is quashed then the Tryal shall be only by the Tales or if the Tales do not amount to a full Inquest another Tales to supply the former may be granted As to the fifth to wit the Quality of the Therefore if the Venire facias be not de medietat linguae the Tales cannot 3 E. 4. 12. Tales they ought to be of the same Quality as the Quales are and therefore if the first be per medietatem linguae of English and Aliens so ought the Tales to be so if the Principal be out of a Franchise so if the Venire facias be directed to the Coroners so ought the Tales and all things which are required by the Law in the Quales are required in the Tales As you may read in the aforesaid Statutes vide Stamf. Plees del Corone fol. 155. Where a Juror is withdrawn when the Plaintiff intends to bring the Cause to Tryal again he may have a Distringas c. with a Decem Tales By the Statute of 23 H. 8. cap. 3. If there be not enough sufficient Freeholders as are required in an Attaint in the County where Attaint such Attaint is taken a Tales may be awarded into the Shire next adjoyning If the Transcript of the Record of the Nisi prius be mistaken and not warranted by the Rolls for which cause the Plaintiff becomes Non-suit he may have a Distringas Nisi prius amendable de novo upon motion to the Court and the Postea shall not be recorded Cro. 1. part 204. Palmers Reports 378. For there is but a Transcript of the Record sent to the Justices of Nisi prius First they were Justices of Nisi prius and Justices of Assise Justices of Assise and therefore they retain that name still though Assises are very rarely brought For this common Action of Ejectment hath Ejected most real Actions and so the Assise is almost out of use CAP. VI. Of the number of the Jurors and why the Sheriff returns 24. though the Venire facias mentions but 12. If he returns more or less no Error and of the number 12. And when the Tryal shall be per primer Jurors And of Inquests of Office and when to remain pro defectu Juratorum NOw for the Quales and these you see for number must be 12. by the Common Law D. and St. fol. 14. for quality liberos legales homines And first of their number 12. And this number is no less esteemed of by our Law than by Holy Writ Of the number 12. If the 12 Apostles on their 12 Thrones must try us in our eternal State good Reason hath the Law to appoint the number of 12. to try our temporal The Tribes of Israel were 12. the Patriarchs were 12. and Solomons Josh 4. Genes 49. Officers were 12. 1 Kings 4. 7. vide Sir Hen. Spelman verb. Jurata Therefore not only matters of fact were tryed by 12. but of ancient time 12. Judges were to try matters in Law in the Exchequer Plow Com. in prooemio 12 Judges Chamber and there were 12. Counsellors of State for matters of State And he that wageth his Law must have 11. others with him which think he says true And the Law is so precise in this number Less than 12 in Inquests of Office of 12. that if the Tryal be by more or less it is a Mis-tryal But in Inquests of Office as a Writ of Wast there less than Finch 400. 484. 12. may serve F. N. B. 107. c. and in Writs to inquire of Damages the just number of 12. is not requisite for they may be over or under And so it was resolved Trin. 1651. B. R. Abbot vers Holt that the Sheriff ought in Writs of Inquiry to summon 12. by their names yet Inquest of Office Vide hic cap. 13. Damages assessed by a less number is sufficient and in the Writ to the Sheriff quod ipse inquirat per Sacramentum pro borum hominum omitting duodecem it s good and usual And in a Writ of Inquiry of Waste by 13. it was holden Good 1. Cro. 414. In Dower if the Tenant come at the Grand Cape and say he was always ready to render Dower and issue is taken upon this although seisin of the Land be presently awarded yet no Inquest of Office but the Jury upon the Tryal of the issue shall assess Damages 22 E. 3. 15. In what cases there shall be an Inquest of Office and in what not see Rolls tit Tryal 595. And although there can be no Verdict Why the Sheriff returns 24. but by 12. yet by ancient course and usage which as my Lord Cook tells you makes the Law in this Case 1 Inst 155. the Sheriff is to return 24. And this is for expedition of Iustice for if 12. should only be returned no man should have a full Jury appear or sworn in respect of Challenges without a Tales which should be a great delay of Tryals And for this cause at Common Law 't was Error if the Sheriff returned less than 24. But now it is remedied by the Satute of 18 Eliz. as a mis-return see Cro. 1 part 223. li. 5. 36 If the Sheriff return less than 24 it is no Error 37. By which Books it appears that if the Sheriff return but 23. c. it shall not vitiate the Verdict of 12. No though a full Jury do not appear so that the Tryal is by ten of
And all these points were resolved by all the Judges of England upon Conference between them in the Case of John Arundel Esq indicted for the death of William Parker Where there may be a special Visne the De Corpore Com. Tryal shall never be de Corpore Comitatus Leon. 1 part 109. If a Venire facias ought to be of one or more Vills in certain in a County and this is awarded de Corpore Comitatus This seems to be aided by the Statute of 21 Jac. of Jeofailes for this comes from the Vills out of which it ought to come and from others in as much as it comes de Copore Comitatus Rolls tit Tryal 618. and many other cases touching this matter But in Ejectment of Land called S. and no place is named where the Land lyes and a Venire is awarded de Corpore Com. this is erroneous and too large because there is a place certain where the Land lyes and yet it is not named in the Nar. as it ought to be Hob. 121. But if the issue be taken upon a title of dignity as whether Chivaler or not this may come de Corpore Comitatus because that the lieu lou c. is not material ib If A. by the name of A. of the County of Hamshire bring a Scire facias upon a Recognisance in Chancery in the Countie of Mid. against B. And the Defendant plead that the Plaintiff is Outlawed by the name of A. of the County of Chester to which the Plaintiff replies that he is not una eadem persona this may be by the body of the County of Mid. where the Writ is brought ibidem In a quare impedit for the Church de Uselbee and the Defendant pleads that there is no such Church the Venue shall not come de Corpore Comitatus but de vicineto de Uselbee for this is a place known and it is intended the Church of Uselbee is within the Ville of Uselbee Hob. 325. IN a prohibition if the parties be at issue Wild. upon a custom de non decimando of wood in the Wild of Sussex the Venire facias shall be de Corpore Com. for the Wild is not such a place whereof the Court may have conusance to be sufficient to have a Jury to come stom this for the Wild is a wood by intendment Hob. 348. In a real Action where the Demandant Heir tryed where the Land lies where not demands Land in one County as Heir to his Father and alledges his Birth in another County if it be denyed that he is Heir it shall not be tryed where the Birth is alledged but where the Land lyeth For there the Law presumes it shall be best known who is Heir But if the Defendant make himself Heir to a Woman for that is the surer and more certain side and the Mother is certain when perhaps the Father is incertain and therefore there it shall be tryed where the Birth is alledged because they have more Cro. 3. part 818. Cro. 2. part 303. certain Conusance than where the Land lyeth And so it is where Bastardy is alledged Bastardy the Tryal shall be in like Case Mutatis mutandis If the man plead the Kings Letters Patents Non concessit where the Land lies and the other party plead non concessit it shall not be tryed where the Letters bear date for they cannot be denyed but where the Land lyeth Every Tryal must come out of the Neighbour-hood of a Castle Mannor Town Visne or Hamlet or place known out of a Castle Mannor Town or Hamlet as some Forests and the like as before Every Plea concerning the person Where the Writ is brought at Common-Law Plaintiff c. shall be tryed where the Writ is brought When the matter alledged extendeth into a place at the Common Law and a place within a Franchise it shall be tryed at the Common-Law Matters done beyond Sea may be tryed in England and therefore a Bond made beyond Sea may be alledged to be Matters done beyond Sea how tryable in England Vide cap. 10. made in any place in England if it bear date in no place But if there be a place as at Burdeaux in France then it shall be alledged to be made in quodam loco vocat Burdeaux in France in Islington in the County of Middlesex and from thence shall come the Jury 1 Inst 261. Lach. 4. and 5. So if the Tenant plead that the Demandant is an Alien born under the Obedience of the French King and out of the Legiance Alien of the King of England the Demandant may reply that he was born at such a place in England within the Kings Legiance and hereupon a Jury of 12. men shall be charged and if they have sufficient Evidence that he was born in France or in any other place out of the Realm then shall they find that he was born out of the Kings Legiance And if they have sufficient Evidence that he was born in England or Ireland or Guernsey or Jersey or elsewhere within the Kings Obedience they shall find that he was born within the Kings Legiance And this hath ever been the pleading and manner of Tryal in that Case So of other things done beyond Sea the adverse party may alledge them to be done at Things done beyond Sea such a place in England from whence the Jury shall come and in a Special Verdict they may find the things done beyond Sea Ib. lib. 7. 26. Lib. 7. 26. So when part of the act is done in England and part out of the Realm that part that is to be performed out of the Realm Part without the Realm and part within if issue be taken thereupon shall be tryed here by 12 men and they shall come out of the place where the Writ or Action is brought Ib. lib. 6. 48. Error for that Iudgment was given by default against the Defendant being an Infant Full age tryed where the Land lies issue was taken that he was of full age And Godfrey moved whether the Tryal should be in Norfolk where the Land was or in Middlesex where the Action was brought And the Court held that it should be tryed in the County where the Land lay and Tanfield said It was so adjudged in the Kings Bench between Throgmorton and Burfind Cro. 3. part 818. Questions of Title of Land except by Where the Land doth ly special order of the Judges in some cases are to be tryed in the County where the Land lies for the Law is that all real and mixt actions as Wast Ejectment c. must be brought in the County where the Land is But Debt Detinue Account Transitory Actions Actions of the Case Battery c. are of their own nature Transitory and yet they ought to be laid and tryed in their proper County where the fact was done unless the Court order the contrary for some Special reasons
and if they are laid out of the proper County dayly practice tells us the Court may alter the venue upon Affidavit of the true place of the fact All Criminal matters are to be tryed Criminal matters where the offence is committed If the Venue arise in two Counties This is called a Joynder of Counties Finch 410. Jury out of two Counties the Jury upon 2. Venire facias shall come from both 6 out of one County and 6. from the other Cro. 3. part 646. but by consent of parties entred upon Record it may be by 5. out of one and 7. from the other as appears Cro. 3. part 471. where in Replevin the Defendant avows for Damage But out of more than two Counties it cannot be made fesant The Plaintiff by his Replication claims common by Prescription in loco quo c. being Broadway in the County of Worcester appurtenant to his Mannor of D. in the County of Gloucester and issue thereupon and 2 Venire facias awarded to the Sheriffs of the several Counties and now 7. of the County of Worcester appeared and 5. of Gloucester And although there ought to have been 6. sworn of each County to try that issue as appears 49 Ed. 3. 1. 31 H. 8. 46. yet by the assent of parties those 12 who appeared by advice of all the Justices were sworn and tryed the issue And it was commanded that this Assent should be entred upon Record for otherwise it would be a strange Precedent In an Assise of Common in Confinio Comitatus and the issue be whether he had Common by prescription in Land in one County appendant to a Mannor in another County this shall be tryed by both Counties The same Law is in Trespass brought in one County which cannot be in confinio upon such an issue the Tryal shall be per ambideux Counties 49 E. 3. 20. See Rolls tit Tryal 599. c. many cases where the Jury shall come from two Counties In an Action upon the Statute of Marlebridge for taking a distress in one County and chasing in another County upon not guilty the Tryal shall be only by the County where the chasing is for this is all the cause of the action 4 H. 6. 4. In Escape upon an Arrest in one County Escape and an Escape in another County upon not guilty this shall be tryed where the Escape is laid for the action is upon the Escape Rolls ib. 602. In an Action of Trover apud Paxton in Covenant in P. to sell at R. tryed at P. Com. Hunt the Defendant pleads a Bargain and Sale apud Royston in Com. Hertford in the Market there whereby he after converted them apud P. in Com. Hunt The Plaintiff saith that he was possessed of those Goods apud P. in Com. Hunt and that J. S. there stole them from him and by Covenant betwixt him and the Defendant at P. in Com. H. he sold them to the Defendant as he hath pleaded The issue was upon the Sale made by Covenant c. And it was tryed in the County of Hunt and found for the Plain●ff And it was moved to be a mis-tryal for it ought to have been by a Jury of the County of Hertford or at leastwise by a Jury of both Counties But it was adjudged to be well tryed because the Sale is confessed and the Issue is upon the Covenant alledged in Hertford Cro. 3. part 511. In Debt upon a Bond in London the Usurous Contract in another County Defendant pleaded an Vsurious Contract in the County of Warwick the Plaintiff replyed that the Bond was made upon good consideration Absque hoc that it was made for such Vsurious Contract the Tryal shall be in the County of Warwick for the Bond is confessed and the usury in Warwick is only in question so if the issue A Dures shall be tryed there not where the Action is brought be whether the Deed were made by Dures the Tryal shall be where the Dures and not where the Deed is supposed to be made Cro. 3. part 195. Where issue is taken upon a surrender Surender it shall be tryed where it was alledged to be done and not where the Mannor is of which the Copy-hold is holden ib. fo 260. Br. tit Visne 114. In an Assumpsit laid at London in Warda Ward or Hundred no good Visne de Cheape the Venire was De parochia de Arcubus in Warda de Cheape whereas no Parish was mentioned before in the Count adjudged that the Venire was ill laid in the Count for a Venire facias may be of a Town Parish Mannor or other place known but not of a Hundred or Ward ib. and so it is adjudged ib. Cro. 1 part 165. for the Ward in a City is but as the Hundred in a County The Parish in London is in lieu of a Vill and the Ward of a Hundred Roll. tit Tryal 620 621 622. vide hic apres Where the Visne is laid to be at a City City in an Action brought in a superior Court or within the City though it be both a City and County the Venire facias may be de vicinet Civitatis Lach. 258. Though it hath been held not good but that the Venire facias must be de Civitate leaving out Vicinet as you may read in Stamf. 155. But now the Case in Cro. 2. part 308. and Bulstr 1 part Rolls 622. 623. 129. say that all Venire facias's are awarded de vicinet Civitatis which is intended as well de Civitate it self as de vicinet infra Jurisdictionem So in all inferior Courts Stiles 2. March 125. of the City And so it is de vicinet Civitatis or de vicinet or de Civitate Coventry Eborum Norwich Sarum Bristow Exon and all other Cities which are Counties in themselves In all places besides London no London mention is made of the Parish or Ward Jb. 493. But in London the Parish and Ward is mentioned And therefore it was adjudged Cro. 2. part 150. That it was not good to alledge any thing done in London generally But it must be in what Parish from which a Venire may be But where a thing is laid in a City in alta Warda there and the Venire facias is from the City only it is well because City it shall be intended there be no more Wards in the same City Cro. 3. part 282. In an action against the Hundred upon the Hundred Statute of Winton c. upon the Roll the Venire facias is awarded of Bradley quod est proximum Hundredum and the Venire facias is generally of Bradley This is well because by the Roll it appears that Bradley and the Hundred were all one Roll. tit Tryal 598. If a thing be laid done apud Bristol viz. in Wardae Sanctae Mariae in Warda de Ratliff and the Venire facias is de Warda de Ratliff this is not good ib. 619. But
if it be alledged in a Ward in the City of Bristol c. the Venue shall be of the Ward not de Civitate A Venire facias was awarded from T. Ward and not de vicinet de T. and for this cause resolved to be ill and not amendable Cro. 2. part 399. Bro. tit Ven. fa. 8. If the issue be Si rex concessit per literas De vicinet left out ill patentes The Tryal shall be as hath been said where the Land lies and not where the Patent was made because the Patent is of Record and if it be traversed Where the Land lies it shall be tryed by the Record and therefore the issue being upon non concessit the issue is not upon the Patent but where the issue is upon non concessit or non dimisit of a thing which passeth by Deed the Tryal shall be where the Grant or Demise is alledged But of a Feoffment or Lease for life pleaded the issue being non Feoffavit or non dimisit Livery ought to be made and therefore the Tryal shall be where the Land lies Cro. 2. part 376. 3. part 259. Where the offence is laid in the Count Where the Action is laid in one County and the Justification in another the Tryal shall be where the Justification is to be in one County and the Iustification in another County and the Plaintiff replies de injuria sua propria c. The Visne shall be where the Iustification is alledged As one Example for all to illustrate In an Action upon the Case for words supposed to be spoken at Bridg-North in the County of Salop the Defendant pleads that he spake them as a Witness upon his Oath upon an issue tryed at Chard in the County of Somerset The Plaintiff replies de son tort demesne c And thereupon it was tryed by a Venire facias of Bridg-North And Error thereof assigned because it ought to have been by a Visne of Chard where the Iustification arose and it was held clearly to be a mis-tryal and not aided by the Stat. of Jeofailes wherefore the Iudgment was reversed Cro. 3. part 468. 261. 870. More 410. Replevin taking 2 Horses at such a place in Denford in Com. Northampton the Defendant makes Con●sans as Bayliff to the Lord Mountague of his Mannor of S. which Mannor is holden of the Honour of Gloucester and that the place in which c. is within the said Honour and alledges a Custome within the said Honour on which Custome the parties were at issue and the Venire facias was from Denford the place of taking which was moved after Verdict for that the Venue was not so large as the issue which was the Honour and of this opinion was the whole Court of C. B. Pasch 13 Car. 2. Hull vers B●nning But the great question was whence the Venue should arise in this Case and per Bridgman Ch. Just and Just Hide in no Case can a Venue arise from an Honour and Ch. Just said he had caused the Prothonotaries to search for Precedents and they Honours could not find that ever a Venue did arise from an Honour which is but a bundle of services and an incorporeal thing from which no Venue can come and yet an Honour may have demesns as the Honours of Grafton and Hampton have but Gloucester not Ch. Just and Just Hide seemed that the Venue should be de Corpore Comitat. Hob. 266. 249. But when the Court was after moved for their opinion they bad them take a Venire facias at their peril and would give no opinion An action of Debt was brought on a Bond to perform Covenants in an Indenture wherely the Defendant had granted to the Plaintiff a walk called shrob-walk in the Forest of in Com Northampton and Covenanted for peaceable in joyment c. and he was ousted per Earl of Northampton who had right on which Right issue was joyned and the Venire facias was from Shrob-walk Per Cur. It 's not good for it appears by the Record that Shrob-walk is not a Vill but if the Obligation had been laid to be made at Shrob-walk the Venue should arise from thence as a Vill. Inter. Stirt Bales Pasch 19 Car. 2. B. R. The Venue shall follow and be according Out of what County to the issue As for words in Warwick-shire Thou art a Vide ●ic ante postea Thief and stolest my Iron The Defendant justifies says the Plaintiff stole the Iron in Leicester-shire and brought it into Warwick-shire and therefore he spake the words in Warwick-shire If the Plaintiff replies de injuria sua propria absque tali causa the Jury shall come from Leicestershire to which the absque tali causa refers for the words are acknowledged See Rolls tit Tryal 598. 623. When part of the matter to be inquired of is in one County or place and part in another the Tryal shall be there where the best Conusans of the matter may be As in an action upon the Case the Plaintiff declares that the Defendant took the From the place best known Horse of A. at S. and sold him at D. to the Plaintiff as his proper Horse and afterwards A. retook the Horse If the Defendant plead that the property was in him at the sale upon which issue is ioyned The Venue shall be de S. where the taking is supposed for there the property may be best known which is only in question 42. Ass 8. see several cases in Rolls ib. 603. under this head If the issue be whether L. did ride from London to York and from York to London Where the Counties cannot joyn 5 times in six days this may be tryed by London only Although part of the matter to be inquired of was done in each County In an action of Battery in London if the Defendant justifies in defence of his posses●on in D. in Essex and the Plaintiff says de son tort demesn s●ns tiel cause this ought to be tryed by both Counties if they might joyn because he may be found guilty at another day and therefore because they may not joyn this may be tryed in Essex Of Assises in confinio Com. See 1 Inst 154. In case for words in one County if the Defendant justifie in another County and the Plaintiff reply de son tort demesn c. although the Counties ought to joyn if they could and the Iustification is principally put in issue yet the Tryal may be in either County at the Election of the Plaintiff In Ejectment in London upon a Lease Rolls tit Tryal 620. made there of Land in Mid. if the Defendant plead not guilty this may be tryed in London because the Counties cannot joyn although London cannot joyn with another County 49 E. 3. 20. the Jury ought to enquire of the Ejectment in Mid. and judgement affirmed in a Writ of Error See Rolls tit Tryal 602. Two Counties may
and payments were in another County The Tryal shall be where the Land and payments are 44 E. 3. 42. In Debt upon a Lease in one County and the payment of the Rent upon the Lease limited there also but the Land was in another County and the payment upon the Land this shall be tryed where the Land and payment was for he was bound to pay this there upon the distress ib. But the Tryal should have been where the Writ was brought if the payment had not been alledged to be where the Land was ib. If Debt be brought for Rent upon a Lease Where the Land and Writ c. for years and the Action is brought where the Land is but the Deed of the Lease bears Date in another County the Tryal shall be where the Land and Writ is brought 45 E. 3. 8. The issue being whether the Lessor had a conditional estate or not so a lawful eviction If the issue be in an Assise whether the Where the Land lies and where not Tenant be the eldest Son of J. S. and his birth is alledged in another County yet this shall be tryed where the Land is 46. Ass 5. If an infant bring an Assise and a release of his Ancestor is pleaded against him dated in another County this must be tryed where the Release is dated and not by the Assise although the Plaintiff be an Infant and the circumstances are to be inquired 21 E. 3. 20. See Rolls ib. 611. In case if the Plaintiff declare upon a trust Where from two places in one County and where not Vide hic cap. 10. at D. and of a wrong at S. upon not guilty if it appear the trust is not material the Venue shall only come from S. and not from both places one not being material In case for stopping a way from such a place to such a place and that the obstruction was at D. upon not guilty the Venue shall not come from D. only for all the way is put in issue In Trespass in one Vill and a release pleaded dated in another Vill within the same County upon non est factum this shall be tryed per ambideux Rolls ib. 624. vide hic ante See Rolls ib. 615. many cases about this Where the Venue cannot be from a Vill De Corpore Com. Hamlet or lieu conus there it may be de Corpore Comitatus for if it might not be so the cause could not be tryed A lieu conus is a Castle Mannor or other notorious place well known and generally taken notice of by those who dwell about it and not a Close or Pasture of ground or such like place of no repute A Custom of a County is to be tryed de Corpore Comitatus for the Custom runs thorough the whole County Where the Parish is named by way of Parish denotation or explanation of the place where the Fact is alledged to be done as at the Parish Church of Hauk Huck●nol there the Venire facias shall be of the Town not of the Parish Bulstr 1 part 60 61. If the Fact be alledged in Kingstreet in Town the Parish of St. Margarets in Com. Mid. You have already heard that the Visne shall be from Kingstreet because it is intended to be a Town but where it is alledged to be done at Grays-Inn-Hall or Lincolns-Inn-Hall c. in Holborn the Visne shall be from Holborn which is the Town for as Yelverton said it was never heard of any Inns of Court Venire facias to be had of any of the Inns of Court Bulstr 2. part 120. especially of the Not from house or hall Hall because it cannot be of a House much less of a Hall In Ejectment upon a Demise made at Denham of Lands in parochia de Denham praedict The Visne may be of Denham or of the Parish of Denham because Denham and Parochia de Denham pr●dict are all one by intendment of Law Bulstr 2. part 209. More 709. Hob. 6. But when it appears by the Record or is intended that the Parish Parish is more spacious than the Town as the case in More 837. where in Ejectment the Lease was alledged to be made at Bredon of Tythes in W. and W. Hamlets within the Parish of Bredon there the Venire facias must not be of Bredon but of the Parish because it appears that the Parish extends further than the Town Hob. 326. Where an Action of Debt for Rent is For Rent where the Land lies and when not brought upon the privity of the Contract by the Lessor as against the Lessee or his Executors for Arrearages due in the life-time of the Testator the Visne may be laid in any place but where the Action is brought upon the privity in Estate as against the Assignee of the Lessee or his Executors for Rent due after the Testators death the Visne must be where the Lands lie Lach. misprinted 197. 262. 271. v. li. 3. 24. And so it was adj in case of Hall and Arnold Mich. 1656. B. R. and it was further adj there the Case being of a Lease made at London of Lands in Monmouthshire rendring Rent payable at the Old Exchange for which action is brought by the Heir If there had been no place of payment the Heir must have brought his Action where the Lands lie but the place of payment being in another County he has his Election as on a Lease for years of Lands in two Counties Walkers Case in Debt upon a Lease of Debt for rent of Land in another County Land in another County Nihil debet shall be tryed where the action is brought Br. tit Visne 119. Vide pag. 93. In Replevin brought by Strede against Hartly for taking a Distress at Baildon the Defendant made Conusance as Bayliff because that locus in quo c. was holden of W. H. as of his Mannor of Baildon and upon issue hors de son fee the Venire facias was de vicineto de Baildon and upon motion that the Venire facias ought to have been as well from the Mannor as the Town The Court adjudged it to be well enough for that the Court shall not intend Mannor the Mannor was larger than the Town because it doth not appear so to be though possibly it might as like the Case of Town and Parish Hob. 305. 326. If the Sheriff return that there are no Visne next adjoyning in what Cases Freeholders of that Visne or if the Visne be where the Kings Writ runs not as in the Cinque Ports c. or in a place where Cinque Ports the men are priviledged from serving on Juries out of that place as the Isle of Ely c. the Plaintiff may pray a Venire facias of the Visne next adjoyning and if the Visne be in Wales ou briefe le Roy ne Court the Venire Wales facias shall be directed to the Sheriff of the next
English County to cause the Jury to come de propinquiori Visne of his County to the Visne in Wales adjoyning For the Court shall not be ousted of the Plea Fitz. Abridg. tit Visne 8. Jurisdict 24. In an action against a Hundred the Venire facias may come from the next Hundred generally In Trespass if the Defendant plead not guilty to part and to the residue a Plea which causes the Tryal of that to be by a Jury de Prochein Hundred The Venire shall be awarded al Prochein Hundred for both issues because there ought not to be two Venire facias in one action vide Rolls tit Tryal 596. In an Appeal of murder committed in the Cinque Ports although the King be concerned yet because this is betwixt common persons the Venire facias to the next adjoyning Vill. ibidem If the issue be joyned of a matter in Ireland Ireland this shall be tryed by a Jury of the next County in England ib. If the issue be to be tryed by the Venue of Prochein Hundred a Mannor and the Plaintiff suggests that he is Lord of the Hundred in which the Mannor is and that all within the Hundred are within his Distress if the Defendant acknowledge this the Venue shall not be de Corpore Comitatus but of the next Hundred for if it should be de Corpore Comitatus this should be tryed by the Tenants of the Mannor Rolls ib. 667. If the Visne is in some part mis-awarded or Visne mis-awarded in part sued out of more places or fewer than it ought to be so as some place be right named this is aided by the Stat. of Jeofailes which hath ended the differences in many cases reported in our Books concerning this point wherefore I purposely omit them Error for that the Iudgment was given Infamy where the Land lies by default against the Defendant being an Infant upon issue that he was of full age adjudged that the Tryal should be in Norfolk where the Land was and not in Middlesex where the Action was brought Cro. 3. part 818. If the Visne cometh from a wrong place May be out of a wrong place by Consent yet if it be per assensum partium and so entred of Record it shall stand for Omnis Consensus tollit errorem 1 Inst 125. Holmes vers Sanders Hill 22 23 Car. B. R. Error to reverse a Iudgement given in the Kings Bench in Ireland in Debt for Rent brought by the Assignes of a reversion the Plaintiff declared of a Lease of Land in such a Parish in the Suburbs of Dublin on nil debet pleaded the Venire facias was from the said Parish in Civitate Dublin and Iudgement there per Plaintiff it was assign'd for Error because the Land lies in the Suburbs of the City and the Venire facias was from a Parish in the City Per Cur. It is all one for the Suburbs are always within the Franchise of the City as Fleetstreet is within the Suburbs of London but the Strand not though so reputed Note It was adjudged Error in an Inferior Court that the Venire facias was awarded secundum consuetudinem Curiae which ought to be per Curiam Reader vers More Mich. 1650. B. R. CAP. IX Challenges YOu have already seen of what Visne the Jury ought to be The next thing to be considered is concerning Challenges Challenge is a word common as well to the English as to the French and sometimes Challenge signifieth to claim and the Latine word is vendicare sometime in respect of revenge to challenge into the field and then it is called in Latine vindicare or provocare Sometime in respect of partiality or insufficiency to challenge in Court persons returned on a Jury And seeing there is no proper Latine word to signifie this particular kind of challenge they have framed a word anciently written Chalumniare and Columpniare and Calumpniare and now written Calumniare and hath no affinity with the verb Calomnior or Calumnia which is derived of that for that is of a quite other sense signifying a false accuser and in that sense Bracton useth Calumniator to Calumn●ator be a false accuser but is derived of the old word Caloir or Chaloir which in one signification is to care for or foresee And for that to challenge Jurors is the mean to care for or foresee that an indifferent Tryal be had it is called Calumniare to challenge that is to except against them that are returned to be Jurors and this is his proper signification But sometimes a Summons Sommonitio is said to be Calumniata and a Count to be challenged but this is improperly And forasmuch as mens Lives Fames Lands and Goods are to be tryed by Jurors it is most necessary that they be Omni exceptione majores and therefore I will handle this matter the more largely A Challenge to Jurors is twofold either Challenge is twofold to the Array or to the Polls to the Array of the principal Pannel and to the Array of the Tales And herein you shall To the Array understand that the Jurors names are ranked in the Pannel one under another which order or ranking the Jury is called the Array and the Verb to Array the Jury and so we say in common speech Battail Array for the order of the Battail Array And this Array we call Arraiamentum and to make the Array Arraiare derived of the French word Arroier so as to challenge the Array of the Pannel is at once to challenge or except against all the persons so Arrayed or Impannelled in respect of the Partiality or default of the Sheriff Coroner or other Officer that made the Return And it is to be known that there is a principal Principal Challenges cause of challenge to the Array a challenge to the favour principal in respect of partiality as first if the Sheriff or other Officers be of kindred or affinity to the Plaintiff or Defendant if the affinity continue Secondly If any one or more of the Jury be returned at the denomination of the party Plaintiff or Defendant the whole Array shall be quashed So it is if the Sheriff return any one that he be more favourable to the one than to the other all the Array shall be quashed Thirdly if the Plaintiff or Defendant have an Action of Battery against the Sheriff or the Sheriff against either party this is a good cause of challenge So if the Plaintiff or Defendant have an action of Debt against the Sheriff but otherwise it is if the Sheriff have an action of Debt against either party or if the Sheriff have parcel of the Land depending upon the same Title or if the Sheriff or his Bayliff which returned the Jury be under the distress of either party or if the Sheriff or his Bayliff be either of Counsel Attorney Officer in fee or of Robes or servant of either party Gossip or Arbitrator in the same
one challenged by the Plaintiff and the other by the Defendant When the Tryal is to be had by two Counties the manner of the tryal is worthy of observation and apparent in our Books If the four Knights in the Writ of Right be challenged they shall try themselves and they shall choose the grand Assise and try the challenges of the parties If the cause of challenges touch the dishonour or discredit of the Juror he shall not be examined upon his Oath but in other cases he Juror examined shall be examined upon his Oath to inform the tryors If an Inquest be awarded by default the Defendant hath lost his challenge but the Plaintiff may challenge for just cause and that shall be examined and tryed Wheresoever the Plaintiff is to recover View per visum juratorum there ought to be six of the Jury that have had the view or known the Land in question so as he be able to put the Plaintiff in possession if he recover In Proprietate probanda and a Writ Challenges to inquire for waste the parties have been received to take their challenges But passing over many things touching this matter I will conclude with the saying of Bracton Plures autem aliae sunt causae recusandi juratores de quibus ad praesens non recolo sed quae jam enumeratae sunt sufficiant exempli causa 1 Inst 157 158. Treat doth signifie as taken out or withdrawn Treat what and is applied to a Juror that is withdrawn by consent or removed and discharged by challenge A Juror sick was withdrawn and another sworn Palmers Reports 411. If the Defendant do not appear at the tryal Challenge lost when he is called he loseth his challenge to the Jurors although he doth afterwards appear 'T is a good challenge to a Juror to say he A wrong name is returned by another name in the Pannel A Juror appeared and said he had no No Freehold Freehold and prayed that he might not serve yet the Judge would not spare him for he may have an action against the Sheriff for returning him Rolls 2 part Reports 483. CAP. The Challenge pro defect Hundred must be written in Parchment and t●e Council must arraign it in French upon which the Defendant may take issue or demur The Clerk or Associate in Court must call the Jury over and ask if they have any Lands within the Hundred or had at the time of the Array of the Pannel and whether they dwell or did dwell in the same And upon examination if it appear clearly that they have no Lands or Tenements nor dwell in the Hundred then the Clerk is to mark them by the side of every of their names thus pr●ter Hundred but if he find there be two Hundredors he is to resort back to the prae●er Hundred and swear them in order So that you see the Tryal whether Hundredors or not is determined by the Courts examination by the Poll severally But if the Council demur and the other side joyn in demurrer the Iudge of Assises may affirm the Challenge and over-rule the Demurrer or allow the Demurrer good and proceed to the Tryal of the Cause or if the Iudge doubt it may be determined in Bank but this is great delay If the challenge be adjudged good the Court awards Que le pannel il soit casse At Common Law there ought to have been In Cities Corporations Burroughs and Towns and Counties this Challenge cannot be 4 Hundredors returned and appeared in all actions pro meliori notitia causae in controversia for vicini vicinorum facta scire praesumuntur But by the Statute 35 H. 8. ca. 6. six are to be returned and appear But since by the Statute 27 Eliz ca. 6. if two Hundredors be returned and appear it is sufficient in all personal actions But in real actions there must be six or else Remanet pro defectu Jur. The Court shall appoint two Tryors in a challenge to the Poll and if they find two indifferent the first Tryors shall be discharged and the two that are found indifferent being sworn to try the Issue shall also be sworn to try the rest of their Fellows At Common Law there used to be returned 24 upon the Venire and afterwards a Habeas corpora with a Decem Tales and if a full Jury did not appear or were challenged then a Distringas with an Octo Tales and so to the Duo Tales if there was not a Tales de circumdantibus may be in the case of Aliens full Jury And this was the course until the Statute 35 H. 8. which gives the Tales de circumstantibus at the Assises c. and by the Stat. 5 Phil. Marie ca 7. where the King Queen or Informer c. are parties A Challenge may be taken to those of the Tales de circumstantibus By the Statute 33 Ed. 1. The King and those who prosecute for him must shew their cause of Challenge as betwixt party and party and left to the discretion of the Iustices The King or any one authorised for him may release his challenge Where the party may challenge the King may challenge 'T is no challenge to say the Juror is the Kings Tenant or that he is favourable to the King but 't is good to say the Sheriff or Juror bears grudge or malice to the Defendant where the King is party If the Juror hath any Freehold 't is sufficient although not to 40 s. a year For the Statute which injoyns that speaks only betwixt party and party The first who challenges be he Plaintiff or Defendant shall have the preference and advantage of his challenge If a Juror be once challenged and withdrawn upon the principal he cannot serve upon the Tales if he doth 't is Error and Iudgement may be stayed And so if he be challenged and a Jury remain pro defect Juratorum if he be sworn upon a new Distringas 't is Error not helped by any Statute of Jeofailes and a mis-tryal and a Venire facias de novo may be awarded Cro. Eliz. fol. 429. Whitbys Case Elisors may be sworn in some cases to return and impannel all Juries as should upon any Venire facias Habeas Corpora or Distringas Jur. come to their hands impartially indifferently and without favour or affection or at the denomination of any person The Record of Attainder Conviction Excommunication Outlawry c. or a Copy thereof ought to be produced to prove the cause of challenge thereupon Where bodies politick or Corporate are concerned a challenge may be taken which arises from the individuals as Brother to one of the Prebendaries is a good challenge where the Dean and Chapter are parties c. Hob. 87. so a Parishioner where the right of the Church comes in question at the Suit of the Parson 17. Ass 15. In High-Treason the prisoner may peremptorily challenge to the number of 35. which is under the
good for that it is a debt every where and not like a debt that ariseth by matter collateral But Twisden ●ust doubted Whitehead vers Browne Pasch 15 Car. 2. B. R. The Jury may find Estoppels as the taking Estoppels When the Estoppel is found the ●ourt may judge according to the e●pecial matter of a Lease of a man 's own Land by Deed indented or the delivery of a Deed before the date as in Debt by an Administrator upon a Bond dated 4 Aprilis 24 Eliz The Defendant pleaded that the Intestate dyed before the date of the Obligation and isint nient son fait upon which they were at Issue and adjudged that the Jury might find that the Bond was delivered the 3d of April because they are sworn ad veritatem dicen●um though the parties are estopped to plead a Deed was delivered before the date but they may plead a delivery after the date because it shall never be intended that a Deed was delivered before the date but after it may But if the Estoppel or admittance be Estoppels within the same Record in which Issue is joyned then the Jurors cannot find ●ny thing contrary to this which the parties have affirmed and admitted of Record though it be not true For the Court may give judgment upon matters confessed by the parties and the Jurors are not to be charged with any such thing but only with such in which the parties vary li. 2. 4. li. 4. 53. Co. Lit. 227. A Decree in Chancery shall be tryed by a Decree Jury and not by it self for it is not a Record but a Decree Recorded The Chancery as it is a Court of Equity is not a Court of Record But touching things agitated in the Petty Bag Office it is a Court of Record The Jury may find Deeds or matter of Records not shewed Record if they will though not shewed in Evidence Finch 400. They may inquire of things done before the memory of man lib. 9. 34. Null tiel Record is not to be tryed by a Jury but upon the general issue c. they may find a Record The Jury may find a Warranty being Warranty given in Evidence though it be not pleaded Nay the ●ury may find that which cannot be pleaded as in Trespass upon not guilty The Jury may find that the Defendant leased Lands for life upon Condition Condition and entred for the Condition broken Tho. this cannot be pleaded without Deed yet the Jury may find it Lit. Sect. 366. Where a Collateral Warranty binds this may well be given in Evidence For although it doth not give a right yet in Law this shall bar and bind a Right Lib. 10. 97. But this matter comes more properly under the Title Evidence wherefore we will proceed to that See also in Chap. 13. CAP. XI Evidence and Witnesses EVidence Evidentia This word in legal Evidence understanding saith Coke 1. Inst 283. doth not only contain matters of Record as Letters Patents Fines Recoveries Inrollments and the like and writings under Seal as Charters and Deeds and other Writings without Seal as Court-Rolls Accounts and the like which are called Evidences Instrumenta But in a larger sense it containeth also Testimonia the Testimony of Witnesses and other proofs to be produced and given to a Jury for the finding of any Issue joyned between the parties And it is called Evidence because thereby the point in Issue is to be made evident to the Jury Probationes debent esse evidentes id est perspicuè facile intelligitur And this Evidence with Bracton we may term probatio duplex viz. viva as Witnesses vivâ voce and Mortua as by Deeds Writings and Instruments and violenta praesumptio in many cases is plen● probatio and therefore if all the Witnesses to a Deed be dead then the Deed shall receive Credit per collationem sigillorum scripturae Presumption c. but especially if there hath been a continual and quiet possession which is a violent presumption 1 Inst 6. for no man can keep his Witnesses alive If a thing be generally referred to proof Proof this shall be intended proof by Jury but if other manner of proof be agreed upon that shall take away the proof which the Law generally intends by Jury Hob. 127. As if I promise to pay what mony you prove B. borrowed this may be proved in the same action brought upon the promise Vide Rolls tit tryal 594 595. Men that are so branded with Infamy Witnesses that they cannot be Jurors for which see before who may be Jurors cannot be Witnesses yet per Glyn Ch. Just and Newdigate Just Mich. 1657. B. R. Conviction of common Barretry hinders not from being a witness but Maynard Sergeant held strongly against it At Lent Assises Suff. 1657. St. John Ch. Just C. B. would not allow one who had been whipped for petty Larceny to be a Witness but Earl Sergeant said they ought to be stigmatici that are disabled from being Witnesses Yet per Roll. Ch. Just one burned in the hand for Felony may be a Witness for he is in capacity to purchase Lands and his fault is purged by his punishment Stiles 388. The Wife cannot be a Witness for or Who may be Witnesses against her Husband 1 Inst 6. that is in case of a common person between party and party but between the King and the party on an Indictment she may although it concerns the Feme her self as in the Lord Audley's Case Hutt 116. So she may have the Peace against her Husband And so it was resolved in John Browne's Case Trin. 25 Car. 2. B. R. on the Stat. of 3 H. 7. cap. 2. vid. 1 Cro. 492. The King cannot be a witness by his Letters under his Signet manual One attained of Piracy cannot be a witness to prove another guilty If he accused another before he was attainted and afterwards confesses he wronged him this confession shall be rejected because he is attainted A woman cannot be a witness to prove a man to be a Villain Co. Lit. 6. 8. Neither can the party to the usurious Contract be a Witness against the Vsurer in an Information upon the Statute of Vsury But Kinsmen never so near Tenants Servants Masters Counsellors and Attorneys c. may be Witnesses A Counsellor may be a Witness to the Agreement c. but not to validity of an assurance nor to the Counsel he gave March Rep. 43. If a Witness being served with Process and having money sufficient to bear his charges or less if he accept it do not appear to give his testimony he forfeits 10 l. to the party damnified and must recompence his damages 5 Eliz. 9. If a Witness commit wilful perjury he loseth 20 l. shall be imprisoned 6. months without bail stand in the Pillory and be disabled to be a Witness so shall the suborner who procures the perjury 5 Eliz 9. A party robbed is allowed a
good witness in his own action against the Hundred for he is not bound nay is to be blamed to tell any one what charge he carries with him and if he should not testifie the Law would be often fruitless for want of Evidence or else more Robberies committed by the parties discovering his money In the Case of Brereton and Tatam Mich. 1656. B. R. Glyn. Ch. Just Cited the Lord Chandoi's Case in this Court where one Gates an Executor was produced to prove the Will as a witness to which he as Counsel excepted because of his Executorship It was answered that he had fully administred He replied the Assets might afterward come to his hand but the ●ourt resolved that it would not be presumed to barr his Testimony which was allowed in the principal Case being in ●j●ctment It 's no good exception to a Witness that he hath common per cause of Vicinage in the Lands in question because it s but an excuse of Trespass and no interest Clapham's case Mich. 1657. B. R. The same of common of Shacke If Obli●ee devises the debt to the Obligor and 〈◊〉 Executors deliver up the Bond in sat●●●●action of the Legacy which is cancell'd and after the validity of the Will is questioned viz. whether the Testator was compos c. the Obligor is a good witness for the will because by the cancelling of the Bond his debt was discharged But Contr. in case of a Mortgage for though the deed be cancelled if it be no good will he must pay the mony Goodman vers Turbervill Mich. 1657. B. R. An Action was brought by the Corporation of the Weavers of Norwich for a penalty against a Weaver for workign in his Trade in Harvest time contrary to an Ordinance by them made And Atkins Just allowed one of the Corporation to be a witness though one moiety of the penalty was due to the Corporation Lent Assise 1657. In a Tryal at Bar where an Estate for Life is limited to I. S. remainder to the poor of the Parish of Greenwich by Will the Inhabitants of Greenwich were allowed to be witnesses to prove the Will Townsend and Roane Mich. 1658. B. R. An Action of Debt was brought Summer Ass Suff. 1669. by the Town of Ipswich for 50 ● a Fine set on one chosen Common Council Man called their prime Constable for refusing to renounce the Covenant c. And the Town-Clerk though a Freeman was allowed a witness to prove Election Refusal c. and the Fine set which is for necessity for that none other are or ought to be present at those Acts. Rainsford Just Per Hale Ch. Just Norf. Summer Ass 1668. A Freeman of Lynn is not an allowable witness to prove the custom of Foreign bought and Foreign sold in that Town Harwich vers Twels As to Witnesses priviledges One was sub-poena'd ad testificandum and prayed a priviledge from being arrested which was granted and per Cur. it will supersede an Arrest on mean process but not upon an Execution yet the Sheriff in that Case may be committed for his Contempt Hen. Nevil's case Mich. 15 Car. 2. B. R. Detaining of Witnesses Sir Jo. Jackson was Convict on an Information for preventing of Evidence to be given on an Indictment of Perjury against Fenwick and Holt who had been witne●●es for Sir J. J. he arrested some witnesse● and gave mony to others and so they w●re acquitted He was fined 1000 Marks 1 ●●●ths imprisonment behaviour for 12 months Hill 1663. B. R. Proofs to determine matter of Fact and Proo●s to be offered to a Judge and Jury are of two sorts First Living as by Witnesses and to a Jury one witness is sufficient And Dead as matters of Record as Letters Patents Fines Recoveries Inrollments c. Writings sealed and delivered as Feoffments Leases Releases c. And without Seal as Court-Rolls Accounts c. And if the Case be between the King and a Prisoner he is first to say what he can himself and then all that can say any thing against him are to be heard upon Oath and then others may be heard for him but not upon Oath And according to this Evidence on both sides or without any Evidence at all the Jury are to give their Verdict according to their knowledge and Oaths Such persons as are infamous as are persons attainted of Felony or of a false Verdict or of a Conspiracy or of Perjury or of Forgery upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 14. and not upon the Statute of 1 H. 5. 3. and such as have had Iudgment to lose their Ears or stand on the Pillory or Tumbrel or have been stigmatized or branded and Infidels Men not of sound memory or not of discretion or such as are interested in the cause or have benefit are not competent witnesses Co. 1. Inst 6. but we see Jews are daily admitted witnesses An account given to and allowed by the Plen● Administravit Ordinary is not good Evidence nor a Pedigree by a Herald of Arms to prove an Pedigree Heir but it must be proved by Deeds Records or Witnesses If the issue be a Recognizance or not a Recognisance Recognizance with a defeasance is good Evidence Plo. 14. So of an Agreement Agreement a special Agreement will prove it Plo. 8. A Licence to alien Land or a pardon for alienation of Land was held by a common Tenure in Ca●ite presumption to be a good proof that the Land was held in capite A thing which is concluded in the Ecclesiastical Ecclesiastical proceedings Court which doth concern Lands is not to be given in Evidence for the Courts of Common Law are not to be guided by their proceedings Ancient Deeds may be given in Evidence Ancient Deeds although the execution of them cannot be proved He that takes out a Copy of part of a Record Copy of a Record must at least take out so much as concerns the matter in question or else the Court will not permit it to be read If one produce ● Lease made upon an Outlawry Outlawry in Evidence to a Jury to prove a Title he must also produce the Outlawry it self To prove a Feoffment a Deed of Feoffment Feoffment is shewed but no Livery is indorsed if possession has gone with the Deed it is good Evidence Rolls Reports 1. part 132. Vpon Not Guilty to an Information upon Proviso a penal Law a Proviso to excuse him may be given in Evidence Jones Reports 320. If a man prescribe in a non decimando Non decimando generally he cannot give a Bull in Evidence Palmers Reports 38. A Deed with the Seals torn off was admitted Deed. to declare uses Palmers Reports 403 405. Records prove themselves and cannot be Records proved by Witnesses but Copies of them must and are good Evidence and so may any thing done in the County-Court Court-Baron or Hundred-Court c. be proved by Witnesses A
11. In Trespass the Buttals must be proved as they are laid If the Defendant plead payment to a Bond Payment by presumption or Bill and it appears the Debt is very old and it hath not been demanded nor any use paid for it many years common presumption is good evidence that the money is paid and the Juries use to find for the Defendants in such cases If the Trespass were in truth done the 4th Trespass another day of May and the Plaintiff alledgeth the same to be done the 5th of May or the first of May when no Trespass was done yet if upon evidence it falleth out that the Trespass was done before the Action brought it sufficeth 1 Inst 283. 'T is dangerous to permit evidence to a Deed. Jury by Witnesses that there was such a Deed which they have seen or read or prove the Deed by a Copy because the Deed may be upon Condition Limitation or power of Revocation and if this should be permitted the whole Reason of the Common Law in shewing Deeds to the Court would be subverted for the Deed might be imperfect and void which the Witnesses could not perceive yet in cases of extremity as where the Deed was burned or lost by some other notorious accident the Judges may at their discretion allow them to be proved by Witnesses li. 10. 92. and so of a Record In Case against an Executor whereas Executor the Testator was indebted to the Plaintiff th● Executor promised to pay the debt in consideration the Plaintiff would forbear to sue him the Executor may give in evidence upon Non assumpsit that there was no Debt or that he had no Assets tempore promissionis for then there would be no Consideration li. 9. 94. William Banes Case upon the issue neunques Executor to prove an Administration granted to him is good evidence Dyer 305. Evidence shall never be pleaded but the Evidence matter of fact shall be pleaded and if it be denied the evidence shall be given to the Jury not to the Court lib. 9. 9. Evidence that the Wife of every Copy-holder shall have the Land durante viduitate will not maintain the issue that the Custom of a Mannor is that she shall have the Land during her life after Estate for life her Husbands death because though durante viduitate imports an Estate for life yet an Estate durante vita is more large and beneficial li. 4. 30. Things done before the memory of man What may be given in Evidence in another County or in another Kingdom may be given in Evidence to a Jury as Assets in another County c. More 47. See li. 4. 22. 9. 27. 28. 34. li. 6. 46 47. Vpon issue payment at the day payment Payment before or after the day is no Evidence More 47. but upon Nil debet it is good Evidence because it proves the issue Vpon issue Assets or no Assets or seised or not seised if one give a Feoffment c. in Evidence Covin may be given in Evidence Covin by the other but not if the issue be infeoffed or not infeoffed for it is a Feoffment tiel quel though made by Covin li. 5. 60. Hob. 72. The Book of Doomesday brought in Doomesday-book Court is good Evidence to prove the Land to be ancient Demesne Hob. 188. In Attaint the Plaintiff shall not Attaint give more evidence nor examine more Witnesses than was before but the Defendant may Dyer 212. Copies of the Court-Rolls are the only Court-Rolls for Copy-holders evidence for Copy-holders for as Littleton Sect. 75. tells you they are called Tenants by Copy of Court-Roll because they have no other Evidence concerning their Tenements but only the Copies of Court-Rolls But Cook explains the Text and says This is to be understood of Evidences of Alienation for a Release of a Right by Deed. A Copy-holder that cometh in by way of admittance may have and that is sufficient to extingish the Right of the Copy-holder which he that maketh the Release had In Actions upon the Case Trespass Battery or false imprisonment against any Iustice of Peace Mayor or Bayliff of City or Town Corporate Headborough Portreve Special Evidence upon the general issue by whom Constable Tythingman Collector of Subsidy or Fifteen in any of his Majesties Courts at Westminst or elsewhere concerning any thing done by any of them by reason of any of their Offices aforesaid and all other in their ayd or assistance or by their Commandment c. They may plead the general issue and give the special matter of their excuse or Iustification in Evidence 7 Jac. cap. 5. General acts of Parliament may be given Statutes in Evidence and need not be pleaded and so may general Pardons given by Parliament if they be without Exceptions But commonly advantage of the Act is given by the Act it self to the offnder without pleading it as by the late most truly Pardons so called general act of Indempnity every person thereby pardoned may plead the general issue and give the act in evidence for his discharge which are general and which particular Statutes see lib. 4. 76. Vpon not guilty in Trover the Defendant Trover may give in Evidence that the goods were pawned to him for 10 l. That he distrained them for Rent or damage feasant That as Sheriff he levied them upon Execution or that he took them as Tythes severed Cro. 1. part 157. 3 part 435. Hob. 187. A demand and denial of the goods is evidence of a conversion If there be two Batteries between Plaintiff and Defendant at divers times the If there be two Trespasses and the Defendant peads a Justification if the Plaintiff replies de injuria sua propria c. he cannot give in Evidence a Trespass at another time But he should have replyed that at another time in the same day of his Count the Defendant did the other Trespass c. to which the Defendant may plead another Justification but the Plaintiff cannot then plead a Trespass at another time but must conclude Sans tiel cause c. vide Apres Plaintiff is bound to prove the Battery made the same day in the Declaration and shall not be admitted to give another day in evidence as the case may be As in Battery the Defendant pleaded Son assault Demesne and the Plaintiff replyed de injuria sua propria absque tali sua and in evidence the Defendant maintained that the Plaintiff beat him the day mentioned in the Declaration and in the same place which the Plaintiff perceiving he gave in evidence that the battery was made another day and place to which the Defendant demurred upon the difference aforesaid Brownlow 1 part 233. 19 H. 6. 47. But upon not guilty it is otherwise though there be never so many Batteries between the parties Littleton Sect. 485. Prohibition for suing for Tythes in Booking Park in Essex and surmised that
foot by fraud and given in evidence how can a Creditor who sues for a just Debt be prepared to detect this fraud And note in Scire facias against an Execuor on Iudgement per Testator the Defendant pleaded fully administred generally and the Plaintiff demurred specially and Sir William Jones Sollictor general moved to amend the Plea and Hale Ch. Just thought he ought to plead specially how fully administred Bradford vers Hutchinson H. 25 26 Car. 2. B. R. Debt for Rent on a Lease the evidence to prove the Lease was that the Plaintiff leased a House to the Defendant at a Rent but no time mention'd and it was agreed at the same time that the Lessee was not to leave it without half a years warning per Hale Norf. Summer Assise 1668. It 's a Lease at will the leaving on half a years warning is but a Collateral agreement and no part of the demise Ejectment The Plaintiff Counts of a joint Lease made by A. and B. in evidence it appeared that A. B. and C. were Ioynt-tenants that C. Leased to B. and that A. and D. Leased to the Plaintiff by 3. Just against two it 's good 2 Cro. Jurdanes case fo 83. Count of a joynt Lease made by two in evidence it appears they were Tenants in Common by 3 Just against one it 's not good 2 Cro. 166. Mantles Case Count of a Lease by Husband evidence was a Lease by Husband and Wife with Letter of Attorney to make livery and 't is made in name of both by 3 Just against one it 's good for Livery as to the Feme was void 2. Cro. Gardners case Of a Lease made 5. May 10. Regis habendum from Lady-day last past for 21 years Extunc prox sequent In evidence a Lease of 5 May 10. Regis habendum from Lady-day last past for 21 years next following the date of the said Indenture adjudged good and affirmed in Error Hob. 19. Ejectment of a Rectory evidence of the taking of Tythes only and not Entry into the Glebe the Plaintiff was nonsuit Latch 62. Hems and Stroud Ejectment of a Lease to A. of Lands in the possession of three Tenants for years delivered to I. S. as an Escrow with Letter of Attorney to enter into all and then to deliver his Deed c. evidence that the Attorney entred upon one Lessee in name of all and delivered the Deed c. Per Jones Just It 's good enough for where the Freehold is in one his Entry into one Lessee for years in name of all the rest is good Latch 71. Dame Argells case Where one declares on a fictitious Lease to A. for three years and within the same time declares of another fictitious Lease to B. of the same Lands the last is not good For Trespass for the mean profits must be brought in the first Lessees name ut dicitur Ejectment of Tythes a Lease for life of Tythes is good if there be Church or Church-yard to make Livery in resolved in Tryal at Bar Wheeler vers Hanchet Hill 14 15 Car. 2. B. R. v. Jones rep 321 322. Entry and Claym made upon the Land within 5 years after the death of the Baron of the Countess of Peterborough to avoid a fine she being issue in tayle proved by one Witness and allowed at a Tryal at Bar B. R. Mich. 15 Car. 2. Floyd and Pollard Custom of Copyholders in extream is to surrender into one Tenants hands in the presence of credible Witnesses A surrender was made accordingly but presented to be done to another Tenant yet being proved to be done to a Tenant it was holden by Wadh. Wyndham Just to be good and by him a Glove or a Turfe is a Rod to give seisin by Maye's case Norf. Summer Assises 1663. A Will under which Title to Land is made must be shown it self and the Probate is not sufficient Contr. if it were on a Circumstance or as inducement or that the Will remain in Chancery or other Court by special order of such Court. Eden vers Chalk-hill Mich. 13 Car. 2. B. R. Also Inrollment of a Deed which needs no Inrollment is no evidence ib. The issue was fine uncertain or certain 2 years Rent and no more the evidence was of admittances on surrenders uncertain but all under 2 years Rent Per Williams Just you ought to produce fines on descent and fines paid above two years Rent 2 Bulst 32. Allen vers Abraham A lease was made by parol and agreed to be put in Writing and Indentures bespoke but being held for Ten years and no Indentures executed it was ruled for a lease parol Per Barkley Just 13 Car. 1. York Clayton 53. By Just Berkley 1638. York Hedges cont-Clayton 57 a Will under Seal proved examined by the original was allowed good evidence Quaere I think the practice against it A Lease and Release were given in evidence to entitle the Plaintiff and they both were named haec Indentura but were not indented good per Hale Ch. Baron Norf. Summer Assises 1668. Briant vers Trendle After default in Ejectment the Defendant may confess Lease Entry and ouster and may give evidence and have all advantages except Challenges and if the Plaintiff becomes non suit any one for the Defendant may pray it be recorded Per H. Wyndham Just Bucks Lent 68 Dr. Crawle's case Deprivation in spiritual Court for Simony disables from bringing Ejectment because he can make no Lease yet quaere If Mortgagor continues in possession without provision for that purpose in the Deed he is Tenant at Will and if he levies a Fine it 's no disseisin by him continuing in possession still because after the Will determin'd he is Tenant at sufferance Per Hale Ch. Baron Bedford Summer Ass 1669. Declaration on a Lease made 14 Jan. 30. Eliz. evidence of a Lease Sealed 13 Jan. good for if it was a Lease 13. it was a Lease made 14. 4. Leon 14. Feoffments of 40 years standing and possession going accordingly you need not prove Livery it may be intended per Jury Roll. rep 132. The Common Rock on which so many have split is laying the Lease to be à die datus and the Entry the same day which is a disseisin not purged by the Commencement of the Lease for where an interest passes à is exclusive and so the entry the same day is before the Lease was to Commence is a disseisin but in cases of Obligation where no interest passes it is contra quod nota Trespass Count of Trespass done in one acre evidence of Trespass done but in half that acre good 2 Cro. Winkworths Case The Lady Hatton brought Trespass for breaking her Close and taking away her Horse c. against two Defendants they plead Not guilty as to the taking of Her Horse as to the rest they say that the Horse of one of the Defndants was in the Close c. and they took him out doing as little damage as they could quae est
eadem c. The Plaintiff replies de injuriâ suâ propriâ c. The evidence was that the Plaintiff as Lady of the Mannor took the Horse as an Estray and it was Cryed and Marked c. that the Defendants refused to pay for the meat and took him away before the year and a day was out 1. Per Wadh. Wyndham Just d'assize A Lord may detain an Estray for meat yet no Trespass lies if the owner takes him but an action of the Case lies for the meat 2. If the action had been brought against the servant only he must justifie c. But being brought against Master and Servant this joynt-justification is good Cambr. Summer Assises 1667. Lady Hatton against Cotes and al. In Trespass the evidence for the Defendant was that the Defendant had a Barn and purschased a way over the Plaintiffs Land to that Barn after the Defendant bought other Lands lying contiguous to that Barn on the one side and to a Haven on the other side and carried Carriages by that way to the Barn and through it over his own new purchased Land to the Haven Per Hale Ch. Baron If I purchase a general way to such a place I may go from thence on my own ground whither I please though I purchase the ground after the way purchased Summer Assises Norf. 1665. Heynsworth vers Bird. Trespass was brought against many by a School-mistress for taking away a child her Scholar with a Scarfe of the Mistresses per Keeling Ch. Just In Trespass for taking things all are principals that are present and consenting Contra in taking persons and this action lies not by the Mistress for the child but for the Scarfe only Lent Norf. Ass 1663. Mary Coopers case Trespass lies for Lessee in Ejectment on a fictitious Lease to recover mean profits during the continuance of that Lease mentioned on Record And the Recovery shall maintain it Otherwise if brought by the Lessor for he is no party to the action Trespass lies not for pulling down a Pew in a Church fastned to a pillar with a Chain Contra had it been fixed by nails driven into the pillar per Glyn Ch. Just Trevors case Trespass quare fregit liberam Warrenam suam and took his Conies In evidence it appeared that the Plaintiff had liberty of chase in the place which though it includes Warren yet a general Trespass lies not but an action of the case E. of Arundels case Pasch 1658. B. R. Per Earl Sergeant if Beasts be impounded and the Key lost the Officer by Replevin may break the pound and deliver the Cattle per Stat. Marlebridge 52 H. 3. 21. Tenants in Common must joyn in Trespass done against them so Avowry Lead and Lamsteads case 7 Car. B. R. cited by Finch in Argument Or Tenant in Common surviving shall have Trespass In Trespass the Defendant sets forth a conditional Feoffment for payment of money at such a day and place and that he paid it accordingly issue joyned on the payment at the day and place evidence of payment before the day is not good Contra had the special matter been pleaded with acceptance More 47. In Trespass with Continuando to recover mean profits an Entry and possession of the Land before the Trespass must be proved and also another Entry after the Trespass In Trespass the Defendant prescribes to dig in the Common for Clay to repair antient houses holden of that Mannor and good Berney vers Stafford Norf. Lent Assises 1667. In Trespass they were at issue on Not Guilty and at the Assises the Defendant left his former plea and pleaded an accord with satisfaction the Iudge would have had it replied to and tryed presently but the Councel refused whereupon the Jury was sworn and the Plaintiff nonsuited Bedford Assises Lent 1667. Green vers Reynolds But this was contrary to the opinion of Sir Orlando Bridgeman at the same Assises and Contr. to 10 H. 7. 21. and 1 Bul. 92. Trespass lies by Recoveror in Erroneous Iudgement for a mean Trespass because the Plaintiff in Writ of Error recovers all mean profits and the Law by fiction of relation will not make a wrong doer dispunishable 13. rep Co. 22. but Contra where Act of Parliament restores c. Trespass for assault and wounding in Suff. the Defendant as to vi armis non Cul. As to the other justification of molliter Manus c. in Norf. and several Tryals Per Hale Ch. Baron Suff. Ass Summer 1668. the vi armis can't be tryed till the other be tryed Contr. If the first issue of non Cul. was as to the wounding and by him evidence of Livery of seisin generally shall be intended for life only The Hogs of B. were put into the yard of A. and broke into the Land of C. and did Trespass action lies against A. though the servant of B. did look to them and serve them by which the owner had the special possession of them So if Agisted Cattle do Trespass the Agistor shall answer Dawtry vers Huggins Clayton 33. per Barkley 11 Car. York A. by Indent of uses raised an Estate to B. in Fee who regrants Turbary to A. by another Deed and after A. levies a fine to confirm the Estate and uses abovesaid declared this doth not touch the Turbary per Vernon 11 Car. York Clayton 42. Any one imployed by an Officer is an Officer within 7 Jac. 5. to plead general issue and give the special matter in evidence Clayton 54. Prescription to tether Equos Boves upon such a balk c. Mares and Cowes good evidence within that prescription Per Barkley Clayton 54. Per Hale A Corporation may bargain and sell though it has been thought an use upon use they being seised to the use of their house But I think it rather a trust than an use If a Just of P. send his Warrant to I. S. who is no Officer to bring one before him if I. S. be no Officer he is not bound to execute it yet if he does execute it it 's good and he may execute it in any part of the County And so a Constable of one Town may execute a Warrant in any other Town in the same County and any such Warrant is as large as the Justices Commission is per Hale Norf. Summer Assises 1668. Wrongries case In Trespass against one for Gleaning on his ground per Hale Norf. Sum. Assises 1668. The Law gives licence to the poor to glean c. by the general Custom of England but the licence must be pleaded specially and can't be given in evidence on non Cul. Trover The Citizens of London gave in evidence their Custom to take Toll Jones 240. In Trover for an Horse proved of 15 l. value the Jury gave but 3 l. damages upon mistake they thinking that the Plaintiff had his Horse again Per Wadh. Wyndham if the Jury had not been gone they should have mended their Verdict but a new action of
Fine be given in Evidence with five years non clayme c. the fine must be shewed with the Proclamations under Seal and the Chirograph will not serve The confession of a party must be taken whole and not by parts As if to prove a debt it be sworn that the Defendant confessed it but withal he said at the same time That he paid it his confession shall be valid as to the payment as well as that he owed it Per Hale Ch. Just And so is common practice A deed cancelled by practice was allowed to be read in Evidence in action under that Deed the practice being proved Hetly 138. Against a Purchasor bona fide recital in a Deed of money paid is not sufficient nor acquittance for the money unless it be of antient standing and then it shall be presumed The Deed to lead the uses of a Fine sur concessit need not be proved per Testes If a deed of Feoffment be shown but no Livery possession going with the Deed is Evidence to a Jury to find Livery At Guild Hall Trin. 23 Car. 2. Hale Ch. Just cited the Case of Sir Paul Pindar A Levari c. was proved by a recital of it in another Record and Hale and Mainard demurred on the Evidence and adjudged against them for this Cause viz. That it was proved there was such a Record that it was filed that it was taken off the file But by him generally without such proof the evidence is not good because one Record may recite one that never was The Jury are to decide the fact and evidence is not given but to inform them in their consciences of the truth for although no evidence is given of either side yet they may give their verdict of one side or the other 14 H. 7. 29. And therefore although two witnesses are necessary where the tryal is by witnesses as in the Civil Law Yet they are not of necessity where the tryal is by Jury And where witnesses are joyned Office of the Jury with the Jury yet they may be rejected if they will not agree with the twelve and the twelve may give their Verdict The Jury after they are departed from the Barr may return to hear their evidence of any thing they doubt before the Verdict Sur Travers de done in tayle the witnesses Done in Tayle prove That another made the Done this doth not warrant the issue In an action against the Sheriff upon Extortion vers Vic. the Statute of Extortion That he took it for Barretée of one who was acquit is good evidence Possession is an evidence of right and he that hath possession may distrain the Cattle Possession of him that hath no title for the taking is in respect of the possession more than of the title In debt for Rent upon a Lease and nil Debt for Rent debet pleaded ne unques seisie de terre is good evidence otherwise upon the plea of riens arrere or levy per distresse Parson or not Parson in such issue Parson you may give in evidence a resignation although it be in another County and Spiritual In riens passe per le fait Not his Fait deed may be given in evidence In Trespass quare claus fregit with What ought to be proved in evidence abuttals all the abuttals and descriptions must be proved But if the abuttal be laid North c. and it incline North though not directly it is sufficient sic de caeteris Vpon this Issue the account given Plene administravit to the Ordinary shall not be given in evidence nor any respect had to it Will The probat is good for the personal What shall be given in evidence and what is good evidence estate but not to prove a Will in writing of Land by the Statute Recital of other Grants by Letters Patents Recital in Letters Patents in Letters Patents are some evidence but not fit to be allowed without shewing the former Letters Patents or a copy But the Jury may find them Surmise in a Prohibition The proof of this surmise in any Court of Record shall not be given in evidence in another action upon the same custome because the Defendant in the prohibition cannot cross examine Depositions Depositions in the Court Christian in the Court of the Councel of York touching the title of Land of which they have not conusance or in another Suit against him who claimeth not under those parties by the Commissioners upon a Commission of Bankrupt because the party could not cross examine shall not be allowed in evidence But a sentence given in the spiritual Court touching Tithes may be given in Evidence in an Action at Common-Law for this is a judicial act After evidence given and the Jury ready Former Tryal to give their Verdict and then the Atturney General will not proceed but draws a Juror and brings another information none of the former Jurors shall be admitted to give in evidence that the Jury were ready to give their Verdict against the King in the first information for this ought not to be discovered for so no benefit would accrue to the King by his Prerogative to draw a Juror But this may be given in evidence in another What may be given in evidence upon a special Issue action where the King is not concerned In debt for rent upon non demisit that Debt for rent the lessor riens avoit in the land at the time of the demise may be given in evidence Vpon an Issue of Common appendant c. Common common per cause de vicinage cannot be given in evidence If the Defendant plead son assault demesne Son Assaule demesne in Battery in Battery and the Plaintiff reply de injuria sua propria absque tali causa And so issue is joyned if there was a battery at another day than what the Plaintiff and Defendent have assigned upon the Plaintiff and another upon the Defendant by the Plaintiff The Verdict ought to be for the Defendant for if the Defendant prove any assault made upon him by the Plaintiff this ought to be found for him although it was at another day than what he hath alledged for the day is not material But upon such speciall justification the Defendant hath liberty to prove his Plea at any time and the Plaintiff might have made a new assignment at another time for peradventure there might be several trespasses at several times to which the Defendant may have several Pleas and therefore if such manner of pleading should not be allowed and such evidence the Defendant could not tell how to help himself nor could know for what Trespass the action is brought Vide devant hic appres cap. 13. If the Issue be whether the Kings Surrender Tenant by Letters surrendred to the King or not the accepting of new Letters Patents which is a surrender in Law is good
the Plaintiff was seized in his Demesn as of Fréehold and that afterwards the Rent was behind at such a Feast c. By which the Lessor entred into the Land upon the possession of the Lessée And pray the discretion of the Iustices if this be a Disseisin done to the Plaintiff or not Then for that it appeareth to the Iustices that this was no Disseisin to the Plaintiff insomuch as the Entry of the Lessor was congeable on him The Iustices ought to give Iudgment that the Plaintiff shall not take any thing by his Writ of Assize and so in such case the Lessor shall be ayded and yet no Writing was ever made of the Condition For as well as the Iurors may have Conusance of the Lease they also as well may have Conusance of the Condition which was declared and rehearsed upon the Lease In the same manner it is of a Feoffment in Fée or a guift in tail upon Condition although no Writing were ever made of it And as it is said of a Verdict at large in an Assize c. In the same manner it is of a Writ of Entry founded upon a Disseisin and in all other Actions where the Iustices will take the Verdict at large there where such Verdict at large is made the manner of the whole Entry is put in Issue But in Assise of Rent it cannot be found to be upon Condition unless they also find the Deed of the Condition So of a Confirmation in Fee to Lessée for years Per Hale Ch. Just Guild-hall Hill 1671. A Special Verdict may be found as to Damag●s in an Action of the Case as the Case was there viz. Pro Quer ' and if so c. then such Damages if so c. then Damages such and he said he had known it so done in Debt and the Damages three ways Also in such case where the Enquest may General Verdict give their Verdict at large if they will take upon them the knowledge of the Law upon the matter they may give their Verdict generally as is put in their charge as in the case aforesaid they may well say that the Lessor did not disseize the Lessée if they will c. The Iury may likewise find Estoppel Estoppels which cannot be pleaded as in the 2 d Report fol. 4. it well appears where one Goddard Administrator of James Newton brought an Action of debt against John Denton upon an Obligation made to the Intestate bearing date the 4th day of April Anno 24 Eliz. The Defendant pleaded that the Intestate dyed before the Date of the Obligation and so concluded that the said Escript was not his Deed upon which they were at Issue And the Iury found that the Defendant delivered it as his Déed 30 July Anno 23. Eliz. and found the Tenor of the Déed in haec verba Noveriat universi c. Dat. 4. Aprilis Anno 24 Eliz. And that the Defendant was alive 30 July Anno 23. Eliz. And that he dyed before the said date of the Obligation and prayed consideration of the Court if this was the Defendants Deed And it was adjudged by Anderson Chief Justice Windham Periam and Walmesley that this was his Deed And the Reason of the Iudgment was That although the Obligèe in Note that a Deed may be pl●aded to be delivered after the dare but nor before because it shall not be intended written before the date which may be after the date 12 H. 6. 1. pleading cannot alledge the delivery before the date as it is adjudged in 12 H. 6. 1. which case was affirmed to be good Law because he is estopped to take an averment against any thing expressed in the Deed yet the Jurors who are sworn ad veritatem dic●nd shall not be estopped For an Estoppel is to be concluded to speak the truth and therefore Jurors cannot be estopped because they are sworn to speak the truth But if the Estoppel or Admittance be As in Wast supposed in A. to plead that A is a hamlet in B. and not a Town of it self admitteth the Wast c. 9 H. 6. 66. and the Jury cannot find no Wast for that would be against the Record Estoppel within the same Record in which the Issue is joyned upon which the Jurors give their Verdict there they cannot find any thing against this which the parties have affirmed and admitted of Record although it be not true For the Court may give Iudgement upon a thing confessed by the parties and the Jurors are not to be charged with any such thing but only with things in which the parties vary Ib. li. 5. 30. So Estoppels which bind the Interest of the Land as the taking of a Lease of a mans own La●d by Déed indented and the like Cro. 1. part 110. Lib. 4. 53. being specially found by the Iury the Court ought to judge according to the special matter for albeit Estoppels regularly must be pleaded and relyed upon by apt conclusion and the Iury is sworn ad veritatem dicend yet when they find veritatem facti they persue well their Oath and the Court ought to adjudge according to Law So may the Iury find a Warranty being given in Evidence though it be not pleaded because it bindeth the right unless it be in a Writ of Right Warranty not pleaded when the Mise is joyned upon the méer right 1 Inst 227. Verdicts ought to be such that the Court Uncertain Verdicts may go clearly to Indgment thereon and therefore Verdicts finding matter incertainly or ambiguously are insufficient and void and no Iudgment shall be given thereupon As if an Executor plead Plene Administravit and Issue is joyned thereon and the Jury find that the Defendant hath Goods within his hands to be administred but find not to what value this is an uncertainty and therefore an insufficient Verdict li. 9. 74. 1 Inst 227. It is the Office of the Jurors to shew the The Office of the Jury verity of the fact and leave the Iudgment of the Law to the Court. And therefore upon an Indictment of Murder quod felonice per cussit c. If the Iury find per cussit tantum yet the Verdict is good for the Iudges of the Court are to resolve upon ●he special matter whether it was felonice and so Murder or not li. 9. 69. And if the Court adjudge it Murder then the Jurors in the conclusion of their Verdict find the Felon guilty of the murther contained in the Indictment A Verdict that finds part of the Issue and Verdict finding part of the Issue finding nothing for the rest is insufficient for the whole because they have not tryed the whole Issue wherewith they are charged As if an Information of intrusion be brought More 406. against one for intruding into a Messuage and 100 Acres of Land upon the general Issue the Iury find against the Defendant for the Land but say nothing for the House this
was intended for damages and how much for costs so that there may be more damages than the Plaintiff declared for or less and so the Court knows not how to increase the cost wherefore he shall have Iudgment but for 20 marks by reason of the incertainty Where a special Verdict is not entred according Verdict amended by the Notes to the Notes the Record may be amended and made agrée with the Notes at any time though it be 3 or 4 c. Terms after it is entred lib. 4. 52. lib. 8. 162. Cro. 1 part 145. In the Case of Turnor and Thalgate Mich. 1658. B. R. It was said per Cur ' That special Verdicts may be amended by the Notes but the Notes cannot be amended or inlarged by any Averment or Affidavit for that were to f●●d a Verdict by the Court. Yet in that Case where the Notes were that the Iudgment c. was vacated pro ut per Rule the Verdict was amended vacated per Cur ' pro ut per Rule for so is implied in the Notes See a Verdict amended by the Notes after Iudgment and Error brought Rolls 1 part Reports 82. If the matter and substance of the Issue Form Hob. 54. be found it is sufficient for precise forms are not required by Law in special Verdicts which are the finding of Lay-men as in Pleadings which are made by men learned in the Law and therefore intendment in many Cases shall help a special Verdict as much as a Testament Arbitrament c. And therefore he which makes a Deputy ought to do it by Escript but when the Iury find generally that A. was Deputy to B. all necessary incidents are found by this and upon the matter they find that he was made Deputy by Déed because it doth tantamount lib. 9. 51. And in the 5th Report Goodale's Case It was resolved That all matters in a special Verdict shall be intended and supplyed but only that which the Iury refer to the Consideration of the Court. In all Cases where the Iury find the matter Ill conclusion committed to their charge at large and over more conclude against Law the Verdict is good and the conclusion ill li. 4 42. and More 105. 269. the Iudges of the Law will give ●udgment upon the special matter according to the Law without having regard to the conclusion of the Iury who ought not to take upon them Iudgment of the Law li. 11. 10. Vide Devant Where the Declaration in Trespass is As general as the Narr Cum aliquibus averiis of a number uncertain and the Verdict is as general as the Declaration cum aliquibus averiis there the Verdict is good Cro. 2. part 662. In Ejectione firme where the Plaintiff declared of a Messuage and 300 Acres of Pasture in D. per nomina of the Mannor of Monkhall and five Closes per nomina c. upon Not guilty the Iury gave a special Verdict viz. quoad four Closes of Pasture containing by Estimation 2000 Acres of Pasture that the Defendant was Not guilty Quoad residuum they found matter in Law And it was moved by Yelverton That this Verdict was imperfect in all For when the Quoad Residuum incertain Iury find that the Defendant was Not guilty of four Closes of Pasture containing by estimation 2000 Acres of Pasture it is incertain and doth not appear of how much they acquit him And then when they find quoad residuum tne special matter it is incertain what that Residue is so there cannot be any Iudgment given and of that Opinion was all the Court wherefore they awarded a Venire facias de novo to try that Issue Cro. 2 part 1●3 Ejectione firmae of 30 Acres of Land in D. and S. The Defendant was found guilty of 10 Acres and Quoad Residuum not guilty Quoad Resisiduum and it was moved in arrest of Iudgment That it is uncertain in which of the Vills this Land lay and therefore no Iudgment can be given sed non allocatur and it was adjudged for the Plaintiff for the Sheriff shall take his Information from the party for what ten Acres the Verdict was Cro. last part 465. diversitas apparet Where the Iury find Circumstances upon Circumstances an Evidence given to incite them to find fraud c. yet the same is not sufficient matter upon which the Court can judge the same to be fraud c. Brownlow 2. part 187. Yet in many Cases the Iury may find Circumstances and presumptions upon which the Court ought to judge As to find that the Husband delivered Goods devised by the Wife Vpon this the Court adjudged that More 192. the Husband assented to the devise at first Where a Verdict is certainly given at the Postea amended how Tryal and uncertainly returned by the Clerk of the Assizes c. The Postea may be amended upon the Iudges certifying the truth how the Verdict was given Cro. 1. p●rt 338. In many Cases a Verdict may make an ill Ill Plea made good by Verdict Plea or Issue good As in an Action for words Thou wast perjured and hast much to answer for it before God Exception after Verdict for the Plaintiff in arrest of Iudgment For that it is not laid in the Declaration that he spake the words in auditu complurimorum or of any one according to the usual form sed non allocatur for being found by the Verdict that he spake them it is not material although he doth not say in auditu plurimorum whereupon it was adjudged for the Plaintiff Cro. 1. part 199. Sée Cro. last part 116. Where the Barr was ill because no place of payment was alledged yet the payment being found by Verdict it was adjudged well enough for a payment in one place is a payment in all places Trespass by Baron and feme de clauso fracto of the Barons And for the battery of the feme ad dampnum ipsorum the Defendant Quoad the Clausum fregit pleaded Not guilty Quoad the Battery justifies And for the first Issue it was found for the Defendant And for the second for the Plaintiff and now moved in arrest of Iudgment that the Declaration is not good because the Baron joyns the feme with him in Trespass Baron Feme de clauso fracto of the Barons which ought not to be But for the Battery of the feme they may joyn whereto all the Court agréed But it was moved That in regard it was found against the Plaintiffs for this Issue in which they ought not to joyn and the Defendant is thereof acquitted and the Issue is found against the Defendant for that part wherein they ought to joyn This Verdict hath discharged the Declaration for that part which is ill and is good for the residue As in 9 E. 4. 51. Trespass by Baron and Feme for the Battery of both The Defendant pleaded Not guilty and found guilty and damages assessed
if a Release be pleaded in a Foreign County and tryed there for the Plaintiff there also shall damages be assessed by the same Iury. For where the 21 Ass 14. principal is tryed there also shall the Accessary and incidents be inquired of I need use no other instances to illustrate this than the case abovesaid They may find a Condition to defeat a What things the Jury may find Freehold of Land although it be not pleaded but of things in grant they must also find the Déed of the Condition Vpon Traverse of a Lease Modo forma the Iury may find a Lease of another date Modo forma although the date be mistaken in the Pleading but not a Lease made by another than from whom was pleaded for this is out of the issue in matter and form In an Assise of Rent the Iury may find Rent that the Rent was granted with an Atturnment although no specialty be shewed A Fine or Recovery may be found by the Matter of Record Iury without shewing of it under Seal The Iury cannot find against what is admitted by the Record They may find a Divorce which is a Record Divorce in the Spiritual Court but not by our Law Attainder of Felony not pleaded cannot be Attainder found unless Sub pede sigilli 26 Ass 2. The Iury is not to inquire of this which is agréed by the parties As in Dower if the Tenant says he has Dower been always ready to render Dower and the issue be if the Husband dyed seised the Iury is not to inquire if the Estate was dowaable for this is confessed If the Defendant doth not deny the Wast Wast but Pleads another matter scilicet nul tiel vill lou c. the Iury is not to inquire of the Wast but give damages although no Wast be made In Debt upon a Bond with a Condition Award to perform an Award and the Defendant Plead Nullum fecit Arbitrium and the Plaintiff reply fecit Arbitrium and sets it forth and the Defendant rejoyn Nul tiel award the Iury cannot find any matter dehors to make the Award void in Law which doth not appear within the Award pleaded As that the release awarded would discharge the Bond of the Submission for nothing is in issue but whether such an Award was made in f●it as is alledged neither could this matter be alledged by any Rejoynder for it would have béen a departure from the Plea and ● Iury cannot find that which would have béen a departure because out of their issue But in this Case if the Defendant would have took advantage of it he ought to have Pleaded all this matter in his Barr and not have said Nullum fecit Arbitrium for 't is a departure in the Rejoynder to acknowledge an Award which was denyed in the Plea In Debt for 20 s. and the Issue be solvit How the Jury ought to find their Verdict and what shall be intended ad diem and the Verdict be quod debet the 20 s. this is not good because it is not direct but by Argument In Debt upon an Obligation if the Defendant say That he is a Lay-man not lettered and 't was read as an Acquittance Nient lettered Et issint nient son fait if the Iury find he knew what he did and that it was a Bond and he was willing to be bound this is no good Verdict because they ought precisely to find if it was his Déed or not If the Issue be whether where a Copyhold is granted to thrée for the lives of two if he which dye seised c. ought by Custom to Custom pay a Heriot or not and the Iury find that there was never any such Estate granted in the Mannor this is not good for the reasons aforesaid So if the Issue be if by Custom an Estate tayle may be granted and the Iur● find that it may be granted in Fée which is greater yet 't is not good In Trespass for taking and cutting his Trespass Leather if the Defendant justifie as a Searcher and cut it for the better search More scrutatorum without any other damage and the Plaintiff reply De injuria sua propria Absque hoc that he cut it More scrutatorum upon which Traverse issue is joyned and the Iury find that the Defendant cut it as the Plaintiff has alledged this is no good Verdict because 't is not any answer to the issue but by Argument In Trespass and Battery in A. to find Battery not guilty in A. is not good for it ought to be generally not guilty Vpon this Plea if the Plaintiff reply Riens per Descent that he hath divers Lands in D. per descent and the Iury find he had divers Lands by descent this is good without finding what for 't is Incertain not material in regard upon this false Plea a general Iudgment is to be without having respect to the Assets Of 5 Acres if they find the Defendant Ejectment guilty in 8 pieces de terre parcel tenementorum predict 't is a void Verdict because uncertain and no Execution can be made of peices In case upon non Assumpsit Pleaded if Verdict Special the Iury find that the Defendant non Assumpsit yet if two Witnesses say true then we find that he did Assume The first shall stand for the Defendant and the last words are void and Surplusage shall not vitiate Surplusage If upon a Lease of 20 Acres and the Defendant Ejectment plead Non dimisit and the Iury find quod dimisit 10 Acres tantum and the Conclusion of the Verdict is Et si super totam materiam Curiae videbitur quod Defendant dimisit 20 Acres then they find for the Plaintiff and if not then for the Defendant this is repugnant and so the Verdict is void in all To Assess Damages incertainly is void Certain As to say we Assess 40 l. if we must by Law if not then but 3 l. this is void Indelitatus assumpsit to Assess Damages occasione debiti predicti is good although it ought to be occasione non performationis c. In an Information upon the Statute Information 39 El. ca. 11. for Dying with Logwood by which he lost 20 l. for every Offence upon Not guilty if the Iury find him Guilty for using this against the Statute for 40 days by which he lost this is not good because he forfeits 20 l. for every time and the number of times do not appear If the Iury find the words in the Will and yet do not find the Will the Verdict is not good If they first find the Special Matter and then find the Issue generally the Special Matter is hereby waved If the Iury find that J. S. was seised in Where a Special Verdict shall be good by Intendment Fée and Devised the Land to J. D. although they do not find
Embraceors F. N. 6. Br. 171. So much doth the Law hate that Jurors Fined for taking Money after their Verdict should privately take Money for their Verdict That certain Jurors were fined for taking Money after their Verdict though there was no pr●ingagement for it 39 Assise p. 19. The practice is otherwise at this day if it were not the Middlesex Iuries would not so Court the Bayliffs to return them especially to Tryals at Barr where 5 l. a man is frequent Gratuity sometimes more If a full Iury appear and some are challenged Issues off so that the Iury remains for default of Iurors the Defaulters shall loose their Issues 4 H. 6. 7. otherwise if a Iury be sworn and one is withdrawn by consent But if there be a joynder of Counties and a Iury of one County appear and not of the other The Defaulters of that County from which enough came shall not loose their Issues because the Inquest doth not remain for their default but for the default of them of the other County 48 Ass 5. Mes quaere If the Iurors at the return of Scire fac Amercement make default yet they shall not be amerced because the parties may be claimed at the first day but at the return of the Habeas Corpora they shall 10 E. 4. 19. 1 E. 3. 12. If any of the Iurors appear the Court Demand sur peine may charge them to inquire if any of the other Iurors were within the Town after the return and if they find they were they shall be demanded upon a Pein and if they come not they shall be amerced Rolls tit Trial. 632. A Juror was challenged and six other Jurors were sworn to try the Challenge who found him indifferent and thereupon the Juror fined for departing when he was challenged Jury was demanded but did not appear for which default he was fined the value of his Lands for a year and the other Jurors inquired of the value c. although the other party then would have challenged him when he was demanded so that he might have béen treit But the Court would not admit this because then the King would have lost his Fine 36 H. 6. 27. If a Juror appear and is adjourned upon Juror adjourned upon pain pain and makes default in this Case because he shall be fined to the value of his Land per annum this shall be inquired by his Companions of the Jury because the Court knows not the value of his Land li. 8. 41. A Verdict was taken from the Fore-man Fined for giving a Verdict before they were agreed of the Jury to which one of them did not assent and damages assessed to 20 s. in Trespass and Assault and afterwards every one of the 11. were fined for giving their Verdict before they were all agreed 40 Assise 10. Where a Iury are to be fined a Fine The fine must not be joynt jointly imposed on them is not legal but they must be severally fined because the offence of one is not the offence of another Et nemo debet puniri pro alieni delicto For then it might be said Rutilius fecit Aemilius plectitur lib. 11. 42. A man stroke a Juror at Westm sitting Punishment for striking a Juror in the Court who passed against him and he was thereof indicted and arraigned at the Kings Suit and attainted his judgment was that he should go to the Tower and stay there in prison all days of his life and that his right hand should be cu● off and his Lands seised into the Kings ha●ds 41 Assise p. 25. and now our Juror sées what punishment it is to strike him in the face of the Court. Let him hold his hands from others least the same Iudgment light on him By the Statute of 27 Eliz. cap. 6. It is Enacted that upon every first Writ of Habeas Corpora or Distringas with a Nisi prius 10 s. shall be returned in Issues upon every person impannelled and upon the second Writ 20 s. and upon the third 30 s. Issues And upon every Writ that shall be further awarded to try any Issue to double the Issues last afore specified until a full Jury be sworn And these Issues being returned upon a Not summoned Tenement in Fée simple in tail or for life of another or himself or in the right of his Wife the Land he then hath will be chargeable for it and any mans Cattel upon this Land may be distrained for it But if the Under Sheriff c. return a Juror summoned who in truth was not legally summoned and therefore doth not appear and so looseth Issues the Vnder-Sheriff shall pay him double the value of the Issues lost Sée the Statutes of 35 H. 8. 6. and the 2 E. 6. 32. And note the Law hath béen so careful to punish all offenders who would endeavour to byass and corrupt the Iury and to punish the Juries themselves if they receive Money to give their Verdict or any otherwise pre-ingage themselves to any of the parties All which is to the end that a true and honest Verdict may be given What punishment shall that Jury have which gives a false Verdict Such a punishment that as I said before in civil Causes it is without example and surely if the Jurors did bear it in their minds their Verdicts would be always grounded upon their Evidence and not upon their own Interests or any partiality to either of the parties Wherefore if the Jurors give a false Verdict which is perjury of the highest degrée upon an Issue joyned betwéen the parties in any Court of Record and Iudgment thereupon The party grieved may bring his Writ of Attaint in the Kings-Bench or Attaint Common-Pleas upon which 24 of the best men in the County are to be the Jurors who are to hear the same Evidence which was given to the Petite Iury and as much as can be brought in affirmance of the Verdict but no other against it And if these 24. who are called the Grand Iu●y find it a false Verdict then followeth ●●is terrible and heavy Iudgment at Common Law upon the Petite Iury. 1. That they shall loose liberam legem for Judgment in Attaint ever that is they shall be so infamous as they shall never be received to be a Witness or of any Jury 2. That they shall forfeit all their Goods and Chattels 3. That their Lands and Tenements shall be taken into the Kings hands 4. That their Wives and Children shall be thrown out of doors 5. That their Houses shall be rased and thrown down 6. That their Trées shall be rooted up 7. That their Meadow-grounds shall be ploughed up 8. That their Bodies shall be cast into the Goal and the party shall be restored to all that he lost by reason of the unjust Verdict So odious is Perjury in this Case in the eye of the Common-Law And the severity of this
assisas in Com̄ N. Capiend assign̄ ꝑ formam statuti c. ven̄tam infra nominat̄ J. A. quā infra script̄ H. C. ꝑ atturnat̄ suos infra Content̄ Iur̄ Iure unde infra fit mentio Exact̄ similit̄ vener̄ Qui ad veritatem de infra Content̄ dicend electi triati Iurati fuer̄ Super quo p̄d H. ꝑ quendam J. B. de Consilio ipsius H. C. manutentione exitus interius Iunet̄ Coram p̄fat̄ Iust̄ Iur̄ p̄d in Evidentijs oftend dic̄ quod c. Here recite the Evidence truely unde petit̄ Iudiciū qd Iur̄ p̄d veredict̄ suum de suꝑ infra Content̄ pro ipso H. reddant c. Et pd J. A. ꝑ quendā C. J. de Consilio suo Demurrer dic̄ qd materia ꝑd ꝑ p̄fat̄ H. C. Iur̄ pred suꝑius in Evidentiis ostent̄ minus in lege existic ad pro band exitum interius Iunct̄ pro parte ejusdem H. quodque ipse ad materiam illam in forma p̄d in Evident̄ ostent̄ necesse necesse non habet nec ꝑ legem terr̄ tenet̄ respondere hoc paratus est verificare unde pro defectu sufficient̄ mater̄ Iur̄ p̄d in hac parte ostens Idem I. petit̄ Iudic̄ quod Iur̄ de Veridict̄ suo suꝑ Exit p̄d reddend exoneretur debitum suum infra spec̄ una cum dampn̄ suis occasione de tent̄ debiti illius sibi addiundi cari c. Et p̄d H. C. Ex quo ipse suffic̄ mater̄ in Joynde lege ad manutenen exit̄ infra Content̄ pro parte ipsius H. Iur̄ pred suꝑius in Evident̄ ostens qd ipse ꝑat̄ est verificare quā quidem materiā p̄d J. non dedicit nec ad eam aliqualiter respond sed verificationem illam admittere omnino recusat pet̄ Iudic̄ qd pred J. ab actione sua pred versus Eum habend precludatur ac qd Iur̄ pred de Veredict̄ suo suꝑ exit̄ pred reddend onerentur c. A Precedent of a Demurrer upon the Evidence And now at this day the said Plaintiff and Defendant by their Attornies did appear and the Iury likewise did appear and were sworn c. upon which Sir T. W. Serjeant at Law of Councel with the Plaintiff gave in Evidence so and so and repeat it truely and did require the Iurors to find for the Plaintiff upon which J. C. of Councel with the Defendant saith That the Evidence and Allegations aforesaid alledged were not sufficient in Law to maintain the Issue joyned for the Plaintiff to which the Defendant néedeth not nor by the Laws of the Land is not holden to give any Answer wherefore for default of sufficient Evidence in this behalf the Defendant demands Iudgment that the Iurors aforesaid of giving their Verdict be discharged c. and that the Plaintiff be barr'd from having a Verdict c. Then the Plaintiff joyns and says That he hath given sufficient matter in Evidence to which the Defendant hath given no Answer c. and demands Iudgment and that the Iury be discharged and that the Defendant be Convicted then the Iury may give Damages if Iudgment shall happen to be for the Plaintiff c. A Bill of Exception Memorand That the First day of August Ebor. sc An. 1650. before T. P. and W. Iustices of our said Lord the King for taking of Assizes in the said County assigned in a Plea of Trespass and Ejectment which J. S. in the Court of our said Lord the King before himself by Bill doth Prosecute against E. B. supposing by the said Bill that the aforesaid T. B. c. and recite the substance of the Declaration or what it is c. and the Issue and then what the Evidence to prove the Defendant guilty was c. which here was a Surrender of a Copyhold out of Court c. and that he desired the Iury aforesaid to give their Verdict for the said T. B. of and upon the Premisses and that he likewise desired the Iudges aforesaid that they would inform the Iury aforesaid that the Surrender aforesaid out of Court made was good and effectual in Law and the aforesaid Iustices the aforesaid Surrender of the Land aforesaid with the Appurtenances made out of Court of the Mannour aforesaid in form aforesaid did affirm to the said Iurors was not good in Law by which the said Thomas for that the aforesaid matter to the said Iurors in Evidence shewed doth not appear c. did request of the said Iustices according to the form of the Statute in such case provided this present Bill which doth contain in it the matter aforesaid above by him to the Iurors aforesaid shewed by which the said Clayton's Reports Iustices at the request of the said Thomas this Bill have sealed at D. aforesaid 1. Westm 2. 31. 13 E. 1. When the Iustices will not allow a Bill of Exception upon Prayer if the Party impleaded tender the same unto them in Writing and requires their Seals thereunto they or one of them shall do it 2. If the Exception sealed be not put into the Roll upon Complaint thereof to the King the Iustice shall be sent for and if he cannot deny the Seal the Court shall procéed to Iudgment according to the Exception This Bill of Exception is given by the Statute Westm 2. cap. 31. before which Statute a man might have had a Writ of Error for Error in Law either in redditione Judicii in redditione Executionis or in Processu c. which Error in Law must be apparent in the Record or for Error in sait by alledging matter out of the Record as the death of either party c. before Iudgment But the mischief was if either party did offer any exception praying the Iustices to allow it and the Iustices over-ruling it so as it was never entred of Record this the party could not assign for Error because it neither appeared within the Record nor was any Error in fait but in Law and so the party grieved was without remedy until this Statute was made This Act extendeth to all Courts to all Actions and to both parties and to those who come in their places as to the vouchee c. who comes in loco tenentis It extendeth not only to all Pleas Dilatory and Peremptory c. to Prayers to be received Oier of any Record or Déed and the like but also ●o all Challenges of Iurors and any material Evidence given to any Iury which by the Court is Over-ruled 2 Inst fo 427. All the Iustices ought to Seal the Bill of Exceptions yet if one doth it it is sufficient if all refuse it is a contempt in them all And the party grieved may have a Writ grounded upon this Statute commanding them to put their Seals Juxta formam Statuti hoc sub periculo quod incumbit nullatenus omittatis The party must pray the Iustices to put their Seals but if they deny it they may be
sufficien in lege existunt tam ad manutenend proband exit pred pro parte dicti A. F. superius ad patriam junct quam ad excludend Domin Regem de aliqua forisfactura bonor pred habend Ad quas pred Attorn Domini Regis pro ipso Domino Rege minus sufficienter respondit nec aliquod pro ipso Rege allegavit unde idem A. pet judicium ac quod pred bona in dicta informatione spec ei reliberentur quodque ipse quoad premissa ab hac Curia dimittatur Ideo ad judicium Note In this Case the agreement according to the Statute was put in Issue generally and yet the special agreement maintained the Issue And wheresoever the Evidence do●h not warrant prove Regula and maintain the v●ny same thing that is in Issue that Evidence is defective and may be Demurred upon Upon non est factum to a Bond dated at York It Non ●st factum was said in this case that to prove the Bond made in another place doth not prove the Bond nor Warrant the Issue because the delivery is intended to be where the Dare is but the Witnesses prove the contrary and so the Issue is not proved But surely if this be found the Plaintiff shall have Judgment as well as upon a Bond delivered before the date 31 H. 6. Plo. 7. Rolls 677. But infancy or made by Dures cannot be given in evidence upon non est factum lib. 5. Whelpdales Case 119. because thereby the Bond is not void but only voidable Otherwise of the Bond of a Feme Covert or Monk for there the Bond is void and so non est factum and so of a Bond made to a Feme Covert and the Husband disagree to it or by Husband and Feme Non est factum of the Wife In an Assise if the Tenant plead Nul tort nul disseisin he cannot give in evidence a release after the disseisin but a release before the Disseisin he may for Release then there is no Disseisin upon the matter In a Writ of Right if the Tenant joyn the Mise Warranty upon the meer Right he cannot give in evidence a Collateral Warranty for he hath not any right by it and therefore it ought to have been pleaded 1. Inst 283. Regularly whatsoever is done by force of a Warrant or Authority ought to be pleaded Regula But Note in all Cases where one cannot have advantage of the special matter by way of Plea there he may have advantage of it in evidence as for example The rule of Law is That one cannot justifie the Death or Killing of a man and therefore if one kill another in his own defence he cannot plead this specially but he may give it in evidence and so in defence of his House against Thieves and Robbers c. By the Statute 23 H. 8. cap. 5. any thing done by Sewers the authority of the Commission of Sewers may be given in evidence upon the general Issue After taking the General Issue the Defendant cannot give in evidence any thing that goes in discharge Regula of the Action as in Debt upon nil Debet he cannot give in evidence a Release nor a grant to cut Trees Release to repair upon nul wast fait nor making of a Ditch to amend the Meadow but that he only lopped the Wast Trees he may if wast be Assigned in succidendo Arbores c. Neither if a Statute was made that all Statute Tenants for life should be dispunishable of wast could he give in evidence this Statute 28 H. 8. Dyer 28. for the discharge ought to be pleaded because it admits a Cause of Action without it In Debt against Executors and Assets inter marus Assets in Issue 'T is good evidence that they sold Land by the Will of the Testator c. and that they had the money And so that they recovered Damages in Trespass for goods taken in the life of the Testator c. 3 H. 6. 3. In an Issue upon Villenage regardant to a Mannor Villenage a Villain in gross is no evidence Dyer 48. In wast by the Grantee of a Reversion by Montague Attornment and Fitz. The Lessee may plead that he in reversion ne grant a pas per le fait and give in evidence that he never attorned or he may Traverse the Attornment at his election Dyer 31. In Trespass Quare clausum fregit the Defendant Trespass says that locus in quo c. is 6 Acres in D. which is his Freehold the Plaintiff replies that it is his Freehold and not the Defendants The Defendant cannot give in evidence other 6. Acres in D. which are his Freehold because the plea shall be intended to refer to the 6 Acres of the Plaintiffs Dyer 23. In Rescous by the Lord upon not guilty the Rescous Defendant shall not give in evidence that he doth not hold by Vavasour and Bryan and so if he said nothing is behind in avowry he shall not give in evidence that he doth not hold of him T. 9 H. 7. 3. Avowry In Assise Feoffment pleaded the Plaintiff said he Feoffment did not enfeoff modo forma upon the Deed and Letter of Attorney to Infeoff upon condition found if the Attorny made it without condition this well proves the Issue for the Plaintiff 13 E. 4. 4. If one plead a Feoffment of a Jointment to his Companion or of a Feme Covert the other may say ne enfeoffa pas and give the matter in evidence and the Court shall instruct the Jury of the Law 18 E. 4. 29. Upon the general Issue any thing may be given in evidence Regula which proves the Plaintiff had no cause of Action Trespass by the Warden of the Fleet upon not Trespass Guilty you may give in evidence that he is not Warden 4 E. 4. 7. So in Trespass of a House that he had no house there or the Freehold of another and not of the Plaintiff is good evidence upon not Guilty but in Trespass of Goods 't is no good Plea to say the property was in another although it is in a Replevin and therefore it seems to be no good evidence in Trespass because possession maintains the Action against all but the owner but that the property was in a stranger and he gave them to the Defendant is good See before cap. Evidence 27 H. 8. 25. But in Trover Trover that they were not the Goods of the Plaintiff is good evidence 5 H. 7. 3. Cessavit 〈◊〉 Count that of diverse Lands held by Cessavit entire service upon non tenuit modo forma held by several services is good evidence for he had no such cause of Action 10 H. 7. 24. Upon the general Issue for the Defendant by evidence to Regula convey to himself the same Interest and Title ● good evidence As in Trespass of Goshauks Not Guilty
that the Sow was with Pigg when she was taken and afterwards cast her Piggs in the Custody of the defendant and the Plaintiff recovered Damages for says Bro. Aridg tit General Issue 88. This is a special taking in Law Dower of rent Hill ne unque seisie que Dower la poit Dower Horton J S. granted the rent to the Husband payable at Michaelmas next and the Husband dyed before the day and so he was seised in Law and demanded judgment Thirm You shall say generally quod seisie que Dower la poit and give your Case in evidence Et sic bene notwithstanding the doubt of the lay Gents for they ought to credit the Law and evidence is not to be pleaded 11 H. 4. 88. Tenant for life leaseth for years who is ousted and the Tenant for life is disseised The disseisor leaseth for years who sows the Land The Tenant for Life dies he in remainder in Fee brings Trespass against the Defendants claiming the Emblements Emblements Knivets Case lib. 5. 85. by the Lessee of the Disseisor Adjudged that they had not the meer right but in respect of their possession they should barr the Plaintiff who had no right and that the meer right was in the Lessee of the Tenant for Life and that he might bring Trespass against the Lessee of the Disseisor and recover all the mean profits But as to the entry into the Land to take the Emblements this was good matter of justifica●ion but in regard it was not pleaded it could not be given in evidence upon Not Guilty and therefore the Plaintiff had judgment for the entry and was barred for the residue Note that the Lessee of Tenant for Life had right to the Land and by consequence to the Emblements as things annexed to the Land and the death of the Tenant for Life determins his interest to the Land but his right to the Emblements remains It sufficeth to prove the substance without any precise Regula Substance Circumstance regard to the Circumstance As if an Indictment be that with a Dagger the offender gave another a mortal wound c. and in evidence it is proved to be done with a Sword Rapier Club Bill or any other Weapon the offender upon this evidence ought to be found guilty For the mortal wound is the substance and the manner of the Weapon is but the Circumstance yet some Weapon ought to be mentioned in the Indictment And so if A. B. and C. be indicted for killing of J. S. and that A. stroke and the other were Abettors To prove that B. stroke is sufficient c. Manslaughter upon an Indictment must be found if proved because the killing is substance upon which judgment shall be given Indictments for ●urther of Ministers of Justice in execution of their Office may be general viz. that the prisoners felonice voluntarie ex malitia sua praecogitata c. percusserunt c. without alledging the special matter which may be given in evidence for the Law implyes malice prepensed So if a Thief in robbing kills the man that resists him or a man is killed without any provocation or without malice prepensed that can be actually proved the Law adjudges this murder and implyes the malice and in these Cases the offenders may be indicted generally that they killed of malice prepense for the malice implyed by Law given in evidence is sufficient to maintain the general Indictment lib. 9. 67. Machallyes Case So of an Indictment as accessary to 2. to prove accessary to 1. is sufficient lib. 9. 119. In Cromwels Case lib. 4. 12. Although it was objected that in an Action of slander If the Defendant will justifie he must justifie the same words in the same sense as it is laid in the Nar. or else he must plead Not Guilty and give the special matter that is the variance in evidence Yet the Court held that the Defendant should not be put to the general Issue but might justifie although he varied from the Plaintiff in the sense and Copyhold In Pilkintons Case Stiles 450. Rolls said If Copies of Court Roll be shewed to prove a Customary Estate the enjoyment of such Estates must also be proved otherwise the proof is not good Forger Totum pars quality of the words and might set forth the coherent words As for calling the Plaintiff Murderer the Defendant may shew that they were speaking of Hares and the words were spoken in reference to killing of Hares Upon the Issue if the Lord of the Mannor granted the Lands per copiam rotulorum Curiae manerii pred secundum consuetudinem manerii pred To prove that there were customary Lands in the Mannor and that the Lord of late granted the Land c. per Copiam rotul Curiae where it was never granted by Copy before is no good evidence to find the Custom or that the Lands c. were grantable or demiseable by Custom Leon. 55. Kemp and Carters Case Forger of a Deed in which is contained a demise of the site of the Mannor of R. and terras dominicales c. A Deed of the site and all the Demesnes of the said Mannor Exceptis duabus clausuris c. is good evidence for it is not necessary to construe terras dominicales c. omnes terras dominicales c. for Lands not excepted are terrae dominicales and so the Count is satisfied by that evidence Leon 139. Atkins and Hales Case Debt against an Executor upon plene administravit it appeared that the Executor medled and administred Plene administravit and then refused in Court and administration was granted to another and that several summs were recovered against the Administrator it was said by Periam Justice 1. That if an Administrator who is a stranger administer without the Commandment of the Executor the Executor cannot give such administration in evidence to prove his Issue 2. That in the principal Case the Executor having administred he could not refuse and so the administration is granted without cause and what he did was without warrant and no administration Ieon 134. Hawkins and Lawse Case At Bury Assises 1682. before Judge Windham The Executor gave the administration of the Administrator in evidence and allowed but there what the Administrator did was by the Executors consent in Mr. Lun and his Mothers Case An Executor de son tort cannot give in evidence Plene administravit An Executor pleads plene administravit praeter a judgment replication and Issue that the judgment was fraudulent The Obligee who had the judgment was denyed to have evidence about his Debt for he sweareth to have Assets for himself and is interested in the thing Before Judge Windham at Bedford Assises 1682. his retaining of goods to pay himself for he cannot retain but if he takes out letters of Administration although pendente lite he may retain for a Debt of as high a Nature and plead this in Barr for
higher nature than the Bond the Rent being real and the other of Record But the Bond extinguishes the contract for the arrears upon an Insimul comput asset c. Acceptance of Rent due the last day and an Acceptance Rent acquittance thereof discharges all the arrerages due before lib. 3. 65. Unity of possession in as high an Estate destroys the prescription c. A seisure and condemnation in the Exchequer of forfeited Trover Trespass Vide Rolls 1. part 1. 2. A custom pleaded in Trover to take Corn to repair a bridge and Cro. Eliz. 433. 262. Promise Imperfect Issue goods may be given in evidence upon Not Guilty in Trover but it must be pleaded in Trespass In Trover of a Horse that he is a Common Hostler and that the Horse was put to him at Livery and dyed is good upon Not Guilty Rolls 1. part 22. Upon Assumpsit the Plaintiff declares upon two considerations and a simple promise If the Jury find but one or a conditional promise this doth not maintain the Issue for the Plaintiff Leon 173. Musted and Hoppers Case Where the Issue is not perfect no evidence can be applied neither can the Justices of Nisi prius proceed to the Tryal of such an Issue As whether the money was paid after the date of the Obligation and the date was left out and did not appear in the Record Brown 2. 47. In Debt upon a Bond conditioned to pay 20 s. at Payment the house of the Defendant the 7. day of May upon payment at the time and place The Jury found the payment before the 7. day and prayed the advice of the Court if this was a payment at the day The Court adjudged that the payment and acceptance before the day was as well as if it had been paid at the day Saviles Reports 96. Bond against Richardson And so saies Cook 1. Institutes 212. The time and place are but circumstances and if the Obligee or Feoffee receive the money at another place or before the day it is sufficient Or a lesser summ before the day But More 47. upon Issue of payment at the day and place and evidence of payment a month before and Demurrer upon the evidence Dyer Brown and Welsh said this evidence doth not maintain the Issue because before the day of payment there is no duty land the day and place are parcel of the Issue and the act on one day is not an act done on another day As if an Executor pleads payment at the day 't is not good evidence to shew that it was paid before the day by the Testator for this doth not prove the Issue and yet there was not any duty remaining at the day and therefore the pleading ought to have been specially according to the truth Vide devant 198. And 't is not like the Case where the circumstances of time and place are pu● only for necessity of Tryal but in regard that payment is the substance why is it not sufficient to prove as well as to find the effect and substance of the Issue And 't is not the case of collateral conditions where the condition is not to pay money but to do some Collateral thing as to deliver a Horse a Robe or Ring c. or to pay money to a stranger such Collateral conditions are more strictly to be observed vide 1 Inst 212. Note if there be a Demurrer yet there may be a Plea puis darrein continuance plea puis darrein continuance and if the Plaintiff take Issue or demur to this plea yet the Court must also consider of the first Demurrer for if upon that standing confessed by the Demurrer the Plaintiff could not have his action the Court cannot give judgment for him howsoever the latter Issue or Demurrer pass But otherwise if the first had been an Issue for then nothing were confessed to his prejudice and then that had been utterly relinquished by a second Issue or Demurrer Hob. 81. with a Quaere c. When this plea is pleaded the Justices of Nisi prius cannot proceed to take the Inquest neither can the Plaintiff reply there but in Bank Bulst 92. 93. Per Doderige In Trover and conversion of goods Trover if the Defendant derive a title from a stranger this amounts to the general Issue otherwise if from the Plaintiff Latch 186. And baylment of the goods to deliver to another and delivery accordingly amounts to the general Issue and may be given in evidence upon it Bulst 3. part 209. In Trespass against two for entring into the Plaintiffs Trespass Freehold Land if one pleads his Freehold and the other that he entred by the commandment of him that pleads it is his Freehold here is to ●e but one Issue joyned viz. by him that claims the interest for upon that Issue all depends If it be found against him his servant has no colour And in regard what may be averred may be proved and given in evidence 't will not be Averments impertinent to draw a short scheme of Averments with which I will conclude To alter qualifie or abridge the operation of it if there be any apt words in the Deed whereupon Averment had upon or against a Deed. to ground it As a grant to A. the Son of B. and he hath two Sons of that name of the Mannor of S. and he hath two Mannors of that name which Son or Mannor was intended may be averred And so may a consideration of a Deed that is besides but Consideration not that is against the express consideration of the Deed nor can any thing against the words of the Deed either inlarge or restrain it Nor can a Use against or besides the express uses in the Deed but where no use is expressed or incertainly Use expressed it may and also to reconcile a fine and the Indentures to lead the uses of the fine lib. 2. 75. But when a Deed is utterly incertain no averment shall help it As a grant to one of the Sons of J. S To two haeredibus c. An estate to a Woman for her life may be averred to be made for her joynture Dyer 146. lib. 4. 4. Upon or against a Record And that the thing granted to me by a new name is all one thing with that which has another or an old name Dyer 37. 44. A thing that is against or besides a Record or any A fine taken by R. M. Esq and retorned by R. M. Militem upon the Ded. p. the Record not to be averred against in Error Yelverton 33. Cro. 2. part 11. thing that is within it shall not be averred Therefore the date of a Recognisance expressed to be taken at Dale cannot be averred to be taken at Sale But such an averment as may stand with the Record may be admitted As that the fine was before the Inrollment being both in one Term The uses of a fine or common Recovery