Selected quad for the lemma: land_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
land_n issue_n son_n tail_n 2,526 5 10.4836 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A28468 Nomo-lexikon, a law-dictionary interpreting such difficult and obscure words and terms as are found either in our common or statute, ancient or modern lawes : with references to the several statutes, records, registers, law-books, charters, ancient deeds, and manuscripts, wherein the words are used : and etymologies, where they properly occur / by Thomas Blount of the Inner Temple, Esq. Blount, Thomas, 1618-1679. 1670 (1670) Wing B3340; ESTC R19028 517,540 312

There are 25 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Conventus Nullum Swainmotum de caetero teneatur in Regno nostro nisi ter in Anno viz. In Principio quindecim dierum ante Festum Sancti Michael c. Circa Festum S. Martini initio quindecim dierum ante Festum Sancti Johannis Baptistae c. Charta de Foresta tam Regis Johan quam Hen. 3. cap. 9. See 4 Inst fol. 289. Swarff-money The Swarff-money is one penny half-penny it must be paid before the rising of the Sun the party must go thrice about the Cross and say the Swarff-money and then take witness and lay it in the hole and when ye have so done look well that your witness do not deceive you for if it be not paid ye give a great forfeiture xxx s. and a White Bull. This Exposition was found in an old MS. containing the Rents due to the Catesbies in Lodbroke and other places in Warwickshire But conceived to be mistaken for or to signifie the same with Warth-money See Ward-penny Swepage Coke on Littl. fol. 4. b. Is the crop of Hay got in a Meadow called also the Swepe in some parts of England Swoling or Suling of Land Sulinga Solinga vel Swolinga terrae Sax. Sulung from sul vel sulh i. Aratrum as to this day in our Western Parts a Plough is called a Sul and a Plough-staff a Sul-paddle Is the same with Carucata terrae that is as much as one Plough can Till in a year a Hide of Land others say it is Quantitas incerta Dedit ctiam idem inclitus Rex Willielmus Conquestor cidem Ecclesiae de Bello in Cantia Regale Manerium quod vocatur Wy cum omnibus appendiciis suis septem Swolingarum id est Hidarum ex sua Dominica Corona cum omnibus libertatibus regalibus consuetudinibus c. Rentale MS. de Wy tempore Ven. Patr. Tho. Ludlowe Abbatis fol. 1. Terram trium aratrorum quam Cantiani Anglice dicunt Thrée Swolings Carta pervetusta Eccles Cantuar. de qua vide Somne●rum in Antiquitat loci pag. 211. Syb and Som Sax. Pax securitas Eallum Cristenum Mannum syb som gemene id est Omnibus Christianis Pax securitas communis esto LL. Eccles Canuti Regis cap. 17. Sylva Caedua Lat. Wood under Twenty years growth Coppice-wood See the Stat. 45 Edw. 3. cap. 3. It is otherwise called Subbois 2 Inst fol. 642. Synod Synodus A Meeting or Assembly of Ecclesiastical Persons for the Cause of Religion of which there are four kindes 1. A General Occumenical or Universal Synod or Council where Bishops c. of all Nations meet 2. National Synod where those of one onely Nation meet 3. A Provincial Synod where Ecclesiastical Persons of one onely Province meet 4. Diocesan Synod where those of but one Diocess meet See Convocation Which is the same thing with a Synod this being a Greek that a Latin word Synodal Synodale Is a Cense or Tribute in Money paid to the Bishop or Arch-deacon by the Inferior Clergy at Easter Visitation and it is called Synodale or Synodaticum Quia in Synodo frequentius dabatur The Impropriation of Derehurt in Com. Gloc. pays yearly vii s. ix d. Pro Synodalibus Procurationibus Pat. 20 July 34 Hen. 8. Et quod sint quieti a Synodalibus ab omni Episcopali consuetudine excepto denario Beati Petri. Mon. Angl. 2 Par. fol. 276. b. See Historical Discourse of Procurations and Synodals pag. 66. 98. These are called otherwise Synodies in the Statute of 34 Hen. 8. cap. 16. Yet in the Statute of 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. Synodals Provincial seem to signifie the Canons or Constitutions of a Provincial Synod And sometimes Synodale is used for the Synod it self T. T. Every Person convict of any other Felony save Murder and admitted to the benefit of his Clergy shall be marked with a T. upon the Brawn of the Left Thumb Anno 4 Hen. 7. cap. 13. Tabellion Tabellio A Notary Publick or Serivener allowed by Authority to Engross and Register private Contracts and Obligations His Office in some Countreys did formerly differ from that of Notary but now they are grown or made one Quoniam Tabellionum usus in Regno Angliae non habetur propter quod magis ad Sigilla authentica credi est necesse ut eorum copia facilius habeatur statuimus ut Sigillum habeant non solum Archiepiscopi Episcopi sed eorum Officiales Matth. Paris fol. 454. de Anno 1236. Tabling of Fines Is the making a Table for every County where His Majesties Writ runs containing the Contents of every Fine passed in any one Term as the name of the County Towns and places wherein the Lands or Tenements lie the name of the Demandant and Deforceant and of every Mannor named in the Fine This is properly to be done by the Chirographer of Fines of the Common Pleas who every day of the next Term after the ingrossing any such Fine does fix every of the said Tables in some open place of the said Court during its sitting And the said Chirographer is to deliver to the Sheriff of every County his Under-Sheriff or Deputy fair written in Parchment a perfect content of the Table so made for that Shire in the Term next before the Assizes or else between the Term and the Assizes to be set up every day of the next Assizes in some open place of the Court where the Justices sit to continue there so long as they shall sit c. If either the Chirographer or Sheriff fail herein he forfeits 5 l. And the Chirographers Fee for every such Tabling is 4 d. Anno 23 Eliz. cap. 3. Tail Fr. Taille i. Sectura Signisies two things grounded upon one reason Plowden Casu Willion fol. 251. First it is used for the Fee which is opposite to Fee-simple by reason it is so minced as it were or pared that it is not in the owners free power to dispose but is by the first giver cut or divided from all others and tied to the issue of the Donee Coke lib. 4. in Proamio And this limitation or Tail is either General or Special Tail General Is that whereby Lands or Tenements are limited to a Man and to the Heirs of his Body begotten and it is General because how many Women soever the Tenant holding by this title shall take to his Wives one after another his issue by them all have a possibility to inherit one after another Tail Special Is that whereby Lands or Tenements are limited to a Man and his Wife and the Heirs of their two bodies begotten because if the Man bury his Wife before issue and take another the issue by his second Wife cannot inherit the Land Also if Land be given to A. and his Wife B. and to their Son C. for ever this is Tail Special See Fee and Littl. lib. 1. cap. 2. and New Book of Entries ●erbo Tail Tail in the other signification is that we vulgarly call a Talley For Une
commanded every Man to take warning for raking up his fire and putting out his light So that in many places at this day where a Bell is customably rung towards Bed-time it is said to ring Curfeu Hil. 3 Rich. 2. Coram Rege Rot. 8. London Curia See Court Curia advisare vult Is a Deliberation which the Court sometimes takes before they give Judgment in a Cause wherein there seems to be any point of difficulty for which see the New Book of Entries on this word Curia claudenda Is a Writ that lies against him who should fence and enclose his ground if he refuse or defer to do it Reg. of Writs fol. 155. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 127. New Book of Entries verbo Curia claudenda Curia Penticiarum Id est Curia in civitate Cestriae coram Vice-comite ibidem in Aula Penticia ejusdem Civitatis Pl. in Itin. apud Cestriam 14 Hen. 7. It is probable this Court was originally held under a Pentice or Shed covered with Bords and thence took denomination Curnock Is four Bushels or half a Quarter of Corn. Fleta lib. 2. cap. 12. Cursitors Clerici de cursu Of these there are in the Chancery twenty who make out original Writs and are a Corporation of themselves and to every Clerk are appointed certain Counties 2 Inst fol. 670. Curtesie of England Jus Curialitatis Angliae Is where a Man takes a Wife seised of Land in Fee-simple fee-Fee-tail general or as Heir in Tail special and hath issue by her Male or Female born alive if the Wife die the Husband shall hold the Land during his life by the Law of England And he is called Tenant by the Curtesie of England because this Priviledge is not allowed in any other Realm except in Scotland where it is called Curialitas Scotiae See more upon this word in the Terms of the Law Curteyn Curtana Was the name of King Edward the Confessors Sword which is the first Sword that is carried before the Kings of England at their Coronation Matth. Paris in Hen. 3. And it is said the point of it is broken which may argue an emblem of Mercy Curtilage Curtilagium Hortus olitorius vel ubi olera leguntur A Gardin Yard Backside or as they call it in Herefordshire a Fold Persoluat decimam Lactis hortorum Curtilagiorum Lanae c. Provinciale Angl. lib. 3. tit de Decimis Et si in Curtilagio alicujus bladum seminaretur decimam garbam illius bladi sicut in campis percipiet Inq. 36 Hen. 3. Mihi dici videtur Curtilagium says Spelman à Curtillum ago scil locus ubi curtis vel curtilli negotium agitur It is mentioned Anno 4 Edw. 1. cap. unico Anno 35 Hen. 8. cap 4. and 39 Eliz cap. 2. See Coke vol. 6. fol 64. a. and Bulstrodes Rep. 2 par fol. 113. Custode admittendo Custode amovendo Are Writs for the admitting or removing of Guardians Reg. of Writs in indice Custodes libertatis Angliae Authoritate Parliamenti Was the stile or title in which Writs and other Judicial Proceedings did run in the Rump time that is from the Decollation of King Charles the First till the Vsurper Oliver was declared Protector c. mentioned in the Statute of 12 Car. 2. cap. 3. Custom Consuetudo hath the same signification with us as with the Civilians being by both accounted a part of the Law Consuctudo quandoque pro lege servatur saith Bracton in partibus uhi fuerit more utentium approbata longavi enim temporis usus consuetudinis non est vilis authoritas Lib. 1. cap. 3. Custom is a Law or Right not written which being established by long use and the consent of our Ancestors and those of our Kinred that are Ultra Tritavum hath been and daily is practised So that allowing the Father to be so much older then his Son as pubertas or the years of generation require the Grand-father so much elder then him and so forth usque ad tritavum we cannot say this or that is a Custom except we can justifie it hath continued so one hundred years For tritavus must be so much elder then the party that pleads it yet because that is hard to prove it is enough for the proof of a Custom if two or more witnesses can depose they heard their Fathers say it was a Custom all their time and that their Fathers heard their Fathers also say it was so in their time If it be to be proved by Record the continuance of one hundred years will suffice Sir Jo. Davies Rep. in Praef. fol. 32. Custom is either general or particular General is that which is currant through England whereof you shall read divers in Doctor and Student lib. 1. cap. 7. Particular is that which belongs to this or that Lordship City or Town Custom differs from Prescription that being common to more Prescription for the most part particular to this or that Man Again Prescription may be for a far shorter time than Custom viz. for five years or less Out of our Statute you may have greater diversity which see collected in Cowels Institutes tit de usucap longi temp praescript Custom is also used for the Tribute or Toll called Tonnage and Poundage which Merchants pay to the King for carrying out and bringing in Merchandise Anno 14 Edw. 3. Stat. 1. cap. 21. and 12 Car. 2. cap. 4. In which signification it is Latined Custuma Reg. of Writs fol. 138. a. and 4 Inst fol. 29. And lastly for such services as Tenants of a Mannor ow to their Lord. Custom-house Is a House in London where the Kings Customs are received and the whole business relating thereunto transacted Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 4. Customary Tenants Tenentes per consuctudinem Are such Tenants as hold by the Custom of the Mannor as their special Evidence See Copihold Custos brevium Is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common Pleas and made by the Kings Letters Patent whose Office is to receive and keep all the Writs retornable in that Court and put them upon Files every return by it self and to receive of the Protonotaries all the Records of Nisi Prius called the Postea's For they are first brought in by the Clerks of the Assise of every Circuit to the Protonotary who entered the Issue in that matter to enter the Judgment And four days after the return thereof which is allowed to speak in Arrest of Judgment the Protonotary enters the Verdict and Judgment thereupon into the Rolls of the Court and afterwards delivers them over to the Custos Brevium who binds them into a bundle and makes entry also of the Writs of Covenant and the Concord upon every Fine and maketh forth Exemplifications and Copies of all Writs and Records in his Office and of all Fines lovied The Fines after they are engrossed are thus divided between the Custos brevium and the Chirographer this always keeps the Writ of Covenant and the Note the
or put by the thing in question Bracton lib. 4. Tract 3. ca. 5. has these words Et non permittas quod A capitalis Dominus Feudi illius habeat custodiam haeredis c. quia in Curia nostra forisjudicatur de custodia c. So does Kitchin use it fol. 29. and Old Nat. Br. fol. 44 and 81. And the Stat. 5 Ed. 3. ca. 9. and 21 R. 2. ca. 12. Forjudicatus with Authors of other Nations signifies as much as banished or as Deportatus in the ancient Roman-Law as appears by Vincentius de franchis Descis 102. Forjudged the Court Is when an Officer of any Court is banished or expeld the same for some offence or for not appearing to an Action by Bill filed against him and in the later he is not to be admitted to Officiate till he shall appear to the Bill Anno 2 Hen. 4. ca. 8. He shall lose his Office and be forjudged the Court c. Forjudicare interdum est male judicare Spel. Forfang Forefeng A Sax. fore ante fangen prendere est captio obsoniorum quae in foris aut nundinis ab aliquo fit priusquam minister Regis ea ceperit quae Regi fuerint necessaria Antecaptio Et sint quieti de Wardwite de utlewe Forvenge Withfange c. Carta Hen. 1. Hosp Sancti Barth Lond. An. 1133. Forfeiture Forisfactura comes of the French Forfact i. Scelus but signifies with us rather the effect of transgressing a Penal Law then the transgression it self as forfeiture of Escheats Anno 25 Edw. 3. ca. 2. Stat. de Proditionibus Goods confiscated and goods forfcited differ Stam. Pl. Cor. fol. 186. where those seem to be forfeited that have a known owner who has committed some offence whereby he loseth his Goods Confiscate are those that are disavowed by an Offender as not his own nor claimed by any other But Forfeiture is rather more general and Confiscation particular to such as forfeit onely to the Princes Exchequer Full forfeiture plena forisfactura otherwise called plenawita Is a forfeiture of life and member and all else that a man hath Manwood Part. 1. pa. 341. Forfeiture of Marriage Foris factura Maritagii Is a Writ which lay against him who holding by Knights-service and being under age and unmarried refused her whom the Lord offer'd him without his disparagement and married another Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 141. Reg. of Writs fol. 163. b. Forfeng forefeng Forbenge Quietantiam prioris prisae designat In hoc enim delinquunt Burgenses Londonenses cum prisas suas ante prisas Regis faciunt Fleta lib. 1. ca. 47. See Forfang Forger of false Deeds from the French Forger i. To beat on an Anvil or bring into shape Signifies either him that fraudulently makes and publishes false Writings to the prejudice of any mans right or else the Writ that lies against him who commits this offence Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 96. b. sayes That a Writ of Deceit lies against him who commits this offence and the penalty of it is declared in the Stat. 5 Eliz. ca. 14. Forlandum Et de duobus Forlandis xvi denarios sc de Forlando Johannis Wauker quod jacet ante terram Ecclesiae viii denarios Mon. Angl. 2 Part. fo 332. Formdon Breve de forma donationis Is a Writ that lies for him who has right to any Lands or Tenements by vertue of any Intail growing from the Stat. of Westm 2. ca. 1. There are three kinds of it viz. Forma Donationis or Formdon in the Descender Formdon in the Reverter and Formdon in the Remainder Formdon in the Descender lies for the recovery of Lands c. given to one and the heirs of his body or to a Man and his Wife and the heirs of their two bodies or to a Man and his Wife being Cosin to the Donor in Frank-Marriage and afterwards alienated by the Donee For after his decease his heir shall have this Writ against the Tenant or Alienee Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 211 217. and 214. makes three sorts of this Formdon in the Descender The first is in the manner now express'd The second for the heir of a Co-parcener that aliens and dies The third he calls Insimul tenuit which lies for a Co-parcner or heir in Gavelkind before partition against him to whom the other Co-parcner or heir has alienated and is dead Formdon in the Reverter lies for the Donor or his heirs where Land is entailed to certain persons and their Issue with condition for want of such issue to revert to the Donor and his heirs against him to whom the Donee alienateth after the issue extinct to which it was entailed Formdon in the Remainder lies where a Man gives Lands in Tayle the Remainder to another in Tayle and afterwards the former Tenant in Tayl dies without issue of his body and a stranger abates then he in Remainder shall have this Writ Reg. of Writs fol. 238. 242. Of this see also the New Book of Entries verbo Formdon and Coke on Litt. fol. 326. b. Fornagium Fr. Fournage Et Dominus Rex proinde amittit per an de exitibus Fornagii sui x. libras Pl. coram Rege ejus Concil in Parl. 18 Ed. 1. in Turr. Lond. It signifies the Fee taken by a Lord of his Tenants bound to Bake in his common Oven as is usual in the North of England or for a permission to use their own also Chimney-Money or Harth-silver See Furnage Fornication Fornicatio Anno 1 Hen. 7. ca. 4. Whoredom the Act of Incontinency in single persons for if either party be Married it is Adultery The first offence herein was punish'd with three Moneths Imprisonment the second was made Felony by a Rump-Act Scobels Collection Anno 1650 ca. 10. SUffex Praeceptum est Vic. quod venire faciat Juratores qui in Assisa Nov. Disseisinae dubium fecerunt Sacramentum tangen quandam Agnetam quam dixerant esse filiam Simonis de Punde patris praedictae Agnetae non dixerint esse haeredem Et in eo quod dixerint quod Matilda quae fuit mater Agnetae fuit uxor dicti Simonis non dixerunt utrum Patria habebat eam ut uxorem ejus Qui Juratores dicunt quod praedictus Simon semper tenuit dictam Matildam ut uxorem suam dicunt quod nunquam dictam Matildam matrem dictae Agnetae desponsavit Sed dicunt quod praedictus Simon aliquo tempore captus fuit per amicos praedictae Matildae in Camera Fornicando cum ipsi Matilda per quod compellebatur unum de tribus facere uxorem vel ipsam affidare vel vitam suam amittere vel ipsam Matildam retro osculare ita quod ipse Simon ibidem dedit fidem suam praedictae Matildae matri praedictae Agnetae quod ipsam desponsare debuit sed ipsam nunquam alio modo desponsavit c. Ideo praedicta Matilda de Kingsford soror praedictae Simonis recepit seisin de 1 Messuag c. in
any Record Matter of Record is that which may be proved by some Record For example if a man be sued to an Exigent during the time he was in the Kings Warrs this is Matter in Deed not of Record And therefore he that will allege this for himself must come before the Scire facias for execution be awarded against him for after that nothing will serve but matter of Record that is some error in the Process appearing upon the Record Kitchin fo 216. makes also a difference between matter of Record and a Specialty and nude Matter this being not of so high a nature as either matter of Record or a Specialty otherwise there called matter in Deed Whereby it should seem that nude matter is a naked allegation of a thing done to be proved onely by Witnesses and not either by Record or Specialty in Writing under Seal Cowel Maugre Being compounded of two French words Mal and Gre. i. Animo Iniquo Signifies with us as much as in despight or in despight of ones teeth As the Wife mauger the Husband Littleton fo 124. that is whether the Husband will or no. Maund Sax. Mano A kind of great Basket or Hamper of Books or other Merchandise containing eight Bales or two Fat 's Book of Rat●s fo 3. Maxims in Law Are the foundations of it or certain Rules or Positions which are the Conclusions of Reason and ought not at any time to be impeached or impugned As it is a Maxim that if a man have Issue two Sons by divers venters and the one of them purchase Lands in Fee and dye without issue the other brother shall never be his heir c. See Coke on Litt. fo 11. Mayor anciently Meyr from the British Miret 1. Custodire The chief Magistrate of a City as the Lord Mayor of London Rich. 1. Anno 1189 changed the Bailiff of London into a Mayor And by that example King Iohn Anno 1204 made the Bailiff of Kings-Lin a Mayor whilst the famous City of Norwich obtained not this Title for her chief Magistrate till 7 Hen. 5. 1419. See more on this word in Spelmans Gloss Meale-Rents Are certain Rents still so called but now payable in Money by some Tenants within the Honor of Clun which heretofore were paid in Meale to make Meat for the Lords Hounds Mean Medius Significes the middle between two extreams and that either in time or dignity Example of the first his Action was mean betwixt the Disseisin made to him and his recovery that is in the interim Of the second there is Lord Mean or Mesne and Tenant Lords mean mentioned in the Stat of Amortizing Lands made tempore Ed. 1. See Mesn Mease Mesuagium Fr. Maison A Mesuage or dwelling House Stat. Hiberniae 14 Hen. 3. and 21 Hen. 8. ca. 13. In some places corruptly called a Mise and Mise-place See Mise and Mese Measue See Mesne Meason due Fr. Maison de Dieu A House of God a Monastery or Religious House Hospitals are also so called in the Statutes 2 3 Phil. Mary ca. 23. 39 Eliz. ca. 5. and 15 Car. 2. ca. 7. Measure Mensura according to the 25th Cha. of Mag. Char. and the Stat. 17 Car. 1. ca. 19. all Weights and Measures in this Nation ought to be the same and those too according to the Kings Standard See 4 Inst fo 273. Mensura Measurer See Alneger Also that William Norton common Meter of Woollen Cloth may be Sworn to occupy his Office of Measurage truly and indifferently upon pain c. Articles exhibited to the Lord Mayor of London c. by the Commons of the City tempore Hen. 8. Medfee Sax. Medfeoh The Sax. Dict. says It is a Bribe or Reward bat it also signifies that Bote or Compensation which is given in an exchange where the things exchanged are not of equal value As in 4 Ed. 3. Hugo de Courtenay made an exchange by Deed with Richard Hanlake and Joan his Wife and there 't is expressd Quod ipsi non dabunt Medfee from the word Meed which signifies a reward See Arrura Medietas linguae Signifies an Enquest empaner'd upon any Cause wherein a Forreigner or Stranger is party whereof the one half consists of Natives or Denizens the other strangers and is used in Pleas wherein the one party is a stranger the other a Denizen See the Stat. 28 Edw. 3. ca. 13. 27 ejusdem Stat. 2. ca. 8. and 8 Hen. 6. ca. 29. Before the first of these Statutes was made this was wont to be obtained of the King by Grant made to any Company of Strangers Stam Pl. Cor. lib. 3. ca. 7. and is called a Party-Jury Anno 14 Car. 2. ca. 11. Medio Acquietando Is a Writ Judicial to distrain a Lord for the acquitting a mean Lord from a Rent which another claims Reg. of Writs judic fo 29. b. Mediterranean Sea so called because it has its course in the midst of the earth Is that which stretcheth it self from West to East dividing Europe Asia and Africa and mentioned 12 Car. 2. in the Stat. of Tonnage Medium tempus Was anciently used for the mean profits As Annum diem medium tempus See Flem. Medlefe Is that which Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 35. calls Medletum and signifies quarrelling scuffling or brawling Culpa dicitur quam quis inopinate commiserit non rixando solum pugnando sed immiscendo se pacifice rei cuivis vel negotio says Spelman Hence our common phrase to meddle with other folks maters Meer Merus Though an Adjective yet is it used substantively for meer right Old Nat. Br. fo 2. To joyn the Mise upon the Meer See Mise Meg-bote See Magbote Meld-feoh Sax. The reward and recompence due and given to him that made the discovery of any breach of Penal Laws committed by another The Promoter or Informers Fee Sax. Dict. Meliores See Tales Meiny Menagium Fr. Mesnie as the Kings Meiny Anno 1 Rich. 2. ca. 4. 1. The Kings Family Houshold or Houshold-servants Melius inquirendo Is a Writ that lay for a second enquiry of what Lands or Tenements a man dyed seized where partial dealing was suspected upon the Writ Diem clausit extremum Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 255. Memories Are used for certain Obsequies or remmebrances for the Dead in Injunctions to the Clergy 1 Edw. 6. Menials from Moenia the Walls of a Castle or other building Are Houshold or Menial Servants that is such as live under their Lord or Masters Roof or within his Walls mentioned Anno 2 Hen. 4. ca. 21. Mensura Hoc est quod Prior habet mensuras tam aridorum quam liquidorum signatas signo Domini Regis quod nullus debet emere in foro seu vendere nisi per illas Ex Registro Priorat de Cokesford Mensura bladi a Bushel of Corne. Mensura regalis The Kings Standard of the Exchequer Anno 17 Car. 1. ca. 19. See Measure Merchenlage Sax. Marcna laga i. Merciorum lex Camb. in his
Reattachment Reattachiamentum Is a second Attachment of him who was formerly attached and dismissed the Court without day as by the not coming of the Justices or some such casualty Brook hoc titulo Where he makes Reattachment General and Special General is where a Man is reattached for his appearance upon all Writs of Assise lying against him Brook eodem num 18. Then Special must be for one or more certain Reg. of Writs Judicial fol. 35. See the New Book of Entries verbo Reattachment Rebellion Rebellio Did anciently signifie a second resistance of such as being formerly overcome in battel by the Romans yielded themselves to their subjection But now we use it generally for the traiterous taking arms against the King be it by Natural Subjects or by others formerly subdued Rebel is sometimes attributed to him that wilfully breaks a Law Anno 25 Edw. 3. cap. 6. And 31 Ejusdem stat 3. cap. 2. Sometimes to a Villain disobeying his Lord. Anno 1 Rich. 2. cap. 6. Commission of Rebellion see in Commission Rebellious Assembly Is a gathering together of Twelve persons or more intending ro going about practising or putting in ure unlawfully of their own authority to change any Laws or Statutes of the Realm or to destroy the enclosure of any Park or or Ground enclosed or Banks of any Fish-ponds Pool or Conduit to the intent the same shall remain void or to the intent unlawfully to have Common or Way in any of the said Grounds or to destroy the Deer in any Park or any Warren of Conneys Dove-Houses Fish in any Ponds or any House Barns Mills or Bays or to burn Stacks of Corn or to abate Rents or Prizes of Victuals Anno 1 Mar. cap. 12. and 1 Eliz. cap. 17. See West par 2. Symbol tit Indictments Sect. 65. and Cromp. Justice of Peace fol. 41. b. Rebutter Fr. Bouter i. Repellere To repel or bar A Man grants Land to the use of himself and the issue of his Body to another in Fee with Warranty and the Donee leaseth out the Land to a third person for years the heir of the Donor impleads the Tenant alleaging the Land was in Tayl to him The Donee comes in and by vertue of the Warranty made by the Donor repels the heir because though the Land was intailed to him yet he is heir to the Warrantor likewise And this is called a Rebutter Again if I grant to my Tenant to hold Sine impetitione vasti and afterward implead him for Waste made he may debar me of this Action by shewing my grant which is likewise a Rebutter Brook tit Bar num 23 25. See the New Book of Entries verbo Rebutter And Coke on Littl. fol. 365. a. Recaption Recaptio Signifies a second Distress of one formerly distrained for the same cause and also during the Plea grounded on the former Distress It likewise signifies a Writ lying for the party thus distrained the form and further use whereof see in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 71. Reg. of Writs fol. 86. and Reg. Judicial fol. 69. Receiver Receptor and Receptator Is used commonly in the evil part for such as receive stoln Goods from Theeves and conceal them but annexed to other words as Receiver of Rents c. It signifies an Officer of good account belonging to the King or other great Personage Cromp. Jurisd fol. 18. There is also an Officer called the Receiver of the Fines upon original Writs in Chancery Receiver-General of the Dutchy of Lancaster Is an Officer belonging to the Dutchy Court who gathers in all the Revenues and Fines of the Lands of the said Dutchy and all Forfeitures and Assessments or what else is thence to be received Anno 39 Eliz. cap. 7. Receiver-General of the Muster Rolls Anno 35 Eliz. cap. 4. Receit See Resceit Recluse Reclusus Is he who being entered into a Religious Order is shut up there and stirs not out of the House or Cloyster Littl. fol. 92. Recognizance Fr. Recognoissance i. Recognitio Is a Bond or Obligation testifying the Recognizor to ow the Recognizee a sum of Money and is acknowledged in some Court of Record or before some Judge Master of Chancery Justice of Peace c. Anno 23 Hen. 8. cap. 6. Some Recognisances are not sealed but enrolled and Execution by force thereof is of all the Recognizors Goods and Chattels except Draught-Beasts and Implements of Husbandry and the Moyety of his Lands West Par. 1. Symb. lib. 2. sect 149. And Reg. of Writs fol. 146 151 252. Recognizance hath another signification as appears in the Statute of Westm 1. cap. 36. For it is there provided and agreed That if any Man be attainted of Disseisin done in the time of the King that now is or for taking any manner of Goods or Moveables and it be found against him by Recognizance of Assise of Novel-Disseisin the Judgment shall be c. where it is used for the Verdict of the Twelve Men impannelled upon an Assise which Twelve are also called Recognitors of the Assise Littl. fol. 72. Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. cap. 9. num 2. and lib. 3. tract 1. cap. 11. num 16. See the Statute of 20 Edw. 1. stat 4. and New Book of Entries verbo Recognizance Recognizée Is he is to whom one is bound in a Recognizance Anno 11 Hen. 6. cap. 10. Recognition Recognitio An acknowledgment It is the title of the first Chapter of the Stat. 1 Jac. Recognitione adnullanda per vim duritiem facta Is a Writ to the Justices of the Common Bench for the sending a Record touching a Recognizance which the Recognizor suggests to have been acknowledged by force and hard dealing that if it so appear it may be disannulled Reg. o● Writs fol. 183. Recognitors Recognitores Is a word used for the Jury impaneld upon an Assise The reason why they are so called is because they acknowledge a Disseisin by their Verdict Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. cap. 9. num 2. See Recogzance Record from Recordare to remember Signifies an authentical and uncontrolable testimony in writing contained in Rolls of Parchment and preserved in Courts of Record and they are said to be Vetustatis veritatis vestigia Coke Praef. to 8 Rep. An Act committed to writing in any of the Kings Courts during the Term wherein it is written is alterable and no Record but that Term once ended and the Act duly enrolled it is a Record and of that credit that admits no alteration or proof to the contrary Brook tit Record num 20. 22. yet see Cokes Rep. lib. 4. Rawlins Case fol. 52. b. The King may make a Court of Record by his Grant Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. Britton cap. 121. As Queen Elizabeth by Her Charter dated 26 Aprilis Anno 3 Regni sui made the Consistory Court of the University of Cambridge a Court of Record There are reckoned three sorts of Records viz. A Record Judicial as Attainder c. A Record Ministerial upon Oath as an
both before and after Coke on Lit●l fol. 71. There cannot be an Accessary before the Fact in Man-slaughter because that is sudden and unprepensed See more in Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 1. cap. 45 46 47 48. Accessories in Petit-Treason Felony Murder shall not have their Clergy An. 4 5 Phil. Ma. c. 4. Accompt computus is taken for a Writ or Action which lies against a Bailiff or Receiver who ought to render an account to his Lord or Master and refuseth And by the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 1. if the Accomptant be found in arrear the Auditors that are assigned to him have power to award him to prison there to remain till he makes agreement with the party But if the Auditors will not allow reasonable expence and costs or if they charge him with more Receipts then they ought his next friend may sue a Writ of Ex parte talis out of the Chancery directed to the Sheriff to take four Mainpernors to bring his body before the Barons of the Exchequer and to warn the Lord to appear there at a certain day See Fitzh Nat. Br. fol. 116. Accord Fr. Agreement Concordance Consent Particularly it is an Agreement between two or more where any person is injured by a Trespass Offence or Contract to satisfie and content him with some recompence which if executed and performed shall be a good Bar in Law if the other party after the Accord performed bring any Action for the same Accroche Fr. accrocher To hook clasp or grapple unto It is used Anno 25 Edw. 3. Stat. 3. cap. 8. as Encroach In France even at this day Accrocher un Proces signifies to stay a Suit or to delay the proceeding of it for a time See Encroachment Achat Fr. Achet i. A Bargain or Purchase is used for a Contract or Bargain Brook tit Contract Purveyors were by Parliament 36 Ed. 3. ordained to be then after called Achators Acquietancia de Shiris et Hundredis i. Quod Prior non debet facere sectam ad Comitatum Norwici vol in Hundredo pro Manerio de Rudham cum pertin Ex Regist Priorat de Coke sford Acquietandis plegiis Is a Writ lying for a Surety against the Creditor that refuseth to acquit him after the Debt is paid Reg. of Writs fol. 158. Where it appears that this is a Justicies Acquital from the Fr. acquiter to free acquit or discharge most commonly signifies a Deliverance discharge and setting free from the suspition or guilt of an offence and is twofold Acquittal in Law and Acquittal in Fact Acquital in Law Is when two are appealed or endited of Felony one as Principal the other as Accessary the Principal being discharged the Accessary is by consequence also freed And in this case as the Accessary is acquitted by Law so is the Principal in Fact Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 168. Acquital is also where there is a Lord Mesn and Tenant and the Tenant holds Lands of the Mesn and the Mesn holds over of the Lord Paramount Now the Mesn ought to acquit the Tenant of all services claimed by any other for the same Lands for the Tenant must do his service to the Mesn onely and not to divers Lords for one parcel of Land See Coke on Littleton fol. 100. Acquittance acquietantia Is a Release or Discharge of a Debt formerly due But the Verb acquit the Participle acquitted and the Noun acquittal signifie also a discharge or clearing from an offence objected as acquitted by Proclamation Smith de Rep. Angl. p. 76. Stams Pl. Cor. fol. 168. Brook tit Acquittal Acre from the Germ. Acker i. ager Is a parcel of Land containing in length forty Perches and four in bredth or to that quantity be the length more or less And if a Man erect any new Cottage he must lay four Acres of Land to it after this measure Anno 31 Eliz cap. 7. With this measure agrees Crompt in his Jur. of Courts fol. 222. Though he says according to the Custom of divers Countreys the Pearch differs being in some places and most ordinarily but sixteen foot and a half but in Staffordshire twenty four foot as was adjudged in the Case between Sir Edward Aston and Sir John B. in the Exchequer In the Statute concerning sowing Flax 24 Hen. 8. cap. 4. eightscore Perches make an Acre which is forty multiplied by four See also the Ordinance of Measuring Land 31 Edw. 1. Stat. 1. which agrees with this account Action actio is thus defined by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 1. 3. Actio nihil aliud est quam jus prosequendi in judicio quod alicui debetur and is divided into personal real and mixt See Cokes 2 Inst fol. 40. Action personal is that which one Man hath against another by reason of any Contract for Money or Goods or for offence done by him or some other person for whose Fact he is by Law answerable Action real is that whereby the Demandant claims title to any Lands or Tenements Rents or Commons in Fee-simple fee-Fee-tail or for life And every Action real is either Possessory that is of his own Possession or Seisin or ancestrel of the Seisin or Possession of his Ancestor Coke lib. 6. fol. 3. Real Actions as Writs of Right Writs of Entry c. And their several Appendixes as Grand Cape Petit Cape Receit View Aid-Prayer Voucher Counter-plea of Voucher Counter-plea of Warrantry Recovery in value were several great Titles in our Year-Books but now much out of use Preface to Rolls Abridgment Action mixt is that which lies indifferently against the thing detained or against the person of the Detainer and is so called because it hath a mixt respect both to the thing and the person Or as others define it is Sute given by the Law to recover the thing demanded and damages for wrong done As in Assize of Novel Disseisin which Writ if the Disseissor make a Feoffment to another the Disseisee shall have against the Disseisor and the Feoffee or other Ter-Tenant to recover not onely the Land but damages also And so is an Action of Wast and Quare impedit Actions are also divided into Civil Penal and Mixt. Coke Vol. 6. fol. 61. a. Action Civil is that which tends onely to the recovery of that which by reason of any Contract or other like cause is due to us As if a Man by Action seek to recover a sum of Money formerly lent c. Action Penal aims at some penalty or punishment in the party sued be it corporal or pecuniary As in the Action Legis Aquiliae in the Civil Law and with us the next friends of a Man feloniously slain or wounded shall pursue the Law against the offender and bring him to condign punishment Bracton lib. 3. cap. 4. Action Mixt is that which seeks both the thing whereof we are deprived and a penalty for the unjust detaining it As in an Action for Tythe upon the Statute 2 3 Edw. 6. cap. 13. Item est alia Actio
Portion See Gerard du Heylan Spel. Glossar in voce Appennagium Appertinances pertinentia Are things both Corporal belonging to another thing as to the more principal as Hamlets to a cheif Mannor Common of Pasture Turbary Piscary and such like and Incorporeal as Liberties and Services of Tenants Brit. cap. 39. Where it may be observed That he accounts Common of Pasture Turbary and Piscary to be things Corporal See Common Apportionment apportionamentum Is a dividing of a Rent into parts according as the Land whence the whole Rent issues is divided among two or more As if a Man have a Rent-service issuing out of Land and he purchaseth part of the Land the Rent shall be apportioned according to the value of the Land So if a Man let Lands for years reserving Rent and after a stranger recovers part of the Land the Rent shall be apportioned But a Rent-charge cannot be apportioned nor things that are entire As if one hold Land by service to pay to his Lord yearly at such a Feast a Horse or Rose there if the Lord purchase part of the Land this service is totally extinct because such things cannot be divided without hurt to the whole Yet in some Cases a Rent-charge shall be apportioned as if a Man hath a Rent-charge issuing out of Land and his Father purchaseth part of the Land charged in Fee and dies and this parcel descends to his Son who hath the Rent-charge there this Charge shall be apportioned according to the value of the Land because such portion of the Land purchased by the Father comes not to the Son by his own Act but by descent and course of Law Common Appendant is of common right and severable and though the Commoner in such case purchase parcel of the Land wherein the Common is Appendant yet the Common shall be apportioned But in this case Common Appurtenant and not Appendant by such Purchase is extinct Coke lib. 8. fol. 79. Apposer See Forein Apposer Apprendre Fr. As Fee or Profit Apprendre Anno 2 3 Edw. 6. cap. 8. Fee or Profit to be taken or received Apprentice Fr. apprenti and that from apprendre to learn whence their apprentisage and our apprentiship Is one that is bound by Covenant to serve a Tradesman or Artificer a certain time for the most part seven years upon condition That the Master shall during that time instruct him in his Art or Mystery Sir Tho. Smith in his Rep. Angl. lib. 3. cap. 8. says They are a kinde of Bondmen differing onely in that they are servants by Covenant and for a time Anciently Barrasters were called Apprentices of the Law As appears by Mr. Seldens Notes upon Fortescu p. 3. So the Learned Plowden stiled himself Sir Henry Finch in his Nomotechnia writes himself Apprentice del Ley and Sir Edward Coke in his 2 Part. Instit fol. 564. says Apprenticii Legis in pleading are called Homines consiliarii in Lege periti And in another place Apprentices and other Counsellors of Law Appropriation appropriatio from the Fr. approprier i. aptare accomodare Signifies the severing of a Benefice Ecclesiastical which originally and in nature is Juris Divini in Patrimonio nullius to the proper and perpetual use of some Religious House Bishoprick College c. So called because Parsons not being ordinarily accounted Domini but usufructarii having no right of Fee-simple are by reason of their perpetuity accounted owners of the Fee-simple and therefore called Proprietarii Before the time of Richard the Second it was lawful as it seems to appropriate the whole Fruits of a Benefice to an Abbey or Priory they finding one to serve the Cure But that King ordained That in every Licence of Appropriation made in Chancery it should expresly be contained That the Diocesan of the place should provide a convenient sum of money to be yearly paid out of the Fruits towards the sustenance of the poor in that Parish and that the Vicar should be well and sufficiently endowed Anno 15 Rich. 2. cap. 6. To make an Appropriation after Licence obtained of the King in Chancery the consent of the Diocesan Patron and Incumbent are necessary if the Church be full if it be void the Diocesan and the Patron upon the Kings Licence may conclude it Plowden in Grendons Case fol. 496. To dissolve an Appropriation it is enough to present a Clerk to the Bishop and he to institute and induct him For that once done the Benefice returns to the former nature Fitz. Nat. Br. 35. and Coke lib. 7. fol. 13. Approvement Anno 43 Eliz. cap. 11. Is the same with improvement but it is more particularly used for the enclosing part of a Common by the Lord of the Mannor leaving sufficient nevertheless for the Commoners Approver approbator Is one that confessing Felony committed by himself appeals or accuses others to be guilty of the same and is so called because he must prove that which he hath alleaged in his Appeal This Proof is by Battle or by the Countrey at his election that appealed The Form of this Accusation you may in part gather by Cromptons Justice of Peace fol. 250. 251. That it is done before the Coroner either assigned to the Felon by the Court to take and record what he saith or else cal●ed by the Felon himself and required for the good of the Commonwealth to do so The Approvers Oath when he begins the Combat you may see in the last Page of Crompton as also the Proclamation by the Herauld Of the Antiquity of this Law read at large Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. cap. 21. 34. Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 2. cap. 52. cum seq And 3 Part. Instit fol. 129. See Prover Approvers of the King Approbatores Regis Are those that have the letting of the Kings Demeans in small Mannors to his best advantage Anno 51 Hen. 3. Stat. 5. And in the Statute of 1 Edw. 3. cap. 8. the Sheriffs call themselves the Kings Approvers Approve approhare To augment or as it were to examine to the utmost For example To approve Land is to make the best benefit of it by increasing the Rent c. Anno 9 Hen. 6. cap. 10. Bailiffs of Lords in their Franchises are called their Approvers and by what follows you may see what kinde of Approvers or Improvers were formerly in the Marches of Wales authorized by the Prince thereof Richard de Lyngein Emprover desuth Commission nostre tre dout Seigneur le Prince deins le Counte de Hereford le Marches adjoygnant a toutz y ceux qui cests Letters verront ou orront salutz Sachez moy aver grant a une Janin de Brompton loyal leige home nostre Seigneur le Roy a ses servants de vendre acheter bests berbez deins le Counte de Hereford le Marche adjoygnant sans empechement ou arrest de nulluy come loyal leige hommes a son propre use encrese sans refreshmente des Rebels de Gales
lx fol. Et inde producit sectam c. praedictus Johannes venit c. Et non dedicit Conventionem praedictam Et quia videtur Curiae quod tale placitum non jacet inter Christianos Ideo partes praedicti adjournantur usque in infernum ad audiendum judicium suum utraque pa●s in misericordia c. Conventione Is a Writ that lies for the breach of any Covenant in writing Reg. of Writs fol. 185. Old Nat. Br. fol. 101. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 145. calls it a Writ of Covenant who divides Covenants into personal and real making a discourse of both as also how this Writ lies for both Conventuals Are those Religious Men who are united together in a Convent or Religious House See Frier Observant Conventual Church See Parish Convict Convictus Is he that is found guilty of an O●fence by Verdict of a Jury Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 186. yet Crompton out of Judge Dyers Commentaries 275 saith That Conviction is either when a Man is outlawed or appears and confesseth or else is found guilty by the Inquest Cromp. Jus● of Peace fol. 9. Conviction and Attainder are often confounded See Attaint and Attainted A Convict Recusant Is one that hath been legally presented indicted and convic● for refusing to come to Church to hear the Common-Prayer according to the Statutes 1 Eliz. 2. 23 Eliz. 1 and 3 Jac. 4. And these are commonly understood to be Popish Recusants though any others that refuse to come to Church for the purpose aforesaid may as properly be called Recusants See Ju●y Convocation Convocatio Is the Assembly of all the Clergy to consult of Ecclesiastical Matters in time of Parliament And as there are Two Houses of Parliament so are there Two Houses of Convocation the one called the Higher Convocation House where the Archbishops and Bishops sit severally by themselves the other the Lower Convocation House where all the rest of the Clergy sit Anno. 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. See Prolo●utor Conusance See Cognisance Conusant Fr. Cognoissant Knowing understanding apprehending If the son be Conusant and agrees to the Fe 〈…〉 ment c. Coke on Littl. fol. 159. b. Conusor See Cognizor Coopertura A Thicket or Covert of Wood. Carta de Foresta cap. 12. Ca●●●ceners Farticip●s Otherwise called Parceners are such as have equal portion in the inheritance of their Ancestor Littleton lib. 3. says Paroenors are either by Law or by Custom Parcenors by Law are the issue Female which in default of Heir-male come in equality to the Lands of their A 〈…〉 Bracto● lib. 2. cap. 30. Parce●●rs by Cust●● are those who by custom of the Country challenge equal part in such Lands as in Kent by ●●volkind Of these you may read more at large in Littl. lib. 3. cap. 1. 2. and Brittan cap. 27. The Crown of England is not subject to Coparcinery Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 22. Cope Is a Custom or Tribute due to the King or Lord of the Soil out of the Lead-Mines in the Wapentake of Wirksworth in Com. Derby of which thus Mr. Manlove in his Treatise of those Liberties and Customs Printed 1653. Egress and Regress to the Kings High-way The Miners have and Lot and Cope they pay The Thirteenth Dish of Oar within their Mine To the Lord for Lot they pay at Measuring time Six pence a Load for Cope the Lord demands And that is paid to the Berghmasters hands c. Copia libelli deliberanda Is a Writ that lies in Case where a Man cannot get the Copy of a Libel at the hands of the Judge Ecclefiastical Reg. of Writs fol. 51. Copihold Tenura per Copiam Rotuli Curiae Is a Tenure for which the Tenant hath nothing to shew but the Copy of the Rolls made by the Steward of his Lords Court For as the Steward enrols and makes Remembrances of all other things done in the Lords Court so he does also of such Tenants as are admitted in the Court to any parcel of Land or Tenement belonging to the Mannor and the Transcript of this is called the Court-Roll the Copy whereof the Tenant keeps as his onely evidence Coke lib. 4. fol. 25. b. This is called a Base Tenure because it holds at the Will of the Lord. Kitchin fol. 80. cap. Copiholds Fitzh Nat. Br. fol. 12. says It was wont to be called Tenure in Villenage and that Copihold is but a new name and yet it is not simply at the Will of the Lord but according to the Custom of the Mannor So that if a Copiholder break not the Custom of the Mannor and thereby forfeit his Tenure he seems not so much to stand at the Lords curtesie for his right that he may be displaced at his pleasure These Customs are infinite varying in one point or other almost in every several Mannor Copiholders do upon their Admittances pay a Fine to the Lord of the Mannor of whom the Lands are holden which Fines are in some Mannors certain in others incertain Those which are incertain the Lord rates at what Fine he pleaseth but if it exceeds two years value the Courts of Chancery Kings Bench Common Pleas or Exchequer have in their several Jurisdictions power to reduce the Fine unto two years value Copiholds are a kinde of Inheritance and called in many places Customary because the Tenant dying and the hold being void the next of the Blood paying the Customary Fine as Two shillings for an Acre or such like may not be denied his admission Secondly some Copiholders have by Custom the Wood growing upon their own Land which by Law they could not have Thirdly Others hold by the Verge in ancient Demesns and though they hold by Copy yet are they in account a kinde of Freeholder for if such a one commit Felony the King hath Annum diem vastum as in case of Freehold some others hold by Common Tenure called Meer Copihold whose Land upon Felony committed Escheats to the Lord of the Mannor Kitchin fol. 81. Cha. Tenants per Verge in ancient Demesn This is the Land which in the Saxons time was called Folkland West Par. 1. Symbol lib. 2. sect 646. says A Copiholder is he who is admitted Tenant of any Lands or Tenements within a Mannor which time out of minde by the use and custom thereof have been Demisable to such as will take the same by Copy of Court-Roll according to the custom of the said Mannor c. Where you may read more on this subject see Freebench Coram non judice In a Cause whereof they the Judges have not any Jurisdiction and then it is Coram non judice 2 Part. Croke fol. 351. Powels Case Coraage Coraagium Is a kinde of Imposition extraordinary growing upon some unusual occasion and it seems to be of certain Measures of Corn. For Corus tritici is a Measure of Corn. Bracton lib. 2. cap. 116. num 6. Who in the same Chapter num 8. hath these words Sunt etiam quaedam communes praestationes quae
Poll which names arise from the form or fashion of them the one being cut in and out in the top or side which we call Indented the other being plain A Deed Indented is a Deed consisting of two parts or more for there are Tripartite and Quadripartite Deeds in which it is expressed That the parties thereto have to every part thereof interchangably set their several Seals The cause of their Indenting is that it may appear they belong to one business or contract A Deed Poll or polled anciently called Charta de una parte is a plain Deed without Indenting as if we should say The Indenting is polled or cut off and is used when the Vendor for example onely Seals and there is no need of the Vendees sealing a Counterpart by reason the nature of the Contract is such as it requires no Covenant from the Vendee unless in such case the Vendor will out of caution or curiosity have a Counterpart to see upon any occasion what Covenants himself hath given See Coke on Littl. fol. 35. b. Déemsters or Demsters from the Saxon dema i. a Judge or Umpire All Controversies in the Isle of Man are decided without Process Writings or any Charges by certain Judges whom they chuse from among themselves and call Déemsters Camd. Brit. tit British Islands Deer-Hays Are Engins or great Nets made of Cords to catch Deer Anno 19 Hen. 7. cap. 11. De essendo quietum de Tolonio Is a Writ that lies for those who are by priviledge freed from the payment of Toll which read at large in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 226. De expensis militum Is a Writ commanding the Sheriff to levy four shillings per diem for the expences of a Knight of the Shire And a like Writ De expensis Civium Burgensium to levy two shillings per diem for every Citizen and Burgess of Parliament 4 Inst fol. 46. De facto Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 30. Which is actually done done indeed Default Fr. Defaut Is an Offence in omitting that which we ought to do Of this Bracton hath a whole Tract lib. 5. tract 3. By whom it appears that Default is most notoriously taken for non-appearance in Court at a day assigned Of this you may also read Fleta lib. 6. cap. 14. and Coke on Littl. fol. 259. b. Defeizance of the Fr. Desfaire i. to undo or defeat Signifies a Condition relating to a Deed as to a Recognizance or Statute which being performed by the Recognizor the Deed is disabled and made void as if it never had been done The difference between a Proviso or Condition in Deed and a Defeizance is That those are inserted in the Deed or Grant this is usually in a Deed by it self Of which you may read West at large Par. 1. Symb. lib. 2. sect 156. Defend Fr. Defendre Signifies in our ancient Laws and Statutes to prohibit or forbid As Usuarios defendit quoque Rex Edwardus ne remanerent in Regno LL. Ed. Conf. cap. 37. 5 Rich. 2. cap. 7. Of which thus Chaucer Where can you say in any manner age That ever God defended Marriage And in 7 Edw. 1. we have a Statute entituled Statutum de defensione portandi arma c. It is defended by Law to Distrain in the Highway Coke on Littl. fol. 161. To this day in divers parts of England we say God defend instead of God forbid And the Fench Moneth is more truly called the Defence Moneth i. the Forbidden Moneth See Fench Moneth Defendant Defendens Is he that is sued in an Action Personal as Tenant is he who is sued in an Action Real See Impediens Defendemus Is a word used in Feofments and Donations and hath this force that it binds the Donor and his Heirs to defend the Donce if any Man go about to lay any servitude on the thing given other then is contained in the Donation Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 10. See Warranty Defender of the Faith Defensor fidei Is a peculiar title given to the Kings of England by the Pope as Catholicus to the King of Spain Christianissimus to the King of France and Advocatus Ecclesiae to the Emperor Which title was given by Pope Leo the Tenth to King Henry the Eighth for writing against Martin Luther in behalf of the Church of Rome and the Bull for it bears date Quinto Idus Octobr. 1521. which may be seen at length in the Lord Herberts History of Henry the Eighth fol. 105. Deforcement Deforciamentum Matth. Paris fol. 422. Quicunque deforciaverit eis dotem de ipso deforciamento convicti fuerit id est Per vim abstulerit A withholding Lands or Tenements by force from the right owner See Deforceor and Coke on Littl. fol. 331. b. Deforciant Anno 23 Eliz. cap. 3. The same with Deforceor Deforceor Deforciator of the Fr. Forceur i. expugnator Is one that overcomes and casts out by force and differs from Disseisor First in this because a Man may disseise another without force which is called Simple Disseisin Britton cap. 53. Next because a Man may deforce another that never was in possession For example if more have right to Lands as Common Heirs and one entring keeps out the rest the Law says He deforceth them though he do not disseise them Old Nat. Br. fol. 118. And Littleton cap. Discontinuance fol. 117. says He who is inseoffed by the Tenant in Tail and put in Possession by keeping out the Heir of him in Reversion being dead doth deforce him though he did not disseise him because he entered when the Tenant in Tail was living and the Heir had no present right A Deforceor differs from an Intruder because a Man is made an Iutruder by a wrongful entry onely into Land or Tenement void of a Possessor And a Deforceor is he that holds out the right Heir as abovesaid Bracton lib. 4. cap. 1. Degrading See Disgrading Delegates Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. Are Commissioners so called because delegated or appointed by the Kings Commission under the Great Seal to sit upon an Appeal to the King in the Court of Chancery in three Cases First When a Sentence is given in any Ecclesiastical Cause by the Archbishop or his Official Secondly When any Sentence is given in any Ecclesiastical Cause in places exempt Thirdly When a Sentence is given in the Admiral Court in Sutes Civil and Marine by order of the Civil Law 4 Part. Inst fol. 339. Anno 8 Eliz. cap. 5 Deliverance See Replegiare Delf from the Sax. delfan to dig or delve Is a Quarry or Mine where Stone or Coal is dug Anno 31 Eliz. cap. 7. And in a Charter of Edward the Fourth there is mention of a Mine or Delf of Copper Camd. Demain or Demesn Dominicum Gallis Domanium Italis Demanium Accipitur multipliciter says Bracton Est autem Dominicum quod quis habet ad mensam suam propriè sicut sunt Bordlands Anglicè i. Dominicum ad mensam Item dicitur Dominicum
Laymen were not approved by the Diocesan and as they term it spiritualized they are not accounted Benefices neither can they be conferred by the Bishop but remain to the pious disposition of the Founders wherefore the Founders and their Heirs may give such Chappels if they will without the Bishop Gwin in the Preface to his Readings saith That the King might of ancient time found a Free-Chappel and exempt it from the Jurisdiction of the Diocesan So also may he by his Letters Patent give Licence to a common person to found such a Chappel and make it Donative not presentable and that the Chaplain shall be deprivable by the Founder or his Heir and not by the Bishop which seems to be the original of Donatives in England Fitzherbert saith fol. 23. That there are some Chantries which a Man may give by his Letters Patent All Bishopricks were in ancient time Donative by the King Coke lib. 3. fol. 75. Donor Is he who gives Lands or Tenements to another in Tail and Donee is he to whom the same are given Doom Sax. dom A Judgment Sentence Ordinance or Decree also sence or signification Substantiva quaedam says Mr. Somner exeunt in Dom ubi compositionis gratia videtur appositum quandoque munus denotat vel Officium item Ditionem Dominium ut in Kingdom Earldom c. Habeat Grithbriche Forstal Dom Som Wreche in Mari. Mon. Angl. 1. par fol. 284. a. Dorture Dormitorium Is the Common Room or Chamber where all the Religious of one Convent slept and lay all night Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 11. Dote Assignanda Is a Writ that lay for a Widow where it was found by Office That the Kings Tenant was seised of Tenements in Fee or Fee-tail at the day of his death and that he held of the King in Cheif c. In which Case the Widow came into the Chancery and there made Oath That she would not marry without the Kings leave Anno 15 Edw. 3. cap. 4. And hereupon she had this Writ to the Escheator for which see Reg. of Writs fol. 297. and Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 263. These Widows are called the Kings Widows See Widow Dote unde nihil habet Is a Writ of Dower that lies for the Widow against the Tenant who bought Land of her Husband in his life time whereof he was solely seised in Fee-simple or Feetail in such sort as the issue of them both might have inherited Fitz. Nat. Br. fol 147. Dotis Admensuratione See Admeasurement and Reg. of Writs fol. 171. Doubles Anno 14 Hen. 6. cap. 6. Signifie as much as Letters Patent being a French word made of the Latin Diploma Double Plea Duplex Placitum Is that wherein the Defendant alleageth for himself two several matters in Bar of the Plaintiffs Action whereof either is sufficient to effect his desire which shall not be admitted for a Plea As if a Man alleage several matters the one nothing depending upon the other the Plea is accounted Double and not admittable but if they be mutually depending each of other then is it accounted single Kitchin fol. 223. See Brook hoc tit And Sir Tho. Smith gives this reason why such Double Plea is not admitted by our Law because the tryal is by Twelve rude Men whose Heads are not to be troubled with over many things at once Lib. 2. de Rep. Angl. cap. 13. Domus Conversorum See Rolls Domus Dei The Hospital of S. Julian in Southampton so called Mon. Angl. 2 par fol. 440. b. Double Duarrel Duplex Querela Is a Complaint made by any Clerk or other to the Archbishop of the Province against an Inferior Ordinary for delaying Justice in some Cause Eccsesiastical as to give Sentence Institute a Clerk presented or the like and seems to be termed a Double Quarrel because it is most commonly made against both the Judge and him at whose sute Justice is delayed Cowels Interp. Dowager Dotata A Widow endowed or that hath a Jointure a Title or Addition applied in general to the Widows of Princes Dukes Earls and Persons of Honor onely Dower Dos Dotarium The first Dos properly signifies that which the Wife brings her Husband in Marriage otherwise called Maritagium Marriage Goods The other Dotarium or Doarium that Portion of Lands or Tenements which she hath for term of her life from her Husband if she out-live him Glanvile lib. 7. cap. 1. Bracton lib. 2. cap. 38. Britton cap. 101. in Princip Some Authors have for distinction called the First a Dowry and the other a Dower but they are often confounded Of the former our Law-books speak little of the later there are five kindes viz. 1. Dower per Legem Communem 2. Dower per Consuetudinem 3. Dower ex Assensu Patris 4. Dower ad Ostium Ecclesiae 5. Dower de la Plus Bele Dower by the Common Law Is a Third Part of such Lands as the Husband was sole seised of in Fee during the Marriage which the Wife is to enjoy during her life for which there lies a Writ of Dower Dower by Custom gives the Wife in some places half her Husbands Lands so long as she lives sole as in Gavelkind And as Custom may enlarge so may it abridge Dower and restrain it to a fourth part Ex Assensu Patris ad Ostium Ecclesiae the Wife may have so much Dower as shall be so assigned or agreed upon but it ought not to exceed a third part of the Husbands Lands Glanv lib. 6. cap. 1. And if it be done before Marriage it is called a Joynture Dower de la Plus Bele Is when the Wife is endowed of the fairest or best part of her Husbands Estate See Coke on Littl. fol. 33. b. Romanis non in usu fuit uxoribus Dotes retribuere ideo verbo genuino carent quo hoc dignoscitur rem ipsam in Germanorum moribus miratur Tacitus Dotem inquit non uxor Marito sed uxori Maritus affert Spelm. To the consummation of Dower three things are necessary viz. Marriage Seizin and the Husbands death Binghams Case 2 Rep. If the Wife be past the age of nine years at the death of her Husband she shall be endowed If a Woman elope or go away from her Husband with an Adulterer and will not be reconcil'd she loseth her Dower by the Stat. of Westm 2. ca. 34. 2 Part Inst fol. 433. Camden in his Brit. tit Sussex relates this memorable Case out of the Parl. Records 30 Edw. 1. Sir John Camois son of the Lord Raph Camois of his own free-will gave and demised his own Wife Margaret Daughter and Heir of John de Gaidesden unto Sir Will. Panell Knight and unto the same William Gave Granted Released and Quit-claimed all her Goods and Chattels c. So that neither he himself nor any Man else in his Name might make Claim or ever Challenge any Interest in the said Margaret or in her Goods or Chattels c. By which Grant when
effect Soccage Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 84. This is taken away and discharged by Act of Parliament 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. See Capite Eskippeson Shipping Cesie Endenture faite parentre lui noble home Mons Thomas Beauchamp Counte de Warwyke d'une parte John Russell Escuier d'autre parte Tesmoigne c. Et que le dit John aura Eskypesoun covenable pour son passage repassage outre meer as cusiages le dit Counte c. done a Warwyke 2 Jan. 50 Edw. 3. Esnecy Aeisnecia Fr. Aisneesse i. Dignitas Primogeniti Is a Prerogative allowed the eldest Coparcener to chuse first after the Inheritance is divided Fleta lib. 5. cap. 10. sect In Divisionem Salvo capitali Mesuagio primogenito Filio pro dignitate Aeisneciae suae Glan● lib. 7. cap. 3. Jus Esnetiae i. Jus Primogeniturae In the Statute of Marlbridge cap. 9. it is called Initia pars Haereditatis See Coke on Lattl fol. 166. b. Esples Expletia from Expleo Are the full Profits which the Ground or Land yields as the Hay of the Meadows the Feed of the Pasture the Corn of the Arable the Rents Services and such like Issues The Profits comprised under this word the Romans properly call Accessiones Note that in a Writ of Right of Land Advowson or such like the Demandant ought to alleage in his Court That he or his Ancestors took the Esplees of the thing in demand else the Pleading is not good T. Ley. Espervarius and Sparverius Fr. Espervier A Spar-Hawk Char. Foresta cap. 14. Reddit solut Willielmo Talboys Arm. ad Manerium suum de Kyme pro omnibus serviciis secularibus unum Espervarium vel 2 s. per annum ad Festum Sancti Mich. c. Comput Davidis Gefferon Collect. Redd de Wragby Anno 35 Hen. 6. Dicunt quod Ricardus de Herthall die quo obiit tenuit Manerium de Poley in Com War in Dominico suo ut de feodo per fidelitatem servitium unius Espervarii vel 2 s. ad Festum S. Jacobi c. Esc de Anno 19 Edw. 2. num 53. Esquier Was originally he who attending a Knight in time of War did carry his Shield whence he was called Escuier in French and Scutifer or Armiger in Latin Howbeit this Addition hath not of long time had any respect at all to the Office or employment of the person to whom it hath been attributed but been meerly a title of dignity and next in degree below a Knight Those to whom this title is now of right due are All the Younger Sons of Noblemen and their Heirs-male for ever The Four Esquiers of the Kings Body the Eldest Sons ot all Baronets so also of all Knights of the Bath and Knights Batchelors and their Heirs-male in the right Line Those that serve the King in any Worshipful Calling to use Camdens words as the Serjeant Chirurgeon Serjeant of the Ewry Master Cook c. Such as are created Esquiers by the King with a Collar of S. S. of Silver as the Heraulds and Serjeants at Ar 〈…〉 The cheif of some ancient Families are likewise Esquiers by Preseription those that hear any Superior Office in the Commonwealth as High Sheriff of any County who retains the title of Esquire during his life in respect of the great trust he has had of the Posse Comitatus He who is a Justice of Peace has it during the time he is in Commission and no longer if not otherwise qualify'd to bear it Vtter Barrasters in the late Acts of Parliament for Pol-Money were ranked among Esquires and so wete many wealthy Men by reason they were commonly reputed to be such and paid accordingly In Walsinghams History of Richard the Second we read of one John Blake who is said to be Juris Apprenticius and has the Addition of Scutifer there given him but whether intituled thereto by reason of that his Profession or otherwise does not appear See Camd. Brit. fol. 111. And 2 Inst fol. 595. A Principe fiunt Armigeri vel scripto vel Symbolo vel munere Scripto cum Rex sic quempiam constituerit Symbolo quum collum ergo alicujus argenteo sigmatico hoc est torque ex SS confecto adornaberit eumve argentatis calcaribus ad discrimen equitum qui aureis usi sunt donavorit Tales in occidentali Angliae plaga ut aliquando didici in conventu rei antiquae studiosorum White spurrs dicti sunt Munere cum ad munus quempiam evocaverit vel in Aula vel in Reipub. Armigerō designatum cujusmodi multa hodie patribus nostris incognita Inter Armigeros qui fiunt non nascuntur primarii habentur quatuor illi Armigeri ad Corpus Regis Esquires of the Body quos Equitum filiis primogenitis anteponendos asserunt Thus the Learned Spel. in whose Glossarium you may find mention of another species of Esquires viz. Squier born de quater Cotes OMnibus Walterus de Pavely miles filius quondam Reginaldi de Pavely salutem Novertitis me obligari Rogero Marmion filio quondam Philippi Marmion omnibus diebus vitae suae in una Roba cum pellura de secta Armigerorum meorum annuatim ad Festum Nativitatis Domini percipiend sine aliqua contradictione vel retractione mei vel haeredum meorum aut assignatorum Ad quam quidem solutionem Robae praedictae cum pellura annuatim ad terminum supradictum fideliter persoluendum obligo me haredes meos bona catalla nostra mobilia immobilia ubicunque fuerint inventa in maneriis meis in Hundredo de Westbury existentibus vel extra c. sine dat Ex codice M. S. penes Gul. Dugdale Arm. Essendi quietum de Tolonio Is a Writ that lies for Citizens and Burgesses of any City or Town that have a Charter or Prescription to exempt them from paying Toll through the whole Realm if it chance that the same is any where exacted of them Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 226. Essoin Essonium from the Fr. Essonie or Exonnie i. Causarius miles he that has his presence forborn or excused upon any just cause as sickness or other impediment Signifies an alleadgment of an Excuse for him that is summon'd or sought for to appear and answer to an Action real or to perform Sure to a Court-Baron upon just Cause of absence It is as much as excusatio with the Civilians The causes that serve to Essoin any Man Summon'd are divers yet drawn to five Heads whereof the First is ultra mare the Second de terra sancta the Third de malo veniendi which is also called the common Essoin the Fourth is de malo lecti the Fifth de servitio Regis For further knowledge of these I refer you to Glanvile lib. 1. Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. per totum Britton ca. 122 125. and to Horns Mirror lib. 7. ca. des Essoins who mentions some more Essoins touching the Service of the King Celestial then the rest do Of these Essoins you may read
the end of the Sute and all that the Kings Writ commands to be done The other Writ with a Quousque is tending to an end but not final as in the Case of Capias ad Satisfaciendum c. which is not final but the Body of the party is to be taken to the intent to satisfie the Demandant and his imprisonment is not absolute but until he satisfie Idem ibid. Executor Executor Is he that is appointed by any Mans last Will and Testament to have the Execution thereof and the disposing of all the Testators substance according to the tenor of the Will See the Duty of Executors a Book so entituled Executor de son tort Or of his own wrong is he that takes upon him the Office of an Execator by intrusion not being so constituted by the Testator or deceased nor for want of such Constitution constituted by the Ordinary to administer How far he shall be liable to Creditors see 43 Eliz. cap. 8. Dyer 166. and the Duty of Executors cap. 14. Exemplification of Letters Patent An. 13 Eliz. cap. 6. Is a copy or example of Letters Patent made from the Inrollment thereof and sealed with the Great Seal of England which Exemplifications are as effectual to be shewed or pleaded as the Letters Patent themselves Nothing but matter of Record ought to be exemplified 3 Inst fol. 173. See Pages Case 5 Rep. Exemplificatione Is a Writ granted for the Exemplification of an Original See Reg. of Writs fol. 290. Ex gravi Querela Is a Writ that lies for him to whom any Lands or Tenements in Fee within a City Town or Borough wherein Lands are devisable are devised by Will and the Heir of the Devisor enters and detains them from him Reg. of Writs fol. 244. Old Nat. Br. fol. 87. See Fitz. Nat. Br. fol 198. L. Exhibit Exhibitum When any Deed Acquittance or other writing is in a sute in Chancery exhibited to be proved by Witnesses and the Examiner certifies on the back of it that the Deed was shewed to such a one at the time of his Examination this is there called an Exhibit The word is mentioned Anno 14 Car. 2. cap. 14. Exigendaries of the Common Bench Exigendarii de Banco Communi Are otherwise 10 Hen. 6. cap. 4. called Exigenters which Vide. Exigent Exigenda Is a Writ that lies where the Defendant in an Action Personal cannot be found nor any thing of his within the County whereby to be attached or distrained and is directed to the Sheriff to proclaim and call him five County days one after another charging him to appear under pain of Outlary This Writ also lies in an Indictment of Felony where the party indicted cannot be found Smith de Repub. Angl. lib. 2. cap. 19. It is called an Exigent because it exacteth the party that is requires his appearance or forth-coming to answer the Law for if he come not at the last days Proclamation he is said to be Quinquies Exactus and then is Outlawed Cromp. Jurisd fol. 188. See the New Book of Entries verbo Exigent Exigenters Exigendarii Are four Officers of the Court of Common Pleas who make a●l Exigents and Proclamations in all Actions wherein Process of Outlary lies and Writs of Supersedeas as well as the Pronotaries upon such Exigents as were made in their Offices 18 Hen. 6. cap. 9. But the making the Writs of Supersedeas is since taken from them by an Officer in the Court of Common Pleas erected by King James by his Letters Patent in the later end of His Reign Ex mero motu Lat. Are formal words used in the Kings Charters and Letters Patent signifying that he does what is contained therein Of his own will and motion without Petition or Suggestion made by any other and the effect of these words is to Bar all Exceptions that might be taken to the Instrument wherein they are contained by alleaging that the Prince in passing such a Charter was abused by salse suggestion Kitchin fol. 352. Ex Officio By vertue of a Branch of the Stat. 1 Eliz. cap. 1. the Queen by Her Letters Patent might authorise any person or persons c. To administer an Oath Ex Officio whereby the supposed Delinquent was compelled to confess accuse or purge himself of any criminal matter and thereby be made liable to censure or punishment c. The Branch of which Statute relating to the said Oath is repealed 17 Car. 1. cap. 11. Exoneratione Sectae Was a Writ that lay for the Kings Ward to be disburdened of all sute c. to the County Hundred Leet or Court Baron during the time of his Wardship Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 158. Ex Parte Lat. Partly or of one part In the Court of Chancery it hath this signification A Joynt-Commission is that wherein both Plaintiff and Defendant joyn A Commission Ex parte is that which is taken out and executed by one Party onely Ex parte talis Is a Writ that lies for a Bailiff or Receiver who having Auditors assigned to hear his account cannot obtain of them reasonable allowance but is cast into Prison by them Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 129. The manner in this Case is to take this Writ out of the Chancery directed to the Sheriff to take four Mainpernors to bring his Body before the Barons of the Exchequer at a day certain and to warn the Lord to appear at the same time Expectant Used with this word Fee differs from Fee-simple For example Lands are given to a Man and his Wife in Frank-Marriage To hold to them and their Heirs In this case they have Fee-simple Bat if it be given to them and the heires of their body c. they have Taile and Fee-expectant Kitchin fol. 153. Explees See Esplees Expeditate Expeditare vel expaaltare In the Forest Laws signifies to cut out the Bal● of great Dogs fore-feet for preservation of the Kings Game Every one that keeps any great Dogs not expeditated forfeits three shillings to the King The Ball of the foot of Mastists is not to be cut off but the three Claws of the fore-foot to the skin 4 Part. Inst fol. 308. Nullus Dominicos canes Abbatis Monachorum expaaltari cogat Charta Hen. 3. Abbati de Rading sint quieti de espeditamentis canum Ex magno Rot. Pipae de Anno 9 Ed. 2. Expenditors Anno 37 Hen. 8. ca. 11. Seems to signifie those that pay disburse or expend the Tax in the said Statute mentioned Anno 7 Jac. ca. 20. Paymasters Expensis militum levandis Is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for levying allowance for the Knights of the Parliament Reg. of Writs fol. 191. b. Explorator A Scout In memoriam Henrici Croft Equitis aurati Exploratoris in Hibernia generali● qui obiit Anno 1609. Scoutmaster-general Also a Huntsman or Chaser Idem Abbas habens Exploratores suos statim ponere fecit retia c. In Itin. Pickering 8 Ed. 3. Rot. 4. Extend Extendere To value
his right hand over the Book and say thus Hear you my Lord A. that I. B. from this day forth unto you shall be true and faithful and shall ow you Fealty for the Land that I hold of you in Villange and shall be justified by you in Body and Goods So help me God and all his Saints See Reg. of Writs fol. 302. a. Fidelitas est fidei ubsequii servitii ligamen quo generaliter subditus Regi particulariter vassallus domino astringitur Spel. Fée Feodum alias Feudum Is applied to all those Lands and Tenements which we hold by perpetual right and by an acknowledgment of any superiority to a higher Lord. Those that write of this subject divide all Lands and Tenements wherein a Man hath a perpetual estate to him and his heirs into Allodium and Feudum Allodium is defined to be every Man 's own Land c. which he possesseth meerly in his own right without acknowledgment of any service or payment of any Rent to any other and this is a property in the highest degree Feudum is that which we hold by the benefit of another and in the name whereof we ow Service or pay Rent or both to a Superior Lord. And all our Land here in England the Crown Land which is in the Kings own hands in right of His Crown excepted is in the nature of Feudum or Fee For though many have Land by descent from their Ancestors and others have dearly bought Land for their Money yet is it of such nature that it cannot come to any either by descent or purchase but with the burthen that was laid upon him who had Novel Fee or first of all received it as a benefit from his Lord to him and to all such to whom it might descend or any way be conveyed So that there is no Man that hath Directum Dominium i. The very Property or Demain in any Land but the Prince in right of His Crown Camd. Britan. pag. 93. For though he that hath Fee hath Jus perpetuum utile Dominium yet he ows a duty for it and therefore it is not simply his own which thing I take those words we use for the expressing our deepest Rights in any Lands or Tenements to import for he that can say most for his estate saith thus I am seised of this or that Land or Tenement in my Demain as of Fee and that is as much as if he had said it is my Demain or Proper Land after a sort because it is to me and my heirs for ever yet not simply mine because I hold it in the nature of a benefit from another yet the Stat. 37 Hen. 8. cap. 16. useth the word Fee of Lands invested in the Crown but it proceeds from an ignorance of the nature of the word for Fee cannot be without Fealty sworn to a Superior as you may read partly in the word Fealty but more at large in those that write De Feudis and namely Hotoman both in his Commentaries and Disputations since no Man may grant that our King or Crown oweth Fealty to any Superior but God onely And all that write De Feudis hold that Feudatarius hath not an entire property in his Fee Fee is divided into Fee absolute otherwise called Fee-simple and Fee-conditional otherwise termed Fee-tail Fee-simple Feudum simplex is that whereof we are seised To us and our heirs for ever Fee-tail Feudum taliatum is that whereof we are seised with limitation to us and the heirs of our Body c. Which Fee-tayle is both general and special General is where Land is given to a Man and the heires of his body the reason whereof is shewed by Littleton lib. 1. ca. 2. because a Man seised of Land by such a gift if he Marry one or more Wives and have no issue by them and at length marry another by whom he hath issue this issue shall inherit the Land Fee-tayl special is that where a Man and his Wife are seised of Lands to them and the heirs of their two bodies because in this case the Wife dying without issue and he Marrying another by whom he hath issue this issue cannot inherit the Land being especially given to such heirs c. This Fee-tayl has Original from the Stat. of Westm 2. ca. 1. Yet see Bracton lib. 2. ca. 5. num 3. Item quaedam absoluta larga quaedam stricta coarcta sicut certis haeredibus To whom add Plowden casu Willion fol. 235. For before that Statute all Land given to a Man and his heirs either general or special was accounted in the nature of Fee and therefore held to be so firmly in him to whom it was given that any limitation notwithstanding he might alienate it at his pleasure Coke on Litt. fol. 19. for redress of which inconvenience the said Statute was made whereby it is ordain'd that if a Man give Lands in Fee limiting the heirs to whom it shall descend with a reversion to himself or his heires for default c. that the form and true meaning of his gift shall be observed He that hath Fee then holdeth of another by some duty or other which is called Service This word Fee is sometimes used for the compass or circuit of a Lordship or Mannor Bracton lib. 2. ca. 5. in eadem villa de eodem Feodo Thirdly It is used for a perpetual right incorporeal as to have the keeping of Prisons in Fee Old Nat. Br. fol. 41. Rent granted in Fee eodem fol. 8. Sheriff in Fee Anno 28 Ed. 1. Stat. 13. ca. 8. Lastly Fee signifies a reward or ordinary duty given a man for the execution of his Office or the performance of his industry in his Art or Science As the Lawyer or Physitian is said to have his Fee when he hath the consideration of his pains taken the one with his Client the other with his Patient Fee expectant Is by the Feudists termed Feudum expectativum See Expectant Fee Farm or Fee Ferm Feudi firma vel feofirma Is when the Lord upon creation of the Tenancy reserves to himself and his heirs either the rent for which it was before letten to Farm or at least a fourth part of that rent 2 Part Inst fo 44. and that without homage fealty or other services other then are especially comprized in the Feoffment but by Fitzh it seems the third part of the value may be appointed for the Rent or the finding of a Chaplain to Sing Divine-Service c. Nat. Br. fol. 210. C. And the Nature of it is this That if the Rent be behind and unpaid for the space of two years then the Feoffor or his heirs have Action to recover the Lands as their Demesnes Britton ca. 66. num 4. But observe out of Wests Symbol part 1. lib. 2. Sect. 463. that the Feoffment may contain services and sute of Court as well as rent And the Author of the New Terms of Law saith
custom was so kept that the Sheriffs at every County Court did from time to time take the Oaths of young ones as they grew to Fourteen years of age and see that they were setled in one Dozein or another whereupon this Branch of the Sheriffs Authority was called Visus Franci-plegii View of Frank-pledge See the Statute for View of Frank-pledge Anno 18 Edw. 2. See Decennier Leet View of Frank-pledge and Friborgh What Articles were wont to be enquired of in this Court see in Horns Mirror lib. 1. cap. De la Veneu des Francs-pleges and what those Articles were in ancient times see in Fleta lib. 2. cap. 52. See also 2 Part. Inst fol. 73. And if there be ony persone within the Warde that is not under Franc-pledge that is to saye under loue and Lawe c. Out of an Ancient Charge of the Quest of Wardmore in every Ward in London Frée-bench Franc-bank Francus Bancus i. Sedes Libera Signifies that estate in Copihold Lands which the Wife being espoused a Virgin hath after the death of her Husband for her Dower according to the custom of the Mannor Kitchin fol. 102. As at Orleton in the County of Hereford the relict or a Cop holdtenant is admitted to her Free-bench that is to all her Husbands Copihold Lands during her life the next Court after her husbands death Bracton lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 13. num 2. hath these words Consuetudo est in partibus illis quod uxores maritorum defunctorum habeant Francum Bancum suum de terris Sockmannorum tenent nomine dotis Fitzherbert calls it a Custom whereby in certain Cities the Wife shall have her Husbands whole Lands c for her Dower Nat. Br. fol. 150. See Plowden Casu Newis fol. 411. Of this Free-bench several Mannors have several customs As it is the custom of the Mannors of East and West Enborn in the County of Berks● That if a Customary Tenant dye the Widow shall have her Free-bench in all his Copihold Lands Dum sola casta fuerit but if she commit Incontinency she forfeits her estate yet if she will come into the Court riding backward on a Black Ram with his tail in her hand and say the words following the Steward is bound by the Custom to re-admit her to her Free-bench Here I am Kiding upon a Black ●am Like a Whore as I am And for my Crinoum Crancum Have lost my Binkum Bankum And for my Tails Game Have done this Worldly shame Therefore I pray you ●r Steward let me have my Land again The like Custom is in the Mannor of Tor in Devonshire and other parts of the West Free-bord Francbordus Et totum hoscum quod vocatur Brendewode cum Francbordo duorum pedum dimid per circuitum illius bosci Mon. Angl. 2 Part. fol. 241. a. In some places more in some less is claimed as a Free-bord beyond or without the Fence Frée-chappel Libera Capella Is in the opinion of some a Chappel founded within a Parish for the Service of God by the Devotion and Liberality of some good Man over and above the Mother Church to which it was free for the Parishioner to come or not and endowed with maintenance by the Founder and therefore called Free Others say and more probably that those onely are Free-chappels which are of the Kings Foundation and by him exempted from the Jurisdiction of the Ordinary but the King may licence a Subject to found such a Chappel and by his Charter exempt it from the Ordinaries Visitation also That it is called free in respect of its exemption from the Jurisdiction of the Diocesan appears by the Register of Writs fol. 40 and 41. These Chappels were all given to the King with Chantries also Anno 1 Edw. 6. ca. 14. Free-Chappel of St. Martin le Grand Anno 3 Ed. 4. ca. 4. 4 Ed. 4. ca. 7. Freedstoll See Fridstoll Freehold Liberum tenementum Is that Land or Tenement which a Man holds in Fee Fee-tayl or for term of life Bracton lib. 2. ca. 9. And it is of two sorts Freehold in Deed and Freehold in Law The first is the real Possession of Land or Tenement in Fee fee-Fee-tail or for Life The other is the right that a Man has to such Land or Tenement before his entry or seisure Freehold is likewise extended to those Offices which a Man holds either in Fee or for life Britton defines it to this effect Franktenement is a possession of the Soyl or services issuing out of the Soyl which a Freeman holds in Fee or at least for life though the Soyl be charged with free-services ca. 32. Freehold is sometimes taken in opposition to Villenage Lambert in his explication of Saxon words Verbo Terra ex scripto says Land in the Saxons time was called either Bockland that is holden by Book or Writing or Folckland held without Writing The former he reports was held with far better condition and by the better sort of Tenants as Noblemen and Gentlemen being such as we now call Freehold The later was commonly in the possession of Clownes being that which we now call at the will of the Lord. R●g Judicial fol. 68. a. sayes That he who holds Land upon an execution of a Statute-Merchant until he be satisfi'd the Debt Tenet ut liberum tenementum sibi ussignatis suis and fol. 73 the same of a Tenant per Elegit where I conceive the meaning is not that such Tenants are Freeholders but as Freeholders for their time until they have receiv'd profits to the value of their Debt Freeholders in the ancient Laws of Scotland were called Milites according to Skene verbo Milites Frenchman Francigena Was anciently used for every stranger Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 15. See Englecery Frendles man Was the old Saxon word for him whom we call an Out-law The reason was because he was upon his exclusion from the Kings Peace and protection deny'd all help of friends after certain days Nam forisfecit amicos Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 12. num 1. says thus Talem vocant Angli Utlaugb alio nomine antiquitus solet nominari friendlesman sic videtur quod forisfecit amicos unde si quis talem post utlagatariam expulsionem scienter paverit receptaverit vel scienter communicaverit aliquo modo vel occultaverit eadem paena puniri debet qua puniretur utlagatus ita quod careat omnibus bonis suis vita nisi Rex ei parcat de gratia sua Frendwite vel Infeng Significat quietantiam prioris prisae ratione convivii Fleta lib. 1. ca. 47. Fresh disseisin from the Fr. Fraiz i. Recens disseisir i. Possessione ejicere Signifies that Disseisin which a man may seek to defeat of himself and by his own power without the help of the King or Judges and which is not above fifteen dayes old Britton ca. 5. Of this you may read Bracton lib. 4. ca. 5. at large concluding that
it is arbitrary Fresh fine Is that which was levied within a year past Westm 2. ca. 45. Anno 13 Edw. 1. Fresh force Frisca fortia Is a force done within fourty dayes Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 7. For if a man be Disseis'd of any Lands or Tenements within any City or Borough or deforced from them after the death of his Ancestor to whom he is heir or after the death of his Tenant for Life or in Tayl he may within fourty dayes after his title accrued have his remedy by an Assise or Bill of Fresh force See Old Nat. Br. fol. 4. a. Fresh sute Recens insecutio Is such a present and active following an Offender as never ceases from the time of the Offence committed or discover'd until he be apprehended And the benefit of the pursute of a Felon is That the party pursuing shall have his Goods restored him whereas otherwise they are the Kings of this see Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 3. ca. 10 and 12. where you shall find what sute is to be accounted fresh and what not The same Author lib. 1. ca. 27. saith that fresh sute may continue for seven years See Cokes Reports lib. 3. Rigeways Case Fresh sute is either within the view or without For Manwood sayes That upon fresh sute within the view trespassers in the Forest may be attached by the Officers pursuing them though without the limits of the Forest pa. 2. ca. 19. num 4. Friar or Frier Lat. Frater Fr. Frere i. A Brother an Order of Religious persons of which these are reckoned the principal Branches Anno 4 H. 4. ca. 17. viz. Minors Grey-Friers or Franciscans Augustins Dominicans or Black-Friers and White-Friers or Carmelites from which the rest descend See Zecchius de Repub. Eccles p. 380 and Linwood tit de relig Domibus c. 1. verbo Sancti Augustini Friburgh alias Frithborg from the Sax. frith i. Pax. and borge i. Fidejussor Is the same with Francpledge the one being in use in the Saxons time the other since the Conquest wherefore for the understanding this read Frankpledge and the Laws of King Edward set out by Lambert fol. 232. in these words Praeterea est quaedam summa maxima securitas per quam omnes statu firmissimo sustinentur viz. ut unusquisque stabiliat se sub fidejussionis securitate quam Angli vocant Freoborghes soli tamen Eboracenses dicunt eandem Tienmannatale quod sonat latine decem hominum numerum c. Bracton mentions Fridburgum lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 10. in these words Archiepiscopi Episcopi Comites Barones omnes qui habent Soc Sak Tol Team hujusmodi libertates milites suos proprios servientes Armigeros c. Dapiferos pincernas camerarios coquos pistores sub suo Fridburgo habere debent Item isti suos armigeros alios sibi servientes quod si cui forisfecerint ipsi Domini sui habeant eos ad rectum si non habuerint solvant pro eis forisfacturam Et sic observandum erit de omnibus aliis qui sunt de alicujus manupastis Where we learn the reason why Great Men were not combined in any ordinary Dozein because they were a sufficient assurance for themselves and for their menial servants no less then the ten were one for another in ordinary Dozeins See Skone verbo Freiborgh Fleta writes it Frithborgh and useth it for the principal man or at least for one of the Dozein lib. 1. ca. 47. See Hoveden parte poster Annal. in Hen. 2. fol. 345. But Spelman makes a difference between Friborg and Frithborg saying The first signifies libera securitas or fidejussio the other pacis securitas Fridstoll et Frithflow from the Sax. frith pax stol sedes cathedra stow locus A Seat Chair or place of Peace In the Charter of Immunities granted to the Church of St. Peter in York confirmed Anno 5 Hen. 7. Fridstol is expounded Cathedra quictudinis pacis Of these there were many others in England but the most famous at Beverley which had this Inscription Haec sedes lapidea Freedstoll dicitur i. Pacis Cathedra ad quam reus fugiendo perveniens omnimodam habet securitatem Camd. Frier observant Frater observans Is a branch of the Franciscans which are Minores tam observantes quam conventuales Capuchini These we find spoken of An. 25 Hen. 8. ca. 12. who are called Observants because they are not combined together in any Cloister Covent or Corporation as the Conventuals are but onely by themselves to observe the Rules of their Order and more strictly then the Conventuals do and upon a singularity of zeal separate themselves from them living in certain places of their own chusing of whom you may read Hospinian de Orig. progress Monachatus ca. 38. fol. 878. Friperer Fr. Fripier i. Interpolator One that furbushes and scowers up old Apparel to sell again It is used for a bastardly kind of Broaker Anno 1 Jac. ca. 21. Frithbrech Sax. Pacis violatio LL. Ethelredi ca. 6. See Frythe Frithburgh See Friburgh Frithmote Per Frithmote Jo. Stanley Ar. clamat capere annuatim de villa de Olton quae est infra Feodum Manerium de Aldford infra Forestam de la Mara x. sol quos Comites Cestriae ante confectionem Cartae praedictae solebant capere Pl. in Itin. apud Cestriam 14 Hen. 7. Frithsocne et Frithsoke frith i. Pax. socne Libertas Tuendae pacis jurisdictio or according to Fleta Libertas habendi franci plegii or immunitatis locus Froborg or Freoburgh from the Sax. freo i. Free and borge i. Fidejussor See Friburgh and Franc-pledge Frodmortel rectius Freomortel from the Sax. freo Free and Morþ doed Murder An Immunity or Freedom granted for Murder or Man-slaughter Carta Adelstani Regis Sancto Wilfrido de Rippon concessa Wyt all that es and es gan Yat ik King Adelstan As given al 's frelith as I may And to ye Capitel of Seint Wilfrai Of my free Devotion Yair pees at Rippon On ilke side the Kyrke a mile For all ilk deeds and ylke agyle And within yair Kyrke yate At ye stan yat Grithstole hate Within ye Kyrke dore and ya quare Pair have pees for les and mare Ilkan of yis stedes sal have pees Of Frodmortel and il deedes Yat yair don is Tol Tem With Iron and with Water deme And yat ye Land of Seint Wilfrai Of alkyn geld fre sal be ay At nai nan at langes me to In yair Herpsac sal haue at do And for ik will at yai be saue I will at yai alkyn fréedome haue And in all thinges be al 's frée As hert may thinke or eygh may sée At te power of a Kinge Masts make free any thynge And my seale haue I sat yerto For I will at no Man it undo Frumgyld Sax. Prima capitis aestimationis pensio vel solutio The first payment made to the
is used in the same signification in other Nations Honor Courts Are Courts held within the Honors aforesaid mentioned 33 Hen. 8. cap. 37. And 37 Ejusdem cap. 18. Honorary Services Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 29. Are such as are incident to the Tenure of Grand Serjeanty and annexed commonly to some Honor or Grand Seigniory Hontfongenethef Cum omnibus aliis libertatibus tantummodo Hontfongenethef mihi retento Carta Wil. Comitis Marescalsi In Mon. Angl. 1 Par. fol. 724. This should have been written Hondfangenethef and signifies a Theif taken with Hondha-bend i. Having the thing stoln in his hand Hornebeam-Pollengers Are Trees so called that have usually been lopped and are above twenty years growth and therefore not tythable Plowden Casu Soby fol. 470. Horngeld from the Sax. Hofn cornu gel● soltitio Signifies a Tax within the Forest to be paid for horned Beasts Cromp. Juris fol. 197. And to be free of it is a priviledge granted by the King to such as he thinks good Quietum esse de omni collectione in Foresta de bestiis cornutis asses 4 Inst fol. 306. Et sint quieti de omnibus geldis Danegeldis Vodgeldis Senegeldis Horngeldis c. Diploma Hen. 3. Canonicis Monialibus de Semplingham See Subsidy Hors de son Fée Fr. i. out of his Fee Is an Exception to avoid an Action brought for Rent issuing out of certain Land by him that pretends to be the Lord or for some Customs and Services For if the Defendant can prove the Land to be without the compass of his Fee the Action falls See District and Broke hoctitulo Hospitalers Hospitalarii Were a certain order of Religious Knights so called because they built an Hospital at Jerusalem wherein Pilgrims were received To these Pope Clement the Fifth transferred the Templers which Order by a Council held at Vienne he suppressed for their many and great misdemeanors These Hospitalers were otherwise called Knights of S. John of Jerusalem and are now those we call the Knights of S. John of Malta Cassan Gloria mundi part 9. Consid 5. This Constitution was also obeyed in Edward the Second's time here in England and confirmed by Parliament Walsinghams Hist Edw. 2. These are mentioned 13 Edw. 1. cap. 43. and 9 Hen. 3. cap. 37. They had many priviledges granted them by the Popes as immunity from payment of Tythes c. Their Lands and Goods were put into the Kings dispose by Stat. 32 Hen. 8. cap. 24. See Mon. Angl. 2 part fol. 489. Hotchpot Fr. Hochepot A confused mingle-mangle of divers things jumbled or put together so also of Lands of several Tenures As a Man seised of thirty Acres of Land in Fee hath issue two daughters and gives with one of them ten Acres in Franc-marriage and dies seised of the other twenty Now if she that is thus married will have any part of the twenty Acres she must put her Lands given in Franc-marriage in Hotchpot that is she must refuse to take the sole profits of the ten Acres but suffer them to be mingled with the other twenty Acres to the end an equal division may be made of the whole thirty between her and her sister and thus for her ten Acres she shall have fifteen otherwise her sister will have the twenty Acres of which the Father died seised Littleton fol. 55. Coke on Littl. lib. 3. cap. 12. Britton fol. 119. Housabold and Hoybold Et similiter concessionem quam idem Willielmus de Lancastre fecit eisdem Abbati Canonicis de Cokersand eorum tenentibus villae de Gairstang tam qui essent quam qui fuerunt de Housabold and Hoybold cum omnibus aliis libertatibus eidem Villae pertin Mon. Angl. 2 par fol. 633. a. Quaere House-bote Compounded of House and Bote i. Compensatio Signifies Estovers or an allowance of Timber out of the Lords Wood for the repair or upholding a House or Tenement Housebote says Coke on Littl. fol. 41. b. is twofold viz. Estoverium aedificandi ardendi House-robbing or House-breaking Sax. Hous-bryc Is the robbing a Man in some part of his House or his Booth or Stall in any Fair or Market and the owner or his Wife Children or Servants being within the same This was Felony by 23 Hen. 8. cap. 1. and 3 Edw. 6. cap. 9. but now it is Felony though none be within the House by 39 Eliz. cap. 15. See Burglary and West part 2. Symb. tit Indictments sect 67. Hudegeld Significat quietantiam transgression is illatae in servum transgredientem Supposed to be mistaken by Fleta or mis-printed for Hinegeld Hue and Cry Hutesium and Clamor from the Fr. Huer and Crier both signifying to shout and cry out aloud Signifies a pursuit of one who hath committed Felony by the High-way for if the party robbed or any in the company of one murdered or robbed come to the Constable of the next Town and will him to raise Hue and Cry or to pursue the Offendor describing the party and shewing as near as he can which way he is gone the Constable ought forthwith to call upon the Parish for aid in seeking the Felon and if he be not found there then to give the next Constable warning and he the next until the Offendor be apprehended or at least thus pursued to the Sea-side Of this read Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 5. Smith de Repub. Anglor lib. 2. cap. 20. And the Statutes 13 Edw. 1. of Winchester ca. 3. 28 Ed. 3. cap. 11. and 27 Eliz. cap. 13. The Normans had such a pursute with a Cry after Offenders as this is which they called Haro of which you may read the Grand Customary ca. 54. Hue is used alone Anno 4 Ed. 1. Stat. 2. In ancient Records this is called Hutesium Clamor See Cokes 2 Part Instit fol. 172. Mandatum est Gulielmo de Haverhul Thesaurario Regis quod Civitatem London capiat in manum Regis eo quod Cives ejusdem Civitatis non Levaverunt Hutesium Clamorem pro morte Magistri Guidonis de Aretio aliorum interfectorum secundum legem consuetudinem regni Rot. Claus 30 H. 3. m. 5. Huers See Conders Huissiers See Usher Hulm See Holm Hundred Hundredum Centuria Is a part of a Shire so called either because at first there were an hundred Towns and Villages in each Hundred or because they did find the King 100 able Men for his Warrs These were first ordain'd by King Alfred the 29th King of the West Saxons Aluredus Rex sayes Lambert verbo Centuria ubi cum Guthruno daco foedus inierat prudentissimum illud olim a Jethrone Moisi datum secutus consilium Angliam primus in Satrapias Centurias decurias partitus est Satrapiam Shyre a Scyrian quod partiri significat nominavit Centuriam Hundred Decuriam Toothing sive Tienmantale i. Decemvirale Collegium appellavit atque iisdem nominibus vel hodie vocantur c. This dividing Counties into
Ex Reg. Priorat de Cokesford See Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 35. who says inter al. Et dicitur Infangethef latro captus in terra alscujus de hominibus suis propriis seisitus latrocinio Utfangthefe verò dicitur latro extraneuae veniens aliunde de terrâ alienâ qui captus fuit in terrâ ipsius qui tales habet libertates c. See also Sir Hen. Spelmans learned Glossarium In forma pauperis Is when any Man who hath just cause of Sure in Chancery and will make Affidavit that he is not worth Five pounds his debts being paid then upon a Petition to the Master of the Rolls he shall be admitted to sue In forma pauperis and shall have Council and Clerks assigned him without paying Fees and the like by the Judges of other Courts Information for the King Informatio pro Rege Is that which for a common person we call a Declaration and is not always preferred directly by the King of his Atturney but also by some other person who prosecutes as well for the King as for himself upon the breach of some Penal Law or Statute wherein a penalty is given to the party that will sue for the same and may either be by Action of Debt or Information Informatus non sum or Non sum informatus Is a Formal Answer made of course by an Atturney who is not instructed to say any thing material in defence of his Clients cause by which he is deemed to leave it undefended and so Judgment passeth against his Client See the New Book of Entries verbo Non sum informatus Informer Informator Is one who informs or prosecutes in the Exchequer Kings Bench or Common Pleas Assises or Sessions against those that offend or break any Laws or Penal Statutes And are sometimes called Promotors by the Civilians Delatores Ingressu Is a Writ of Entry whereby a Man seeks Entry into Lands or Tenements and lies in divers Cases wherein it hath as many diversities of Forms See Entry This Writ is also called in particular Praecipe quod reddat because those are formal words in all Writs of Entry De Ingressu sine assensu Capituli c. Reg. of Writs fol. 230. Is a Writ given by the Common Law to the Successor of him who alienated Sine assensu capituli c. And is so called from those words contained in the Writ Coke on Littl. fol. 325. b. Ingrossator magni Rotuli See Clerk of the Pipe In grosse Is that which belongs to the person of the Lord and not to any Mannor Lands c. As Villain in grosse Advowzen in grosse c. Coke on Littl. fol. 120. b. Ingrossing of a Fine Is making the Indentures by the Chirographer and the delivery of them to the party to whom the Cognisance is made Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 147. A. Ingrosser Ingrossator Is one that buys Corn growing or dead victuals to sell again except Barley for Malt Oats for Oat-meal or Victuals to Retail Badging by Licence and buying of Oyls Spices and Victuals other then Fish or Salt Anno 5 Edw. 6. cap. 14. Eliz. cap. 14. 13 Eliz. cap. 25. These are the words of Wests Symbol par 2. tit Indictments sect 64. But this definition rather belongs to unlawful ingrossing then to the word in general See Forestaller and 3 Part. Inst fol. 195. Ingrosser Is also a Clerk that writes Records or Instruments of Law in Skins of Parchment as in Henry the Sixth's time He who is now called Clerk of the Pipe was called Ingrossator Magni Rotuli and the Comptroller of the Pipe was called Duplex Ingrossator Spelm. Inheritance Haereditas Is a perpetuity in Lands or Tenements to a Man and his Heirs For Littleton lib. 1. cap. 1. saith this word is not onely understood where a Man hath inheritance of Lands and Tenements by descent of heritage but also every Fee-simple or fee-Fee-tail that a Man hath by his purchase may be called Inheritance because his Heirs may inherit him Several Inheritance is that which two or more hold severally as if two Men have Land given to them and the Heirs of their two Bodies these have Joynt Estate during their lives but their Heirs have several inheritance Kitchin fol. 155. A Man may have an inheritance in title of Nobility three manner of ways 1. By Creation 2. By Descent And 3. by Prescription Inhibition Inhibitio Is a Writ to forbid a Judge from farther proceeding in the Cause depending before him See Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 39. where he confounds Inhibition and Prohibition But Inhibition is most commonly a Writ issuing out of a higher Court Christian to an inferior upon an Appeal Anno 24 Hen. 8. cap. 12. and 15 Car. 2. cap. 9. And Prohibition out of the Kings Court to a Court Christian or an Inferior Temporal Court Injunction Injunctio Is a Writ grounded upon an interlocutory order of the Chancery sometimes to give possession to the Plaintiff for want of appearance in the Defendant sometimes to the Kings Ordinary Court and sometimes to the Court Christian to stay proceeding in a Cause upon suggestion made that the rigor of the Law if it take place is against Equity and Conscience in that case See West Par. 2. Symbol tit Proceedings in Chancery sect 25. Inlagh or Inlaughe Inlagatus Signifies him that is sub lege in some Frank-pledge not out-lawed of whom thus Bracton tract 2. lib. 3. cap. 11. Faemina utlagari non potest quia ipsa non est sub lege i. Inlaughe anglicō scil in Franco plegio sive decenna sicut masculi 12 annorum vel amplius Inlagary or Inlagation Inlagatio Is a restitution of one outlawed to the Protection of the Law or to the benefit or liberty of a Subject From the Sax. In-lagian i. Inlagare Et ex eo seipsum legis patrocinii adeo capacem reddat ut ad compensationem admittatur LL. Canuti Reg. pag. 1. cap. 2. Inland Inlandum Terra dominicalis pars Manerii Dominica terra interior For that which was let out to Tenants was called Utland In the Testament of Brithericus in Itinerar Kantii thus to wulsege that Inland to aelfege that Utland i. Lego terras Dominicales Wulfego Tenementales Aelfego Thus Englished by Lambert To Wulfée I give the Inland or Demeans and to Elfey the Outland or Tenancy Ex dono Wil. de Eston 50 Acras de Inlanda sua Rot. Cart. 16 Hen. 3. m 6. This word is often found in Domesday Inleased Fr. Enlasse Intangled or insnared The word is found in the Champions Oath 2 Part. Cokes Inst fol. 247. Inmates Are those that are admitted to dwell for their Money joyntly with another Man though in several Rooms of his Mansion-house passing in and out by one door and not being able to maintain themselves which are inquirable in a Leet Kitchin fol. 45. where you may finde who are properly Inmates in Intendment of Law Innes of Court Hospitii Curiae Are so called because the
or out of Lands For he is truly said to have an interest in them Coke on Litt. fo 345. b. Interlocutory Order Ordo interlocutorius Is that which non definit controversiam sed aliquid obiter ad causam pertinens decernit As where an Order is made by motion in Chancery in a Sute there depending for the Plaintiff to have an Injunction to quiet his possession till the hearing of the Cause This or any such like order which is not final is call'd interlocutory Interpleder See Enterpleder Intestates Intestati There are two kinds of Intestates one that makes no Will at all another that makes a Will and Executors and they refuse in which case he dies quasi intestatus 2 Part Inst fol. 397. Intiertie See Entierty Intrusion Intrusio Is when the Ancestor dies seiz'd of any Estate of inheritance expectant upon an estate for life and then Tenant for life dies between whose death and the entry of the Heir a stranger does interpose himself and intrude Coke on Litt. fo 277. To the same effect is Bracton lib. 4. ca. 7. Intrusio est ubi quis cui nullum jus competit in re nec scintilla juris possessionem vacuam ingreditur c. See him at large and Fleta lib 4. ca. 30. Sect. 1 2. Britton ca. 65. See Abatement Entrusion and the Stat. 21 Jac. ca. 14. Intrusione Is a Writ that lies against the Intruder Regist fo 233. Invadiationes Morgages or Pledges Confirmamus eis omnes alias donationes venditiones invadiationes eis rationabiliter factas Mon. Angl. 1. pa. fo 478. a. Inventarie Inventarium Is a list or repertory orderly made of all dead mens goods and Chattels prized by four credible Men or more which every Executor or Administrator ought to exhibit to the Ordinary at such time as he shall appoint West Part 1. Symbol lib. 2. Sect. 696. where likewise you may see the form This Inventary proceeds from the Civil Law for whereas by the ancient Law of the Romans the Heir was tied to answer all the Testators Debts by which means Inheritances were prejudicial to many men Justinian to encourage men the better to take upon them this charitable Office ordain'd That if the Heir would first make and exhibit a true Inventary of all the Testators Substance coming to his hands he should be no farther charged then to the value of it Lib. ult Cod. de Jure deliberando In ventre sa mere Fr. In the Mothers Belly Is a Writ mentioned in the Register of Writs and in Anno 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. Invest from the Fr. Invester Signifies to give possession Investitura proprie dicitur quando hasta vel aliquod corporeum traditur a Domino sayes the Feudist lib. 2. tit 2. We use likewise to admit the Tenant by delivering him a Verge or Rod into his hands and ministring him an Oath which is called Investing Others define it thus Investitura est alicujus in suum jus introductio a giving Livery of seisin or possession Invoice 12 Car. 2. ca. 34. Is a particular of the value custom and charges of any goods sent by a Merchant in another mans Ship and consign'd to a Factor or correspondent in another Country Inure Signifies to take effect or be available As the pardon inureth Stamf. Praerog fo 40. See Enure Jocalia Jewels Edward the First employ'd one Andevar ad socalia sua impignoranda Claus 29 Edw. 1. Praeterea confiderantes gratam subventionem quam praefati abbas Monachi Rading nobis fecerunt de magnis praeciosis Jocalibus ac aliis rebus suis in subsidium expensarum sumptuum quos circa praesens passagium nostrum versus partes transmarinas c. In mem Scac. de Anno 20 Ed. 3. Trin. Rot. 3. Jocarius a Jester In a Deed of Richard Abbas de Bernayo to Henry Lovet sine dat among the witnesses to it was Willielmo tunc Jocario Domini Abbatis Joclet Sax. Praediolum agri colendi portiuncula A little Farm or Mannor in some parts of Kent called a Yoklet as requiring but a small Yoke of Oxen to till it Sax. dict Jotson See Jetsen Flotson Joynder Is the coupling or joyning of two in a Sute or Action against another Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 118. and in many other places as appears in the Index verbo Joynder Joyntenants Simul tenentes or qui conjunctim tenent Are those that come to and hold Lands or Tenements joyntly by one title pro indiviso or without partition Littleton lib. 3. ca. 3. And these Joyntenants must joyntly plead and joyntly be impleaded by others which property is common between them and Coparceners but Joyntenants have a sole quality of survivorship which Coparceners have not For if there be two or three Joyntenants and one has Issue and dies he or those Joyntenants that survive shall have the whole by survivorship See Coke on Litt. fo 180. Joyning of Issue Junctio exitus See Issue Joynture Junctura Is a Covenant or Settlement whereby the Husband or some other friend in his behalf assureth to his Wife in respect of Marriage Lands or Tenements for term of her life or otherwise It is so called either because it is granted ratione Juncturae in matrimonio or because the Land in Frank-marriage is given joyntly to the Husband and Wife and after to the heirs of their bodies whereby the Husband and Wife are made Joyntenants during the Coverture Coke lib. 3. Butler and Bakers Case Ioynture is also used as the abstract of Ioyntenants Coke lib. 3. Marq. of Winchesters Case Journal Fr. A Diary or Day-book Iournals of Parliament are no Records but Remembrances they are not of necessity nor have been of long continuance See Hob. Rep. fo 109. Journ-choppers Anno 8 Hen. 6. ca. 5. Were Regraters of Yarn Whether that we now call Yarn was in those dayes called Iourn I cannot say but choppers in these dayes are well known to be changers As to chop and change is a familiar phrase See Chop-chirch Journy-man from the Fr. Iournee i. A day or days work Was properly he that wrought with another by the day though now by Statute it be extended to those likewise that covenant to work with another in their Occupation or Trade by the year Anno 5 Eliz. ca. 4. Ire ad largum To go at large to escape to be set at liberty Irregularity Irregularitas Disorder going out of Rule In the Canon Law it is taken for an impediment which hinders a man from taking Holy Orders as if he be base-born notoriously desamed of any notable Crime maimed or much deformed or has consented to procure anothers death with divers other Irrepleviable or Irreplevisable That may not or ought not by Law to be replevied or set at large upon Sureties The Distress shall remain irrepleviable Anno 13 Ed. 1. ca. 2. Isinglas Gluten piscium Is a kind of Fish-glue or Fish-gum brought from Iseland and those parts and is used in Medicines and by some in the
adulteration of Wines in which last use it is prohibited by Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 25. Issue Exitus Hath divers applications sometime being used for the Children begotten between a Man and his Wife sometime for Profits growing from Amercements or Fines sometimes for Profits of Lands or Tenements Westm 2. An. 13 Ed. 1. ca. 39. Sometime for that point of matter depending in Suite whereon the parties joyn and put their Cause to the Trial of the Jury And in all these it has but one signification which is an effect of a Cause preceding as Children are the effect of the Marriage the Profits growing to the King or Lord from the punishment of any mans Offence is the effect of his Transgression the point referr'd to 12 Men is the effect of pleading or process Issue in this last signification is either general or special General Issue seems to be that whereby it is referr'd to the Jury to bring in their Verdict whether the Defendant have done any such thing as the Plaintiff lays to his charge For example if it be an Offence against any Statute and the Defendant plead not culpable this being put to the Jury is called the General Issue See Doctor and Student fo 158. b. The Special Issue then must be that where special matter being alledged by the Defendant for his defence both parties joyn thereupon and so grow either to a demurrer if it be quaestio juris or to a Trial by the Jury if it be quaestio facti An. 4 Hen. 8. ca. 3. See the New Book of Entries verbo Issue and 18 Eliz. ca. 12. Itinerant Itinerans i. That takes a journey Those were anciently called Iustices itinerant who were sent with Commission into divers Counties to hear such causes specially as were termed Pleas of the Crown See Iustices in Eyre Judaism Iudaismus The Custom Religion or Rites of the Iews This word was often used by way of exception in old Deeds as Sciant Quod ego Rogerus de Morice dedi Willielmo Harding pro tribus marcis argenti unum croftum Habend de me heredibus meis sibi haeredibus ejus vel ejus assignatis eorum heredibus cuicunque quocunque vel quandocunque dictum Croftum dare vendere legare invadiare vel aliquo modo assignare voluerint in quocunque statu fuerint libere quiete integre bene in pace excepta Religione Judaismo c. Sine dat The Stat. De Iudaismo was made 18 Edw. 1. At which Parliament the King had a Fifteenth granted him Pro expulsione Iudaeorum Iudaismus was also anciently used for a Morgage Pro hac autem donatione dederunt mihi dicti Abbas Canonici sex Marcas Sterl ad acquietandam terram praedictam de Judaismo in quo fuit impignorata per Rob. fratrem meum c. Ex magno Rot. Pipae de Anno 9 Edw. 2. Judgment Iudicium quasi juris dictum The very voice of Law and Right and therefore Iudicium semper pro veritate accipitur The ancient words of Iudgment are very significant Consideratum est c. because Iudgment is ever given by the Court upon consideration had of the Record before them and in every Judgment there ought to be three persons Actor Reus Iudex Of Iudgments some are final and some not final c. See Coke on Littl. fol. 39. a. Judicium Dei The Judgment of God so our Ancestors called those now probibited Tryals of Ordael and its several kindes Si se super defendere non posset Judicio Dei scil Aquâ vel ferro fieret de eo justitia LL. Divi Edw. Confess cap. 16. See Spelm. Gloss on this word Judgment or Tryal by the Holy Cross long since disused See Cressy's Church-History fol. 960. Jugum terrae In Domesday contains half a P o 〈…〉 and. Jun 〈…〉 ia from juncus A Soil where Rushes grow Coke on Littl. fol. 5. Cum Piscariis Turbariis Juncariis communibus Pasturis ad Messuagium praedictum pertin Pat. 6 Edw. 3. pa. 1. m. 25. Jura Regalia See Regalia Jurats Iurati Anno 2 3 Edw. 6. cap. 30. As the Major and Iurats of Maidstone Rye Winchelsey Tenterdon c. are in the nature of Aldermen for Government of their several Corporations and the name is taken from the French where among others there are Major Iurati Suessenses c. Vide Choppin Doman Fran. lib. 3. Tit. 20. sect 11. p. 530. So Iersey hath a Bailiff and Twelve Iurats or sworn Assistants to govern the Island Cam. Romene● Marsh is incorporate of one Bailiff xxiiii Iurats and the Commonalty thereof by Charter Dat. 23 Febr. 1 Edw. 4. See Mr. Dugdale Hist of Imbanking and Draining fol. 34. b. Jury Iurata from Iurare to swear Signifies Twenty four or twelve Men sworn to inquire of the matter of Fact and declare the Truth upon such Evidence as shall be delivered them touching the matter in question of which Iury who may and who may not be impaneld see Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 165. There are two manner of Tryals in England one by Battel the other by Assise or Iury. See Smith de Repub. Angl. lib. 2. cap. 5 6 7. who adds a third by Parliament The Tryal by Assise be the Action Civil or Criminal Publick of Private Personal or Real is referred for the Fact to a Iury and as they finde it so passeth the Judgment which by Bracton lib. 2. cap. 7. is called Regale beneficium c. This Iury is not onely used in Circuits of Justices but in other Courts and Matters of Office as if the Coroner enquire how a subject found dead came to his end he useth an Enquest the Justices of Peace in their Quarter Sessions the Sheriff in his County and Turn the Bailiff of a Hundred the Steward of a Court Leet or Court Baron if they enquire of any offence or decide any Cause between party and party do it by the same manner So that where it is said all things are tryable by Battel or Assise Assise in this place is taken for a Iury or Enquest empanelled upon any Cause in a Court where this kinde of Tryal is used This Iury though it pertain to most Courts of the Common Law yet is it most notorious in the half-yearly Courts of the Justices Itinerants or of the Great Assises and in the Quarter Sessions where it is usually called a Iury and that in Civil Causes whereas in other Courts it is oftener termed an Enquest and in the Court Baron a Iury of the Homage In the General Assise there are usually many Iuries because there are many Causes both Civil and Criminal commonly to be tryed whereof one is called the Grand Iury or Great Enquest and the rest Petit Iuries whereof it seems there should be one for every Hundred Lamb. Eiren. lib. 4. cap. 3. pag. 384. The Grand Iury consists ordinarily of Twenty four grave and substantial Gentlemen or some of them of the better sort of Yeomen chosen
Curia vel invariare Renovamus etiam confirmamus Privilegia antiquorum Regum atque ob reverentiam Dominae nostrae perpetuae Virginis Mariae Sanctique Benedicti Sanctarumque virginum omnibusque futuris ibidem Abbatibus in tota possèssione Monasterii Sacham Socham Theloneumque suum in terra in aqua concedo Consuetudines ut ab omnibus apertius plenius intelligantur Anglice scriptas scilicet Mundbriche Feardwite Firwite Blodewite Mistzeninge Frithsoke Hamsockne Forstall Forphange Theifphange Hangwite Frithbriche Utlepe Infongenthefe Supbriche Tol Tem aliassque omnes leges Consuetudines quae ad me pertinent tam plene tam libere sicut eas in manu mea habebam Confirm Fundationis Monast de Ramsey per S. Edw. Conf. Mon. Angl. 1 par fo 237. Miskering Hoc est quietus pro querelis coram quibuscunque in transumptione probata MS. LL. Rob. Cot. pa. 262. See Mishering Misnomer compounded of the Fr. Mes which in composition alwayes signifies amisse and nomer i. nominare the using one name for another a mis-terming or mis-naming Misprision Fr. Mespris i. contempt or neglect Signifies a neglect negligence or oversight as Misprision of Treason or Felony is a neglect or light account made of Treason or Felony committed by not revealing it when we know of it Stam. pl. Cor. lib. 1. cap. 19. or by suffering any person committed for Treason or Felony or suspition of either to go before he be indited Misprision of Clerks Anno 8 Hen. 6. ca. 15. Is a neglect of Clerks in writing or keeping Records By misprision of Clerks no Process shall be adnulled or discontinued 14 Edw. 3. ca. 6. Stat. 1. For Misprision of Treason the offenders are to suffer imprisonment during the Kings pleasure lose their Goods and the Profits of their Lands during their lives Misprision of Felony is onely Finable by the Justices before whom the party is attainted Cromp. I. of Peace fo 40. Other faults may be accounted Misprisions of Treason or Felony because later Statutes have inflicted that punishment upon them whereof you have an example Anno 14 Eliz. ca. 3. of such as Coyn forrain Coyns not currant in this Realm and their Procurers Aiders and Abettors Misprision also signifies a mistaking Anno 14 Ed. 3. Stat. 1. ca. 6. v. 3 Inst fo 36 and 139. Mis-trial A false or erroneous Trial. Crokes Rep. 3 Part. fo 284. Delves Case Mis-user Is an abuse of liberty or benefit As He shall make Fine for his Misuser Old Nat. Br. fo 149. Mitta Sax. Mensura decem modiorum MS. In Wich salina redd 30 mittas salis Domesday tit Wirec scire Ego Wulfrun uxor Anketelli Singulis annis vitae meae ad Festum S. Benedicti quod est in aestate decem mittas de brasio quinque de gruto quinque mittas farinae triticiae 8 pernas 16 caseos duas vaccas pingues de terra mea Hicheling pro respectu annuo eidem Ecclesiae Ramesiensi procurari decerno Lib. Rames Sect. 38. Praeterea concessi eis septem Mittas Salis quolibet anno percipiendas apud Wiz Mon. Angl. 2 Par. so 262. b. Mittendo manuscriptum pedis Finis Is a Writ Judicial directed to the Treasurer and Chamberlains of the Exchequer to search and transmit the foot of a Fine acknowledged before Justices in Eyre into the Common-Pleas c. Reg. of Writs fo 14. Mittimus Is a Writ by which Records are transmitted from one Court to another as appears by the Stat. of 5 Rich. 2. ca. 15. as out of the Kings Bench into the Exhhequer And sometimes by a Certiorari into the Chancery and from thence by a Mittimus into another Court as you may see in 28 Hen. 8. Dyer fo 29. and 29 Hen. 8. Dyer fo 32. Mittimus also signifies the Precept that is directed by a Justice of Peace to a Jaylor for the receiving and safe keeping a Felon or other Offender committed by the said Justice See Table of Reg. of Writs for other uses and applications of this Word Mixt tithes decimae mixtae Are those of Cheese Milk c. and of the young of beasts See Cokes 2 Part Inst fo 649. and see Tithe Mockadoes Anno 23 Eliz. ca. 9. A kind of Stuff made in England and elsewhere Moderata misericordia Is a Writ that lies for him who is amer●●d in a Court-Baron or other Court not of Record for any transgression or offence beyond the quality of the fault It is directed to the Lord of the Court or his Bailiff commanding them to take a moderate Amerciament of the party and is founded upon Magna Charta ca. 14. Quod nullus liber homo amercietur nisi secundum qualitatem delicti c. The rest touching this Writ see in Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 75. See Misericordia Modo forma Are words of art in pleadings namely in the Answer of the Defendant whereby he denies to have done the thing laid to his charge modo forma declarata Kitchin fo 232. The Civilians in like case say Negat allegata prout allegantur esse vera Where modo forma are of the substance of the Issue and where but words of course see Coke on Litt. fo 281. b. Modus decimandi Is either when Land or a yearly Pension summ of Money or other profit belong to the Parson Viccar c. by composition or Custom in satisfaction of Tithes in kind MS. penes Auth. See 2 Inst fo 490. Molendinum bladonicum A Corn-mill for which in ancient Charters we also find Molendinum bladum molendinum de blado So a Fulling-mill is thus variously Latin'd in Re-Records Molendinum fullonicum Mol. fullanicum Mol. Fullere Mol. Fullarium Mol de Fulelez A Windmill Molendinum ad ventum venti Molendinum ventriticum ventricium A Water-mill Molendinum aquaticum aquatilium A Horse-mill Molendinum Equitium A Grinding or Griest-Mill Molendinum molare Ex Cartis Record in Mon. Angl. Molman Prior. Lewens pa. 21. omnis Lanceta omnis Toftman omnis Molman qui non sedet super Ogeland debent spergere unam reiam de fiens c. i. Unam strigam vel tractum stercoris a rew of muck Molasses Anno 12 Car. 2. ca. 25. Is the refuse Sirrop in the boiling of Sugar with which by the said Statute Wine is prohibited to be mingled or adulterated Monetagium Jus artificium cudendi monetas Moniers or Moneyors Monetarii Ministers of the Mint which make Coin and deliver out the Kings Moneys Anno 25 Edw. 3. ca. 20. Reg. of Writs fo 262. It appears that in ancient time our Kings of England had Mints in most of the Counties of this Realm and in the Tractate of the Exchequer written by Ockham we find that whereas Sheriffs ordinarily were ty'd to pay into the Exchequer the Kings Sterling-Money for such Debts as they were to answer they of Northumberland and Cumberland were at liberty to pay in any
Office or Inquisition found a Record made by Conveyance and Consent as a Fine or Deed enrolled or the like Coke lib. 4. Ognels Case fol. 54. b. Recordare facias or Recordari facias Is a Writ directed to the Sheriff to remove a Cause depending in an Inferior Court as Court of Ancient Demesn Hundred or County to the Kings Bench or Common Pleas Fitz. Nat. ●r fo 71. B. C. Where and in what Cases this Writ lies read Brook tit Recordare Pone It seems to be called a Recordare because it commands the Sheriff to whom it is directed to make a Record of the proceedings by himself and others and then to send up the Cause See the Register verbo Recordare in the Table of Original Writs Recorder Recordator Is he whom the Major or other Magistrate of any City or Town Corporate having Jurisdiction or a Court of Record within their Precincts by the Kings Grant does associate unto him for his better direction in matters of Justice and proceedings according to Law And he is for the most part a person well seen in the Common Law Recordo Processu Mittendis Is a Writ to call a Record together with the whole Proceedings in the Cause out of an Inferior Court into the Kings Court See the Table of the Register of Writs Recordo utlagariae mittendo Is a Writ Judicial which see in Reg. Judic fol. 32. Recovery Recuperatio from the Fr. Recouvrer i. Recuperare Signifies an obtaining any thing by Judgment or Tryal of Law as Evictio does among the Civilians But there is a true Recovery and a feigned The true one is an actual or real Recovery of any thing or the value thereof by Verdict and Judgment A feigned Recovery is a certain form or course set down by Law to be observed for the better assuring Lands or Tenements unto us the end and effect whereof is to discontinue and destroy Estates in Remainder and Reversion and to Ba●●the Intails thereof And to this Formality there are in a Recovery with single Voucher required three parties the Demandant the Tenant and the Vouchee The Demandant is he that brings the Writ of Entry and may be termed the Recoverer The Tenant is he against whom the Writ is brought and may be called the Recoveree The Vouchee is he whom the Tenant Voucheth or calls to Warranty for the Land is demand A Recovery with double Voucher is where the Tenant voucheth one who Voucheth another or the Common Vouchee and a Recovery with treble Vouchers is where three are Vouched See West par 2. Symb. tit Recoveries sect 1. But to explain this Point A Man that is desirous to cut off an Estate-tail in Lands or Tenements to the end to sell give or bequeath them causeth by the contrivance of his Councel or Atturney a feigned Writ of Entry Sur Disseisin in le Post to be brought for the Lands of which he intends to dock or cut off the Intail and in a feigned Count or Declaration thereupon made pretends he was disseised by him who by a feigned Fine or Deed of Bargain and Sale is named and supposed to be Tenant of the Lands This feigned Tenant if it be a single Recovery is made to appear and vouch the Bag-bearer of Writs for the Custos Brevium in the Court of Common Pleas in which Court onely the said Common Recoveries are to be suffered who makes default whereupon a Judgment is by such Fiction of Law entred That the Demandant shall recover and have a Writ of Seisin for the possession of the Lands demanded and that the Tenant shall recover the value of the Lands against the Lands of the Vouchee-Bagbearer a poor unlanded and illiterate person which is feigned to be a satisfaction for the Heir in Tail though he is never to have or expect it one Edward Howes a Bag-bearer and Common Vouchee having in the space of 25 or 30 years passed or suffered to be recovered against him by such fictitious Actions and Pleadings a considerable part of the Lands of England and obliged his own Lands when he had none at all to answer the value of the Lands recovered against the Tenants or Remainders in Tail This feigned Recovery is also called a Common Recovery because it is a beaten and Common Path to that end for which it is ordained viz. To cut off the Estates above specified See New Book of Entries verbo Recovery Recoupe from the Fr. Recouper i. To out again also to reply quickly and sharply to ●a peremptory Demand We use it to Defaulk or Discount As if a Man hath Ten pound issuing out of certain Land and he disseises the Tenant of the Land in an Assise brought by the Disseisce the Disseisor shall Recoupe the Rent in the Damages Recreant Fr. Cowardly faint-hearted Hence Recroantise See Cravent Recto Is a Writ called a Writ of Right which is of so high a nature that whereas other Writs in Real Actions are onely to recover the possession of the Lands or Tenements in question which have been lost by an Ancestor or by the Party Demandant himself this aims to recover both the Seisin which some Ancestor or the Demandant himself had and also the property of the thing whereof the Ancestor died not seised as of Fee and whereby are pleaded and tryed both their Rights together viz. That of Possession and Property And if a Man once lose his cause upon this Writ either by Judgment Assise or Battel he is without remedy and shall be excluded Per exceptionem rei judicatae Bracton lib. 5. tract 1. cap. 1. seq where you may read much on this subject See Right It hath two species Rectum Patens a Writ of Right Patent and Rectum Clausum a Writ of Right Close The first is so called because it is sent open and is in nature the highest Writ of all other lying always for him that hath Fee-simple in the Lands sued for and not for any other And when it lies for him that challenges Fee-simple and in what Cases See Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 1. C. whom see also fol. 6. or a special Writ of Right in London otherwise called a Writ of Right according to the Custom of London This Writ is also called Breve magnum de Recto Reg. of Writs fol. 9. and Fleta lib. 5. cap. 32. sect 1. A Writ of Right close Is a Writ directed to a Lord of ancient Demesn and lies for those who hold their Lands and Tenements by Charter in Fee-simple or in Fee-tayl or for term of lite or in Dower if they are ejected out of such Lands or disseised In this case a man or his he● may sue out this Writ of right close directed to the Lord of ancient Demesn commanding him to do him right in his Court This is also called Breve parvum de Recto Reg. of Writs fo 9. and Britton ca. 120. in fine See also Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 11. seq Yet note that the Writ of right
patent seems to be extended farther in use then the original intention For a Writ of right of Dower which lies for the Tenant in Dower is patent as appears by Fitzherb Natura Brevium fo 7. E. The like may be said in divers other cases of which see also the Table of Reg. of Writs verbo Recto This Writ is properly tryed in the Lords Court between Kinsmen who claim by one title from their Ancestor But how it may be thence removed and brought either to the County or Kings Court see Fleta lib. 6. ca. 3 4 5. Glanvile seems to make every Writ whereby a Man sues for any thing due unto him a Writ of Right lib. 10. ca. 1. lib. 11. ca. 1. lib. 12. ca. 1. Recto de dote Is a Writ of Right of Dower which lies for a Woman that has received part of her Dower and proceeds to demand the Remnant in the same Town against the Heir Of this see more in Old Nat. Br. fo 5. and Fitz. fo 7. E. Reg. of Writs fo 3. and New Book of Entries verbo Droyt Recto de dote unde nihil habet Is a Writ of right which lies in case where the Husband having divers Lands or Tenements has assured no Dower to his Wife and she thereby is driven to sue for her Thirds against the Heir or his Guardian Old Nat. Br. fo 6. Reg. of Writs fo 170. Recto de rationabili parte Is a Writ that lies alwayes between privies of Blood as Brothers in Gavelkind or Sisters or other Coparceners as Nephews or Neeces and for Land in Fee-simple For example if a Man Lease his Land for Life and afterwards dies leaving issue two Daughters and after the Tenant for life likewise dies the one Sister entring upon all the Land and so deforcing the other the Sister so deforced shall have this Writ to recover her part Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 9. Reg. of Writs fo 3. Recto quando Dominus remisit Is a Writ of right which lies in case where Lands or Tenements that are in the Seigneury of any Lord are in demand by a Writ of right For if the Lord hold no Court or otherwise at the Prayer of the Demandant or Tenant shall send to the Court of the King his Writ to put the Cause thither for that time saving to him at other times the right of his Seigneury then this Writ issues out for the other party and has its name from the words therein comprised being the true occasion thereof This Writ is close and must be returned before the Justices of the Common-Bank Old Nat. Br. fo 16. Reg. of Writs fo 4. Recto de advocatione Ecclesiae Is a Writ of right lying where a man has right of Advowsen and the Parson of the Church dying a stranger presents his Clerk to the Church and he not having brought his Action of Quare impedit nor darrein presentment within six Moneths but suffer'd the Stranger to usurp upon him Which Writ he onely may have that claims the Advowsen to himself and his heirs in Fee And as it lies for the whole Advowsen so it lies also for the half the third or fourth part Old Nat. Br. fo 24. Reg. of Writs fo 29. Recto de custodia terrae haeredis Is a Writ which by the Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. is become useless as to Lands holden in Capite or by Knight-service but not where there is Guardian in Socage or appointed by the last will and Testament of the Auncestor The form of it see in Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 139. Reg. of Writs fo 161. Recto sur disclaimer Is a Writ that lies where the Lord in the Court of Common-Pleas does avow upon his Tenant and the Tenant Disclaims to hold of him upon which Disclaimer he shall have this Writ and if the Lord aver and prove that the Land is holden of him he shall recover the Land for ever Old Nat. Br. fo 150. which is grounded on the Statute of Westm 2. ca. 2. Rector Lat. Signifies a Governor And Rector Ecclesi● parochialis Is he that has the Charge or Cure of a Parish-Church qui tantum jus in Ecclesia parochiali habet quantum Praelatus in Ecclesia Collegiata It has been over-ruled that Rector Ecclesiae parochialis is he that has a Parsonage where there is a Vicaridge endow'd and he that has a Parsonage without a Vicaridge is called Persona But the distinction seems to be new and subtile It is certain Bracton uses it otherwise lib. 4. Tract 5. ca. 1. in these words Et sciendum quod Rectoribus Ecclesiarum parochialium competit Assisa qui instituti sunt per Episcopos Ordinarios ut Personae Where it is plain that Rector and Persona are confounded Note also these words there following Item dici possunt Rectores Canonici de Ecclesiis praebendatis Item dici possunt Rectores vel quasi Abbates Priores alii qui habent Ecclesias ad proprios usus See Vicar Rectory Rectoria Is taken pro integra Ecclesia parochiali cum omnibus suis juribus praedi is decimis aliisque proventuum speciebus Spelm. Rectus in Curia i. Right in Court Is he that stands at the Bar and no man objects any offence against him Smith de Repub. Angl. lib. 2. ca. 3. Reddendum Is used substantively for the clause in a Lease c. whereby the Rent is reserved to the Lessor Coke lib. 2. Cromwels case fo 72. b. Reddition Redditio Is a judicial confession and acknowledgment that the Land or thing in demand belongs to the Demandant or at least not to himself Anno 34 35 Hen. 8. ca. 24. Perkins Dower 379. 380. Redemptions Redemptiones Mulctae gravissimae utpote quae pro aestimatione capitis ipsius delinquentis impinguntur Anglice Ransomes See Misericordia Redisseisin Redisseisina Is a Disseisin made by him who once before was found and adjudged to have disseised the same Man of his Lands or Tenements for which there lies a special Writ called a Writ of Redisseisin Old Nat. Br. fo 106. Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 188. See New book of Entries on this word The punishment for Redisseisin see in the Stat. 52 Hen. 3. ca. 8. Redmans or Radmans Domesday in fine Cestrescire Tit. Lanc. Blacburn Hundret Rex E. tenuit Peneverdant Ibi 11 Car. sunt in Dominio 6 Burgenses 3 Radmans 8 Vil. 4 Bovar These Redmans may be the same in signification as the Rod or Rad Knights Men which by the Tenure or Custom of their Lands were to ride with or for the Lord of the Mannor about his business or affairs Redubbors or Adubbors Are those that buy stoln Cloth and to the end it may not be known turn it into some other Colour or Fashion Briton ca. 29. and see 3 Inst fo 134. Re-entry From the Fr. Rentrer i. Rursus intrare Signifies the resuming or re-taking that possession which we had lately foregone As if I make a Lease of Land or
Exactions mentioned in the said Statute to be claimed by the Pope heretofore in England and seems to signifie a Bul or Breve for re-inabling a Spiritual Person to exercise his Function who was formerly disabled or a restoring to former ability Rejoynder Rejunctio Signifies an Answer or Exception to a Replication For first the Defendant puts in an Answer to the Plaintiffs Bill which is sometimes called an Exception The Plaintiffs Answer to that is called a Replication and the Defendants to that Duplication in the Civil Law and Rejoynder with us especially in Chancery West par 2. Symbol tit Chancery sect 56. Rekpenis Constitut Rob. Dunelm Episc Anno 1276. cap. 3. Porro huic Sanctioni adjicimus quod si plures liberi proprium habentes in parontum pariter familia vivant ad denarios qui nuncupantur Rekpenis minime arceantur cum sic communiter intrinscois aluntur a parentibus sic in extrinsecis ab eisdem laetentur pariter se defendi Relation Re latio Is where in consideration of Law two times or other things are considered as if they were all one and by this the thing subsequent is said to take his effect by relation at the time preceding As if A. deliver a writing to B. to be delivered to C. as the Deed of A. when C. hath paid a sum of Money Now when the Money is paid and the writing delivered this shall be taken as the Deed of A. at the time when it was first delivered So Bills of Parliament to which the King Assents on the last day of Parliament shall relate and be of force from the first day of the beginning of the Parliament Coke lib. 3. Butlers Case says it is Fictio juris Release Relaxatio Is an Instrument whereby Estates Rights Titles Entries Actions and other things are sometimes extinguished sometimes transferred sometimes abridged and sometimes enlarged West par 1. Symb. lib. 2. sect 509. And there is a Release in fact and a Release in Law In fact is that which the very words expresly declare in Law is that which acquits by way of consequent or intendment of Law an example whereof you have in Perkins Grants 71. How these are available and how not see Littleton at large Lib. 3. cap. 8. And of divers sorts of Releases see New Book of Entries verbo Release Releif Relevamen Relevium Signifies a certain sum of Money which the Tenant holding by Knight-service Grand Sergeanty or other Tenure for which Homage or Regalservice was due and after the death of his Ancestor paid to his Lord at his entrance Mag. Charta cap. 2. and 28 Edw. 1. stat 1. Bracton lib. 2. cap. 36. says it is called a Releif Quia haereditas quae jacens fuit per Antecessoris decessum relevatur in manus haeredum propter factam relevationem facienda erit ab haerede quaedam praestatio quae dicitur Relevium See the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. A Releife is likewise paid in Soccage Tonure or Petit Serjeanty where a Rent or any thing is paid by rendring as much as the Rent or payment reserved Relegation Relegatio A banishing or sending away As Abjuration is a sorswearing the Realm for ever Relegation is taken for a banishment for a time onely Coke on Littl. fol. 133. Religiosi Religious men such as enter'd into some Monastery or Convent In ancient Deeds of sale of Land we often find the Vendee restrain'd from giving or alienating it Viris Religiosis vel Judaeis to the end the Land might not fall into Mortmiain See Judaism Rex Vicecom Praecipimus tibi quod clamari facias sine dilatione per comitatum tuum quod nulli sicut diligunt corpora catalla sua malum faciant vel dicant viris Religiosis vel Clericis contra pacem nostram Et si quem inde attingere possimus ad proximum quercum cum suspendi faciemus T. meipso apud Marlebergh xi Apr. Claus 9 Joh. m. 3. Remainder Remanentia Signifies an Estate limited in Lands Tenements or Rents to be enjoyed after the Estate of another expired For example a man may grant Land to one for term of his life the remainder to another for term of his life Litt. ca. Atturnment fo 113. And this Remainder may be either for a certain term or in Fee-simple or fee-Fee-tail as appears by Brock tit Done Remainder fo 245. Glanvile lib. 7. ca. 1. in fine has these words Notandum quod nec Episcopus nec Abbas quia eorum Baroniae sunt de Elemosina Dom. Regis antecessorum éjus non possunt de Dominicis suis aliquam partem dare ad remanentiam sine assensu confirmatione Domini Regis In like sort Bracton uses it lib. 2. ca. 23. lib. 4. Tract 2. ca. 4. nu 4. See New Book of Entries verbo Remainder In eo igitur differunt Remanentia Reversio haec post statutum terminum ad donatorem vel haeredes suos uti in fontem remeat illa vero ad tertium quempiam seu extraneum progreditur Spelm. Remembrancers of the Exchequer Rememoratores Scaccarii are three Officers one called the Kings Remembrancer Anno 35 Eliz. ca. 5. The second the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer upon whose charge it lies to put the Lord Treasurer and the rest of the Justices of that Court in remembrance of such things as are to be called on and dealt in for the Kings behoof The third is called the Remembrancer of the first-fruits Anno 5 Rich. 2. Stat. 1. ca. 14 15. These Anno 37 Edw. 3. ca. 4. are called Clerks of the Remembrance The Kings Remembrancer enters in his Office all Recognizances taken before the Barons for any the Kings Debts for appearances or observing of Orders he takes all Bonds for the Kings Debts for appearance or observing Orders and makes Proces upon them for the breach of them He Writes Proces against the Collectors of Customs Subsidies and Fifteenths for their accounts All Informations upon Penal Statutes are entred in his Office and all matters upon English Bills in the Exchequer Chamber remain in his Office He makes the Bills of Compositions upon penal Laws and takes the stalment of Debts He has deliver'd into his Office all manner of Indentures Fines and other Evidences that concern the assuring or passing any Lands to or from the Crown He yearly in Crastino animarum reads in open Court the Statute for election of Sheriffs and gives them their Oath he reads in open Court the Oath of all the Officers of the Court when they are admitted The Treasurers Remembrancer makes Process against all Sheriffs Escheators Receivers and Bailiffs for their accounts He makes Process of Fieri Facias and Extent for any Debts due to the King either in the Pipe or with the Auditors makes Proces for all such Revenue as is due to the King by reason of his Tenures He makes Record whereby it appears whether Sheriffs and other Accountants pay their Profers due at Easter and
Michaelmas He makes another Record whether Sheriffs and other Accountants keep their dayes of Prefixion All Estreats of Fines Issues and Americiaments set in any Courts of Westminster or at the Assises or Sessions are certify d into his Office and are by him deliver'd to the Clerk of the Estreats to make out Process upon them There are also brought into his Office all the Accompts of Customers Controllers and other Accountants to make entry thereof on Record See Repertory of Records fo 121. The Remembrancer of the First-fruits takes all Compositions and Bonds for First-fruits and Tenths and makes Process against all such as pay not the same Remitter from the Lat. Remittere to restore or send back Where a man has two titles to Land and is seised of the later and that proving defective he is restored to the former more ancient title This is a Remitter Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 149. F. Dyer fo 68. num 22. and see Brook tit Remitter If Land descend to him that has right to it before he shall be remitted to his better Title if he will Doctor and Student ca. 9. fo 19. b. See Terms of the Law on this word Coke on Litt. li. 3. c. 12. Render from the Fr. Rendre i. Reddere Retribuere and so it signifies with us A Fine with render is where Lands are render'd back by the Cognizee to the Cognizor Also there are certain things in a Mannor that lie in Prender that is which may be taken by the Lord or his Officers when they chance without the Tenants leave as Escheats c. and certain that lie in Render that is must be rendred or answer'd by the Tenant as Rents Reliefs Heriots and other Services West Par. 2. Symb. Sect. 126. C. Also some Service consists in seisance some in Render Perkins Reservations 696. Renegeld Per Renegeld Johannes Stanley Ar. clamat habere de qualibet bovata terrae infra feodum de Aldford 1 d exceptis Dominicis terris terris in feodo praedicto infra Hundred de Macclefeld Rot. Plac. in Itin. apud Cestriam 14 Hen. 7. Renovant from renovo to renew or make again The Parson sued one for Tithes to be paid of things renovant but this Horse being onely for labor and travel would not renew c. Croke 2 Part fo 430. Rent Reditus Is a summ of Mony or other consideration issuing yearly out of Lands or Tenements Plowden Casu Browning fo 132. b. 138. a. 141. b. Of which there are three sorts Rent-service Rent-charge and Rent-seck Rent-service is where a man holds his land by fealty and certain rent or by Fealty Service and Rent Litt. lib. 2. ca. 12. fo 44. or that which a man making a Lease to another for years reserves yearly to be paid him for the same Rent-charge is where a man chargeth his Land or Tenements by Deed indented either in Fee ' fee-Fee-tail or for term of life with a summ of Money to be paid to the Grantee yearly with clause of distress for not payment thereof Litt. ubi supra Rent-seck otherwise Dry-rent is that which a man making over an Estate of Lands or Tenements by Deed indented reserves yearly to be paid him without Clause of Distress mentioned in the Indenture See more on this subject in the Terms of the Law and the difference between a Rent and an Annuity in Doctor and Student ca. 30. Dial 1. Rents resolute Redditus resoluti Are reckon'd among the Fee-farm Rents to be sold by the Stat. 22 Car. 2. ca. 6. and are such Rents or Tenths as were anciently payable to the Crown from the Lands of Abbies and Religious-Houses and after the dissolution these Abby-lands being demised to others the said Rents were still reserved and made payable again to the Crown Renusiator Et sunt communes latrones Renusiatores hominum c. Trin. 28 Ed. 3. Ebor. 37. q. Reparatione facienda Is a Writ that lies in divers cases whereof one is where there are three Tenants in Common Join-tenants or pro indiviso of a Mill or House which is faln into decay and the one is willing to repair it the other two not In this case the party willing shall have this Writ against the other two Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 127. where you may see the form and many uses of it as also in Reg. of Writs fo 153. b. Repeal From the Fr. rappel i. revocatio Signifies the same with us as the Repeal of a Statute is the revoking or disanulling it Brook uses Repellance in the same sence Re-pleader Replacitare Is to plead again that which was once pleaded before See Brook and New Book of Entries verbo Repleader Replegiare de averiis Is a Writ brought by one whose Cattel are distrained or put in pound upon any cause by another upon surety given to the Sheriff to pursue or answer the Action at Law Anno 7 Hen. 8. ca. 4 Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 68. See Reg. of Writs for divers sorts of this Writ New Book of Entries ver●o Replevin and Dyer fo 173. num 14. Replevie Plevina Is derived of replegiare to re-deliver to the owner upon pledges or suerty and signifies the bringing the Writ called Replegiari facias by him that has his Cattel or other goods distrained by another for any cause and putting in Surety to the Sheriff that upon delivery of the thing distreined he will pursue the Action against him that distreined Coke on Litt. lib. 2. ca. 12. Sect. 219. Goods may be replevied two manner of wayes viz. by Writ and that is by the Common-Law or by Plaint and that is by Statute-Law for the more speedy having again of their Cattel and Goods Replevie is used also for the bailing a man Pl. Cor. fo 72 74. and Westm 1. ca. 11. and 15. Replevish Replegiare Is to let one to Main-prise upon surety Anno 3 Ed. 1. ca. 11. Replication Replicatio Is an exception of the second degree made by the Plaintiff upon the first Answer of the Defendant West par 2. Symb. tit Chancery Sect. 55. and Westm 2. ca. 36. It is that which the Plaintiff replies to the Defendants Answer in Chancery and this is either General or Special Special is grounded upon matter arising out of the Defendants answer c. General so called from the general words therein used Report From the Lat. Reportare Is a publick relation or a bringing again to memory Cases judicially argued debated resolved or adjudged in any of the Kings Courts of Justice with such causes and reasons as were delivered by the Judges of the same Coke on Litt. fo 293. Also when the Chancery or other Court refers the stating some case or computing an account c. to a Master of Chancery or other Referree his Certificate therein is called a Report Reposition of the Forest i. A re-putting to Was an Act whereby certain Forest-grounds being made Purlieu upon view were by a second view laid or put to the Forest again Manwood
Statute forfeited to him Tenant in Franc-marriage Idem fol. 158. that holds Land by vertue of a Gift thereof made to him upon marriage Tenant by the Curtesie that holds for his life by reason of a Childe born alive and begotten by him of his Wife being an Inheritrix Tenant per Elegit that holds by vertue of the Writ Elegit Tenant in Morgage that holds by vertue of a Morgage Tenant by the Verge in Ancient Demesn Kitchin fol. 81. is he that is admitted by the Rad in a Court of Ancient Demesn Tenant by Copy of Court Roll is one admitted Tenant of any Lands c. within a Mannor which time out of minde have been demisable according to the Custom of the Mannor West Par. 1. symbol lib. 2. sect 646. Tenant by Charter is he that holds by Feoffment or other Deed in Writing Very Tenant that holds immediately of his Lord for if there be Lord M●sn and Tenant the Tenant is Very Tenant to the Mesn and not to the Lord above Kitchin fol. 99. Tenant Paravail see Paravail Joynt-tenants that have equal Right in Lands by vertue of one Title Littl. lib. 3. cap. 3. Tenants in Common that have equal right but hold by divers Titles Particular Tenant Stamf. Praerog fol. 13. is he who holds onely for his term See Coke in Sir Will. Pelhams Case Lib. 1. fol. 15. called also Termor for Life or Years See Plowden Casu Colthirst fol. 23. b. Sole Tenant Kitchin fol. 134. he that hath no other joyned with him Several Tenant is opposit to Joynt-tenant or Tenant in Common Tenant al Praecipe is he against whom the Writ Praecipe is brought Coke lib. 3. Case of Fines fol. 88. Tenant in Demesn Anno 13 Edw. 1. cap. 9 is he that holds the Demesns of a Mannor for a Rent without Service Tenant in Service An. 20 Edw. 1. stat 1. is he that holds by Service See Britton cap. 39 96. Tenant by Execution Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 5. is he that holds Land by vertue of an Execution upon any Statute Recoguizance c. Tenant in Fee-simple Kitchin fol. 150. Tenant in fee-Fee-tail Tenant at the Will of the Lord according to the Custom of the Mannor Tenant at Will by the Common Law Idem fol. 165. Tenant upon Sufferance Tenant of Estate of Inheritance Stamf. Praerog fol. 6. Tenant in Burgage Tenant in Soccage Tenant in Franck-fee c. with divers others Tenement Tenementum Signifies most properly a House or Homestal but in a larger sence it is taken either for House or Land that a Man holds of another and joyned with the Adjective Frank it contains generally Lands Houses or Offices wherein we have Estate for Life or in Fee For Kitchin fol. 41. makes Frank-tenement and base Estate opposit and in the same sense Britton uses it Chap. 27. Tenheved Sax. tienheofed i. Decem habens capita Decanus Decemvir caput vel princeps Decaniae sive decuriae LL. Edw. Confess cap. 29. Statuerunt Justiciarios super quosqne decem friborgos quos Decanos possumus appellare Anglice vero tienheofod dicti sunt Tenentibus in Assisa non onerandis c. Is a Writ that lies for him to whom a Disseisor hath alienated the Land whereof he disseised another that he be not molested for the damages Awarded if the Disseisor have wherewith to satisfie them himself Reg. of Writs fol. 214. b. Tenmantale Sax. tienmantale i. Sermo decem hominum vel decemvirorum numerus Decuria Tithinga LL. Edw. Conf. cap. 20. Et sint quieti de Geldis Danegeldis Themanatale Concelationibus Scottis c. Cart. 29 Edw. 1. n. 25. Abbat de Thornton See Friburgh Tenore indictamenti mittendo Is a Writ whereby the Record of an Inditement and the Process thereupon is call'd out of another Court into the Chancery Reg. of Writs fo 169. a. Tenths Decimae Is that yearly portion or Tribute which all Livings Ecclesiastical yield to the King For though the Bishop of Rome does originally pretend right to this Revenue by example of the High-Priest among the Jews who had Tenths from the Levites Numb ca. 8. Hieron in Ezech. yet we read in our Chronicles that these were often granted to the King by the Pope upon divers occasions sometimes for one year sometimes for more until by the Statute 26 Hen. 8. ca. 3. they were annexed perpetually to the Crown See Disms It signifies also a Tax levied of the Temporalty 4 Inst fo 34. Tentor A stretcher tryer or prover which Dyers and Clothiers used Anno 1 Rich. 3. ca. 8. But prohibited by the Stat. 39 Eliz. ca. 20. Tenure Tenura Is the manner whereby Tenants hold Lands and Tenements of their Lords What makes a Tenure and what not see Perkins Reservations 70 where you shall find most of those Tenures recited which are now in England See Cromptons Jurisd fo 200. New Book of Entries verbo Tenure Mr. Fabian Philips Book entituled Tenenda non Tollenda and the Stat. 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. The Family of Barnhams hold the Mannor of Nether Bilsington in the County of Kent by this tenure to carry the last Dish of the second Course to the Kings Table at His Coronation and presenting Him with three Maple-cups which was performed at the Coronation of King Charles the Second Term Terminus Signifies commonly the bounds and limitation of time as a Lease for term of Life or Years Bracton lib. 2. ca. 6. nu 4. But most notoriously it is used for that time wherein the Tribunals or places of Judgment are open for all that list to complain of wrong or to seek their right by course of Law or Action The rest of the year is called Vacation Of these Terms there are four in every year during which time matters of Justice are dispatch'd One is Hillary Term which begins the 23d of January or if that be Sunday the next day following and ends the twelfth of February The next is Easter Term which begins the Wednesday fortnight after Easter-day and ends the Munday next after Ascension-day The third is Trinity Term beginning the Friday next after Trinity-Sunday and ending the Wednesday Fortnight after The fourth is Michaelmas-Term which anciently began the ninth of October but by Stat. 17 Car. 1 ca. 6. contracted to the 23d of October and ending the 28th of November Termini apud nos dicuntur c●rtae anni portiones agendis litibus designatae See Spel de origine ratione Terminorum forensium Termonland Seems to be the Gleab-land or Land of the Church anciently so called Termor Tenens ex termino Is he that holds for term of years or life Kitchin fo 151. Litt. fo 100. Terra Giliforata Land held by the Tenure of paying a Gilly-flowre MS. Terra extendenda Is a Writ directed to the Escheator c. willing him to enquire and find out the true yearly value of any Land c. by the Oath of twelve Men and to certifie the Extent into the Chancery