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A22779 The principal lawes customes and estatutes of England which be at this present day in vre [sic] compendiously gathered togither for y[e] weale and benefit of the Kinges Maiesties most louing subiect[s] : newely recognized and augmented. Taverner, Richard, 1505?-1575. 1540 (1540) STC 9290.5; ESTC S123569 54,193 204

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it is that the grauntoure shulde be enforced to atturne sith an atturnement is adhibited to none other purpose than to haue the consēt and agremente of the particular tenaunte to the intent that it may appere that he hath notice or knowlege of this graūte but here where as the particular tenaunte hymselfe is the grauntour an atturnement were superfluous and more than neded Of seruices HYtherunto I haue brefely touched and ouerrun the sundrye kyndes and formes of estates Now forasmoch as there is no tenure but hathe vnto it some seruice knyt and annexed it were very necessary to declare howe many kyndes of seruices there be and what seruyce is due to euery tenure For the knowledge her of ye shal vnderstande that the principall and moste common kynde of seruyce that the tenaūt oweth to hys lorde is called knyghtes seruyce Knyghtes seruice KNyghtes seruice includeth homage fealeie and for moste ꝑte escuage and whosoeuer holdeth his lādes by knyghtes seruice is bound by the law of this realme to do vnto his lorde homage and fealtie and to paye for most parte escuage when it shal be assesed by authoritie of parliamente as hereafter more playnlye shal be declared vnto you Homage is the most hūble and reuerent seruice that a man of free condition can do for whan the tenaunte shall do homage to his lord the lord shal sytte and the tenaunt shal knele before hym vpon bothe knees and shall holde his handes bitwene hys lordes handes and saye in this wise I become your man from this daye forthward of life and of membre and of earthly honoure and to you shall be faythfull and loyall and faithe to you shall beare for the landes that I clayme to holde of you sauynge the faythe that I beare vnto oure soueraigne lorde the kynge and than the lorde so syttynge shal kysse him But if an ecclesiasticall persone whych by hys ordre and profession hath addicted himselfe to the seruice of god in especiall shall do homage to his lord he shall not say I become your man bycause he hath professed himselfe to be the onely man of god but shal say I do to you homage and shall be to you faythfull and true and fayth to you shall beare for the tenementes y● I holde of you sauynge the faythe whyche I do owe to our soueraygne lorde the kynge Ye shal note also that when a woman not maried doth homage to her lord she shal not say I become your woman for it is not conuenient that a woman shulde be the woman of any other than of her husbande that she shall mary but she shal saye euen as the ecclesiasticall persone sayeth I do vnto you homage c. That yf perchaunce a man holdeth sundry landes and tenementes of sundrye lordes and euery of them by knyghtes seruice than in the ende of his homage makinge he shal say sauynge the fayth that I owe to our soueraygne lorde the kynge and to myne other lordes And it is to be knoewn that none is bounde to do homage to the lord onles it be suche a tenaunte as hath in the tenauncye an estate of fee simple or fee tayle eyther in hys owne ryght or in the ryght of an other For if a woman haue landes or tenementes in fee simple or fee tayle whyche she holdethe of her lorde by knyghtes seruice and taketh an husbande and haue issue in this case the husbande in the lyfe of his wyfe shal do the homage bycause he hath a title to haue the landes by the curtesy of Englande yf he ouerlyueth her also he holdeth them nowe in his wiues ryghte yet before issue had bytwene them y● homage shal be made in theyr both names But if the woman dieth before any homage made by her husbande in her lyfe and the husbande kepeth styll the landes as tenaunt by the curtesye now he shall not do homage to hys lorde bycause he hath nowe an estate but for terme of lyfe Fealtie is as moche to saye as a fidelitie or faythefulnes in doynge wherof the tenaunte shall holde hys hand vpon a boke say thus Heare you this my lorde I to you shall be faythfull and true and fayth to you shall beare for the landes and tenementes whyche I clayme to holde of you and duelye shall do you the customes and seruices whiche I owe to do you at the termes assigned as me helpethe god and hys sayntes And than he shall kysse the boke but he shal not knele as he the doth homage And ye shal obserue that homage can not be done but to the lorde hym self where as the steward of the lordes courte or the bailife may take fealtie for the lorde Also tenaunte for terme of life shal do fealte but homage as is sayde he can not do Nowe as concernynge escuage that is to saye the seruice of the shild ye shal vnderstand that he that holdeth his lādes by escuage whan the kynge makethe a viage royall in to Scotlande for the subduynge of the Scottes is bounde to be wythe the Kinges Maiestye by the space of .xl. dayes well and conuenientlye arayed and appointed for the warre And he that holdeth his lande but by the moitie of the fee of knightes seruice is bounde by the force of his tenure to be wyth the kynge by the space of xx dayes and so proporcionably accordyng to the rate and quantitte of hys tenure But now to our institute and purpose after thys viage royall in to Scotlande in whyche the kynge goeth in persone and after the retyre in to Englande agayne a parliamente is wont to be sommoned in whyche shal be prescribed asseised what euerye persone that helde hys lande by homage and went not wyth the king neither by hymselfe nor by his deputye shall paye to hys lorde in satisfaction of his not seruynge and accordynge to the taxacion herof euery tenaunte shall paye to hys immediate lorde whether it be the kyng or other after the rate and porcion of hys tenure if he holdeth by an hoole fee he shall paye the hoole escuage if by a moitie the halfe yf by the fourth ꝑte of a fee the fourth parte c. and this money thus asseysed is called scurage or escuage for whyche the lorde to whome it is due maye verye well for the non paymēt therof distreyne But here it is to be noted that some tenaūtes by custom vsed tyme out of mynde are bound to pay but the moitie or the thyrde parte of that which shall be asseised and limited by acte of parliament Yea and the custome is in some place that to what somme of money so euer escuage is asseised y● tenaūtꝭ shall paye neuer but such a certeyne somme of mony and this escuage is called escuage certeyne where as the other is called escuage vncertayne Finally ye shall vnderstande that escuage vncertayne is alwayes adiuged to be knightes seruice and draweth vnto it warde mariage reliefe but escuage certaine is no knyghtes
seruice but is of the tenure of socage as shall be herafter more amplye shewed Of warde mariage and reliefe EUery knyghtes seruice draweth vnto it warde mariage and releife Wherfore it is now ryght expedient somewhat to entrete of them Ye shall therfore be admonished that whan the tenaunte whyche holdeth hys lande by knyghtes seruyce dyeth his heyre male beynge at that tyme wtin thage of .xxj. yeares the lorde shall haue the warde that is to saye the custodye or kepynge of the landes so holden of hym to hys own vse and profyte tyl the heyre cōmeth to the full age of .xxj. yeares For the law here presumeth that tyl he cōme to this age he is not able to do such seruice as is of this tenure requyred Furthermore yf such heyre be vnmaryed at the tyme of the deathe of the tenaunte than the lorde shal haue also the warde and bestowynge of the maryage of hym But yf tenaunt by knyghtes seruice dyeth hys heyre female being of thage of .xiiii. yeres or aboue thā the lord shal haue the ward neyther of the lande ne yet of the bodye of suche an heir and the reason herof is bycause a woman of that age maye haue a husbande hable to do knyghtes seruice that is to saye to wayte vpon the kynges maiesties persone whan he auaunceth into Scotlande wyth hys armye royall But if suche an heyre femalle be within the age of .xiiii. yeres and not maryed at the tyme of the deathe of her auncestoure than the lorde shall haue the warde of the lande holden of hym tyll suche heyre female commeth to the age of .xvi. yeres by force of an acte of parliamēt in the statute of Westm̄ the fyrste Note that there is a great diuersitie in the lawe bytwene the ages of females and of males for the female hath these manye ages apoynted by the lawe Fyrste at .vii. yeares of age the lored her father maye distreyne his tenauntes for ayde to mary her Seconde at .ix. yeares of age she is dowable Thyrdlye at .xii. yers she is hable to assent to matrymonye Fourthly at .xiiii. yeares she is able to haue her lande and shall be oute of warde if she be of thys age at the geantye but of the kynge onelye Homage auncestrell TEnaunt by homage auncestrel is he whyche holdeth his lande of his lorde by homage and bothe he and his auncestours whose heyre he is haue holden the same lande of the saide lord of his auncestours tyme out of mynde by homage and haue done vnto them homage and this is called homage auncestrell by reason of the longe continuaunce whyche hath bene by title of prescription as well concernynge the tenauncye in the bloude of the tenaunte as concernynge the lordeshyp in the blode of the lord And this seruice of homage auncestrell drawethe vnto it warrantye that is to saye yf the lorde which is nowe in lyfe hathe ones receyued the homage of his tenant he oughte to warrant the same tenaunte what tyme so euer he shal be impleaded or sued for such lande so holden of him by homage auncestrell Moreouer suche seruice of homage auncestrell draweth to it acquitall that is to saye the lorde oughte to acquyte the tenaunt agaynste all other lordes that can demaūd any maner of seruice out of the tenauncye Wherfore yf in thys case the tenaunte whyche holdethe by homage auncestrell be impleaded of hys landes and voucheth his lorde to warrauntye who commeth in by processe and demaundethe of the tenaunte what he hath to bynde hym to the warrantye and the tenaunt sheweth howe he and his auncestours whose heyre he is haue holden his lande of hym and of his auncestoures tyme ease or continuall infirmitie All these and suche lyke be dispargementes But here also ye shal vnderstande that it shall be sayd no dispargement onlesse the heyre be so maryed when he is wythin the age of discretion that is to say within the age of .xiiii. yeres For if he be of that age or aboue and consenteth to such mariage it is no dispargement neyther shall the lorde for suche mariage lose his warde bycause it shal be reputed and assigned to the folye of the heire beynge of age of discretion to consēt to suche mariage Now yf the gardeyne offre to the heyre beyng in his warde a conuenient mariage wythout dispargement and the heyre refuseth it as he maye very wel do than the lord shall haue the value of the mariage of suche heyre whan he commethe to hys full age But yet yf he marye hymselfe being so in warde agaynste the wyll of hys gardeyne than he shal paye the double value by force of the statute of Merton before remembred And ye shall note that if landes holden by knyghtes seruice descende to an infaunte from hys mother or from any of hys auncestours his father beyng yet alyue in thys case the lorde shall not haue the mariage of this heyre for during the lyfe of the father the sonne shall be in warde to no man Finally it is to be knowne that he whyche is gardeyne in cheualrye in ryght maye after he hathe seased the warde graunte the same eyther by dede or wythout dede to an other man than he to whom suche graūt is made is called gardeyne in fayte Now as touching reliefe ye shal knowe that yf a man holdethe hys lande by knightes seruice and dyeth hys heyre beynge of full age the full age of the male is .xxi. yeares of the female .xiiii. then y● lord of whome the land is holden shal haue of the heyr reliefe Reliefe of a hole knightes fee is C s. of halfe a knightes fee fyftye s Also a man maye holde landes of a lord by two knyghtes fees and thā the heyre beynge of full age at the death of his auncestoure shal paye to his lorde for reliefe .x. poundes Seruice of castel garder YE shal vnderstande that a man may holde by knyghtes seruice and yet not hold by escuage nor shal paye no escuage for he may holde by castell garder that is to saye by seruyce to kepe a tower of hys lordes castell or some other place vpō a reasonable warnynge whan hys lorde heareth that enemyes wyll come or be alredy come into Englande Thys seruyce is also knyghtes seruice and drawethe to it warde mariage reliefe as the common knyghtes seruyce dothe Of graunde sergeauntie THere is also an other kynde of knightes seruice called grande sergeantye whyche is where a man holdeth is landes or tenementes of the kynge by suche seruice as he oweth in proper person to do as to bear the baner of oure soueraigne lorde the kynge or his spere or to conduct hys hoste or to be his marshall or to be the sewar caruar or butler at the feaste of the coronation or to be one of the chamberlaynes of the receypt of his eschequere or to do lyke seruices to the kyng in propre persone such maner of seruyce I saye is called grande
aboue the summe of iii s. vi d wherof to be to them y● haue auctoritie to take the probation .ii s. vi d and the other .xii d to the scribe for regestring of the same And where the goodes amoūt aboue xl li than onely .v. shyllynges to be taken wherof to be to them that haue auctorite to take the probation .ii s. .vi d and thother .ii s. vi d to be to the scribe for y● regestring or els if he wyl refuse that .ii s. vi d then he to haue for euery .x. lines of the same testamēt euery line conteyning in length .x. inches i d And they that haue auctoritie as is aboue sayde shall approue insinuate seale and regester the sayde testamentes and deliuer the same sealed wyth the seale of their office to thexecutours for the sommes abouesaid that with conuenient spede without any frustratorie delay And if any person dye intestate or thexecutours refuse to proue the said testament than they hauing auctoritie as is abouesaid shal grauntthadministration of y● testatours goodes or person disceased to the widowe of the same person deceased or to the next of kinne or to both after their discretiō taking suretie of them for the trewe administration of the goodes dettes whiche they shall be so authorised to minister And where one or diuers claime thadministration as nexte of kin which be egal in degre of kinred or where any one persone desireth the administration as nexte of kin where in dede diuers persones be in equalitie of kinred then in any such case the ordinarie shal be at libertie to take one or mo making request And where diuers do require the administration or where but one or mo of them and not al being in like degre make request than the ordinarie shal admit the widowe and him or them onely making request or any of them taking nothīg for the same where the persone deceased died not worth C.s. And if he died worthe C.s. and not aboue xl li than ijs vi d onely to be taken And thexecutor or administratour callinge to him the dettors two at the least or such persons to whome any legacie was made and if they refuse than .ii. nexte of kin to the persone deceased and in their defaute .ii. other honest persons shal by their discretions make a trew inuentory indented of al the goodes whiche persons sweringe before the bishoppe or his officers to be trewe shal deliuer the one parte therof vnto them the other kepe with himselfe And none hauinge authoritie to take probate of testamentes vpon payne conteined in this statute shall refuse to take any such inuentory presented or tended to them Prouided if any person shall dispose or wil by his testament any landes or hereditamentꝭ to be solde that the mony or profites of the same be accōpted for goodes or catels And they hauing the auctorite abouesaid vpon the deliuerie of the seale and sygne of the testatour shall cause y● same to be defaced and incontinent shall redeliuer it to y● executor wtout any claime And if any require a copy of the testament and inuentory than they hauīg auctoritie or their ministers shal wtout frustratorie delay delyuer them a copy taking therfore and for the regestring of the same or els for euery ten lines i d as before is specified Prouided that where they hauing auctoritie as is abouesaid haue vsed to take lesse for the probate of testamentes or other thinges concerning the same than is here specified they shal take as they did before this acte Now if any that haue auctoritie to take probate of testamentes or their ministers do attempte agaynste this acte they shal forfete for euery time to the partie greued as moche mony as they shall take contrary to this acte And ouer that x.li the one half to the king the other to the partie greued that wil sue by action of dette bil information or otherwise in any of the kinges courtes wherin no essoine protection nor wager of law shal be alowed And euery of them shal be charged for him selfe and for none other Prouided that euery hauing auctoritie abouesaid may cal before them euery person named executour to the intent to proue and refuse the testament and to bring in inuentaries and to do euery other thinge concerninge the same as they myght before this acte so that neither they nor their ministers shal take aboue the fees limited by this acte ❧ How landes and tenementes may be by testamēt or otherwise disposed inacted ā xxxii Hē viii EUery person hauing landes or other hereditamētes holden in socage or of the nature of socage tenure and not hauing any landes or hereditamētes holden of the king by knightes seruice or by socage tenure in cheif or of the nature of socage tenure in cheife nor yet of any other person by knightes seruice shal from y● .xx. day of Iuly in the yeare of our lorde M.D.Xl. haue full libertie power to giue dispose deuise aswel by testamēt in writing as otherwise by any acte laufully executed in his life al his said landes or hereditamentes or any of them And euery person hauing landes or other hereditamētes holdē of y● kinge in socage or of the nature of socage tenure in cheife and hauing also any other landes or hereditamentes holden of any other person in socage or of the nature of socage tenure not hauing any hereditamentes holden of y● king or of any other by knyghtes seruice may from the sayd tyme giue and deuise as wel by testament in writing as otherwise by any acte laufully executed in his life al his sayd landes and hereditamentes or any of them at his pleasure Sauing to the king all his right of primer season reliefes aud also all other rightes duties for tenures in socage or of the nature of socage tenure in chief as hertofore hath bene accustomed the same landes or hereditamentes to be taken and sued out of the kinges handes by the person to whom any such landes shal be disposed willed or deuised in like maner as hath bene vsed by any heire or heires before the making of this statute And sauing and reseruinge also fines for alienations of suche landes tenementes or hereditamentes holdē of the king in socage or of the nature of socage tenure in chiefe wherof shal be any alteration of frehold or inheritance made by wyl or otherwise as is aforesayd Item al persones hauing landes or other hereditamētes of estate of inheritance holden of the king in chiefe by knightes seruice or of the nature of knightes seruice in chiefe shal in like maner haue power to giue wyl or as●signe two parties of the same in three partes to be deuided or elles as much of the same as shal amount to the yer●y value of two partes of the same in three partes to be deuided in certaintie and by special diuisions as it may be knowne in seueraltie for the aduācement of his wife prefermēt
of his children and payment of his dettes or otherwise at his pleasure Sauing to the King aswel the wardship and primer season of as moch as shal amoūt to the clere yerely value of the thirde parte therof wtout diminution dower fraude couein charge or abridgement therof as also al fines for alienations of al such landes and tenementes so holden of him by knightes seruice in chief wherof there shal be any alteration of frehold or of inheritance made by wyl or otherwise And euery person hauing lādes or truementes of estate of inheritaunce holden of the king in chief by knightꝭ seruice other landes holden of him or of any other by knightes seruice or otherwise shall from the saide .xx. day of Iuly haue poure to giue or assigne by his testament or otherwise as is aforesayd two partes of the same in thre partes to be diuided or elles as moch therof as shal extende to y● yearly value of two partes of the same in three partes to be diuided in certainty Sauing to the king y● wardship primer season of as moch thereof as shall amounte to the yerely value of the third part wtout diminution dower couein charge or subtractiō of the same or of the ful profittes therof Sauing also al fines for alienations as is abouesayde Item euery person holding landꝭ or other hereditamentes onely of any other than of y● King by knightes seruice and other landes and tenemētes in socage or of the nature of socage tenure maye gyue dispose or assure by testament or otherwise as is aforesaid two partes therof holden by knightes seruice or as moch as shal amount to the ful yerely value of two partes in maner aboue declared And also al the landes and tenementes holden by socage or of the nature of socage tenure at his pleasure Sauing to the lorde of the landes and tenementes holden by knightes seruice for his wardship as moch therof as shal amount to the clere yearly value of the thirde parte wtout any diminutiō dower fraud c And euery person holdinge onely of the King by knightes seruice but not in chief or holdīg of y● king by knightes seruice and not in chiefe and also other hereditamentes of others by knightes seruice and holding also other hereditamentes of any other person in socage or of y● nature of socage tenure may giue deuise and assure by his last will or otherwise two partes of the hereditamentes holden of the king by knightes seruice two partꝭ of the hereditamentes holden of any other persō by knightes seruice or as moch of either of them as shal amoūt to the ful yearly value of two partes and also al his landes and tenemētes so holdē in socage or of the nature of socage tenure Sauing as wel to the king the wardship of as moch as shall extende to the clere yearely value of the thirde parte of the same so holden of him by knightes seruice without diminution c. As also to the lordes of whom any of the said landes or other hereditamētes bene holden by knightes seruice for wardshyp as moche of the same so holdē of them by that seruice as shal amount to the clere yerly value of the thirde parte in maner aboue declared Prouided that if that thirde parte whiche in any of the cases abouesayd shal come to the king do not amount to the clere yearly value of the ful .iii part of all the sayde hereditamentes whereof the king shal be intitled to haue the custody or primer season than the kinge maye take into his handes as moch of thother two partes of the sayd hereditamētes as with that of the same hereditamētes remayning in his hādes shal make vp the clere yearly value of the thirde parte of the said lādes and tenementes so to be had to him in title of wardship and primer seasō And like benefyte to be giuen to euerie lorde of whom any such hereditamentes shall be holden by knightes seruice concernīg only his third part for title of wardship Also al persons shal sue their lyueries for possessions reuersions or remaynders and also pay reliefes and heriettes like as they shuld haue done before y● making herof And fines for alienatiōs shal be payd in the Chancery vpon writtes of entre in the post to be obteined there after the sayd .xx. day of Iuly for common recoueries to be suffered of any landes holden of the king in chiefe in lyke maner as is vsed vppon alienations of landes so holden in chief by fi●e or feoffement Prouided that in such cases where fines for alienations shall be paid in the Chancery for writtes of entre in the poste as is aforesayde none other fine shal be payd in the same court for any such writtes Item where two or more persons holde of the king by knightes seruice ioyntly to them to the heires of one of them and he that hath the inheritaunce therof dyeth his heire beinge wtin age the king shal haue y● warde and mariage of the body of such heire the life of the freholder or freholders of the landes so holden by knightes seruice notwithstanding Sauing to al women such right title of dower as they owe to haue of any landes or tenementes by the lawes of this realme to be assigned vnto them out of y● two partes of the said landes or tenementes seuered frō the thirde parte as is abouesaide and not otherwise And sauing also to the king the reuersions of al such tenātes in ioyntenure and dower immediatly after the death of such tenantes if they shal happen to die during y● none age of the kinges wardes ❧ Of mariagies inacted ā 32. Hen. 8. IT is inacted that from the first day of Iuly in the yeare of our Lorde a M.D. and XL. al mariages within this churche of Englande contracted betwene lawful persōs as by this act we declare al persōs to be lauful that be not prohibited by gods law to mary such mariages being contract and solemnised in the face of the church consummate with bodily knowledge or frute of chyldren or chylde beynge had therin betwene y● parties so maryed shal be demed taken to be laufull good indissoluble not withstādyng any precontract of matrimony not cōsūmate with bodily knowlege whiche either of y● persons so maried or both shal haue made with any other before the time of contracting that mariage which is solemnised and consūmate or wherof such frute is ensued or may ensue as afore and not withstanding any dispensation prescription law or other thynge graunted or confirmed by acte or otherwise And that no reseruation or prohibition godes lawe excepte shal trouble or impeache any mariage without leuiticall degrees And that no person shal after the said fyrst day of Iuly aforesaid be admitted in any of the spirituall courtes with in this the kinges realme or any hys other landes and dominions to any processe plee or allegation contrary to this acte FINIS EX AEDIBVS RICHARDI TAVERNERI PER RICHARDVM BANKES TYPOGRAPHVM Cū priuilegio ad imprimendum solum
by an aunciente custom she shal be indowed of the 〈◊〉 ▪ yea and thoughe 〈…〉 seased actually durying the courture yet if the landes be caste vpon 〈◊〉 by the lawe so that the law calleth him tenaunt to euery mans action it suffiseth for the woman to demaunde her dower for it were vnreasonable that the negligence 〈…〉 of entrynge of the husbande shulde hurte the wyues 〈…〉 Otherwise it is as I sayde before of tenaūt by the curtesy for if landes descende to a woman couert and the husbande for slouthfulnes or negligence doth not entre in his wyues life he shal not be tenaunt by the curtesi● 〈◊〉 by all lawes the wyfe oweth obedience and subiectiō to her husbande and therfore she can not compel him to entre but when landes descend to the wyfe the husbande onelye haue power to entre at his pleasure And ye shall vnderstand that onlesse the wyfe be passed the age of ix yeares at the tyme of her husbandes deathe she shall not be endowed by the common lawe But it is to be knowen that a womā maye by diuers wayes estoppe and preuidi●e her selfe of her dower as if she commyt any crime for which she is atteynted of treasone murdre or felonye ●he gett●●no dower not wythstandyng she hath obteyned her pardone Also yf after the deathe of her husband she taketh a lease for terme of lyfe of the same landes wherof she is indowable she losed her dower of the same Moreouer yf she departethe from her husbande and lyuethe in aduoutrye wyth an other man and not reconcieled agayne to her husbande wythout coercion of the ecclesiasticall power she lesethe her dower after her husbandes deathe She shall be also barred of dower yf she wyll wythholde from the heire the charters and euidence concernynge that lande wherof she asketh dower But none other saue the heyre can wytholde her dower for thys cause It maye not be vnknowne also of what thynges she maye demaunde dower and of what thinges not Of landes messuagies aduousons rent charges rente seruyses or signories in grosse or otherwyse of villaynes of cōmons certayne of estouers certayne she is dowable But of commons and estouers sans nombre also of annuities of homage of thingꝭ of pleasure as of seruyces of paimet of roses and semblable she shall not be endowed There be yet two other kindes of dower the one is called dowment ex assēsu patr●is and the other is called dowment de la plus beale ꝑtie that is to saye of the fairest parte Dowment ex assensu patris is whan the father is seased of landes in fee and his sonne whiche is heyre apparaunt endoweth his wife at the churche dore whan he is espoused of parcell of hys fathers landes wyth the assente of his father in wrytinge testifienge the same assent if in thys case her husband dye she may forthwyth entre into the laudes so assigned vnto her wtout further app●yntynge or proces of law although the father of her husbande be yet aliue in actual possession of the lande But if she thus do and take her to thys endowment at the churche dore she can not haue her dower by the common lawe of the thyrde parte of all her husbandes landes or any parcell of them how be it if she wyll refuse this assignement made vnto her at the church dore and demaund dower at the common lawe she maye verye well A man maye also endow his wyfe at the time of the spousailes of his own landes whiche he hath in his owne possession and that dower is called dower ad ostium ecclesiae Dowment Dela plus beale that is to saye dowmente of the fayreste parte shall be in thys case Whan a man is seased of landes whiche he holdethe of an other man by knyghtes seruice and of other lādes which be of socage tenure and hathe issue whyche is wythin the age of .xiiij. yeares dye and the lorde of whom the lande is holden by knyghtes seruyce entrethe in to the lande holden of hym and the mother of the chylde entrethe in to the socage tenure as gardeyne in socage yf in thys case the woman wyll brynge a wrytte of dower agaynste the lorde whyche is gardeyne in cheualrye he may plede the speciall mater and shewe howe she as gardeyne in socage hath so moche lande and pray the court that she maye be suffred to endowe her selfe of so moche lande beynge in her owne custodie as amounteth to the thyrde parte of the hole landes And than the iudgemente shall be that the gardeyne in chyualrye shall reteyne the lande holden of hym quyte from the woman duerynge the non age of the warde After which iudgement she maye go and in presence of her neighboures endowe her selfe of the beste parte of that whyche is in her custodye amountynge to the thyrde parte of the hole and than is she called tenaunte in dower de la plus beale A diuision of inheritaunces HYtherunto I haue spoken of free holdes nowe it remayneth to treate of inheritaūces not that inheritaūces be no free holdes for they be free holdes also but the other estates of whiche I haue here tofore treated be onely free holde and of no hygher nature where as a state of in heritance although it ●e a free hold yet it is not to be called by that name sythe it is a farre more excellent and greater estate But ye shall vnderstande that of inheritaunces some be of more amplitude and excellencye than other some be as that inheritaunce whyche is pure simple and without limitacion of what heyres is it called fee simple But when I make a limitaciō of what heyres thā is it called fee tayle of which also be two sortes as herafter more at large shal be declared Nowe the nature of fee simple is to be setforth wyth oure accustomed compendiousnes Fee simple FEe simple is as I sayd the most ample large inheritaunce that can be in this realme diuised or excogi●ate as that whiche a man hath to hym and to his heyres simply without any further limitacion for whether they be of his owne bodye begot ten or not so that they be the next of his kinne and wythin the degrees it suffiseth So then tenaunte in fee simple is he that hath landes or tenementes whether it be by purchase or by discent to him to his heires for euer For if a man will purchase landes in fee simple he must nedes haue these wordes his heyres in his purchase for these be the onlye wordes that make an estate of inheritaunce Therfore yf landes be gyuen to a man for euer no mencion be made of his heyres he hath an estate but for terme of his lyfe bycause these wordes his heyres do lacke Yet neuertheles if a mā by his testament doth deuise landes to an other in suche where the custome wyl serue so to do though he maketh no mencion of heyres but saythe that he bequethethe to suche a
almoyne By force of whyche tenure they that holde in francke almoyne after thys sorte be bounde of ryght before god to make orisones and prayers to celebrate masses and to do other diuine seruices for y● soules of their graunters and feffers and for the soules of theyr heires whych be dead and for y● prosperous estate of their heyres that be nowe alyue And bycause of ryghte they be bounde to thys diuine seruice they be discharged by the lawe to do any other prophane or corporall seruice as fealtye or suche other lyke But neuerthelesse if suche as hold theyr tenementes in franke almoyne do omyt and leaue vndone these deuine seruices wherūto they be boūd before god the lorde can not distrein them ne yet compell them by any other meanes by the course of the cōmon lawe but the onelye remedy is to complayne of them to theyr ordinarye who of ryght ought to compel suche ecclesiasticall persones to do the deuyne seruice due as afore said But here ye shall note that yf a persone of a chyrche or any other ecclesiasticall persone holdethe of hys lorde by certeyne diuine seruice to be done as to synge masse euery frydaye in the weke or placebo and ●irige or to fynde a preest to synge masse or to distribute in almes C. pence to a hondred men at suche daye in all these cases yf such diuyne seruice be vndone the lorde mayne very wel distrayn bycause the seruice is put here in certayntye Now I sayde that if in olde time a man dyd infeoffe suche ecclesiasticall persone after such sorte he shuld holde hys lande in franke almoyne but at this day it is otherwise for by the reasone of a statute called Quia emptores terrarum no man can aliene ne graunt landes or tenementes in fee simple to holde of hym selfe so that nowe yf a man beynge seased of landes in fee simple graunteth the same by licēce to an ecclesiastical person in franke almoyne these wordes franke almoyne be voyde the ecclesiastical persone shal holde them immediatlye of y● lorde of the feoffer by the same seruyces y● the feoffer helde so that no man can hold in franke almoyne but by force of a grante made before the sayd statute onely the kinges maiesty excepted for he is out of the compasse of the-statute Finally ye shall note that where as a man holdeth in frank almoyne his lorde is bounde by the lawe to acquite him of al maner of seruice that any other lorde can haue or demaūd out of the sayde landes That yf he dothe not acquyte him but suffre him to be distreyned than he shall haue agaynst his lorde a certayne wryt called a wryt of meane and shall recouer agaynste hym hys damages and costes of his suite Of burgage A Tenure in burgage is where an aūciēt broughe is of which the kynge is lorde and they whyche haue tenemētes wtin y● same brough holde the same of the kyng payenge a certeyne yearly rent whych tenure in effecte is but socage tenure Lykewyse it is where as any other lorde spirituall or temporal is lord of such broughe Here ye shal note that for the most parte suche auncient burghes haue dyuers customes and vsages which other townes haue not For some burghes haue a custome that the yongest sonne shal inherite before the eldeste whyche custome is called commonlye broughe Englyshe Also in some burghes by the custome the woman shall haue for her dower al the landes and tenementes wherof her husbande was seased at anye tyme durynge the couerture Moreouer in some burghes a mā may deuise his landes or tenemētes by testamēt at the tyme of his death and by force of suche deuyse or legacye he to whome the bequeste was made after the death of the testatour maye by force of thys auncient custome entre in to the landes so to him bequethed or deuised without anye lyuery of seasone to him made or further ceremonye of lawe Dyuers other customes in Englande there be contrary to the course of the common lawe whyche if they be anye thynge probable and maye stande wyth reason are good and effectuall not withstandynge they be agaynste the common lawe Of villenage or bonde seruice A Tenant in villenage is proper lye whan a villayne that is to saye a bondman holdeth of his lord whose bondman he is certayne landes or tenementes accordynge to the custome of the Manoure or otherwyse at the wyll of hys lorde and to do his lorde villayne seruice as to beare to carye y● donge of his lorde out of the citie or out of hys lordꝭ Manoure to lay it vpon the demeane landes of his lorde or to do such like seruyle villayne seruice How be it fre men in some places holde theyr tenementes lādes of their lordes by custome by such sorte of seruice and theyr tenure is called tenure in villenage yet they themselues be no villaines ne of seruile condicion but fre mē For the land holden in villenage maketh not the tenant a villayn but contrary wyse a villayne may make fre land to be villayne land vnto his lorde As if a villayn purchaseth lād in fee simple or in fee tayle the lorde of the villayne maye entre into the lande so purchased by hys bondman and put hym and his heyres out for euer and this done the lord if he wil maye lease the same lande to his villayne to holde of hym in villenage And here ye shall vnderstande that seruitute or villenage is the ordinance not of the law of nature but of that law which is called Ius gentium by whyche a man is made subiecte contrary to nature vnto an other mannes dominiō For he that is a villayne or bondman eyther he is so by title of prescription that is to saye he and hys auncestoures haue bene villaynes tyme out of minde or elles he is a villayne by his owne cōfession in court of recorde so that all villaynes either they be borne villaynes or elles they be made so They be borne villaines when theyr father beynge a bonde man himselfe begetteth them in lawfull wedlocke either of a fre woman or of a bond woman for so that the father be bonde the issue of him lawfully begotten muste nedes be bonde by the lawes of Englande hauynge no regarde to the cōdicion of the mother where as in the ciuill lawe it is clene contrarye For there partus sequitur ventrem that is to say the seruitute or bondage of the mother maketh the chylde bonde and not of the father Howe be it the bastarde sonne of a bondeman shall not be bonde bycause a bastarde is nullius filius in the law that is to say nomans sonne They be made vyllaynes two wayes eyther by theyr owne propre acte as whan a free man beynge of full age wyll come into a court of recorde there confesse himselfe bon●e to an other man Or elles by the lawes of armes called Ius gentium as whan a man is taken
prysoner in warres and is compelled to serue and become the thrall and bondeman of hym that toke hym the lawe calleth suche persone a villayne And ye shall note that vyllaynes be properly called in latyn serui bycause that whā they be taken in war the captaynes be wonte not to kyll them but to sell them and so to saue theyr lyfes so that they be called serui a seruando that is to say of sauyng They be also called Mancipia a manu capíendo bicause that they be taken by hand poure of the enemies Nowe as I sayde by the lawe o● nature we are al borne free but after that by the lawe of Gentilitie seruit●te inuaded the worlde than ensued the benefyte of manumission Manumission is de manu datio that is to saye a gyuynge out of the hande or power For so longe as a man is in bondage and seruitute he is subiecte to the hande and power of an other and whan he is manumissed he is made free delyuered from the sayd power so that a manumission is nothynge elles than an enfranchisemēt that is to saye a wrytynge testifieng that the lorde hath enfranchised his villayn al his offpring and sequel Also yf the Lorde maketh to hys villayne an obligacion of a certeyne summe of money or grauntethe to him by his dede an annuitie or yearly pension or leaseth to hym by dede landes or tenementes for terme of yeres any of these actes do imply an enfranchisement Lykewyse yf the Lorde maketh a feoffement to his villayne and maketh vnto hym lyuery of seys● thys also is an enfranchisment and secret manumissiō Brefely to speke where so euer the lorde compelleth his vyllaine by the course of the lawe to do that thyng that he myght otherwyse ēforce him to do or to suffre without the auctoritie and compulsion of the lawe he doth by implication enfranchise his villayne as if the lorde wyl bryng agaynst his villayne an action of det an action of accompt of couenant or of trespace these and such lyke be in the eye of the lawe enfranchisementes and manumissions bycause that the lorde in all these cases may haue the effecte and purpose of his suite that is to saye the goodes catels and correctiō of his bondman without the compulsion of the lawe euen by his owne propre power and authoritie whyche he hath vpon hys villayne But if the lord doth sue his vilayne by an appeale of felonye the villayne beyng lawfully endyted of the same before this is no tacite manumission or infranchisemēte for the lorde though he haue power to beate his villaine and to spoyle him of his goodes yet he can not by the lawe of this Realme put him to deathe Ye shall also vnderstande that if a mannes villayne purchaseth landꝭ or acquyre and gette vnto him anye other thynge the lorde maye by and by entre and sease the same in to hys owne handes Wherfore if the lorde wyll brynge agaynste hys villayne a praecipe ꝙ reddat by whyche he demaundeth agaynst his villayne any landes or tenementes this implyeth an enfranchisemente for asmoche as he byndeth himselfe to the prescripte and authoritie of the lawe where as he might vse his owne authoritie by entring and seasing the said landes Finally ye shal marke that some villaynes be called villaynes in grosse and other some be called villaynes regardāt In grosse be they of which the lorde is seuerally seased and not by reasone of any lordeshyp or maner but they be called regardaunte whiche do belonge to a Manoure of whyche the lorde is seased and the sayd villaynes haue bene regardant that is to saye expectant and attendante tyme out of mynde to the lorde of the sayde Manour in doing vnto him suche seruices as to a villayne appertayne ❧ Of rentes ❧ FOr asmoch as vpō euery tenure there is commonly reserued one rente or other therefore I thynke it good sumwhat to treate of rentes But ye must vnderstande that there be sundry sortes of rentes There is one kynde of rente whyche is called rent seruice ●n other whiche is called rent charge and the thyrde which is named in frenche rente secke that is to saye in latyne redditus siccus a drye rente Nowe rent seruice is so called bycause it is knyt to the tenure and is as it were a seruice wherby a man holdeth his landes or tenemētꝭ or at lest way when the rente is vnseuerably coupled and knyt wyth the seruice as for an exemple where the tenant holdeth his lande of the king or of any other lorde by fealtie and by certaine rente or by homage fealtie and certaine rent or by any other sortes of seruices by certaine rent this rent is called rente seruice And here ye shal note that if this rent seruice be at any time when it ought to be payed behynde and vnpayde the lorde of whom the land or tenement is so holden whether it be in fee simple fe taile for terme of life for yeres or at wyll may of common right entre and distraine for the rent though there be no mencion at all ne clause of distresse put in the dede or lease I said before that y● nature of this rent seruice is to be coupled and knyt to the tenure For where no tenure is there can be no rent seruice And therfore if at this day I be seised of landes in fee simple and make a dede of feffement of the same to an other in fe simple reseruing by the same dede a rente thys can be called no rente seruice bicause there can be nowe no tenure betwene the feffoure and the feffee Otherwise it is of feffementes in fee simple made before the statute of Westmester the thirde called Quia emptores terrarū For before the making of y● statute if a man had made a feoffement in fe simple reseruynge to him a certayne rent yea though it had bene wtout dede here had bene created a new tenure betwene the feffoure and the feffee and the feffee shuld haue holdē of the feffoure who by vertue of the same myght of common right haue distreyned for suche rent But at this daye by force of the sayde acte there can be no suche holdyng or tenure created nor begonne and consequently no rent seruice can be at this daye reserued vpon anye gyfte in fee simple except it be in the kinges case who being chiefe lord of all euer might and may giue landes to be holden of him Thus ye se that at this day no subiect can reserue any rente seruice vnto him onles the reuersiō of the landes or tenementes that he shall graunt be styll in him as where he grauntethe them in fe● tayle or maketh but a lease for terme of lyfe or for certayne yeares or ells at wil. For in al these cases the reuersion of the fee simple remayneth styll in hym and therfore if here be anye rent reserued it is to be called a rent seruice and is of common right distreynable
as is he that hath a free holde at the common law but the determination of this question I remit to my great maysters which cā solue the knottes and enigmaes of the lawe For asmoche as yet styl of this matter Causidici certant adhuc subiudice li● est ❧ Also ye shall vnderstand that the vsage of some Manour is when the tenaunte wyll surrender his land to the vse of an other that he shall take a wande in his hande and deliuer it to the stewarde of the court and the stewarde shal deliuer the same wand in name of seisin to him that shall take the lande and suche a tenaunte is called tenaunte by the verge Diuerse other customes there be of surrendryng of copy hold landes which here for tediousnes I wyll omytte And forasmoch as tenauntes by custome of the Manoure haue by the course of the common lawe no free holde therfore they be called tenaūtes of base tenure Hytherto I haue treated of the first membre of oure diuision that is to wytte of chatelles for as I sayde all leases for terme of yeres and at will be accōpted in the law but as cateles and be comprysed vnder that name saue that they be called cateles reals where as kyne oxen horses moneye plate corne and suche lyke be called chatell personalles Nowe we wyll procede to thexplaniciō of the second membre that is to say of free holdes ❧ A diuision of free holdes FRee holdes or franke tenemētes a man may haue in sūdry wyses for ether he is seased for terme of his owne lyfe or for terme of an other mans life Yf he be sesed for terme of his owne life either he haue gotten such estate by way of purchase or els the law hath entiteled him therunto I call it by purchase whether he commeth vnto it by his owne barganing and procuremēt or by the gyft of his frende and I call it by the operation and intitelynge of the lawe whan a man maryeth a woman that is an in heritres and hath issue by her and she dyeth nowe shal he haue the landes durynge his life by the course of the lawe and shal be called tenaunte by the curtesye of Englande In likewise yf a man be seased in fe● simple or fee tayle of landes and taketh a wyfe and he dyeth the law giueth vnto the wyfe the thyrde parte of her husbandes lādes for terme of her life and she shal be called tenaūt in dower ❧ Tenaunt for terme of life TEnaunte for terme of life is he that holdeth landes or tenemētes for terme of his owne life or for terme of an others lyfe Howe be it the most frequent and common maner of speakynge is to call him that hath estate for terme of his own life tenaunte for life and him that hath estate for terme of an others life tenaunt pour terme dautre vie that is to saye tenaunte for terme of an others life Ye shal note that like as he that maketh the lease is called the lessoure he to whome the lease is made is called the lessee so he that maketh a feffement is called the feffoure and he to whome the feffement is made the feffee Also if tenaunte for terme of lyfe or tenaunte for terme of an other mans life do wast the lessour or he in the reuersion shall maynteyne very wel an action of waste agaynste hym and shall by the same recouer treble damages Finally ye shall vnderstand that by an acte of parliamēt made in the xxvii yere of oure Souerayne lorde that now is king Henry the eight it is enacted that no free holde nor estate of inheritance shal passe ne take effecte but by dede indented sealed enrolled in one of the kynges courtꝭ at Westmynster or els wythin the same countie where the lande dothe lye as by the sayd acte more at large appereth ❧ Tenaunt by the curtesi TEnaunt by the curtesye of Englande is he that hath maryed a wyfe inherited and hath had issue by her and she is deade in this case the lawe of Englande permytteth and suffreth the husbande of suche wyfe to reteyne all his wyues landes that she had either in fee simple or fee tayle so longe as he lyueth And this is by the curtesye and vr●anitie of Englande for this thing is vsed in none other region But in thys case it is requyred that the chylde ve vitall that is to saye be borne and broughte forth i● to this worlde aliue and therfore the common sayeng hath bene that onles the chylde be harde crye the father shall not be tenaunte by the curtesye for the onelye proue and argument of lyfe in an infaunt new borne is the vagite and cryenge Ye shal furthermore vnderstand that onlesse the husbande be in actual and reall possession of his wyues landes seased of them in her right he shall not be tenaunte by curtesye after her death And therfore yf landes descende to a mans wyfe so that she is tenaunt in the lawe and to euery mans accion yet if the husbande haue not made an actuall entreedurynge the couerture and matrimony betwene the● he shall not be tenaū● by the curtesye for it shall be reputed and iugged his foly and negligence that he wolde not entre in her lyfe tyme. Otherwyse it is of aduousons ●●̄tes and such other thynges which forthwyth when they descende be in a man or woman wythout any entre or further ceremonye of lawe Note that if tenaunte by the curtesye of England wyl suffre or make any wast in the landes or tenemētes that he so holdeth he is punyshable therfore by action of wast Also it is to be knowne that of thinges that be in suspense a man shall not be tenaunt by the cur●●sye and therfore yf a man be the tenaunt in fee simple of certayne lande and doth entremary wyth a woman that is the seignoresse or lady of the same and hath issue by her and she dyeth yet he shal not be tenaunt by the curtesye of the lordshyp of seignorye bycause himself is tenaunt of the land and therfore the lordeship is suspended for the time for a man can not be both lorde and tenaunt of one thing but if he had not bene tenaunt of the lande he shulde haue had the lordeshyp after the deathe of his wyfe by the curtesie of Englande very well Of tenaunt in dower TEnaunte in dower is she that hath bene maried to an husbād that was during the matrimony betwene them seised of landes ▪ or 〈◊〉 in fee simple or fee tayl ▪ which is nowe dede and she seased of the thy● departe of her husbande 's sayde landes for terme of her life For by the common lawe of the lande if the husbande be at any tyme duryng the couerture seased lawfully whether 〈◊〉 be by purchase or by discent 〈◊〉 the● in fee or in tayle dye his 〈◊〉 to be indowed by the course of the cōmon lawe of the thyrde fo●e And in some places
applied to that whyche commeth by discente from a mannes auncestours but also to euery purchase in fee simple or fee taile Fee tayle Ye shall vnderstande that before a certayne statute called the statute of Westminster seconde there was no state tayle but all was fee simple eyther purely that is to saye wythout condition or condicinallye as appereth by the pretence of y● said statute but now sythens the promulgating of that statute diuers formes of state tayles haue rysen Fee tayle is whan it is prescribed and lymytted in the gifte what heyres and by whome engendred shall inherite As for exemple I gyue landes to a man and to his heyres and go no further this is fee simple but if I make a limitation and adde of his hody begotten now is it fee taile that is to saye a fee or inheritaunce limitted prescribed determinate or assigned So that if I gyue landes to a man and to his heyres he hathe fee simple but yf I gyue landes to hym and to hys heyres of hys bodye lawfully begotten he hathe but a fee tayle for asmoche as I appoynte lymytte prescribe and determyne the heyres and for lacke of suche heyres the gyfte shall be expired and worne out the landes shall reuerte agayn to the gyuer or his heyres But ye muste obserue that there bo two kyndes of fee tayle There is a generall tayle and there is a speciall tayle Fee tayle generall is as where landes be giuen to a man and to his heyres of his bodye begotten without anye mencyonynge and expressynge by what woman they are to be begotten And therefore yfa mā be tenaunte in the generall tayle of landes and taketh a wyfe and hathe issue by her and she dyeth and afterwarde he takethe an other wyfe of whom he hath also other issue here either of these issue is inheritable to this land entayled But if I expresse in the gifte by what womā the heires shall be procreate and ingēdred then is it an especiall tayle as for exemple to make the thynge playne if landes be gyuen to a man and to the heyres of his body lawfully begotten by Katherin his wyfe this is an especiall tayle for the issue of him begotten by an other woman shal neuer inherite by force vertue of the tayle Lykewyse it is if landes be giuen to a woman and to y● heires of her body law fully begotten shewe not by what man this is a general taile but if I adde saye by suche a man her husbande than is it an especiall taylle Also yf I gyue landes to a man and to hys wyfe and to the heyres of there two bodyes lawfully begotten thys ys an especyal tayle as wel in the husbande as in the wyfe Semblably it is yf a man gyueth landes to an other man wyth hys daughter or kynswoman in francke mariage thys emplyeth a state tayle especiall and in thys case as wel the man as the woman hathe estate in in the speciall tayle But yf I gyue landes to a man and to suche a woman and to hys heyres that he shall begette of her here the woman hathe estate but for terme of her lyfe and the husbands an estate in the especyall tayle In lykewise it is on the womās behalfe as if I gyue landes to a man and to hys wyfe and to her heyres of the bodye of her said husbande engendred he hathe an estate but for terme of lyfe and she an estate in the specyall tayle But in bothe cases yf I hadde sayde to the heyres and not hys or her heyres than shulde eyther of them haue hadde an estate in the specyall tayle bycause thys worde heytes is as well referred to the one as to the other Ye shall also vnderstande that yf landes be giuen to a man ond to the heyres males of his bodye this ys a state tayle and in this case the heyre femalle shall neuer inherite Finally it is to be noted that of landes whych a man hath in fee simple the possession of the brother shall cause the syster germayne that is to saye the syster bothe by the fathers syde mothers to inherite and not the brother by the halfe blod as here tofore was said but of landes which be entayled otherwise it is Therfore if a man be seysed of landes in the generall tayle and hath issue by hys furst wyfe a sonne and a daughter and also a sonne by an other wyfe dyeth and the eldest sonne entreth in to the landes after dyeth the suster germayne shall not haue the landes but the yonger brother of the halfe blode bycause whosoeuer shall inherite landes in taile must claym them as nexte and immediate heyre not to hym that dyeth last seased of the landꝭ but to hym vnto whome the landes were fyrst gyuen whyche in the case before remembred is the sonne and not the daughter Thus ye shal marke obserue a great diuersitie bytwene the forme of successyon in landes of fee simple and the forme in fee tayle Tenaunt after possibilitie of issue extincte WHan landes or tenementes be giuen to a mā and to his wife and to the heires of there two bodies lawfully begotten yf in thys case either of them chaunce to dye before they haue issue betwene them he or she that ouerlyueth hys styl tenaunt in tayle but wythout all possibilitie of any issue that can be heyre to these landes entayled and for thys cause he or she thus ouerlyuynge is called tenaunte after possibilitie of issue extincte for in suche a tenaunte is all possibilitie of issue that maye be inherytable to these landes by force of the gyfte in tayle vtterlye extincte and quenched and by his or her deth the state tayle shall expyre cease and be abolyshed for euer and shall reuerte agayn to the gyuer or donoure from whence it came Yet forasmoche as thys tenaunt after possibilitie of issue hadde ones an inheritaunce in hym he shall not be punyshede by an action of waste though he makethe neuer so moche waste in the landes and tenementes whereas yet in effecte he is but a tenaunte for terme of lyfe Of perceners Hitherunto I haue made a compendious and short declaracyon of estates of al sortes But where I sayde that among susters there is no prerogatyue or preminence concernyng the inheriting of theyr auncestoures landes but that they shall be al togither inheritours and make as it were but one heyre it is expedient to make a further processe in this behalfe and to shew howe in what maner this partition shall be made But ye shall vnderstande that there be besyde parceners at the common lawe whyche be onelye susters also parciners by custome whiche is amonges brothers contrarye to the course of the common lawe and this custome is in Kent and in other places where landes and tenemētes be of the tenure of Gauel kynde Ye shall thefore knowe y● whan a mā is seised of landes in fee simple or see tayle and hath no
sergeantye that is to saye a greate or hygh seruice and the cause why it is so called is bicause it is the moste honorable and moste worthye seruice that is for he that holdeth by escuage is not appoynted by hys tenure to do anye other more specyall seruice than an other is bounde that holdethe by escuage but he that holdeth by grande sergeantye is bound to do some speciall seruice to the king Also if he that holdeth of the king by grante sergeanty dyeth his heire beyng of ful age than the heyre shal paye to the kynge for reliefe not onlye C.S. as he that holdethe by escuage shall do but moreouer the clere yearly value of those landes and tenementes whych he so holdeth of the kynge by grande sergeantye Furthermore ye shal obserue that in the marches of Scotlande some men holde of the kynge by coruage that is to say by blowing of an horn to the intent to warne the men of the contrey whan they heare that the Scottes or other theyr enemyes be commynge or be alreadye entred in to Englande whyche seruice is also a kynde of grande sergeantie Grande sergeantie therfore is as moche to saye in latyn as magnum seruitium that is to saye a greate or hyghe seruice lyke as petite sergeantye is called paruum seruitium that is to saye a lytle or smale seruice But to reuerte agayne to the mamatier ye shall note yf any tenaunte holdeth of any other lord than of the king by such seruice of cornage then it is no graunde sergeantye but yet neuertheles it is knyghtes seruice draweth to it ward mariage and reliefe for this is a rule infallible that none can holde by grande sergeanty but of the kynges owne maiestie Finallye ye shall vnderstande that al they whych holde of the king by thys seruice called graunde sergeauntye do holde of the kynge by knyghtes seruyce and by vertue of thys tenure the kynge shall haue of them warde mariage and reliefe but escuage yet he shal not haue of them oneles they holde by escuage of him by expresse and speciall wordes Petite sergeantie TEnaunte by petite sergeantye is he that holdeth his land immediatly of oure soueraygne lorde the kynge by thys maner of seruice to paye to the kynge yearelye eyther a vowe a spere a dagger a swerde a payre of gantlettes a paire of spores of golde a shafte or such other smale thynges apperteynyng to the warre this seruice is in effect but socage bycause that suche a tenaunte is not bounde by hys tenure to go ne do anye thing in his owne propre person touchyng the warre but only to rendre and pay yerely certayne thynges to the kynge as a man ought to pay a rente wherfore thys seruice of petite sergeantye is no knyghtes seruyce but yet ye shal note that a man can not holde neyther by petite sergeauntye neyther by graunde sergeantye out of mynde surely the lorde yf he can not denye this and if he hath receiued the homage of such a tenaūt is bounde by the lawe to warrante hym his lande so that if the tenaunt lose his lande in defaute of the lorde thus vouched that is to saye called to warranty he shal recouer against hym so moche in value of those landes and tenementes whyche the lord had at the tyme of callynge to warrantye or at any tyme after But yf the lorde neuer receyued the homage of hys tenante than he maye verye well whan he is thus vouched disclaime in the lordeshyp or seignorye and so put out the tenaunte of hys warrantye Where ye shal note that in euery case where the lord disclaim in his seignorye in courte of recorde his seignorye or lordeshyp is extinct and the tenaunte shall holde from thensforthe of the nexte lorde to him that thus disclaymed Thus ye perceyue that homage auncestrell is not but where as is a long cōtinuaūce as well in the blode of the tenaunte in respecte of hys tenauncye as in the bloude of the lord in respecte of his seignorye Wherfore if the tenaunte doth ones aliene hys landes to an other although he purchasethe the same agayne yet he shal not hold any longer by homage auncestrell bycause of thys discontinuaunce but shall holde it nowe by the vulgare accustomed homage Of socage SOcage is properly where the tenant is bound to come wyth his soke that is to saye with his plough to eare and sowe parcell of the demene landes of hys lorde which seruyce in aūcient tyme was very commen frequēte but nowe by the mutuall consent bothe of the lorde and of the tenant yt ys conuerted for the moost parte in to a yerely rente How be it the name of socage abideth styll wherfore now al that is not knyghtes seruice is caled by y● name of socage So y● yf a man holdeth by fealtye onely or by fealtye and homage for all maner of seruyce it is but socage tenure for homage alone makith not knyghtes seruyce yea yf a man holdeth by escuage certayne as I haue said here tofore he holdeth in effecte but by socage Nowe where a man holdethe hys landes by socage and dyeth hys heyre beynge wythyn thage of .xiiii. yeres the lord shal not haue y● warde but the next of kynne to the heyre to whome the heritage can not descend shall haue the wardeshyp as well of the lande as of the heyre tyll the heir come to the age of .xiiij. yeares and suche gardeine is called gardeine in socage and shal rendre accomptes to the heyre for the issues and profytes that he hathe receiued of the landes durynge suche tyme hys reasonable costes and expēses deducted so that he shall not haue the wardeshyp to his owne vse profyte as gardeine in cheualrye hath Finally ye shal vnderstande that whan tenaunte in socage dyethe the lorde shall haue reliefe that is to say the value of the rent that is yearlye due vnto hym of the tenauncye besyde the yerly rente so that in effecte after the death of his tenante he shal haue of the heyre .ii. rentes saue that for the reliefe he may distreyne forth wyth but for the accustomed rent he can not distreyne tyl the vsuall daye of payment be come Francke almoyne TEnaunte in francke almoygne that is to saye in free almesse is where a byshop deane or any other ecclesiasticall persone holdeth of his lorde in pure and perpetuall almes and suche tenure began firste in olde time after this maner Whan a man was seased in ancient time of certain landes or tenementes in his demene as of fee of the same tenementes enfeoffed an abbot his couent or a priour his couent or any other persone ecclesiastical as a deane of a colege mayster of an hospitall or suche like to haue to hold the same landꝭ to them and to theyr successoures for euer in pure and perpetuall almesse or in francke almes in these two cases the tenementes shulde be holden in franke