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A29656 Some new cases of the years and time of King Hen. 8. Edw. 6. and Qu: Mary; written out of the great abridgement, composed by Sir Robert Brook, Knight, &c. There dispersed in the titles, but here collected under years. And now translated into English by John March of Grays-Inn, Barrister. All which said cases are hy [sic]the translator methodised, and reduced alphabetically under their proper heads and titles. With an exact table of the principall matter contained therein.; Graunde abridgement. Selections. French (Law French) Brooke, Robert, Sir, d. 1558.; March, John, 1612-1657.; Fitzherbert, Anthony, Sir, 1470-1538. 1651 (1651) Wing B4898; ESTC R213260 142,103 327

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the arrearages for they are reall and parcell of the rent or annuity But if the Judgment be of arrearages and dammages there he shall have his age B. age 50. And where he recovers in a Writ of annuity or assise as before Or hath avowed for a Rent which is Freehold and recovers the arrearages without costs and damages he shall not have an action of Debt of that but a Scire facias for t is real But where he hath Judgement of it with costs and dammages which go together so that that t is mixt with the personality then lies a Writ of Debt against the Heir of the arrearages and dammages and this B. thinks in default of Execution per curiam 23. H. 8. B. Debt 212. age 50. Note That of the Land of the Duchy of Lancaster and other Lands which the King hath as Duke or the like his age is material and he may have his age as another common person may for he hath them as Duke not as King B. Age 52. 78. As if the King alien Land parcel of his Dutchy of Lancaster within age there he may avoid it for Non-age for the reason aforesaid otherwise of Land which he hath as King for the King cannot be disabled by Non-age as a common person shall B. Prerogative 132. Yet by the Statute of 1. E. 4. which is a private act not printed but inrolled in the Dutchy Chamber by which King H. 6. was attainted of Treason and that all the Lands of the said Dutchy should be forfeited and should be a Dutchy separated and incorporated c. t is annexed to the Crown but by another private act 1. H. 7. t is disannexed and made as in the time of H. 4. 1. E. 6. B. Age. 52. Note t was in a manner granted by all the Justices in the Common Bench That if a Parson Prebend or the like be within age of 21 years and makes a Lease of his Benefice within age that yet this shall binde him for where he is admitted by the Law of holy Church to take it within age so the Common Law inables him to Demise his Benefice within age 4. Mar. 1. B. Age. 80. Alienations If the Tenant of the King alien in Fee without licence and die his Heir within age the King shall not have the Ward because that nothing is discended to him and that the Alienation is good save the Trespass to the King which is but a Fine by Seiser B. Alienations 29. Gard 85. But otherwise if the Alienor were Tenant in Tail and if the Alienation without licence be found by office the King shall have the Issues of the Land from the time of the Inquisition taken and not before B. Alienations 26. in medio But where the Tenant dies and his Heir enters upon an office found for the King of the dying seised of the Ancestor there the heir shall answer the profits taken by him before 26. H. 8. B. Intrusion 18. the end T is said for Law That a fine for alienation is one years value of the land aliened and the same Law of a Fine for intrusion upon the King But the Fine to have licence to alien is but the third part of the yearly value of the land which shall be aliened and for licence to alien in Mortmain the Fine is the value of the Land for three years 31. H. 8. B. Alienations 29. the end If a man obtain licence to alien the Mannor of D. and all his Lands Tenements in D. he cannot alien by Fine for the Fine shall be certain so many acres of Land so many of Meddow so many of Pasture and the like and the alienation ought not to vary from the Licence Yet by B. t is otherwise used with an averment that all is one 32. H. 8. B. Alienations 30. Note if there be two Joynt-tenants who hold of the King in Capite and one releases to the other all his right this is no alienetion nor doth he need Licence or pardon of it for he to whom the Release is made is in by the first feoffor and not by him that Released nor shall he Fine for such release and so t is used in the Chequer that t is no alienation But if three Joynt tenants are and the one Releases to one of the others there he is in of it by him that releases Contra if he had released to all his compagnions and where a man Releases by Fine to the Tenant of the King this is no alienation Otherwise of a Fine Sur Conusans de droit Com ceo c. for this is an estate made by Conclusion 37. H. 8. B. Alienations 31. Tenant of the King in Capite cannot alien for term of life without Licence for it alters the Freehold Time H. 8. B. alienations 22. the end Note That for Burgage Tenure of the King a man may alien without licence well enough 6. E. 6. B. Alienations 36. Note That a Devise by Testament was taken to be an alienation 3. Mar. 1. B. alienations 37. Alien See Tit. Denizen Note by the whole Court in the Kings Bench an alien may bring an action personal and shall be answered without being disabled because he is an alien born otherwise in an action real and the same B. seems in an action mixt and he may have a property and buy and sell. 38. H. 8. B. Denizen 10. Nonability 40. T was said in the Kings Bench That to say that the Plaintiff is an alien born Judgement if he shall be answered is no plea in an action personal otherwise in an action real Yet this hath been in question after this time in the same Court and t was said that an alien born is no plea in Trespass if he doth not say further That the Plaintiff is of allegiance of one such a one enemy to the King for t is no plea in an action personal against an alien that he is of the allegiance of such a Prince which is of amity with the King 1. E. 6. B. Nonability 62. If an alien born purchase the King shall have it but the purchase ought to be found by office and so t was in the case of Alien King and B. seems that an information in the Chequer will not serve in this case Time E. 6. B. Denizen 17. the end T was said in Parliament That if an alien born obtain a Lease for years that the King shall have it for he cannot have Land in this Realm of no estate 4. Mar. 1. B. Denizen 22. Amendment By Fitzherbert and the Court where a Writ of Error was sued to remove a Record out of the Common Bench into the Kings Bench betwixt an Abbot and I. N. the Warrant of Attorney varied in the Roll in the name of the Abbot and t was amended after Judgement and if they had not amended it they said that those of the
Termor where land is recovered against him and the Lessor because they lose not any Free-hold and because that they are acquitted by W. Whorewood the Kings Attorney Yet by B. t is not reasonable where they are named and lose their interest yet it seems to him that he that is acquitted shall not have an attaint but if they are found disseisors they shall have an attaint by him Time H. 8. B Attaint 82. the end Note For Law where Trespass of battery goods carried away or a writing broken which are transitory is done in one County yet an action may be brought in an other B. Attaint 104. And so t was agreed in Trespass in London of breaking of at D. in London where indeed D. was in the County of E. for these are not local B. Lieu. 65. And therefore in Trespass transitory the place is not issuable nor traversable No more then in Trespass upon the case upon a promise and these may be continued B. Traverse c. 283. And in those cases the Jury of another County may take Conusance thereof but is not bound to it but if they take Conusance attaint lies not Otherwise of Trespass of Trees cut or Grass trod which are local and shall be brought in the proper County 2. Mar. 1. B. Attaint 104. Jurors 50. Note T is said that upon an Information for the King which passes upon the issue tried the King nor the informer shall not have an attaint for the informer is not fully party And when the Defendant hath answered the Kings Attorney replies for the King and after no further mention of the informer and therefore neither the one nor the other shall have an attaint 4. Mar. 1. B. Attaint 127. Where an attaint lies where not See Tit. Dammages And Tit. Fanxifier Attornment Note That Attornment may be made by Tenants to the Lord in his Court to the Steward in absence of the Lord or purchasor But Attornment to the servant of the purchasor out of Court and in absence of the Purchasor is not good but by payment of one penny for every Tenant to the servant of the Purchasor and in his absence in name of Seisen of their several Rents is a good attornment for a servant may receive Rent for his Master Quaere If no Rent then is due nor the rent day come 28. H. 8. B. Attornment 40. T was agreed That where Land is fold by Deed indented and inrolled according to the Statute of 27. H. 8. c. 10. there because the use is changed by the bargain and sale by the said Statute and the buyer in possession and hath no means to compel the Tenant to attorn there he may distrain and avow without attornment Otherwise upon a grant by Fine for there he may have a Writ of Por quae servitia 30. H. 8. B. attornment 29. the end Note That if a man hath Common of Pasture to a certain number or Common of Estovers to a certain number of Carts and with Grant them over they pass without attornment because they are not to be taken by the hands of the Tenant but by the mouth of beasts and by cutting and carrying So see that when no attendancy nor payment is to be made by the Tenant there the thing passes without attornment 31. H. 8. B. Attornment 59. See by Whorewood the Kings Attorney where a man Leases for forty years and after Leases the same Land to another to have from the end of the first Term for twenty years this needs no attornment otherwise where he grants the Reversion as afore there ought to be attornment Quaere and see after And if a man Leases for ten years and after Leases to another for twenty years this is good for ten years without Attornment otherwise if there were a word of Reversion 37. H. 8. B. attornment 41. A man Leases Land for twenty years the Lessee Leases over for ten years rendring Rent and after grants the Reversion of the Term and Rent to a stranger this shall not pass without attornment by reason of the attendancie of the Rent otherwise if no Rent were reserved upon the second Lease for ten years for then there is no attendancie to be made nor action of Waste nor the like to be brought For as B. seems attornment is not necessary but to have avowry or an action of Waste 2. E. 6. B. attornment 45. See by Mountague chief Justice and Townsend That by a Feoffment of a Mannor the services pass without attornment of the Free-holders But B. seems that the Tenants ought to attorn 4. E. 6. B. attornment 30. Note If a man let a house and 200 acres of Land for Term of life and after grant the Reversion to another to have the said House Land and Tenements a Festo Sancti Micha●lis prox-post mortem vel determinationem interesse of Tenant for life for twenty one years then next following the Tenant for life dies before attornment yet the grant of the Reversion is good because that the words in the Habendum of the house and land is intended to be a Lease and a Rent was also reserved upon it and so a good Lease without attornment By Brown Sanders and Stamphord Justices Yet by B. Chief Justice t is but a Grant of a Reversion and no Lease but yet the grant is good without attornment because that t is to Commence after the death of Tenant for life so that the Tenant for life shall not be attending to the Grantee nor shall he avow upon him nor have an action of Waste or the like by judgment of the Court. 3. Mar. 1. B. Attornment 60. Leases 73. Attorney In these Cases a man shall not make an Attorney except in special case viz. Attaint Premuniri Appeal Per quae servitia Quid juris clam Quem redd reddit Nor in assigning of Errors nor at the Plures in case of contempt nor the Tenant in a Cessavit upon tender of arrearages Nor the pray' to be received in a Pr. quod redd Nor in an assise nor in an attachment Nec contra finem levat nor in any case where the Defendant shall be imprisoned Audita querela A man seised of 20. acres is bound in a Statute Marchant and makes a Feoffment of 15. to several persons and Execution is sued against one of them he shall have an Audita querela upon his surmise to have the other Feoffees to be contributory with him But if execution be sued against the Conusor himself he shall not have such contribution for this is upon his own act B. Audita querela 39. Yet if the Conusor dies and the Conusee sues Execution against the heir he shall have Contribution of the Feoffee So every of them shall have of the heir 25. H. 8. B. Audita querela 44. the end Averments See Tit. Pleadings Note Where a man pleads a recovery by a strange
shall have it for this name heires males of the body is but a name of purchase and Sir W. H. shall not have it as heir to Sir John but as purchaser B. Nosme 1. Livery 1. Discent 1. As if land is given to a man and his heires males of his body and he hath issue 2 sons the eldest hath issue a daughter and the father and the eldest son dies the younger brother shal have the land and yet he is not heir to his father And the same Law where land is given to a man and to his heirs females of his body and he hath a son and daughter and dies the daughter shall have the land and not the son B. Nosme 1. 40. And so where Tenant in tail is attainted of Treason before the Statute of 26. H. 8. his son shall have the land for he doth not claim onely as heir but by the Statute and per formam doni B. Nosme 1. Yet some were of a contrary opinion and took a Diversity where the gift is to the father himself and where t is to the heires of his body by remainder B. Nosme 1. 40. And therefore in 9. H. 6. if lands are given for term of life the remainder to the heires females of the body of I. S. who is dead and hath issue a son and daughter and after the Tenant for life dies the daughter shal not have the land for she is not heir for by Hare Master of the Rolls an antient apprentice there is a difference betwixt a gift in possession to a man and his heires females c. and a gift to a stranger the remainder to the heirs females of another for there he ought to be heir indeed when the remainder falls or otherwise the rem ' is void for ever B. Done 61. for though that the case holds place in the two cases put by Whorewood this is because that the gift was once vested which was in the father and therefore good law there otherwise in the principall case where the rem ' is not vested Yet by some the opinion of Whorewood is the better for where land is given to a man and his wife for term of life the rem ' to the heires males of the body of the man this remainder cannot be vested in the life of the wife for t is not a tail in the man by reason of the estate of the wife yet if he hath issue 2 sons and the eldest hath issue a daughter and dies the father and mother dies the younger son shall have the land as heir male and yet he is not heir indeed The same Law if such gift were the rem ' to the heirs females of the body of the man who hath a son and daughter and dies the daughter shall have the land though she is not heir The same Law where land is given to W. N. for life the remainder to I. S. for life the remainder to the heires males of the body of the said W. N. who hath 2 sons the eldest hath issue a daughter and dies W. N. and I. S. die the younger son shall have the land as heir male yet he is not heir indeed but his Neece is heir to his father for t is not matter of the first vesting nor of the remainder for where the first estate for term of life is executed the remainder over ut supra the remainder may depend in abeyance quousque c. ut supra But otherwise of a remainder to the right heires for none can have that but he which shall be heir indeed B. Nosme 40. and therefore t was agreed that the 2 remainders to the right heires of Sir John Hussey was forfeited by the attainder 37. H. 8. B Nosme If land discends to the daughter within age and after she is disseised the disseisor dies and his heir enters and after a son is born he born shal avoid the discent for he claims not as heir to his sister nor was he in esse at the time of the discent Lecture B. Discent 40. Discontinuance of Possession Recovery against Tenant in tail the reversion or remainder in the King in fee shall binde the Tenant in tail and the issue in tail but not the King But now by the Statute it shall not binde the issue in tail but that he may enter 32. H. 8. B. Discontinuance of possession 32. Note that t was agreed in the case betwixt the King and Anthony Lee Knight if the King Tenant in tail of the gift of another makes a lease for years or for life and hath issue and dies the issue may make another grant without reciting them for they are void by the death of the King Tenant in tail who granted and the heir of the King shall avoid it so that this shall not binde but during the life of the grantor for a grant without warranty or livery is no discontinuance and the King upon his grant doth not make livery And also every discontinuance is a wrong which the King cannot do the same law if he had granted in fee t is no discontinuance B. Patents 101. Discontinuance of Possession 35. Tail 39. Leases 61. And so see that the King may be Tenant in tail for when a man gives to the King in tail he cannot have a greater estate then the donor will depart with to him 38. H. 8. B. Tail 39. Release no Discontinuance See Tit. Releases Discontinuance of Proces Note that a Discontinuance puts the party to a new originall but where the Parol is without day this may be revived by a re-summons or re-attachment for the originall remains Regulae B. Discontinuance of proces 43. Dismes Tythes T was said that if a Parson demise his Glebe to a lay man there he shall pay Tythes contrary of the Parson himself that reserves them in his proper hands And that land first discharged of Tythes shall be ever discharged of them Yet if he which hath purchased a Mannor and Rectory which is discharged of Tythes Leases part of his demeanes the lessor shall have Tythes of that because that he hath the Parsonage 32. H. 8. B Dismes 17. Disseisor T was said for Law if A. leases the land of I. N. to me for years rendring rent the lessee enters and payes the rent to the lessor the lessor is a disseisor for countervails a commandment to enter and he which commands is a disseisor which note by his void lease 23. H. 8. B. Disseis ' 77. Distress Where land shall be charged with 2 distresses by Dower of part and so of partition See Tit. Avowry Note for Law that he which distrains beasts may put them into a close house if he will feed them for the distress in pound overt is but to the intent that the owner may feed them 33. H. 8. B. Distress 66. T was agreed for Law by the Justices that if a man distrain without
other and that A. brought a Formedon of th●● tenements and pleaded certain c. an● recovered by Action tried and the esta●● of the Plaintiff mean betwixt the title 〈◊〉 and his recovery judgeme●● si of such an estate assize c. to wh●● the other said that every of the said 〈◊〉 and N. were Villes by themselves and 〈◊〉 at issue and 't was found that they we●● several Villes and the seisin and disseis●● by which 't was awarded that this tena●● then Plaintiff should recover And because that he hath recovered these sain● Lands against the Plaintiff himself in H. judgement si assise And Shelly Just. held strongly that this recovery of Land in H. is no plea in an assise of Land in N. and therefore the assise ought to be awarded and so it seems to B. 25 H. 8. B. Judgement 66. If A. infeoffs B. upon condition c. to re-enter there if a man impleads B. who vouches A. and so recovers or if A. re-enters upon B. without cause and ●s impleaded and loses there in the one case and the other the condition is determined for the Land is recovered against him who made the condition 26 H. 8. B. Judgement 136. Note by Bromley chief Just. that a Judgement where there is no original is void as in an assise the Plaintiff appears and after makes a retraxit and after the Justices of Assize record an agreement betwixt them in nature of a Fine this is void and coram non Judice and shall not be executed by reason that no Original was pending but was determined before by the retraxit For without Original they have not Commission to hold Plea and then they are not Judges of this cause 2 M. 1. B. Judgement 114. Issues joyns Issues joyned Trespass upon the case quod def assumpsit deliberat quer 4 pannos laneos and he pleads quod assumpsit liberare 4 pannos lineos without that qd assumpsit modo forma and so at issue And 't is found that he assumed to deliver 2 pannos laneos sed non 4 so see that this issue though that it comes in a traverse doth not amount but to the general issue the Pl. recovered dammages for the 2 and was barred and amercied for the rest But otherwise 't is if the issue be If A. and B. infeoffed the tenant in a Precipe quod reddat necne and 't is found that A. infeoffed him but that A. and B. did not infeoff him this is found against the tenant in toto or against him who pleads such Feoffment which is so found 32. H. 8. B. Issues joyns 80 Verdict 90. Informed in the Excheq against A. B. for buying Wools betwixt shearing time and the Assumption such a year of C. D. contra forma Statuti where 't is not cloth nor he did not make thereof cloth nor yarn He sees that he did not buy of C. D. contra formam Statut. propt c. And no issue for 't is not material nor traversable whether he bought of C. D. or of E. F. or of another but whether he bought them contra formam Statut. necne And therefore the Issue shall be that he did not buy modo forma c. 33. H. 8. B. Issues joyns 81. Negativa pregnans 54. Travers per 367. In waste issue was taken if the defendant cut twenty Oaks there if the Jury finde ten and not the rest the Plaintiff shall recover for the ten and shall be amercied for the rest 2 M. 1. B. Issues joyns 80. the middle Issues returns Issues returned See Tit. Intrusion Jurisdiction If the Lord of a Mannor claim the Tythes of such Lands in D. to finde a Chaplain in D. and the Parochians claim them also for the same purpose 't is said for Law that the Lay Court shall have jurisdiction betwixt them and not the Spiritual Court 25 H. 8. B. Jurisdiction 95. 'T was said where a man pleads a plea in Banco ultra mare it shall be condemned at this day because that it cannot be tried in England 36 H. 8. B. Jurisdiction 29. Jurors Trial of a Peer of the Realm arraigned upon an Indictment and appeal diversity See Tit. Trial and Tit. Enquest Where Jurors may take conusance and notice of a thing in another County See Tit. Attaint Jury took a Scroll of the Plaintiff which was not delivered to them in Court and passed for the Plaintiff and because that this matter appeared to the Court by examination therefore the Plaintiff shall not have Judgement 3 M. 1. B. Jurors 8. Leet NOte for Law if a pain be put upon a man in a Leet for to redress a Nusance by a day sub poena 10 l. and after 't is presented that he did it not and shall forfeit the pain this is a good presentment and the pain shall not be otherwise affeered And the Lord shall have an Action of Debt clearly but he cannot distrain and make avowry except by prescription of usage to distrain and make avowry 23 H. 8. B. Leet 37. Note where the Statute of Magna Charta cap. 25. saith Et visus de Fran●hi-plegio tunc fiat ad illum Terminum St. Michaelis sine occasione this is ●●tended the Leet of the Tourne of the Sheriff and not other Leets 25 H. 8. B. Leet 23 the end Leases By Fitz-James ch Just. Englefield●ust ●ust and many others if tenant for life ●ases Land for yeers rendring rent and ●●es the Lease is void and then the rent is ●etermined The same Law of a Parson ●nd though the successor receives the rent ●he Lease is not good against him for ●hen 't is void by the death of the Lessor 〈◊〉 cannot be perfected by no acceptance B. Leases 19. Debt 122. Otherwise 〈◊〉 seems of a Lease for life made by a Par●●● rendring rent and the successor accepts 〈◊〉 rent this affirms the Lease for life 24 〈◊〉 8. B. Leases 19. A man leases for ten yeers and the ne● day leases the same Land to another fo● twenty yeers this is a good Lease for th● last ten yeers of the second Lease 26 H. 8. B. Leases 48. Where a Lease for 300 or 400 yee●● shall be Mortm in See Tit. Mortmain A man leases a house cum pertin ● Land shall pass by these words cum per● Contrary if a man leases a house cu● omnibus terris eidem pertin there 〈◊〉 Lands to this used pass and many Gra●● are de omnibus terris in D. nuper M● nasterii de G. pertin and especially● heavers that it hath pertained de tempor● c. 31 H. 8. B. Leases 55. If a Parson of a Church leases for 〈◊〉 and dies the successor accepts fealty 〈◊〉 shall be bound by this during his 〈◊〉 Contra upon a Lease for yeers made 〈◊〉 him this shall not binde the successor 〈◊〉 acceptance of the rent for 't was void 〈◊〉 the death of the Lessor 32 H. 8. 〈◊〉
King and goe quite as if he had holden of a common person Contra of Tenure in Capite 32 H. 8. B. Livery 62. Note that the heir of him who holds of the King in Capite in Soccage shall not render primer seisin to the King for all his Lands but onely for those Lands holden in Soccage in Capite Contrary of him who holds in Knight service in Capite by the experience of the Exchequer And the heir which sues Livery shall have in every County a several livery And note that livery is where the heir hath been in Ward and comes to full age he shall have livery extra manus Regis And primer seisin● is where the heir is of full age at the time of the death of his ancestor or where his tenant holds in Soccage in Capite and dies there the King shall have primer seisin of the Land which amounts to the like charge to the heir as the livery is 38 H. 8. B. Livery 60. Note that a man cannot sue livery in the Chancery for Land in Wales Nor in a County Palatine by experience Time H. 8. B. Livery 63. If the heir of cestuy que use be of full age at the time of the death of his ancestor the King shall not have primer seisin for 't is not given by the Stat. but onely the ward of Land and body And if a will were declared by cestuy que use which is not performed during the nonage of the heir there the King shall not have the Land but the heir at full age shall prove his age and shall goe quite by experience in the Exchequer Casus B. Livery 77. the middle Mainprise IF a man be arrested in London and finds sureties to the Plaintiff there and after is dismissed in banco by Writ of priviledge and after a Procedendo comes in the same suit to the court of London this shall not revive the first mainprise or suretiship for once dismissed and always dismissed And 't is said that after a man hath found mainprise to a Bill in the Kings Bench and after is at issue or demurrer and after is awarded to replead and to make a new declaration the Mainprise is by this discharged Contrary where they manuceperunt usque ad finem pliti and where the original remains 32 H. 8. B. Mainprise 96. If a man be convicted of Felony and remains in prison and after the King pardons him there the Justices of Goal-delivery may bail him till the next Sessions o● Goal-delivery so that he may then com● with his Pardon and plead it 2 E. 6. B Mainprise 94. Maintenance Note by all where Tenant in Tayl o● for term of Life is impleaded he in rem● or reversion may maintain and give of his proper money to maintain for safeguard of his interest for 't was agreed that he who hath an interest in the Land may maintain to save it 1 E. 6. B. Maintenance 53. Note that upon the Statute of buying Titles and to maintain that a man shal● not buy Land except the vendor hath been in possession c. by a yeer before 't was agreed by Mountague chief Justice and by all of Serjeants Inne in Fleet-street that if a man morgages his Land and redeems it he may sell his Land infra unum annum prox c. without danger of the State aforesaid for so is the intendment of the Statute for the ancient Statutes are That none shall maintain and yet a ●an may maintain his Cousin and so of ●e like for 't is not intended but of un●wful maintenance and so of a preten●d Title and not of that which is clear ●itle 6 E. 6. B. Maintenance 38. Mannor A man cannot make a Mannor at this ●ay notwithstanding that he gives Land 〈◊〉 many severally in Tayl to hold of him 〈◊〉 Services and suit of his Court for he ●ay make a Tenure but not a Court for ● Court cannot be but by continuance cu●● contrarium memoria hominum non ●●sist it And 't is said for Law that if a ●annor be and all the Free-tenures es●eat to the Lord but one or if he pur●hases all but one there after this the Mannor is extinct for there cannot be a Mannor except there be a Court-Baron 〈◊〉 it And a Court-Baron cannot be ●olden but before Suitors and not before 〈◊〉 Suitor therefore one Free-holder ●●ely cannot make a Mannor 33 H. 8. ● Comprise 31. Mannor 5. Misnosmer Misnamer A Statute was acknowledged by man in the name of I. S. de D. in Co● E. Butcher and he was taken upon Pr●cess and said in avoydance of the Statut● that he was always dwelling at S. a●● not at D. and was a Husbandman and n● a Butcher and that I. S. of D. acknowledged the Statute without this that he the same person that acknowledged i● which Plea was refused for a great inconvenience that might fall upon it 36 H. B. Misnosmer 34. the end Monstrans de faits Shewing of Deeds See that he which pleads a Deed Record or which declares upon a Deed Record it behoves him to shew it Oyer of those is always to be had by 〈◊〉 which is charged by it Regulae Monstrans 165. Oyer de Recordes 1● the end Mortdauncestor By the best opinion in the Comm●● Bench if two purchase jointly to them ● to the heires of one and he which hath the Fee dies and after the other dies the heir of the first shall not have a Mortdauncestor and B. seems the reason to be because the Fee was not executed in Possession by reason of the survivor of the other and t is in effect now but the discent of a reversion and the wife of him who had the Fee shall not have Dower and yet he might have forfeited the Fee simple or given it by Feoffement but not by grant of the Reversion 12. E. 4. 2. and joyn the Mise in a Writ of Right for he in Reversion and the Tenant for life may do it Quaere if he may release it 29. H. 8. B. Mortdauncestor 59. Mortmain Lord and Tenant the Tenant leases for life to I S. the remainder to an Abbot and his successors the Lord need not to make claim till the Tenant for life be dead for if he will wave the Remainder t is not Mortmain But of a grant of a Reversion with Attornment t is otherwise And if the Tenant makes a Feoffment in Fee to the use of A. for life and after to the use of an Abbot and his successors there t is not Mortmain till the Tenant for life in use dies and he in Remainder takes the profits Note that appropriation of an advowson without licence is Mortmain 25. H 8. B. Mortmain 37. If a man leases to an Abbot and his successors or to another Religious person for a 100 years and so from a 100. years to a 100 years untill 300 years be incurred this is one Lease
barre the demandant by which the demandant recovers and the tenant over in value that this land recovered in value shall not go to me in reversion after the death of the tenant for life nor the reversion of the land recovered in value shall not be in me in the life of tenant for life and so 't is holden at this day 25. H. 8. B. Recovery in value 33. Note by some where a writ of entry in the Post is brought against a husband and wife where the wifis tenant in taile and they vouch overe and so the demandant recovers against the husband and wife and they over in value if the wife tenant in taile dyes and the husband survives this shall not bind the issue in taile for the recompence shall go to the survivor and then it shall not bind the issue in taile Yet B. seems that this opinion is not law for the recompence shall go as the first land which was recovered should go And voucher by husband and wife shall be intended for the interest of the wife 25. H. 8. B. Recovery in value 27. the end Tenant for life the remainder over or tenant in taile the remainder over is impleaded by a writ of entry in the Post and he vouches a stranger the demandant recovers against the tenant and the tenant over in value this shall bind him in remainder by Monntague Just. and others for the recompence shall go to him in remainder But yet in the case of the Lord Zouch and Stowell in the Chancery the law was determined otherwise by all the Justices B. seems the reason because that when he vouches a stranger the recompence shall not go to him in remainder contrary if he vouches the donor or his heir who is privy But after this day many put in●ure to bind the remainder 27. H. 8. B. Recovery in value 28. Recovery against Feoffees seised to use in tailes See Tit Feoffements to uses 'T is held that where tenant for life is the remainder over in tail or for life and the tenant for life is impleaded and vouches him in remainder who vouches over one who hath title of Formedon and so the recovery passes by voucher there the issue of him who hath title of Formedon may bring his Formedon and recover against the tenant for life for the recompence supposed shall not go to the tenant for life and therefore he may recover for his ancestor warranted but the remainder and not the estate for terme of life and therefore the tenant for life cannot bind him by the recovery for he did not warrant to him And therefore in such case the sure way is to make the tenant for life to pray in aide of him in remainder and they to joyn and vouch him who hath title of Formedon and so to passe the recovery for there the recompence shall go to both 30. H. 8. B. Recovery in value 30. 'T was agreed that if tenant in taile the reversion to the King suffers a recovery this shall bind him and his issue but not the King by the common law See now the Statute of thereof that it shall not bind the issue 33. H. 8. B. Recovery in value 31. Taile 41. the end Relation Where an office found for the King shall relate where not See Tit. Intrusion Of the Relation of an Act of Parliament See Tit. Parliament Note that the attainder of Treason by Act of Parliament shall not have elder relation then to the first day of the Parliament except it be by speciall words that he shall forfeit his lands that he had such a day and after 35. H. 8. B. Relation 43. 'T is held for good Law that by attainder of felony by verdict a man shall forfeit all his lands that he had the day of his felony done or ever after for this shall have relation to the Act contra upon an attainder by out lawry For B. seems there that he shall not forfeit but those which he had the time of the outlawry pronounced or after for outlawry hath not relation as a verdict hath Time H. 8. B. Relation 42. the end Relation of an Inrolment See Tit. Faitz inrol Releases Husband and wife purchase in fee and after they lease for years by Indenture and after the husband releases to the lessee and his heirs this is no discontinuance and yet this gives a freehold to the lessee during the life of the husband Per plures without doubt 29. H. 8. B. Releases 81. G. Chancery was possessed of an Indenture and lost it and I. S. found it to whom the said G. C. released all actions and demands and after the said I. S. gave the same Indentrue to John Tison and after the said G. C. brought in action of detinue against the said I. T. who pleaded that the said I. S. found the Indenture and that the said G. C. released to the said I. S. all actions and demandes and after the said I. S. gave the said Indenture to the said I. T. Judgment if action And t' was agreed in the common Bench the case being of land demanded ibidem that this is a good barre and that the release of all demandes shall exclude the party of seisure of the thing and of his entry into the land and of the property of the chattell which he had before And it was moved in the Kings bench and they were of the same opinion and said that the reason is because that entry in land and seisure of goods are demandes in Law 34. H. 8. B. Releases 90. Relief See Tit. Debt Remainder See Tit. Discent Remitter No Remitter against an Act of Parliament See Tit. Parliament Note a Per curiam if Tenant in Taile makes a Feoffement to his use in Fee before the statute of uses made 27. H. 8. and dyes before the said Stat●te his heir within age and after the Statute is made before the full age of the heir by which the heir is in possession by the Statute he shall not be remitted by it Contrary of a discent after the Satute for this shall be a remitter 34. H. 8. B. Remitter 49 If a man hath a Tittle of entry and not a right of entry as by escheat mort●maine assent by a woman to a ravisho●● and the like and takes an estate of th● terretenant he shall not be remited for he hath but a Tittle And a ma● cannot be remitted but in respect o● a right before as where a man is di●seised and takes an estate of the disseisor he is remitted for he had a right of entry before And the same Law where a man decaies his Tenements or converts Land from tillage into pasture against the Statute and makes an estate for life to his Lord he shall have no other estate for he had but a Title of entry and not a right of entry Quaere for Non adjudicatur 34. H. 8. B.
that Tail may be of a Copyhold and that a Formedon mayly of it in Discender by Protestation in nature of a Writ of Formedon in Discender at common Law and good by all the Justices for though that a Formedon in Discender was not given but by Statute yet now this Writ lies at common Law and it shall be intended that this hath been a custome there de tempore c. and the Demandant shall recover by advise of all the Justices 15 H 8. B Tenant per Copy 24. Where a Stuard or under-stuard may let by Copy e contra See Tit Court baron Note that if a man leases a Mannor for yeeres in which are Copy-holds and after a Copyholder dies the termer of the Mannor grants the land by Copy for three lives this is good for the custome through all England is that the Lord for the time being may demise by Copy c. and this notwithstanding that hee is but durante bene placit or at Will And 't is held that such Tenant of a Mannor cannot demise reserving lesse rent then the ancient rent but he ought to reserve the ancient rent or more quaere of that Tenant by sufferance see Tit Tenant at Will Tender 'T is said for Law that upon a Lease for yeers rendring rent with re-entry the Lessee ought to bee ready all the day and make attendance to offer it and it suffices for the Lessor to come any time of the day yet the entry is that the one and the other attended the intire day quaere inde 36 H 8. B Conditions 192. the end Entre Congeable 2. the end Note that 't was agreed in the Serjeants Case that where a man leases Land for yeeres rendring rent and for default of payment a re-entry it suffices for the Lessee to tender the rent upon the Land the last houre of the last day of the Moneth if the money may bee told in that time And so it sufficeth for the Lessor to demand it the same houre 4 M 1. B Tender 41. If a man Leases for yeeres rendring rent at Michaelmasse and other Covenants if hee bee bound in an obligation to pay the rent precisely there hee shall seeke the Lessor but if hee be bound to perform the Covenants c. The tender upon the land sufficeth for there the payment is of the nature of the Rent reserved Contrary in the first Case 6 E 6. B Tender 20. Tenures What shall bee a Tenure and what a Condition see Tit. Conditions What shall bee a Tenure in Capite of the King what not see Tit. Liverie A man makes a Feoffment of the moytie of his Land the Lessee shall hold of the Lord by the intyre services which the intire Land was holden before for the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum tenend pro particula holds not place here for a moytie is not particula the same Lawe of a third part and the like which goes by the halfe and the whole contrary of an acre or of two acres in certain And if a man holds two acres by a hauke and makes a Feoffment in Fee of one acre the Feoffee shall hold it by a hauke and the Feoffor shall hold the acre by another hauke 29 H 8. B Tenures 64. Restitution by Parliament revives a Seigniory or Tenure which was extinct by attainder of Treason by Parliament See Tit. Extinguishment See in the Exchequer 3 E 3. Ro 2. 't was found that a man held of the King in Knight service in capite ut de honore suo de Rayleghe and 't was taken no tenure in capite but a tenure of the honour and therefore his heir shall have ouster Omaine of his other Lands which should not be if it had been in capite for then the King shall have all in Ward by his Prerogative yet otherwise 't is if the Honour be annexed to the Crown for then the Honour is in capite And 11 H 7. the Honour of Rayleghe was annexed to the Crown therefore now 't is in capite And where the King gives Land to hold of him by fealty and 2 d. pro omnibus servitiis this is Socage in capite for 't is of the person of the King otherwise if it were to hold ut de manerio de R. 33. H 8. B Tenures 94. 'T is held that if a man made a Feoffment of land before the Stat of Quia emptores terrarum to hold of him and to make suit to his Court this is good if he hath a Court But a man cannot commence a Court by tenure made where he had not a Mannor before for there the services should be holden of his person B Tenures 34. And a man cannot make a Mannor at this day though that he gives Land in tayl to hold of him and by suit of his Court for he cannot make a Court for a Court cannot be but by continuance And so a Man may make a tenure but no Mannor nor Court for a Mannor and Court cannot be but by usage had de tempore cujus contrarium memoria hominum non existit Testament Testament by a Feme Covert of the assent of the husband See Tit Devise A man devises his Land to I S this shall be taken but for term of his life but if he saith paying a 100. l. to W N this shall be intended a Fee-simple and if he doth not pay it in his life yet if his Heir or Executor pay it that suffises Quaere of his Assignee 29 H 8. B Testament 18. If a man holds three severall Mannors of three severall Lords in Knight service and every of them of equall value he cannot make his will of two of the Mannors leaving the third Mannor to the Heir but of two parts of every Mannor for otherwise he shall prejudice the other two Lords 35 H 8. B Testament 19. Note by the Doctors of the Civill-Law and Serjeants of the Common-Law if a man makes his Testament and names no Executors this is no Testament but yet 't is a good Will of the Land in it for those are not Testamentary but in the first where Executors want yet the Legacies shall be paid But if it appears that he made part of the Testament and not the whole there the Legacies shall not be paid And where a man makes a Testament and Executors and they refuse yet the Legacies shall be paid for there is no default in the Testator and the Testament shall be annexed to Letters of Administration 37 H 8. B Testament 20. Note for Law by the Chancellor of England and Justices That if the Tenant who holds of the King in Knight service in capite gives all his Land to a Stranger by act executed in his life and dyes yet the King shall have the third part in Ward and shall have the Heir in Ward if he be within age And if of full age he shall have