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A44485 The booke called the mirrour of justices made by Andrew Horne ; with the book called the diversity of courts and their jurisdictions ; both translated out of the old French into the English tongue by W.H. Horne, Andrew, d. 1328. 1646 (1646) Wing H2789; ESTC R23979 152,542 367

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grace Some became Free by the Pope as it is of those villains who by Bishops are ordained into Orders of Deacon and above but norwithstanding the same a man shall not lose his right thereby who will sue for them On the other part villains become Freemen if their Lords grant or give unto them any free estate of Inheritance to discend to their Heires or if the Lord take their Homage for their land or if the Lord eject them out of their Fees and give them sustinance or if he put them in a common Prison if it be not for crime A woman after she is put in possession by her Lord is never againe to be challenged as a Neife notwithstanding she be sold And if the Lord suffer his Villaine to Answer in Judgement without him in a personall Action or to be a Jurour amongst Free-men as a Free-man knowingly and without the Lords claime the Villaine hath this Plea to the Villinage if he returne not of his owne accord Also a Villaine becomes free through the Lords default in a Writ of Native Habendo as by his Non-suit in the Writ Also by proofe of a free Stocke or to have been borne of free Parents Also by the Lords grant in Court and also by prescription also for default of proofe and also by the Lords negligence as by the remaining of the Villaine within a City or upon the Kings Demesnes for a whole yeare Or if wittingly he suffer his Villaine to be a Suiter in another Court or to be sworne in Assize or elsewhere amongst Free-men if a Villaine depart from his Lord claiming free estate so that he cannot seise him within the Mannour within the yeare or out of his Fee nor after his Writ of Nativo Habend brought it belongeth to the Lord that he bring againe that Action which is ViceCountiel and pleadable in the County by Summons and Distresses of his Lands for the Law requireth that he doe right and use not force The Parties being brought to Judgement in the County Court and the Action being declared in the Defendant by way of exception may plead that he is Franck and because that a free estate is of a higher nature then Villinage therefore because the Sheriffe hath not power to try so high a Plea by the Writ of Nativo Hebendo those Writs and such Pleas are suspendable till the comming of the Justices in Eyre into those parts but if the King Command not to the contrary those Pleas are not adjournable but from one County Court to another Note that all Villaines are not slaves for slaves are said Regardant as before they can purchase nothing but to the Lords use they know not in the Evening what ser●ice they shall doe in the Morning nor any certainty of their services the Lords may fetter imprison beat or chas●●se those at their pleasure saving to them their ●ives and members these may nor fly or run from their Lords so long as they finde them wherewith to live nor is it law full for others to receive them without their Lords consent those can have no manner of Action against any man without their Lords but in case of Felony and if those slaves hold Lands of their Lords it is intended that they hold them from day to day at their Lords will and not by any certaine services Villaines are Tillers of Lands Note by Villaines in this place is meant Copy-hol-ders dwelling in Upland Villages for of Vill commeth Villaine of Burough Burgesse and of City Citizen and of Villaines mention is made in the Great Charter of Liberties where it is said that a Villaine be not so grievously amerced that his Tillage be not saved to him but the Statute maketh no mention of slaves because they have nothing of their owne to lose And of Villaines are their Tillages called Villinages Copy-hold called Copy holders And note that those who are free and quit of all servitude become servile by Contracts made berwixt the Lords and the Tenants And there are many manners of Contracts of Fees as of Gift of Rent of Exchange and Lease which all may make for a time or for ever and quitment without Obligation and charge of service and with charge And these Contracts as all other are made by Writings Charters and Minuments by solemne Witnesses according to the example of Contracts of Marriages which ought to be a patterne to all other Contracts according to which Example were the first Contracts made by the first Conquerour when the Earles were enfeoffed of the Earldomes Barons of the Baronies Knights of Knights Fees Serjeants of Serjanties Villaines of Villinages Butgesses and Merchants of Boroughs whereof some received their Lands without Obligation or service or in Frankalmoigne some to hold by Homage and by Service for defence of the Realme and some by Villaine Customes as to Plough the Lords Lands to Reape cut and carry his Corne or Hay or such manner of service without giving of any wages whereof many Fines were leavied of such services which make mention of the doing of these base services as well as of other more gentile services and although it be so that the people have no Charters Deeds nor Minuments of their Lands neverthelesse if they were ejected or put out of their Possessions wrongfully by bringing an Assize of Novell Disseisin they might be restored to their estates as before because they could averre that they knew the certainty of their services and workes by the yeare as those whose Ancestours before them were Asteries for a long time in case Disseisors were not their Lords And thereupon Sr. Edward in his time Doom-day Booke Vt credo caused enquity to be made of all such who held did to him such services as ploughing his Lands c. besides their lawfull Customes And afterwards the people lesse fearing to offend then they ought many of these Villaines by wrongfull Distresses were forced to doe their Lord the service of Rechat of blood and many other voluntary Customes to bring them in servitude under their power for which their remedy was a Writ of Ne investoè vexes CHAP. II. SECT 29. Of Summons THis Chapter maketh mention of speciall Summons to make a difference from generall Summons where all Freeholders and others ought to come according to the nature of the Cry whereof and every one may Summon by a Common Cry but of this Summons this Chapter maketh not mention A speciall Summons is a friendly admonition of an amendment of an offence or wrong and because none is tyed to Answer to any Action reall or mixt before a Summons therefore it is to see 1 Who have Authority to Summon 2 Who are Summonable 3 In what place he is Summonable 4 How farre one is Summonable 5 At whose Charges 6 How often 7 Who may be Summonors 8 What is a reasonable Summons 1 All who have Jurisdiction have Authority to Summon 2 All those who are not forbidden by Law are
Fame against others And that which is said of making of Title to the possession of things in Case where a false Writ or false Mony or Larcine or thing lost or Estrey or other hurt is found at the Kings Suit although that the last professor acquit himselfe of the selony if the Plainliffe neverthelesse prove the thing to be his as of his possession or stoll en from another or otherwise lost the Law is that he recover the thing without any payment for it Or he may have Exception Dillatory to a vicious Deed for varience betwixt the words of the Writ and the nature of the Action and the Count as if he have omitted to Charge me or if he Charge that in the Count which was not to be in that Action as felony in a veniall Action And as the Defendant hath a Dillatory Exception to abate a vicious Count in like manner hath the Plaintiffe a Replication against the Defendant upon a faulty Answer but because none is to be Iudged for not Answering in Appeales of Felony it is sufficient for every one to deny the fellony generally though he Answer not particularly to every word mentioned in the Appeale And in Cases venialls where the Defendants say nothing in excuse of that which is offered against them in Judgement they are to be adjudged and Condemned as not Answering at all in the same manner is it where one Answereth not duly or insufficiently CHAP. III. SECT 14. Exception to Approvers TO an Approver one may thus Answer Sir I am a true man sworne to the King and within a Franck-pledge and this Approver is a Felon attainted by his owne confession and our of the Kings protection by consequence out of the Kings Peace whereby he hath lost his free voice and lost every right and every Action so as he is not to be admitted in any Action no more then a man who is Out-lawed by Judgement Or he may plead that he ought not ●o Answer him because he did not Appeale him in his first Appeale or not before the Coroners and if the Approver cannot helpe himselfe by this Replication as ●o say that he is not any way out of the Kings protection the Defendant is bound to Answer him but he is not to be delivered to the Fee-pledges where he is in the Decenry or to other Main-prisors untill he be appealed or indicted CHAP. III. SECT 15. Exceptions of Indictments THese Exceptions hold to Indictments Sir I demand sight of the Indictments whereby I may take exceptions again●● the persons of the Endictors or to the sorme of the Indictment for no Villaine can indite any man Or if the Indictment be not made by 〈◊〉 whole dozien of Free-men or by 〈◊〉 who cannot indict any man Or if the Indictment be not sealed with the Seale of the twelve Jurouts or 〈◊〉 it is not the record of Iudges 〈◊〉 thereunto Or if the Indictment hath not been within the yeare or by people of credit and of good fame no man is bound to answer to such an indictment Nor if the Indictment hath not been made within the Neighbour-hood of the same County also if the Indictment be generall for a generall slander defameth no man nor is he compelled to answer thereunto as if the Indictment be such a one is a Murderer or a Thiefe or wicked without alleadging any particular offence therein for to the common fame of the people an Indictment ought to give no credit or beleefe Or he may say that the Iustices went the Eyre after the felony done where nothing was moved of this felony CHAP. III. SECT 16. An Answer to Treason DArling here denies all Treasons and Felonies and whatsoever is against the Kings Peace And as to the consideration he may say thus Sir notwithstanding the joynt Alliance betwixt us by Homage sometimes before this time neverthelesse when he counted that I should commit this Treason I had yeelded up to him all the Lands which I held of him or I lost them by Judgement or by Disseisin which the Plaintiffe did to me or he appointed them to come to others in which case the felony is barred and the Plaintiffe is condemnable And as to the consideration of present Fealty he may say that this Alliance the Plaintiffe forfeited against him in such a point or such a point such Fealty issued out of such Lands whereof the Defendant was not then Tenant neither in demeane nor in service And to the Alliance of Courtesie he may say that such benefit was not to continue but untill a time past before the time named in the Appeale for afterwards he paid him nothing of such Pension or other Courtesie but by Iudgement had against him and in despite of him O● thus before the time named in the Appeale he yeelded up to him his deed of the Pension or released the same unto him or quit-claimed the same whereby the Alliance was destroyed CHAP. III. SECT 17. TO Burning he may say that the mischiefe came by mischance and not of a premeditated felon CHAP. III. SECT 18. Murder TO an Appeale of Murder he may plead that the Action belongeth not to such women as the wife of the Plaintiffe because he was not killed in her armes or in her seisin Or thus Sir the Plaintiffe is to have no Action for as much as there is one nearer of blood who hath brought his Appeale and is a person of ability so to doe Or he may say that he is not bounden to Answer in England unto an Act done out of the Realme if the thing concerne not the Kings right as his Person or his Inheritance nor in a Priviledged place where the Kings Writ runneth not of an Act done in a forraigne place nor è contra in a Franchise of an Act done in Guildable Or he may say that he did it not feloniously but by mischance or by a lawfull Judgement or thus not against the Peace as a Fugitive or as a known Felon or as one who was not within Allegiance to the King at the time of the killing CHAP. III. SECT 19. TO an Appeale of Robbery or of Larcine he may plead that he wrongfully bringeth this Appeale for as much as the Plaintiffe brought an Action of Trespasse against the same Persons of the same before such Iudges and if any one would cover his Larcine by colour of Avowry for an estray or a Waife in such case it behooveth thathe shew forth a Title allowable for such a franchise but this exception is counterpleadable by this peremptory replication Sir such Avowry ought not to be of any force because he presently carried away the Estray or Waife so found or changed it or sold it or killed it or put it out of the View or from the knowledge of the neighbour-hood whereas he ought to have publikely cried it in three Markets and Monasterles next adjoyning and keepe it in a common place for a whole yeare To the exception of Distresse
after default untill due satisfaction was made so as the defaults were more hurtfull to persons in contempt then profitable Some Actions are personalls and not mixt in the introduction as of Neistie of Acccompt of leading away distresses and some actions there are that although they savour of the personalty and realty yet they hold not the rules of those actions As of Recognitions of Assizes in which if the Tenants make defaults for that there is no distresse nor seisure of the Land or other thing in the Kings hands but the Recognitions are to be taken ex officio and the Judgements are to be pronounced according to the Verdict of the Jurours in respect of such defaults CHAP. IIII. SECT 6. Of Personall Action IN personall Actions venialls where the Defendants are not Freeholders the defendants used to be punished after this manner First Processe was to bee awarded to arrest their bodies and those who were not found were put in exigent in what Court so ever the Plea was and were at three Courts solemnly demanded and proclaimed and if they appeared not at the fourth Court then were they banished the Lords jurisdiction or the Bayliffes of the Court for a time or for ever according to the quantity of the Trelpasses CHAP. IIII. SECT 7. Defaults in reall Actions THe defaults in reall Actions are punishable in this manner At the first default the plaintife is there seized to the value of the demand into the hand of the Lord of the Court and the Tenants are sommonable to heare their Iudgments of defaults Or after appearance the seisure is to be adjudged to the Plaintifes to hould in the name of a distresse untill by lawfull judgment hee be ousted thereof And if any one appeare in Court first he is to plenise the thing in demand and presently to answer the default In which case hee may deny the Summons because hee was never Summoned or not reasonably Summoned and thereof he may wage his Lawyer against the Testimoney of the Summoners although they be present and if he wage his Lawyer he is presently to plead to the Action or to the plaintife CHAP. IIII. SECT 8. Of Actions Mi●t THe defaults of mixt actions are punishable in this manner The defendants are distrainable by all their moveable Goods and Lands saving that they are not put out of that possession from Court to Court till they apeare and Answere and the issues come to the profits of the Lords of the Courts CHAP. IIII. SECT 9. Of Pledge and Mainpernor PLedges and Mainpernors are of one signification notwithstanding that they differ in names But Pledges are these who baile other things then the Body of Men as in Reall Actions and Mixt Mainpernors are in personall Actions only those w●● bayle the Body of a Man safe Pledges are those who are sufficient to answere the demand or the value and are true men and Freeholders to whom the Plaintife is and in whose Court the Plea is brought and if any one bring the Body or his Fees by default he is sufficient punished though hee bee not amerced but then the Offendor is first amerceable when he is brought to judgement and cannot excuse his wrong or save his default And as none who commeth before Summons is amecreable so no Plaintife is amerceable or his pledges de prosequendo for Nonsuit where the Tenant appeareth according to the warrant of the Summons or other wise maketh satisfaction for the same As in Case where the King Commands the Sheriffe that hee command such a one to appeare or to doe and if he do not and the Plaintifes put in sureties to prosecute his suit then that he summon or attach the defendant c. In which case if the Sheriffe had not warned the Tenant to appeare or to do according to the points of the Warrant if he take surety of the Plaintife to prosecute hee doth him wrong But the Plaintifes and their pledges are to bee amerced when the defendants offer themselves in judgment against them and they make defaults by Nonsuit And also those Sheriffs do wrong who forbeare to execute the Kings Commands in as much as the Plaintifes have found sureties to prosecute their Plaints when no mention is made in the Writts to put in sureties CHAP. IIII. SECT 10. Defaults after summons AS there is a default of persons in the like manner there are of things As of services issuing out of Lands where the Lands are in service and wherenot If Rent Suit or other service bee behinde to the Lord of the Fee The Tenant is not distraineable for the same by his moveable goods but it behoveth to sommon the Tenants to save their defaults or to make satisfaction or to answere wherefore those services due out of their possessions are behinde to the Lords and if they appeare not at the Sommon by the a ward of the suitors their Lands are to be seised into the Lords hands til they justify themselves by pledges And if they be againe summoned to heare the Iudgments for their defaults Although they come not at the second Summon they are not to bee amerced in as much as they came they may render the Land or alledge a priviledge or say something why they ought not to obey the Summons And if the Lord have not a proper Court nor suitors or hath not power to do Iustice to his Tenants in manner as aforesaid Then the same may bee done in the County or Hundred or elce in the Kings Courts Or at first by a Writ of Customes and Services and other Remediall Writts And if any one hath not any thing to acquit himself the Lord is not to loose his Right although hee be delayed thereof but the Lord may seize his Land as before is said and the Tenant is to recover his damages where he can and it shall be accounted his follie to enter or remaine in another Fee without the consent of the Lord. And if any one oust him of his Land and of his Tenement enforceth another person to hould of him and maketh himselfe mesne betwixt the Lord and the Tenant in prejudice of the Lord in such a case the law is used to hould the course after said CAP. IIII. SECT 11. Of champion IF any one do or say to his Lord of whom he houldeth any thing which turneth to the hurt of his body or to his dissinherison or to his great dishonour First by the Award of his Court or of some other such a one is sommonable if he be his Tenant and afterwards if he make default he is destrainable by his Land by the Lord till he appeare and if hee appeare and cannot discharge himselfe by his wager of Law by 12. men more or lesse according to the Award of the Court hee is to bee disinherited of the Tenancie which hee houldeth of the Lord in such a manner by the Judgment of the Suitors and so it behoveth that the Tenants leave their Lands and
understood that one shall recover by Assize of Novel disseisin every manner of Free-hold and all manner of Possession reall of Lands or of Franchises whereout one is cast if it be not by lawfull Iudgement and these words if it be not by lawfull Iudgement referre to all the words of this Statute The point which the King grants to the people that he will sell no Right or hurt nor delay Iustice is misused by the Chansellour who se●ls the remediall Writs and calls them Writs o● Grace by the Chansellour of the Exchequer who denyeth Acquittances of payments made to the King under Green Waxe and all those who delay right judgement or other right The point concerning leave for the staying of Merchants Alliens is so to be understood that it be not prejudiciall to the Townes not to the Merchants of England and that they be sworne to the King if they stay longer then forty daies The point which forbiddeth that none Allien his Land in prejudice of the Lord of the Fee is to be interpreted in this manner that no Tenant allien the Fee of his Lord without his consent or to hold in chiefe of the Lord without encrease of new service The point of the custody of Abbies and of religious places when they fall is thus to be understood that every Lord have the keeping of his Fee during the Vacation The point that none shall be taken or imprisoned upon the appeale of any woman for the death of any other then of her Husband is to be meant of such a woman which the Husband last held for his wife if in case there be many wives alive The points concerning Sheriffes Turnes and Viewes of Franck-pledges are disused three waies the first that Sheriffes Bayliffes and Stewards take extortion of Fines in that they make the people to fine for what they are not occasioned which they call for Beaupleader The second that they amerce the people for Presentments upon personall Actions The third is that they charge the Iurours with Articles touching Trespasse done by Neighbour to Neighbour or of Tenant or of other Lord then to the King The point which forbiddeth religious persons to purchase Lands overthroweth the Statute afterward made at Westminster of the same for as much as the Action of the chiefe Lord is limited in so short time to hasten the Kings Action in prejudice of the Lords of the Fee The last point is of such vertue and of such meaning as that the King hath the Cognisance of Trespasses done in such manner as that the Fee-Tenants have their Courts and the Cognisance of Trespasses done within their Mannours and also as well of reall Actions and Personalls as of mixt CHAP. V. SECT 2. The Articles upon the Statute of Merton SOme points are reproveable amongst the Statutes made at Merton after the Great Charter made and namely the point of Redisseisins Since the Law doth not attaint any Trespassor by enquest of Office and because Pleas may perhaps availe the Tenants and should be by Law allowable Assizes lye to the example of Novel Disseisin and where it is said that Redisseisors be arrested and kept in Prison and afterwards that they be released is but an abuse of the Law which requireth that every one who is attainted of a personall Trespasse be punished by a Corporall punishment if he cannot ransome it by money and that which is said of this Statute is to be understood of all Statutes made after the Great Charter made in the time of King Hen. the 1. for it is not Justice that he should be punished for one fault with Corporall punishment as imprisonment or other and further by a pecuniary paine or by ransome for ransome is nothing but a buying out the Corporall punishment The point of Improvements of Wasts is reproveable as being too generall for it ought to distinguish of Commons for in some places the Commonors are infeoffed in such manner that the whole Common is onely in the Tenants so that the Lords have nothing but the soile and in such case that Statute is prejudiciall to the Commoners and repugnant to the Great Charter which willeth that none be cast out of his Free-hold not the appurtenances without lawfull judgement The point of Rape of Marriages is reproveable in as much that it hath an Exception of Persons of Laymen and of Clerkes for there is no more Law that a Clerke should offend without punishment then a Lay man Other points are repugnable If the Tenant doe damage to his Lord or è contra for they are not punishable according to the Statute but they are bound by their Homage and Fealty betwixt them as it is before said amongst the judgements of defaults The points of making Atturnies in Suits at Hundreds is to be understood in this manner That although a Suitor by this Statute may make an Atturney for him to save his default yet none can give Judgement by Atturney nor is a Woman named in this Statute because that no judgement is to be given by a Woman CHAP. V. SECT 3. Of the Statutes of Marle-bridge SOme points of the Statutes of Marle-bridge are reproveable and namely the first five points because that every personall Trespasse is punishable by a Corporall punishment if the Trespasse be not bought in by ransome according to the quantity thereof The Chapter which commandeth t●e Great Charter to be kept in all points is defective for want of addition of punishment and it seemes crosse to make constitutions not holden The Chapters remedialls of Lords of Fees is reproveable in the mittigation of punishment For all those who doe defraud the Law are punishable by a Corporall punishment and not by a simple Amercement The point of Proclamation of Wards is reproveable as that which is founded upon Errour as it appeareth in the Chapter of defaults The Chapter of Redisseisors is reproveable for that no speciall command ought to exceed Common Right not any paine of imprisonment is judgeable but for a wrongfull imprisonment The Chapter of daies in dower is reproveable since the Law hasteneth right more in the Kings Court then clsewhere The Chapters following of Attachments and Distresses are reproveab●e for in pleas of Attachments no Essoigne is allowable for the Defendants nor any such order of distresses is to be holden according to Law The Chapter which forbiddeth that none make his Tenants Jurours is reproveable because that no punishment is therein ordained and because it hath no Exception for there are many Cases where the people ought to be Jurours though they come not by the Kings Command as before Justices of Forrests before Coroners and before Escheators and as in Courts of Sheriffes and Viewes of Fraukpledges and as Afferrours and at Goale deliveries The Chapter which commandeth the arresting of those who are bound to Accompt is reproveable since the Action is mixt and requireth Summons and not personall Arrests The Chapter of wasters of Farmes is reproveable for waste is
that Socage Lands should be partable amongst the Heires rights and that none might alien but the fourth part of his Inheritance without the consent of his Heire and that none might alien his Lands by Purchase from his Heires if Assignes were not specified in the Deeds It was Ordained That every one might endow his Wife Adestúm Ecclesia or of the Monastery without the consent of his Heires that Heire Females nor Widowes should not Marry themselves without the assent of their Lords because the Lords were not bound to take the Homages from their Enemies or other unknowne Persons and the same is forbidden upon paine of Forfeitures whether their Parents were cousenting thereunto or not and that Widowes in case they Marry without the consent of the Guardians of the Lands should lose their Dowries That those also should be dis-inherited or lose their Dowries before that they Married Widowes neverthelesse this should not forfeit their Inheritance for whoredome and that the eldest Son should forfeit nothing to the prejudice of his Ancestour nor his Heires living the Ancestour whose Heire apparant he is It was Ordained That the Lords of Fees might Summon their Tenants by the award of their Peeres into the Lords Courts or into his Counties or the Hundred at all times that they detaine or deny to doe their services in Deed or in Word Etè contra that is to say The Lords against the Tenants and there they shall be acquitted or forfeit their Alegiance with the appurtenances by the judgement of the Suiters and all their Tenancy and the Tortious or outragious Lords shall lose their Fees and the Services and the Tenements shall goe to the chief Lords of the Fee It was forbidden that none be destreyned by his moveable goods but by their bodies or by their Fees except in speciall Cases after mentioned It was Ordained that Infants should be in Ward with their Lands and Goods and that the Guardians should answer for Trespasses done by their Wards and give satisfaction to those who were damaged except of Felonies and that their Marriages should be to the Lords and that should have Escuage Reliefe and Aydes of their Tenants which they held of the Lords as to make the Heire of the Lord Knight and to Marry their eldest Daughters and that the Heires males should doe homage to their Lords and the Females should sweare fealty and that the Inheritance should discend to all the Children by warrant of right of the possession and that the male should barre the female and the next the more remote by warrant of right of propriety It was Ordained That offenders guilty of death should not be suffered to remaine amongst the guiltlesse and that the King should have the value of the Lands and the rent for one yeere and the wast of Felons Lands and also that he should have all Deodand and that the Goods and Chattels of Usurers should remaine as Escheates to the Lords of the Fèes Essoines were Ordained in mixt and reall Actions and not in personall Actions as after is said It was forbidden that any one should alien the profits of his Lands or his Rents to any one out of the Realme and it was also forbidden that none sold Wine in the Kingdome but by Tonnell or Pipe It was forbid that no money was to be carried out of the Realme and that none should carry Wooll out of the Kingdom nor should kill Lamb or Calf which might live nor Oxe which was not gelt It was forbidden That no Bishop doordaine Lay-m●n to the Order of Clerkes above the number which are sufficient to serve the Churches whereby the Kings Jurisdiction be destroyed It was Ordained That the poore should be sustained by Parsons Rectors of the Church and by the Parishioners so that none of them dye for want of sustenance It was Ordained That Faires and Markets should be in places and that the buiers of Corne and Cattell should pay Tole to the Lords Bayliffes of Markers or Faires That is to say a false penny of six shillings of good and of lesse lesse and of more more so that no Tole exceed a penny for one manner of Merchandize and this Tole was given to testifie the Contracts for that every private Contract was forbidden It was Ordained That no action was receiveable to Judgement if there was not a present proofe by Witnesses or other things and that none was bound to Answer to any Suite not to appeare to any Action in the Kings Courts before the Kings Justices before they found Sureries to Answer damages and the costs of Suite if damages lay in the C●se except in foure offences Diss●rsins Cirtification of Dissersius Attaints Rediffeisius and other Cases To which Ordinance King Henry the first put this mittigation in favour of poore Plaintiffes that those who had not sufficient Sureties present should make satisfaction according to their ability according to a reasonable taxation and in the same manner in Summances and in hatred of Perjury Attaints were Ordained in all Actions It was forbidden That no Merchant Alien should repaire into England but at foure Fayres and that none such should remaine in the Realm above forty daies Of the Curtesie of King Henry the first It was granted That all those who survived their Wives who were with childe by them should hold their Wives Inheritance for ever Many other Ordinances were made by them and since have been made in aide of the Peace according as afterwards shall be said CHAP. 1. SECT 4. Of Offences and the Division of them THe division of Offences is according to that which appeareth by the punishment Mortall or Veniall The mortall Offences are these Of Majesty Falsifying Treason Burning Larcency Burglary Homicide Of the Offence of Majesty The Crime of Majesty is an horrible offence done against the King and that is either against the King of Heaven or an earthly King Against the King of Heaven in three manners Heresie Venery Sodomy Against the earthly King in 3. manners 1 By these who kill the King or compasse so to doe 2 By those who dis-inherite the King of his Realm by bringing in an Army or compasse so to doe 3 By those Adulterours who ravish the Kings Wife the Kings lawfull eldest Daughter before she be married being in the Kings custody or the Nurse or the Kings Ant heire to the King Heresie is an evill and false belief arising out of Error of the true Christian Faith under this offence is Witchcraft o● Divination which are members of Heresie and in case lesse notorious they come by presumptions of ill workes which are by evill Art arising from an ill beleife and sometimes of a firmer beleif they doe wonders and sometime they come by open confessions of Error So Eresie is an Art to Divine Divination properly is taken in the ill sence as Prophesie is taken in a good sence Divination used to be in many kinds whereof one manner of Divination was through an ill beliefe by
wrong to the King when I disseise him of his right or use force where I ought to use Judgement On the other side that which is taken from me by the rightfull Judgement of any Judge Ordinary or Arbitraty is not taken wrongfully from me Wrong is here taken as well for deforcement or disturbance as for ejection Deforcement as if another entereth into anothers Tenement when the rightfull owner is at the Market or else where and at his returne cannot enter therein but is kept out and hindred so to doe Disturbance is as if one disturbe me wrongfully to use my seisin which I have peaceably had and the same may be done three waies 1 As when one driveth away a distresse so that I cannot distreyne in the Tenement lyable to my distresse whereof I have had seisin before 2 Another is where one doth Repleive his distresse by the Sheriffe or the Hundred wrongfully 3 As if one distreyne me so outragiously that I cannot manure Plow or the my Land duely in which Case it maketh one an outragious distreyner to disseise or for to eject the Tenant as if any one eject me out of my Tenement whereof I have had peaceable possession by discent of Inheritance or other lawfull title to the possession Note that all right is in two kinds either in right of possession or in right of property and therefore the right of property is not so determinable by this Assize as is the knowne possession or as that which altogether favoureth of a possessory right The remedy of Disseisins hold not of moveable goods nor of any thing which falleth not into Inheritance as Land Tenement Rent Advowson of a Church and a house of Religion Franchises and the Appurtenances and such other rights whether they are holden perpetually in Fee or for terme of life or yeares according to the Contract as well as the Land morgaged to such a one and his Heires untill so much be paid to such a Tenant or his Heires Eiection of a terme of yeares falleth into the Assize which sometimes commeth by Lease or Baylement or Loane and sometimes by right of Wardship by the Nonage of some Heire and to the recoverer it belongeth to hold them according to the Contracts Villinage in some Case falleth into this Assize as to Free-tenants who are ejected or disturbed to continue their seisin of lawfull Presentments and whereof a Bargaine is made betwixt any Doner and any Purchaser although that the Purchaser cannot present living the Clerke of the Doner instituted into the Church the Title neverthelesse of Contracts barreth not altogether the Donee so that afterwards he cannot present against the forme of the Contract and if he doe the Doner falleth into this Assize and the Bishop who gave the Institution to him who is not presented by him to whom the right of presentation doth belong in his owne name Into this Assize also fall Donors and Purchasers who make vicious Contracts of Lands and Possessions as also it is of Guardians and of Farmers who Lease their Lands for a longer time then their terme endureth in prejudice of the Lord of the Fee or of him to whom the Reversion belongeth as it is of those Lessors who have Fee rayle On the other side fall into offence those the Kings Officers and others who disseise a man or a Corporation of their Franchises whereof they have the Inheritance by lawfull Title if not through the default abuse or negligence of those or of their Bayliffes to whom the Franchises belong Into this offence also fall all Atturnies who yeeld up the Inheritance or Freehold of their Clyents in Judgement and the Justices also who yeeld to them and the Tenants also for it behoveth not Atturnies to lose their Clyents rights but it behoveth them to defend them till a rightfull Judgement be given Into this offence fall all those who commit any wast exile or destruction in Lands as that which is not justifiable by Law as those who assigne over Lands to others where in the Feoffments to themselves or their Ancestors there is mentioned but of Heires only and that may be two waies viz. to Heires generall or to speciall Heires named as in Fee tayle or not named as in Franck-marriages This Action all Persons may bring Men Women Clerkes and Laymen Infants and others of what condition soever they be who are not forbidden by the Law It is forbidden to Villaines to bring this Action without their Lord for as much as they are in the Custody of their Lords In the same manner to Feme Coverts and to others who are in Ward and to those who were never Tenants in their owne names but in the name of the Lord The Law also denyeth the Suit to those who have withdrawne themselves from the same action in Judgement or have released or quit-claimed their right And note that Retrahere sub-trahere is not all one Retrahere doth acquit a man from those things which are in his Writ or in his Action but neither the one not the other can utterly barre him if he doe not openly declare the same but subtrahere withdraw his Action every Plaintiffe may doe either by himselfe or his Atturney whether he be present in Court or absent and although it be that one will not pursue his Action yet he doth not so barre himselfe nor withdraw himselfe but that he may have a new Writ and a new Plaint if he doe not openly in Judgement say that he withdraweth his Action these remedies hold against a Disseisor and where there are many against all those who appeare in the force or in the aide CHAP. II. SECT 26. Of Distresses ANy Action rightfully grounded upon a Personall Trespasse accrueth to people wrongfully distreyned which is called a Distresse and because that none can cover his Robbery or his Latcine by Distresse it is 1 to be knowne what is the division of Distresses 2 Who may distreyne 3 When and of what things a Repleive lyeth A Repleive is nothing else but a reasonable distresse A reasonable distresse is to the value of the thing in demand without any other fault for no outragious distresse is termed lawfull There are two manner of Distresses a dead distresse as of Corne Wine and other such Chattels and a live distresse as of a Man a Beast and of such like things No man can distreyne who is not warranted so to doe by Law or by some other speciall deed 1 By the Law as for Damage feasance and for Debts and Contracts of Forraigners for Forraigners are distreynable by their moveable goods and summonable because they are not free Tenants in the places where they are destreyned and for as well a Debt recovered as any other and so for Amercements of damages and Arrerages of Accompt or other thing 2 By Deed as if you grant me any Annuity and doe grant me to distreyne in the Lands for the Arrerages of the same or other service and binde
for a yeare or of sicknesse in the Journey and that holds not but to the example of a common Essoigne in these Essoignes of hinderance are Essoignes De malo veniendi This Essoigne lyeth after every Summons and generall R●-summons upon Pleas except to Jurours and those who are summoned for the common-wealth But of Adjournments it is to distinguish for in the Eyre of Justices the Adjournement is for three daies or foure at the most or lesse according as the places are ●eare or containe and to this Essoigne is respited fifteen daies at the least The Essoigne of sicknesse in passage lyeth before the Essoigne De malo lecti and also after the yeare of the languishing and it lyeth before appearance and after appearance except in foure Assizes and where it lyeth in Actions it holdeth in Warranties This common Essoigne is not allowable in the cases aforesaid but once after the Parties have joyned issue not after the Parties have agreed to appeare without Essoigne nor where a Bishop is commanded that he have or cause such a Person to appeare nor there where many claime by one right or are Tenants of the same right nor to a man and his Wife not to all the paeceners but if a man dyeth without Heire after the Writ purchased and brought the Writ is thereby abateable because at the day of the date the Plaintiffe had no Action against the other parceners which are alive as to that of the Party This common Essoigne lyeth as well for Infants where they are impleaded of their Lands as for men of full age And as the same is allowed to the Tenant so is it warranted where no sicknesse is adjudged this Essoigne is allowable from day to day according to the common Adjournments in Writs of right till the sicknesse be Judged if the Tenant rise not before from his sicknesse neverthelesse none can doe it in such a case if not with the Plaintiffes leave or by the command of the King if the Plaintiffe will not give him leave This Essoigne holdeth in the Writ of Droit Potent sent to the Lord of the Mannour and in a Writ of Droit close of Lands holden of the Kings in Capite and in the Writ of Customes and Services after that the deforceor hath pleaded and said that the Batraile or the Grand Assize may be joyned The Essoigne De malo Lecti is in Court for two yeares when the sicknesse turnes to weaknesse this Essoinge lyeth not for the Plaintiffe and after the sicknesse adjudged it is adjournable by a yeare of respite to the Court of London Weakenesse lyeth not in any Writ of right after appearance but where Battaile may be joyned or the Grand Assize This Essoigne De malo Lecti was never allowable to any Atturney nor to any but those who had a Warrant before the common Essoigne cast by the Tenant nor to any after the weakenesse adjudged nor without ●●sing nor in Justi●●es nor in the Writs De quo jure nor De rationabilibus divisis nor Quo warranto nor Customes and Services before that the Court be certified that Battaile might be joyned or the grand Assize This Essoigne of De malo veniendi is called De malo villa and this lyeth in case where one appeareth the first day in Judgement and is suddenly taken with sicknesse in the Town that he cannot the next day appeare in Court This Essoigne may be cast the second day by one the third day by another and the fourth day by a third in which case the Judge ought to receive the Atturnies of those who are sicke but this Essoigne lyeth not but there where the Essoigne De molo lecti lyeth CHAP. II. SECT 31. Of Atturnies BEfore a Plea put into Court by Essoignes by Attachment or by appearance of the Parties none is to be received by Atturney no more then a Plea is removeable out of Court into a higher Court where the Plaint or the Writ is not brought nor any is to be received by Atturney in a Plea which was nor in a Plea which shall be but onely in a Plea which is Pendant in the County Court or else-where or is brought by the Kings Writ and this Plea be afterwards removed into a higher Court. By this removing the Atturney is not removed for no Atturney is removeable unlesse he whose Atturney is come into the Court in proper person and remove him if not in case where one hath generall Atturnies for generall Atturnies may appoint speciall and remove them nor any can receive Atturnies after the Plea brought but the King or other warranted by a speciall Writ if not in the presence of the parties All may be Atturnies which the Law will permit Women may not be Atturnies nor Infants nor Villaines nor any who are in Custody or any other who is not free of himselfe nor any who is criminous nor any who are not sworne to the King nor any in any personall Action nor in an Accompt nor in Nativo habendo Plaintiffes notwithstanding they have Atturnies in personall Actions are not to appeare not answer in Judgement by no Atturney but he disseiseth his Clyent when he doth it The Contents of the Third Chapter OF Exceptions What is Exception and the division and order of excepting Exceptions Dillatories Of Exception of Clergy Exception of Bigamy Exception of the power of the Judge Exception of time Exception of place Exception to the person of the Plaintiffe Exception of Prison and of Ward Exception of Summons Exception of vicious Counts Exception of Approvers Excedtion to Indictments Pleas to Treason Pleas to B●●ning Pleas to Murder To Larcine To Burglary Of Rape Of imprisonment Of Mayhem and ●ounding Juramentum Duelli The order of Battaile Exception of Personall Trespasse Of Purprestures Of Treasontrove Of Wrecks Of Vsury Of Driving Of Obligation Of Attaint Of Oathes Homage Fealty annexed to Homage Common Oathes Of finall Accords CHAP. III. CHAP. III. Sect. 1. Of Exceptions IT behoveth the Defendant to Answer the Plaintiffes Declaration and because the people commonly know not all the Exceptions in Pleadings Countors are necessary who know how to advance and defend their Clyents Causes according to the rules of Law and the Costoms of the Realm and the more needfull are they to defend them in Indictments and Appeales of Felony then in personall or veniall Causes and the better to helpe our memory which every day inclineth to forgetsulnesse it is necessary to shew what is an Exception and the division of it and the order of Excepting or Pleading for some account them guilty who Plead not or Plead ill or not sufficiently for example If any one Vouch one to warranty and Judgement passe if he tell not the yeare or before what Judges the Judgement passed it is as if he had said nothing and so of other Cases and although a Plea be requisire neverthelesse every one is not received to plead for some are admitted to Plead without Tutors
was in these words I will beare faith to such a King of life and member and Terren honour against all those that from this day forward shall c. So God me helpe and his holy Evangelist CHAP. III. SECT 36. Homage HOmage is done in these words I become your man for such Land so that the whose quantity be shewed and certainty specified whereby the Lord well knoweth both how he may warrant his Tenant and for how much he bindeth his Land to warranti and that the Tenant know for how much he is his Tenant Cap. 3 Sect. 37. Fealty annexed to Homage THe Oath of Fealty annexed to Hem ●iage is in these words I shall beare Fealty to him by name of life and Member c. for so much as I shall be his Tenant against all c. saving the Oath of Fealty which I have made to such a King c And if I sweare Fealty to another then to the King then thus saving the Faith which I ●wore to the King and to my other Lords And if the Homage be done to the King or to another to whom the Tenant hath before sworne Fealty in these Cases Hee needeth not sweare Fealty againe if the Alliance in no case hath bin broken Chap. 3 Sect. 38. common Oathes COmmon Oathes are in these words I will speake truth in what you aske of mee in such a Case So God mee helpe c. The Oathes in Assises are in these words I will speake the truth of the Land of which I have had the view by Authority of this Assise or of the Land of which this Action of Reddisseision is arraigned or of the Pasture or Feeor of the Nusance or of the Walt or of the Ditch or of the Peel or of the Water or of the Church or of the Rent or of the service and nothing shall hinder me that I shall not speak the truth c. Of Life and Member and Terren Hanour he will doe so much that he will never assent that the King or his other Lord have damage of his life or any of his Members nor will assent that his honour shall be overthrowne in power not fame Cap. 3. Sect. 39. Of sinall Accoràs NO Law forbiddeth Pleas nor Accords wherefore it is lawfull for overy one to agree with his adversarie and to relcase and quit claime his Right and his Action Neverthelesse after one bath once affirmed and brought his person all Action whereby scandall ariseth none can agree it without the leave of the Iudge so as he may withdraw it For every Plaintife in Actions of Scandall who attainteth not his Adversarie according to that as hee bath brought his plaint is adjudged scandalous as his adversarie should be if he were attainted Neverthelesse in favour to save a man from death who is not attainted of mortall Offences it is suffered that the Adverse parties doe agree After Battaile waged one of the parties neverthelesse remaineth infamous None can accord or agree who is 〈◊〉 of the Age of 21. yeares nor any who is in custody nor any by Attorney In custody are villanies married women men professed in Religion Infants within the age of 14 years heirs Idiots heirs deafe and dumbe heirs deseased and those who are in prison and under Bayle and women who are in the custody of the Lords who have the marriage of them CHAP. IIII. The Contents OF Iudgment Odinance of Iudgment Of Iurisdiction Of Paul s punishable Of Defaults Of Personall Actions Of Defaults in reall Actions Of Actions mixt Of Pledge and Maynpernors Of Defaults after sommons Of Champions Of Paynes Of Imfamies Of Majests Of Burning Of Murdur Of Paines in divers manners Of false Justices Of Perjury Of the Offices of Iuctices in Eyre Of the Articles in Eyre Of Prauchises Of Satisfaction of Debts Cases of Disseisin Of Amercoments Of Amercements taxable Of the Office rf Iustices in Eyre CHAP. IIII SECT 1. Of Iudgment THe flower and necessity of Law doth depend in righteous judgment without which the Law can have no effect nor any due end And therefore it is fitte speake of judgments which are not in all points here according to therigour in the old Testament and the usages used by Moses and the Prophets before the Incarnation of Christ but they are mittigated to the temper of mercy of the truth and of the justice which Christ himselve used upon the earth and commanded to be used in the new Testament and which the Apostles and their successours have used since the Incarnation of Christ and according to the judgements of the ancient usages in Pleas touching the Lawes of this Realine CHAP. IIII. SECT 2. The Ordinance of Judgement IUdgement commeth from jurisdiction which is the greatest dignity which belongeth to the King And there are two kindes of junisdiction Ordinary and Assigned Every one hath ordinary jurisdiction if offence take it not away from him for every one may judge his owne according to the righte rules of Law But this jurisdiction is now restrained by the power of Kings in as much as none hath power to held Plea of Trespasse or of Debt which passeth 40 s. but the King Nor anie hath power of Counsins of Fees without a Writ Neverthelesse it is lawfull for every one to f. oust the mortall offender for committing of their offences by good witnesses by warrant of ordinary jurisdiction whether the offenders bee Clerks or Lay people of age or within age and all others of what condition so ever they be and in those coses are those offences called notorious offences There are two kindes of notorious nototious in fait and notorious in right Notorious in fait is where no contradiction lyeth nor no oathes need to justisie them by reason of the witnesse of the people Notorious of Right is where the offenders are attainted of their offences by themselves or by the oathes of witnesses or otherwise in judgement This jurisdiction assigned i● that which the King assignes by his Commissions of his Writs for without a Writ he cannot by Law grant any jurisdiction if not in the presence and with the assent of the parties None can give jurisdiction but the King the reason is because he is not sufficient to beare without helpe the charge which belongeth to him to punish the Trespasses and to assoile the offenders which hee hath to governe And so our Ancestours appointed a Seale and a Chancellour to helpe the same to give Writs remediall to all Plaintiffes without delay That Writs used to be of this Assize They were without raysure without enterlyning without blots without usuall transposition and without every fault in the parchment and letters and written in English with a knowne hand by a Clerke of the Chancery and used to containe the name of the parties and the substance of the Plaintiffe and the name of the Judge and of the King or other Teste of the Writ which sometimes were directed to the Lord of the Fee sometimes
that they come to the Lords And if any one denieth his service which he ought to do it may be said by the Lords that wrongfully he denieth either part or the whole and that to his wrong and so further count of seisin by his owne hand and that such is his right c. as after shall be said And the Tenant may choose to try his Right by his owne body or by another or joyne issue upon the Grand Assise And pray Conusans whether hee hath the better right to hould such land specified discharged of such service as he houldeth or the said A. to have the same Land indemesure as he claimeth And if the Defendant will try his Right by the body of another Then yee are to distinguish For if the Action be personall the Suit need not be present and if the Action bee Reall and the Tenant hath his Champion present Then may the Plain●ife offer his Champion against the Champion of the defendant or he shalloose his Covenant or his Writ And if the Defendant have nochampion then are the parties adjournable if they have joyned Battle that they have their Champions ready at the next Court as appeareth in the case of Saxeling to whom Hustan was bounded in a Bond of 10. li. by a writing Obligatory made at Rome which the said Hunstan denyed That it was not his deed To which Saxeling by way of Replication Answered That hee wrongfully denyed the same and that wrongfully for that he sealed it with his Seale or with the Seale of another which he borrowed of him such a day such a yeare and at such a place and that if he would deny it he was ready to prove it by the body of A. who saw it or by O. and C. who saw the same and if any hurt come to them he was ready to prove the same by another who could prove the same And so it appeareth that it is not needfull to have present Suit in such personall Actions the first day but the Parties may bee ad●●urned as it is said And if any one who cannot bee a fit witnesse or who is a Champion bee offered by one of the parties to combate who was not named before to make the Battle and the adverse partie there challenge him and demand Iudgement of the default in such such case the Iudgement is to be given against the profferer And if any ill happen to any of their Champions where by they cannot combate according to their proffer none is resceiveable to try the battle for him but only his eldeft sonne Lawfully begotten as by some is said And if the Tenants champion be va●●uished The Tenant thereby looseth all Homage and all Alliance and all Oathes of Fealty and all Homage betwixt him and the Lord and the Lord is to enter therein and to hold the same in demesue as if he had recovered by the Grand Assise And if the champion of the Lord be vanquished that them the Iudgement be that the Tenant hold his Land for ever quit of the service in the demand And if the King doth any wrong to any of his free men who hould of him in chiefe the same course is to be holden The Earles of Parliaments and the Commons have Iurisdiction to heare such causes and determine them because the King cannot by himselfe nor by his Iustices determine the Causes nor pronounce their Iudgment where the King is a partie And as the Lords may challenge their Tenants of wrong Or Injuries done to them against the Articles of their Fealtie In the like manner are the Lords challengeable of wrongs and Injuries done by them to their Tenants And if the Lords do not appeare to answer their Tenants Then are the Tenants to be adjudged that●they doe no service for their Lands till the Lords have Answered CHAP. IIII. SECT 12. Of punishments PVnishment is a satisfaction for a Trespasse or an Offence There are two kinds of punishments Voluntarie and Violent Volantatie is that which bindeth the doer of his owne accord as it is in his Compromises to compell the people to keepe their Bargaines But with such punishments the Law medleth not with Of violent punishment wherewith the Law medleth there are two kindes Corporall and Pecaniarie Of Corporall some are Mortall and some Veniall Of Mortall some are by beheading some by drawing some by hanging some by burning alive some by falling from dangerous places and otherwise according to Auncient priviledges and Vsuages The Offences which require punishment of death are the mortall Offences Of Veniall punishments some are by losse of Member As the Fellony of Mayhem in case of wrong Of Member some by the losse of hand as it is of false Notories and of cutters of Purses with the Larcine of lesse then 12. d. and more then 6. d. which King Rich. changed some by cutting out of Tongues as it used to be of false witnesses some by beating some by Imprisonment some by losse of all their moveable goods and not moveable as of false Iudges and it is of userers attainted of usury after their decease but not if they bee attainted thereof in their life for then thy loose but only their moveables because by pennance and Repentance they may amend and have Heires Some by exile and abjuration of their Christianity or of the Realme of the Towne of the Mannor or the Land and their friends as it is of those who are attainted in personall Actions Venialls who are not able to make satisfaction Some by Banishment as it is in contempts in personall Actions Venialls some by other Corporall paines as it appeareth after its place And although one offend indeed or in word in all judgements upon personall Actions 7. things are to bee weighed in the ballance of Conscience that is to say 1. The cause 2. The petson 3. The place 4. The time 5. The Quality 6. The Quantity 7. The end 1. The cause whether it be mortall or veniall 2. The person the plaintiffe and defendant 3. The place whether in Sanctuary or not 4. The time whether in day or in the night 5. The Quality of the Trespaffe 6. The Quantity appeareth in it selfe 7. The end whether the taking were in manner of distresse by a justisiable importment Or in manner of Larine By Allienation unjustifiable CHAP. IIII. SECT 13. Of Insamous Persons ALL those who are rightfull attained of an Offence whereupon corporall punishment followeth are infamous Infamous ar all those who offend mortally or Fellouously all those who are perjured in giving false witnesse All false Iudges All false Vsurours and all those who are attainted of personall trespasses to whom open pennance is joyned by enjudgment of Law Those who Imprison a Free-man against his will or blemith the credit of his Franchise by extortion or by any purchase Those who also bring attaints and cannot prove the perjury whereby honest Iurours are slandered And those who indite or Appeale a man who is innocent of
realls And if any one receive a Felon wittingly into his Franchise the same is now challengable CHAP. IV. SECT 17. Of satisfaction of Debt IF a Plaintiffe recover against many by Iudgement he shall have but once damages as in this case If many Persons owe one Debt and every one be bound in the whole if one of them make agrement for the same although he doe not make a speciall agreement for all the Debtors all of them neverthelesse are discharged because satisfaction hath respect to the Debt and not to the persons CHAP. IV. SECT 18. Cases of Disseisin IF the Iurours in Petit Assizes are agreed that one shall give their common Verdict for all and if they say that they know nothing nor that the Plaintiffe shall receive nothing because he proved not his Action and if they be of divers opinions they are not therefore to be threatned nor imprisoned but they are to be severed and diligently examined And if two Iurours be found to agree amongst all the rest it sufficeth for him for whom they speake and they are not to be examined upon the title of the possession but it is sufficient for the Iudge to know if the Plaintiffe were disseised of his Land whether it were rightfull or wrongfull according to the Plaint for though it were right neverthelesse it was tortious because the Tenant used force where he should have used Iudgement and for that he made himselfe a Iudge therein Iudgement is to be given for the Plaintiffe so as he shall recover seisin such as it is saving every right by another Writ for an Affize lyeth not upon Assize of the same Tenement betwixt the same parties not an Attaint upon an Attaint and if the Iurours for him whether they were sworn upon the Action or upon the Exceptions Iudgement goes for him and they behoove to enquire of the others named in the Writ and if the Disseisors came in with force and Armes although they hurt no persons body all of them neverthelesse are to be adjudged to Corporall punishment according to the quantity of the offence and if they cast him our of his dwelling house or out of his Demesne the felony of this Burglary is punishable at the Kings Suit or at the Suit of the Party for none is to be cast out of his house where he dwelleth and which he hath used as his owne for a yeare without Iudgement although he hath no title thereunto but by Disseisin or intrusion and it sufficeth for fotce and Armes onely the shewing of Armes for to hurt the Adversaries and under the name of Armes are contained B●wes Artowes Sawes Launces Speeres Staves Swords and Targets of Iron The Iury ought to enquire of the damages that is to say of the profits of the Tenements done since the Disseisin and to whose hands such profits after came and of the Charges Costs and reasonable expences which the Plaintiffe hath sustayned in his whole recovery and in all things and how much he is endamaged in distresse of his goods and in his honour and the damages being assessed it is to be awarded that the Plaintiffs recover his seisin such as it is according to the view of the Recognitors and the damages and the Disseisors are punishable according to the points of the offences For the goods found in the Tenements whereof none can know the value as Charter Writings Royall Treasure and such things locked up the Plaintiffe hath an Action by Appeale of Robbery or by a Writ of Trespasse In Iudgement of ●atcine veniable satisfaction is to be made to the 〈◊〉 in●ffes to the double of the value of 〈…〉 which are stolen and in case of 〈…〉 the value 4 double or foure 〈…〉 CHAP. IV. SECT 25. Of Amercements A Pecuniary paine we call an Amercement which follow reall offenders and m●●t and sometimes are certaine and sometimes uncertaine An Amercement is certaine sometimes according to the dignity of the Persons as it is of Earles and Barons for he who holdeth an entire Earldoine is to be amerced one hundred pound when he is least amerced And a Baron for a Barony entire one hundred Markes and he who holdeth lesse lesse and more more according to the quantity of the Tenure And sometime by a certaine Assize in another case as it is of Escapes of people imprisoned in which case yee are to distinguish of the place as where one escapeth out of the Kings Prison or out of the Prison of another out of the Kings Prison yee are to distinguish of the cause whether it be mortall or veniall and if mortall then distinguish if the cause were adjudged or not and if adjudged by norory of fact or of right then the Corporall punishment is uncertaine for if the Keeper or more be assenting to the escape punishment of death followeth thereupon and if the cause was not adjudged and the Keeper was not the Kings Officer nor assented to the escape then the Assize of punishment is so many Shillings sterling or more according to the usage of the Country or of the place or of the person And if the Cause he veniall then the escape is not punishable And if the escape be from the prison of others then yee are to distingu●sh of the cause and of the caption whether the cause be mortall or veniall and if mortall then the pecuniary paine aforesaid holdeth place and if the cause be veniall there is no punishment for the escape CHAP. IV. SECT 26. Of Amercements taxable COmmon Amercements are Taxable by the Oathes and A●●erments of the Peeres of those who sal in misere cordia according to the constitution of the Charter of Franchises which willeth that a Free-man be assessed when he falleth into an Amercement according to the quantity of his offence a Merchant saving to h●● his Merchandize and a Vi●●aine saving his Wainage and these Aff●rrors are to be chosen by the assent of the Parties if they will but the Kings Officers are the more grievonsly to be Amerced for the breach of their faith c. Many cases there are where Corporall punishments are brought in by Fines of money and such are called Ransomes which is as much as to say Redemption from Corporall paines whereof some Fines are common as for Murders other for personall Trespasses of Townes and Commonalties which Fines King Edward Ordained that they should be assessed in the presence of the Justices so as the names of them be put into the Roles of the Iustices so that the Estreates may come to the Sheriffe to leavie the same by parcells and not by totall Summons And in case where one recovereth Debt or Damages King Edward enacted that it should be in the election of them to doe execution by leavying such Debt and damages of the moveable goods of the Debtors at the very value to the value of the thing in demand except the Oxen and Beasts of the Plow together with the moyety of Lands and Tenements of the Debtors if
Action personall from a longer time then the last Eyre 123 It is abuse of the Writ of Accompt for which every one may imprison another wrongfully 124 It is abuse that one is bound to render an accompt of issues of Land whereof he is Guardian by title of Law 125 It is abuse that the Writ of Ne cui juste vexces is so out of use 126 It is abuse that Battailes be not in personall Actions as well as in Felonies 127 It is abuse that proofes and purgations be not by the Miracle of God where other proofe faileth 128 It is abuse to joyne Battaile betwixt persons who are not admitted to wage battailé 129 It is abuse that a Knight is otherwise armed then another man in a Combate 130 It is abuse that Judges have Cognizance by originall Writ or warrant by Vouchers or in others to which his jurisdiction extendeth not 131 It is abuse to suffer a Voucher to warranty in the Kings Writ of Quo warranto 132 It is abuse that those who are sound Usurers by indictments after their deaths are suffered to be buried in Sanctuaries and that the Lands doe not escheat to the Lords of the Fees 133 It is abuse that vicious Obligations drive the Authors to personall Damages in as much as they are voidables 134 It is abuse to compell Iuronts Witnesses to say that which they know not by distresse of Fine and imprisonment after their Verdict when they could not say any thing 135 It is abuse to use the words to their knowledge in their Oath to make the Iurours speake upon thoughts since the chiefe words of their Oathes be that they speake the truth 136 It is abuse that one examine not the Jurours though they finde at least two to agree 137 It is abuse to put more words in the doing of Homage but thus I become your man for the Land which I claime to hold of you 138 It is abuse to Answer or appeare by Atturney 139 It is abuse to make Justices such parties without the Writ in the Kings presence if not with the assent of the parties 140 It is abuse that the Writs of Audita quareta and Conspiracy and others containe not the substance of the plaints 141 It is abuse that the Justices of the Bench meddle with more Pleas then of wrong done against Fines Grand Assizes translation of pleas out of lower Courts and of Darrein presentment and of the rights of the King Queene and their Allies 142 It is abuse to use a Pone when their Causes are discussed if the parties challenge the same for a lying purchasor ought not to have benefit of his leasings 143 It is abuse to sue forth Grand Distresses in Pleas of Attachments whereof the defaults are to the profit of the King and not of the Plaintiffes 144 It is abuse that Trespassours who have nothing are not banished from Townes Counties Manours and Hundreds as they used to be 145 It is abuse to hold that a Petit Cape maketh other title but to save every right in reall Action not in others 146 It is abuse that the issues of Grand Distresses in mixt Actions come not to the profit of the Lords of the Fees and others who have Courts as they doe to the King of Pleas moved in his Court upon the same Actions 147 It is abuse to thinke the same punishment is to be to Maine-prisots as to Principals who make default whereas they are amerceable onely in Courts 148 It is abuse to amerce a man in plesive of Fee or of service going out of the Land by default in a personall Action or reall for Outlawty or losse of Land is sufficient punishment 149 It is abuse that Sheriffes doe not execution of Writs Vice Conntiels in as much as the Plaintiffes have found Pledges De proseqnend where there is no mention to take Sureties 150 It is abuse to distreine for Ar●erages of services issuing out of Lands moveable goods whereas no distresse ought to be but in the Land onely 151 It is abuse that the Tenant may without punishment enfeoffe a third person of the Land of his Lord in prejudice of him or doe other thing or say any thing against the points of his Oath of fealty 152 It is abuse to suffer a man who is a Champion to be a witnesse 153 It is abuse that none have recovery of wrong done by the King or the Queen but at the Kings pleasure 154 It is abuse to judge a man to divers punishments for one Trespasse as to a corporall punishment and to a ransome since ransome is but a Redemption from corporall punishment by payment of a fine of money 155 It is abuse that people defamed of offence are not barred from making oathes and of their dignities and of their other Honors And divers other abuses appeare by those who well understand the Writ before written CHAP. V. SECT 2. The defects of the great Charter SEeing how the Law of this Realm sounded upon forty points of the Great Charter of Liberties is damnably dis-used by the Governours of the Law and by Statutes afterwards made contrary to some of the points to shew the defects or defaults of the points aforesaid and the errours of some Statutes I have put in memory this Chapter of the defect and reprehensions of Statutes and first of the defects of the points of the Great Charter To the point That the Church of England shall have all her Rights and Liberties inviolable for first it were necessary to ordaine a Corporall punishment and namely to the Lay Judges the Kings Ministers and others who Judge Clerkes for mortall Crimes to Corporall punishments infamatories doe detain their goods after their purgation and to those Secular Judges who take upon them Cognizance in causes of Matrimony and Testaments or other speciall things The other point is That every Free-man of the Realme inherite the Liberties of the Charter and whereof every one is disseised as of his Free-hold which is not adjudged according to the points following there lyeth no recovery of damages by the Assize of Novel Disseisin A third point seemeth to be defective for as the releife of an Earldome entire was to decrease in him who held lesse so it seemeth that that certainety was to encrease as much if an Earle held more so as he who held two Earldoms and who held an Earldome and a Barony shall pay as an Eardome and as a Barony and so of other Fees if they be not expressed in the Charter that the Fyne of one hundred pound be not an Eirldome for no point oncreased and so of other certainties The fourth point is defective for although it be that such a point be grounded upon Law to binde the Lord of Fees to warranties by taking of such Homages whether they tooke them of the right Heires or not because it is not expressed whoshould be Guardian of the Fees in time of vacancy and have the issues in the mean
he who bound himselfe to warranty would not warrant the Land not vouch over it appeareth thereby that the Ancestor was Tenant by a naughty title and that he was possessor thereof by an ill way and if the Heire had nothing whereby to discharge him the Tenements bound to warranty should be recovered And if the Heire had nothing whereby to discharge not no Land is found bound to the warranty if the Purchasor lost his purchase it was at his owne perill and accounted his owne folly the better at any other time to looke to his assurance CHAP. V. SECT 5. Articles upon the Statute of Westminster 2. THat which is said of the Statute of Westminster 2. which faileth in many cases is now to be understood for against all Trespasses is the Law made although it be dis-used or controuled by those who know not the Law And the three first Chapters are not Statutes but are the revocations of the Errours of negligent Judges for the Law permits not that a man make a better estate to another then himselfe hath but requireth that every lawfull Contract be made according to the wills of the speakers and that which is in the Statute that if a Fine be leavied in deceit of right that the same be null is reproveable but it might have been better said That for that Fine that no man be barred of his right for the Fine leavied cannot be rightly said null but it holds in force and barreth at the least the Donor of his Action The point if Distresses doth not repeale any Errour but affirme them as before appeareth in the second beoke And that which is said in the second Statute that Suitors in Counties have no Record is but abusion since every lawfull restimony is a Record and every false testimony is a lye and as lawfull may other people testifie as the Justices assignned Is not the same Writ abused to grant to Counties Records in Outlawries Pledges Maine-prises Battailes Grand Assizes and other Cases and not other points and to deny that the Sheriffes or Lord of the Fee or other to whom the King sendeth his Writ hath not as well Record of Processe before him as those whom they call Iustices is but Errour And as to the causes of Writs of paines is suffered great Errour that that which is not warranted in the Accessory that he may 〈…〉 in the principall since the Law permits that none be aided by a lye or a vicious Writ Of the other side because there is more realty in the Statute then personalty as more Attachments are awarded in personall Actions then in mixt and realls The point of Measnes is reproveable as to the Proclamation and as to the non-acquittance of those who hold by lesse service then the Measnes for be it that B. hold one hundred pound Land of D. by the service of twenty pound per annum and the same B. give the moyety thereof in Frankalmoigne or Frank marriage or to hold by the service of a Rose to C. if it happen that the same B. forfeited what he hath by this Statute no remedy is ordained for C. who was purchasor from B. and therefore the old course is to be holden which is said before in Iudgements The remediall Statute of the right of the Wife lost by the default of the Husband is reproveable for the old Law was that a woman after the death of her Husband should repleeve her Inheritance or purchase so lost summoning the Tenants for a Cape is not but a distresse and ejection of seasin saving every right and it is lawfull for one of the Tenants in common to defend his right where he is damnified by the negligence or the non ability of his Partner In the same manner may a Woman according to Law in the right of her Husband neither doth the Law give to Widowes Action to demand Dower in the cases named in the Statute but in all cases the Law enables her to be received by Lawfull reversing of the Iudgement And that which is contained that Tenants may vouch to warranty is but abuse how holdeth voucher place where a Writ lyeth not yet is it understood with a saving that no jurisdiction of a Iudge assigned extend to other Persons then those who are named in the Writ and that none shall vouch more then in the same Writ are named by Writ of Replegiare and therefore are warranties attainable and determinable by Writs The Statute following which Ordaineth new Writs remedialls after defaults is prejudiciall to Lords of Fees who lose the advantages of their Courts because that Writs of Right are forbidden in such cases where they wont to be used Presentments to Churches ought not to be but in the names of those to whom the meere right of the Advowson doth belong according as is said before in Contracts and it is errour and abusion of Law to endow women of Advowsons or to Lease them to Farme or for the terme of anothers life or in Frank-marriage or in Mortgage or in Fee-tayle or otherwise then in Fee-simple And those who receive Clerkes presented to Churches in prejudice of those to whom the meere right in Fee doth appertaine are bound to make restitution of the damages and those who have recovered to Jurours by whom they were certified of the right of the personage and so it appeareth that the punishment lyeth more against the Bishops then the presentors And that which enacteth long Imprisonment for a punishment is but abuse since none is imprisonable if not for a wrongfull imprisonment The Statute of Warranties is but a revocation of Errour used against Law The Statute of Admeasurement is reproveable in many points as to the Proclamations since admeasurement and surcharge are to be by Jurours The Statute of Measnes is reproveable in many points as it appeareth in the Chapter of Distresses Contracts and defaults and the same appeareth in the end of the Statute where the Plaintiffes know not a set fine The Statute of suspension of Writs in Eyres is reproveable as repugnant to the great Charter which saith we will sell no Right nor detaine it and wherefore are Writs rebuttable from heating but for the multitude of Writs which are and for the small number of Justices the right of many perish The Statute of obligees in Accompt is reproveable in many points one as to the exception to the Persons for the Masters is ordained recovery and to Serjeants not when Auditors are assigned without the consent of the servants The other that the Auditors are not tyed to allow any thing but at their pleasure without punishment Another that the recovery is ordained by detinue of the servants and not against the Surety not the goods Another that the Lords are not to be Attested according as of the servants Another that the wickednesse of Auditors remaineth unpunished Another of Outlawry for none is to be imprisoned if not for a tortious imprisonment The Statute of Appeales is reproveable in
is reproveable and distinguishable according as hath been said before The Statute to have view of Lands is but a wrongfull delay of the right of the Plaintiffes for the View appeareth sufficient by the Certificate of the Summons upon what Tenements the Tenants are summoned The Statute which forbiddeth that no Officer of the Court take any presentment of any Church not other thing which is depending in Plea or in debate is not kept Reprehensions upon the Statute of Gloucesier 16. E. 1. THe Statutes to recover Damages in Pleas of possession enacted at Gloucester or else where and of the horrible damages in waste are reproveable for that the Law giveth one no more then is his demand and therefore it behooveth that the damages be mentioned in the Writs if damages shall be awarded for a Judge cannot exceed the points of his Commission and so it would be needfull to use it according to the first Ordinance of Writs And the Statute of Tenements alliened of Lands in prejudice of others is reproveable for the remedy ought to be such as of Guardians allienors to the dis-inherison of the right Heires The Statute of Trespasse pleaded in Counties is reproveable for want of distinction for small Trespasses Debts Covenants broken and such other kinds not exceeding forty shillings Suitors have power to heare and determine without Writs by warrant of jurisdiction Ordinary and by Writs granted afterwards for Sheriffes have more jurisdiction in their Writs vicontiell then Justices of the Bench by the Pone And as to the recovery of twenty shillings or more in right of Essoigne of the Kings service not warranted the Statute is reproveable for that Essoigne might be cast where the Defendant would make default by the adverse Party and so he should have advantage of his malice The Statute which forbiddeth the abatement of Appeales is not observed The Statute which awardeth an innocent man to remaine in Prison or to have no manner of punishment for necessary Man-slaughter or by mischance where no offence is found is but an abusion The Statutes making mention of London ought to extend commonly throughout the whole Realme CHAP. V. SECT 6. The reprehensions of Circumspectè agates An. 13. E. 1. THe first point which saith That the Kings prohibition holds not in correction of mortall offences where a pecuniary paine is enjoyneable by Ordinaries is founded upon open errour and usage to enjoyne a pecuniary paine for a mortall offence notwithstanding to destroy the King jurisdiction The other points to compell the Parishioners by corrections to enclose Church-yards to offer to give Mortuaries Monies for Consessions Chalices Lights Holy Vestments and other adornement of Churche are more grounded upon interest then amendment of soules and note that after that they are offered to God that they are so spirituall that they are to be expended but in Almes and spiritually for they are never to be converted to Lay uses And then if any Parishioner for the hurt of the Parson of the Church keopeth back his Tithes or stealeth them away or doth not pay them duly or fully the same is not punishable by a pecuniary paine but by a corporall punishment For the Excommunicate no pecuniall paine was to be for restitution or satisfaction no more then of a Pagan or a Jew and if they doe demand a pecuniary paine there the Kings Prohibition lyeth and much more in the demand of Pensions or of damages of Trespasse or of defamation but of Pleas of correction where one Pleades onely Pro salute anima the Kings prohibition lyeth not CHAP. V. SECT 7. THe new Statute of Debts is contrary to Law as it appeareth in the Chapter of Contracts for every imprisonment of the body of a man is an offence if not for tortious Judgement and the Law will not suffer any Obligation or vicious Contract by intermixture of offence and therefore it was to be avoided as grounded upon an offence for no honest man ought to agree to such a Contract which causeth him to offend or to be punished Againe it is contrary to the Great Charter which enacteth that no man be taken nor imprisored if not by the lawfull judgement of his Peeres or by the Law of the Land Here endeth the Mirrour of Justices of the right Lawes of Persons according to the ancient usages of England The end of the fifth Chapter and of the whole Booke FINIS THE BOOKE Called The Diversity of Courts And Their Jurisdictions Written by an unknown Author in the time of King Henry the Eighth in the French Tongue Wherein many necessary and profitable things ate contained Translated out of the French Tongue into English for the use of many By W. H. of Grays Inne Esquire Imprinted at London for Matthew Walbancke and are to be sold at his Shop at Graies Inne gate 1646. The Booke called The diversity of Courts and their Jurisdictions IT is to be understood that the King is the fountaine of Justice and to that purpose ordayneth Judges that Justice be administred to all his Subjects The King himselfe for the excellency of his Person may fit and give Judgement in all Causes personall or reall betwixt Party and Party but he cannot fit in Person in Judgement in any Cause where he himselfe is Party or where the things of his Crowne or Dignity are concerned as upon an Indictment of Treason or upon as appeale of Murder or Felony or upon an Action brought by himselfe as Formdon of Land of which the right is descended to him from a colaterall Ancester or in an Action of Debt by reason of the affection moving him to be favourable to himselfe and therefore he maketh his Iudges to sit and heare such matters in difference and to doe justice to the parties And the place where the Judges sit to minister Justice are called Courts which are of divers kinds and the Judges thereof have severall Authority Of the Court of Marshalsey ANd first the Court of Marshalsey is an ancient Court and made for the well government and ordering of the Kings house for the preservation of the King and his Servants and this Court hath its bounds within which it hath jurisdiction and not without The Iudges of this Court are the Steward and Marshall of the Kings house for in them under the King is the ordering of the houshold c. The title of the Court is Placita Corone aula Hospitii Domini Regis leat coram seneschalle mareschallo hosp●●●i Domini Regis c. And this Court hath power to enquire of Treason Murder and Felony and to take Appeales of them and of Mayhem if they be done within the Virge betwixt persons who are of the Kings house And if one of the houshold Sueth another who is not of the houshold he may plead to the jurisdiction of the Court and if they will not allow of the Plea he shall have a Writ of Errour and the Iudgement shall be reversed in the Kings Bench. And if
Ports and such places which have Counsans of Pleas and also in Court Barons in which Courts is Iustice done according to Law c. And although they of the Cinque Ports ought to be empleaded of their Lands within the jurisdiction of the Cinque Ports yet that holdeth onely where the Tenant sheweth the same and taketh advantage thereof if he be impleaded in the Kings Courts of things which are within that jurisdiction but if the Tenant be sued in the Common Pleas for Lands within the Cinque Ports if the demandant doth recover by default or if the Tenant appeare and plead any matter which is found against him so that the demandant hath judgement for to recover the Land that judgement shall bind him for ever c. But the Tenant might have alleadged That the Land was within the Cinque Ports and by such Plea the Kings Courts should be outed of the jurisdiction c. And so it is of Lands within an ancient demeasne if a Writ be brought thereof in the Common Pleas if the Tenant appeareth and pleadeth and doth not take exception to the jurisdiction and the Plea be found against him so that the demandant recovereth the Tenant shall not reverse the judgement by a Writ of Errour because the Tenant might have taken exception to the jurisdiction of the Court and it should have been allowed c. But yet the Lord may reverse that judgement by a Writ of deceit and shall make the Land ancient demeasne as it was before c. And if one hath Counsans of Pleas in a Towne or in a Mannor and a Writ is brought in the Common Pleas of the same Land and the Tenant pleadeth and judgement is given against him the recovery is good for it is within the power of the King and the Writ of the Common Pleas doth take place there and if the Bayliffe or Lord doth not demand Cognusans the judgement is good But in another Action the Bayliffe shall have Cognusans for that the nature of the Lard is not changed and so see that where a man hath counsans of Plea c. it ought to be demanded by the Bayliffe or the Lord and the Tenant shall not demand the same if he be impleaded in the Kings Court but of the ancient demeasne there it behoveth the Tenant to shew the same and plead to the jurisdiction c. if he will have advantage thereof c. And so note that in the Cinque Ports there is such a liberty that the Lands and Tenements are pleadable there before the Barons c. and yet if one be impleaded at the Common Law of Lands within the Cinque Ports the Barons shall not have Counsans of the Plea but the Tenant may plead the same to the jurisdiction in abatement of the Writ c. The Court Baron NOte also that there is another Court which is called Court Baron in which Court the Suitors are the Judges and not the Steward and they hold plea of Contracts within the jurisdiction c. and yet it is said by some That the Defendant shall not shew that the Contract was made out of the jurisdiction and pray that the Plaintiffe be examined as in a Court of Pipowder The Judges of the Court Baron have Authority to hold plea before them of Debt upon Contracts or Detinue but not of detinue of Charters nor Actions of debt upon a judgement in a Court of Record but otherwise I thinke it is of a recovery in the same Court nor shall they hold plea of Maintenance forgery of false Deeds of deceit not of Decies tantum not of pleas of Accompts for they have not authority to assigne Auditors They shall not hold plea of Debt above the summe of forty shillings unlesse it be by prescription and they shall not hold plea of Free-hold by plaint but by a Writ of right they may But if a judgement be given of Free-hold upon a plaint it is said it is good untill it be reversed by a Writ of false judgement tamen quaere c. And note for what Suit a man shall be judged in a Court Baron and it is said That it is where a man is seised of Lands in Fee-simple and which he holdeth by service of Suit at the Lords Mannour that Suit is properly Suit-service and for such Suit he shall be judged in a Court Baron and for no other Suit as it is said c. And quaere also when erronious judgements are given how they shall be reversed viz. when by Writ of false judgement and when by a Writ of Errour And some say That in all Courts where the party might remove the plea by a Recordare upon a judgement given in such Courts a Writ of false judgement lyeth as in ancient Demeasne Court Baron County Court and Hundred but in other Courts which are of Record the plea shall be removed by a Certiorare and upon judgement given in such Courts which are of Record it shall be reversed by a Writ of Errour c. And if a man recovereth in a Court of Record by erronious judgement and Sueth not Execution some say That a Writ of Errour lyeth and the party shall have a Supersedeas if he will prey the same but if a man hath judgement in a Court Baron and taketh not forth Execution no Writ of false judgement lyeth Quaere the reason thereof and what the Law is in that case And note that sometimes the Sheriffe is Judge as in Reddisseisin Wast and Admeasurement and the Processe shall be served by the Baily as is said And note that the Sheriffe is an Officer ●o the Kings Court to execute the Processe thereof yet sometimes the Coroner is the Officer to the Court where defect is found in the Sheriffe c. so that he cannot by Law indifferently execute the Processe as for divers apparent causes yet if the Sheriffe dyeth the Processe shall not goe to the Coroner but shall stay till another Sheriffe is chosen c. And because the Sheriffe is an Officer appointed by the Law to attend the Kings Courts a man shall not take an Averment against the returne of the Sheriffe directly and the reas●n is because where Justice ought to be ministred and executed those who have the Government of the Law ought to repose trust and confidence in some person and if every one might averre against that which the Sheriffe doth then Justice should not be executed but should for ever be delayed c. The meanes and the remedy how a man may come to his due and to that which is wrongfully kept from him and that is by plea and this word is generall and hath divers effects implyed therein and may be divided into divers branches viz. Into pleas of the Crowne as appeales of Death Robbery Rape Felony and divers other things c. and into Actions reall whereby Lands Tenements Rents and other hereditaments are demanded as Writs of right Formed on c. Or Actions
owne Purchase or of the seisin of his Ancestor or his owne seisin the taking of the Explees and the seisin thereof in the time of what King and in the time of peace and the tender of the Demy marke a good discent and in wha manner he hath right and the averment And note that the Explees ought to be of the Demesne or of the Services and in a Precipe quod reddat of the manner of Explees in Services c. and of the Demesnes in Sheep and Corne in Pasture in feeding of Cattle of Wood in selling of the Wood Gardens in selling the Apples or Grasse of Villain is in base service to his profit and in seisin of those of his blood and for a Chaplaine or findeing of poore men the Explees are alledged in Masses and Prayers c. and of a Gorge in taking of the Fish of a Mill in taking of Tole And generally a man shall alledge Explees according to the matter in demand and the nature of it And the triall in this Writ of Right may be two waies the one by the Grand Assize and the other by Battaile but if the right be to be determined by the Battaile it shall be done by Champions and not by the parzies themselves as it is said and the reason is that if any of the parties be killed Judgement of the Land cannot be given against a dead person Quaere if that be the reason or not And it was said That a man cannot have a Writ of Right of a Rent but onely of a Rent-service for that other Rents are against common right c. And see that a Writ of Right doth differ from other Writs in pleading for in a Writ of Right the Tenant ought to conclude upon the right To conclude so that he hath more right to have the Lands c. then the demandant and not to conclude Judgement of Action as the conclusion is in other Writs yet the same holdeth not in every case for if the Tenant in a Writ of Right plead a release collaterall c. without warranty there the Tenant shall conclude Judgement if Action and not otherwise as it seemeth for the demandant hath more right to the Land then the Tenant hath but by reason of the warranty the demandant shall be barred of his Action And note that in a Writ of Right upon the Triall no attaint lyeth and yet in a Writ of right of Dower an attaint lyeth which is a Writ of Right but the reason is because the Triall thereof shall not be by the Grand Assize nor by Battaile but by a Common Jury c. And note that there are divers Writs of Right a Writ of Right which is triable by Battaile or by Grand Assize as a Writ of right of Land or a Writ of Customes and Services a Quod permittat in the debet Writ of right of Advowson c. and the like And there are other Writs of the possession mixt with the right as a Writ of Escheat Cessavit rationable part c. and the like but in those no Battaile nor Grand Assize lyeth In a Writ of Customes and Services the effect thereof is the wrongfull deforcement in not doing of the Services which ought to be done to the demandant out of the Land and the Land ought to be shewed and how he holdeth by such Services and shew seisin in him or his Ancestors of Fee and Right and alledge the taking of Explees and the Averment The Articles and things which are materiall in the Writs appeare in the Writs themselves and in the booke of Novel Tales and in other bookes and therefore they need not to be here mentioned and for that cause I omit them here c. An Indictment upon the Statute of 8. H. 6. JVrator present pro Dom. rege quod cum instatuto in Parliamento Dom. nuper Regis Henriet Angliae sexti post conquestum ap●d Westm anno Regni sui 8. tent edit inter cetera ordinatum sit quod si aliqua persona expulsa sit seu dissesita de aliquibus terris et tenementis modo forcibili aut pacisice expulsa sit et postea manu forti et armis extra teneatur contra justic pacem vel post aliquem talem ingressum aliquod feossementum seu discontinuatio aliquo modo inde factum sit ad jus possessor defraudend aut tollend quod pars in ea parte gravata habeat assissam nove d●sseisine aut breve de transgress●one versus hujus disseisttorem et si pars gravata recuperaverit per assisam vel rationem transgr et preveredictum alio modo per debitain legis formam sit compactum quod pars defendens in terras e● tenem vi imgressusfuit aut ea per vim post ingressum tenuerit quaerens reciperet versus defendentem d●nna sua ad triplicem et ulterius finem faciet Dom. Regi et redemptionem pro ut in statuto pred plenius continetur c. Quidam tamen L. C. de E. in com pred generosus snnul cum quinque personis juratoribus pred ignotis statutum illud minime ponderans die Dom. 20. die Januarii circa horam 9. post meridiem ejusdem diei anno Regni Dom. regis nunc 12. manu forti ac vi et armis viz. Baculis et cultelltis in unum messuagium unum gardinum ducent as acras terre 40. c. prati et 30. arras basvi cum pertinetii quorundum E. K. Armigeri et L. M. armigeri c. scituat jacen et existen in perochia de L. juxta T. in com pred ingressus fuit et inde ipsas E. K. et L. M. vi et armis viz. baculis et cultellis ac manu forti dissertivit Et ejus inde statum et possessionem sic per disseissinam illam habitam et obtent cum pred personis ignotis usque in crastinum diem sequentem viz. 13. diem mensis Januarii continuavit Quo quidem 13. die Januarii H. L. de M. in comitatu pred yeoman W. B. de pred Husbandman et I. C. nuper eisdem villa et com●tatu laborer apud L. pred in et super tenta pred una cum prefato T. C. manu forti ac vi et armis viz. baculis cultellis gladiis scutis arcubus et sagittis se assemblaverunt et eadem tenementa vi et armis pred a pred 12. die Januarii hucusque inrurius ipsius T. C. et ipsum T. pretensa tenuerunt et prefat E. K. et L. M. c. inde hucusque extra tenent in dicti Dom. Regis nunc contemptum ac contra formam statuti pred et contra pacrm dicti Dom. Regis c. When the Parties are at issue in their Actions the common Triall thereof in our Law is by Verdict of 12. men who shall be sworne upon the Booke to speake the truth according to their conscience And sometimes the matter shall be tried by the
the Earles to meet and Ordained for a perpetuall usage That twice in the yeere or ostner if need were in time of Peace they should assemble together at London to speake their mindes for the guiding of the people of God how they should keepe themselves from offences should live in quiet and should have right done them by certaine usages and sound judgements By this Estate many Ordinances were made by many Kings King Ed. 1. untill the time of the King that now is the which Ordinance were abused or not used by many nor very currant because they were not put into writing and certainly published One of the Ordinances was That every one should love his Creator with all his soule and according to the points of the Christian Faith And wrong force and every offence was forbidden And it was assented unto that these things following should belong to Kings and to the Right of Crown Soveraigne Jurisdiction The Soveraigne Jurisdiction throughout the whole Land unto the middest of the Sea encompasaing the whole Realme as franchises treasure found in the Land Waife Estray goods of Felons and Fugitives which should remaine out of any ones rights Counties Honours Hundreds Wards Goales Forrests chiefe Cities the chiefe Ports of the Sea great Mannours these Rights the first Kings held and of the residue of the Land they did infeoffe the Earles Barons Knights Serjeants and others to hold of the Kings by the services provided and ordained for the defence of the Realme according to the Articles of the ancient Kings Also Coronors were ordained in every Country and Sheriffes to defend the Country when the Counties were dismissed of their Guards and Bailiffes in the places of Centyners And the Sheriffes and Bayliffes caused the Free-Tenants of their Bayliwicks to meet at the Counties and Hundreds at which Justice was so done that every one so judged his Neighbour by such judgement as a man could not elsewhere receive in the like cases untill such times as the customes of the Realme were put in writing and certainly established And although a Free-man commonly was not to serve without his assent neverthelesse it was assented unto that Free-Tenants should meet together in the Counties Hundreds and the Lord Courts if they were not especially exempted to doesuch Suits and there judged their Neighbours And that Right should be done from 15. daies to 15. daies before the King and his Judges and from month to month in the Counties if the largenesse of the Counties required not a longer time and that every three weekes Right should be administred in other Courts And that every Free-Tenant was bound to doe such suite And every Free-Tenant had ordinary jurisdiction And that from day to day the Right should be hastened of Strangers as in Courts of Pipowders according to the Law-Merchant The Turnes of Sheriffes and views of Free-pledges were Ordained and it was Ordained That none of the age of 14. yeeres or above was to remaine in the Realme above forty daies if they were not first sworne to the King by an Oath of Fealty and received into a Decenery It was Ordained That every Plaintiffe have a remediall Writ to his Sheriffes or to the Lord of the Fee in this forme Questus est nobis C. quod O. c. Et ideo tibi vices nostras in boc parte committentes precipimus quod causam illam audias legitimo fine decidas It was Ordained That every one have a remediall Writ from the Kings Chancery according to his plaint without difficulty and that every one have the Processe from the day of his plaint without the seale of the Judge or of ths Partie It was Ordained That Coroners should receive Appeales of Felony and should give the Judgements of Out-lawries and should make the visnes in the Causes aforesaid And that all the next Townes should present to the Coroners in the Countie the mischances of the bodies of the people and the names of the finders And that every Country should present Felonies Mischances and other Articles presentable in the Eyres for offences that the Kings might send to summon them to appear against the comming of the Kings or of the Justices assigned to hold all Pleas. And for the great dammages which the Commons suffer by Amercements issuing out for Concealements and for fault of these presentments in Eyres it was agreed unto That these presentments in Eyres should be by the Coroners chosen by all the Commons of the County and so the Coroners are as it were the Commons Bayliffes as to these Charges neverthelesse they are the Kings ministers because they take an Oath to him For personall trespasses neverthelesse the Coroners are only punishable without any damage to those who chose them unlesse they have not sufficient wherewith to satisfie for their trespasses The Exchequer was Ordained in manner as followeth and the pecuniary penalties of Earldomes and Baronies certaine and also of all Earldomes and Baronies entire or dismembred and that those Amercements were afferred by the Barons of the Exchequer and that the Estreats of the Amercements be sent into the Exchequer though they were amerced in the Kings Court. It was Ordained That after a plaint of wrong be sued that no other have jurisdiction in the same place before the first plaint be determined and from the 〈◊〉 came this clause in the Writ of Right Et nist foreris vicecones saciat It was Ordained That every one of the age of fourteene yeares and above should be ready to kill mortall offenders in their notorious sinnes or to follow them from Towne to Towne with Hue and Cry and if they could not kill them the offenders to be put in exigent and Out-lawed or banished And that none should be Out-lawed but for a mortall offence and in no other County but where he committed the offence It was Ordained That the Kings Courts should be open to all Plaints by which they had originall Writs without delay as well against the King or the Queene as against any other of the people for every injury but in case of life where the plaint held without Writ It was Ordained That no King of this Realme should change his money nor impaire it nor inhannse it nor make any other money but of Silver without the sssent of the Lords and all the Commons It was Ordained That Felonies should be tryed by Appeales and that Appeales might sometimes be ended by Battaile and that Exigents of the Offenders should continue by three County Courts before the Out-lawrie It was Ordained That all Free-Tenants should be obedient and appeare at the Summons of the Lords of the Fee and if one caused a man to be summoned elsewhere then in the Fees of the Avowants or oftner then from Court to Court that they were not bound to obey such smmmons if not at the charges of the Avowants of the Summons It was Ordained That Knights Fees should come to the eldest Sonne by mecession of Inheritance and