Selected quad for the lemma: land_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
land_n manor_n meadow_n pasture_n 1,600 5 9.7852 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A68633 An exposition of certaine difficult and obscure words, and termes of the lawes of this realme, newly set foorth and augmented, both in french and English, for the helpe of such younge students as are desirous to attaine the knowledge of ye same. Whereunto are also added the olde Tenures; Expositiones terminorum legum Anglorum. English and Law French Rastell, John, d. 1536.; Rastell, William, 1508?-1565. 1579 (1579) STC 20706.5; ESTC S115758 196,680 894

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

great discretiō take the helpe and opinion of some skilful Surgeon to consider thereof before they determine vpon the case Mainprise MAinprise is when a mā is arrested by capi as then the Judges may deliuer his bodie to certeine menne for to keepe and to bringe him before them at a certaine daye and these be called mainpernours and if the partye appeare not at the daye assigned the mainpernoures shal be amerced Mannour MAnnour is a thinge compounde of diuers thinges as of a house lande arrable pasture meadowe woode rent auowson court baron and such like make a manor this ought to be by longe contynuaunce of time to the contrary● whereof mans memory cannot tel for at this day a manor cānot be made because a court baron cānot nowe be made and a manour cannot be w tout a court baron suters or fréeholders two at the least for if all the fréeholdes except one escheate to the lord or if he purchase al except one there his manor is gone for that it cannot bée a mannor without a court Baron as is aforesaid and a court baron cannot bée holden but before suters not before one suter therfore where but one fréehold or fréeholder is there cannot bée a mannour Manumission MAnumission is in ii sortes the one is a manumission expressed the other a manumissiō implyed or secreat Manumission expressed is when the Lord maketh a déed to his villen to enfraunches hym by this word Manumittere which is as much to say as to let one goe out of an other mans hands or power The manner of manumittinge or infraunchising in old time most vsually was thus The Lorde in presence of hys neyghbours toke the bonde manne by the heade saying I wil that this manne be frée and therewyth shewed him forwarde out of hys handes and by this hée was frée without anye more a doe Manumissyon implyed wythout this woode Manumittere is when the lorde maketh an obligation to his villē to pay him money at a certein daye or suith him wher he might enter without sute or graunteth vnto his vyllen an annitie or lesseth lande to him by déede for yeres or for life in dyuers such like cases y e villen thereby is made frée Maximes MAximes be the foundations of the lawe the conclusions of reason and are causes efficient certein vniuersall propositions soe sure and perfect that they may not bée at any time impeached or impugned but ought alwaies to bée obserued and holden as strong principalles and aucthorities of thēselues although they cannot be proued by force of argument or demonstratiōs logicall but are knowen by enduction by y e way of sence memory As for example it is a maxime that if a man haue issue 2. sonnes by diuers women and the one of them purchase landes in fée and dieth wythout issue the other brother shall neuer be hys heyre c. Also it is an othermaxime that lāds shal discēd frō the father to y e sōne ▪ but not frō the sōne to y e father for that is an ascention c. diuers such like there be Maynour MAynour is when a théefe hath stolne and is followed with hue and cry and taken hauing y t founde about him which he stole that is called the maynour And so we cōmonly vse to saye when we finde one doing of an vnlawfull act that wée tooke him with the maynour or maner Misprision MIsprision is when on knoweth that an other hath committed treason or felony and will not discouer him to the Q. or to her councell or to any magistrat but doth conceale the same A chapleine had fixed an olde seale of a patent to a newe patent of non residence and this was holden to bée misprision of treason onely and noe counterfeiting of the Q. seale Also if a man knowe mony to be counterfet bringe the same out of Irelād hither into England and vtter it in payment this is but mysprision of treason and no treason soe it is in diuers such like cases And in al cases of misprision of treason y e partie offendor shall forfayt his goods for euer and y ● profets of his landes for terme of his life and his body to prison at the Q. pleasure And for misprision of felonie or trespas y e offēdour shalbée committed to prison vntill hée haue founde suerties or pledges for his fine which shal be assessed by y e ducretion of y t Justices before whom he was conuict And note that in euerie treason or felonye is included misprision and where any hath cōmitted treason or felony the Q. may cause y e sāe to be indited and arramed but of misprision onely if she will Shewinge of deedes or Recordes SHewinge of déedes or Recordes is as if for example an actyon of dette be brought against one vppon an obligation or by Executors c. there after that the pleyntife hath declared he ought to shewe his obligatiō or y ● executour the testamēt to the court and soe it is of Recordes And the diuersitye béetwene shewing of deeds or Recordes hering of déeds or records is thus he y ● pleades the deede or record or declares vppon it to him it doth appertaine to shewe the same And the other agaynst whom such déede or record is pleaded or declared and is thereby to bée charged may demaunde hearing of the same déed or record which his aduersarie brigeth or pleadeth against him Mortgage or Morgage MOrtgage or Morgage is whē a mā maketh a feoffement to another on such condition that if the feoffour pay to the feoffée at a certaine day xl li. of money that then the feoffour may reenter c. In thys case the feffée is called tenaunt in morgage And as a mā may make a feoffement in fée in morgage so hée may make a gift in tayle or a lease for terme of life or for term of yeares in morgage And it seemeth that the cause why it is called morgage is for that it standeth in doubt whether the feoffor will pay the money at the day appointed or not and if hée fayle to pay then y ● land which hée layed in gage vppon condition of paymēt of y e money is gone from him for euer so dead to him vpō cōditiō But if he pay y ● money then is the gage dead as to y ● tenāt y t is to say the feoffée for this cause it is called in latin mortuum vadium as master Littleton sayth or rather mortuum vas as I thinke Mortmaine MOrtmaine was whē lands were geuen to a house of religion or to a cōpany which be corporat by y e kings graūt then the land is cōe into mortmain that is to say in English a dead hand and the kynge or the lord of whō y e lād to holden may enter into thē Mulier MUlier is a word vsed in our lawe but howe aptly I cannot tell nor doe wel knowe howe
may well pursue and if I take it presently in the hye way or in an others groūd y ● taking is lawful aswell there as vppon the land charged to whomsoeuer y ● propertie of the goodes bee Also for fines and amercemēts which be assessed in a leete one may alway take the goodes of him that is so amerced in whose ground so euer they bée within the iurisdictyon of the court as it is sayd And when one hath takē a distresse it beeh●●ueth hym to bringe it to the commen pound or els hée may kéepe it in an others ground so that hée géeue notice to the party that hée if the distresse be a quicke beast may géeue to it foode and then if the beast dye for defaut of foode hee that was dystrayned shall bee at the losse and then the other may distrayne agayne for the same rent or duitie But if hee brynge the dystresse to a holde or out of the coūty that the sherife may not make deliueraunce vppon the repleuin then the party vppon the retorne of the sherife shall haue a writ of Withernam directed to the sherife that he take as many of hys beastes or as much goodes of the other in his kéepinge tyll that he hath made deliuerāce of the first distres Also if they bee in a forfelet or Castell the Sherife may take with him the power of the County beate downe the Castel as it appeareth by y ● statute Westm 1. cap. xvii Therefore looke the statute Diuorce DIuorce so called of diuortium cōminge of the verbe diuorto which signifieth to returne backe As when a mā is diuorced frō his wife hée returneth her backe home to her father or other frends or to the place from whē●e he had her by such diuorce the mariage is defeated and vndone Donor donee DOnor is hee whych gyueth lands or tenements to an other in tayle and hée to whom the same is so gyuen is called donée Double plea. DOuble plee is where the defendaunt or tenant in any accion pleadeth a plée in the which ii matters be comprehēded and euery one by himselfe is a sufficyent barre or aunswere to the action then such a doublee plee shall not bée admitted for a plée except one depend vpon an other and in such case if he may not haue the last plée without the first plée then such a double plee shal be wel suffered Ryght RIght is where one hath a thing that was taken from an other wrongfully as by disseisin or putting out or such like And the challenge or claime that hée hath who should haue y e thing is called right Right of entrie RIght of entrie is when one seysed of land in fee is therof disseised Now the disseisée hath right to enter into y ● land may so do whē he wyll or els hée may haue a writ of ryght against the disseisour Dures DUres is where one is kept in prison or restrained frō his liberty contrary to the order of the lawe and if such a person so beinge in dures make any especialtie or obligation by reason of such imprisonment such a déede is voyde in the lawe and in an actyon brought vppon such an especialtie hee may say that it was made by dures of imprysonment but if a man bee arrested vppon any accion at the suite of an other though the cause of the accion be not good nor trewe if hée make any obligation to a straunger béeinge in prison by such arrest yet it shall not bee sayed by dures but if hée make an obligation to hym at whose suit he was arrested to bée dyscharged of such imprisonment then it shal be said dures Eire Iustices EIre Justices or Itinerant as we call them were Justices that vsed to ryde from place to place through out the realme to administer Justice Embrasour or Embraceour EMbrasour or Embraceour is he that when a matter is in trial béetwéene party and party commeth to the Barre with one of the partyes hauinge receyued some rewarde soe to doe and speaketh in the case or priuely laboreth the Jurie or standeth there to furuey or ouerlooke thē thereby to put them in feare doubt of y ● matter But men that are learned in the laws may speake in the case for their fée but they may not labour the Jurye and if they take money soe to doe they alsoe are embrasors Encrochment ENcrochment is sayed when the Lorde hath gotten seisine of more rent or seruices of hys tonaunt then of right is due or ought to bée payed or done vnto him As if the tenaunt holde slande of hys Lorde by fealtye and ij s. rent yerelye And nowe of late tyme the Lord hath gotten seysine of thrée shillings rent or of homage or Escuage or such lyke Then thys is called an Encrochment of that rent or seruice Enheritance ENheritaunce is such estate in landes or tenements or other thinges as may be inherited by the heire whether it be of estate in fée simple or taile by discent from any of hys ▪ Auncesters or by hys owne purchase And Enheritaunce is deuided into two sortes that is to say enheritāce corporate enheritance incorporate Enheritance corporate are mesuages landes meadowes pastures rentes and such lyke that haue substaunce in them selues and may haue contynuaunce alwayes And these ar called corporal things Enheritaunce incorporate are aduowsens villaynes wayes comons Courts fishings and such like that are or may be appendant or appurtenant to inheritances corporate Equitie EQuitie is in two sorts differing much the one from the other and are of contrarye effectes for the one doth abridge diminishe and take from y e letter of y ● law The other doth inlarge amplifie and adde therunto The first is thus defined Equitie is the correction of a lawe generally made in that part wherein it faileth which correction of y e generall wordes is much vsed in our lawe As if for example when an act of parliament is made that whoesoeuer doth such a thinge shal be a sclon and shal suffer death yet if a madde manne or an infaunt of yonge yeres that hath noe discretion doe the same they shal be no felōs nor suffer death therefore Also if a statute were made that al personnes that shal receiue or gene meate and drinke or other succour to any that shal do such a thing shal bée accessorie to hys offence and shal suffer death if they did knowe of the fact yet not withstandinge one doth such an act and commeth to his wife whoe knowing thereof doth receiue him and giues him meat and drinke shée shall not bée accessory nor felon for in the generaltie of the said wordes of y e lawe he that is mad nor y e infant nor the wife were included in meaning And thus equity doth correct y ● generality of y ● law in those cases the general words are by equitye abrydged The other equitie is defined after this sorte Equitye is when the wordes of
dyd nothinge for it by meanes whereof hospitalyty decaied in the place where it ought to haue bē chefelye mayntained namelye in the parishe where the benefice was and where the profites dyd growe so it continueth to this day to y ● great hinderance of lerninge y ● empouerishmēt of y ● ministery y ● infamy of y ● gospel professor therof Approouement APprouemēt is wher a man hath common in the lords wast groūd and the Lorde encloseth part of the wast for himselfe leapinge neuer the lesse sufficient comon w t egresse regresse for the cōmoners This enclosinge is called approouement Arbiterment ARbiterment is an awarde determination or iudgement which one or moe maketh at the request of ij parties at the least for vpō some det trespas or other controuersie had betwéene the sayed parties And this is called in latin Arbitratus and arbitrium and they that make y e award or arbiterment are called Arbitri in english Arbitrators Arest ARest is when one is taken and resirayned from his libertye none shal be arrested for debt trespas detinue or other cause of action but by vertue of precepte or cōmaundemēt out of some court But for treason felony or breaking of the peace euery mā hath aucthority to arest without warrant or precept and wher one shal be arrested for felony it behooueth y ● there hath bene some felony done and that he be suspected of y e same felonye or otherwise hée may haue against hym that soe did arest him a writte of false imprisonment Arrerages ARrerages are duities behinde vnpayed after the dayes and tymes in which they were due and ought to haue ben payed whether they be rēt of a maner orany other thing reserued Assets ASsets is in ij sortes the one called Assets per discent the other Assets enter maynes Assets per discent is where a man is bound in an obligation and dieth seised of lāds in fée simple which discend to his heire but maketh no executors or if he make executors leaueth not sufficient goods to discharge this obligation thē this land shal be called assets that is to say enough or sufficient to pay the same det and by that meanes the heire shal bee charged as farre as the lande soe to hym dyscended wyll stretch But if he haue aliened before the obligation be put in suite hée is discharged Also when a man seysed of lāds in taile or in y e right of his wife alieneth the same witt warrantie and hath in value as much land in fée simple which discendeth to hys heire who is also heire in taile or heire to y e woman Nowe if the heire after the discease of his auncestour bring a writ of formedon or sur Cui in vita for the lande so aliened then hée shalbée barred by reason of the warranty y e land so discēded which is as much in value as that that was sold so thereby hée hath receiued noe preiudice therefore this land is called Assets per discēt Assets ent ' mains is whē a man indebted as before is said maketh executors leaueth to thē sufficient to pay or some cōmoditie or profit is coē to thē in right of their testator this is said as●●ts ī their hāds Assignee ASsignee is he to whō a thing is appointed or assigned to be occupyed paied or don and is alwaies such a persō which occupieth or hath y ● thing so assigned in his owne right for him selfe And of assignées there bée ii sorts Nāely assignee in déed and assignée in law Assignée in déed is when a leas is graūted to a mā to his assignées or with out those words assignées y ● grantee giueth graūteth or felleth the same leas to an other he is his assignée in déede Assignée in law is euery executor named by y ● testator ī his testamēt as if a leas be made to a mā to his assignées as is aforesaid he maketh his executours dieth w tout assignemēt of the leas to any other nowe y e executors shal haue y e sāe leas because they are his assignées in law so it is in diuers other like cases Attainder ATtainder is a cōuiction of any person of a cryme or fault whereof he was not cōuiet before as if a man haue cōmitted felony Treason or such like therof is endited arraigned foūd giltie hath iudgment then he is said to be attainted And this may be ii ways the one vpon apparance the other vpon default The attainder vppon apparance is by confession Battaile or verdict The attainder vppon default is by processe Auerment AUerment is where a man pleadeth a plée in abatement of the writ or barre of the accion which hée sayth hée is ready to proue as the court wil award this offer to proue his plée is called an auerment Auerpeny AUerpeny that is to bée quite of diuers sūmes of money for the kinges auerages Auncien demesne AUncien demesne are certein tenures holden of those mannours that were in the hāds of saint Edward the confessour and the which hée made to be written in a booke called Domes day subtitulo regis and all the lands holden of the sayd manours be auncien demesne and the tenaunts shal not be impleded out of the said manor and if they bée they may shew the matter and abate the writte but if they aunswere to the writte and iudgment be geuen then the lands become franke see for euer Also the tenauntes in auncien demesne be free of tolle for al things cōcerning their sustenāce husbandry in auncien demesne for such lands they shall not be put or impaneled vpō any enquest But all the lands in aunciē demesne that are in the Kynges hands be franke fée and pledable at the common lawe See more after in the title Sokmanes Auowry AUowry is where one taketh a distresse for rent or other thing the other sueth a repleuin thē he y t hath takē it shal iustify in his plee for what cause he tooke it and so auowe the taking and y t is called his auowry Baile BAile is when a man is taken or arrested for felony suspicion of felony endited of felony or any such case so that hée is restrained of his libertie And beinge by lawe baileable offreth suerty to those that haue aucthoritie to baile him which suerties are bounde for him to the Quéenes vse in a certeine sūme of money or body for body y t he shall appere before the Justices of gaole deliuery at y ● next sessiō c. Thē vpon the bonds of these suerties as is aforesayd he is bailed that is to say set at libertie vntyll the day appointed for his apparance Bailement BAilement is a deliuery of things whether it be of writings goods or stuffe to an other some times to be redeliuered backe to y ● bailor y t is to say to him y t so deliuered it
sue any accyon in the Quéens court if he remaine excommunicate xl daies wil not be iustified by his Ordinarie then the Bishoppe shall sende hys letter patent to the Chauncellour and thereupon it shal be commaunded to the sheriffe to take the body of hym y ● is accursed by a writte called de Excommunicato capiendo til hée hath made agréement wyth the Church for the contempt and wronge and when hée is iustified and hath made gréement then the bishop shal send his letters to y ● Quéene certifiyng the same and then it shal be commaunded to the shirife to deuer him by a writ called Excommunicato deliberando Exchange EXchaunge is where a man is seysed of certaine land and an other manne is seysed of other lande if they by a déede indented or without déede if the Landes be in one selfe countie exchaunge the landes so that euery of them shal haue others landes to hym so exchaunged in fée fée tayle or for terme of lyfe that is called an exchaunge and it is good wythout lyuere and seysin And in exchaunge it behoueth that the estates to them limitted by thexchange be equal for if one haue an estate in fée in hys land and the other hath estate in the other land but for terme of lyfe or in tayle then such eschaunge is void but if y e estates bée equal and the landes bee not of equal value yet the exchange is good Also an exchange of rent for Landes is good soe an exchaunge beetwene rent and common is good and that ought to bée by déede And it béehoueth alway that these woordes exchaunge bée in the deede or els nothing passeth by the déede except that hée haue liuery and seisin Execution EXecutiō is where iugement is geuen in any actyon that the playntife shal recouer the land the debt or dammages as the case is and whē y t writ is awarded to pute him in possession that is called a writte of Executyon and when he hath the possession of the lande or is payed of the debt or dammages or hath the bodie of the defendant awarded to prison then hée hath executyon and if the plée be in the countie or court barron or hundred and they deferre the iudgement in fauoure of the partie or for other cause then the demaundaunt shal haue a writ of Executione iuditij But in a writ of Debt a man shal not haue recouerye of any lande but of that whiche the defendaunt hath the day of the iugement yelded And of chattelles a manne shall haue executyon onelye of the chattelles which hée hath the day of executyon sued Executour EXecutour is when a man maketh his testament and last will and therein nameth the personne that shall execute his testament then hée that is so named is hys executour and such an executour shall haue an actyon agaynst euerye debtour of hys testatour and if the executors haue assets euery one to whō the testator was in debt shall haue an action against the executor if hée haue an obligatiō or specialtie but in euery case where y ● testator might wage his lawe no actiō lieth against the executour Extinguishment EXtynguishement is where a Lorde of a manor or any other hath a rent goynge out of lande and hee purchaseth the same lande soe that hée hath such estate in the lande as hée hath in the rent then the rent is extinct for that that a manne may not haue rent goinge out of hys owne lande And when any rent shalbée extinct it behoueth that the lande and the rent bée in one hande and also that the estate that hee hath bée not defesible and that hée haue as good estate in the lande as in the rent for yf hée haue estate in the lande but for terme of lyfe or yeares and hath a fée simple in the rent then the rent is not extinct but is in suspence for that tyme and then after the terme the rent is reuiued Also if there bée Lorde mesne and tenaunt and the Lorde purchaseth the tenauncy then the menaltie is extinct but that mesne shall haue the surplusage of the rent if there bée any as a rent secke Also if a manne haue a hye waye appendant and after purchase the lande wherein the hye way is then the waye is extinct and soe it is of a common appendaunt Extortion EXtortion is a wronge don by an officer as a Maier Bailife Sherife Eschetor or other offycer by colour of hys office in takinge excessiue reward or fée for executyon of hys sayde office or otherwyse and is no other thynge in déede then playne robbery or rather more odius then robbery for robbery is apparant and alwaies hath wyth it the countenance of vice but extortion being as great a vice as robbery is carrieth w t it a countenance of vertue by meanes whereof it is the more hard to be tryed or dyscerned and therefore the more odious and yet some there bee that will not sticke to stretch their office credit and consciēce to purchase mony as well by extortion as otherwise according to y ● saying of y e poet Uirgil What can be told or what is that that hūger swéete of gold doth not constraine men mortal to attempt Failing of record FAilynge of recorde is when an action of trespas or such like is brought against one and the defendaunt sayeth that the plaintife before this brought an accyon for the same trespas in an other court recouered damage c. And demaūdeth iudgmēt of the court if he shall agayne haue this actiō c. And y ● plaintife sayth there is ●o● such record Whereupō y ● defendant hath a day giuē him to bring in the record at which day hee fayleth or bryngeth in such a one as is nor barre to this action thē he is said to faile of hys record and therupon the plaintife shal haue iudgment to recouer c. Deede DEode is a proofe and testimonie of the agréement of the partye whose déede it is to the thing contayned in the déede as a déed of feoffement is a proofe of the liuery of seysin for y e land passeth by the liuery of seysin but when y ● déede and the liuery are ioyned together that is a proofe of the liuery and that the feoffour is content that the feoffée shal haue the land And note that al déedes are either indēted wherof there bée two thrée or more as the case requireth of which y e feoffour grauntor or lessour hath one the feofrée grātee or lessee an other and peraduenture some other body also another c. or els they are poll deedes or single and but one which the feoffée grauntée or lessée hath c. And euery deede consisteth of thrée pryncipal points and if those thrée be not ioyned together it is noe perfect déed to bynd the parties namely writinge sealing and deliuery The first point is writing wherby is shelved y ● parties names to the déed
y ● hundreth or in the court of his lord where essoine lyeth and that aswell in case of common sute as of plea. Moreouer they clayme by an especiall déede of kinge Henry the father of kinge Edwarde that of the tenements which are holden in Gauelkinde there shal no battayle bée ioyned nor graund assise taken by xii knightes as it is vsed in other places of y e Realme y t is to wit where the tenaunt demaundant hold by Gauelkind But in place of these graund assises let Juries be taken by xii men being tenaunts in Gauelkind so y ● four tenāts of Gauelkind choose xii tenaunts of Gauelkynd to be Jurors And y t Charter of the king of this especialty is in the custody of Sir John of Norwood the day of S. Elphey in Caunterbury the yeare of king Edward y e sonne of king Henry the xxi These be the vsages of Gauelkind and of Gauelkindmen in Kent which were béefore the conquest and the Cōquest and euer since till nowe The end of the customes Hauinge thus ended y e custōes as you sée Brother Nicholas there remayneth nowe to bée shewed what lands w tin this Countrey of Kent be of the nature of Gauelkind and what not First therefore it is to be vnderstanded y t all y ● lands w tin this Shire which be of aunciēt Socage tenure as was said at the béegynnynge be also of the nature of Gauelkind And y ● lands holden by auncient tenure of knightes seruice be at the cōmon lawe are not departible after the order of this custome except certen which béeing holden of old tyme by knyghtes seruice of the Archbishop of Caūterbury are neuer the lesse departible as it may appere by y e booke 26. H. 8. 4. And that grewe by reason of a graunt made by kynge John to Hubert the Archbishoppe there the tenor of which is as followeth John by the grace of God Kyng of Englande ▪ Lorde of Ireland Duke of Normādye of Aquitane and Earle of Angieu To all Archbyshoppes Bishops Abbots Earles Barons Justices Shirifes Gouernours and officers and al Bailifes and his faithful subiects gréeting Knowe yée y t wée haue graunted and by this our presēt Charter haue confirmed to our reuerend and déerely beloued father Hubert Archbishoppe of Caunterbury and hys successors for euer that it shall bée lawfull for them to conuert those lāds which menne of the fée of the Church of Caunterbury do hold in Gauelkind in to knightes fee. And y t y e same Bishops their successours haue the like power and libertie for euer ouer those men and their heires that shal hold those lāds so ●●uerted into knights sée which the Archbishop hath his successors after him shall haue ouer other knights of y e sée of the Church of Caunterbury their heires And that those men and their heires haue the same al such libertie for euer which other knightes of the sée of the Church of Caunterbury and their heires haue Prouided alwayes y t neuerthelesse their accustomed rent of pence be holy payed out of their landes as before time their giftes auerages and other seruices which issued out of the same landes be conuerted into a rēt of pence of like value And y ● y ● same rent be paied as y ● other rēt of pence is Wherefore we wil straightly cōmaund y ● whatsoeuer the aforenamed Archbishop and his successours after him shall doe concerninge those landes which are to bée conuerted into knightes fée accordinge to the forme manner aboue written abide ratified and cōfirmed for euer Forbiddinge any person to presume against the déed of the Archbishoppe or hys successors in this behalf Witnesse E. Bishop of Ely S. of Bathe G. y ● sonne of Peter Earle of Essex Williā Marshall Earle of Pēbrooke Ro. of Harecourt Garine y ● sōne of Gerald Peter of Stoke Ric. of Reuers Rob. of Tateshal yeuen by y ● hād of S. Archdeacon vnto Williā at Rupem auriual y ● 4. day of May the third yeare of our raigne But for asmuch as it is disputable whether this Charter of Kynge John be of sufficiēt vertue to change y e nature of Gauelkynde land or no and for that the certeintie of the landes so conuerted into knightes fée doth not any where appere saue onely that in the booke of Aide leuied in this shire Anno 20. E. 3. it is foure or fiue tymes noted that certeine lands in Kent bee holden in knightes seruice by the newe licence graunted to the Archbishoppe this shall suffise for that and it shall followe to be proued that al the landes of auncient tenure in knightes seruice be subiect to the ordinary course of discent at the common lawe And that may sufficiently be done both by the expresse wordes of a note in 9. H. 3. abridged by master Brooke ti Customes 57. and in master Fitzherb ti Prescription 63. And by the opinion of the Justices 26. H. 8. 4. as also by pleyne recital in the act of parliament made 31. H. 8. ca. 3. by which statute the possessiōs of certen gentelmen there were deliuered from this customary discent and incorporated to the common lawe for amongest other thinges in that act it is saied That from thence forth such their landes shal be chaunged from the saied custome and shal discend as lands at the commō lawe as other lands being in the said coūty of kent which neuer were holdē by seruice of Socage but alwaies haue bene holden by knights seruice do discende By which words it is very euident that y ● makers of that estatute vnderstoode al lands holden by knights seruice to be of their proper nature discendable after y ● comō lawe that Socage tenure was the onely subiect in which thys our custome of Gauelkinde discent preuailed helde place But when mencion is here made of Socage knightes fée it must alwayes be vnderstanded a tenure longe since and of auncyent tyme contynued and not nowe newely or lately created for so it may fal out otherwise then is alreadye reported As for example if land aunciētlye holden by knightes seruice cōe to y ● Quéens hands whoe afterwarde giueth y e same out againe to a cōon persō to be holdē of her manor of East Grene within Socage this lande not with standinge the alteration of y ● tenure remaineth dis●●dable to y ● eldest sonne only as it was before as also in like sort if lands of auncient Socage seruite come to y e Crowne and be deliuered out agayne to be holden either of the Quéene in Capite or by knightes seruice of any manor it ought to discēd according to y ● custde not w tstanding y t y e tenure be altered if this be true in the graūt of y e Quéene her selfe then much lesse may the Archbishope by a newe creation of tenure make to his tenants any alteratiō of this olde custome maner For as the
very troublesome and therefore nowe for the most part that way is altered and they vse to leuy the same by the yarde or Acre or other measure of lande By meanes whereof it is nowe lesse troublesome and more certen then before it was And euery Towne and coūtrey doe knowe what summe is to be payed amonge them and howe the same shal be raysed Wée read that Moyses was the first that did number the people for he nūbred the Israelits and therefore the first taxe subsidy tribute or fiftéene was inuented by him amonge the Hebrues as Polidore Uirgil doth thinke Regrator REgrator is hée that hath corne vittailes or other thinges sufficient for his owne necessary néede occupation or spendinge and doth neuerthelesse engrosse and buy vppe into hys handes more Corne vittailes or other such thinges to the entent to sell the same againe at a highe rand déerer price in faires marketes or such like places Reioynder REioynder is when the defendant maketh aunswere to the Replication of the plaintyfe And euery Reioynder ought to haue these ii properties specially that is to say it ought to bee a sufficient aunswere to the Replication also to followe and enforce the matter of the barre Reliefe REliefe is sometimes a certen some of money that the heire shall pay to the Lord of whō those landes are holden which after the discease of his auncestour are to him dyscended as next heire sometymes it is the payment of an other thinge and not money And therefore reliefe is not certen and a like for all tenures but euery sundry tenure hath for the most part hys speciall reliefe certayne in it selfe Neyther is it to bée payed alwayes at a certen age but varyeth therein also acording to the tenure As if the tenaunt had landes holden by knyghtes seruics except great Sergeantie and die his heire being of full age and helde his lands by the seruice of a whole knightes fée the Lord of whome that lands are soe holden shal haue of the heire 100. s. in the name of relyefe And if he helde by lesse then a knightes fée hee shal pay lesse and if more then more hauinge respect alwaies to the rate for euery knightes fée an hundred shillinges And if hée helde by graunde serieantie which is alwayes of the Quéene and is also knightes seruice then the relyefe shalbée the value of the lande by the yeare besides al charges issuinge out of the same Reliefe that the lorde shal haue for lands holdē in Socage is soe much more as the rent that the tenaunt holdeth his lande in Socage by as if hee holde by a penye rent and die the lorde shal haue that peny rent and a peny ouer for reliefe of what age soeuer the tenaunt be at the death of his auncestour And note that insome cases the lord shal haue his reliefe immediatly after the death of his tenaunt if it soe be that the tyme of the yeare wil suffre the same to be gotten as money corne flesh fish spices or any such like and for default of payement the lorde maye therefore of cōmon right presently distraine But in some cases the Lorde must stay for his reliefe a certen time when necessitie soe constraineth As if the tenāt helde by a rose a chery a strawbery or such like die in winter he shal not haue reliefe til roses cheries and strawberies are naturally fresh and ripe which is about midsomer then he shal haue one for rent an other for reliefe There is an other kind of reliefe that is payd after the death change or alienation of fréeholders that hold in auncient demesne and otherwise is paied as a knowledge of the tenure betwene y e lord and the tenant The same is not certein how much But doth vary according to y e custome of the mannour or tenure and is to be presented by the homage or sutours at the next court day of the same maner And note that alwaies when the reliefe is due it must bee payed at one whole payment and not by partes although that the rent bée to be payed at seueral festes Remainder REmaynder of lande is the lande that shal remaine after the particuler estate determined As if one graunt lanoe for terme of yeres or for lyfe the remaynder to I. S. that is to saye that when the lease for yeares is determined or lessée for life is dead that then y ● land shal remaine shal be or abide with to or in I. S. Replication REplication is when y ● defendaunt in any action maketh an aūswere and the plaintife maketh an aunswere to that that is called the replicatiō of the plaintife Reprises ▪ REprises are deductions payments and dueties that goe yearely and are payed out of a manour As rent charge rent secke pentions corodies annuities such like Resceipt REsceit is when an action is brought agaynst the tenaunt for terme of life or tenaunt for terme of yeres and he in the reuersion commeth in and praieth to be receiued to defende the land and to plede wyth the demaundaunt And when hée commeth it behoueth that hée bée alway redy to plede with the demaundant Reseruation REseruation is taken diuers waies hath diuers natures as some times by way of exception to kéepe that which a mā had before in him as if a lease bee made for yeares of ground reseruing y e great trées growing vpon the same nowe y e lessée may not meddle w t thē nor w t any thing y t commeth by reason of thē so longe as it abideth in or vpon the trées as mast of Oke Chestnut Aples or such like but if they fall from the trées to the ground then they are in right the lessées for y ● ground is set to him and al theruppon not reserued c. Sometimes a reseruation doth get and bringe forth an other thynge which was not before As if a m● lease his lāds reseruing yerely for y e sāe xx li. c. and diuers other such reseruatiōs thereby And note y e in auncient time their reseruations were as wel or for the more part in victualles whether flesh fish corne bread drink or what els as in mony vntill at the last and that chiefely in the raigne of kinge Henry the first by agrement y ● reseruation of victuals was changed into ready money as it hath hither so since continued Retraxit REtraxit is the preterperfectēce of Retraho compound of Re and Traho which make Retraho to pull backe and is when the party plaintife or demaundant commeth in proper person into the court where his plea is and sayth that hée wil not procéede any farder in the same c. Now this shal be a barre to the accion for euer Reeue REeue is an officer but more knowen in auncient tyme then at thys day for almost euery manour had then a Réeue and yet styll in many coppy hold manners where the old custome any thing preuayleth