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A58086 Les termes de la ley; or, Certain difficult and obscure words and terms of the common laws and statutes of this realm now in use, expounded and explained Now corrected and enlarged. With very great additions throughout the whole book, never printed in any other impression.; Expositiones terminorum Legum Anglorum. English and French. Rastell, John, d. 1536. 1685 (1685) Wing R292; ESTC R201044 504,073 1,347

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Soccage the Widow is sped of her Dower rather in the Soccage-Lands as the fairest part Of this see Littl. lib. 1. cap. 5. Enfranchisement ENfranchisement is when a man is incorporated into any Society or Body politick So if an Alien born be made Denizon of England he is said to be enfranchised and he that is made a Citizen of London or other Town Corporate because he is made partaker of those Liberties which belong to the Corporation whereinto he is enfranchised And when a man is enfranchised into a City or Borough he hath a Free-hold in his Freedome for his life and with others in their politick capacity hath Inheritance in the Land of the said Corporation wherefore the thing which shall be the cause of his Dis-infranchisement ought to be an Act or Deed and not only an Endeavouring or enterprising whereof he may repent before it be put in execution And what shall be sufficient cause to dis-infranchise a Free-man and what not see Cok. lib. 11. in Bagg's Case fol. 98. Englesherie ENglesherie or Englecerie is an old word which signifies the being an Englishman For in ancient time as appears by Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. cap. 15. fol. 134. if a man had been slain or murthered he was accounted to be Francigena which word implies every Alien until Englesherie were proved that is until it was made manifest that he was an Enlish-man The original whereof was this Kanotus the Danish King having established his Estate here in peace at the request of our Barons discharged the Land of his Armies wherein he reposed his greatest safety upon this condition That the Barons would give consent to a Law That whosoever should ● ill an Alien and was apprehanded and could not acquit himself should be liable to Iustice ● But if the Man-slaier escayed the Town where the man was slain should forfeit sixty six Marks to the King and if ● he Town was not able to pay it then the Hundred should forfeit and pay this to the King 's own Tteasury and farther That every man murthered should be accounted Francigena unless Englesherie were proved and how it should be proved see Bracton in the same chap. num 7. Also see Horn's Mirrour of Justices l. 1. cap. of the Office of Coroners and Fleta l. 1. c. 30. This Englesherie for the abuses and grievances which were afterwards perceived to arise therefrom was utterly abolished by Stat. An. 14. E. 3. c. 4. See Coke l. 7. f. 16. Calvin's Cafe Enheritance ENheritance is such Estate in Lands or Tenements or other things as may be inherited by the Heir whether it be estate in Fee-simple or Tail by Discent from any of his Ancestors or by his own Purchase And it is divided into Enheritance Corporate and Enheritance Incorporate Enheritance Corporate are Mesuages Lands Meadows Pastures Rents and such like that have substance in themselves and may continue always And these are called Corporal things Enheritance Incorporate are Advowsons Villains Ways Commons Courts Fishings and such like that are or may be appendant or appurtenant to Enheritance Incorporate The Eldest part ENitia or Einecia pars is that Part which upon Partition among Coparceners falls to the Eldest Sister or ancientest Coparcener as it appears by Littleton sect 245. And it is called Enitia pars from the French word Eigne or Aisne that is the First-born Enquest ENquest is that Inquiry which is made by Iurors in all Causes civil or criminal touching the matter in Fact And such Inquiry is either ex officio which are called Inquests of Office and are traversable or at the mise of the parties This word is used in the Statutes of 25 E 3. c. 3. 28 E. 3. c 13. and almost in all Statutes that speak of Trials by Iurors Entendment ENtendment is an usual word in our Law when a thing is in doubt then by Entendment it shall sometimes be made good As if an Inquisition be found before a Coroner that a man was murthered at A. which is a Liberty and is not said in the Inquisition at A within the Liberty of A yet it shall be good by Entendment for peradventure the Liberty may extend beyond the Town but that the Town if self shall be presumed to be out of the Liberty of the Town is a captious construction wherefore the Inquisition shall be good by Entendment Coke l. 5. f. 121. See Kitch f. 224. Enterpleader ENterpleader is when in any Cause a matter happens which of necessity ought to be discussed before the principal Cause can be determined For example Two persons be found Heir to Land by two several Offices in one County by this the King is in doubt to whom he shall make Livery for which cause before Livery made he will have them interplead and thereby determine who is the right Heir See Coke l. 7. f. 45. Stam. Prer c. 19. Brooke tit Enterpleader Also there is another sort of Interpleader in Detinue in divers cases which see Rast Entries 213. Entire Tenancie ENtire Tenancie is that which is contrary to Several Tenancy and signifies a Sole possession in one man where the other signifies Ioynt or common in more See Brooke Several Tenancies and the Old Book of Entries under this Title Entrie ENtrie is where a man enters into any Lands or Tenements or takes possession of them Also there are divers Writs of Entry which are in divers manners One is a Writ of Entrie sur Disseisin which lies where a man is disseised he or his Heir shall have this Writ against the Disseisor or any other after Tenant of the Land And if the Disseisor alien and die seised then the Writ of Entrie shall be against the Heir and the Alienee in the Per viz. in which the Tenant hath no Entry but by such a one naming the Disseisor who him hath disseised c. If the Heir or Alienee die seised or alien to another then the Writ shall be in the Per and Cui viz. to which the Tenant hath no Entry but by such a one naming the Heir or Alienee of the Disseisor to whom such a one naming the Disseisor did let it who by force disseised him c. And if Land be conveyed over to many or if the first Disseisor be disseised then the Writ of Entry shall be in the Post viz. that the Tenant hath no Entry but after the Disseisin which the first Disseisor made to the Demandant or his Ancestor See Entre en le Per. Entrie in the Per Cui and Post A Writ of Entrie in the Per lies where a man is disseised of his Free-hold and the Disseisor aliens or dies seised and his Heir enters then the Disseisee or his Heir shall have the said Writ against the Heir of the Disseisor or against the Alienee of the Disseisor but living the Disseisor he may have an Assise if he will and the Writ of Entry shall say In quod A non habet Ingressum nisi per B qui illud
Law Actions real ACtions real are such Actions whereby the Demandant claims title to any Lands or Tenements Rents or Commons in Fee simple Fee-tail or for Term of life Every Action real is either possessory that is of his own possession or seisin or ancestrel scil of the seisin or possession of his ancestor Co. lib. 6. fol. 3. Acts. ACts of Parliament are positive Laws which consist of two parts that is to say of the words of the Act and of the sense and they both joyned together make the Law Additions ADdition is that which is given to a man besides his proper name and Surname that is to shew of what Estate Degree or Mystery he is and of what Town Hamlet or County Additions of Estate are these Yeoman Gentleman Esquire and such like Additions of Degree are these which we call names of Dignity as Knight Earl Marquess Duke Additions of Mystery are Scrivener Painter Mason Carpenter and all other of like nature for Mystery is the craft or occupation whereby a man gets his living Additions of Town as Sale Dale and so of the rest And where a man hath a houshold in two places he shall be said to dwell in both of them so that his Addition in one of them doth sufice By the Statute An. 1 H. 5. c. 5. it was or dained that in Suits or Actions where process of Vtlagary lies such Additions should be to the name of the Defendant to shew his estate mystery and place where he dwells and that such writs shall abate if they have not such Additions if the Defendant take exception thereto but they shall not abate by the Office of the Court. Also Duke Marquess Earl or Knight are none of those Additions but names of Dignity which should have been given before the Statute And this was ordained by the said Statute to the iutent that one man might not be grieved nor troubled by the Vtlary of another But that by reason of the certain Addition every man might be certainly known and bear his own burthen Adjournment ADjournment is when any Court is dissolved and determined for the present and afsigned to be kept again at another place or time and methinks is compounded of two words ad or al and jour Admeasurement of Dower ADmeasurement of Dower is a writ that lies where a woman is endowed by an Infant or by a Gardian of more than she ought to have the Heir in such case shall have this writ whereby the woman shall be admeasured and the Heir restored to the overplus But if one abate that is one who hath no right enter after the death of the husband and indow the wife of him that is dead of more than she ought to have the Heir shall not have this Writ but Assise ● Mort dancestor against the Woman and if she plead that she was indowed of the Land as of the Free-hold of her husband the Heir shall shew how she was indowed by the Abator and that she had more than she ought to have and shall pray that he may be restored to the surplusage and if it be found he shall be restored Admeasurement of Pasture ADmeasurement of Pasture is a Writ that lies where many Tenants have Common appendant in another ground and one overcharges the Common with many Beasts then the other Commoners may have this Writ against him And also it may be brought by one Commoner only but then it ought to be brought against all the other Commoners against him that surcharged for that all the Commoners shall be admeasured And this Writ lies not against him nor for him that hath Common appurtenant or Common in gross but those who have Common appendant or Common because of vicinage See the diversity of all these Commons afterwards in the title of Common Also this Writ lies not for the Lord nor against the Lord but the Lord may distrain the beasts of the Tenant that are surplusage But if the Lord overcharge the Common the Commoner hath no remedy by the Common Law but an Assise of his Common Administrator ADministrator is he to whom the Ordinary commits the Administration of the goods of a dead man for default of an Executor and an Action shall lie against him and for him as for an Executor and he shall be charged to the value of the Goods of the dead man and no further unless it be by his own false Plea or by wasting the goods of the dead If the Administrator die his Executors are not Administrators but it behoves the Ordinary to commit a new Administration And if a stranger that is not Administrator nor Executor take the Goods of the dead and administer of his own wrong he shall be charged and sued as an Executor and not as Administrator in any Action brought against him by any Creditor But if the Ordinary make a Letter ad colligendum bona defuncti he that hath such a Letter is not Administrator but the Action lieth against the Ordinary as well as if he take the goods in his own hand or by the hand of any of his Servants by any other Commandment There is also another sort of Administrator where one makes his will and makes an infant under the age of 17 his Executor The Bishop commits Administration to some friend during the nonage of the Executor which Administrator if he sue does not declare that the deceased died intestate Which Administration ceases when the Infant is 17 years old Admiral ADmiral is a high Officer that has the Government of the Kings Navy and the hearing and determining of all Causes as well civil as criminal belonging to the Sea and to that purpose hath his Court called the Admiralty He may cause his Citation to be served upon the Land and take the paries body or goods in execution upon the Land Also he hath cognizance of the death or maihem of a man committed in any great Ship fleeting in great Rivers in the Realm beneath the Bridges of the same next the Sea Also to arrest Ships in the great Streams for the Voiages of the King and Realm and hath Iurisdiction in the said Streams during the same Voiages Ad quod damnum AD quod Damnum is a Writ which ought to be sued before the King grant certain Liberties as a Fair Market or such like which may be prejudicial to others And thereby it shall be required if it should be a prejudice to grant them and to whom it shall be prejudicial and what prejudice shall come thereby There is also another Writ of Ad quod damnum if any one will turn a Common high-way and lay out another way as veneficial Both which though found to be prejudicial may be traversed in another Action although the King hath made his grant pursuant to the Verdicts of the Iury. Advent ADvent is a time which contains about a month next before the Feast of the Nativity of our Saviour Christ In which our
Instruments have been heretofore used and of force in this Land but by the Statute of 28 H. 8. c. 16. it was e ● acted That all Bulls Breves Faculties and Dispensations of whatsoever name or nature that it was had or obtained from the B. of Rome should be altogether void and of no effect See Rastal 328. C. D. Bullion BUllion comes from the French word Billon which is the place where Gold is tryed And so Bullion is taken in the Statutes made in 27. E. 3. Stat 2. c. 14. and in 4 H 4. Stat. 1. c. 10. for the place whither Gold or Silver is brought to be tryed or exchanged But Bullion is also taken in the Stat. 9 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 2. for Gold or Silver in the Mass or Billet Burbreach BUrbreach is to be quit of Trespasses done in City or Borough against the Peace Burgage TO hold in Burgage is to hold as the Burgagers hold of the King or of another Lord lands or tenements yielding him a certain Rent yearly or else where another man then Burgers holds of any Lord Lands or Tenements in Burgage yielding him a certain Rent Burghbote BUrghbote is to be quit of giving aid to make a Burrough Castle City or Walls thrown down Burgh English BUrgh English or Borough English is a Custome in some ancient Borough that if a man hath issue divers sons and dies yet the youngest son only shall inherit and have all the Lands and Tenements that were his fathers whereof he died seised within the same Borough by descent as Heir to his Father by force of the Custome of the same Borough This Tenure is also of Copyhold Estates by Custome of divers Mannors Burglary BUrglary is when one breaks and enters into the House of another in the night with felonious intent to rob or kill or to do some other Felony in which cases although he carry away nothing yet it is Felony for which he shall suffer death Otherwise it is if it be in the day-time or that he break the House in the night and enter no therein at that time But if a Servant conspire with other men to rob his Master and to that intent opens his Masters doors and windows in the night for them and they come into the house by that way this is Burglary in the Strangers and the Servant is a Thief but no Burglar And this was the opinion of Sir Roger Manwood Knight Lord chief Baron of the Cxchequer at the quarter Sessions holden at Canterbury in Jannary 1579. 21 Eliz. Buttlerage IS an old Duty to the Kings of this Realm for Wine imported by Aliens Moor Rep. 833. C Cablish CAblish among the Writers of the Forest Laws signifies Brushwood Manwood pag. 84. Cromp. Jur. fol. 165. Cantred CAntred is as much in Wales as an Hundred in England for Cantre in the British tongue signifies Centum The word is used An. 28. H. 8. c. 3. Capacity CApacity is when a man or Body politick or corporate is able to give or take Lands or other things or sue Actions As an Alien born hath sufficient Capacity to sue in any personal Action but in a real Action it is a good Plea to say he is an Alien born and pray if he shall be answered Dyer f. 3. pla 8. If a man enfeoff an Alien and another man to the use of themselves or c. it seems that the King shall have the moiety of the Land for ever by reason of the Incapacity of the Alien Dyer f. 283. pla 31. By the Common Law no man hath Capacity to take Tythes but Spiritual persons and the King who is a person mixt but a Lay-man who is not capable of taking Tithes was yet capable of discharge of Tithes in the Common Law in his own land as well as a Spiritual man See Coke l. 2. f. 44. Cape CApe is a Writ judicial touching Plea of Lands or Tenements so called as the most part of Writs are of that word which in it self carries the especiallest intention or end thereof And this Writ is divided into Grand Cape and Petit Cape both which take hold of things immovable and seem to differ in these Points First because Grand Cape lies before Apparance and Petit Cape after Secondly by the Grand Cape the Tenant is summoned to answer to the default and over to the Demandant Petit Cape summons the Tenant to answer to the default only and therefore it is called Petit Cape in the Old N. B. 161 162. Yet Ingham saith that it is not called Petit Cape because it is of small force but because it is a little Writ in words This Writ seems to contain in it a Process with the Civilians called Missio in possessionem ex primo secundo Decreto For as the first Decree seises the thing and the second gives it from him that made the second default in his Appearance so this Capias seises the Land and also assigns over to the party a day of Appearance at which if he comes not in the Land is forfeited Yet there is difference between these two courses of the Common and Civil Law for this Missio in possessionem extends to touch as well Goods movable as immovable where a Cape extends only to the immovable Secondly in this That the party being satisfied of his demand the residue is restored to him that defaulted but by the Cape all is seised without restitution Thirdly That is to the use of the party agent the Cape is to the use of the King See Bract. l. 5. tract 3. c. 1. num 4 5 6 Regist Judic fol. 2. a. Cape ad Valentiam CApe ad Valentiam is a Writ or Execution and is thus defined in the Old Nat. Brev. fo 161. 162. This writ lies where the Tenant is impleaded of certain Lands and he vouches to Warranty another against whom the Summons ad warrantizan ● hath been awarded and the Vouchee comes not in at the day given then if the Demandant recover against the Tenant he shall have this Writ against the Vouchee and shall recover so much in value of the Vouchees land if he have so much and if he hath not so much then the Tenant shall have Execution by this Writ of such Lands and Tenements as descend to him in Fee-simple or if he purchase afterwards the Tenant shall have against him a Resummons and if he can say nothing he shall recover the value And know that this Writ lies before Apparance Of these and their divers uses see the Table of the Reg. jud the word Cape Capias CApias is of two sorts The one before Iudgment called Capias ad respondendum in an action personal if the Sheriff return upon the first Writ Nihil habet in Balliva nostra And the other is a Writ of Execution after Iudgment which also is of divers natures which see in the Title Process Capite CApite is a Tenure that holds immediately of the King as of his Crown
Money is not to be accounted Goods or Catals nor Hawks nor Hounds for they are ferae naturae But it seems that Money is not a Chattel because it is not in it self valuable but rather in imagination than in Deed. Catals are either real or personal Catals real are either such as do not immediately appertain to the person but to some other thing by way of dependance as a Box with writings of Laud the body of a Ward the Apples upon the tree or the Tree it self growing upon the ground Crom. fol. 33. b. Or else such as are issuing out of some thing immovable to the person as a Lease for Rent or term of years Personal may be so called in two respects The one because they belong immediately to the person of a man as a Horse c. The other because when they are wrongfully detained we have no other means for their recovery but personal Actions The Civilians comprehend these things and also Lands of all natures and tenures under the word Goods which are by them divided into Moveable and Immovable See Bract. lib. 3. c. 3. num 3 4. Cepi corpus CEpi corpus is a Return made by the Sheriff that upon an Exigend or other Writ he has taken the body of the party F N. B. fol. 26. Certificate CErtificate is a Writing made in some Court to give notice to another Court of something done there as a Certificate of the cause of Attaint is a transcript briefly made by the Clerks of the Crown Clerks of the Peace or Clerks of Assise to the Court of Kings Bench containing the tenor and effect of every Indictment Outlawry or Conviction and Clerk attainted made or declared in any other Court But note that this Certificate ought to be made by him that is the immediate Officer to the Court and therefore if the Commissary or Official of the Bishop certifie an Excommunication in bar of an action at the Common Law this is not good as was resolved in Coke lib. 8. fol. 68. but such Excommunication ought to be certified by the Bishop himself Yet the Certificate of an Excommunication by special Commissioners Delegates under their Common Seal was allowed and held good enough in the Common-place Dyer fol. 371. pla 4. Certification of Assise CErtification of Assise of Novel disseisin c. is a Writ awarded to re-examine or review a matter passed hy Assise before any Iustices and is used when a man appears by his Bailiff to an assise brought by another and loses the day and having some other matter to plead farther for himself as a Deed of Release or c. which the Bailiff did not plead or might not plead for him desires a better Examination of the Cause either before the same or other Iustices and obtains Letters Pa ● ents see their form F. N. B. 181. and then brings a Writ to the Sheriff to call the party for whom the Assise had passed and also the Iury which was impannelled upon the same Assise before the said Iustices at a day and place certain And it is called a Certificate because therein mention is made to the Sheriff that upon the parties complaint of the defective Examination or doubts remaining yet upon the Assise passed the King hath directed his Letters Patents to the Iustices for the better certifying of themselves whether all the points of the said Assise were duly examined or not Certiorari CErtiorari is a Writ that lies where a man is impleaded in a base Court that is of Record and he purposes that he may not have equal Iustice there then upon a Bill in the Chancery comprising some matter of Conscience he shall have this Writ to remove all the Record into the Chancery there to be determined by Conscience but if he prove not his Bill then the other party shall have a Writ of Procedendo to send again the Record into the base Court and there to be determined And it lies in many other cases to remove Records for the King as Indictments and others This Writ is also granted out of the Court of Kings Bench or Common Pleas to remove any Action thither out of Inferior Courts of Record and so the Plaintiff must declare and proceed in the Superior Court Also to certifie original writs or proceedings out of any Courts of Record into the Kings Bench where nullum tale Recordum is pleaded Also upon Writs of Error of a Iudgment in the Common Pleas each party may have this Writ to bring any of the Proceedings into the Kings Bench upon alledging Diminution as appears Coke Entr. 232 233 242. 2 Cro. 131 479. Cessavit CEssavit is a Writ that lies where my very Tenant holds of me certain Lands or Tenements yielding certain Rent by the year and the Rent is behind for two years and no sufficient Distress may be found upon the Land then I shall have this Writ by which I shall recover the Land But if the Tenant come into the Court before Iudgment given and tender the Arrearges and Damages and find Surety that he shall cease no more in payment of the said Rent I shall be compelled to take the Arrerages and the Damages and then the Tenant shall not lose the Land The heir may not maintain this Writ for Cessure made in the time of his Ancestor And it lies not but for Annual service as Rent and such other and not for Homage and Fealty Also there is another Writ called Cessavit de cantaria which lies where a man gives Land to a House of Religion to find for the soul of him his ancestors and his heirs yearly a Candle or Lamp in the Church or to say Divine Service feed the poor or other Alms or to do some other thing then if the said Services be not done in two years the Donor or his Heirs shall have this Writ against whosoever holds the things given after such Cessure See the Statute W. 2. cap. 41. Cession CEssion is when an Ecclesiastical Person is created Bishop or when a Parson of a Parsonage takes another Benefice without dispensation or otherwise not qualified c. In both cases their first Benefices are become void and are said to become void by Cession And to those that he had who was created Bishop the King shall present for that time whosoever is Patron of them And in the other case the Patron may present See 41 E. 3. 5. 11 H. 4. 37. Cestuy a que vie cestuy a que use CEstuy a que vie is he for whose life another holds an estate and cestuy a que use is he who is a Feoffee for the use of another Challenge CHallenge is an Exception taken either against Persons or Things Persons as in an Assise the Iurors or any one or more of them or in case of Felony by the Prisoner at the Bar against Things as a Declaration Old N. B. 76. Challenge made to the Jurors is either made to the Array or
Lessee pays the Rent to the Lessor and he receives it and puts it in his purse and afterwards upon review of it at the same time he finds that he hath received some counterfeit pieces aud thereupon refuses to take away the Money but re-enters for the Condition broken there his Entry is not lawful for when he hath accepted the Money this was at his peril and after this allowance he shall not take exception to any of it Collateral COllateral is that which comes in or adheres to the side of any thing as Collateral Assurance is that which is made over and beside the Deed it self For example if a man covenants with another and enters Bond for the performance the Bond is called Collateral Assurance because it is external and without the nature and essence of the Covenant And Crompton fol. 185. saith that to be subject to feeding the Kings Deer is collateral to the soil within the Forest In like manner we may say that the liberty to pitch Sheds or Standing for a Fair in the soil of another man is collateral to the land The private Woods of a common person within the Forest cannot be cut down without the Kings license for it is a Prerogative collateral to the soil Man part 1. pag. 66. Collateral Warranty See tit Warrantie Collation COllation is properly the bestowing of a Benefice by the Bishop that hath it in his own Gift or Patronage and differs from Institution in this for that Institution into a Benefice is performed by the Bishop at the motion and Presentation of another who is Patron of the same Church or hath the Patrons right for that time Yet Collation is used for Presentation in 25 E. 3. Stat. 6. and there is a Writ in the Regist 31. b. called De Collatione facta uni post mortem alterius c. directed by the Iustices of the Common Pleas commanding them to direct their Writ to the Bishop for the admitting a Clerk in the place of another presented by the King who during the Suit between the King and the Bishops Clerk deceased for judgment once passed for the Kings Clerk and he dying before he be admitted the King may give his Presentation to another Collusion COllusion is where an action is brought against another by his own agreement if the Plaintiff recover then such Recovery is called by Collusion And in some cases the Collusion shall be enquired of as in Quare impedit and Assise and such like which any Corporation or Body politick brings against another to the intent to have the Land or Advowson whereof the Writ is brought in Mortmain But in Avowry nor in any Action personal the Collusion shall not be inquired See the Stat. of Westm 2. c. 32. which gives the Quale jus and enquiry in such cases Colour COlour is feigned matter which the Defendant or Tenant uses in his barre when an Action of Trespass or an Assise is brought against him in which he gives the Demandant or Plaintiff a Shew at first sight that he hath good cause of Action where in truth it is no just cause but only a Colour and Face of a cause and it is used to the intent that the determination of the Action should be by the Iudges and not by an ignorant Iury of twelve men And therefore a Colour ought to be a matter in Law doubtfull to the common people As for example A. brings and Assise of land against B. and B. saith he himself did let the same land to one C. for term of life and afterward did grant the Reversion to A. the Demandant and after C. the Tenant for term of life died after whose decease A. the Demandant claiming the Reversion by force of the Grant whereto C. the Tenant for life did never atturn entred upon whom B. entred against whom A. for that Entry brings this Assise c. This is a good Colour because the common people think the land will pass by the Grant without Atturnment where indeed it will not pass c. Also in an Action of Trespass Colour must be given of which there are an infinite number one forexample In an Action of Trespass for taking away the Plaintiffs Beasts the Defendant saith that before the Plaintiff had any thing in them he himself was possessed of them as of his proper goods and delivered them to A. B. to deliver them to him again when c. and A. B. gave them unto the Plaintiff and the Plaintiff supposing the property to be in A. B. at the time of the gift took them and and the Defendant took them from the Plaintiff whereupon the Plaintiff brings an Action that is a good Colour and a good Plea See more hereof in Doctor and Student l. 2. c. 13. Colour is for this cause viz. where the Defendant justifies by title in trespass or Assize if he do not give the Plaintiff Colour his plea amounteth only to not guilty for if the Defendant hath title he is not guilty 1 Co. 79. 108. Colour of Office COlour of Office is always taken in the worst part and signifies an act evilly done by the countenance of an Office and it bears a dissembling face of the right of the Office whereas the Office is but a vail to the falshood and the thing is grounded upon vice and the Office is as a shadow to it But by reason of the Office and by virtute of the Office are taken always in the best part and where the Office is the just cause of the thing and the thing is pursuing the Office Plo. in Dive Man case sol 64. a. Combat COmbat in our ancient Law was a formal Trial of a doubtful Cause or quarrel by the Sword or Bastons of two Champions See Glanvile l. 14. c. 1. Britton c. 22. and Dyer fol. 301. num 41. Commandment COmmandment is taken in divers significations sometimes for the Commandment of the King when by his mere motion and from his own mouth he casts any man into prison Stamf. Plac. Coron fol. 72. or of the Iustices And this Commandment of the Iustices is either absolute or ordinary Absolute as when upon their own authority or wisdom and discretion they commit any man to prison for a punishment Ordinary is when they commit one rather to be safely kept then for punishmenr and a man committed by such ordinary Commandment is bailable Placit Cor. fol. 73. Commandment is again used for the offence of him that wills another man to transgresse the Law or to do any such thing as is contrary to the Law as Murther Theft or such like Bract. l. 3. tract 2. c. 19. The Civilians call this Commandment Angelus de maleficiis Commendrie COmmandrie was the name of a Manor or chief Messuage with which Lands or Tenements were used belonging to the late Priory of S. John of Jerusalem untill they were given to King Henry the eighth by Statute made in the 32 year of his reign And he who
one of the Articles to be enquired touching the Forrest is If all great Dogs or Mastives in the Forest are Expeditated according to the Laws of the Forrest and if any be not the Owner of every such Dog shall forfeit to the King three shillings and four pence Cromp. Jurisd fol. 152. Manwood uses the same word and part 1. of his Forrest Law fol. 212. sets down the manner of expeditating Dogs heretofore which was that the three Claws of the Fore-foot on the right side shall be cut off by the skin whereunto he also adds out of the Ordinance called the Assise of the Forrest that the same manner of expeditating Dogs shall be still used and kept and none other Quaere whence it arises that Crompton and he differ the one saying the Ball of the foot is cut out the other that the three Fore-claws are cut off by the skin Expensis Militum levandis EXpensis Militum levandis is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for levying the Allowance for the Knights of the Parliament Regist orig fol. 191. b. And Expensis Militum non levandis de hominibus de Antiquo Dominico nec a Nativis is a Writ to prohibit the Sheriff to levy any Allowance for the Knights of the County upon such as hold in Ancient Demesne c. Ibidem fol. 261. b. Extend EXtend is to value the Lands or Tenements of one bound by Statute c. that hath forfeited it and to deliver them to the Conusee at such indifferent rates as that by the yearly Profits the Conusee in time may be satisfied his Debt See Fitz. Nat. B. fol. 131. and Coke lib. 4. fol. 67. Fulwoods Case Extent EXtent has two significations The one is a Writ or Commission to the Sheriff for the valuing of Lands or Tenements the other the act of the Sheriff or other Commissioner upon that Writ Broke tit Extent fol. 313. Extinguishment EXtinguishment is where a Lord or any other hath any Rent or Service going out of any Land and he purchases the same Land so that he hath such Estate in the Land as he hath in the Rent then the Rent is extinct for that one may not have Rent going out of his own Land Also when any Rent shall be extinct the Land and the Rent must be in one hand the Estate indefesible and he have as good Estate in the Land as in the Rent for if he have Estate in the Land but for Life or Years and hath Fee-simple in the Rent then the Rent is not extinct but in suspence for that time and after the term the Rent is revided If there be Lord Mesne and Tenant and the Lord purchase the Tenancy the Mesnalty is extinct but the Mesne shall have the surplusage of the Rent if there be any as Rent-seck Also if a man have a High-way appendant and after purchase the Land wherein the High-way is then the Way is extinct and so it is of a Common appendant Extortion EXtortion is wrong done by any Officer Ordinary Archdeacon Official Major Bailiff Sheriff Escheator Coroner Under-Sheriff Goaler or other Officer by colour of his Office by taking excessive Reward or Fee for execution of his Office or otherwise and is no other thing indeed then plain Robbery or rather more odious then Robbery for Robbery is apparent and always hath with it the countenance of Vice but Extortion being as great a Vice as Robbery is carries with it a countenance of Vertue by means whereof it is the more hard to be tried or discerned and therefore the more odious And yet some there are that will not stick to stretch their Office Credit and Conscience to purchase Mony as well by Extortion as otherwise according to the saying of the Poet Virgil What is it that the greedy thirst of Gol ● doth not constrain mortals to attempt F. Faculty FAculty is a word often used in the Statute of 25 Hen. 8. cap. 21. and it signifies a Priviledge or special Dispensation granted unto a man by favour and indulgence to do that which by the Law he cannot do as to eat Flesh upon days forbidden or to hold two or more Ecclesiastical Livings and the like And for the granting of these Faculties there is a special Officer under the Arch-bishop of Canterbury called The Master of the Faculties Failing of Record FAiling of Record is when an Action is brought against one who pleads any matter of Record and avers to prove it by Record and the Plaintiff saith there is no such Record whereupon the Defendant hath day given him to bring in the Record at which day he fails or brings in such a one as is no Bar to this Action then he is said to fail of his Record and thereupon the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment to recover c. Faint Action Faint Pleading FAint Action as Littleton fol. 154. saith is as much as to say in English a Fained Action that is such Action as though the words of the Writ be true yet for certain causes he hath no title by the Law to recover by the same Action And a false Action is where the words of the Writ are false So Faint Pleading is a covinous false and collusory manner of Pleading to the deceit of a third party And against such Faint Pleading amongst other things the old Statute in 3 E. 1. cap. 29. seems to be made Deed. DEed is a Writing sealed and delivered to prove and testifie the agreement of the party whose Deed it is to the thing contained in the Deed as a Deed of Feoffment is a Proof of the Livery of Seisin for the Land passes by the Livery of Seisin but when the Deed and the Delivery are joyned together that is a proof of the Livery and that the Feoffor is contented that the Feoffee shall have the Land All Deeds are either Indented whereof there are two three or more parts as the ease requires of which the Feoffor Grantor or Lessor hath one the Feoffee Grantee or Lessee another and peradventure some other body a third c. Or else they are Poll Deeđs single and but one which the Feoffee Grantee or Lessee hath c. And every Deed consists of three principal Points without which it is no perfect Deed to bind the parties namely Writing Sealing and Delivery 1. By Writing is shewed the parties Names to the Deed their Dwelling-places their Degrees the Thing granted upon what Considerations the Estate limited the Time when it was granted and whether simply or upon Condition with other such like Circumstances But whether the parties to the Deed write in the end their Names or set to their Marks as it is commonly used it matters not at all as I think for that is not meant where it is said that every Deed ought to have Writing 2. Sealing is a farther Testimony of their Consents to what is contained in the Deed as it appears in these words In Witness whereof c. or to such effect
Gift in the tail a man shall have a Writ of Warrantia Chartae but not upon Escuage Garrantie del jour GArranty del jour See for that Warrantia diei Gavelet GAvelet is a special and ancient kind of Cessavit used in Kent where the Custom of Gavelkinde continues whereby the Tenant shall forfeit his Lands or Tenements to the Lord of whom they are holden if he withdraw from his Lord his due Rents and Services after this manner If any Tenant in Gavelkind withhold his Rent and Services of the Tenement he holds of his Lord let the Lord seek by the award of his Court from three weeks to three weeks to find some Distress upon the Tenement until the fourth Court always with witnesses And if within that time he can find no Distress on that Tenement whereby he may have Iustice of his Tenant then at the fourth Court let it be awarded that he take that Tenement into his hand in name of a Distress as if it were an Ox or Cow and let him keep it a year and a day in his hand without manuring it within which Term if the Tenant come and pay his arrerages and make reasonable amends for the withholding then let him have and enjoy his Tenement as his Ancestors and he before held it and if he do not come before the year and day past then let the Lord go to the next County-Court with his Witnesses of his own Court and pronounce there this Process to have farther Witnesses and by the award of his Court after the County-Court holden he shall enter and manure in those Lands and Tenements as in his own And if the Tenant come afterward and will re-have his Tenements and hold them as he did before let him make Agreement with the Lord according as it is anciently said Hath he not since any thing given nor hath he not since any thing payed then let him pay v. li. for his Were before he become Tenant or Holder again See hereof 10 H. 3. Fitzh Cessavit 60. and Stat. 10 Ed. 2 of Gavelet in London in the Collection of Statutes London 2. matter much tending to this purpose that by this word Gavelet the Lord shall have the Land for the cessing of the Tenant And see Westm 2. ca. 21. which gives Cessavit There be some Copies which have the first Verse thus Written Nisith yelde and Nisith gelde And others thus Nighesith yeld and nighesith geld But these differ not in signification Other Copies have it thus Nigondsith seld and nigondsith geld That is Let him nine times pay and nine times repay Gavel-kinde GAvel-kinde is a Custom annexed and going with Lands in Kent called Gavel-kind-lands holden by ancient Socage Tenure And it is thought by the skilful in Antiquities to be called Gavel-kinde of Give all Kinne that is to all the Kindred in one Line according as it is used among the Germans from whom we English-men and chiefly of Kent come Or else it is called Gavel-kine of Give all kinde that is to all the Male-children for Kinde in Dutch signifies a Male-childe And divers other like conjectures are made touching Gavel-kinde which I omit The most usual Customes are That the Land is dividable between the Heirs-male and that the Heir of the age of fifteen years may give and sell his Land and shall inherit although his Father be attainted and hanged for Felony and his wife shall be endowed of half the Land whereof her husband died seised and the husband shall be Tenant by the Curtesse of the half although he have no issue by his wife but the Estate of the husband and wife ceases by their second Marriage And divers other Customes are used in Kent of the Lands in Gavel-kinde for which see Lambert's Perambulation of Kent Gawgeour GAwgeour is an Officer of the King appointed to search all Tuns Hogsheads Pipes Barrels and Tertians of Wine Oyl Honey Butter and to give them a Mark of allowance before they are sold in any place And because this mark is a Circle made with an Iron Instrument for that purpose it seems he takes his name from thence Touching this Office there have been made many Statutes the first is An. 27 E. 3. cap. 8. and the others are 4 R. 2. cap. 1. 18 H. 6. c. 17. 23 H. 6. c. 16. 1 R. 3. cap. 13. and 28 H. 8. c. 14. Gersuma GErsuma is an obsolete word for a Fine or Summe of mony it is often found in ancient Records See Sir Hen. Spelmans Glossarium Gild. GIld alias Geld has divers significations as sometimes a Tribute othertimes an Amerciament thirdly a Fraternity or Company combined together by Orders and Laws made amongst themselves with the Kings Licence Cambden cites many Antiquities whereby it appears to signifie a tribute or tax as pag. 135 139 159 168 178. Crompton in his Jurisdictions fol. 191. shews it to be an Amerciament as Footgeld yet fol. 197. he says to be quit of all manner of Gelds is to be discharged of all manner of Prestations to be made for gathering of Sheaves of Corn young Lambs and Wool to the use of the Foresters Also Cambden pag. 149. dividing Suffolk into three parts calls the first Gildable because tribute is thence gathered And the Statutes Anno 27 Edw. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 13. and Anno 11 H. 7. cap. 9. use Gildable in the same sense and so the Statute Anno 27 H. 8. cap. 26. Hence Lambert in the word Contubernalis is perswaded that the common word Gild or Gild-hall proceeds being a Fraternity or Communalty of men gathered in one Combination supporting their common charge by a mutual Contribution And in the Reg. Orig. fol. 219. b. there is Gildam Mercatoriam which seems to be a certain Liberty or Priviledge appertaining to Merchants whereby they are enabled to hold certain Pleas of Land within their own Precincts This word Gilds or Guilds is so used Anno 27 E. 3. cap. 51. and Anno 15 R. 2. c. 5. And Guildhalda Teutonicorum is used for the Fraternity of Easterling Merchants in London called the Stillyard Anno 22 H. 8. c. 8. See Coke l. 8. f. 125. Gisarms GIsarms was a certain Weapon mentioned 13 E. 1. Stat. 3. c. 6. Fleta writes it Sisarmes l. 1. cap. 24. Glebe GLebe are Lands of which the Rector or Vicar are seised in Jurae Ecclesiae Gors GOrs Gurges is a Pool or or Pit of water to keep fish in by the Grant whereof the Soil it self passes and a Praecipe quod reddat lies of it as you may see in 4 Ed. 3. 29. b. and 8 E. 3. 13. a. and F. N. B. 191. H. Granage GRanage is a Duty in London viz. the twentieth part of Salt Imported by an Alien and due to the Mayor Dyer 352. Grand Cape GRand Cape Look for it after in the Title Petit Cape Grand distress GRand Distress See of that before in the Title Distress Grand Serjeanty GRand Serjeanty is where a man holds of the
his Father and he shall have be no other Recovery against the Tenant or any other because such advantage is given by the Law to the Tenant And note that Fealty of common right belongs to Rent service but not to Rent charge nor Rent seck If a man distrain for Rent charge and the Distress be rescued from him and he was never seised before he hath no recovery but by Writ of Rescous for the Distress first taken gives not Seis ● to him unless he had the Rent before for if he were seised of the Rent before and after the Rent be behind and he distrain and Rescous be made he shall have Assise or a Writ of Rescous In every Assise of Rent charge and annual Rent or in a Writ of Annuity it behoves him that brings the Writ to shew an Especialty or else he shall not maintain the Assise But in an Assise of Mortdancestor or Formedon in the discender or other Writs in which Title is given or comprised brought of Rent charge or annual Rent the Especialty need not be shewn And note well that if a man grant a Rent charge to another and the Grantee release to the Grantor parcel of the Rent yet all that Rent is not extinct If Rent charge be granted to two joyntly and the one release yet the other shall have the half of the Rent And if the one purchase the half of the Land whereout the Rent is going the other shall have the half of the Rent of his companion And if the Disseisor charge the Land to a Stranger and the Disseisee bring an Assise and recover the Charge is defeated But if he that hath right charges the Land and a Stranger feign a false Action against him who hath no right and recovers by Default the charge abides In case Partition be between two Parceners and more Land be allowed to one then to the other and she that hath most of the Land charges her Land to the other and she happeth the Rent she shall maintain Assise without Especialty And it is a Rent seck where a man holds of me by Homage Fealty and other Services yielding to me a certain yearly Rent which I grant to another reserving to me the other Services If Rent seck be granted to a man and to his Heirs and the Rent be behind and the Grantor die the Heir may not distrain nor shall recover the arrearages of the time of his Father as it is said before of Rent services And in the same manner it is of Rent charge or annual Rent But in all these Rents the Heir may have for the arrerages in his own time such advantage as his Father had in his life See the Statute 32 H. 8. cap. 37. And note well that in Rent seck if a man be not seised of the Rent and it be behind he is without recovery for that it was his own folly at the beginning when the Rent was granted him or reserved that he took not Seisin of it as a peny or two pence A man may not have a Cessavit per biennium or any other Writ of Entry sur Cessavit for any Rent seck behind by two years but only for Rent service as it appears in the Stat. West 2. cap. 21. It behoves him that sues for Rent seck to shew a Deed to the Tenant cise the Tenant shall not be charged with the Rent except where the Rent seck was Rent service before as in this case Lord Mesne and Tenant and every of them holds of other by Homage and Fealty and the Tenant of the Mesne by 10 s. rent the Lord paramount purchases the Lands or Tenements of the Tenant all the Seigniory of the Mesne but the rent is extinct and for this cause this rent is become Rent seck and the Rent service changed for he may not distrain for this rent and in this case he that demands the rent shall never be charged to shew a Deed. Also in a Writ of Mordint-cestor Ayle or Besayle of rent seck it needs not to shew a Specialty for that these Writs of Possession comprehend a Title within themselves that is to say that the Ancestor was seised of the same rent and centinued his possession in respect of which Seisin the Law supposes that it is also averrable by the Countrey Yet learn for some suppose a necessity to shew forth a Deed because rent seck is a thing against common right as well as rent charge But in Assise of Novel disseisin and in a Writ of Entry sur disseisin brought of Rent seck it is needful to shew forth a Deed for that Rent seck is a thing against Common Right except in the case aforesaid where it was Rent service before and by the act of Law it is become Rent seck And Assise of Novel disseisin and a Writ of Entry sur disseisin contain within them no Title but suppose a Disseisin to be done to the Plaintiff and by the intendment of the Law the Disseisin gives no cause of Averment against common Right but there is a necessity to shew forth a Deed. Repleader REpleader is where the plea of the Plaintiff or Defendant or both are ill or an impertinent Issue joyned then the Court makes void all the Pleas which are ill and awards the Parties to replead Coke Entr. 152. and 221 224. Replevin REplevin is a Writ that lies where a man is distrained for Rent or other thing then he shall have this Writ to the Sheriff to deliver to him the Distress and shall find Surety to pursue his Action and if he pursue it not or if it be found or judged against him then he that tooks the Distress shall have again the Distress which is called the Return of the Beasts and he shall have in such case a Writ called Returno habendo But if the Defendant avow for Rent he may have Iudgment for the value of the Cattel by the Statute of 17 Car. 2. cap. 7. If it be in any Franchise or Bailiwick the party shall have a Replevin of the Sheriff directed to the Bailiff of the same Franchise to deliver them again and he shall find Surety to pursue his Action at the next County And this Replevin may be removed out of the County unto the Common place by Writ of Recordare See more of Replevin in the Title Distress Also see Mich. 2 E. 3. pl. 31. 7 E. 3. 27. pl. 13. the word Plevin where Land was taken out of the Kings hands and are afterwards delivered or replevied out of the Kings hands For which see Stat. 9. 3. cap. 2. The Writ of Homine replegiando lies where a man is in Prison and not by special commandment of the King nor of his Iustices nor for the death of a man nor for the Kings Forest nor for such cause which is not replevisable then he shall have this Writ directed to the Sheriff that he cause him to be replevied This Writ is a Justcies
keeps an Ale-house to the intent that he may have the Custom of the Inhabitants within the Forrest to come and spend their mony with him and for that he shall wink at their Offences committed within the Forrest Second deliverance SEcond deliverance is a Writ made by the Filacer to deliver Cattle Distreined after the Plaintiff is Non-suit in Replevin Plow Com. 274. Dyer 41. Se defendendo SE defendendo is a Plea for him that is charged with the death of another saying that he was driven unto that which he did in his own defence Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 1. cap. 7. Seigniory in Gross SEigniory in Gross See Lord in Gross Selion SElion comes of the French Sellon that is the Ground rising between two Furrows in Latine Parca a Ridge and it is not of any certain quantity but sometimes more and sometimes less And therefore Crompton in his Jurisdiction of Courts fol. 221. saith that a Selion cannot be demanded because it is uncertain Seneshal SEneshal Steward is a French word borrowed of the Germans and signifies one that hath the dispensing of Iustice in some particular Cases as Stamf. Pl. of the Cor. fol. 152. B. the High Steward of England or of the affairs of a Family as Cromptons Jurisdiction fol. 102. Steward of the Kings Houshold and 25 E. 3. Stat. 5. cap. 21. and others He is also a learned man appointed by the Lord of a Mannor to hold Courts Leet or Baron Co. 1 Inst 58. 61. Sequestration SEquestration is the Setting aside of a thing in controversie from the possessson of both those that courend for it It is used also for the act of an Ordinary when no man will meddle with the goods and chattels of one deceased as 4 5 M. Dyer fol. 160. b. 7 Eliz. Dyer 232. a. And so it is used also for the Gathering of fruits and profits of a Benefice void for the use of the next Incumbent by the Statute of 28 H. 8. cap. 11. Knights Service TO hold by Knights Service is to hold by Homage Fealty and Escuage and it draws to it Ward Marriage and Relief And note that Knights Service is Service of Lands or Tenements to bear arms in War in defence of this Realm and it owes Ward and Marriage by reason that none is able nor of power nor may have knowledge to bear arms before he be of the age of xxi years And to the end that the Lord shall not lose that which of right he ought to have and that the power of the Realm be nothing weakned the Law wills because of his tender age that the Lord have him and his Lands in his Ward till full age that is to say xxi years But see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. whereby all Tenures are turned into free and common Soccage Sessions SEssions is a Sitting of Iustices in Court upon their Commission as the Sessions of Oyer and Terminer Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 67. Quarter Sessions otherwise called General Sessions or open Sessions 5 El. c. 4. opposite whereunto are Privy or especial Sessions which are procured upon some especial occasion for the speedy expedition of Iustice Cromp. Justice of P. fol. 110. What things are enquirable in General Sessions see Cromp. as above and fol. 109. Petit Sessions or Statute Sessions are held by the high Constables of every Hundred for the placing of Servants An. 5. El. cap. 4. in the end Severance SEverance is the Singling of two or more that are joyned in a Writ As if two are joyned in a Writ De liberate probanda and the one afterward is non-suited in this case Seveance is permitted so that notwithstanding the Nonsuit of the one the other may alone proceed F. N. B. fol. 78. See of this Brook tit Severance Summons fol. 238. For it is harder to know in what cases Severance is permitted then what it is There is also Severance in Assise Old Book of Entries fol. 81. col 4. And Severance in Attaint fol. 95. col 2. And Severance in Debt fol. 200. col 1. And Severance in Quare impedit Coke l ● b. 5. fol. 97. Sewers SEwers seems to be a word compounded of two French words Seoir to sit and Eau Water for that the Sewers are Commissioners that sit by virtue of their Commission and Authority grounded upon divers Statutes to enquire of all Nusances and Offences committed by the stopping of Rivers erecting of Mills not repairing of Banks and Bridges c. and to tax and rate all whom it may concern for the amending of all defaults which tend to the hindrance of the free passage of the Water through her old and ancient Courses See the Statute of 6 H. 6. cap. 5. 23 H. 8. cap. 5. for the form of their Commission Shack. SHack is a peculiar name of Common used in the County of Norfolk and Cattel go to Shack is as much to say as to go at liberty or to go at large And this Common called Shack which in the beginning was but in nature of a Feeding because of vicinage for avoiding of Suits in some places within this County is by Custom altered into the nature of Common appendant or appurtenant and in some places it retains its Original Nature Coke lib. 7. fol. 5. Shewing SHewing is to be quit with Attachment in any Court and before whomsoever in Plaints shewed and not allowed Soc. SOC is Suit of Men in your Court according to the custom of the Realm Soccage TO holo in Soccage is to hold of any Lord Lands or Tenements yeelding him a certain Rent by the year for all manner of Services To hold by Soccage is not to hold by Knights Service nor doth Ward Marriage or Relief belong to it but they shall double once their Rent after the death of their Ancestor according to that that they be wont to pay to their Lord. And they shall not be above measure grieved as it appears in the Treatise of Wards and Relief And note well that Soccage is in 3 manners that is to say Soccage in free Tenure Soccage in ancient Tenure and Soccage in base Tenure Soccage in free Tenure is when one holds of another by Fealty and certain Rent for all manner of Services as is before said And of all Lands holden in Soccage the next of kin shall have the Ward to whom the Heritage may not discend till the age of xiv years that is to say if the Heritage come by the part of the Father they of the part of the Mother shall have the Ward and contrariwise If the Gardian in Soccage make waste he shall not be impeached of waste but he shall yield accompt to the Heir when he shall come to his full age of 21 years for which see the Statutes of Marlebr ca. 17. Soccage of ancient Tenure is that where the people held in Ancient Demesne who were wont to have no other Writ than the Writ of Right close which was determined According to the ●
LES TERMES DE LA LEY OR Certain difficult and obscure Words and Terms of the Common Laws and Statutes of this Realm now in use expounded and explained Now Corrected and Enlarged With very great Additions throughout the whole Book never Printed in any other Impression Hor. Multa renascentur quae jam cecidere cadentque Quae nunc sunt in honore vocabula si volet usus LONDON Printed by W. Rawlins S. Roycroft and M. Flesher Assigns of Richard and Edward Atkins Esquires For G. Walbanke S. Heyrick J. Place J. Poole and R. Sare 1685. To the READER I Need not strive much to prove the necessity of this Book if you consider that the most accomplished Pleader that ever charm'd his Author with Eloquence and Reason began with it much less shall I have difficulty to shew its profitableness to any who looks about and sees how many fair Estates are every day gained by the Professors of this Noble Science to which this little Book must open the door and let them in But least of all need I suspect that whoever is convinced of these two Points its Necessity and Profitableness will fail to peruse and esteem it Though no name of any Authour appears to it yet my Lord Cook in his preface to his Tenth Report ascribes it to William Rastal that reverend Judge who was eminently knowing both in the Common and Statute Law of this Land as appears by the many Leraned Expositions and Excellent Cases which every where occur in it And we may probably guess it to be written by him originally in French only having some cause to suspect the Translation to be done by a less skilful Hand For though by the many Impressions of it and carelesness of Printers it has suffered much as other Books of like nature daily do yet some Objection lay against the Translator himself as to omit others Chapter is defined to be Locum in quo fiunt communes tractatus Collegiatorum which was Englished thus odly A Place wherein common Tracts of men Collegiate are made And for Errors of the Press they were very numerous and strangely unhappy as disseised for die seized Common Law for Canon Law deep for deer necessary for accessary tiel for viel rather for either owner for power c. In devastaverunt sans compulsion was Englished by compulsion In the word Gild two whole Lines were omitted in the English and the French imperfect so likewise in Garranty and other words There was also a mistake in Geography in the word Pape where Rome was said to be 1500 miles from hence full 500 too much And still as Impressions were iterated Errat's increased Besides the very many Faults which were thus crept into this Book it was so extreamly misalphabeted that some words could not be found without much difficulty I had almost said not at all for if the Reader finds not the word he seeks in its true place he commonly lays by the Book with despair To remedy these encreasing Evils I was willing to bestow my endeavour First by adding above an hundred Words with Explications in their proper places and making references to others where needful Secondly by Correcting the whole Work in what I found amiss and retrenching some antiquated and tautological Expressions as they occurred Thirdly by adding to some old words such late Statutes as alter or concern the Law established by them And lastly by digesting the whole into an exact Alphabet and taking care to prevent Errors of the Press That I intended well I can give you but my word how I have performed I make my Reader Judge Inner Temple T. B. TERMS OF THE LAW EXPOUNDED Abate ABate seems to come from the French Abbatre is to destroy or defeat utterly and has several significations As to Abate a Castle or Fortlet Old Natura brev fo 45. which in Westem 1. cap. 17. is interpreted to beat down And to abate a Writ is to defeat or overthrow it by some Error or Exception Britton cap. 48. And he that steps in between the former possessor and his Heir is said to abate in the Lands See Abatement Abatement of a Writ or Plaint ABatement of a Writ or Plaint is when an Action is brought by Writ or Plaint wherein is want of sufficient and good matter or else the matter alledged is not certainly set down or if the Plaintiff or Defendant or Place are misnamed or if there appear variance between the Writ and the Specialty or Record or that the Writ or the Declaration be uncertain or for Death of the Plaintiff or Defendant and for divers other like causes then upon those defaults the Defendant may pray that the Writ or Plaint may abate that is to say that the Plaintiffs Suit against him may cease for that time and that he shall begin again his Suit and bring a new Writ or Plaint if he be so disposed But if the Defendant in any Action plead a matter in Bar to annul the Action for ever he shall not come afterwards to plead in Abatement of the writ but if after it appear in the Record that there is some matter apparent for which the Writ ought to be abated then the Defendant or any person as a friend to the Court may well plead and shew it in Arrest of Iudgement See the titles of Writ Misnosmer and Variance in the Abridgements and the Book called The Digests of Writs in which this matter especially is very well handled There are also other matters Which abate and stay Actions and Writs that is to say Variance between the Writ and the Count. If the Plaintiff be an alien Enemy For want of naming the Defendant of what Town Trade or degree he is where the Suit is by Writ That a Woman Plaintiff is married before or hanging the Suit That the Plaintiff hath another Action depending for the same cause That the Writ is dated before the Action accrued For that the Defendant ought to be sued in another Court of which he is an Attorney or Officer For that the Land is ancient demesne For that the matter in Suit was done upon the high Sea in which case the Admiral hath Iurisdiction These csuses underneath do not abate the Writ or Action but suspend the prosecution for a time If the Plaintiff in Action personal be out-law'd or convicted of Recusancy or Excommunicated Vpon a Scire facias against ter ' tenants for Debt plea that there are other Lands liable to the same Debt which are not returned doth stay the Proceedings until they be also returned Abatement in Lands ABatement in Lands or Tenements is when a man dies seised of Lands or Tenements and one that hath no right enters into the same before the Heir this Entry is called an Abatement and he an Abator But if the Heir enter first after the death of his Ancestor and the other enter upon the possession of the Heir this last entry is a Disseisin to the Heir Look in
the Book of Entries fo 63 c. 205. d. 519. c. where this word Abatement is called in Latin Intrusio And I think it better to call it in Latin Interpositio ot Intratio per interpos ● ionem make a difference between this word and Intrusio after the death of the Tenant for life Abbot ABbot was the sovereign head or Chief of those Houses which when they stood were called Abbies and this Abbot with the Monks of the same House who were called the Covent made a Corporation Such a Sovereign of any such House shall not be charged by the Act of his Predecessor if it be not by common Seal nor for such things which come to the use of his House Also an Abbot shall not be charged for the debt of his Monk before his entry in Religion though the Creditor have an especialty thereof except it have come to the use of his House but the Executors of the Monk shall be charged therewith Look for this in the Abridgements the same Title under which you shall see that some of them were elective some presentative and how they were made Governours and their Authority And in this Title are also comprehended all other Corporations Spiritual as Prior and his Covent Friers and Canons Dean and Chapter Abettors ABettors are in divers Cases diversly taken One Kind of Abettors are they that maliciously without just cause or desert do procure others to sue false Appeals of Murther or Felony against men to the intent to trouble and grieve them and to bring them to infamy and slander Abettors in Murthers are those that command or procure counsel or comfort others to Murther And in some case Abettors shall be taken as Principals and in some case but as Accessories So in other Felonies And their presence at the deed doing and their absence makes a difference in the case There are Abettors also in Treason but they are as Principals for in Treason there are no Accessories See more in the Book called Pleas of the Crown made by the Reverend Judge Sir W. Stamford in the Titles of Accessories and Dammages in Appeal Abeyance ABeyance is when a Lease is made for term of life the Remainder to the right Heirs of J. S. who is living at the time of the Grant now by this Grant the Remainder passes from the Grantor presently yet it vests not presently nor takes hold in the Grantee that is the right Heir of J. S. but is said to be in Abeyance or as the Logicians term it in posle or in understanding and as we say in the Clouds that is in the Consideration of the Law That if J. S. die having a right Heir and living the Lessee for life then this is a good Remainder and now vests and comes to the right Heir in such sort as that he may grant forfeit or otherwise dispose the same and ceases to be any more in Abeyance for that there is one now of ability to take it because J. S. is dead and hath left a right Heir in life which could not be living J. S. for that during his life none could properly be said to be his Heir Also if a man be Patron of a Church and presents one to the same now the Fee of the Lands and Tenements pertaining to the Rectory is in the Parson But if the Parson die and the Church become void then is the Fee in Abeyance until there be a new Parson presented admitted and inducted for the Patron hath not the Fee but only the right to present and the Fee is in the Incumbent that is presented and after his death it is in no body but in Abeyance till there be a new Incumbent as is aforesaid See Litt. Lib. 3 cap. 11. fo 145. and Perkins fol. 12. Abishersing ABishersing and in some Copies Mishersing is to be quit of Amerciaments before whomsoever of Transgression proved Abjuration ABjuration is an Oath that a Man or Woman shall take when they have committed Felony and fly to the Church or Church-yard or to any other place priviledged for safeguard or their lives chusing rather perpetual Banishment out of the Realm than to stand to the Law and be tryed for the Felony In which Case before the Coroner he shall make such Confession which may make a sufficient Indictment of Felony Then the Coroner at the Common Law shall make him forswear the Realm and assign to him what Port he shall go and shall swear him that he go not out of the High way and that he abide not at the Port if he may have good passage above one flood and one ebb and if he cannot have Passage then he shall go every day during xl days in the Sea to the knees But if such a Felon as abjures goes out of the High way and flies to another place if he be taken he shall be brought before the Iudge and there shall have Iudgment to be hanged And if he who so prays the privilege will not abjure then he shall have the priviledge for xl days and every man may give him meat and drink And if any give him sustenance after xl days although it be his Wife such giving is Felony Also he that doth abjure shall be delivered from one Constable to another and from one Franchise to another till he come to his Port and if the Constable will not receive him he shall be grievously amerced See the Oath in the Treatise De abjuratione Latronum This Law was instituted by S. Edward the Confessor a King of this Realm before the Conquest and was grounded upon the Law of mercy and for the Love and Reverence he and others his Successors did bear unto the House of God or place of Prayer and Administration of his Word and Sacraments which we call the Church Note this Law is now changed by the Statutes 21 H 8. cap. 2. 22 H. 8. cap. 14. and 32 H. 8. cap. 12. by which it appears that he at this day shall not abjure the Realm but all his Liberty of this Realm and all his liberal and free habitations resorts and passages from all places of this Realm to one certain place in this Realm thereto limited by 32 H. 8. cap. 13. and 33 H. 8. c. 15. See more in Stamf. li. 2. c. 10. and see the Statutes 1 Jac. c. 25. and 21 Jac. c. 28. for the repeal of all Statutes concerning Abjured persons and the taking away of all Sanctuaries See the Statutes of 35 El. chap. 12. for the Abjuration of Recusants and Stat. 1 Jac. c. 25. Abridgement of a Plaint or Demand ABridgement of a Plaint or Demand is where one brings an Assise Writ of Dower Writ of ward or such like in which cases for that the Writ of Assise is de libero tenemento as in a Writ of Dower the Writ is Rationabilem dotem quae contingit de libero tenemento W. her husband and in a Writ of ward the Writ is Custo ● terrarum
haeredis c. without shewing any certainty in these Writs bnt in the Plaint of the Assise or Demand in the Writ of Dower and in the count in the Writ of Ward the Plaintiff or Demandant is to shew the certainty of the acres or parcels of Land then if the Tenant pleads Nontenure or Ioyntenancy or some other such like Plea to parcel of the Land demanded in abatement of the Writ the Plaintiff or Demandant may abridge his Plaint or Demand to that Parcel that is he may leave out that part and pray that the Tenant may answer the rest to which he hath not yet pleaded any thing The cause is for that in such Writs the certainty is not set down but is generally and notwithstanding the Demandant hath abridged his Plaint or Demand in part yet the Writ remains good still for the rest Accedas ad Curiam ACcedas ad Curiam is a Writ directed to the Sheriff commanding him to go to such a Court of some Lord or Franchise where a Plaint is sued for taking of beasts as a Distress or any false Iudgment is supposed to be made in any Suit in such a Court which is not of Record and that the Sheriff shall there make Record of the said Suit in presence of the Suitors of the same Court and of four other Knights of the County and certiffe it into the Kings Court and at the day that is limited in the Writ This Writ is made out of Chancery and returnable into the Kings Bench or Common Pleas. Accedas ad Vicecomitem ACcedas ad Vicecomitem is a Writ directed to the Coroner commanding him to deliver a writ to the Sheriff who having a Pone delivered him suppresses it Regist orig 8. 3. Acceptance ACceptance is a taking in good part and as it were an Agreeing unto some act done before which might have been undone and avoided if such Acceptance had not been by him or them that so accepted for example if a Bishop before the Statute made 1 Eliz. lease part of the possessions of his Bishoprick for term of years reserving rent and dies and after another is made Bishop who accepts that is takes or receives the Rent when it is due and ought to be paid now by this Acceptance the Lease is made perfect and good which else the new Bishop might very well have avoided The like law is if a man and his wife seised of Land in right of the wife joyn and make a Lease or Feoffment by Deed reserving rent and the husband dies she accepts or receives the rent by this the Feoffment or Lease is made perfect and good and shall bar her of bringing a Cui in vita Accessories ACcessories are of two sorts by the Common Law and by the Statute Law Accessory by the Common Law is also of two sorts the one before the offence is done the other after Accessory before the Fact is he that commends or procures another to do Felony and is not there present himself when the other does it but if he be present then he is called Principal Accessory after the offence is he that receives favours aids assists or comforts any man that hath done any Murther or Felony whereof he hath knowledge Such an Accessory shall be punished and shall have judgment of life and member as well as the Principal which did the Felony but such an Accessory shall never be put to answer that till the Principal be attaint or convict or be outlawed thereupon In Manslaughter a man cannot be Accessory before the fact for Manslaughter ought to ensue upon a sudden debate or affray for if it be premeditated it is Murther Co. l. 4. fo 44. ● But a Woman in such case shall not be Accessory for helping her husband In great or high Treason as well the commanders as the Assisters and receivers are always Principals If a man councels a Woman to murther the child in her body and after the child is born and then is Murthered by the woman in the absence of him that so gave the counsel yet he is Accessory by his counselling before the birth of the Infant and not countermanding it Dyer fo 186. pl. 2. Also one may be Accessory to an Accessory as if one feloniously receive another that is accessory to Felony there the Receiver is an Accessory Accessory by the Statute is such an one as abets counsels or receives any may who commits or hath committed any offence made Felony by Statute For although the Statute doth not make mention of Accessories Abettors c. yet they are included by the interpretation of the said Statutes Stamf. Pl. cor li. 1. c. 45 46 47 48. See more of Accessory in the said Book of Plees lib. 1. cap. 44 59 50. Accompt ACcompt is a Writ and it lies where a Bailiff or Receiver to any Lord or other man who ought to render Accompt will not give his Accompt then he to whom the Accompt ought to be given shall have this Writ And by the Statute of Westm 2. c. 10. if the Accomptant be found in arrerages the Auditors that are assigned to him have power to award him to prison there to abide till he have made satisfaction to the party But if the Auditors will not allow reasonable expence and costs or if they charge him with more receipts than they ought then his next friend that will sue for him shall sue a Writ of Ex parte talis out of the Chancery directed to the Sheriff to take four Mainpernors to bring his body before the Barons of the Exchequer at a certain day and to warn the Lord to appear there the same day Accord ACcord is an agreement between two at the least to satisfie an offence or Trespass that the one hath made to the other for which he hath agreed to satisfie and content him with some Recompence which if it be executed and performed then because this Recompence is a full satisfaction for the offence it shall be a good bar in Law if the other after the Accord performed should sue again any Action for the same Trespass Note that the first is properly called an Accord the other a Contract Acquital ACquital is where there is a Lord Mesne and Tenant and the Tenant holds of the Mesne certain Lands or Tenements in Frank-almoign Frank-marriage or such like and the Mesne holds over also of the Lord paramount or above him Now ought the Mesne to acquit or discharge the Tenant of all and every manner of Service that any other would have and demand of him concerning the same Lands or Tenements because the Tenant must do his Service to the Mesne only and not to divers Lords for one Tenement or parcel of Land The same Law is where there is Lord Mesne and Tenant as aforesaid and the Mesne grants to the Tenant upon the tenure made between them to acquit and discharge him of all Rents Services and such like This Discharge is called Acquital Like
have any real or personal Action concerning land but in every such Action the Tenant or Defendant may plead that he was born in such a place which is not within the Kings liegeance and demand judgment if he shall be answered Every alien friend may by the Common Law have and get within this realm by gift trade or other lawful ways any treasure or personal goods whatsoever as well as any Englishman and may maintain any Action for the same But Land within this realm or houses if not for their dwelling only Alien friends connot have nor get nor maintain any Action real or personal for any Land or House unless the House be for their necessary dwelling An Alien enemy cannot maintain any Action nor get any thing within this Realm And the reasons why aliens born are not capable of inheritance within England are 1. The Secrets of the Realm may by this be discovered 2. The Revenues of the Realm shall be taken and injoyed by Strangers born 3. This will tend to the destruction of the Realm First in the time of war for then Strangers may fortifie themselves in the heart of the Realm and set in combustion the Common-wealth Secondly in the time of peace for by such means many Aliens born may get a great part of the Inheritance and free-hold of the Realm by which there would ensue a want of Iustice the supporter of the Common-wealth for this that Aliens cannot be returned of Iuries nor sworn for the tryal of Issues between the King and Subject or between Subject and Subject Vide Coke lib. 7. Calvins Case Alienation ALienation is as much to say as to make a thing another mans or to alter or put the possession of Lands or other things from one man to another And in some cases a man hath power in himself so to do without the assent or licence of any other and in some not As if Tenant in chief alien his estate without the Kings licence then by the St. of 1 Ed. 3. c. 12. a reasonadle Fine shall be taken where at the Common Law before the said St. the Lands and tenements held in chief of the K. and aliened without licence have been held forfeited And if the K's Tenant that holds in chief intended to alien unto C. to the use of D. and hereupon if he purchase Licence to alien to C. and accordingly aliens to C. to the use of D. which use is not mentioned in the Licence in this case he shall pay but one Fiue for it is but one Alienation Coke lib. 6 fol. 28. But if a man will alien Lands in Fee-simple to an House of Religion or to a body incorporate it behoves him to have the Kings Licence to make this Grant or Alienation and the chief Lords of whom such lands are held c. otherwise the land so alienated in Mortmain shall be forfeited by the Statute of 15 R. 2. cap. 5. Allay ALlay is the Temper or mixture of Gold and Silver with baser metal for the increasing the weight of it so much as might countervail the Kings charge in the coyning This word is used in the Statute of 9 H. 5. cap. 11. for the payment of English Gold by the Kings weight Almner ALmner is an Officer of the Kings house whose Office is to distribute the Kings Alms every day and to that purpose he hath the collecting of all Forfeitures of Deodands and of the goods of Felons de se which the King allows him to dispose in Alms to the poor And of his Office see Flets lib. 2. cap. 22. Almoin ALmoin See Aumone Alnager ALnager is an Officer of the Kings who by himself or by his Deputy looks to the Assise of all Cloth made of Wool throughout the Land and to put a Seal for that purpose ordained unto them 35 E. 3. Stat. 4. c. 1. Anno 3. R. 2. c. 2. And he is to be accomptable to tae King for every Cloth that is so sealed in a Fee or Custom hppertaining to it Altarage ALtarage in Latin Altaragium signifie Duties and Offerings to holy Altars mention'd 2 Cro. Rep. 516. that a Vicarage was endowed with it and small Tythes Ambidexter AMbidexter is he that when a matter is in suit between men takes money of the one side and of the other either to labour the Suit or such like or if he be of the Iury to give his Verdict Amendment AMendment is When Error is in the Process the Iustices may amend it after Iudgment But if there be Error in giving Iudgment they may not amend it but the party is put to his Writ of Error And in many cases where the default appears in the Clerks that writ the Record it shall be amended but such things as come by information of the party as the Town Mystery and such like shall not be amended for he must inform true upon his peril Amercement AMercement most properly is a Penalty assessed by the Peers or equals of the party amerced for an offence done as for want of Suit of Court or for not amending someting that he was appointed to redress by a certain time before or for such like cause in which case the party who offends puts himself in the mercy of the King or Lord and thereupon this Penalty is called Amerciament And there is a difference between Amerciaments and Fines Kitch 214. For Fines are Punishments certain which grow expressy from some Statute and Amerciaments are such which are arbitrarity imposed by the Affeerors which Kitchin seems to confirm fol ● 8. in these words The Amerciament is affeered by Equals Also it appears Coke lib. 8. fol. 39. That a Fine is always imposed and assessed by the Court but Amerciament which is called in Latin Misericordia is assessed by the Country Another diversity there is as if a man be convict before the Sheriff of the County of a Recaption he shall be only amerced but if he be convict of this in the Common Bench he shall be fined And the reason of this diversity is That the County Court is not a Court of Record and therefore cannot impose a Fine for no Court can impose a Fine but such a Court as is of Record Cok. lib. 8. fol. 41. a. If the Defendant or Tenant plead a false Deed to him or deny his own Deed and this is found against him or he leaving his own Verification acknowledges the Action he shall be fined for his falsity because we ought to be sure of our own Acts. But if one deny the Deed of his Ancestor and this is found against him yet he shall not be fined but amerced only because it was the act of a Stranger Co. lib. 8. fol. 60. a. see more there Amercement royal AMercement royal is when a Sheriff Coroner or other such Officer of the King is amerced by the Iustices for his abuse in the Office Learn if it should not be called a Fine Amoveas manus AMoveas manus See Ouster le
Lease to any other the Executors shall have the Lease because they are his Assignees in Law And so it is in other cases Assise ASsise is a Writ that lies where any man is pur out of his lands tenements or of any profit to be taken in a certain place and so disseised of his Free-hold Free-hold to any man is where he is seised of lands and tenements or profit to be taken in Fee-simple Fee-tail for term of his own or another mans life But Tenant by Elegit Tenant by Stat Merchant and Stat. Staple may have Assise though they have no Free-hold and this is ordained by divers Statutes In an Assise it is needful always that there be one Disseisor and one Tenant or otherwise the writ shall abate Also where a man is disseised and recovers by Assise of Novel Disseisin and afterward is again disseised by the same Disseisor he shall have against him a Writ of Redisteisin directed to the Sheriff to make inquisition and if the Redisseisin be found he shall be sent to prison Also if one recover by assise of Mortduncaster or by other Iury or default or by reddition and if he be another time disseised then he shall have a Writ of Post Disseisin and he who is taken and imprisoned for Redisseisin shall not be delivered without special commandment of the King See the Statutes Merton c. 3. Marlebridge cap. 8. and Westminster 2. c. 26. There is also another assise called Assise of Fresh force and lies where a man is disseised of tenements which are devisable as in the City of London or other Boroughs or Towns that are Franchises then the Defendant shall come unto the Court of the said Town and enter his Plaint and shall have a Writ directed to the Mayor or Batleffs c. and thereupon shall pass a Iury in manner of Assise of Novel Disseisin But he must enter his Plaint within forty days as it is said or otherwise he shall be sent to the Common Law And if the Officers delay the Execution then the Plaintiff shall have another Writ to have Execution and a Sicut alias and a Pluries c. See Littleton cap. Rents Assise de darrain Presentment ASsise de darrain Presentment See Quare impedit Also there is an Assise of Nusance called Assisa Nocumenti Assise of the last Presentation Assise de Mortdancestor ASsise de Mortdancastor Look in the title of Cosinage Association ASsociation is a Patent sent by the King either of his own motion or at the suit of the party Plaintiff to the Iustices of Assise to have other persons associated to them to take the Assise And upon this Patent of Association the King will send his Writ to the Iustices of Assise by it commanding them to admit them that are so sent If the King makes three Iustices of Assise and afterwards one of them dies there the King may make a Patent of Association to another to associate him to the two in place of him that is dead and a Writ which shall be close directed to the two Iustices that are alive to admit him F. N. B. 185. Assoil ASsoil comes from the Latin absolvere and signifies to deliver or discharge a man of an Excommunication and so it is used by Stamford in his Plcas of the Crown lib. 2. cap 18. fol. 71. b. Assumpsit See Nude Contract ASsumpsit is a voluntary promise made by word by which a man assumes and takes upon him to perform or pay any thing to another This word contains in it any verbal Promise made upon consideration which the Civilians express by several words according to the nature of the Promise calling it sometimes Pactum Promissionem other times Sponsionem Pollicitationem or Constitutum Attach ATtach is a Taking or Apprehending by Command or Writ There are some differences between an Arrest and an Attachment for an Arrest proceeds out of the inferiour Courts by Precept and Attachment out of the Superior Courts by Precept or Writ Lamb. Eiren. lib. 1. cap. 16. Also an Arrest lies only upon the Body of a man whereas an Attachment is sometimes upon the Goods only as Kitch fol. 279. b. saith a man may attach a Cow and in another case that a man may be attached by an hundred Sheep and it is sometimes awarded upon the Body and Goods together at one and the same Attachment differs from a Capias for Kit. fol. 79. b. hath these words Note that in a Court of Baron a man shall be attached by goods and a Capias shall not go out thence By which it seems Attachment is more general extending to the taking of Goods where a Capias extends to the taking of the Body only An Attachment differs from a Distress as appears by Kit. fol. 78. a. where he saith Process in Court Baron is Summons Attachment and Distress which are Process at the Common Law There is also an Attachment of Priviledge and this is twofold either giving power to apprehend a man in a place priviledged or by vertue of an Office or Priviledge as to call another to that Court to which he himself belongs and in respect of which he is priviledged New Book of Entries fol. 431. a. And there is a Process called a Foreign Attachment which is used to attach the goods of Foreigners found within any Liberty or City for a Debt due to the party himself And by the custome of some places a man may attach goods in the hands of a stranger As if A. ows to B. ten pounds and C owes A. another Summe of money B. may attach the goods of A. in the hands of C. to satisfie himself in part or all as the Debt is Also there is Attachment of the Forest which is a Court there held every forty days throughout the year In which the Verderors have not any authority but to receive and inrol the Attachment of offenders against Vert and Venison taken by the other Officers that they may be presented at the next Iustice seat in Eyre Manwood part 1. pag. 93. cap. 22. Attainder ATtainder is a Conviction of of any person of a Crime or fault whereof he was not convict before As if a man have committed Felony Treason or such like and thereof is convicted arraigned and found guilty and hath Iudgment then he is said to be Attainted And this may be two ways the one upon Appearance the other upon default The Attainder upon Appearance is by Confession Batrail or Verdict the Attainder upon Default is by Process until he be outlawed Attaint ATtaint is a Writ that lies where false Verdict is given by twelve men and Iudgment given thereon then the party against whom they have passed shall have a Writ against the twelve men and when they are at issue it shall be tried by twenty four Iurors and if the false Verdict be found the twelve men are attaint and then the Iudgment shall be That their Meadows shall be eyred their Houses broken down their
Woods turned up and all their Lands and Tenements forfeited to the King But if it pass against him that brought that Attaint he shall be Imprisoned and grievously ransomed at the Kings will See the Statute 23 Hen. ● cap. 3. Attaint also is when Iudgment is given in Treason or Felony Attendant ATtendant is where one ows a duty or service to another or as it were depends upon another As if there be Lord Mesne and Tenant the Tenant holds of the Mesne by a peny the Mesne holds over by two pence the Mesne releases to the Tenant all the right which he hath in the Land the Tenant dies his wife shall be endowed of the land and she shall be Attendant to the Heir of the third part of one peny and not of the third part of two pence for she shall be endowed of the best possession of her husband Also where the wife is endowed by the Gardian she shall be attendant to the Gardian and to the Heir at his full age Attournment ATtournment is when one is Tenant for term of Life and he in Reversion or Remainder grants his right or estate to another then it behoves the Tenant for life to agree thereto and this agreement is called an Attournment For if he in the Reversion grant his estate and right to another if the Tenant for life attourn not nothing passes by the grant But if it be granted by Fine in Court of Record he shall be compelled to attourn And see thereof after Title Quid juris c ● mat and in Littl. lib. 3. cap. 10. Atturney ATturney is one appointed by another man to do something in his stead whom West hath defined thus Attorneys are such persons as by consent commandment or request take care of see to and undertake the Charge of other mens Business in their absence And where in ancient time those of authority in Courts have had it in their dispose when they would permit men to appear or sue by any other than themselves as appears by F. N. B. 25. in the Writ of Dedimus potestatem đ Attornato faciendo where it is shewed that men were driven to procure the Writs or Letters Patents of the King to appoint Atturneys for them it is now provided by divers Stat. that it shall be lawful so to do without any such circuity And there is great diversity of Writs in the table of the Register by which the King commands his Iudges to admit of Atturneys By which means at last there were so many unskilful Atturneys and so many mischiefs by them that an Act was 4 H. 4 c. 18. ordained for their restraint that the Iustices should examine them and put out the unskilful and An. 33 H. 6. c. 7. that there should be but a certain number of them in Norfolk and Suffolk In what cases a man at this day may have an Atturney and in what not see F. N. B. in the place before cited Atturney is either general or special Atturney general is he that is appointed to all our Affairs or Suits as the Atturney general of the King Atturney general of the Duke Cromp. 105. Atturney special or particular is he that is imploi ● d in one or more things particularly specifyed Atturneys general are made two ways either by the Kings Letters Patents or by our own appointment before Iustices in Eyre in open Court See Glan lib. 11. cap. 1. Brit. 126. Audience Court AUdience Court Curia audientiae Canturiensis is a Court belonging to the Archbishop of Canterbury of equal Authority with the Arches Court though inferior both in dignity and antiquity Of which you may read more in a Book entituled De antiquitate Ecclesiae Britannicae historia Audita Querela AUdita Querela is a Writ that lies where one is bound in a Statute-Merchant Statute-Staple or Recognisance or where Iudgment is given against him for Debt and his body in Execution thereupon then if he have a Release or other matter sufficient to be discharged of Execution but hath no day in Court there to plead it then he shall have this writ against him which hath recovered or against his Executors Auditor AUditor is an Officer of the King or some other great person who by yearly examining the Accounts of all under-Officers accountable makes up a general Book that shews the difference between their Receipts or Charge and their Payments or Allowances See the Statute 33 H. 8. c. 33. There is also another sort of Auditor assigned by any Court wherein a Defendant is adjudged to Account who take the Account and put it in form into Writing and then it is inrolled and the Plaintiff pleads to it and the Defendant replies if occasion be and so go to issue upon divers points and particulars of the Account Average AVerage is that Service which the Tenant owes his Lord to be done by the Beasts of the Tenant and it seems to be deriv'd from the word Averia because it is the Service which the Tenants Beasts perform for the Lord by carriage or otherwise This word also hath another signification and is much used in the Statute 32 H. 8. c. 14. for a certain Contribution which Merchants and others pay proportionably towards their losses that have their goods cast out in a tempest for the saving of the Ship or of the goods or lives of them that are therein Averment AVerment is where a man pleads a Plea in Abatement of the Writ or Bar of the Action which he saith he is ready to prove as the Court will award This offer to prove the Plea is called an Averment Also there is a Writ called a Writ of Averment which is made out of any of the Law Courts of Westminster-Hall when the Action is depending when the Sheriff upon a Distringas returns small issues then the Iudges of Assise may cause it to be enquired by a Iury if the Sheriff could return more issues of the Lands of the Defendant and if it be found he may then he must return more issues to force the Defendant to appear to the Plaintiffs suite or to do what the Distringas required him to do Averpeny AVerpeny is to be quit of divers sums of money for the Kings arrerages Augmentation AUgmentation was the name of a Court erected in the 27 year of King Henry the eighth And the cause thereof was that the King might be iustly used touching the profits of such Religious Houses and their Lands as were given him by Act of Parliament the same year not printed For dissolving which Court there was an Act made in the Parliament held in the first year of the Reign of Queen Mary Sess 2. cap. 10. which she afterward put in execution by her Letters Patents The name of the Court arises from this That the Revenues of the Crown were so much augmented by the Suppression of the said Houses as the King reserved to the Crown and neither gave nor sold to others But the Office of
Augmentation remains to this day wherein there are many Records of great use and importance Aumone AUmone or Tenure in Almoin is Tenure by Divine Service for so says Britton fol. 164. Tenure in Aumone is Land or Tenements given for Aims whereof some Service is reserved to the Feoffer or Donor Auncel weight AUncel weight was an ancient manner of Weighing in England by the hanging of balances or hooks at each end of a staff which the party lifted up upon his finger or with his hand and so discerned the equality or difference of the things weighed But this weight being subject to much deceit many Statutes were made to out it as the Stat. of 25 E. 3. c. 9. 34 E. 3. c. 5. 8 H. 6. c. 5. and others And it was called Auncel weight as much as to say Handsale Weight Ancient or Ancient Demesne ANcient demesne is a certain Tenure whereby all those Manors that were in the hands of S. Edward the Confessor and which he caused to be written in a Book called Dooms-day sub titulo Regis and all the Lands holden of the said Manors are held and the Tenants shall not be impleaded out of the said Manors and if they be they may shew the matter and abate the Writ but if they answer to the Writ and Iudgment be given then the Lands become frank-free for ever until that Iudgment be reversed by writ of Disceit Ra. Ent. 100 221. 2 R. 1. 11 H. 4. 36. 21 E. 3. 20. Also the Tenants in Ancient demesne are free of T ● ll for all things concerning their sustenance and Husbandry in ancient Demesne and for such Lands they shall not be put or impannelled upon any Enquest But all the Lands in Ancient Demes ● e that are in the Kings hands are frank-free and pleadable at the Common Law See more after in the Title Sokmans Avoir de pois AVoir de pois is as much as to say true or just weight And it signifies in our Law Two things first a kind of weight diverse from that which is called Troy Weight which hath but 12 ounces to the pound whereas Avoir de pois hath 16. Secondly it signifies such Merchandises as are weighed by this weight and not by Troy weight As you may see in the Statute of York 9. E. 3. 27 E. 3. c. 19 Stat. 2. c. 10. and the Statute of Glocester 2 R. 2. c. 1. Avowry AVowry is where one takes a Distress for Rent or other thing and the other sues Replevin then he that hath taken it shall Iustifie in his Plea for what cause he took it and if he took it in his own right he ought to shew that and so avow the taking and that is called his Avowry But if he took it in or for the right of another then when he hath shewed the cause he shall make conusance of the taking as Bailiff or servant to whom in whose right took it Avowterer AVowterer is an Adulterer with whom a married woman continues in Adultery the Crime is called Avowtry 43 E. 3. 19. Awme AWme is a Vessel that contains 40 galons of Rhen ● sh wine and is mentioned in the Statute made 1 Jac. c. 23. B Backberind Thief BAckberind Thief is a Thief taken with the manner that is having that found upon him being followed with a Hue and Cry which he hath stollen whether it be Money Linnen Wollen or other stuff but it is most properly said when he is taken carrying those things that he hath stolen in a bundle or fardel upon his Back Manwood in part 2. notes this for one of the circumstances or cases in which a Forester may arrest the body of any offender against Vert or Venison in the Forest which are Dog-draw Stable-stand Back-berind and Bloody-hand Badger BAdger is as much as to say Bagger of the French word Baggage id est Sarcina And it is used with us for one that is licenced to buy Corn or other Victuals in one place and carry them to another and such a one is exempted in the Statute made in the 5 and 6 of E. 6. cap. 14 from the punishment of an Ingrosser within that Statute Bail BAIL is when a man is taken or arrested for Felony suspicion of Felony indicted of Felony or any such case so that he is restrained of his liberty and being by Law bailable offers Surcties to those who have authority to bail him which Sureties are bound for him to the Kings use in a certain Sum of money or body for body that he shall appear before the Iustices of Goal-delivery at the next Sessions c. Then upon the Bonds of these Sureties as is aforesaid he is bailed that is set at liberty until the day appointed for his appearance Manwood in the first part of his Forest Law pag. 167. says There is a great diversity between Bail and Mainprise for he that is mainprised is always said to be at large and to go at his own liberty out of ward after he is put to Mainprise until the day of his Appearance by reason of Common Summons or otherwise But it is not so where a man is put to bail by four or two men by my Lord chief Iustice in Eyre of the Forest until a certain day for there he is always accounted by the Law to be in their ward and custody for the time and they may if they will hold him in ward or in Prison till that time or otherwise at their will so that he that is bail'd ● hall not be said by the Law to be at large or at his own liberty Bailement Bailement is a Delivery of things whether Writings Goods or Stuff to another sometimes to be delivered back to the Bailor that is to him that so delivered it sometimes to the use of the Bailee that is of him to whom it is delivered and sometimes also it is delivered to a third person This delivery is called a Bailment Bailiff BAiliff is an Officer that belongs to a Mannor to order the husbandry and hath authority to pay Quit-rents issuing out of the Mannor fei ● Trees repair Houses make Pales Hedges distrain Beasts doing hurt upon the ground and divers such like This Officer is he whom the ancient Saxons called a Reeve for the name Bailiff was not then known amongst them but came in with the Normans and is called in Latin Villicus There are two other sorts of Bailiffs that is Bailiffs errant and Bailiffs of Franchises Bailiffs errant are those that the Sheriff makes and appoints to go about the Country to execute Writs to summon the County Sessions Assises and such like Bailiffs of Franchises are those that are appointed by every Lord within his Liberty to do such Offices within his Precincts as the Bailiff errant doth abroad in the County This Bailiff distrains for Amerciaments in Courts held within the Mannor of which he is Bailiff But if such Court is by prescription to be
held within one month after a Feast and the Steward holds it after the month and in this Court Assess a Fine or Amerciament and the Bailiff distrains for it the party that is so distrained may have an Action of Trespass against the Bailiff Bank BAnk in French Banque i. Mensa is most usually taken for a Seat or Bench of Iudgment as Bank le Roy the Kings Bench Bank de Common Pleas the Bench of Common Pleas or Common Bench. Kitchin fol. 102. called also in Latin Bancus Regius and Bancus Communium Placitorum Cromp. Jur. f. 67 91. Kings Bench. KIngs Bench is a Court at Westminster where Pleas of the Crown Debts Trespasses and personal Actions Errors Audita Querela's c. are determined Bankrupt BAnkrupt by the Statute 1 Jac. c. 15. is thus described All and every such person and persons using or that shall use the trade of Merchandise by way of Bargaining Exchange Bartery Chevisance or otherwise in gross or by seeking his her or their trade of Living by buying and selling and being a Subject born of this Realm or any of the Kings Dominions or denizon which at any time since the first day of this present Parliament or at any time hereafter shall depart the Realm or begin to keep his or her house or houses or otherwise to absent him or her self or take sanctuary or suffer him or her self willingly to be arrested for any Debt or other thing not grown or due for money delivered ware sold or any other just or lawful cause or good considerations or purposes or hath or will suffer him or her self to be outlawed or yield him or her self to prison or willingly or fraudulently hath or shall procure him or her self to be arrested or him or her goods money or chattels to be attached or sequestred or depart from his or her dwelling-house or make or cause to be made any fraudulent grant or conveyance of his her or their Lands Tenements Goods or Chattels to the intent or wherehy his her or their Creditors being Subjects born as aforesaid shall or may be defeated or delayed for the recovery of their just and true Debt or being arrested for Debt shall after his or her Arrest lie in prison six months or more upon that Arrest or Detention in Prison for Debt and shall lie in Prison six months upon such Arrest or Detention shall be accounted and adjudged a Bankrupt to all intents and purposes See the Stat. 14 Car. 2. ca. 23. Banneret BAnneret is a Knight made in the Field with the ceremony of cutting off the point of his Standard ' and making it as it were a Banner And such are allowed to display their names in a Banner in the Kings Army as Barons ● o. And that such were next unto Barons in Dignity appears by the Statute made in the 5 year of R. 2. Stat. 2. cap. 4. by which Statute it seems such Bannerets were anciently called by Summons to the Parliament Banns BAnns is a word common a ● d ordinary among the Feudists and signifies a Proclamation or any publick notice given of any thing Eract lib. 3. tra 2. cap. 21. makes mention of Bannus Regis for a Proclamation or silence made by the Crier before the meeting of the Champions in a combat But we use this word Banns especially for the Publication of matrimonial Contracts in the Church before Marriage Bargain Sale BArgain and Sale is when a Recompence is given by both the parties to the Bargain as if one bargain and sell his Land to another for money here the Land is a Recompence to him for the money and the money is a Recompence to the other for the Land and this is a good Contract and Bargain And by such a Bargain Sale lands may pass without Livery or seisin if the Bargain and Sale be by Deed indented sealed and inrolled either in the County where the Land lies or in one of the Kings Courts of Record at Westminster within six months next after the date of the same writing indented according to the Statute in that behalf made in the 27 year of H. 8. cap. 16. Barcary BArcary signifies a Farm house as it seems Rast Ent. Tit. Assise en Corps politique 2. Barmote BArmote are divers Courts not of Record within the Hundred of the Peak in Derby-shire for the regulation of Groves Possessions and Trade of the Myners and Lead Barony BArony is a certain Royal Lordship where the Kings writ tunneth not and held of the King Rast Ent. Tit. Assise en Office 1. Barr. BArr is when the Defendant in any Action pleads a Plea which is a sufficient answer and destroys the Action of the Plaintiff for ever And it may be divided into Barr to common intendment and Barr special Barr to common intendment is an ordinary or general Barr which commonly disables the Declaration or Plea of the Plaintiff Barr special is that which more than ordinary and falls out in the case in question upon some special circumstance of the Fact As an Executor being sued for the Debt of his Testator pleads That he hath nothing in his hands at the day of the Writ purchased this is a good Barr to common intendment or at first sight but yet the case may be such that more goods may come to his hands after that time which if the Plaintiff can shew by way of Replication then except the Defendant hath a more special Plea or Barr to alledge he is to be condemned in the Action See Plow fol. 26 28. And in the same sense Barr is also divided into Barr material or special and Barr at large Kit. fol. 68. Barr is also in regard of the effect divided into Barr perpetual and Bar temporary Perpetual is that which overthows the Action for ever Temporary is that which is good for the present and may afterwards fail as Fully administred is a good Barr until it appear that more goods came afterward to the hands of the Executors which also holds for the Heir who in an Action for his Ancestors Debt pleads Nothing by discent See Brook Tit. Bar. nu 23. Barre fee. BArr fee is a Fee of twenty pence which every prisoner acquitted of Felony pays to the Sheriff or Goaler of which see 21 H. 7. 16. b. Barretry IS a word used in Pollices of Insurance and signifies dissentions and quarrels among the Officers and Seamen Barretor BArretor is a Common Mover Stirrer up or Maintainer of Suits Quarrels or parts either in Courts or in Country In Courts of Record and in the County Hundred and other inferior Courts In Country in three manners first in disturbing the peace secondly in taking or detaining the Possessions of Houses Lands or Goods c. that are in question or controversie not only by force but by subtilty and deceit and more usually in suppression of truth and right thirdly by false inventing and sowing of Calumnies Rumors and Reports making discord and disquiet to rise
woman at such a place within such a Diocess and that she is dead and that he hath married another woman within the same Diocess or within some other Diocess and so is Bigamus Or if he have been but once married then to say that she whom he hath married is or was a Widow that is the Relict of such a one c. which shall be tried by the Bishop of the Diocess where the Marriages are alledged And being so certified by the Bishop the prisoner shall lose the Benefit of the Clergy But at this day by force of the Act made 1 E. 6. ca. 12. this is no Plea but he may have his Clergy notwithstanding So is Brook titulo Clergie Placito 20. to the same purpose By-laws BY-laws are Orders made in Court-Leets or Court-Barons by a common consent for the good of them that are the makers of them And they are called By-laws quasi Birlaws or Bawrlaws of the Dutch word Bawr that is a Countrey-man and so Bawrlaws or By-laws is as much as the Laws of Country-men Bilinguis BIlinguis in general is a man with a double tongue but is commonly used for that Iury which passes between an English man and an Alien whereof part ought to be Englishmen and part Strangers And for this cause it is enacted by the Statute of 28 E. 3. cap. 13. That if any variance chance to be about the packing of Wooll before the Mayor of the Staple between the Merchants or Ministers of the same thereupon to try the truth thereof Enquest shall be taken and if the one party and the other be Denizons it shall be tried by Denizons or if the one party be Denison and the other Alien the half of the Enquest or of the proof shall be Denizons and the other half Aliens Bill BILL is all one with an Obligation saving that when it is in English it is commonly called a Bill in Latin an Obligation Also a Declaration in writing that expresses either the grievance and wrong which the Complainant has suffered by the party complained of or else some fault by him committed against some Law or Statute of the Realm By a Bill we now ordinarily understand a single Bond without a Condition by an Obligation a Bond with a Penalty and Condition West part 2. Symbol tit Supplications sect 52. Billa vera BIlla vera is the Indorsement of the grand Inquest upon any Presentment or Indictment which they find to be probably true Blackmail BLackmail is a word used in the Statute of 43 Eliz. c. 13. and signifies a certainty of Money Corn Cattel or other consideration given by the poor people in the North of England to men of great name and alliance in those parts to be by them protected from such as usually rob and steal there Black rod. BLack Rod is the Huissier belonging to the most Noble Order of the Garter so called of the Black rod he carries in his hand He is also Huissier of the Lords house in Parliament Bloodwit BLoodwit is to be quit of Amerciaments for Blood-shedding and what Pleas are holden in your Court you shall have the Amerciaments thereof coming because Wit in English is Misericordia in Latin Bloody hand BLoody hand is the apprehension of a Trespasser in the Forest against Venison with his hands or other part bloody though he be not found chasing or hunting Of which see Manwood part 2. c. 18. Bockland BOckland in the Saxons time was that we at this day cail Free-hold Land or Land held by Charter and it was by that name distinguished from Folkland which was Copy-hold Land Bona notabilia BOna notabilia is where a man dies having goods to the value of five pound in divers Diocesses then the Archbishop ought to grant Administration and if any inferior Bishop do grant it it is void 37 H. 6. 27. 28 10 H. 7. 18. Dyer 305. Bordlands BOrdlands signifie the Demesns which Lords keep in their own hand ● for he maintenance of their Bord or Table Bracton l. 4. Tract 3. c. 9. num 5. Borow BOrow which with us signifies an ancient Town as appears by Littleton sect 164. is a word derived either of the French Burg id est Pagus or of the Saxon Borhoe id est ● ignus for that anciently the Neighbours of a Town became Pledges one for another and from thence comes Headborow for the chief Pledge or Borhoe-Aldere with us now called the Borow-holder or Bursholder Borow English BOrow English is a customary Descent of Lands or Tenements in some places whereby they come to the youngest son or if the owner have no issue to his youngest brother as in Edmunton Kitchin fol. 102. Borowhead BOrohead See Head-borow Bote. BOte is an old word signifying Help Succor Aid or Advantage and is commonly joyned with another word whose signification is doth augment as these Bridgebote Burgbote Firebote Hedgebote Plowbote divers other for whose significations look in their proper Titles Bottomry vulgo Bomry IS when a Master of a Ship in case of necessity doth engage his Ship for money for use of the Ship Bribor BRibor Fr. Bribeur i. Mendicus seems to signifie one that pilfers other mans goods Anno 28 E. 2. Stat. 1. Brief BRief Breve signifies most properly in our Law the Process that issues out of the Chancery or other Court commanding the Sheriff to summon or attach A. to answer to the Suit of B. c. But more largely it is taken for any Precept of the King in writing under Seal issuing out of any Court whereby he commands any thing to be done for the furtherance of Iustice and good order And they are therefore called Briefs because they briessy comprehend the cause of the action And some of them are Original and some judicial as you may see at large in the Register of Writs Broadhalpeny BRoadhalpeny in some Copies Broadhalfpeny that is to be quit of a certain custome exacted for setting up of Tables or Boards in Fairs or Markets and those that were freed by the Kings Charter of this Custome had this word put in their Letters Patents by reason whereof at this day the Freedom it self for brevity of speech is called Broadhalfpeny Broker BRoker seems to come of the French word Broieur id est Tritor he that grinds or breaks a thing into small pieces And the true trade of a Broker as it appears in the Statute made 1 Jac. c. 21. is to beat contrive make and conclude Bargains between Merchants and Tradesmen But the word is now also appropriated to those that buy and sell old and broken apparel and Houshold-stuff Brugbote BRugbote and in some copies Bridgebote is to be quit of giving aid to the repair of Bridges Bull. BULL is an Instrument so called granted by the Bishop of Rome and sealed with a Seal of Lead containing in it his Decrees Commandments or other Acts according to the nature of the thing for which it is granted And these
in the same signification cap. 3. And at this day Chapiters are called Articles for the most part and are delivered as well by the mouth of the Iustice in his Charge as by the Clerks in writing to the Enquest where in ancient time they were after an Exhortation given by the Iustices for the observation of the Laws of the Kings peace first read distinctly and openly in the full Court and then delivered in writing to the grand Enquest An example of these Chapiters there is in the Book of Assises fol. 138. pla 44. Chaplain CHaplain is he that performs Divine Service in a Chappel and therefore is commonly used for him that depends upon the King or other man of worth for the instruction of him and his Family the reading of Prayers and Preaching in his private house where usually they have a Chappel for that purpose And for that they are retained by Letters under the Seal of their Patron and thereby by intendment are to be resident with them the Law hath given liberty for their Non-residency upon their Benefices If an Earl or Baron retains a Chaplain and before his advancement is attainted of Treason there the Retainer is determined and after the Attainder such Chaplain cannot take a second Benefice because he that is attainted is by his Attainder a dead person in Law What and how many Chaplains Noblemen and others may respectively retain the Statute of 21 H. 8. c. 3. doth well declare The wife of a Baron during the Coverture cannot retain a Chaplain yet when a Baronnesse Dowager retains one or two according to the Proviso of the said Statute the Retainer is the principal matter and as long as the Retainer is in force and the Baronness continues a Baronness the Chaplains may well take two Benefices by the express letter of the Statute for it suffices if at the time of the Retainer the Baronness were a widow And herein this rule is to be observed of a woman that attains Nobility by Marriage as by marriage of a Duke Earl or Baron c. for in such case if she afterward marry under the degree of Nobility by such Marriage she loses the Dignity she had attained and after such latter Marriage the power to retain a Chaplain is determined But otherwise it is where a woman is Noble by Discent for there her Retainer before or after the Marriage with one that is not Noble shall be in force and is not countermanded by the Marriage nor determined by her taking a Husband under her degree Coke lib 4. fol. 118 119. Chapter CHapter in Latine is defined to be An Assembly of Clerks in a Church-Cathedral conventual regular or Collegiate and in another signification A place wherein the members of that Community treat of their common affairs and it hath other significations which appertain not to our purpose It may be said that this Collegiate company is termed Chapter metaphorically the word originally implying a little head for this Company or Corporation is as a Head not only to rule and govern the Diocesse in the vacation of the Bishoprick but also in many things to advise the Bishop when the See is full Charge CHarge is where a man grants a Rent issuing out of his land and that if the Rent be behind it shall be lawfull for him his heirs and assigns to distrain till the Rent be paid this is called a Rent-charge But if one grant a Rent-charge out of the land of another though after he purchase the land yet the Grant is void Charter land CHarter-land is such as a man holds by Charter that is by Evidence in writing which otherwise is called Free-hold Copyhold-lands before the Conquest were by the Saxons called Folkland and the Charter-lands Bockland And Lambert in the Explication of Saxon words saith That this land was held with more easie and commodious conditions then Folkland and Copyhold-land held without writing And his reason is because it is a free and absolute Inheritance whereas land without writing is charged with payment and bondage so that for the most part Noblemen and persons of Quality possess the former and Rusticks the other The first we call Free-hold and by Charter the other Land at the will of the Lord. If a Riot Rout or Vnlawful assembly be committed then by the Statute of 19 H. 7. c. 13. twenty men inhabiting within the County where the Riot c. is made whereof every of them shall have lands and tenements within the same County to the yearly value of twenty shillings of Charter-hold or Free-hold or twenty six shillings of Copyhold shall make enquiry thereof Charter-party CHarter-party is an Indenture of Covenants and Agreements made between Merchants or Mariners concerning their Sea-affairs and of this you may read in the Statute now out of use made 32 H. 8. cap. 14. Charters CHarters of Lands are Writings Deeds Evidences and Instruments made from one man to another upon some Estate conveyed or passed between them of Lands or Tenements shewing the names place and quantity of the Land the Estate time and manner of the doing thereof the Parties to the Estate delivered and taken the Witnesses present at the same with other circumstances Chartis reddendis CHartis reddendis is a Writ which lies against him that has Charters of Feoffment delivered him to be kept and refuses to deliver them Old Nat. Brev. fol. 66. Reg. orig fol. 159. Chase CHase is taken two wayes first to drive cattel as to chase a Distress to a Castle secondly for a Receit for Deer and Beasts of the Forest and it is of a middle nature between a Forest and a Park being commonly less then a Forest and not endued with so many Liberties as with Courts of Attachment Swainmore and Justice seat and yet of a larger compass and having greater diversity of Keepers and Game then a Park Crompt in his Book of Iurisdictions fol. 148. saith That a Forest may not be in the hands of a Subject but it presently looses the name and becomes a Chase and yet fol. 197. he saith That a subject may be Lord and owner of a Forest which though they seem contradictory yet are both his sayings in some sense true For the King may give or alienate a Forest to a Subject yet so that when it is once in the Subject it loses the true property of a Forest because the Courts of Swainmote Justice seat and Attachment presently vanish none being able to make a Lord chief Iustice in Eyre of the Forest but the King as Manwood hath well shewed as his Book of Forest Laws cap. 3. 4. Yet it may be granted in such large manner that there may be Attachment and Swainmote and a Court equivalent to a Justice Seat as appears by him in the same Chapter numb 3. So that a Chase differs from a Forest in this because it may be in the hands of a Subject which a Forest in its proper nature cannot be and from
lastly to be out of Court voluntarily Confession of Offence COnfession of Offence is when a prisoner is appealed or indicted of Treason or Felony and broughe to the Bar to be arraigned and his Indictment is read unto him and he is demanded by the Court what he can say thereto then either he confesses the Offence and the Indictment to be true or he estranges himself from the Offence and pleads not guilty or else gives an indirect answer and so in effect stands mute Confession may be made in two sorts and to two several ends The one is he may confesse the offence whereof he is indicted openly in the Court before the Iudge and submit himself to the censure and judgement of the Law which Confession is the most certain answer and best satisfaction that may be given to the Iudge to condemn the Offendor so that it proceeds freely and of his own accord without any threats force or extremity used for if the Confession arise from any of these causes it ought not to be recorded As a woman was indicted for the felonious taking of Bread to the value of two shillings and being thereof arraigned she confessed the Felony and said that she did it by the commandment of her husband and the Iudges in pity would not record her Confession but caused her to plead Not guilty to the Felony whereupon the Iury found that she stole the Bread by the compulsion of her husband against her will for which cause she was discharged 27 Assis pla 50. The other kind of Confession is when the prisoner confesses the Indictment to be true and that he hath committed the Offence whereof he is indicted and then becomes an Approver that is an Accuser of others who have committed the same Offence whereof he is indicted or other Offences with him and then prayes the Iudge to have a Coroner assigned him to whom he may make relation of those Offences and the full circumstances thereof There is also a third kind of Confession made by an Offendor in Felony which is not in Court before the Iudge as the other two are but before a Coroner in a Church or other priviledged place upon which the Offendor by the ancient Law of the Realm is to abjure the Realm Confirmation COnfirmation is when one who hath right to any Lands or Tenements makes a Deed to another who hath the possession or some Estate with these words Ratificasse Approbasse Confirmasse with intent to enlarge his Estate or make his possession perfect and not defesible by him that makes the Confirmation nor by any other that may have his right Whereof see more in Littl. l. 3. cap. 9. of Confirmation Confiscate COnfiscate is derived from the Latine Fiscus which originally signifies a Hamper or Basket but metonymically the Princes Treasure because in ancient time it was put in the Hampers or Frails And though our King doth not put his Treasure in such things yet as the Romans have said that such goods as were forfeited to the Emperors Treasury were Bona Confiscata in like manner do we say of such goods as are forfeited to the Kings Exchequer And the title to have these goods is given to the King by the Law when they are not claimed by some other As if a man be indicted that he feloniously stole the goods of another man where in truth they are the proper goods of him indicted and they are brought in Court against him as the manner and he there asked what he says to the said goods to which he disclaimes by this Disclaimer he shall lose the goods although that afterwards he be acquitted of the Felony and the King shall have them as confiscated But otherwise it is if he doth not disclaim them The same Law is where goods are found in the Felons possession which he disavows and afterwards is attainted of other goods and not of them there the goods which he disavows are confiscate to the King But had he been attainted of the same goods they should have been said to be forfeited and not confiscate notwithstanding his Disavowment So if an Appeal of Robbery be brought and the Plaintiff leaves out some of his goods he shall not be received to enlarge his Appeal and forasmuch as there is none to have the goods so left out the King shall have them as confiscate according to the old rule Quod non capit Christus capit Fiscus And as in the case aforesaid the Law punishes the owner for his negligence and connivency so the Law abhors malice in seeking the bloud of any without just cause And therefore if A. hath the goods of B. by delivery or finding and B. brings an Appeal against A. for taking them feloniously and it is found that they were the Plaintiffs goods and that the Defendant came lawfully by them in this case these goods are confiscate to the King because of the false and malicious Appeal Congeable COngeable comes of the French word Conge id est venia and signifies in our Common Law as much as Lawfull or lawfully done and so Littleton uses it in his 410. sect where he says that the Entry of the Dis● elsee is Congeable Conged ' eslire COnge đ eslire i Leave to chuse or Power of chusing is the Kings Royal Permission to any Dean and Chapter in time of Vacancy to chuse a Bishop or to an Abbey or Priory of his own foundation to chuse their Abbot or Prior. Fitzh Nat. Brev. fol. 169. b. 170. b. c. c. Master Gwin in the Preface to his Readings saith That the King of England as Soveraign Patron of all Archbishopricks Bishopricks and other Ecclesiastical Benefices had of ancient time free disposition of all Ecclesiastical Dignities whensoever they happen'd to be void investing them first per baculum annulum and afterwards by his Letters Patents and that in progress of time they gave power to others to make Election under certain forms and conditions as namely that they upon e ● ery Vacation should beg of the K. Conge de eslire that is licence to proceed to Election and after to crave his Royal Assent c. And farther he affirms by good proof out of the Common-Law Books that King John was the first that granted it and that it was afterward confirmed by Westm 1. c. 1. which Statute was made Anno 3 E. 1. and again by the Statute de Art Cleri c. 2. which was ordained Anno 25 E. 3 Stat. 3. Conjuration COnjuration is a Compact or Plot made by men combining themselves together by oath or promise to do any publick harm But it is more commonly used for such as have personal Conference with the Devil or evil Spirit to know any secret or to effect any purpose Anno 5 Eliz. c 16. And the difference between Conjuration and Witchcraft may be this Because the one seems by Prayers and Invocation upon the powerful Name of God to compell the Devil to say or do what he
Winchester 13 Edw. 1. which appoints for the conservation of the Peace and view of Armour two Constables in every Hundred and Liberty and these are at this day called High Constables because the increase of people and offences hath again under these made others in every Town called Pe ● ie Constables who are of the like nature but of inferiour authority to the other Besides these there are Officers of particular places called by this name as Constable of the Tower Stan. 152. 1 H. 4. 13. Constable of the Exchequer 15 H. 3. Stat. 5. Constable of Dover Castle Camb. Brit. pag. 239. F. N. B. otherwise called Castellain Manw. part 1. cap. 13. of his Forest Law makes mention of a Constable of the Forest Customes and Services See Prescription CUstomes and Services is a Writ and lies where I or my ancestors after the limitation of Assise for which see the Title of Limitation in the Collection of Statutes were not seised of the Customes or Services of the Tenant before then I shall have this Writ to recover those Services Also the Tenant may have this Writ against his Lord but after the Tenant hath declared the Lord shall defend the words of the Declaration and replying shall say that he distrained not for the Customes whereof the Declaration is and then he shall declare all the Declaration of the Customes and Services and then the Tenant who was Plaintiff shall become Defendant and shall defend by Battel or great Assise Consultation COnsultation is a Writ whereby a Cause being formerly removed by Prohibition out of the Ecclesiastical Court or Court Christian to the Kings Court is returned thither again For if the Iudges of the Kings Court comparing the Libell with the Suggestion of the party find the Suggestion false or not proved and therefore the Cause to be wrongfully called from the Court Christian then upon this Consultation or Deliberation they decree it to be returned again whereupon the Writ in this case obtained is called a Consultation Of this you may read the Regist Orig. fol. 44. untill fol. 58. Old Nat. Brev. fol. 32. Fitzh Nat. Brev. fol. 50. Contenement COntenement seems to be the freehold-Freehold-land that lies to the Tenement or Dwelling-house that is in his own occupation for in Magna Charta cap. 14. there are these words A Free-man shall not be amerced for a small fault but according to the quantity of the fault and for a great fault according to the manner thereof saving unto him his Conteuement or Free-hold And a Merchant shall also be amerced saving to him his Merchandizes and a Villain saving to him his Wainage Continual Claime COntinual claim is where a man hath right to e ● ter into certain lands whereof another is seised in Fee or Fee-tail and dares not enter for fear of death or beating but approaches as nigh as he dares and makes Claim thereto within the year and day before the death of him that hath the Lands if that he who hath the Land die seised and his Heir is in by discent yet he that makes such Claim may enter upon the Heir notwithstanding such discent because he hath made such Continual claim But such Claim must always be made within the year and the day before the death of the Tenant for if such Tenant do not die seised within a year and a day after such Claim made and yet he that hath right dares not enter then it behoves him that hath such right to make another Claim within the year and day after the first Claim and after such second Claim to make the third Claim within the year and day if he will be sure to save his Entry But if the Disseisor die seised within the year and day after the Disseisin and no Claim made then the entrie of the Disseisee is taken away for the year and day shall not be taken from the time of the title of the Entry to him grown but only from the time of the last Claim by him made as is aforesaid See more hereof in Littl. li. 3. c. 7. and see the Stat. 32 H. 8. cap. 33. Continuance COntinuance in the Common Law is of the same signification with Prorogatio in the Civil as Continuance until the next Assise Fitzh Nat. Brev. 154. f and 244. d. in both which places it is said That if a Record in the Treasury be alledged by the one party and denyed by the other a Certiorari shall be sued to the Treasurer and the Chamherlain of the Exchequer and if they do not certifie in the Chancery that such Record is there or that it is like to be in the Tower the King shall send to the Iustices repeating the said Certificate and commanding them to continue the Assise In this signification it is also used by Kitchen 202. and 119. also Anno 11 H. 6. cap. 4. Contract COntract is a Bargain or Covenant between two parties where one thing is given for another which is called Quid pro quo as if I sell my Horse for money or if I covenant to make you a Lease of my Mannor of Dale in consideration of twenty pound that you shall give me these are good Contracts because there is one thing for another But if a man make promise to me that I shall have xx s. and that he will be debtor to me thereof and after I ask the xx s. and he will not deliver it yet I shall never have any Action to recover this xx s. because this Promise was no Contract but a bare Promise and Ex nudo Pacto non oritur Actio But if any thing were given for the twenty shillings though it were but to the value of a peny then it had been a good Contract Contra forma Collationis COntra formam Collationis is a Writ that lies where a man hath given Lands in perpetual Almes to any of the late Houses of Religion as to an Abbot and Convent or other Soveraign or to the Warden or Master of any Hospital and his Covent to find certain poor men and to do other Divine Service if they alien the Lands then the Donor or his heirs shall have the said Writ to recover the Land But this Writ shall be alway brought against the Abbot or his successor and not against the Alienee although he be Tenant but in all other Actions where a man demands Free-hold the Writ shall be brought against the Tenant of the Land See the Stat. West 2. cap. 41. Contra formam Feoffamenti COntra formā Feoffamenti is a Writ that lies where a man before the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum made 18 Edw. 1. infeoffed another by Deed to do certain Service if the Feoffor or his heirs distrain him to do other Service then is comprised in the Deed then the Tenant shall have this Writ commanding him not to distrain him to do other Service then is comprised in the Deed. But this Writ lies not for the Plaintiff who
claims by purchase from the first Feoffee but for the Heir to the first Feoffee Contributione facienda COntributione facienda is a Writ that lies where there are divers Parceners and he who hath the part of the eldest makes all the suit to the Lord the others ought to make Contribution to him and if they will not he shall have against them this Writ In some cases the Heir shall have Contribution and in others not but shall be alone charged For if a man be seised of three Acres of Land and acknowledges a Recognizance or Statute c. and infeoffs A. of one Acre and B. of another Acre and the third discends to his Heir if Execution be sued against the Heir only he shall not have Contribution against any Purchasor yet he is charged as Terre-tenant and not as Heir for the Land and not himself is charged Yet if a man be seised of two Acres the one of the nature of Borough-English and binds himself as before and dies having issue two daughters who make partition in this case if the one be charged he shall have Contribution for as one Purchasor shall have Contribution against others and against the Heir of the Conusee also so one Heir shall have Contribution against another Heir for they are in equal degree Also if a man be so bound and after his death some of his Land descends to the Heir of the part of the father and some to the Heir of the part of the mother the one alone shall not be charged but if he be he shall have Contribution In Dower if the Tenant vouches the Heir in ward to three several Lords each of them shall be equally charged If two four or more men be severally seized of Land and they all joyn in a Recognisance in this case the Conusee cannot extend the Land of any of the Conusors alone but all ought equally to be charged for though the Land of the Conusor himself may be only extended when divers men have purchased any of the Land subject to the Recognisance because the Purchasor is in another degree then the Conusor himself yet one of the Conusors shall not be solely charged for he stands in equal degree with the other Conusors Also the tertenant of a Debtor upon an extent shall have contribution of the Heir of the Debtor which see 1 Cro. Eyer against Taunton If Iudgement be given against two Disseisors in Assise for the Land and damages and one Disseisor dies the Execution shall not be awarded against the surviving Disseisor that was party to the wrong but as well the Heir as the Disseisor shall be equally charged But otherwise it is in personal binding as if two are bound in an Obligation there the charge shall survive And where it is said that the one Purchasor shall have Contribution it is not thereby intended that the others shall give or allow unto him any thing by way of Contribution but it ought to be intended that the party that is solely extended for all may by an Audita querela or Scire Facias as the case requires defeat the Execution and thereby shall be restored to all the mean profits and force the Conusee to sue Execution of all the Land so in this manner every one shall be contributory viz. the Land of every Terre-Tenant shall be equally extended Convocation COnvocation is commonly taken for the Assembly of all the Clergy to consult of Exclesiastical matters in time of Parliament And as there are two Houses of Parliament so there are two places called Convocation-houses the one called the Higher Convocation-house where the Archbishops and Bishops sit severally by themselves the other the Lower Convocation-house where all the rest of the Clergy sit Vide Prolocutor Conusance COnusance of Plea is a Priviledge that a City or Tenant hath by the Kings grant to hold Plea of all Contracts and of Lands within the precinct of the Franchise and that when any man is impleaded for any such thing in the Court of the King at Westm the Mayors or Bayliffs of such Franchises or their Atturneys may ask Conusance of the Plea that is to say that the Plea and the matter shall be pleaded a ● d determined before them But if the Court at Westminster be lawfully seised of the Plea before Conusance be demanded then they shall not have Conusance for that Suit because they have neglected their time of demand thereof but this shall be no bar to them to have Conusance in another Action for they may demand Conusance in one Action and omit it in another at their pleasure And note that Conusance lies not in Prescription but it behoves to shew the Kings Letters Patents for it Coparceners COparceners See Parceners Copyhold COpyhold is a Tenure for which the Tenant hath nothing to shew but the Copies of the Rolls made by the Steward of his Lord's Court For the Steward as he inrolls all other things done in his Lords Court so he doth also such Tenants as are admitted in the Court to any parcel of Land or Tenements belonging to the Manor and the Transcript of this is called the Court-Roll the Copy whereof the Tenant takes from him and keeps as his only Evidence Coke l. 4. fol. 25. This Tenure is called a Base Tenure because it holds at the will of the Lord Kitchen fol. 80. Fitzh Nat. Brev. f. 12. b. c. who saith it was wont to be called Tenure in Villenage and that this Copyhold is but a new name Yet it is not simply at the will of the Lord but according to the Custome of the Manor so that if a Copiholder break not the Custome of the Manor and thereby forfeit his Tenure he seems not so much to stand at his Lords courtesie for his right as to be displaced when he pleases The Customes of Manors are infinite varying in one point or other almost in every several Manor First some Copyhold is fineable and some certain That which is fineable the Lord rates at what Fine he pleases when the Tenant is admitted unto it that which is certain is a kind of inheritauce and called in many places Customary because the Tenant dying and the Hold being void the next of bloud paying the customary Fine cannot be denied admittance Secondly some Copyholders have by Custome the Woods growing upon their own Land which by the Law they cannot have Thirdly there are Copy-holders that hold by the Vierge in Ancient demesne and although they hold by Copy yet they are in nature of Free-holders for if such a one commit Felony the King hath the year day and waste as in case of Free-hold Some others hold by Common Tenure called mere Copyhold and if they commit Felony their Land presently escheats to the Lord of the Manor West part 1 l. 2. sect 646. defines a Copyholder thus Tenant by Copy of Court-roll is he who is admitted Tenant of any Lands or Tenements within a Manor which time without
the eldest son hath no issue then alive But if the eldest son who was attaint hath any Issue 〈◊〉 which should have inherited but for the Attainder the 〈◊〉 shall escheat to the Lord and shall not discend to the youngest brother because the Bloud of the eldest brother is corrupt 32 H. 8. Dy. 48. But it is to be noted That there are divers things made Treason by Act of Parliament whereof although a man be attainted yet his Bloud is not corrupt neither shall he forfeit any thing but that which he hath for his own life As if a man be attainted upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 1. ordained against the maintaining of the authority of the Bishop and See of Rome this shall not extend to make any Corruption of bloud the disheritance of any Heir forfeiture of any Dower nor to the prejudice of the right or title of any person other then the Offendor during his natural life only So if a man be attainted by force of the Statute of 5 Eliz. cap. 11. provided against the clipping washing filing and rounding of Money yet there is no Corruption of bloud In the same manner is it of the Statute of 18 Eliz. cap. 1. 1 Jac. cap. 12. 1 Mar. cap. 12. against Vnlawfull assemblies and 5 Eliz. cap. 14. against the Forging of evidence and the Statute of 31 Eliz. c. 4. against the Embezilling of the Queens Ordnance Armour or Artillery Corse present COrse present are words signifying a Mortuary and the reason why the Mortuary is so termed is because where a Mortuary was wont to be due the Body of the best Beast was according to the Law or custome offered or presented to the Priest See Anno 21 Hen. 8. ca. 6. where among other things it is enacted That no Corse present nor any summe of money or other thing for any Mortuary or Corse present shall be demanded received or had but only in such places and Towns where Mortuaries have been accustomed to be taken and paid Cosinage COsinage is a Writ that lies where my great Grandfather my Grandfathers Grandfather or other Cousin dies seised in Fee-simple and a Stranger abates viz. enters into the Lands then I shall have against him this Writ or against his Heir or his Alienee or against whosoever comes after to the said Lands But if my Grandfather die seised and a Stranger abates then I shall have a Writ of Ayel But if my Father Mother Brother Sister Vncle or Aunt die seised and a Stranger abates then I shall have an Assise of Mortdauncester Cottage COttage is a little House for habitation of poor men without any Land belonging to it whereof mention is made in the first Statute made in 4 E. 1. And the inhabitant of such a house is called a Cottager But by a Statute made in the 31 year of Queen Eliz. cap. 7. no man may build such a Cottage for habitation unless he lay unto it four acres of Freehold-land except in Market-Towns or Cities or within a mile of the Sea or for habitation of Labourers in Mines Sailors Foresters Shepherds c. Coucher COucher is a Factor who continues in some place or Country for traffick an 37 E. 3. c. 16. It is also used for the general Book into which any Corporation enters their particular Acts for a perpetual remembrance of them Covenable COvenable is a French word signifying Convenient or suteable as Covenably endowed Anno 4 H. 8. ca. 12. It is anciently written convenable as in the Stat. 27 Ed. 3. Stat. 2. ca. 17. Covenant COvenant is an Agreement made by Deed in writing and sealed between two persons where each of them is bound to the other to perform certain Covenants for his part and if the one performs not his Covenant the other shall have thereupon a Writ of Covenant And Covenants are either in Law or in Fact Cok. lib. 4. fol. 80. or Covenant expressed and Covenant in Law Cok. lib. 6. fol. 17. A Covenant in Law is that which the Law intends to be done though it be not expressed in words As if a man demise any thing to another for a certain term the Law intends a Covenant of the part of the Lessor that the Lessee shall hold all his term against all lawfull incumbrances Covenant in Fact is that which is expresly agreed between the parties Also there is a Covenant meerly personal and Covenant real Fitzh Nat. Brev. f. 145. seems to say that Covenant real is whereby a man ties himself to pass a thing real as Lands or Tenements as a Covenant to levy a Fine of Land Covenant meerly personal is where a man covenants with another by Deed to build a house or to serve him See the old Book of Entries the word Covenant But note well That no Writ of Covenant shall be maintainable without especialty except in the City of London or in some other place priviledged by custome and use Coverture COverture is when a man and a woman are married together now whatsoever is done concerning the wife in the time of the continuance of this Marriage is said to be done during the Coverture and the wife is called a Woman covert and thereby is disabled to contract with any one to the prejudice of her self or her husband without his consent and privity at the least without his allowance and confirmation See Brook this Title And Bract. saith That all things that are the wife's are the husbands neither hath the wife power of her self but the husband lib. 2. cap. 15. and the husband is the head of his wife lib. 4. cap. 24. and again that in any Law-matter she cannot answer without her husband lib. 5. tract 1. cap. 3. And if the husband alien his wife's Land during the Coverture she cannot gain-say it during his life Covin COvin is a secret Assent determined in the hearts of two or more to the prejudice of another As if a Tenant for term of life or Tenant in tail will secretly conspire with another that the other shall recover against the Tenant for life the Land which he holds c. in prejudice of him in the Reversion Or if an Executor or Administrator permit Iudgments to be entred against him by fraud and plead them to a bond or any fraudulent assignment or conveyance be made the party grieved may plead covin and relieve himself Vid. Stat. 2 R. 2. cap. 3. 3 H. 7. ca. 4. 13 El. c. 5. and 27 El. 4. Count. COunt is as much as the original Declaration in a Processe though more used in real than personal Actions as Declaration is more applied to personal than real F. N. B. 16. a. 60. d. n. 71. a. 191. e. 217. A Libel with the Civilians comprehends both Yet Count and Declaration are confounded sometimes as Count in Debt Kitch 281. Count or Declaration in Appeal Pl. Cor. 78. Count in Trespasse Brit. cap. 26. Count in Action of Trespasse upon the Case for a Slander Kitch 252. Contours
and the issue is ●● pt forth of her belly alive there he shall not be Tenant by the Curtesie for this ought to begin by the issue and consummate by the death of the woman and the Estate of the Tenant by the Curtesie ought to avoid the immediate discent But if the husband hath issue by his wife and after Land discends to the woman be the issue then dead or alive he shall be Tenant by the Curtesie for the time of the birth of the issue is not material if it be in the life of the woman If Lands be given to a woman and the heirs males of her body and she takes an hu ● band and hath issue a daughter and dies the husband shall not be Tenant by the Curtesie for the issue cannot by any possibility inherit the same Tenements Also as a woman alien marrying one of the Kings subjects shall not be endowed in the same manner a man alien shall not be Tenant by the Curtesie Also if a man seised of Land in right of his wife be attainted of Felony having issue and then purchases the Kings Pardon and after his wife dies there he shall not be Tenant by the Curtesie But if he hath issue by his wife born after the Pardon in such case he shall Curtilage CUrtilage is a Garden Yard Field or piece of void ground lying near and belonging to the Messuage West part 2. sect 26. And so it is used 35 H. 8. c. 4. 39 Eliz. 2 Coke l. 6. fol. 64. Customary Tenants CUstomary Tenants are such Tenants as hold by the Custome of the Mannor as their special Evidence Custome CUstome may be defined to be a Law or Right not written which being established by long use and consent of our Ancestors hath been and dayly is put in practice Custome is either general or particular General is that which is current through England whereof you may read in Doctor and Student l. 1. c. 7. many very worthy to be known Particular is that which belongs to this or that County as Gavelkind to Kent or to this or that Lordship City or Town Custome differs from Prescription because Custome is common to many and Prescription by the opinion of some is particular to this or that man Again Prescription may be for a shorter time than Custome sc for five years or less As if a Fine be duly levied of Lands or Tenements and be not gainsaid within five years this is a Bar to all Claim for ever If a man omits his Continual Claim for a year and a day then the Tenant in possession prescribes an Immunity against the Entry of the Demandant and his Heir Fitzh Nat. Brev. 79. Out of our Statutes you may have greater diversity so that this seems to be a true saying That Prescription is an Exception founded upon so long time gone and past as the Law limits for the pursuit of any Action An example may be taken out of the Statute of 1 H. 8. c. 4. which enacts That in all Actions popular information shall be made within three years after the offence committed otherwise to be of no force Custome is also used for the Tribute or Toll that Merchants pay to the King to carry in and out Merchandizes 14 E. 3. Stat. 1. c. 21. In which signification it is called Custuma in Latine Reg. Orig. 129. a. 138. a. And lastly for such Services as Tenants of a Manor owe unto their Lord. Old Book of Entries word Custome See Consuetud Servitiis Custos Brevium CUstos Brevium is the chief Clerk belonging to the Court of Common Pleas or Kings Bench whose office is to receive and keep all the Writs and to put them upon Files every Return by it self and at the end of every Term to receive of the Prothonotaries all the Records of Nisi prius called the Postea The Custos Brevium also makes entry of Writs of Covenant and the Concord upon every Fine and makes out Exemplifications and Copies of all the Writs and Records in his Office and of all the Fines levied The parts of the Fines after they are ingrossed are divided between the Custos Brevium and the Chirographer whereof the Chirographer keeps always the Writ of Covenant and the Note the Custos Brevium keeps the Concord and the Foot of the Fine upon which Foot the Chirographer causes the Proclamations to be indorsed when they are all proclaimed Custos Rotulorum CUstos Rotulorum is he that hath the keeping of the Rolls or Records of the Sessions of the Peace and as some think of the Commission of the Peace it self Lam. l. 4. c. 3. p. 373. He is always Iustice of the Peace and Quorum in the County where he hath his Office and by his Office he is rather termed an Officer or Minister then a Iudge because the Commission of the Peace lays this special Charge by express words upon him That he should cause the Writs Precepts Process and Indictments aforesaid to come and be before him and his fellow-Justices at the days and places aforesaid Gardian of the Spiritualties GArdian of the Spiritualties is he that exercises the spiritual and Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction of any Diocess during the Vacancy of the See the appointment of whom by the Canon Law pertains to the Dean and Chapter lest in the Vacancie of the See some Innovation should be introduced But in Engl. the Archbishop of the Province hath it by Prescription Howbeit many Deans and Chapters a ● M. Gwyn saith in his Preface to his Readings challenge this by ancient Charters from the Kings of this Land Cuynage CUynage is a word used in the Statute of 11 H. 7. c. 4. for the making up of Tinne into that fashion as it is used to be framed for the better carriage of it into other parts D. Dammage DAmmage is part of that which the Iurors are to enquire of in giving their Verdict for the Complainant or Demandant in an Action real or personal For after the Verdict given upon the principal matter they are also asked their Consciences touching Costs which are the Expences of the Suit and Dammages which contain the prejudice which the Plaintiff or Demandant hath suffered by means of the wrong doue him by the Defendant or Tenant And forasmuch as Iustice and Reason require that when the life credit lands goods corruption of bloud and all that a man hath to forfeit in this world are put in peril without just cause but only upon the malicious Accusation of another by Appeal that the Appellee should have satisfaction therefore against his false Accuser and if he hath not sufficient then against him or them that abbetted or procured him to pursue the Appeal Therefore the Common Law gave Dammages to the Defendant in an Appeal and assigned him a means for the recovery thereof when he was acquitted of the Felony as it is 48 E. 3. 22. But forasmuch as the Dammages against the Procurors and Abbettors were to be recovered
by Original Writ that is by Writ of Conspiracy and not otherwise which was not so speedy remedy as the Heinous quality of the wrong required the Statute of Westm the 2. An. 13 Ed. 1. cap. 12. for the more expeditious redress thereof was ordained But if the Defendant barrs the Plaintiff of his Appeal then he cannot recover Dammages by the said Statute against the Plaintiff except the Barr be such as acquits the Defendant of the Felony And if the Defendant pleads that the Appellant is a Bastard or hath an elder Brother or like Pleas in barre and thereby barrs the Plaintiff yet he shall not recover Dammages against him because the Defendant may be indicted again of the same Felony and attainted notwithstanding any of those Pleas for by them the innocency of the Defendant is not tried and therefore he shall not have Dammages 27 Ass pl. 25. The same Law is if the Defendant barrs the Appellant by Demurrer in Law And so it is if in Appeal of the death of a man the Defendant pleads to the issue and it is found by Verdict that he killed the man in his own defence or by Chance-m ● dley in these cases he shall not recover Dammages But if the Defendant in Appeal hath the Release of the Appellant or the Kings Pardon and will wave them and plead Not guilty and is acquitted in this case he shall recover Dammages This word Dammage is taken in the Law in two several significations the one properly and generally the other strictly and relatively Properly as it is in cases where Dammages are founded upon the Statute of 2 Hen. 4. cap. 1. and 8 Hen. 6. cap. 9. where Costs are included within this word Dammages for Damnum in its proper and general signification is said a demendo when a thing by Diminution is made worse and in this sense Costs of Suit are Dammages to the Plaintiff for by them his Substance is diminished But when the Plaintiff declares the wrong done to him to the Dammage of such a summe this is to be taken relatively for the wrong which is passed before the Writ brought and are assessed by reason of the Trespass aforesaid and cannot extend to Costs of Suit which are future and of another nature See Co. l. 10. f. 116 117. Dammage fesant DAmmage fesant is when a stranger's Beasts are in another mans ground without licence of the Tenant of the ground and there do feed tread and otherwise spoil the corn grass woods and such like In which case the Tenant whom they dammage may therefore take distrain and impound them as well in the night as in the day But in other cases as for Rent and Services and such like none may distrain in the night Danegeld DAnegeld is to be quit of a certain Tribute which the Danes did levie in England Also the Tribute it self This began first in the time of King Etheldred who being sore distressed by the continual Inivasson of the Danes to purchase Peace was compelled to charge his County and people with great Payments for he first gave them at five several payments 113000 lib and afterwards granted them 48000 lib. yearly Darreine Presentment DArreine Presentment an Assise thereof lies where I or mine ancestors have presented a Clerk to a Church and after the Church being void by the death of the said Clerk or otherwise a stranger presents his Clerk to the same Church in disturbance of me And how it is otherwise used see Bract. lib. 5. tract 2. Regist orig fol. 30. If a husband and wife present to an Advowson in right of the wife which is appendant to the Mannor of the wife and after the husband aliens an Acre parcel of the Manor with the Advowson in fee to a stranger and dies and after the stranger presents and then aliens the Acre to another in fee saving the Advowson to himself and after the Church is void there the wife shall present and if she be disturbed she shall have an assise of Darreine Presentment because the Advowson was severed from the Acre But if the Advowson was appendant to the Acre then the wife ought to recover the Acre before she presents to the Advowson Fitz. Nat. Brev. 32. Darrein Continuance IS when the Defendant or Tenant pendente placito pleads new matter done after the last continuance of the plea. See Thelwel 361. 2. Cro. 261. Dean and Chapter DEan and Chapter is a Body corporate Spiritual consisting of many able persons as namely the Dean who is chief and his Prebends and they together make the Corporation And as this Corporation may jointly purchase Lands and Tenements to the use of their Church and Successors so likewise every of them severally may purchase to the use of himself and his heirs And as there are two Foundations of Cathedral Churches in England the Old and the New the New are those that King Henry the eighth upon suppression of Abbeys transformed from an Abbot or Prior and Covent to Dean and Chapter so there are two means of Creation of these Deans for those of the Old Foundation are brought to their Dignity like Bishops the King first sending his Congee deslire to the Chapter the Chapter then chusing the King yeilding his Royal assent and the Bishop confirming and giving his Mandate to instal him Those of the New Foundation are by a shorter course enstalled by the King's Letters Patents without other Election or Confirmation This word is also applyed to divers that are the chief of certain peculiar Churches or Chappels as the Dean of the Kings Chappel the Dean of the Arches the Dean of Saint George's Chappel in Windsor c. Debet solet See Custom Prescription DEbet solet are words used in the Old Natura Brevium fol. 98. The Writ of Secta molendini being in the Debet solet is a Writ of Right c. And again fol. 69. A Writ of Quod permittat may be pleaded in the County before the Sheriff and may be in the Debet solet or the Debet only as the Demandant claims Wherefore note That these Writs that are brought in such sort have these words in them as formal words not to be omitted And according to the diversity of the Case the Debet solet are used or the Debet only As if a man by Writ sues to recover any right whereof his ancestor was disseised by the Tenant or his ancestor then he uses only the word Debet in his Writ and it is not apt to use Solet because his ancestor was disscised and the Custom discontinued but if he sues for any thing that is first denied him then he hath both these words Debet solet because his ancestor before him and himself have usually enjoyed the thing for which he sues as Suit to the Mill or Common of Pasture until this present refusal of the Tenant Reg. orig fol. 144. a. Debet Detinet DEbet Detinet Much may be
dishonour of the King and his Crown and discredit of the Law that any person by birth and oath obliged to the obedience of the King and his Laws should presume of his own authority by Force and strong hand to resist them both by violent Intrusion into the Possession of another before the Law hath decided his Tttle therein therefore divers Statutes have been made for the restraint and reformation of these Abuses as among others the Stat. of 5 R. 2. ca. 7. where the King defends any Entry into Lands or Tenements but in case where Entry is given by the Law and then not with strong hand or with a multitude of people but onely in a peaceable manner See more of this in Po ● lt de pace Reg. f. 34. 35 c. Degrading DEgrading See Disgrading Delegates ARE Commissioners appointed by Letters Patents to determine Appeals upon things testamentary or matrimonial in which sentence was given Demaines DEmaines or Demesnes generally speaking are all the parts of any Mannor which are not in the hands of Freeholders though they be held by Copy-holders Lessees for years or for life as well as Tenants at will And the reason why Copyhold is accounted Demesnes is because they who are Tenants to it are adjudged in Law to have no other Estate but at the will of the Lord so that it is still reputed to be in a manner in the Lords hands yet in common speech that is ordinarily called Demesnes which is neither free nor copy And this word Demesne is sometimes used in a more special signification and is opposite to Frank-fee as those Lands which were in the possession of Edward the Confessor are called Ancient demesne and all others are called Franck-fee Kitch fol. 98. and the Tenants which hold any of those Lands are called Tenants in Ancient demesn the other Tenants in Frank-fee And no common person hath any Demesnes in the simple acceptation of the word because there is no Land but depends mediately or immediately of the Crown that is of some Honor or other belonging to the Crown and not granted in fee to any inferiour person and therefore when a man in pleading will signifie his Land to be his own he saith That he is or was seised thereof in his Demesne as of Fee Littleton f. 3. whereby it appears that though his Land be to him and his Heirs for ever yet it is not true Demesne but depending upon a superiour Lord and holding by Service or Rent in lieu of Service or by Service and Rent together Demaines according to the common speech are only understood the Lords chief Mannor-place which he and his Ancestors have time out of mind kept in their own hands with all buildings and houses meadows pastures woods arable lands and such like therewith occupied Demand DEmand is a word of art and if one release to another all Demands this is as Littleton fol. 117. a. saith the best Release to him to whom the Release is made that he can have and shall most enure to his advantage for by it not onely all Demands but also all causes of Demands are released And there are two manner of Demands that is in Deed and in Law In Deed as in every Praecipe there is expresse Demand and therefore in real Actions he is called Demandant in personal Plaintiff In Law as every Entry in Land Distresse for Rent Taking or seisure of Goods and such like acts in the Countrey which may be done without any words or demands in Law As a Release of Suits is more large then a Release of Quarrels or of Actions so a Release of Demands is more large and beneficial than either of them for by it is released all that which by the others is released and more By Release of all Demands all Freeholds and Inheritances executory are released By Release of all Demands to the Dissetsor the right of the Entry in the land and all that is contained therein is released By Release of all Demands all Executions are released and he that releases all Demands excludes himself from all Actions Entries and Seisures Littleton fol. 170. holds That if Tenant in tail enfeoffs his Vncle who enfeoffs another in fee with Warranty if after the Feoffee by his Deed releases to the Vncle all manner of Demands by such Release the Warranty which is a Covenant real and executory is extinct and the reason is because that by Release of Demands all the means and remedies and their causes which any hath to Lands Tenements Goods Chattels c. are extinct and by consequence the right and interest it self unto the thing Yet a Release of all Demands doth not extend to such Writs by which nothing is demanded neither in Deed nor in Law but lie only to relieve the Plaintiff by way of Discharge and not by way of Demand as a Release of all Demands is no Bar in a Writ of Error to reverse an Outlawry and so of such like See 18 Edw. 3. 59. Coke lib. 8. fol. 153 154. Demandant DEmandant is he that sues or complains in an Action real for Title of land and he is called Plaintiff in an Assise and in an Action personal for Debt Trespass Deceit Detinue and such like Demurrage IS called the time when a Shi ● lies idle in a Port or Harbour or on the Sea in a Calm Demurrer DEmurrer is when any Action is brought and the Defendant pleads a Plea to which the Plaintiff says that he will not answer for that it is not a sufficient Plea in the Law and the Defendant avers the contrary that it is a sufficient Plea and thereupon both parties submit the Cause to the Iudgement of the Court which is called a Demurrer for that they go not forward in pleading but rest upon Iudgement in that point and is called in Latine Records Moratur in Lege For in every Action the difference consists either in Deed or in Law If in Fact it is tried by the Iury if in Law then the matter is either plain or difficult and rare if it be plain then Iudgment is presently given but when it is hard and doubtfull then is stay made and time taken either to consider farther thereupon by the Iudges to agree if they can or otherwise for all the Iustices to meet together in the Exchequer-Chamber and upon hearing of that which the Serjeants shall say unto both parts to advise and determine what is Law and that which is there concluded on by them shall stand firm without further remedy There is also a Demurrer to Evidence given to a Iury upon Tryal of an Issue Plo. Com. 2. 3 Rast Entr. 607. Half bloud HAlf bloud is when a man marries a wife and hath issue by her a son or daughter and the wife dies and then he takes another woman and hath by her also a son or daughter Now these two sons are after a sort Brothers or as they are termed Half-brothers or Brothers of the half
both are Records yet the Iudgment in the Kings Court upon judicial and ordinary proceeding is more notorious and conspicuous and of a more high and eminent degree then a Statute or Recognisance taken in private and by consent of parties and is therefore preferred in judgment of the Law before Recognisance or Statute and if the Executors do not satisfie this first then if they have no goods of the dead in their hands they shall pay it of their own So the Ordinary having goods of one that dies intestate in his hands by Sequestration and an Action of Debt upon an Obligation to the value of the said goods is brought against him as Ordinary he shall not dispose or administer any parcell of the said Goods to the other Creditors at his pleasure but is bound to satisfie the Debt first for which an Action is brought against him Dyer fol. 232. placit 5. If a Sheriff retorne ex officio without inquest that the Executor hath wasted goods the Execution goes de bonis propriis of the Executor and if the retorn be false then the Executor may have an Action upon the Case against the Sheriff for his false retorn because the Executor hath no day to plead But if the Sheriff retorn a devastavit upon an Inquiry by a Iury the Executor may appear and traverse quod non devastavit and try it 1 Cro. Mounson and Bourn Proctor versus Chamberlain Devenerunt DEvenerunt is a Writ directed to the Escheator when any of the Kings Tenants holding in Capite dies and when his son and heir within age and in the Kings custody dies then shall this Writ go forth commanding the Escheator that he by the oath of good and lawful men enquire what Lands or Tenements by the death of the Tenant come to the King c. See Dyer f. 360. pla 4. But see the Stat. 12. Car. 2. cap. 24. Devest DEvest is a word contrary to Invest for as Invest signifies to deliver the possession of a thing so Devest signifies the taking it away Devise DEvise is where a man in his Testament gives or bequeaths his Goods or Lands to another after his decease And where such Devise is made of Goods if the Executors will nor deliver them to the Devisee he hath no remedy by the Common Law but it behoves him to have a Citation against the Executors of the Testator to appear before the Ordinary to shew why he performs not the Will of the Testator for the Devisee may not take the Legacy and serve himself but it must be delivered to him by the Executors See the Stat. 32 H. 8. ca. 1. 34 H. 8. ca. 5. 29 Car. 2. ca. 3. By which last Statute the Law of Testameuts is altered But by the Common Law if a man be sole seised of Lands in fee and devises them by Testament this Devise was void unless the Lands were in City or Borough where Lands are devisable by Custome But if any man were infeoffed to the use of another and his heirs and he to whose use he was so seised did make Devise of his Lands this Devise was good though it were not in a Town where Lands are devisable Also if any man devise Lands in City Town or Borough devisable and the Devisor dies if his Heir or any other abate in the Lands then the Devisee shall have a Writ of Ex gravi querela But this Writ shall never be pleaded before the Kings Iustice but always before the Maior or Bailiffs in the same Town And here to the end to shew how much the Laws of this Realm and the discreet Iudges of the same who are the Interpreters of it do favour Wills and Testaments and Devises in yielding to them such a reasonable construction as they think might best agree with the minds of the dead considering that Wills and Testaments are for the most part and by common intendment made when the Testatour is very sick weak and past all hope of recovery for it is a received opinion in the Countrey amongst most that if a man should chance to be so wise as to make his Will in his good health when he is strong of good memory and hath time and leisure to ask counsell if any doubt were of the Learned that then he should not live long after and therefore they deferre it to such time when it were more convenient to apply themselves to the dispositions of their Souls than of their Lands or Goods except it were that by the fresh memory and recital of them at that time it might be a cause to put them in mind of some of their goods or lands falsly gotten and so move them to restitution c. And at that time the penning of such Wills is commonly committed to the Minister of the Parish or to some other more ignorant who knows not what words are necessary to make an Estate in Fee-simple Fee-tail for term of life or such like besides many other mischiefs I will therefore here set down some of those Cases that are most common in ignorant mens mouths and carry by the wise interpretations of the Judges a larger and more favourable sense in Wills than in Deeds First therefore if one devise to J. S. by his Will all his Lands and Tenements here not only all those Lands that he hath in possession do pass but all those that he hath in Reversion by virtue of those words Tenements And if Lands be devised to a man to have to him for ever or to have to him and his Assigns in these two cases the Devisee shall have a Fee-simple But if it be given by Feoffment in such manner he hath but an Estate for term of life And if a man devise his Land to another to give sell or do therewith at his pleasure or will this is Fee-simple A Devise made to one and to his Heirs males doth make an Estate-tail But if such words be put in a Deed of Feoffment it shall be taken for Fee-simple because it doth not appear of what body the Heirs males shall be begotten If Lands be given by Deed to J. S. and to the Heirs males of his body c. who hath issue a daughter who hath issue a son and dies there the Land shall return to the Donor and the son of the Daughter shall nor have it because he cannot convey himself by Heirs males for his mother is a let thereto But otherwise it is of such a Devise for there the son of the daughter shall have it rather then the Will shall be void If one devise to an Infant in his mothers belly it is a good Devise but otherwise by Feoffment Grant or Gift for in those cases there ought to be one of ability to take presently or otherwise it is void See 14. El. Dy. 304. A Devise made in Fee-simple without expresse words of Heirs is good in Fee-simple But if a Devise be made to J. N. he
shall have the Land but for term of life for those words will carry no greater Estate If one will that his son J. shall have his Land after the death of his wife here the wife of the Devisor shall have the Land first for term of life So likewise if a man devise his goods to his wife and that after the decease of his wife his son and heir shall have the House where the goods are there the son shall not have the House during the life of the wife For it doth appear that his intent was that his wife should have the House also for her life notwithstanding it were not devised to her by express words If a Devise be to J. N. and to the Heirs females of his body begotten after the Devisee hath issue a son and daughter and dies here the daughter shall have the Land and not the son and yet he is the most worthy person and Heir to his father but because the Will of the dead is that the daughter should have it Law and Conscience will so also And herein the very Heathens were precise as appears by those Verses of Octavius Augustus which Donatus reports he made after Virgil at his death gave commandment that his Books should be burnt because they were imperfect and yet some perswaded that they should be saved as indeed they happily were to whom he answered thus Let Faith and Law be kept and what last Will Commandeth to be done we must fulfill Devoire DEvoire is as much as to say a Duty It is used in the Statute of 2 R. 2. ca. 3. where it is provided That all the Western Merchants being of the Kings amity shall pay all manner Customs and Subsidies and other Devoires of Caleis See the Stat. 5 Ejusdē Regis cap. 2. Devorce DEvorce or Divorce Divortium dictum est Diversitate mentium quia in diversas partes eunt qui distrahunt Matrimonium or else from the verb Diverto which signifies to return back because after the Devorce between the husband and wife he returns her again to her father or other friends or to the place from whence he had her And though Devorce was never approved of by the Divine Law but contrariwise prohibited as appears by this precept Let no man separate that which God hath joyned together yet in all ages and well-governed Common-wealths it hath been used and permitted As at this day with us there are divers causes for which the husband and wife may be devorced as first causa Praecontractus Therefore if a man marry with a woman precontracted and hath issue by her this issue in Law and in truth bears the surname of his father but if after the husband and wife be devorced for the Precontract there the issue hath lost his surname and is become a Bastard and nullius filius Cok. lib. 6. fol. 66. Devorce may be causa Frigiditatis and therefore if a man be married to a woman and after they are devorced causa Frigiditatis and then the man takes another wife and hath issue by her yet this issue is lawfull because that a man may be habilis inhabilis diversis temporibus and by the Devorce causa Frigiditatis the Marriage was dissolved a vinculo Matrimonii and by consequence either of them might marry again Cok. lib. 5. fol. 98. b. Also a man may be devorced causa Impubertatis or Minoris aetatis and in this case if two are married infra annos nubiles and after full age Devorce is had between them this dissolves the Marriage and the woman may arraign an Assise against the Husband for the Lands or Tenements given with her in Frank-marriage 19 lib. Assise Pla. 2. So Devorce may be had causa Professionis causa consanguinitatis causa Fornicationis and for many other causes too long to be now recited It is requisite that in the sentence of Devorce the Cause thereof be shewed because some Devorce dissolves the Matrimony that is to say a vinculo Matrimonii bastards the issue and barrs the wife of Dower and some a mensa thoro the which dissolves not the Matrimony nor barrs the Woman of Dower nor bastards the issue Devorce is a Iudgement spiritual and therefore if there be cause ought to be reversed in the Spiritual Court See Cok. lib. 7. Kenns Case If a Woman Copiholder of certain Land durante viduitate sua according to the Custome of the Mannor sows the Land and before the severance of the Corn takes a husband the Lord shall have the Emblements and not the husband But if a Lease be made to the husband and wife during the Coverture and the husband sows the Land and afterward they are devorced causa Praecontractus the husband shall have the Emblements and not the Lessor Dicker DIcker is a word used in the Statute of 1 Jacobi cap. 22. and it signifies the quantity of Ten Hides of Leather And it seems to come from the Greek word Decas which signifies Ten. Diem clausit extremum DIem clausit extremum is a Writ that lies where the Kings Tenant that hold in Chief dies then this Writ shall be directed to the Escheator to enquire of what Estate he was seised who is next Heir and his age and of the certainty and value of the Land and of whom it is holden and the Inquisition shall be returned into the Chancery which is commonly called The Office after the death of that persō And there is another Writ of Diem clausit extremum awarded out of the Exchequer after the death of an Accountant or Debtor of his Majestie to levy the Debt of his Heir Executor Administrators lands or goods Dietus datus DIes datus is a Respite given to the Tenant or Defendant before the Court Brook Tit. Continuance Dieta rationabilis DIeta rationabilis is sometimes used for a Reasonable Days journey as Bract. l. 3. patt 2. cap. 16. It hath in the Civil Law other significations which need not be here mentioned See Vocabul utriusque Juris Dieu son act DIeu son act these are words oftentimes used in our Law and it is a Maxime That the Act of God shall prejudice no man And therefore if a House fall down by Tempest or other Act of God the lessee for life or years shall not only be quit in an Action of Waste brought against him but hath by the Law a special interest to take timber to build the House again if he will for his habitation Cok. lib. 4. 63. lib. 11. 82. a. In like manner when the Condition of an Obligation consists of two parts in the disjunctive and both are possible at the time of the Obligation made and afterwards one of them becomes impossible by the Act of God the Obligor is not bound to perform the other part for the Condition shall be taken beneficially for him Coke lib. 5. 22. Dignitie Ecclesiastical DIgnitie Ecclesiastical is a phrase of speech used in the Statute of 26 Hen. 8.
punishes her Officers as Serjeants Pleaders Philizers Exigenters Attornies and others so she renounces and condemns all acts of greatest importance if they be intermixt with Disceit and falshood As if a Fine be levied by Disceit and five years past by the Statute of 4 H. 7. c. 24. all persons and their rights shall be barred thereby yet for that it was by Disceit th ● Fine shall be avoided as is a ●● dged in Cok. lib. 3. fol. 77. 〈◊〉 the same manner if one ●● cover Land by Disceit the ●●● overy for this shall be fru ●●● ated and made void 3 Ed. 3. 2 ● So if a woman that hath good cause to be endowed will by Disceit have the Tenant to be disseised and after recovers her Dower by a Writ of Dower against the Disseisor yet she shall be adjudged in possession against the Disseis ● e but as a Disseisoresse in respect of the Disceit Cok. lib. 5. fol. 35. There is another manner of Writ of Disceit where Land which is auncient demesn is impleaded by the Kings Writ at Westm Then the Lord of the Mannor may have this Writ and reverse all the former proceedings and Iudgment as it appears Rast Ent. 100 221. 2 R. 3. 1 11 H. 4. 36. Discent DIscent or Descent is in two sorts either lineal or collateral Lineal Discent is when a Discent is conveyed in the same Liue of the whole bloud as grandfather father son sons son and so downward Collateral Discent is out in another branch drawn from above of the whole bloud as grandfathers brother fathers brother and so downward Note that if one die seised in fee or in tail of Land in which another hath right to enter and that discends to his Heir such Discent shall take away the Entry of him who hath right to enter for that the Heir hath it by Discent from his father and so by act of the Law and he that hath right cannot put him out by entring upon him but is put to sue his Writ to demand the Land according to the nature of his Title See hereof in Littl. lib. 3. cap. 6. and Stat. 32. H. 8. cap. 33. Disclaimer DIsclaimer is where the Lord distrains his Tenant and he sues a Replevin and the Lord avows the taking by reason he holds of him if the Tenant say that he disclaims to hold of him this is called a Disclaimer and if the Lord thereupon bring in a Writ of Right sur Disclaimer and it be found against the Tenant he shall lose his Land Also if one brings a Praecipe against two others for the Land and the Tenant disclaims and saith that he is not thereof Tenant nor claims any thing therein then the other shall have the whole Land but if the Praecipe be brought against one alone and he disclaims as aforesaid the Writ shall abate yet the Demandant may enter in the Land and hold it in his rightfull estate though his Entry was not lawful And after the Tenant in an Action brought against him disclaims he shall not have a Writ of Error against his own Disclaimer because by it he hath barred himself of his right to the Land for the words of the Disclaimer are He hath nothing neither claims he to have in the Land neither at the day of the bringing of the Original Writ aforesaid c. had or claimed but any thing in the same Land to have he disavows and disclaims and against this he shall not have Restitution by a Writ of Error See Cok. lib. 8. fol. 62. So if a Lord in case where he may disclaims his Seigniory in Court of Record his Seigniory by this is extinct and the Tenant shall hold of the Lord next above him that so disclaimed Lit. sect 146. If Lands be given to the husband and wife in tail or in fee and the husband dies the wife cannot devest the Freehold cut of her by any verbal Waver or Disclaimer in the Countrey as if before any Entry made by her she saith that she altogether waves and disclaims the said Estate and will never take nor accept thereof yet the Free-hold remains in her and she may enter when she pleases So a Charter of Feoffment was made to four and Seisin was delivered to three in the name of all and after the Seisin was delivered the fourth coming sees the Deed and saith by word that he will have nothing of the Land nor agree to the Deed but disclaims and it was adjudged that this Disclaimer by word in the Countrey shall not devest the Freehold out of him Cok. lib. 3. fol. 26. Discontinuance DIscontinuance is when a man alienates to another Lands or Tenements and dies and another hath right to the same Lands and may not enter into them because of this Alienation as if an Abbot alien the Lands of his House to another in fee fee-tail or sor life or if a man alien the Lands that he hath in right of his wife or if Tenant in tail makes of the Lands given to him and the Heirs of his body any Feoffment Gift in tail or Lease for life not warranted by the Statute 32 Hen. 8. by Fine or Livery of seisin then such Alienations are called Discontinuances for such Estates passe away by Livery and seisin In these cases the Successors of the Abbot or the woman after the death of her husband or the issue in tail after the death of the Tenant in tail and they that have any Remainder or Reversion after the end of the Estate-tail may not enter but every of them is put to his Action And as there is Discontinuance of Possession as is said before so also is there Discontinuance of Process or Plea and this is when the instant is lost and may not be regained but by a new Writ to begin the Suit afresh for to be discontinued and to be put without day is all one and nothing else but finally to be dismissed the Court for that time West part 2. tit Fines sect 115. So Crompton in his Jurisdictions fol. 131. uses it in these words If a Justice-seat be discontinued by the not coming of the Justices the King may renew it by his Writ And if the Iustices of any Court do not meet at the day and place appointed then the Cause shall be discontinued unto another day as in Cok. lib. 1 fol. 38. So if a man hath an Action in the Court of the Marshalsea and the King removes forth of the Vierge the Pleas shall be discontinued Cok. lib. 10. fol. 73. See more hereof in Litt. lib. 3. cap. 11. and 32 H. 8. cap. 28. which takes away Discontinuances by the husband seised in right of his wife Disgrading DIsgrading or Degrading is when a man having taken upon him a Dignity temporal or spiritual is afterwards thereof deprived be he Knight Clerk or other Whereof if a Clerk be delivered to his Ordinary and cannot clear himself of the Offence whereof he is convicted by the
Iury he shall be disgraded for it which is nothing else but the Deprivation of him from those Orders he hath taken upon him as Priesthood Deaconship or otherwise Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 130 138. In like manner there is Disgrading of a Knight as is aforesaid See Stow Annal. pag. 685. And it is worthy the observation that by the Canon Law there are two kinds of Disgradings the one summary by word only and the other solemn by Devesting the party disgraded from those Ornaments and Rites which are the Ensigns of his Order or Degree See 4 E. 4. 19 20. Tithes TIthes are the Tenth parts of any thing but properly of those things that increase which for the most part belong to Ministers of the Church for their maintenance and they are of three sorts to wit Predial Personal and mixt Predial Tithes are Tithes that are paid of things that come of the Ground onely as Corn Hay Fruits of trees and such like Personal Tithes are Tithes paid of such profits as come by the labour and industry of a mans person as by Buying and Seiling gains of Merchandize and of Handy-crafts men Labourers and such as work for hire as Carpenters Masons and such like Mixt Tithes are Tithes of Calves Lambs Pigs and such like that increase partly of the Ground they are fed upon and partly of the keeping industry and diligence of the Owner Disparagement DIsparagement is a Shame Disgrace or Villany done by the Gardian in Chivalrie to his Ward within age in point of his Marriage As when the Gardian marries his Ward within age of fourteen years and within such time as he cannot consent to Marriage to a Bond-woman or to the Daughter of one that dwels in a Borough which is to be understood such whose fathers profess Handicrafts and those baser Arts of buying and selling to get their living or to one that is lame or deformed or hath some horrible Disease as the Leprosie French-Pox Falling-sickness or such like or marries him to a woman that is past Child-bearing and divers such other then upon complaint made by the friends of such Heir the Lord or Gardian shall lose the Wardship and the profits during the Nonage of the Heir for the Disparagement done him See Littl. lib. 2. cap. 4. Disseisin DIsseisin is when a men enters into any Lands or Tenements where his Entry is not lawful and puts him out that hath the Freehold Disseisin upon Disseisin DIsseisin upon Disseisin is when the Disseisor is disseised by another Disseisor and Disseisee DIsseisor is he who puts a man out of his Land without order of Law But the King cannot be said to be a Disseisor and with this is a note in 1 E. 5 f. 8. that it was held the King could not be termed one that did wrong for if one will disseise another to the use of the King where the King hath no right the King cannot be said a Disseisor Disseisee is he that is put out of his Land and if such Disseisee levy a Fine of the Land whereof he is disseised to a stranger the Disseisor shall keep the Land for ever for the Disseisee against his own Fine cannot claim and the Conusee cannot enter for the right which the Disseisee had was extinct by the Fine whereof the Disseisor shall take advantage and so was the opinion Cok. lib 2. fol. 56. Distress DIstress is the thing taken and distrained upon any Land for Rent behind or other duty or for hurt done although the property of the thing belongs to a stranger but if they are Beasts that belong to a stranger it behoves that they were levant and couchant upon the same Ground that is to say that the Beasts have been upon the ground a certain space that they have themselves well rested there or else they are not distrainable for Rent or Service If one distrain for Rent or other thing without lawfull cause then the party grieved shal have a Replevin and upon Surety found to pursue his Action shall have the Distress re-delivered But there are divers things that are not distrainable viz. another mans Gown in the house of a Tailor or Cloth in the house of a Fuller Sheerman or Weaver they being common Artificers and the common presumption is that such things belong not to the Artificers but to other persons who put them there to be wrought Victual is not distrainable nor Corn in sheaves unless they are in a Cart because a Distress ought to be always of such things whereof the Sheriff may make Replevin and deliver again in as good case as they were at the taking A man may distrain for Homage of his Tenant for Fealty and Escuage and other Services and for Fines and Amerciaments which are assessed in a Leet but not in a Court-Baron and for Dammage-feasant that is when he finds the Beasts or goods of any other doing hurt or incumbring his Ground But a man may not distrain for any Rent or thing due for any Land but upon the same Land that is charged therewith And in case where I come to distrain and the other seeing my purpose cases the beasts or bears the th ● ng out to the intent that I shall not take it for a Distresse upon the Ground then I may well pursue and if I take it presently in the High-way or in anothers ground the taking is lawful as well there as upon the Land charged to whomsoever the property of the goods belongs Also for Fines and Amerciaments assessed in a Leet one may always take the goods of him that is so amerced in whose ground soever they be within the Iurisdiction of the Court as it is said Also when one ha ● h taken a Distresse it behoves him to bring it to the common Pound or else he may keep it in an open place so that he give notice to the party that he if the Distress be a quick beast may give it food and then if the beast die for want of food he that was distrained shall be at the loss and the other may distrain again for the same Rent or duty But if he carry the Distresse to an Hold or out of the County that the Sheriff may not make deliverance upon the Replevin then the party upon Return of the Sheriff shall have a Writ of Withernam directed to the Sheriff what he take as many beasts or as much goods of the other into his keeping till deliverance be made of the first Distresse And also if they be in a Fortlet or Castle the Sheriff may take with him the Power of the County and beat down the Castle as appears by the Statute of West 1. c. 17. Therefore see the Statute District DIstrict is sometimes used for the Circuit or Territory within which a man may be compelled to appear Brit. c. 120. and so also is Districtio in the Reg orig fol. 6. v. Distresse in the former signification is divided first into finite and infinite
Finite is that which is limited by Law how often it shall be made to bring the party to trial of the Action as once or twice Old Nat. Brev. f. 43. Distresse infinite is without limitation untill the party comes as against a Iury that refuses to appear upon Certificate of Assise the Process is a Venire facias Habeas corpora and distresse infinite Old nar Brev. f. 113. Then it is divided into the grand Distresse as Anno 52 H. 3. c. 7. which Fitzh calls in Latine Magnam Districtionem Nat. Brev. 126. a. and an ordinary distresse A grand Distresse is that which is made of all the goods and chattels which the party had within the County Brit. c. 6. f. 52. But see whether it be not sometimes all one with Distresse infinite idem fol. 80. with whom also the Statute of Marlbridge seems to agree Anno 52 H. 3. c. 7. 9 12. See the Old Nat. Brev. 71. b. Distringas DIstringas is a Writ directed to the Sheriff or any other Officer commanding him to distrain for a Debt to the King c. or for his appearing at a day See the great diversity of this Writ in the Table of the Reg. judic verbo Distringas Also there is a Writ to distrein Iurors to try an issue in a Suit at Common Law And also another Writ to distrein the adjacent Villages to make good Hedges and fences thrown down in the night by unknown men Of which see 1 Cro. Rep. 204. in t ' Reg. Inhabit ' de Epworth Dividend DIvidend is a word used in the Statute of Rutland Anno 10 E. 1. where it seems to signifie one part of an Indenture See Anno 28 ejusdem Stat. 3. c. 2. Divorce DIvorce See Devorce Docket DOcket is a Little piece of Payer or Parchment written that contains in it the effect of a Greater Writing See the Statute 2 3 P. M. c. 6. M. West part 2. tit Fines sect 106. calls it Dogget Dog-draw DOg-draw is an apparent Deprehension of an offendor against Venison in the Forrest There are four kinds of them observed by Manwood part 2. c. 18. num 9. of his Forest Laws that is Dog-draw Stable stand Back-bear and Bloudy-hand Dog-draw is when one is found drawing after a Deer by the sent of a Hound led in his hand Dogger DOgger is a kind of Ship Anno 31 E. 3. Stat. 3. c. 1. Dogger-fish ib. c. 2 seems to be Fish brought in those Ships to Blackney Haven c. Doggermen Anno 2 H. 8. c. 4. Dole-fish DOlefish seems to be those Fishes which the Fishermen yearly imployed in the North seas do of custome receive for their allowance See the Statute Anno 35 H. 8. c. 7. Dominus litis IS the Advocate in the Civil Law who after the death of his Client prosecutes a Suit to sentence for the Executors use Domo reparan ●● DOmo reparanda is a Vr. that lies for one against his neighbour by the fall of whose House he fears some hurt will come to his own Reg. orig fol. 123. Doom DOom from the Saxon Dom signifies Iudgment a word much used in References to Arbitrators Dooms-day DOoms-day is a Book that was written in the time of S. Edward the Confessor as the Author of Old Nat. Brev. saith fol. 15. and before in the title of Ancient demesne containing in it not only all the Lands through England but also all the names of those in whose hands they were at that time when the Book was made Lambert proves that this Book was made in the time of William the Conquerour with whom Cambden in his Britan. pag. 94. agrees proving it out of Ingulphus that flourished the same time who touching the contents thereof hath these words It describes the whole Land neither was there one Hide in all England whose Value and Possessour was unknown nor any Pool or place not describ'd in the Kings Roll and the Rent profits Possession it self and Possessor not made known to the King according to the fidelity of the Taxers who described the same Country wherein they were elected That Roll is called Rotulus Wint. and by the English for its generality in that it contains all the Tenements contained throughout the Land it is surnamed Dooms-day And this Book is sometimes called Liber Judicatorius because in it is contained a diligent Description of the Kingdom and it expresses the value of all the ground thereof as well in the time of King Edward as in the time of King William under whom it was compiled Doomsman SEem to be Suitors in a Court of a Mannor in Auntient demesne who are Iudges there Donative DOnative is a Benefice meerly given and collated by the Patron to a man without either Presentation to or Institution by the Ordinary or Induction by his commandment F. N. B. 35. e. See the Statute of 8. R. 2. c. 4. Peter Gregory de Beneficiis c. 11. num 1. hath these words But if Chappels founded by Lay-men were not approved of the Diocesan and as they term it spiritualized they are not accounted Benefices neither can they be conferred by the Bishop but remain to the pious disposition of the Founders Wherefore the founders and their Heirs may give such Chappels if they will without the Bishop M. Gwyn in the Preface to his Readings saith That the King might of antient time found a free Chappel and exempt it from the Iurisdiction of the Diocesan So also he may by his Letters Patents give licence to a common person to found such a Chappel and to ordain that it shall be Donative and not presentable and that the Chaplain shall be deprivable by the Founder or his heir and not by the Bishop and this seems to be the original of Donatives in England Fitzherbert saith fol. 33. c. that there are some Chauntries which a man may give by his Letters Patents And all Bishopricks were of the Foundation of the Kings of England and therefore in the antient time they were Donative and given by the Kings yet now the Bishopricks are become by the Grants of the Kings eligible by their Chapter Coke l. 3. f. 76. Donor and Donee DOnor is he who gives Lands or Tenements to another in tail and he to whom the same is given is called Donee Dorture DOrture is a common Room place or Chamber where all the Religious of one Covent slept and lay all night Anno 25 H. 8. cap. 11. Double Plea DOuble Plea is where the Defendant or Tenant in any Action pleads a Plea in which two matters are comprehended and each one by it self is a sufficient Bar or Answer to the Action then such double Plea shall not be admitted for a Plea except one depend upon another and in such case if he may not have the last Plea without the first then such a double Plea shall be well received Double Quarel DOuble Quarel is a Complaint made by any Clerk or other to the Archbishop of
the Province against any inferiour Ordinary for Delaying Iustice in any Cause Ecclesiastical as to give sentence or to institute a Clerk presented or such like the effect of which is That the Archbishop taking knowledge of such Delay directs his Letters under his authentical Seal to all and singular Clerks of his Province thereby commanding and giving authority to them and every of them to admonish the said Ordinary within nine days to do the Iustice required or otherwise to cite him to appear before him or his Official at a day in the said Letters prefixed and there to alledge the cause of his Delay and lastly to intimate to the said Ordinary that if he performs not the thing injoyned nor appears at the day assigned he himself without other Delay will proceed to perform the Iustice required And it seems to be called a Double Quarel because it is most commonly made against the Iudge and him at whose request Iustice is delayed Dower DOwer by the Law of the Realm is a Portion which a Widow hath of the Lands of her husband which by the Common Law is the third part but by her husbands assignment by his fathers assent at the Church-door she may have so much of his fathers Land as is so assigned and so of the husbands assignment of part of his own Land And Dower by the Custome of some places is to have half the husbands Land Dower is also a Writ that lies where a man is sole seised during the Coverture between him and his wife of Lands or Tenements in Fee-simple or Fee-tail where by possibility the issue between them may inherit if such a man die his wife shall recover the third part of all the Lands whereof the husband was sole seised any time during the Coverture by a Writ of Dower unde nihil habet though he died not seised and though he made Alienation thereof in his life But if a man before the Statute of Vses 27 H. 8. had Lands in which another man or other men were seised to his use always during the Coverture and he to whose use they were seised died before the said Statute his wife should not be endowed And if before the said Statute two men were seised of Lands to the use of one of them and he to whose use c. died before the said Statute his wife should not be endowed Also if a woman bring a Writ of Dower she should recover Dammages for the profit run after the death of her husband if he died seised thereof but if any Alienation or Estate were made during the Coverture so that the husband died not seised then though she should recover the Land yet no Dammages Also there is another Writ of Dower called a Writ of Right of Dower which lies where a woman hath recovered part of her Dower in one Town and the other part she is to recover But in divers cases a woman shall not have Dower as if the husband commit Treason for which he is attainted then his wife shall have no Dower And if she elope from her husband with another man in Adultery and be not reconciled to him of her own will without coercion of the Church she shall not be endowed See Lit. l. 1. cap. 4. And note where in the Civil Law Dower is that which the husband hath with his wife in Marriage to maintain the married estate by the Laws of this Realm the word Dower signifies such Portion as the wife after her husbands death shall have to live on Dozeine DOzeine See Deciners Drie Exchange DRie Exchange Anno 3 H. 7. cap. 5. Seems to be a subtile term invented to disguise Vsury in which something is pretended to pass on both sides whereas in truth nothing passes on the one side Drift of the Forest DRift of the Forrest is nothing else but an exact view or Examination taken once twice or oftner in a year as occasion shall require what Beasts there are in the Forrest to the end that the Common in the Forrest be not over-charged that the Beasts of Foreiners that have no Common there be not permitted and that Beasts not commonable may be put out See for this the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 35. and Manwoods Forrest Laws cap. 15. Right RIght is where one hath a thing that was taken from another wrongfully as by Disseisin Discontinuance or such like the Challenge or Claim of him that ought to have it is called Right If a woman release all her Right to him in Reversion her Dower is extinct for when the Right which is the foundation and principal is released by Consequence the Action which is but the means to recover is also released By Release of all Title to the Land all his Right is extinct So when a man hath Title either by Condition or by Alienation in Mortmain the Release of all his Right shall extinguish this Title Cok. lib. 8. fol. 151 153. Right of Entry RIght of Entrie is when one seised of Land in fee is thereof disseised now the Disseisee hath Right to enter into the Land and may so do when he will or else may have a Writ of Right against the Disseisor Duces tecum DUces tecum is a Writ out of the Chancery commanding a man to appear there and to bring with him some piece of Evidence or other thing that the Court would have a sight of Dum fuit infra Aetatem DUM fuit infra aetatem is a Writ that lies where an Infant aliens his Land in Fee-simple or for term of life when he comes to his full age he shall have this Writ or he may enter if he will but he must be of full age the day of his Writ brought Also if an Infant alien his Land and die his issue at his full age shall have this Writ or he may enter but the issue shall not have this Writ within his age Dum non fuit compos mentis DUM non fuit compos mentis is a Writ that lies when a man that is out of his wit viz. Mad or Lunatick aliens his Land in Fee-simple and dies then his Heir after his decease shall have this Writ but he himself shall not have it for that a man shall not be received to disable himself Also this Writ may be made in the Per Cui and Post Duplicat DUplicat is a Second Letters Patents granted by the Lord Chancellour in case where he hath granted the same before and therefore they are held void by Crompton in his Jur. of Courts fol. 215. Duresse DUresse is where one is kept in Prison or restrained from his Liberty contrary to the order of Law or threatned to be killed maimed or greatly beaten and if such person so in Prison or in fear of such Threatnings make any Specialty or Obligation by reason of such Imprisonment such a Deed is void in Law and in an Action brought upon such a Specialty he may say it was made by Duresse
ei dimisit qui inde eum injuste disseisivit c. But if the Disseisor alien and the Alienee dies seised or aliens over to another or if the Disseisor dies and his Heir enters and that Heir aliens or dies and his Heir enters then the Disseisee or his Heir shall have a Writ of Entre sur Disseisin in the Per and Cui and the Writ shall say In quod idem A non habet Ingressum nisi per B cui C illud ei dimisit qui inde injuste c. A Writ of Entry in the Per and Cui shall be maintainable against none but where the Tenant is in by Purchase or Discent For if the Alienation or Discent be put out of the Degrees upon which no Writ may be made in the Per or in the Per and Cui then it shall be made in the Post and the Writ shall say In quod A non habet Ingressum nisi Post Disseis ● nam quam B inde injuste sine judicio fecit praef t. N. vel M. proavo N. cujus haeres ipse est Also there are five things which put the Wri ● of Entrie out of the Degrees viz. Intrus●on Succession Disseisin upon Disseisin Iudgment and Escheat 1. Intrusion is when the Disseisor dies seised and a stranger abates 2. Diss ● isin upon Disseisin is when the Disseisor is disseised by another 3. Succession is when the Disseisor is a man of Religion and dies or is deposed and his Successor enters 4. Judgment is when one recovers against the Disseisor 5. Escheat is when the Disseisor dies without Heir or doth Felony whereby he is attaint by which the Lord enters as in his Escheat In all these cases the Disseisee or his Heir shall not have a Writ of Entrie within the degrees of the Per but in the Post because in those cases they are not in by Discent nor by Purchase Entrie ad Communem Legem ALso there is a Writ of Entrie ad Communem Legem which lies where Tenant for term of Life Tenant for term of anothers Life Tenant by the curtesie or Tenant in Dower aliens and dies he in the Revetsion shall have this Writ against whomsoever is in after in the Tenement Entrie in the Case provided A Writ of Entrie in Casu proviso lies if Tenant in Dower alien in fee or for term of life or for anothers life living the Tenant in Dower he in the Reversion shall have this Writ which is provided by the Stat. of Gloc. c. 7. Entrie in Casu consimili A Writ of Entrie in Casu consimili lies where Tenant for life or Tenant by the courtesie aliens in Fee he in Reversion shall have this Writ by the Statute of Westmin 2. cap. 24. Entrie ad Terminum qui praeteriit THe Writ of Entrie ad terminum qui praeteriit lies where a man leases Land to another for term of years and the Tenant holds over his term the Lessor shall have this Writ And if Lands be leased to a Man for term of anothers life and he for whose life the Lands are leased dies and the Lessee holds over then the Lessor shall have this Writ Entrie without Assent of the Chapter A Writ of Entrie sine Assensu Capituli lies where an Abbot Prior or such as hath Covent or common Seal aliens Lands or Tenements of the right of his Church without the Assent of the Covent or Chapter and dies then the Successor shall have this Writ Entrie for Marriage in Speech A Writ of Entrie causa Matrimonii praeloquuti lies where Lands or Tenements are given to a man upon Condition that he shall take the Donor to his wife within a certain time and he does not espouse her within the said term or espouses another woman or makes himself Priest or enters in Religion or disables himself so that he cannot take her according to the said Condition then the Donor and her Heirs shall have the said Writ against him or against whosoever is in the said Land But this Condition must be made by Indenture otherwise this Writ doth not lie And all these and other Writs of Entry may be made in the Per Cui and Post Entrusion ENtrusion is a Writ that lies where a Tenant for Life dies seised of certain Lands or tenements and a Stranger enters he in the Reversion shall have this writ against the Abator or whosoever is in after their Entrusion Also a writ of Entrusion shall be maintainable by the Successour of an Abbot against the Abator who shall enter in Lands or tenements in the time of Vacation that belong to the Church by the Statute of Marlebridge the last Chapter And it seems the difference between an Intrudor and an Abator is this that an Abator is he that enters into Lands void by the death of a Tenant in Fee and an Intrudor is he that enters into Lands void by the death of a Tenant for Life or Years See F. N. B. fol. 203. Entrusion de Gard. ENtrusion de Gard is a Writ which lies where the Heir within age enters in his Lands and holds out his Lord for in such case the Lord shall not have the Writ de Communi Custodia but this Writ of Entrusion of the Ward Old N. B. Enure ENure signifies to take place or effect to be available As a Release shall enure by way of Extinguishment Lit. Cha. Release Equity EQuity is in two sorts and those of contrary effects for the one doth abridge and take from the letter of the Law the other doth enlarge and add thereunto The first is thus defined Equity is the Correction of a Law generally made in that part wherein it fails which correction of the general words is much used in our Law As for example When an Act of Parliament is made that whosoever doth such a thing shall be a Feion and shall suffer death yet if a Mad-man or an Infant that hath no discretion do the same they shall be no Felons nor suffer death ther fore Also if a Statute were made That all persons that shall receive or giv ● me ● t and drink or other succor to any that shall do any such thing shall be accessary to his Offence and shall suffer death if they knew of the Fact yet one doth such an act and comes to his wife who knowing thereof doth receive him and gives him meat and drink she shall not be Accessary nor Felon for by the generality of the said words neither the M ● d-man Infant nor Wife were included in the intent of the Law And thus Equity doth correct the generality of the Law in those cases and the general words are by Equity abridged The other Equity is defined to be an Extension of the words of the Law to Cases unexpressed yet having the same reason So that when the words enact one thing they enact all other things that are of like degree As the Statute which ordains That in an Action of Debt against
And the Escheator is an Officer of Record and may ordain an under-Escheator as the Sheriff may an under-Sheriff yet the Escheator cannot return any Office by vertue of his Office but he shall be punished See F. N. B. 100. Office Escaetriae is the Escheatorship Reg. orig fol. 259. Exchequer EXchequer Scaccarium comes of the French word Eschequier id est Abacus which in one signification is taken for a Counting-Table or for the art or skill of Counting And from thence as some think the place or Court of the Receits and Accounts of the Revenues of the Crown is called the Exchequer Others have otherwise derived the name But the Exchequer is defined by Crompton in his Jurisd of Courts fol. 105. to be a Court of Record wherein all Causes touching the Revenues of the Crown are handled Escrow AN Escrow is a Deed delivered to a third person to be the Deed of the party upon a future condition And is called in Latine Schedula Rast Ent. 181. Escuage EScuage in Latine Scutagium that is Service of the Shield and he that held by Escuage held by Knight-service and to that did belong Ward Marriage and Relief c. But see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. c. 24. for taking away the Court of Wards and Liveries and turning all Tenures into free and common Soccage Escuage was a certain Sum of mony levied by the Lord of his Tenant after the quantity of his Tenure when Escuage ran through all England and was Ordained by all the Council of England how much every Tenant should give his Lord and that was properly to maintain the wars against Scotland or Wales and not against other Lands for that those Lands did of right belong to the Realm of England See Lit. lib. 2. cap. 3. Eslisors ARe persons nominated by a Court of Law to whom a Venire facias is directed by challenge to the Sheriff and Coroners who return the Writ in their own names with a panel of the Iurors names 15 E. 4. 24. pl. 4. Esnecy ESnecy is a Priviledge given the eldest Coparcener to choose first after the Inheritance is divided Flet. lib. 5. cap. 10. Esplees ESplees is the Profit or Commodity that is to be taken of a thing As of a Common the taking of the Grass by the mouths of the Beasts that common there of an Advowson the taking of gross Tithes by the Parson of Wood the ● elling of Wood of an Orchard the selling of Apples and other Fruit growing there of a Mill the taking of Toll are the Esplees and of such like And note that in a Writ of Right of Land Advowson or such like the Demandant ought to alledge in his Count that he or his Ancestors took the Esplees of the thing in demand otherwise the Pleading is not good Essendi quietum de Tolonio ESendi quietum de Tolonio is a Writ to be quit of Toll and lies in case where the Citizens or Burgesses of any City or Borough have been acquitted of Toll by the Grant of the Kings Progenitors throughout the whole Realm or by Prescription then if any man of the said Cities or Boroughs come with his Merchandises to any Town Fair or Market and there put them to sale or buy any Merchandises if the Officers of the said Town will demand any Toll of him against the Kings Charter or against the Vsage and Custom he may sue and have such a writ Fitz. N. B. fol. 226. Regist original fol. 258. Essoine Essoine Where an Action is brought and the Plaintiff or Defendant may not well appear at the day in Court for one of the five causes under specified he shall be Essomed to save his default There are five manner of Essoins viz. Essoine De ouster le mere by which the Defendant shall have a day by forty days The second is De terra sancta and upon this the Defendant shall have a day by a year and a day and these two shall be laid in the beginning of the Plea The third Essoin is De male vener and that shall be adjourned to a common day as the Action requires and this is called the Common Essoine and when and how this Essoine shall be see the Statutes and the Abridgment of Statutes where it is well declared The fourth is De malo lecti and that is only in a Writ of Right and thereupon there shall a Writ go out of the Chancery directed to the Sheriff that he shall send four Knights to see the tenant and if he be sick to give a day after a year and a day The fifth Essoine is De service del Roy and it lies in all Actions except i ● Assise De Novel Disseisin Writ of Dower Darreine presentment and in Appeal of Murther but in this Essoine it behoves at the day to shew his warrant or else it shall turn to a Default if it be in a Plea real or else he shall lose xx s. for the journey or more by the discretion of the Iustice if it be in a Plea personal as it appears by the Statute of Gloucest cap. 8. Essoino de malo lecti ESsoino de malo lecti is a writ directed to the Sheriff to send four lawful Knights to view one that hath essoined himself De malo lecti Reg. Orig. fol. 8. b. Establishment de Dower EStablishment de Dower seems to be the Assurance of Dower made by the husband or his friends before or at the time of the Marriage And Assignment of Dower is the Setting it out by the Heir afterward according to the Establishment Brit. cap. 102 103. Estandard EStandard or Standard signifies an Ensign in war but is also used for the principal or Standing Measure of the King to the proportion whereof all the Measures through the Land are and ought to be framed by the Clerk of the Market Aulneger or other Officer according to their Function For it was established by Magna Charta ann 9 H. 3. c. 25. that there should be but one scantling of Weights and Measures through all the Realm which is since confirmed by An. 14 Ed. 3. cap. 12. and many other Statutes as also that all should be ● itted to the Standard sealed with the Kings Seal And there is good reason that it should be called a Standard because it stands constant and immoveable and hath all other Measures coming towards it for their conformity as Souldiers in the Field have their Standard or Colours for their direction in their March or Skirmish Of these Standards and Measures read Britton cap. 30. See the Statute 17 Car. 1. cap. 19. Estate EState is that Title or Interest that a man hath in Lands and Tenements as Estate simple otherwise called Fee-simple and Estate conditional or upon Condition which is either upon Condition in Deed or upon Condition in Law See Littleton lib. 3. cap. 5. Estoppel EStoppel is when one is concluded and forbidden in Law to speak against his own act or deed yea though it be
time their Reservations were as well in Victuals as Money until at the last and that chiefly in the time of King Henry the First by agreement the reservation of Victuals was turned into ready Money and so hitherto hath continued amongst most men Fate or Fatt FAte or Fatt is a Measure mentioned in the Statutes of 1 H. 5. cap. 10. and 11 H. 6. cap. 8. to contain eight Bushels but the Citzens and Merchants of London as it appears by those Statutes and the Kings Purveyors would have that measure and a Bushel over for one Quarter and so they had nine Bushels for one Quarter of Corn. Faux Imprisonment FAux Imprisonment is a Writ that lies where a man is arrested and restrained from his Liberty by another against the order of the Law then he shall have against him this Writ whereby he shall recover Dammages See more thereof before tit Arrest Faux Judgment FAux Judgment See thereof before tit Error Fealty FEalty is a Service called in Latine Fidelitas and shall be done in this manner viz. The Tenant shall hold his right hand upon a Book and shall say to his Lord I shall be to you faithful and true and shall bear to you Faith for the Lands and Tenements which I claim to hold of you and truly shall do you the Customs and Services that I ought to do to you at the terms assigned So help me God and shall kiss the Book but he shall not kneel as in doing Homage And thereof see after in the Title Homage Also Fealty is incident to all manner of Tenures Fee FEE Feodum is in our Law an equivocal word of divers significations for it is most usually taken for an Estate of Inheritance in Lands and Tenements to one and his Heirs or to one and the Heirs of his Body But it is used also for the Compass Circuit or Extent of a Lordship or Mannor And from thence comes the ordinary Plea in Bar to an Avowry That the Land upon which he avows is out of his Fee And thirdly it is taken for a Reward or Wages given to one for the execu ● 〈◊〉 of his Office as the Fee of a Forrester or the Keeper of a Park or a Sheriffs Fee sor ● erving an Execution lim ●● s by the Statute of 29 Eliz. cap 4. And it is also taken for that Consideration which is given a Sergeant at Law or a Councellor or a Physitian for their Counsel or Advice in their profession which as it is well observed by Sir Jo. Davies in his Preface to his Reports is not properly Merces but Honorarium Yet in our Law-language it is called his Fee Fee expectant FEE expectant Where Lands are given to a man and his wife in Frank-marriage to have and to hold to them and their heirs in this case they have Fee-simple but if they are given to them and the heirs of their body c. They have Tail and Fee-expectant Kitch fol. 153. Fee Farm FEE Farm is when a Tenant holds of his Lord in Fee-simple paying to him the value of half or of the third fourth or other part of the Land by the year And he that holds by Fee-Farm ought not to pay Relief or do any other thing that is not contained in the Feoffment but Fealty for that belongs to all kind of Tanures Fee-simple FEe-simple is when any person holds Lands or Rent or other thing inheritable to him and his Heirs for evermore and these words His Heirs make the Estate of Inheritance for if the Land be given to a man for ever yet he hath but an Estate for life Also if Tenant in Fee-simple die his first son shall be his Heir but if he have no Son then all his Daughters shall be his Heirs and every one shall have her part by partition but if he have no Son nor Daughter then his next Coufin collateral of the whole Blood shall be his Heir Fel de se FElo de se is he that commits Felony by murthering himself See Crompt Justice of Peace fol. 28. Felony FElony is a general term which comprehends divers hainous Offences for which the Offenders ought to suffer death and lose their Lands And it seems that they are called Felonies of the Latine word Fel which is in English Gall in French Fiel or of the ancient English word Fell or Fierce because they are intended to be done with a fell fierce or mischievous mind When a man without any colour of Law steals the Goods of another amounting to the value of Twelve pence or more that is Larceny but if he approaches the Person of another in the High-way and robs him of his Goods although it be but to the value of one peny it is Felony and that is called Robbery and therefore he shall be hanged Fence-moneth FEnce-moneth is a Forrest word and signifies the time of 31 days in the year that is to say 15 days before Midsummer and 15 days after in which time it is forbidden for any man to hunt in the Forrest or to go into it to disturb the wild Beasts The reason of which is because the Female Deer do then Fawn And therefore this Moneth is called the Fence-moneth or Defence-moneth for that the Deer are then to be defended from scare or fear See Manwood Forrest Laws cap. 13. fol. 90. b. Feodarie FEodarie was an Officer in the Court of Wards appointed by the Master of that Court by virtue of the Statute 32 H. 8. c. 46. to be present with the Escheator in every County at the finding of Offices and to give in evidence for the King as well for the Value as the Tenure And his Office was also to survey the Lands of the Ward after the Office found to return the true value thereof into the Court to assign Dower unto the Kings Widows to receive all the Rents of the Wards Lands within his Circuit and to answer them to the Receiver of the Court But see the Stat. 12 C ● r. 2. c. 24. for Abolishing the said Court Feoffment FEoffment is where a man gives Lands Houses or other Corporal things which are Heritable to another in Fee-simple and thereof delivers Seisin and Possession Also if one make a gift in tail or a lease for life Livery and Seisin must be given or else nothing shall pass by the Grant Feoffor and Feoffee FEoffor is he that infeoffs or makes a Feoffment to another of Lands or Tenements in Fee-simple And Feoffee is he who is infeoffed or to whom the Feoffment is so made Ferdfare FErdfare is to be quit from going to War Flet. lib. 1. c. 47. Ferdwit FErdwit is to be quit of Murther committed in the Army Flet. l. 1. c. 47. Ferry IS a liberty by prescription or the Kings Grant to have a Boat for passage upon a great Stream for Cariage of horses and men for reasonable toll Feude FEude or Deadly Feude is a German word and signifies implacable Hatred not to be
In Latine Falda Faldae Is Common for Sheep See Shack. Co. Ent. 14 15. Coke 8. Rep. 125. 1 Cro. Rep. Spooner and Day Folkmoot FOlkmoot signifies according to Lambert in his Exposition of Saxon words two kinds of Courts one now called the County Court the other the Sheriffs Tourne And in London it signifies at this day celebrem ex omni Civitate Conventū Stows Survey Footgeld FOotgeld is an Amerciament for not cutting out the Balls of great Dogs feet in the Forrest for which see Expeditate And to be quit of Footgeld is a priviledge to keep Dogs within the Forrest unlawed without punishment or controll Cromp. Jurisd fol. 197. Manwood part 1. pag. 86. Forcible Entry FOrcible Entry is a Violent actual Entry into House or Land or taking a Distress weaponed whether he offer Violence or no. West part 2. Symb. tit Inditements Sect. 65. Forest or Forrest FOrest is a place priviledged by Royal Authority or by Prescription for the peaceable abiding and nourishment of the Beasts or Birds of the Forrest for disport of the King For which there have been in ancient time certain peculiar Officers Laws and Orders part of which appear in the great Charter of the Forrest Forester FOrester is an Officer of the Forest sworn to preserve the Vert and Venison of the Forest to attend upon the wild Beasts within his Bailywick to watch and keep them safe by day and by night to apprehend all Offenders there in Vert or Venison and to present them at the Courts of the Forest to the end they may be punished according to their Offences Forfeiture of Marriage FOrfeiture of Marriage was a Writ that lay for the Lord by Knights Service against his Ward who refused a convenient Marriage offered him by his Lord and married another within age without the assent of his Lord. And see for this Fitz. N. B. fol. 141. g. c. Forger of false Deeds FOrger of false Deeds comes of the French word Forger which signifies to Frame or fashion a thing as the Smith doth his work upon his Anvil And it is used in our Law for the Fraudulent making and publishing of false Writings to the prejudice of another mans right Fitz. in his F. N. B. f. 96. B. C. says that a Writ of Deceit lies against him that thus forges any Deed. Forjudger FOrjudger is a Iudgment given in a Writ of Mesne brought by a Tenant against a Mesne Lord who should acquit the Tenant of Services demanded by the Lord above of whom the Tenement is holden and the Mesne will not appear then Iudgment shall be given that the Mesne Lord shall lose his Seignory and that the Tenant from thenceforth shall hold of the Lord above by such Su ●● as the Mesne held before and shall be discharged of the Services which he yielded to the Mesne by the Statute of Westm 2. ca. 9. which is called a Forjudger Also if an Attorney or other Officer in any Court be put out and forbidden to use the same he is said to be forjudged the Court. Formedon FOrmedon is a Writ that lies where Tenant in tail infeoffs a Stranger or is disseised and dies his Heir shall have a Writ of Formedon to recover the Land But there are three manner of Formedons One is in the Discender and that is in the case before said And if one give Land in the taile and for default of Issue the Remainder to another in the taile and that for default of such Issue the Land shall revert to the Donor if the first Tenant in tail die without Issue he in the Remainder shall have a Formedon in the Remainder But if the Tenant in the tail die without Issue and he in the Remainder also die without Issue then the Donor or his heirs shall have a Formedon in the Reverter Forrein FOrrein is a word adjectively used and joyned with divers Substantives as Forrein matter triable in another County Pl. Cor. 154 or matter done in another County Kitch fol. 126. Forrein Plea is a refusal of the Iudge as incompetent because the matter in hand was not within his Precincts Kitch fol. 75. Anno 4 H. 8. cap. 2. Anno 22 ejusdem cap. 2. 14. Forrein Answer is such an Answer as is not triable in the County where it is made Anno 15 H. 6 cap. 5. Forrein Service is such Service whereby a Mean Lord holds over of another without the compass of his own Fee Bro. tit Tenures fol. 251. num 12. 28. and Kitch fol. 209. Or else that which a Tenant performs either to his own Lord or to the Lord above him out of the Fee For of such Services Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 7. speaks thus Also there are certain Services which are called Forrein though they be named and express'd in the Charter of Feoffment and may therefore be called Forrein because they appertain to our Lord the King and not to the chief Lord unless when he goes in Service in Person or that he satisfies our Lord the King for the Service by some kind of means and they are performed at certain times when occasion and necessity require and they have divers sundry names For sometime they are called Forrein the word taken largely as to the Kings Service somtime Escuage somtime Service of the King and it may therefore be called Forrein because it is done and taken without or beside Service done to the Lord Paramount See Broke Tenures 28 95. Forrein Service seems to be Knights Service or Escuage uncertain Perkins sect 650. Forrein Attachment is an Attachment of the Goods of Forreiners within any Liberty or City for the satisfaction of any Citizen to whom the said Forreigner owes money Forrein Apposer is an Officer in the Exchequer to whom all Sheriffs and Bailiffs do repair by him to be apposed of their Green wax And from thence he draws down a charge upon the Sheriff or Bailiff to the Clerk of the Pipe Forsechoke FOrsechoke seems to signifie as much as Forsaken in our modern Language It is especially used Anno 10 Edw. 1. cap. unico for Lands or Tenements seised by the Lord for want of Services due from his Tenant and so quietly held and possessed beyond the year and day Forestaller FOrestaller is he that buys Corn Cattel or other Merchandize whatsoever by the way as it comes to Markets Fairs or such like places to be sold to the intent to sell the same again at a more high and dear price in prejudice of the Common-wealth and people c. The pain for such as are convict thereof is for the first time two months Imprisonment and loss of the value of the thing sold The second time Imprisonment by the space of half a year and loss of double value of the Goods c. The third time Imprisonment during the Kings pleasure and Iudgment of the Pillory and to forfeit all his Goods and Chattels See the Statute 5 Ed. 6. cap. 14.
Forestall FOrestall is to be quit of Amerciaments and Cattels arrested within your Land and the Amerciaments thereof coming Founder FOunder is he that uses the Art of Melting or Dissolving Metals and making any thing thereof by casting in Molds He seems to have his name from the Latine word Fundere and is mentioned in the Statute of 17 R. 2. cap. 1. Fourcher FOurcher is a device used to delay the Plaintiff or Demandant in a Suit against two who thereto are not to answer till they both appear and the Appearance or Essoin of one will excuse the others Default at that day and they agree that the one shall be essoined or appear one day and for lack of the Appearance of the other have day over to appear and the other party shall have the same day and at that day the other will appear or be essoined and he that appeared or was essoined before will not then appear because he hoped to have another day by the Adjournment of the party who then appeared or was essoined This is called Fourcher and in some cases the mischief thereby is remedied by the Statute of Gloucest cap. 10. and Westm̄ 1. cap. 42. Franchise FRanchise is a French word and signifies in our Law an Immunity or Exemption from ordinary Iurisdiction as for a Corporation to hold Pleas within themselves to such a value and the like See of this in the Old Nat. Brev. fol. 4. a b. Franchise Royal. FRanchise Royal is where the King grants to one and his Heirs that they shall be quit of Toll or such like Free Almes FRee Almes is where in ancient times Lands were given to an Abbot and his Covent or to a Dean and his Chapter and to their Successors in pure and perpetual Almes without expressing any Service certain this is Frank-almoigne and such are bound before God to make Oraisons and Prayers for the Donor and his Heirs and therefore they do no Fealty and if such as have Lands in Frank-almoigne perform no Prayers nor Divine Service for the Souls of the Donors they shall not be compelled by the Donors to do it but the Donors may complain to the Ordinary praying him that such negligence be no more and the Ordinary of right ought to redress it But if an Abbot c. holds Lands of his Lord for certain Divine Service to be done as to sing every Friday a Mass or do some other thing if such Divine Service be not done the Lord may distrain and in such case the Abbot ought to do Fealty to the Lord and therefore it is not said Tenure in Frank-almoign but Tenure by Divine-Service for none can hold by Frank-almoign if any certain Service be expressed Frank Bank FRank Bank or Free Bench are Copihold-Lands which the Wife being married a Virgin hath after the decease of her husband for her Dower Kitch f. 102. Bract lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 13. num 2. hath these words There is a custom in those parts that the Wives their Husbands being dead should have Frank Bank of Lands of Sockmans and hold it in name of Dower Fitzh calls this a Custome by which in some Cities the Wife shall have all the Lands of her Husband for Dower N. B. fol. 150. See Plow fol. 411. Frank Chase FRank Chase is a Liberty by which all men having Land within this compass are prohibited to cut down the Wood or discover c. without the view of the Forrester although it be his own Crom. Jur. f. 187. Frank Fee TO hold in Frank Fee is to hold in Fee-simple Lands pleadable at the Common Law and not in ancient Demesne Frank Law FRank Law See Crom. Just of Peace f. 151. where you may find what this is by the contrary for he that for an Offence as Conspiracy loses his Frank Law is said to fall into these Mischiefs First that he shall never be Impanelled upon any Iury or Assize or otherwise used in saying any Truth Also if he have any thing to do in the Kings Court he shall not approach thither in person but must appoint his Attourney 3 His Lands Goods and Chattels are to be seised into the Kings hands and his Lands must be estrepped his Trees rooted up and his Body committed to prison Free Marriage FRee Marriage is when a man seised of Land in Fee-simple gives it to another man and his wife who is the daughter sister or otherwise of kin to the Donor in Free Marriage by virtue of which wards they have an Estate in special tail and shall hold the Land of the Donor quit of all manner of Services until the fourth degree be past accounting themselves in the first degree except Fealty which they shall do because it is incident to all Tenures saving Free alms And such Gift may be made as well after Marriage solemnized as before And a man may give Lands to his Soir in Free Marriage as well as to his Daughter by the opinion of Fitzh in his Writ of Champertie H. But it appears otherwise in Littleton and in Broke tit Frank-marriage pla 10. And so it was holden clear in Grays-Inne in Lent an 1576. 18 Eliz. by M. Rhodes then Reader there Frank-plege FRank-plege signifies a Pledge or Surety for Free-men according to the ancient Custom of England for preservation of the publick Peace See the Statute for View of Frank-pledge Anno 18 Ed. 2. and see View of Frank-pledge Free-hold FRee-hold is an Estate that a man hath in Lands or Tenements or Profit to be taken in Fee-simple Tail for term of his own or anothers life in Dower or by the Courtesse of England and under that there is no Free-hold for he that hath Estate for years or holds at will hath no Free-hōld but they are called Chatels And of Free-holds there are two sorts viz. Free-hold in Deed and Free-hold in Law Free-hold in Deed is when a man hath entred into Lands or Tenements and is seised thereof really and actually As if the Father seised of Lands or Teuements in Fee-simple dies and his son enters into the same as heir to his Father then he hath a Free-hold in Deed by his Entry Free-hold in Law is when Lands or Tenements are discended to a man and he may enter into them when he will but hath not yet made his Entry in Deed As in the case aforesaid if the Father being seised of Lands in Fee die seised and they discend to his Son but the Son hath not entred into them in Deed now befo rt his Entry he hath a Free-hold in Law French-man FRench-man was wont to be used for every Outlandish-man Bracton Lib. 3. Tract 2. cap. 15. See Engleshery Frendless man FRendless man was the old Saxon word for him we call an Outlaw nam forisfecit Amcos suos Bracton Lib. 3. Tract 2. cap. 12. Fresh Force FResh Force Frisca Forcia is a force committed in any City or Borough as by Disseisin Abatement Intrusion or Deforcement of any Lands or
King certain Land by the Service of carrying his Banner or Launce or to lead his Host or to be his Carver or Butler at his Coronation or the like and that is the most Honorable Service that a Tenant may do and for that it is called Grand Serjeanty But Petit Serjeanty is when one holds of the King paying him yearly a Bow a Sword a Spear or such like and that is but Socage in effect but a man cannot hold in Grand Serjeanty or Petit Serjeanty but of the King Also if a Tenant by Grand Serjeanty dies his Heir being of full age shall pay to the King for Relief the value of the Lands besides the charges that he pays to the King by Grand Serjeanty but he that holds by Escuage shall pay for his Relief but C. 5. Those that are in the Marches of Scotland who hold of the King by Cornage that is to blow an Horn when the Scots enter England are Tenants in Grand Serjeanty Also where a man holds of the King to find a man in his Wars within the Realm that is called Grand Serjeanty because it is done by a mans Body And if the Tenant cannot find a man to do it he is bound to do it himself But see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. c. 24. whereby all Tenures are now turned into Free and Common Socage Gree. GRee comes of the French word Gre good liking and it signifies in our Law Contentment or Satisfaction as in the Statute of 1 R. 2. c. 15. to make Gree to the parties is to give them Contentment or Satisfaction for an Offence done unto them Green hew GReen hew is all one with Vert as appears by Manwood in his Forest Laws cap. 6. sect 5. And for it see Vert. Green Wax GReen Wax is a word used in the Statutes of 42 E. 3. c. 9. and 7 H. 4. c. 3. and signifies the Estreats of Issues Fines and Amerciaments in the Exchequer and delivered out to the Sheriffs under the Seal of the Court to be levied by them in their several Counties Grithbreach GRithbreach that is the Kings Peace broken because Grith in English is Pax in Latine Gule of August GUle of August is the first day or the Calends of August which in the time of E. 1. and E. 3. was called ordinarily the Gule of August as appears by F. N. B. f. 62. l. and Plowdens Com. f. 316. b. It is the very day of S. Peter ad vincula and the reason why it was called the Gule of August is conceived upon a Story recorded by Durandus in his Rationale Divinorum l. 7. c. 19. of a Miracle wrought by S. Peter's Chain upon the daughter of one Quirinus a Tribune of Rome who by the kissing of that Chain was healed of the Kings Evil in her Throat gula And see Hospinian de origine festornm f. 85. b. Gultwit GUltwit is an Amends for Trespass according to Saxton in his Description of England c. 11. H. Habeas Corpus HAbeas Corpus is a writ which a man indited of any Trespass before Iustices of the Peace or in a Court of any Franchise and upon his Apprehenston being laid in Prisost for the same may have out of the Kings Bench thereby to remove himself hither at his own Costs and to answer the Cause there F. N. B. f. 250. h. And the order in this case is first to procure a Certiorari out of the Chancery directed to the said Iustices for the removing of the Indictment into the Kings Bench and upon that to procure this writ to the Sheriff to cause his Body to be brought at a day Reg. Judic f. 81. where you may find many cases wherein this writ shall be used Habeas Corpora HAbeas Corpora is a writ which lies against a Iury or any of them that refuse to come upon the Venire facias for the Trial of a Cause brought to issue Habendum HAbendum is a word of form in a Conveyance to the true understanding whereof it is to be observed That in every Deed or Conveyance there are two principal parts the Premisse and the Habendum The Office of the Premisses is to express the Name of the Grantor the Grantee and the thing to be granted The Office of the Habendum is to limit the Estate so that the general Implication of the Estate which by construction of Law passes in the Premisses is by the Habendum controlled and qualified as in a Lease to two men Habendum to the one for life the Remainder to the other for life alters the general Implication of the Joynt-tenancy in the Free-hold which passes by the Premisses if the Habendum were not See Coke l. 2. c. 55. HAbere facias Seisinam Habere facias Seisinam is a Writ Iudicial that lies where one hath recovered certain Lands in the Kings Court then he shall have this writ directed to the Sheriff commanding him to give him Seisin of that Land and it shall not be retornable Habere facias Visum HAbere facias Visum is a writ that lies in divers Cases where view is to be taken of the Lands or Tenements in question See F. N. B. In Indice verbo View Bract. l. 5. tract 3. c. 8. Half-blood HAlf blood See Demysank Half Seal HAlf Seal is a Seal used in Chancery for the Sealing of Commissions to Delegates upon an Appeal in a Cause civil or marine as it appears by the Statute made in 8 Eliz. c. 3. Halymote HAlymote is a Court-Baron as appears by Manwood in his Forest Laws c. 23. f. 217. a. And it is called Halymote that is the Meeting of the Tenants of one Hall or Mannor Hambling or Hoxing of Dogs HAmbling or Hoxing or Hock-sinewing of Dogs are old Forrest terms for the Lawing of Dogs when the Custom was as appears in Manwood's Forrest Laws c. 16. sect 12. to cut or gash Dogs in the Hamms but now they use to do it in their Feet Of which see Expeditate Hand-gun HAnd-gun is an Engine which is prohibited to be used and carryed about by the Statute of 33 H. 8. c. 6. And though a Dag was invented of late time and after the making of the said Act and is not known by the name of Hand-gun but a special name yet the carrying of a Dag is within the said Act and comprehended within the word Hand-gun So whereas Cross-bows are forbidden by the said Act thereby Stone-bows are also forbidden See Coke l. 5. f. 71 72. Hangwit HAngwit is to be quit of a Thief or Felon hanged without Iudgment or escaped out of your custody Hanper HAnper of the Chancery Anno 10 R. 2. c. 1. seems to signifie as Fiscus originally does in Latine Haque HAque is a little Hand-gun of three quarters of a yard long and it is mentioned in the Statutes of 33 H. 8. c. 6. and 2 3 E. 6. c. 14. There is also mention made of an half Haque Haquebut HAquebut is a Gun mentioned in the
who is therefore called the Incumbent of that Church because he doth bend all his study to the discharge of the Cure there Indicavit INdicavit is a Writ or Prohibition that lies for the Patron of a Church whose Clerk is Defendant in Court-Christian in an Action for Tithes commenced by another Clerk and extending to the fourth part of the Church or of its Tithes in which case the Suit belongs to the Kings Court by Westm 1. c. 5. Wherefore the Defendants Patron being like to be prejudiced in his Church and Advowson if the Plaintiff obtain in the Court-Christian has this means to remove it to the Kings Court Reg. orig fol. 35. and Britton c. 109. This Writ is not returnable but if they cease not their Suit he shall have an Attachment Inditement INditement See Enditement Indorsement INdorsement is that which is written upon the Back of a Deed as the Condition of an Obligation is said to be indorsed because it is commonly written on the Back of the Obligation Induction INduction is a lay act made by prescept of the Ordinary by which actual possession of the Church is given to the Rector or Vicar after his Presentation and Institution to it Infangtheef INfangtheef is a Priviledge or Liberty granted to Lords of certain Mannors to judge any Thief taken within their Fee Information INformation for the King is that which for a common person is called a Declaration and is not always done directly by the King or his Attorney but rather by some other man who sues as well for the King as for himself upon the breach of some penal Law or Statute wherein a Penalty is given to the party that will sue for the same but no Action of Debt to recover it therefore it must be had by Information Ingrosser INgrosser comes of the French word Grosier that is one that sells by Whole-sale But in our Law an Ingrosser is one that buys Corn Grain Butter Cheese Fish or other dead Victuals with an intent to sell the same again And so he is defined in the Stat. of 5 E. 6. c. 14. made against such Ingrossing Inheritance INheritance See Enheritance Inhibition INhibition is a Writ to inhibit a Iudge to proceed farther in the Cause depending before him And there is another Writ where after the Kings Presentment to a Benefice he presents another and inhibiteth the Bishop to give Induction to the first Presentee Plo. Com. 528. See F. N. B. f. 39. where he puts Prohibition and Inhibition together Inhibition is most commonly a Writ issuing forth of an higher Court-Cheistian to a lower and inferiour upon an Appeal Anno 24 H. 8. c. 12. and Prohibition out of the Kings Court of Record at Westminster to a Court-Christian or to an inferiour Temporal Court Injunction INjunction is an interlocutory Decree out of the Chancery sometimes to give Possession to the Plaintiff for defect of Apparance in the Defendant sometimes to the ordinary Courts of the King and sometimes to the Court-Christian to stay Proceeding in a Cause upon suggestiou made that if the rigor of the Law take place it is against Equity and Conscience in that Case See West part 2. tit Proceedings in Chancery sect 25. Inlagary INlagary or Inlagation is a Restitution of one outlawed to the Kings Protection or to the benefit condition of a Subject Inlaugh INlaugh signifies him that is sub Lege in some Frank-pledge not out-lawed of whom see Bract. l. 3. tract 2. c. 11. Inmates INmates are those persons of one Family that are suffered to come and dwell in one Cottage together with another Family by which the poor of the Parish will be increased And therefore by the Statute of 31 Eliz. c. 7. there is a Penalty of ten shillings a Month set upon every one that shall receive or continue such an Iumate Inquisition INquisition See Enquest Inrolment INrolment is the Registring Recording or Entring of any Act or Deed in the Chancery or elsewhere as of a Recognizance Fine Statute or Deed indented by the Statute of 27 H. 8. c. 16. by which a Freehold shall pass Instant INstant in Latine Instans is defined by the Logicians A thing not dividable in Time which is not any Time nor part of Time to which yet the parts of time are conjoyned and much considered in the Law and though it cannot be actually divided yet in consideration and conceit it may be divided and applied to several purposes as if they were several times whereof see in Plowdens Commentaries in the Case between Fulmerston and Stuard where the Statute of 31 H. 8. which Enacted That if an Abbot within a year before the Statute had letten Lands to one who at the time of making that Lease had the same Land to farm for a term of years then not expired that the Lessee should have that Land only for twenty one years is expounded And there it is debated That when the Termor takes the second Lease he surrenders his former term and so at the same instant of taking the second Lease the former term is expired And in the Case between Petit and Hales he who kills himself commits not Felony till he be dead and when dead he is not in being so as to be termed a Felon but at the instant is in the Law so adjudged And there are many other Cases in Law where the instant time that is not dividable in nature in the consideration of the mind and understanding of the Sages of the Law is divided upon which arise many arguments of great use and profound learning Institution INstitution is a Faculty made by the Ordinary by which a Vicar or Rector is approved to be Inducted to a Rectory or Vicarage Interdiction INterdiction has the same signification in the Common as in the Canon Law where it is thus defined Interdictio est Censura Ecclesiastica prohibens administrationem Divinorum And so it is used 22 H. 8. cap. 12. Intrusion INtrusion is a Writ that lies against him that enters after the death of Tenant in Dower or other Tenant for Life and holds out him in the Reversion or Remainder for which see Fitz. N. B. fol. 203. E. And every entry upon the possession of the King is called an Intrusion as where the Heir of the Kings Tenant enters after Office and before Livery this is called an Intrusion upon the King as appears in Stanf. Prerog fol. 40. and many other Books Intrusion INtrusion See Entrusion Inventary AN Inventary is a Catalogue or Recital in Writing of all the Goods and Chattels of one that is dead with the Valuation of them by four several persons which every Executor and Administrator ought to exhibit to the Ordinary at the time appointed Jointenans JOintenants are where two men come to any Lands and Tenements by one joynt Title as if a man give Lands to two men and to their Heirs Tenants in common are where two have Lands by several Titles or by Feoffment to two
to have and tohold the one half to one and his Heirs aud the other half to another and his Heirs in all these cases none of them knows his several If there be two or three Ioyntenants and one hath Issue and dies then he or those Ioyntenants that overlive shall have the whole by Survivorship If two Iointenants by agreement make Partition between them by Deed then they are several Tenants But if one Ioyntenant grant that which belongs to him to a Strang ●● then the other Ioyntenantand the Stranger are Tenants in common And though two Tenants in common be seised throughly and of the whole and none knows his several yet if one die the other shall not make the whole by Survivorship but the Heir of him that dies shall have the half And so if there be three Ioyntenants and one of them makes a Feoffment of his part to another and the Feoffee dies then his Heir shall have the third part and the other two are Ioyntenants as they were because they two are seised by one joynt Title Also if Lands be given to the baron and his wife and the husband aliens and dies the wife shall recover the whole But if they were Ioyntenants before the Coverture then he shall recover but the half If Land be given to the husband and his wife and a third person if the third person grant that which belongs to him the one half passes by this Grant for that the baron and his wife are but one person in Law and in this case they have right but to half Also if two Ioyntenants are of Lands in a Town that is Borough-English where Land is devisable and one by his Testament devises that which belongs to him to a Stranger and dies this Devise is void and the other shall have the whole by Sutviver for that the Devise may not take effect till after the death of the Devisor and immediately after the death of the Devisor the right comes to the other Ioyntenant by Surviver who claims nothing by the Devisor but in his own right by Surviver But otherwise it is of Parceners seised of Lands devisable causa qua supra Journies accounts JOurnies accounts Dietae computatae is a term in the Law which is understood thus If a Writ be abated without the default of the Plaintiff or Demandant he may purchase a new Writ which if it be purchased by Journies accounts that is within as little time as he possibly can after the Abatement of the first Writ then this second Writ shall be as a Continuance of the first and so shall ouste the Tenant or Defendant of his Voucher Plea of Non-tenure Ioyntenancy fully administred c. or any other Plea which arises upon matter hapning after the date of the first Writ And fifteen days have been held a convenient time for the purchase of the new Writ See for this Writ by Journies accounts Spencers Case Coke lib. 6. fol. 9. b. Joynture JOynture is an Estate and Assurance made to a Woman in consideration of Marriage for term of her life or otherwise as is mentioned in the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 10. whether it be before or after Marriage And if it be after then she may at her liberty after the death of her husband refuse to take or have the Lands so assured for her Ioynture and demand her Dower at the Common Law But if it be made before Marriage then she may not refuse such Ioynture nor have Dower according to the Common Law unless that when she brings her Writ of Dower the Defendant pleads such a Plea as will not bar her of her Dower as if he say in Bar that her husband was not seised of such Estate whereof she might be endowed or any such Plea and doth not shew that she hath a Ioynture made c. and therefore demands Iudgment of that Action or any such like Plea c. And this was the opinion of Master Brograve at his Reading in Grays-Inn in Summer An. 1567. 18 Eliz. upon a Branch of the Statute made 27 H. 8. cap. 10. concerning Joyntures and Dowers And of those things whereof a Woman may be endowed she may have Ioynture as of Mines Vesturam terrae Woods Towns Is ● es Meadows and such like Also of an Advowson Reversion depending upon an Estate for Life Wind-mill high Chamber Rectory and such other and they are called Tenements Also of a Villain for he is an Hereditament And of all these profit may come to the woman But of those things whereof no profit will come but rather a charge a Ioynture cannot be made See Coke lib. 4. fol. 1. Vernons Case Jurisdiction JUrisdiction is a Dignity which a Man hath by a power to do Iustice in Causes of complaint made before him Juris utrum JUris utrum is a Writ that lies for the succeeding Incumbent of a Benefice to recover the Lands or Tenements belonging to the Church which were aliened by his Predecessor And see of this Fitz. N. B. fol. 48. R. and see after in the Title Utrum Juror JUror is one of those 24 or 12 men which are sworn to deliver a truth upon such Evidence as shall be given them touching the matter in question of which see Fitz. Nat. B. fol. 165. D. and the Statute 16 and 17 Car. 2. cap. for returning able and sufficient Jurors Justice seat JUstice seat is the highest Court that is held in a Forrest and it is always held before the Lord Chief Iustice ●● Eyre of the Forrest upon m●●ning 40 ● ays before And 〈◊〉 the Iudgments are always given and the Fines see for Offences that were presented at the Courts of Attachments and the Offenders indicted at the Swainmotes See concerning this Court Manwoods Forrest Laws cap 2 ● fol. 238. b. Justices in Eire JUstices in Eire See Eire Justicies JUsticies is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the dispatch of Justice in some special Cases in his County-Court of which he cannot by his ordinary power hold Plea there And of this you may see Precedents in Fitzh N. B. fol. 117. C. in Account and fol. 152. B. in Annuity and fol. 119. G. in Debt and many others And it is called a Justicies because it is a Commission to the Sheriff to do a man right and it requires no Return or Certificate of what he hath done K. Keelage KEelage in Latine Killagium is a Custom paid at Hartlepool in Durham for every Ship coming into that Port. R of Parl. 21 E. 1. Kiddle KIddle or Kidel is a Dam or Wear in a River All Kidels shall from henceforth be utterly put down in the Thames and Medway and throughout all England except upon the Sea-coast Mag. Char. cap. 24. KIngs silver Kings silver is the Money which is due to the King in the Court of Common Pleas for a License there granted to any man to pass a Fine Coke lib. 6. fol. 39 43. Kintal KIntal is a Weight
commonly of One hundred pounds more or less according to the Vsage of sundry Nations Mr. Plowden in the Case of Reniger and Fogassa makes mention of this word Knights Service KNights Service was a Tenure by which several Lands in this Nation were held of the King But it is abolished by Statute 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. L. Laches LAches or Lasches is an old French word signifying Slacknesse or Negligence as it appears in Lit. sect 403. 726. where Laches of Entry is nothing else but a Neglect in the Infant to enter So that I think it may be an old English word And when we say There is Laches of Entry it is as much as to say There L ● ok is of Entry or there is Lack of Entry Yet I find that Lascher in French is to Loyter and Lasche signifies one that is idle or lazy and therefore it may also come from the French For Etymoligies are divers and many times ad placitum Lagan LAgan is such a parcel of Goods as the Mariners in a danger of Shipwreck cast out of the Ship and because they know they are heavy and will sink they fasten to them a Boigh or Cork that so they may find them and have them again If the ship be drowned or otherwise perish these Goods are called Lagan or Ligan a ligando and so long as they continue upon the Sea they belong to the Admiral but if they are cast upon the Land they are then called a Wreck and belong to him that hath the Wreck as it appears in Coke l. 5. f. 106. Lageman LAgeman est Homo Legalis seu legitimus such as we call Good men of the Jury The word is found in Dooms-day-Book Land-cheap LAnd-cheap is a payment of 10 d. in the Purchase-mony for every Mark thereof for all the Lands within the Borough of Maldon in Essex by prescription which see H. 25 26. Car. 2. Roll 706. in B. R. Lapse LApse Lapsus is the Omission of a Patron to present to a Church of his Patronage within six months after an Avoidance by death or taking of another Benefice without qualification or notice to him given of the Resignation or Deprivation of the present Incumbent by which neglect Title is given to the Ordinary to collate to the said Church Larcenie LArceny is a wrongful taking away another mans Goods but not from his person with a mind to steal them And Theft is in two sorts the one so called simply and the other Petit or Little Theft The first is where the thing stolen exceeds the value of 12 d. and this is Felony The other called Little or Petit Theft is where the thing stolen doth not exceed the value of 12 d. and that is not Felony Last LAst signifies a certain Wright or Burthen as a Last of Herring is ten thousand Anno 31 E. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 2. a Last of Hides is twelve dozen Anno 1 Jae c. 33. Lastage LAstage is to be quit of a certain Custom exacted in Fairs and Markets for carrying of things where a Man will Latitat LAtitat is a Writ by which all Men in Personal Actions are originally called in the Kings Bench to answer And it is called Latitat because it is supposed by the Writ that the Defendant cannot be found in the County of Middlesex as it appears by the Return of the Sheriff of that County but that he lurks in another County and therefore to the Sheriff of that County is this Writ directed to apprehend him Law LAw See Ley. Law-day LAw-day signifies a Leet or Sheriffs Tourn as it appears by the Statute of 1 E. 4. c. 2. where the Sheriffs Tourn is so called and 9 H. 7. f. 21. b. and many other Books where a Leet is so called See Smiths Commonwealth l. 2. c. 21. Lawing of Dogs LAwing of Dogs See Expeditate Lawless man LAwless man is the who is extra Legem an Outlaw Bract. l. 3. tract 2. c. 11. num 1. Leases LEases are Grants or Demises by one that hath any Estate in any Hereditaments of those Hereditaments to another for the lesser time And they are in divers manners viz. for term of Life for Years for anothers Life and at Will Also a Lease of Land is as good without Deed as with Deed. But in a Lease for term of Life it behoves to give Livery and Seisin upon the Land or else nothing shall pass by the Grant because they are called Free-holds Also a Lease of a Common or Rent may not be good without Deed. But of a Parsonage that hath Glebe it is good without Deed for that the Glebe of the Church which is the principal may well enough pass without Deed and so the Dismes and Offerings which are as accessary to the Church But Dismes and Offerings by themselves may not be let without Deed as it is said Leet LEet is a Court derived out of the Sheriffs Tourne and inquires of all Offences under the degree of High Treason that are committed against the Crown and Dignity of the King But those Offences which are to be punished with loss of life or member are only inquirable there and to be certified over to the Iustices of Assise See Stat. 1. E. 3. c. 16. Legacy LEgacy Legatum is a term of the Civil Law and it is that which we in our Law call a Devise viz. Lands or Goods given unto any man by the Will or Testament of another See more Tit. Devise before Lessor and Lessee LEssor is he that leases Lands or Tenements to another for term of life years or at will And he to whom the Lease is made is called Lessee Levant and Couchant LEvant and Couchant is said when the Beasts or Cattel of a Stranger are come into another mans Ground and there have remained a certain good space of time Levari facias LEvari facias is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the Levying of a sum of mony upon the Lands Tenements and Chattels of him that hath forfeited a Recognizance See F. N. B. fol. 265. D. Law LAw is when an Action of Debt is brought against one upon some secret agreement or Contract had between the parties without especialty shewed or other matter of Records as in an Action of Detinue for some Goods or Chattels lent or left with the Defendant then the Defendant may wage his Law if he will that is swear upon a Book and certain persons with him that he detains not the Goods or ows nothing to the Plaintiff in manner and form as he hath declared And it is allowed only in cases of Secrecy where the Plaintiff cannot prove the surmise of his Suit by any Deed or Open act for the Defendant might discharge it privily between them without any Acquittance or Publick act And therefore in an Action of Debt upon a Lease for years or upon Arrearages of accompt before Auditors assigned a man shall not wage his Law But when one shall wage his Law he
shall bring with him vj viij or xij of his Neighbors as the Court shall assign him to swear with him much like the Oath which they make who are used in the Civil Law to purge others of any crime laid against them who are called Compurgators Note that the Offer to make the Oath is called Wager of Law and when it is accomplished then it is called the Doing of your Law And if the Sheriff in any Action return that he hath summoned the Defendant to appear in Court at any day to answer the Plaintiff at which day he makes Default Process shall be awarded against him to come and save or excuse his Default which is as much to say as to excuse the Delay or otherwise to lose the thing demanded And the Defendant comes and swears he was not summoned which is called waging of Law then he ought to do it at the day assigned with xij others And in doing of his Law he ought upon his Oath to affirm directly the contrary of that which is imputed to him But the others shall onely say They think he saith the truth Libel LIbel Libellus is a term of the Civil Law signifying the Original Declaration in any Action and so it is used in the Statutes of 2 H. 3. cap. 3. and 2 E. 6. cap. 13. And an infamous Libel signifies properly in our Law a Scandalous report of any man unlawfully published in writing of which see Cok. lib. 5. fol. 125. a. Liberate LIberate is a Warrant issuing out of the Chancery to the Treasurer Chamberlains and Barons of the Exchequer or Clerk of the Hamper c. for the payment of any yearly Pension or other Sum granted under the Great Seal Regist orig 193. Sometimes to the Sheriffs c. Fitzh N. B. fol. 132. for the delivery of Lands or Goods taken upon Forfeiture of a Recognizance F. N. B. 131 132. Cok. lib. 4. Fulwoods Case fol. 64 66 67. Also to a Gaoler from the Justices for the delivery of a Prisoner that hath put in Bail for his Appearance There is also another Writ made out of the Petry-bag Office in Chancery upon a Statute Staple after an Extent thereupon retorned by which the Sheriff retorns he has delivered the Land extended to the Cognizee which being filed he may then not before bring his Action of Ejectment to recover possession of the Lands extended Libertate probanda LIbertate probanda Look for that in the Title Nativo habendo Librata Terrae LIbrata Terrae contains four Ox-gangs and every Oxgang 13 Acres of Land Skene de verb. signif verbo bovata Terrae Lien LIen is a word of two significations Personal lien and come being Covenant or Contract And real lien as Judgment Statute Recognizance or an Original against an Heir which oblige and affect the Land Ligeance LIgeance is a true and faithful Obedience of the Subject due to his Soveraign and this Ligeance which is an incident inseparable to every Subject is in four manners the first is natural the second acquired the third local and the fourth legal Of all which you may read much excellent Learning in Cok. lib. 7. Calvins Case Limitation LImitation is an Assignment of a space or time within which he that will sue for any Lands or Hereditaments ought to prove that he or his Ancestor was seised of the thing demanded or otherwise he shall not maintain his Suit or Action which Assignments are made by divers Statutes As the Statute of Merton cap. 8. Westm 1. cap. 38. 32 Hen. 8. cap. 2. c. Livery of Seisin LIvery of Seisin is a Ceremony used in Conveyance of Lands and Tenements where an Estate in Fee-simple Fee-tail or a Free-hold shall pass And it is a Testimonial of the willing departing of him who makes the Livery from the thing whereof Livery is made And the receiving of the Livery is a willing Acceptance by the other party of all that whereof the other hath devested himself And it was invented as an open and notorious thing by means whereof the common People might have knowledge of the Passing or Alteration of Estates from man to man that thereby they might be the better able to try in whom the right and possession of Lands and Tenements were if they should be impanelled in Juries or otherwise have to do concerning the same The common manner of Delivery of Seisin is thus If it be in the open Field where is no Building or House then one that can read takes the Writing in his hand if the Estate pass by Deed and declares to the standers by the cause of their meeting there together c. and then openly reads the Deed or declares the effect thereof and after that is sealed the party who is to depart from the Ground takes the Deed in his hands with a Clod of the earth and a Twig or Bough if any be there which he delivers to the other party in the name of Possession or Seisin according to the form and effect of the Deed there read or declared But if there be a Dwelling-house or Building upon the Land then this is done at the Door of the same none being left at that time within the House and the party delivers all aforesaid with the Ring of the Door in the name of Seisin or Possession and he that receives the Livery enters in first alone and shuts the door and presently opens it again and lets them in c. If it be a House whereto is no Land or Ground the Livery is made and Possession taken by the delivery of the Ring of the Door and Deed only And where it is without Deed either of Lands or Tenements there the party declares by word of mouth before witness the Estate that he means to depart with and then delivers Seisin or Possession in manner aforesaid And so the Land or Tenement doth pass as well as by Deed and that by force of the Livery of Seisin It was agreed in Gray's Inne by Master Snagge at his Reading there in Summer Anno 1574. That if a Feoffor deliver the Deed in view of the Land in name of Seisin that is good because he hath a Possession in himself But otherwise it is of an Attorney for he must go to the Land and take Possession himself before he can give Possession to another according to the words of his Warrant c. And where Livery of Seisin is by View if the Feoffee do not enter after c. nothi ● g passes for he ought to enter in Deed. Lollards LOllards were Dogmatists in Religion in the times of E. 3. and H. 5. and in those times were reputed Hereticks as appears by the Statutes in 5. R. 2. cap. 5. and 2 H. 5. cap. 7. Which Statutes you shall find repealed in 1 E. 6. cap. 12. and 1 El. cap. 1. They had their name as some think from one Gualter Lolhard a German who lived about the year 1315. and was the first Author
of 13 R. 2. cap. 2. and 1 H. 4. c. 7. 14. the Marshal of the Kings House of whom you may read F. N. B. f. 241. B. and in the Statute of Artic. sup Chart. c. 3. 18 E. 3. c. 7. 2 H. 4. c. 23. 15 H 6. c. 1. and others There are also other inferior Marshals mentioned in our Books as the Marshal of the Kings Bench in the Statute of 5 E. 3. c. 8. and F. N. B. f. 251. l. who hath the custody of all the Prisoners of that Court and the Marshal of the Exchequer mentioned in the Statute of 51 H. 3. Stat. 5. called the Statute of the Exchequer Marshal is a French word and is as much to say as Master of the Horse for it seems to come of the German Marschalk which hath that signification Marshalsea MArshalsea is the Court or Seat of the Marshal of the Kings House of which you may read at large in Coke l. 6. f. 20. B. l. 10. f. 68. B. It is also taken for the Prison belonging to the Court of the Kings Bench of which the Marshal of that Court is the Keeper for so are the forms of the Bills there that A complains of B in the custody of the Marshal of the Marshalsea of our Lord the King c. Maugre MAugre is a word compound of two French words Mal and Gree so that it is as much as to say with an unwilling mind or in despight of another And so it is used in Littleton sect 672. where it is said that the Husband and Wife shall be remitted maugre the Husband that is in despight or against the will of the Husband Maximes MAximes are the Foundations of the Law and the Conclusions of Reason and are Causes efficient and certain universal Propositions so sure and perfect that they may not be at any time Impeached or Impugned but ought always to be observed and holden as strong Principles and Authorities of themselves although they cannot be proved by force of Argument or Demonstrations Logical but are known by Induction by the way of Sense and Memory For example it is a Maxime that If a man have Issue two Sons by divers women and the one purchases Lands in Fee and dies without issue the other shall never be his Heir c. And it is another Maxime that Lands shall discend from the Father to the Son but not from the Son to the Father for that is an Ascension c. And divers such there are whereof see Doctor and Student Maynour MAynour is when a Thief hath stollen and is followed with Hue and Cry and taken having that found about him which he stole that is called Maynour And so we commonly use to say when we find one doing of an unlawful act that we took him with the maynour or manner Meane MEane See Mesne Mease MEase or Messuage seems to come from the French word Maison or Mansion which is no other but a Place of abiding or habitation And yet Messuage in our Law contains more then the very place of habitation for a House and a Messuage differ in that a House cannot be intended other then the matter of Building but a Messuage shall be said all the Mansion-place and the Curtelage shall be taken as parcel of the Messuage 20 H. 7. Keloway fol. 57. a. And by the name of a Messuage the Garden and Curtelage shall pass Plowden fol. 171. a. Measondue MEasondue is an Appellation of divers Hospitals in this Kingdom which are so named Anno 2 3 P. M. cap. 23. 15 Car. 2. c. 7. And it comes of the French Maison de Dieu and is no more but Gods House in English Medietas Linguae MEdietas Linguae is an Inquest Impannelled upon any cause whereof the one half is of Denizens the other Strangers and it is used in Pleas between parties whereof one is a Denizen and the other a Stranger And this manner of Trial was first given by the Statute of 27 E. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 8. And by the Statute of 28 E. 3. c. 13. it was granted in cases where the King himself was party with an Alien Melius inquirendo MElius inquirendo is a Writ directed to the Escheator for a second Inquiry to be made when there is any doubt made of partiality in an Inquiry made upon a Diem clausit extremum after the death of the Kings Tenant See F. N. B. f. 255. C. Merchenlage MErchenlage is one of those three Laws out of which William the Conqueror framed our Common Laws with a mixture of the Laws of Normandy And it was the Law of the Mercians when they had the Government of the third part of this Realm Mesnalty MEsnalty is the right of the Mesne as the Mesnalty is extinct Old Nat. Br. f. 44. Mesne MEsne is where the Owner of Lands or Tenements holds of one by certain Services and he holds them of another by like or other Services then he who holds the Lands is called Tenant paravail and he of whom it is held is called Mesne and he of whom the Mesue holds is called chief Lord or Lord Paramount And in this case if the Lord above distrains the Tenant for the Service of the Mesne who ought to aequit him to the chief Lord then the Tenant shall have a Writ of Mesne so called against the Mesne and if he acquit not the Tenant then the Mesne shall lose the Service of the Tenant and shall be forejudged of his Seigniory and the Tenant shall be immediate Tenant to the chief Lord and shall do him the same Service and Suits as the Mesne did Messuage MEssuage See Mease Metropolitane MEtropolitane signifies the Arch-bishops of whom Centerbury is stiled Totius Angliae Primas Metropol And York the like Title without the word Totius Miscreant MIscreant is one who is perverted to Heresie or a faise Religion Bro. Presentation 54. Mise MIse is a French word and signifies as much as Expensum in Latine and it is so ordinarily used in the Entries of Iudgments in Personal Actions when the Plaintiff recovers the Entry is that Recuperet damna sua to such a value and pro misis custagis for Costs and Charges so much There is also another acception or signification of this word in the Law where it is taken for the Issue to be tried by Battail of Grand Assise And so it is used in Littleton sect 478. 482. and divers others where joyning of the Mise upon the meer right is putting it in Issue who hath the best or clearest right Misericordia MIsericordia is used in the Common Law for an Amerciament or Mulct set upon any for an offence as where the Plaintiff or Defendant in any Action are amerced the Entry is always Ideo in misericordia c. And it is therefore called Misericordia as Fitzh says N. B. fol. 75. H. for that it should be but small and less then the fault and saving his Contenement as
the Statute of Mag. Charta cap. 14. speaks And therefore if a man be outragiously amerced in a Court not of Record as in a Court-Baron c. there is a Writ called Moderata Misericordia to be directed to the Lord or his Baily commanding them that they take moderate Amerciaments according to the quantity of the fault And of that see Fitzh N. B. fol. 75. A. and Moderata Misericordia after Misnomer MIsnomer is the Mistake of a Name or the using of one Name for another See Broke tit Misnomer Misprision MIsprision is when one knows that another hath committed Treason or Felony and will not discover him to the King or his Council or to any Magistrate but conceals the same Divers other offences are called Misprision as when a Chaplain had fixed an old Seal of a Patent to a new Patent of Non-residence this was held to be Misprision of Treason only and no counterfeiting of the Kings Seal So it is holden in 37 H. 8. Bro. tit Treason 3. in Fine but 2 H. 4. f. 25. A. it is adjudged contrary and Stamf. Pl. cor fol. 3. B. cites it Treason and so it is holden at this day And if a man know Money to be counterfeit and bring the same from out of Ireland hither and utter it in payment yet this is but Misprision of Treason and no Treason and so it is in divers like cases In all cases of Misprision of Treason the Party offendor shall forfeit his Goods for ever and the profits of his Lands for his life and his Body to Prison at the Kings pleasure And for Misprision of Felony or Trespass the Offendor shall be committed to Prison until he have found Sureties or Pledges for his Fine which shall be assessed by the discretion of the Iustices before whom he was convict And note That in every Treason or Felony is included Misprision and where any man hath committed Treason or Felony the King may cause him to be Indicted and Arraigned of Misprision only if he will See more hereof Stamf. lib. 1. cap. 39. Mittimus MIttimus is a Writ by which Records are transferred from one Court to another sometimes immediately as it appears in the Statute of 5. R. 2. cap. 15. as out of the Kings Bench into the Exchequer and sometimes by a Certiorari into the Chancery and from thence by a Mittimus into another Court as you may see in 28 H. 8. Dyer fol. 29. a b. 29 H. 8. Dyer fol. 32. a b. This word is used also for the Precept that is directed by a Iustice of Peace to a Goaler for the receiving and safe keeping of a Felon or other Offendor committed by the said Iustice to the Goal Moderata Misericordia MOderata Misericordia is a Writ that lies where a man is amerced in Court-Baton or County more then he ought to be then he shall have this Writ directed to the Sheriff if it be in the County or to the Bayliff if it be in Court-Baron commanding them that they amerce him not but with regard to the quantity of the Trespass and if they obey not this Writ then shall go forth against them a Sicut alias and Causam nobis significes and after that an Attachment Modus decimandi MOdus decimandi is Mony or other thing of value given annually in lie ● of Tithes The tryal of which appertains to the Common Law and not to any Court-Christian Ridley's view del Civil Law 141. In which he says There was one modus decimandi pro omnibus rebus per totum regnum Monstrans de Droit MOnstrans de Droit is a Suit in Chancery for the Subject to be restored to Lands and Tenements which he shews to be his Right but are by Office found to be in the possession of another that is lately dead by which Office the King is intitled to a Chattel Free-hold or Inheritance in the said Lands And this Monstrans de Droit is give by the Statutes of 34 E. 3. cap. 14. and 37 E. 3. cap. 13. See Coke lib. 4. fol. 54. B. in the Case of the Wardens and Commonalty of Sadlers Shewing of Deeds or Records SHewing of Deeds or Records is thus An Action of Debt is brought against A upon an Obligation by B or by Executors c. After the Plaintiff hath declared he ought to shew his Obligation and the Executor the Testament to the Court. And so it is of Records And the diversity between Shewing of Deeds or Records and Hearing of Deeds or Records is this He that pleads the Deed or Record or Declares upon it ought to shew the same and the other against whom such Deed or Record is pleaded or declared and is thereby to be charged may demand hearing of the same Deed or Record which his Adversary brings or pleads against him Monstraverunt MOnstraverunt is a Writ that lies for the Tenants in Ancient Demesne and is directed to the Lord him commanding not to Distain his Tenant to do other Service then he ought and they may have this Writ directed to the Sheriff that he suffer not the Lord to distrain the said Tenant to do other Service If the Tenants cannot be in quiet they may have an Attachment against the Lord to appear before the Iustices and all the names of the Tenants shall be put in the Writ though but one of them be grieved Also if any Land in ancient Demesne be in variance between the Tenants then the Tenant so grieved shall have against the other a Writ which is called of Right close after the Custome of the Mannor and that shall be alway brought in the Lords Court and thereupon he shall declare in the nature of what Writ he will as his case lies and this Writ shall not be removed but for a great cause or non-power of the Court. Also if the Lord in another place out of ancient Demesne distrain his Tenant to do other Service then he ought he shall have a Writ of Right called Ne Injuste vexes and it is a Writ of Right Patent which shall be tried by Battel or Grand Assise Mortdancester MOrtdancester See before in the Title Cosinage MOrtgage or Morgage MOrtgage or Morgage is when a Man makes a Feoffment to another on such condition that if the Feoffor pay the Feoffee at a certain day 40 li. of money then the Feoffor may re-enter c. In this case the Feoffee is called Tenant in Morgage And as a Man may make a Feoffment in Fee in Morgage so he may make a Gift in Tail or a Lease for Life or Years in Morgage And it seems the cause why it is called Morgage is for that it stands it doubt whether the Feoffoe will pay the mony at the day appointed or not and if he fail then the Land which he laid in gage upon condition of payment of the money is gone from him for ever and so dead to him upon condition but if he pay the mony then is the gage dead
Serjeantie TO hold by Petit Serjeantie is as if a man held Lands or Tenements of the King yielding him a Knife a Buckler an Arrow a Bow without string or other like Service at the will of the first Feoffor and there belongs not Ward Marriage or Relief And mark well that a man may not hold by Grand or Petit Serjeanty but of the King See the Stat. 12. Car. 2. cap. 24. Piccage PIccage is the payment of money or the money paid for the breaking of the ground to set up Booths and Standings in Fairs Picle or Pitle PIcle or Pitle seems to come from the Italian Picco ● o Parvus and signifies with us a little small Close or Inclosure Pillory PIllory is an Engine of punishment ordained by the Statute of 51 H. 3. for the punishment of Bakers but now used for many other Offendors and is called in Latine Collistrigium Pipowders PIpowders is a Court which is incident to every Fair for the determination of differences upon Bargains and disorders therein See more hereof Crom. Jurisd fol. 229. Coke lib. 10. fol. 73. Piscary PIscary is a Liberty of Fishing in another mans waters or his own Placard PLacard is word used in the Statutes of 33 H. 8. cap. 6. 2 3 Ma. cap. 9. and it signifies a Licence to use unlawful Games or to shoot in a Gun Plaintiff PLaintiff is he that sues or complains in an Assise or in an Action personal as in an Action of Debt Trespass Disceit Detinue and such other Pledges PLedges are Sureties either real or formal which the Plaintiff finds to prosecute his suit Pleading PLeadings are all the Sayings of the parties to Suits after the Count or Declaration namely that which is contained in the Bar Replication and Rejoynder and not that contained in the Count it self and therefore defaults in the matter of Count are not comprised within Mispleading or insufficient Pleading nor are remedied by the Statute of Jeofails 32 H. 8. but only the Mispleading or insufficient Pleading committed in the Bar Replication and Rejoynder are there provided for But see those now remedied also by the Statute of 18 Eliz. cap. 13. Plenartie PLenartie is when a Benefice is full directly contrary to Vacation which signifies the being void of a Benefice Stamf. Prerog cap. 8. fol. 32. Plevyn See Replevyn Pluralities PLuralities are where a Uicar or Rector has two or more Ecclesiastical Benefices For which see Stat. 21. H. 8. cap. 13. Policy of Assurance POlicy of Assurance is a course taken by Merchants for the assuring of their Adventures upon the Sea by giving a certain proportion in the Hundred for securing the safe return of the Ship and so much Merchandize as is agreed upon And of this you may read in the Statute of 43 Eliz. cap. 12. Vpon which an Action lies at the common Law or in the Court by the Kings Patent sitting at the Royal Exchange in London the Iudges of which are Civilians common Lawyers and Merchants Pone POne is a Writ whereby a Cause depending in the County-Court is removed into the Common-Pleas See for this Old N. B. fol. 2. a. Pontage POntage is a word mentioned in many Statutes as in Westm 1. cap. 25. 1 H. 8. cap 9. 39 Eliz. cap. 24. and it signifies sometimes the Contribution that is gathered for the Repairing of a Bridge sometimes the Toll paid by the Passengers to that purpose Portgreve See Viscount Portmoot POrtmoot is a word used in the Statute of 43 Eliz. cap. 15. and signifies a Court kept in a Haven-Town Possessio Fratris POssessio Fratris is where a man hath a son and a daughter by one Woman and a son by another Venter and dies the first son enters and dies without Issue the daughter shall have the Land as Heir to her brother although the second son is Heir to the father Litt. Sect. 8. Possession POssession is twofold either actual or in Law Actual Possession is when a man actually enters into lands or tenements to him discended or otherwise Possession in Law is when Lands or Tenements are descended to a man and he hath not as yet really actually and in Deed entred into them And it is called Possession in Law because in the eye and consideration of the Law he is deemed to be in Possession since he is Tenant to every mans Action that will sue concerning the same Lands or Tenements Post diem POst diem is the Return of a Writ after the day assigned for its Return Postd ● sseisin POstdisseisin Look for that before in the Title Assise Postea POstea is the Record of the proceedings upon a Trial by a Writ of Nisi prius which is returned after the Trial by the Iudge before whom it was tried into the Court where the first Suit began to have Iudgment there given upon the Verdict and it is called the Postea because it begins with Postea die loco c. Poundage POundage is a Subsidie to the value of 12 d. in the pound which is granted to the King by every Merchant as well Denizen as Alien for all manner of Merchandize carried out and brought in And of such Subsidies see the Statute 1 2 Ed. 6. cap. 13. 1 Jac. cap. 33. 14 Car. 2. cap. 24. Also by Stat. 29 El. cap. 4. every Sheriff is allowed poundage for levying Debt or Damages by Execution Pounds POunds are in two sorts the one Pound open the other close Pound open is every place wherein a Distress is put whether it be common Pound or Back-side Court Yard Pasture or else whatsoever whereto the Owner of the Distress may come to give them meat without offence for their being there or his coming thither Pound close is such a place where the owner of the Distress may not come to give them meat without offence as in a Close house or whatsoever else place Preamble PReamble takes his name of the preposition prae before and the verb ambulo to go so joyned together they make the compound verb praembulo to go before and hereof the first part or beginning of an Act is called the Preamble of the Act which is a Key to open the minds of the makers of the Act and the mischiefs which they intend to remedy by the same As for example the Statute made at Westm the first the 37 chap. which gives an Attaint the Preamble of which is thus Forasmuch as certain people of the Realm doubt very little to give false Verdicts or Oaths which they ought not to do whereby many people are disherited and lose their right It is provided c. Prebend and Prebendary PRebend and Prebendary are terms often used in our Books and they come of the Latine praebeo Prebend is that portion which every member or Canon of the Cathedral Church receives in right of his place for his maintenance and Prebendary is he that hath such a Prebend Precipe or Praecipe in capite PRecipe in capite
is a Writ that lies where the Tenant holds of the King in chief as of his Crown and he is deforced that is put out of his Land then he shall have this Writ and it shall be Close and shall be pleaded in the Common Pleas. Also if any Tenant that holds of any Lord be deforced it behoves him to sue a Writ of Right Patent which shall be determined in the Lords Court But if the Land be holden of the King the Writ of Right Patent shall be brought to the Kings Court and the Writ may be removed from the Lords Court unto the County by a To ● t and from the County into the Common Place by a Pone Look therefore before in the Title Drolt Praecipe PRaecipe are of divers sorts Quod reddat terras as dower formedon c. debitum bona catalla Quod teneat conventionem Quod faciat sectam ad molendinum Quod permittat c. Preignotary PReignotary is compounded of two Latine words prae and Notarius and is used in our Law for the chief Clerks of the Kings Courts whereof there is one in the Kings Bench and three in the Common Pleas. He in the Kings Bench records all Actions Civil sued in that Court and they of the Common Pleas inrol all Declarations Pleadings and Iudgments and make out all Iudicial Writs they Inroll all Fines and Recognisances and exemplifie all Records the same Term before the Rolls are delivered out of their hands In 15 E. 4. 26 b. This Officer is called Praesignator And one of the three in the Common Bench Praesignator pauperum Premisses PRemisses See Habendum Praemunire PRaemunire is a Writ that lies where any man sues another in the Spiritual Court for any thing that is determinable in the Kings Court for which great punishment is ordained by divers Statutes viz. that he shall be out of the Kings protection and put in Prison without Bail or Mainprise till he have made Fine at the Kings Will and that his Lands and Goods shall be forfeited if he come not within two months And his Provisors Procurators Atturneys Executors Notaries and Maintainers shall be punished in the same manner Therefore look the Statute Also some say if a Clerk sue another man in the Court of Rome for a thing Spiritual where he may have remedy within the Realm in the Court of his Ordinary that he shall be within the case of the Statute And upon divers other offences is imposed by Statutes lately made the Penalty that they incur who are attainted in Praemunire As by 13 Eliz. cap 8. they who are aiding to make a corrupt Bargain whereupon Vsury is reserved above x. l. in the hundred for a year c. Prender PRender is the power or right of Taking a thing before it be offered from the French prendre i. accipere Prescription PRescription is when a Man claims any thing because he his Ancestors or Predecessors or they whose Estate he hath have had or used it all the time whereof no memory is to the contrary But one may not prescribe against a Statute except he have another Statute that serves for him Presentment PResentment is of two significations One is to a Church as when a man hath right to give any Benefice Spiritual and names the person to the Bishop to whom he will give it and makes a Writing to the Bishop for him that is a Presentation or Presentment If divers Coheirs cannot agree in Presentment the Presentee of the eldest shall be admitted But if Ioyntenants and Tenants in common agree not within six moneths the Bishop shall present by lapse The other is a Presentment or Information by a Iury in a Court before any Officer who hath Authority to punish any offence done contrary to the Law Pretensed Right or Title PRetensed Right or Title is where one is in possession of Lands or Tenements and another who is out claims it and sues for it now the pretensed Right or Title is said in him who so doth sue claim And if he afterward come to the possession his Right or Title is annexed to the Land and possession and not then called Right Primer Seisin PRimer Seisin is used in the Common Law for a branch of the Kings Prerogative by which he hath the first possession that is the intire Profits for a year of all the Lands and Tenements whereof his Tenant that held of him in capite died seised in his Demesne as of Fee his Heir then being at full age and thus the King takes in lieu of the intire Profits which he may take if he will until Livery be sued or at the least tendered Prerog Reg. c. 3. Stamf. f. 11. B. See the Stat. 12 Car. 2. c. 24. Prisage PRisage is that part or portion that belongs to the King of such Merchandizes as are taken at Sea by way of lawful Prise And this word you shall find in the Statute of 31 Ell ● cap. 5. Prisage of Wines PRisage of Wines mentioned in the Stat. 1 H. 8. c. 5. is a custom by which the King out of every Bark laden with Wine under 40 Tun claims to have two Tun at his own price Privie or Privities PRivie or Privities is where a Lease is made to hold at will for years for life or a Feoffment in fee and in divers other cases now because of this that hath passed between these parties they are called Privies in respect of strangers between whom no such Conveyantes have been Also if there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant holds of the Lord by certain Service there is a Privity between them because of the Tenure and if the Tenant be disseised by a stranger there is no Privity between the Disseisor and the Lord but the Privity still remains between the Lord and the Tenant that is disseised and the Lord shall avow upon him for that he is his Tenant in right and in Iudgment of the Law Privies are in divers sorts as namely Privies in Estate Privies in Deed Privies in Law Privies in Right and Privies in Blood Privies in Estate is where a Lease is made of the Mannor of Dale to A for life the Remainder to B in fee there both A and B are Privies in Estate for their Estates were both made at one time And so it is in the first case here where a Lease is made at will for life or years or a Feoffment in fee the Lessees or Feoffees are called Privies in Estate and so are their Hairs c. Privies in Deed is where a Lease is made for life and afterward by another Deed the Reversion is granted to a stranger in fee this Grantee of the Reversion is called Privy in Deed because he hath the Reversion by Deed. Privy in Law is where there is Lord and Tenant the Tenant leases the Tenancy for life and dies without Heir and the Reversion escheats to the Lord he is said Privy in Law because he hath his Estate
Tenements but only the King in right of his Crown because all the Lands through the Realm are in nature of Fee and hold mediately or immediately of the Town This word nevertheless is used for such right in Lands and Tenements as common persons have in the same And there are three manner of rights of Property that is Property absolute Property qualified and Property possessory Of which see at large Cok. lib. 7. Case de Swans fol. 17. Proprietary PRoprietary is he that hath a Property in any thing but is most commonly used for him who hath the Profits of a Benefice to him and his Heirs or to himself and his Successors as in times past Abbots and Priors had Protection PRotection is a Writ that lies where a man will pass over the Sea in the Kings service then he shall have this Writ whereby he shall be quit of all manner of Pleas between him and any other person except Pleas of Dower Quare impedit Assise of Novel disseisin Darrein presentment and Attaints and Pleas before Iustices in Eyre But there are two Writs of Protection one cum clausula Volumus and another cum clau ● ula Nolumus as appears in the Register But a Protectiou shall not be allowed in any Plea begun before the date of it if it be 〈◊〉 in Veyages where the King himself shall pass or other Voyages Royal or in Messages of the King of affairs of the Realm Nor shall a Protection be allowed for Victual brought for the voyage whereof the Protection makes mention nor in Pleas of Trespass or of Contracts made after the date of the Protection Note that any may attach or begin any Action real against him that hath such Protection and therein proceed until the Defendant comes and shews his Protection in the Court and hath it allowed and then his Plea or Suit shall go without day But if after it appears that the party who hath the Protection goes not about the affairs for which he hath it then the Demandant shall have a Repeal thereof And if he go and return after the business ended the Demandant shall have a Resummons to recontinue the former Suit Protestation PRotestation is a form of Pleading when any will not directly affirm nor directly deny anything that is alledged by another or which he himself alledges And it is in two sorts One is when one pleads any thing which he dare not directly affirm or cannot plead for doubt to make his plea double As if in conveying to himself a Title to any Land he ought to plead divers Discents by divers persons and he dare not affirm that all they were seised at the time of their death or although he could do it it shall be double to plead two Discents of both which each by it self may be a good Bar. Then the Defendant ought to plead and alledged the matter interlacing this word protestando as to say that such a one died by Protestation seised c. And that is to be alledged by Protestation and not to be traversed by the other Another Protestation is when one is to answer to two matters and yet by the Law he ought to plead but to one then in the first part of the Plea he shall say to the one matter protestando and non cognoscendo this matter to be true and makes his Plea farther by these words Sed pro placito dicit c. And this is for saving to the party that so pleads by Protestation the being concluded by any matter alledged or objected against him upon which he cannot joyn issue and is no other but an exclusion of the Conclusion for he that takes the Protestation excludes the other party to conclude him And the Protestation ought to stand with the sequel of the Plea and not to be repugnant or otherwise contrary Provendry PRovendry in the Church of Sarum is called the lesser part of the Altar in the Church of St. Mary 41 E. 3. 5. b. Provision PRovision is used with us as it is in the Common Law for providing of a Bishop or other Ecclesiastical person of an Ecclesiastical Living by the Pope before the Incumbent of it be dead the great abuse whereof appears by several Statutes that have been made from the time of E. 3. to the reign of H. 8. for the avoiding of such Provisions Rast Entries Quare impedit Roy 17. 20. Proviso PRoviso is a Condition inserted in any Deed upon the performance whereof the validity of the Deed consists Sometimes it is only a Covenant whereof see Coke lib 2. in the Lord Cromwels Case It hath also another signification in matters judicial as if the Plaintiff or Demandant desists from prosecuting an Action and brings it not to Trial then the Defendant or Tenant may take forth the Venire facias to the Sheriff which hath in it these words Proviso quod c. to this end that if the Plaintiff takes out any Writ to this purpose the Sheriff shall summon but one Iury upon them both See Old Natura Brevium in the Writ Nisi prius fol. 159. Prov ● sor See Praemunire Proxy Procuratio PRoxy Procuratio is a payment to a Bishop by a Religious house for the charges of his visitation of such Houses Davies rep 2. Purchase PUrchase is the Possession that a man hath in Lands or Tenements by his own act means or agreement and not by title of Discent from any of his Ancestors See Littl. l. 1. c. 1. Purlue PUrlue is all the Ground near any Forrest which being made Forest by Henry the second Richard the first or King John was by Perambulations granted by Henry the third severed again from the same Manwood part 2. of his Forrest Laws c. 20. And it seems that this word is composed either of pouralle that is to go or walk about or purelieu that is a pure place because such Lands as were by those Kings subjected to the Laws and Ordinances of the Forrest are now cleared and freed from the same As the Civilians call that a pure place which is not subject unto Burials fo ●● kewise this may be called a pure place because it is exempted from the servitude and thraldom which was formerly laid upon it Purlue man is he that hath Lands within the Purlieu and being able to dispenh forty shillings by the year of Free-hold is upon these two points licensed to hunt in his own Purlieu Manwood part 1. p. 151. 177. See now the Stat. made 1 Jac. c. 27. Purpresture PUrpresture is a wo ●● derived from the French ● ourpr ●● which signifies to take from another and to app ●● priate to himself and therefore a Purpresture in a general sense is taken for any such wrong done by one man to another Purpresture in a Forrest is every Incroachment upon the Kings Forrest be it by Building Inclosing or using of any liberty without a lawful warrant so to do And of this see Manwood in his Forrest Laws
Registry of Proceedings are not properly called Records But Courts of Law held by the Kings Grant are Courts of Record Recovery REcovery is commonly intended a common recovery by assent of parties to dock an Intail and is founded upon a Writ of Entry Also every Iudgment is a Recovery by the words Ideo consideratum est quod recuperet Recusants REcusants are all those who separate from the Church and Congregation by the Laws and Statutes established in this Realm of what opinion or Sect they are of As all the Iudges have expounded the Statute 35 Eliz. cap. 1. and divers other Stat. Redisseisin REdisseisin Look of that before in the Title Assise Reextent REextent is a second Extent made upon Lands or Tenements open complaint made that the Former Extent was partially performed Broke tit Extent fol. 313. Regarder REgarder comes of the French Regardeur id est Spectator and signifies an Officer of the Kings Forest sworn to take care of the Verr and Venison and to view and inquire of all the Offences committed within the Forrest and of all the concealments of them and if all the Officers of the Forrest do well execute their Offices or no. See Manwood's Forrest Laws cap. 21. fol. 191. b. Regrator REgrator is he that hath Corn Victuals or other things sufficient for his own necessary use or spending and doth nevertheless ingross and buy up into his hands more Corn Victuals or other such things to the intent to sell the same again at a higher and dearer price in Fairs Markets or other such like places whereof see the Statute 5 E. 6. cap. 14. He shall be punished as a Forestaller Rejoynder REjoynder is when the Desendant makes answer to the Replication of the Plaintiff And every Rejoynder ought to have these two properties specially that is it ought to be a sufficient Answer to the Replication and to follow and enforce the matter of the Barre Relation RElation is where in consideration of Law two times or other things are considered so as if they were all one and by this the thing subsequent is said to take his effect by relation at the time preceding As if one deliver a writing to another to be delivered to a third person as the Deed of him who delivered it when the other to whom it should be delivered hath paid a summ of mony now when the money is paid and the Writing delivered this shall be taken as the Deed of him who delivered it at the time when it was first delivered So Petitions of Parliament to which the King assents on the last day of Parliament shall relate and be of force from the first day of the beginning of the Parliament And so it is of divers other like things Release RElease is the Giving or Discharging of the Right or Action which any hath or claims against another or his Land And a Release of Right is commonly made when one makes a Deed to another by these or the like words Remised released and utterly for me and my Heirs quite claimed to A. B. all my right that I had have or by any means may have hereafter in one Messuage c. But these words whatsoever I may have hereafter are void For if the Father be disseised and the Son release by his Deed without Warranty all his right by those words whatsoever I may have hereafter c. and the Father dies the Son may lawfully enter in the possession of the Disseisor Also in a Release of Right it is needful that he to whom the Release is made have a Freehold or a Possession in the Lands in Deed or in a Law or a reverston at the time of the release made for if he have nothing in the Land at the time of the release made the Release shall not be to him available See more hereof in Littl. lib. 3. cap. 8. Relicta verificatione RElicta Verificatione is when a Defendant hath pleaded and the issue is entred of Record And after that the Defendant relicta verificatione que est son Plea acknowledges the Action and thereupon Iudgment is entred for the Plaintiff Relief RElief is sometimes a certain summ of mony that the Heir shall pay to the Lord of whom his Lands are holden which after the decease of his Ancestor are to him descended as next Heir Sometimes it is the Payment of another thing and not mony And therefore Relief is not certain and alike for all Tenures but every several Tenure hath for the most part his special Relief certain in it self Neither is it to be paid always at a certain age but varies according to the Tenure As if the Tenant have Lands holden by Knights Service except grand Serjeanty and dies his Heir being at full age and holding his Lands by the Service of a whole Knights Fee the Lord of whom these Lands are so holden shall have of the Heir an hundred shillings in the name of the Relief and if he held by less than a Knights Fee he shall pay less and if more then more having respect always to the rate for every Knights Fee Cs. And if he held by grand Serjeanty which is always of the King and is also Knights Service then the Relief shall be the value of the Land by the year besides all charges issuing out of the same And if the Land be holden in Petit Serjeantie or in Socage then for the Relief the Heir shall pay at one time as much as he ought to pay yearly for his Service which is commonly called the Doubling of the Rent And if a man hold of the King in chief and of other Lords the King shall have the Ward of all the Lands and the Heir shall pay Relief to all the Lords at his full age but the Lords shall sue to the King by petition and shall have the Rent for the time that the Infant was in Ward But see now that by the Statute of 2 E. 6. cap. 8. the mesne Lords are not put unto their Petition but shall have all the Rents paid them by the Kings Officers upon request yearly during the Kings possession And note that always when the Relief is due it must be paid at one whole payment and not by parts although the Rent be to be paid at several Feasts See the Statute 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Remainder REmainder of Land is the Land that shall remain after the particular Estate determined As if one grant Land for term of years or for life the Reinainder to J. S. that is to say when the Lease for years is determined or the Lessee for life is dead then the Land shall remain or abide with to or in J. S. See Reversion Remembrancer del Eschequer REmembrancer del Eschequer there are three Officers or Clerks there called by that name one is called the Remembrancer of the King the other of the Lord Treasurer and the third of the First fruits The Kings Remembrancer enters in his Office all Recognisances for
and not retornable And if the Sheriff do it not then there shall go forth another Writ Sicut alias and afterward another Writ Sicut pluries vel causam nobis significes which shall be retornable And if the Sheriff yet make no Replevin then there shall issue an Attachment directed to the Coroners to attach the Sheriff and to bring him before the Iustices at a certain day and farther that they make execution of the first Writ Replication REplication is when the Defendant in any Action makes an Answer and the Plaintiff replies to that that is called the Replication of the Plaintiff Reprises REprises are Deductions Payments and Duties that go yearly and are paid out of a Mannor as Rent chare Rent seck Pensions Corrodies Annuities Fees of Stewards or Bailiffts and such like Reprieve REprieve comes from the French Repris that is taken back so that to reprieve is properly to take back or suspe ● d a Prisoner from the Execution and proceedings of the Law for that time Requests REquests is a Court held in the Kings Palace before the Master of the Requests by Petition and it seems is a Court of Equity Rere County REre County is a word used in the Statutes of Westm 2. cap. 39. and 2 E. 3. c. 5. and seems by those Statutes to be some publick place which the Sheriff appointed for the receiving of the Kings mony after his County Court was done Resceit REsceit is when any Action is brought against the Tenant for term of life or years and he in the Reversion comes in and prays to be received to defend the Land and plead with the Demandant And when he comes it behoves that he be alway ready to plead with the Demandant In the same manner a Wife shall be received for the default of her Husband in an Action brought against them both And Tenant for years shall be received to defend his Right where in an Action brought against the Tenant of the Free-hold he pleads faintly Rescous REscous is a Writ that lies when any man takes a Distress and another takes it again from him and will not suffer him to carry the Disress away this is a Rescous upon which he may have this Writ and shall recover dammages Also if one distrain Beasts for dammage Feasant in his Ground and drives them in the High way to Impound them and in going they enter into the House of the owner and he withholds them there and will not suffer the other to impound them that withholding is a Rescous Also if a Sheriff takes my Debtor by an Execution or by mesne Process and J. S. rescue him out of the Custody of the Sheriff I may have an Action of Rescous against J. S. for this wrong and recover Dammages and Debt Reservation REservation is taken divers ways and hath divers natures As sometimes by way of exception to keep that which a man had before in him As if a Lease be made for years of Ground reserving the great Trees growing upon the same now the Lessee may not meddle with them nor with any thing that comes of them so long as it abides in or upon the Trees as Mast of Oak Chesnut Apples or such like but if they fall from the Trees to the ground then they are by right the Lessees for the Ground is let to him and all thereupon not reserved c. Sometimes a Reservation doth produce and bring forth another thing which was not before As if a man Lease his Lands reserving yearly for the same xxli c. And divers other such Reservations there be And note that in ancient time their Reservations were as well in Victuals whether Flesh Fish Corn Bread Drink or what else as in Money until at last and that chiefly in the Reign of King Henry 1. by agreement the Reservation of Victuals was changed into ready Money as it hath hitherto continued Residence REsidence comes from the Latine Residere and is all one with Resiance but that this word Residence is oftner appropriated to the Continuance of a Parson or Vicar upon his Church or Benefice and so it is used in the Statute of 28 H. 8. cap. 13. Resignation REsignation is where an Incumbent of a Church resigns or leaves it to the Ordinary who did admit him to it or to his Successors which differs from Surrender since by that he to whom the Resignation is made hath no interest in the thing so resigned but he to whom the Surrender is made hath by that the thing it self Restitution REstitution is when a Iudgment is reversed by Error then a Writ of Restitution shall issue to restore to the Defendant in the Action what he hath lost And there is a Writ of restitution of stolen goods upon conviction of the Thief which is made at the Sessions or Assises on the Statute of 21 H. 8. 11. Noy rep 128. Resummons REsummons is a Second Summons of a man to answer an Action where the first Summons is defeated by the Demise of the King or such other cause And of this see Coke lib. 7. fol. 29. b. Also if a Terr-tenant returned upon a Scire facias or Defendant in another Action plead non-age and the Plea stays until c. When he comes of full age the Plaintiff upon a suggestion may have a Scire facias or resummons And so when a Plea is staid by pleadiny Protection Excommunication or such other disability Resumption REsumption is a word used in the Statute of 31 H 6. c. 7. and is there taken for the Taking again into the Kings hands such Lands or Tenements as upon false suggestion or other error he had made Livery of to an Heir or granted by Patent to any man Retraxit REtraxit is the Preterperfect tense of Retraho to pull back and is when the party Plaintiff or Demandant comes in proper person into the Court where his Plea is and saith he will not proceed any farther in the same c. this will be a Bar to the Action for ever Reve or Reeve REeve is an Officer more known in ancient time then at this day for almost every Mannor had then a Reeve and yet still in many Copyhold-Mannors where the old custom prevails the name and office is not altogether forgotten And it is in effect that which now every Bayliff of a Mannor practises although the name of Bayliff was not then in use amongst us being siuce brought in by the Normans But the name of Reeve anciently called Greeve which Particle Ge in continuance of time was altogether left out and lost came from the Saxon word Geresa which signifies a Ruler And so indeed his Rule and Authority was large within the compass of his Lords Mannor and among his men and Tenants as well in matters of Government in peace and war as in the skilful use and trade of Husbandry For as he did gather his Lords Rents pay Reprises or Duties issuing out of the Manor set the Servants
to work fell and cut down Trees to repair the Buildings and Inclosures with divers such like for his Lords commodity so also he had Authority to govern and keep the Tenants in peace and if need required to lead them forth to war Reversion REversion of a Land is a certain Estate remaining in the Lessor or Donor after the particular Estate and Possession conveyed to another by Lease for Life or years or Gift in tail And it is called a Reversion in respect of the possession separated from it so that he that hath the one hath not the other at the same time for in one body at the same time there cannot be said a Reversion because by the uniting the one of them is drowned in the other And so the Reversion of Land is the Land it self when it falls Ribaud RIbaud seem to be sturdy Vagabonds Rot. Par. 50 E. 3. 61. Right Right of Entrie RIght and Right of Entry See in Droit Riot RIot is when three at the least or more do some unlawful act as to beat a man enter upon the possession of another or such like Robbery RObbery is when a Man takes any thing from the person of another Feloniously although the thing so taken be to the value but of a penny yet it is Felony for which the Offendor shall suffer death Rood of Land ROod of Land is a certain quantity of Land containing the fourth part of an Aere Anno 5 Eliz. c. 5. Rout. ROut is when people assemble themselves together and after proceed or ride or go forth or move by the instigation of one or more who is their Leader This is called a Rout because they move and proceed in routs and numbers Also where many assemble themselves together upon their own quarrels and brawls as if the Inhabitants of a Town will gather themselves together to break Hedges Walls Ditches Pales or such like to have Common there or to beat another that hath done them a common displeasure or such like that is a Rout and against the Law although they have not done or put in execution their mischievous intent See the Stat. 1 Mar. c. 12. S. Sac or Sake SAke is a Plea and Correction of Trespass in your Court because Sake in English is Encheson in French and sake is put for sick See Keloway in his Cases incerti temporis f. 145. a. that the privilege called Sake is for a man to have the Amerciaments of his Tenants in his own Court Sacrilege SAcrilege is when one steals any Vessels Ornaments or Goods of Holy Church which is Felony 2 Cro. 153 154. Salary SAlary is a word often used in our Books and it signifies a Recompence or Consideration given a man for his pains bestowed upon another mans business And it is so called as Pliny says in the 31 Book of his Nat. Hist cap. 7. because it is as necessary for a man as Salt and makes his labor relish as Salt doth his meat Sanctuary SAnctuary is a Priviledged place by the Prince for the safeguard of mens lives who are Offendors being founded upon the Law of Mercy and upon the great Reverence Honor and Devotion which the Prince bears to the place whereunto he grants such a Privilege which was heretofore so great that the Princes have granted the same in cases of Treason committed against themselves Murder Rape or other Crime whatsoever Hereof see Stamf. Pl. of the Crown l. 2. c. 38. Satisfaction SAtisfaction is when a Defendant hath paid a Debt or Dammages recovered against him it behoveth him to have satisfaction to be entred upon the Record of the Iudgment Sarpler SArpler is a quantity of Wool which in Scotland is called Serplath and contains 80 stone and with us in England a Load of Wool contains by the opinion of some fourscore Tod and every Tod two Stone and every Stone fourteen Pounds and that a Sack of Wool is in common account equal with a Load and a Sarpler the one half of a Sack Scandalum magnatum SCandalum magnatum is an Evil report invented or dispersed to the prejudice or slander of any great personage or Officer of the realm The punishment of which is enacted by divers Statutes viz Westm 1. c. 33. 2 R. 2. c. 5. 12 R. 2. c. 11. Scavage SCavage or Shewage is a Toll exacted by the Mayors Sheriffs and Bayliffs of Cities and Towns Corporate for wares or merchandise shewed to be sold within their precincts or jurisdiction which Exaction being against the priviledge of the Kings subjects was prohibited by a Statute made in 19 H. 7. c. 8. See 21 H. 7. f. 14. a. and see the Statute of 22 H. 8. c. 8 in the end thereof The Mayor c. of London brought debt for this duty by these words Pro supervisu a ꝑcionis H. 18 19 C. 2. B. R. roll 625. Scire facias SCire facias is a Writ judicial going out of the record and lies where one hath recovered Debt or Dammages in the Kings Court and sues not to have Execution within the year and the day then after the year and the day he shall have the said Writ to warn the party and if the party come not or if he come and say nothing to discharge or stay the Execution then he shall have a Writ of Fieri facias directed to the Sheriff commanding him to levy the Debt or Dammages of the goods of him that hath lost The Writ of Fieri facias lies within the year without any Scire facias sued Also if the summ of the same Debt or Dammages may not be levied of the Goods of him that hath lost them he may have a Writ of Elegit commanding the Sheriff to deliver him the one half of his Lands and Goods except his Oxen and implements of Plow When one hath recovered Debt or Dammages in an Action personal where the Preces is a Capias he may have another Writ of Execution called a Capias ad satisfaciendum to take the Body of him that is so condemned which shall be committed to prison there to abide without Bail or mainprise till he hath satisfied the party And when one hath Iudgment to recover any Lands or Tenements he shall have a Writ called Habere facias seisinam directed to the Sheriff commanding him to deliver to him Seisin of the same Land so recovered See more of that in the Titles Fieri facias and Execution The Writ abovesaid is given by the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 45. But there are also other manner of Scire facias Scil. upon Audita Querela Writs of Error as well to hear errors as wherefore the Plaintiff ought to have Execution against terrtenants upon Iudgments and the like Scot. SCot is to be quit of a certain Custom as of common Tallage made to the use of the Sheriff or Bayliff Scotale SCotale is an Extortion prohibited by the Statute of Charta de Forresta cap. 7. and it is where any Officer of the Forrest
ustome of the Mannor and the Monstraverunt to discharge them when their Lord distrains them to do other Services than they ought This Writ of Monstraverunt ought to be brought against their Lord and these Tenants hold all by one certain Service and are free Tenants of Ancient Demesne Soccage in base Tenure is where a man holds in Ancient Demesne that may not have the Monstraverunt and for that it is called the base Tenure Sockmans SOckmans are the Tenants in Ancient Demesne that held their Lands by Soccage that is by Service with the Plow and therefore they are called Sockmans which is as much to say as Tenants or men that hold by Service of the Plow or Plow-men For Sok signifies a Plow And these Sockmans or Tenants in Ancient Demesne have many and divers Liberties given and granted them by the Law as well those Tenants that hold of a common person as those that hold of the King in Ancient Demesne as namely to be free from paying Toll in every Market Fair Town and City throughout the whole Realm as well for their Goods and Chartels that they sell to others as for those things that they buy for their Provision And thereupon every of them may sue to have Letters Patents under the Kings Seal directed to his Officers and to the Mayors Bayitffs and other Officers in the Realm to suffer them to be Toll-free to be exempt from Leets and Sheriffs Turns also to be quit of Pontage Murage and Passage as also of Taxes and Tallages granted by Parliament except that the King tax ancient Demesne as he may at his pleasure for some great cause to be free from payments toward the expences of the Knights of the Shire that come to the Parliament And if the Sheriff will distrain them or any of them to be contributary for their Lands in Ancient Demesne then one of them or all as the case requires may sue a Writ directed to the Sheriff commanding him that he do not compel them to be contributary to the expences of the Knights And the same Writ doth command him also that if he have already distrained them therefore that he redeliver the same Distress Also that they ought not to be impannelled nor put in Iuries and Enquests in the Country out of their Mannor or Lordship of Ancient Demesne for the Lands that they held there except that they have other Lands at the Common Law for which they ought to be charged And if the Sheriff do return in Pannels then they may have a Writ directed to him De non ponendis in Assisis Juratis And if he do the contrary there lies an Attachment against him And so it is also if the Bailiffs of Franchises that have return of Writs will return any of the Tenants which hold in Ancient Demesue in Assises or Iuries Sodomy SOdomy in the Indictment for this offence it is said Rem veneream habuit peccatum illud Sodomiticum inter Christianos non nominandum felonice commisit Spoliation SPoliation is a Suit for the Fruits of a Church or for the Church it self it is to be sued in the Spiritual Court and not in the Temporal And this Suit lies for one Incumbent against another where they both claim by one Patron and where the right of the Patronage doth not come in question or debate As if a Parson be created a Bishop and hath dispensation to keep his Benefice and afterward the Patron presents another Incumbent which is instituted and inducted now the Bishop may have against that Incumbent a Spoliation in the Spiritual Court because they claim both by one Patron and the right of the Patronage doth not come in debate and because the other Incumbent came to the possession of the Benefice by the course of the Spiritual Law that is to say by Institution and Induction so that he hath c ● lour to have it and to be Parson by the Spiritual Law for otherwise if he be not instituted and inducted c. Spoliation lies not against him but rather a Writ of Trespass or an Assise of Novel disseisin c. So it is also where a Parson who hath a Plurality doth accept another Benefice by reason whereof the Patron presents another Clerk who is instituted and inducted now the one of them may have Spoliation against the other and then shall come in debate whether he has a sufficiene Plurality or not And so it is of Deprivation c. The same law is where one saith to the Patron that his Clerk is dead whereupon he presents another there the first Incumbent who was supposed to be dead may have a Spoliation against the other And so it is in divers other like cases whereof see Fitz. Natura Br. f. 36. G. c. Stablestand STablestand is a term of the Forrest Laws when one is sound standing in the Forrest with his Bow bent ready to shoot at any Deer or with his Grey-hounds in a Lease ready to slip See Manw. Forest Laws cap. 18. fol. 133. b. Stallage STallage signifies money paid for pitching Stalls in Fairs or Markets or the right of doing it Standard STandard See Estandard Stannary STannary are Courts by ancient custom held in Cornwal for suits concerning the Trade of Tin Statute-Merchant TO hold by Statute-Merchant is where a man acknowledges to pay mony to another at a certain day before the Mayor Bailif or other Warden of any Town that hath power to make execution of the same Statute and if the Obligor pay not the Debt at the day and nothing of his Goods Lands or Tenements may be found within the Ward of the Mayor or Warden aforesaid but in other places without then the Recognisee shall sue the Recognisance and Obligation with a Certification to the Chancery under the Kings Seal and he shall have out of the Chancery a Capias to the Sheriff of the County where he is to take him and to put him in prison if he be not a Clerk till he have made satisfaction for the Debt And one quarter of a year after he is taken he shall have his Land delivered to himself to make gree to the party for the Debt and he may sell his Land while he is in prison and his sale shall be good And if he do not make satisfaction within a quarter of a year or if it be returned that he is not found and if he be not a Clerk then the Recognisee may have a Writ out of the Chancery called Extendi facias directed to any Sheriff to extend his Lands and Goods and to deliver the Goods to him and to scise him in his Lands to hold them to him his Heirs and Assigns till the Debt be levied or payed and for that tune he is Tenant by Statute-Merchant Note that in a Statute-Merchant the Recognisee shall have Execution of all the Lands which the Recognisor had the day of the Recognisance made and any time after by force of the
same Statute And when any Waste or destruction is made by the Recognisee his Executors or him that hath his Estate the Recognisor or his Heirs shall have the same Law as is before said of the Tenant by Elegit If Tenant by Statute-Merchant hold over his term he that hath right may sue against him a Venire fac ' ad computandum or else enter immediately as upon Tenant by Elegit See the Statute 11 E. 1. and of Acton Burnel and 13 E. 1. De Mercatoribus Starr-chamber STarr-chamber was an High Court held in the Star-Chamber at Westm before the King Peers and Iudges abolished per Stat. 17 Car. cap. 10. Sterbrech STerbrech alias Strebrech is the Breaking Obstructing or or making less of a Way Stilyard STilyard is a word used in the Statute of 22 H. 8. chap. 8. where the Ha ● se-Merchants are called the Merchants of the Sti yard which is a place in London where these Merchants or their Brotherhood had their thode And the House is said to be so called because bullt upon a Court-yard near the Thames where Steel was wont to be much sold Sub poena SUb poena is the name of a Writ made in divers Courts of Law and Equity viz. in Chancery and all other Courts to summon Witnesses and in that Court and in the Exchequer in Law and Equity and in the Common Pleas upon Informations qui tam c. to summon Defendants and in the Crown Office upon Informations Suffragan SUffragan is a word used in the Statut of 26 H. 8. cap. 14. and signifies a Titular Bishop appointed to aid and assist the Bishop of the Diocess in his Spiritual Function And he is called Suffraganeus in Latin because by his Suffrage Ecclesiastical Causes are to be adjudged Suggestion SUggestion is an Information drawn in Writing shewing cause to have a Prohibition which is left in Court and is mentioned in the Statute 2 E. 6. cap. 13. Sumage SUmage seems to be Toll for Carriage on Horseback Cro. Jurisd f. 191. Summons ad Warrantizandum c. SUmmons ad Warrantizandum and Sequatur sub suo periculo See of them after in the Title Voucher Supercargo ou Supracargo SUpercargo ou Supracargo is a Factor or Agent which goes with a Ship beyond the Seas by order of the Owner of the Wares therein and disposes thereof And the Master of the Ship is obliged to perform the Orders of such Factor or Supereargo Supersedeas SUpersedeas is a Writ that lies in divers cases as appears by F. N. B. f. 236. A. but it is always a command to stay some ordinary Proceedings in Law which ought otherwise to proceed Supplicavit SUpplicavit is a Writ issuing out of the Chaucery directed to the Sheriff and some Iustices of the Peace in the County or to one or more Iustices without the Sheriff for taking Surety of such a one as it is prayed against that he should keep the Peace and this is by the Statute of 1 E. 3. c. 16. See F. N. B. f. 80. C and see the Stat. 21 Jac. c. 8. Sur cui in vita SUr cui in vita is a Writ that lies for the Heir of an Inheritrix whose Husband aliened the Inheritance of his Wife and the Wife died before she recovered in a Cui in vita See for this F. N. B. 194. C. Surplusage SUrplusage comes of the French Surplus that is an Overplus and signifies in the Law an Addition of more then needs which sometimes is the cause that a Writ shall abate but in pleading many times it is absolutely void and the residue of the Plea shall stand good Surrejoynder SUrrejoynder is an Answer to the Defendants Rejoynder or a second inforcing of the Plaintiffs Declaration Surrender SUrrender is the Consent of a particular Tenant that he in the Reversion or the Remainder shall presently have the possession And this is either Surrender in Deed by an actual yielding up of the Estate or in Law by the taking of the new Lease or such other act See of this Perkins c. 9. Also it is an act done to the Lord of a Mannor or his Steward of a Copy-hold Estate or done by special Custom of some Mannors to two Copy-hold Tenants of Mannors which surrender ought to be presented at the next Court Baron Swainmote SWainmote or Swannimote is a Court held thrice in a year within a Forrest by the Statute of Charta de Foresta c. 8. for all the Free-holders of the Forrest for so much the Etymology of the word imports Mote in the Norman speech signifying a Court and Swain in the Saxon a Charterer or Free-holder so that Swannimore is the Court of the Free-holder See of this Manwoods Forrest Laws cap. 23. f. 217 c. at large Swainmote in this Court Presentments of Offences done to the Forrest or Game are made given into the Iustices in Eyre Syb Som. SYb Som i. Peace and Security L. L. Eccles. Canuti Regis c. 17. Symony SYmony is an unlawful Contract made to have a man presented to a Rectory or Vicarage which is prohibited by Stat. 31 Eliz. cap. 6. T. Fee-tail TO hold in the Tail is where a man holds certain Lands or Tenements to him and to his Heirs of his Body begotten If the Land be given to a man and to his Heires males and he hath Issue male he hath Fee-simple which was adjudged in Parliament But where Lands are given to a man and to his Heirs males of his body begotten then he hath Fee-tale and the issue Female shall not inherit as appears in the 14 year of E. 3. in an Assise 18 E. 3. 45. Fee-tail is where the Land is given to a Man and the Heirs of his Body begotten and he is called Tenant in Taile general If Lands are given to the Husband and Wife and the Heirs of their two Bodies begotten then the Husband and the Wife are Tenants in Tail especial And if one of them die he that survives is Tenant in Tail after possibility of issue extinct and if he make Waste he shall not be impeached for it See Littleton But if the King give Lands to a man to his Heires males and the Donee dies without issue male then the Cousin collateral of the Donee shall not inherit but the King shall re-enter and so it was adjudged in the Exchequer-chamber 18 H. 8. in an Information made against the Heir of Sir T. Lovel Knight Tail after possibility TO hold in the Tail after possibility of Issue extinct is where Land is given to a Man and his Wife and the Heirs of their two Bodies engendred and one of them overlives the other without issue between them begotten he shall hold the Land for term of his own life as Tenant in the Tail after possibility of Issue extinct and notwithstanding that he do Waste he shall never be Impeached of it And if he alien he in the Reversion shall not have a Writ of Entry in consimili casu
the View that is that he may see the Land which he claims But if the Tenant hath had a View in one Writ and after the Writ is abated in misnaming the Town or by Ioyntenure and after the Demandant brings another Writ against the Tenant then the Tenant shall not have the View in the second Writ View of Frank pledge VIew of Frank pledge Visus franci plegii is the power to hold a Turn or Leet in which Courts every Free-man in ancient time became bound with Sureties at the age of fourteen years for his Truth to the King and his Subjects and thereupon those Courts were called the View of the free Pledges that is of such Free-men as were Pledges or Sureties one for another See Deciners Vi Laica removenda VI Laica removenda is a Writ that lies where Debate is between two Parsons or Provisors for a Church and one of them enters into the Church with great power of Lay-men and holds the other out with force and arms he that is holden out shall have this Writ directed to the Sheriff that he remove the Power which is within the Church and the Sheriff shall be commanded that if he find any men there withstanding he take with him the Power of his County if need be and arrest the Bodies of all those that resist and put them in Prison so that he have their Bodies before the King at a certain day to answer the Contempt And this Writ is returnable and shall not be granted before the Bishop of the place where such Church is hath certified in the Chancery such Resisting and Force Villain and Villainage TO hold in pure Villainage is to do all that that the Lord will him command The division of Villainage is Villain of Blood and of Tenure And he is a Villain of whom the Lord takes Redemption to marry his Daughter and to make him Free and it is he whom the Lord may put out of his Lands or Tenements at his will and also of all his Goods and Chattels A Sockman is no pure Villain nor does a Villain owe Ward Marriage or Relief nor does he any other Services real Tenure in Villainage shall make no Free-man Villain if it be not continued time out of mind nor shall Villain Land make a Free-man Villain nor Free-land make Villain Free except the Tenant have continued Free beyond the time of memory But a Villain shall make Free-land Villain by Seisin or by Claim of the Lord. If a Villain purchase Land and take a Wife and alien and dies before the Claim of Seisin of the Lord the Wife shall be endowed In case the Lord bring a Praecipe quod reddat against the Alience of his Villain who vouches to warrant the Issue of the Villain which is Villain to the Lord he shall have the Voucher And by protestation the Lord may notwithstanding he plead with his Villain save his Villain from being infranchised A Bastard shall not be judged Villain but by knowledge in Court of Record If Debt be due by a Lord to a Free-man and he makes two Men his Executors who are Villains to the said Lord and dies the Villains shall have an Action of Debt against their Lord. And notwithstanding that he plead with them and if he make Protestation they shall not be thereby infranchised for that they are to recover the Debt to the use of another person that is to say their Testator and not to their own use And if the Tenant in Dower have a Villain who purchases certain Land in Fee and after the Tenant in Dower enters she shall have the Land to her and her heirs for ever And the same Law is of Tenant for term of years of a Villain The Lord may rob beat and chastise his Villain at his will save only that he ● ay not maim him for then he shall have an Appeal of Maihem against him A Villain may have three Actions against his Lord that is to say an Appeal of the death of his Ancestor an Appeal of Rape done to his Wife and an Appeal of Miahem If two Parteners bring a Writ of Niefty and one of them be Nonsuit the Nonsuit of him shall be judged the Nonsuit of both so that if that Nonsuit be after Appearance they shall be barred from that Action for ever for such is the Law in favor of Liberty If two have a Villain in common and one of them makes him a Manumission he shall not be made free against both In a Writ de Nativo habendo it behoves that the Lord shew how the Defendant comes to be privy of the Blood of the Villain of whom he is Lord c. And if he nor any of his Aucestors were seised of any of his Blood he shall not gain by his Action if the Villain have not acknowledged himself in Court of Record to be his Villain In a Writ of Niefty may not be put more Niefs then two and this was first introduc'd in hatred of Bondage But in a Writ de Libertate probanda may be put as many Niefes as the Plaintiff will If the Villain be fled into Ancient Demesne of the King or other Town priviledged within a year and a day the Lord may seise him and if he dwell in the same Town or other place Franchised by a year and a day without seisin of the Lord he hath no power to seise him after if he go not out of the foresaid Franchise Some are Villains by title of Prescription that is to say that all their Blood have been Villains regardants to the Mannor of the Lord from time out of mind And some are made Villains by their Confession in a Court of Record Also the Lord may make a Manumission to his Villain and enfranchise him for ever If a Villain bring any Action against his Lord other then an Appeal of maihem and the Lord without protestation make answer to it by this the Villain is made free Also if a Villain purchase Land and hath Goods and sell the Goods and Lands before any Entry or Seisin made by the Lord the sale is good But the King Lord of a Villain in such case may enter and seise the Land after such sale made For no time runs against the King Note that this Title and Tenure are abolished by the Statute of Car. 2. R. Villanous judgement VIllanous judgment is that which is given upon an Indictment of Conspiracy viz. that the party found guilty shall lose the benefit of the Law shall never more be sworn in Iuries or Assises nor admitted to give any Testimony cise where and if he have to do in the Kings Courts he shall come by Attorney and not in person that his Lands Goods and Chattels shall be seised in the Kings hands and estreaped if he find not the more favor and his Trees digg'd up and his Body imprisoned See 24 E. 3. fol. 34. b. 27 Ass pl. 59. Virgata terrae VIrgata terrae
21 Jac. cap. 17. at 8 l. per Cent. and now by the Statute of 12 Car. 2. c. 17. it is reduced to 6 l. per Cent. Utlary UTlary is when an Exigent goes forth against any man to appear in any Court to make Answer to any Action or Indictment and Proclamation made in five Counties then if the Defendant appear not the Coroner shall give Iudgment that he shall be out of the Protection of the King and out of the aid of the Law By such an Utlary in Actions Personal the party Outlawed shall forfeit all his Goods and Chattels to the King And by an Utlary in Felony he shall forfeit as well all his Lands and Tenements that he hath in Fee-simple or for term of his life as his Goods and Chattels Also though a man be outlawed yet if any Error or Discontinuance be in the Suit of the Proces the party shall have advantage thereof and for such cause the Vtlary shall be reversed and adnulled If the party Defendant be over the Sea at the time of the Vtlary pronounced that is a good cause of Reversal If an Exigent be awarded against a man in one County where he dwells not yet an Exigent with Proclamation shall go forth to the County where he dwells or else if he be thereupon Outlawed the Utlary may be reversed as it appears by the Statute An 6 4 H. 8 c. 4. And if a man be outlawed in Action personal at the Suit of another and after he Purchase his Chatter of Pardon of the King such Charter shall never be allowed till he hath sued a Writ of Scire facias to warn the party Plaintiff and if he appear then the Defendant shall answer him and bar him of his Action or else make Agreement with him Utlaw UTlaw See Waive Utlepe UTlepe signifies the Escape of Theives Fleta lib. 1. cap. 47. Utrum UTrum is a Writ that lies when the Right of any Church is allened and holden in Lay-fee or translated into the possession of any other Church and the Alienor dies then his Successor shall have the said Writ whereof an Enquest shall be charged to try whether it be the Free alms of the Church or Lay-fee And note well that none that have Covent or Common Seal may maintain this Writ but a Writ of Entre sine assensu Capitull for the Alienation made by his Predecessor W. Wage WAge is the Giving Security for the performing of any thing as to wage Law and to wage Deliverance which see before in Gage None wages Law against the King Brook tit Chose en Action num 6. See Law Waife WAife is when a Thief hath feloniously stolen Goods and being nearly followed with Hue and Cry or else overcharged with the burthen or trouble of the Goods for his ease sake and more speedy Travelling without Hue and Cry flies away and leaves the Goods or any part of them behind him c. then the Kings Officer or the Reeve or Bayliff to the Lord of the Mannor within whose Iurisdiction or Circuit they were left who by Prescription or Grant from the King hath the Franchise of Waife may seise the Goods so waived to their Lords use who may keep them as his own proper Goods except the Owner come with fresh Suit after the Felon and sue an Appeal or give in Evidence against him at his Arraignment upon the Indictment and he be attainted thereof c. In which cases the first Owner shall have Restitution of his Goods so stollen and waived And though as hath been said Waife is properly of Goods stollen yet it may be also of Goods not stollen As if a man be pursued with Hue and Cry as a Felon and he flies and leaves his own Goods c. these shall be taken as Goods waived and forfeit as if they had been stollen But see Foxleys Case Coke l. 4. l. 109. b. that these are not Goods waived but Goods of Fugitives which are not forfeited till it be found before the Coroner or otherwise of Record that he fled for the Felony Waive WAive is a Woman that is Outlawed and she is called Waive as left out or forsaken of the Law and not an Outlaw as a man is for Women are not sworn in Leets to the King nor to the Law as men are who therefore are within the Law whereas Women are not and for that cause they cannot be said Outlawed insomuch as they never were within it See Fitz. N. B. fol. 161. A. But a man is called utlaw because he was once sworn to the Law And now for contempt he is put out of the Law and is called utlaw as one should say without benefit of the Law Wapentake WApentake is all one with that which we call Hundred as appears by Bract. lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 1. num 1. in the end Lambert in his Explication of Saxon Words word Centuria saith That this word Wapentake is more especially used at this day in the Countries beyond the River Trent And in the Laws of King Edward by him set forth num 33. it is most plain in these words And what the English term Hundred the foresaid Counties call Wapentake The Statutes An. 3 H. 5. cap. 2. and An. 9 H. 6. cap. 10. and An. 15 H. 6. cap. 7. make mention of Stainctife Wapentake and Friendless Wapentake in Craven in the County of York See Roger Hoveden part poster Annal. fol. 346. Warden WArden is of the same signification with the French Gardein and therefore of this see more in the Title Gardein But it is the most usual word in English for him that hath the Custody and Charge of any person or thing by Office as Wardens of the Fellowships in London Anno 14 H. 8. cap. 2. Warden Courts An. 31 H. 6. c. 3. Warden of the Marches An. 4 H. 7. cap. 8. Ferry Warden An. 18 Eliz. c. 10. An. 27 Eliz. c. 26. Wardens of the Peace Anno 2 Edw. 3. c. 3. Wardens of the West Marches Cambden Brit. p. 606. Warden of the Forrest Manwood part 1. p. 111 112. Warden of the Alnage An. 18 H. 6. c. 16. Warden of the Kings Armor in the Tower An. 1 E. 4. c. 1. Chief Warden of the Forrest Manwood part 1. pag. 42 43. Warden of the Kings Wardrove Anno 5 Hen. 3. Stat. 5. Wardens of the Tables of the Kings Exchange Anno 9 Ed. 3. Stat. 2. c. 7. and Anno 9 Hen. 5. Stat. 2. cap. 4. Warden of the Rolls of the Chancery Anno 1 Edw. 4. cap. 1 5. Wardens and Communalty of Lands contributory to Rochester Bridge Anno 18 Eliz. cap. 17. and Wardens of the Stannary Courts 4 Instit 230. Wardmote WArdmote is a term mentioned in the Stat. of 32 H. 8. c. 17. and signifies a Court that is kept in every Ward in London and is usually called the Warmote-Court or the Wardmote-Inquest Warrantie WArrantie See Garrantie Warrantia chartae WArrantia chartae is a Writ that lies
Tenements within the said City or Borough For the redressing of which wrong he that hath right may by the Vsage of the said City or Borough have his remedy without Writ by an Assise or Bill of Fresh Force brought within 40 days after the Force committed or Title to him accrued In which Action he may make his protestation to sue in the nature of what Writ he will And see for this matter Fitzh Nat. Bre. f. 7. C. and Old N. B. f. 4. a. Fresh Suit FResh Suit is when a man is robbed and the party so robbed follows the Felon immediately and takes him with the manner or therwise and then brings an Appeal against him and doth convict him of the Felony by Verdict which thing being enquired of for the King and found the party robbed shall have restitution of his goods again Also it may be said that the party made Fresh Suit although he take not the Thief presently but that it be half a year or a year after the Robbery done before he be taken if so be the party robbed do what lies in him by diligent enquiry and search to take him yea although he be taken by some other body yet this shall be said Fresh Suit Fresh Suit is also when the Lord comes to distrain for Rent or Service and the Owner of the Beasts makes rescous and drives them into anothers Ground not holden of the Lord and the Lord follows presently and takes them And so in other like cases Friperer FRiperer is a word used in the Statute of 1 Jac. c. 21. for a kind of Broker And it seems to be a word taken from the French word Fripier to trick up old things and therefore a Friperer is one that uses to dress old Clothes to sell again Frumgyld FRumgyld is an old Saxon word which signifies the first payment made to the Kindred of a slain person in recompence of his Murder L. L. Edmundi c. ult Fugitives goods FUgitives Goods are the proper goods of him that flies upon felony which after the flight lawfully found do belong to the King Coke vol. 6. f. 109. b. G. Gable GAble Gablum in ancient Records is an old word that signifies a Rent Duty Custom or Service yielded or done to the King or any other Lord See the Comment upon Littl. fol. 142. a. Gager de deliverance GAger de deliverance is where one sues a Repleven of goods taken but he hath not the goods delivered and the other avows and the Plaintiff shews that the Defendant is yet possessed of the goods c. and prays that the Defendant may gage the Deliverance then he shall put in Surety or Pledges for the Redeliverance and a Writ shall go forth to the Sheriff to redeliver the goods c But if a man claim property he shall not gage Deliverance And if he say that the Beasts are dead in the Pound he shall not gage c. Also a man shall never gage the Deliverance before they are at Issue or Demurter in the Law as it is said Gainage GAinage Wainagium seems to come from the French word Gaignage id est Gain or Profit but in our Law it signifies the Profit most properly that comes by the Tillage of Land And therefore in the Statute of Mag. Chart. c. 14. it is Enacted that a Villain shall be amerced saving his Gainage and in West 1. c. 6. saving his Gainure and in c. 17. it is Enacted That he that deforces any of the deliverances of his Beasts by Replevin shall render unto the Plaintiff his double Dammages which he hath sustained in his Beasts or in his Gainage disturbed c. And by the Statute of Distress of the Exchequer made in 51 H. 3. it is Enacted That no man of Religion or other shall be distrained by the Beasts that gain his Land Galli-halpens GAlli-halpens were a certain Coin prohibited by the Stat. An. 3. H. 5. c. 1. Gaole GAole or Gayle comes of the French word Geole which signifies a Cage for Birds but metaphorically is used for a Prison And from thence the Keeper of the Prison is called a Gaoler or Gayler Garbe GArbe comes of the French Garbe vel Gerbe which signifies a Bundle or Sheaf This word is used in the old Stat. called Charta de Foresta cap. 7. where Herbas in the Latine is translated Garbe in English Garble GArble is is to sort and chuse the good from the bad as the Garbling of Bow-staves Anno 1 R. 3. c. 11. and the Garbling of Spice is nothing else but to purifie it from the Dross with which it is mixed See of this at large in the Statute of 1 Jac. c. 19. Gard. GArd or Ward is when an Infant whose Ancestor held by Knights Service is in the Ward or Keeping of the Lord of whom those Lands were holden And if the Tenant hold of divers Lords divers Lands the Lord of whom the Land is holden by Priority that is by the more elder Tenure shall hade the Wardship But if one Tenure be as old as the other then he that first gets the Ward of the Body shall keep it But every Lord shall have the Ward of the Land that is holden of him And if the Tenant hold any Land of the King in chief he by his Prerogative shall have the Ward of the Body and of all the Land that is holden of him and of every other Lord. Also there are divers Writs of Ward One is a Writ of Right of Ward and that lies where the Tenant dies his Heir within age and a Stranger enters into the Land and happens to have the Ward of the Body of the Infant A Writ of Ejectment of Ward lies where a man is put out of the Ward of the Land without the Body of the Infant A Writ of Ravishment of Ward lies where the Body is taken from him only and not the Land But see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. c. 24. for Abolishing the Court of Wards c. Gardian GArdian or Wardein most properly is he that hath the Wardship or Keeping of an Heir and of his Land holden by Knights Service or of one of them to his own use during the Nonage of the Heir and within that time hath the bestowing of the Body of the Heir in Marriage at his pleasure without disparagement And of Wa ●● ens there are two sorts namely Gardian in Right and Gardian in Deed. Gardian in Right is he that by reason of his Seigniory is seised of the Wardship or keeping of the Land and Heir during his Nonage Gardian in Deed is where the Lord after his Seifin as aforesaid grants by Deed or without Deed the Wardship of the Land or Heir or both to another by force of which Grant the Grantee is in possession The Grantee is called Gardian in Deed. And this Gardian in Deed may grant the Heir to another also but that other is not properly called Gardian in Deed but Grantee of the Gardian in Right
only by the Law that is to say by Escheat Privy in Right is where one possessed of a Term for years grants his Estate to another upon Condition and makes his Executors and dies now these Executors are Privies in Right for if the Condition be broken and they enter into the Land they have it in right of their Testator and to his use Privy of Blood is the Heir of the Feoffor or Donor c. Also if a Fine be levied the Heirs of them that levied the Fine are called Privies Privileges PRivileges are Liberties and Franchises granted to an Office Place Town or Mannor by the Kings great Charter Letter Patents or Act of Parliament as Toll Sake Socke Infangtheef Outfangtheef Tourne Ordelfe and divers such like for which look in their proper titles and places Also there are other privileges which the Law takes notice of that is to say the privileges of the Commons Peers of the Parliament the privileges of Attornies Officers of the Courts at Westm that they shall not be sued or impleaded in another Court but in that where they are Attornies or Officers Procedendo PRocedendo is a Writ that lies where any Action is sued in one Court which is removed to another more high as to the Chancery Kings Bench or Common Place by a Writ of Priviledge or Certiorari and if the Defendant upon the matter shewed have no cause of Priviledge or if the matter in the Bill whereupon the Certiorari issued be not well proved then the Plaintiff shall have this Procedendo to send again the matter unto the first base Court there to be determined Proces PRoces are the Writs and Precepts that go forth upon the Original And in Actions real and personal there are sundry sorts of Proces For in Actions real the Proces i ● Grand Cape before Appearance Therefore see of that in the 〈◊〉 Petit Cape But in Actions personal as in Debt Trespass or Detinue the Proces is a Distress and if the Sheriff return Nihil habet in Balliva c. then the Proces is Alias Capias and Pluries and an Exigent and they are called Capias ad respondendum Also the Exigent shall be proclaimed five times and if the party do not appear he shall be outlawed But in divers Actions there are divers manners of Proces which at large is declared in N. B. And there are divers other Proces after Appearance when the parties are at Issue to make the Enquest appear as a Writ of Venire facias and if they do not appear at the day then a Writ of Habeas corpora Jurat ' and after a Writ of Dist ● ingas Jurat ' And there are divers other Proces after Iudgment as Capias ad satisfaciendum and Capias utlagatum c. Capias ad satisfaciendum lies where a man is condemned in any Debt or Dammage then he shall be arrested by this Writ and put in Prison without Bail or Mainprise till he hath paid the Debt and the Dammages Capias utlagatum lies where one is outlawed then he shall be taken by this Writ and put in Prison without Bail or Mainprise for that he had the Law in contempt And there are other Proces and Writs Iudicial as Capias ad valentiam Fieri facias Scire facias and many other and therefore look for them in their Titles Next friend NExt friend is commonly taken for Gardian in Soccage and is where a man seised of Land holden in Socage dies his issue within age of 14 years then the next friend or next of kin to whom the Lands cannot discend shall have the keeping of the Heir and of the Land to the only use of the Heir until he come to the age of 14 years and then he may enter and put the Gardian out and bring him to accompt But in that Accompt he shall be allowed for all reasonable costs and expences bestowed either upon the Heir or his Land The next friend or next of kin to whom the Inheritance cannot discend is thus to be understood If the Lands discend to the Heir from his Father or any of the kin of his Fathers side then the Mother or other of the Mothers side are called the next of kin to whom the Inheritance cannot discend for before it shall so diseend it shall rather escheat to the Lord of whom it is holden And where the Lands come to the Heir from his Mother or any of her side then the Father or other of the Fathers side are called the next of kin to whom the Inheritance cannot discend but shall rather escheat to the Lord of whom it is holden Otherwise Prochein amy is he who appears in any Court for an Infant who sues any Action and aids the Infant to pursue his Suit whereof see the Statutes of Westm 1. cap. 47. and Westm 2. cap. 15. that an Infant may not make an Atturney but the Court may admit the next Friend for the Plaintiff and a Gardian for the Infant Defendant as his Atturney Proclamation PRoclamation is Notice publickly given of any thing whereof the King thinks good to advertise his Subjects so it is used Anno 7. R. 2. c. 6. Proclamation of Rebellion is an open notice given by an Officer that a man not appearing upon a Subpoena or Attachment in the Chancery shall be reputed a Rebell except he render himself at the day assigned Crompt Jurisdict fol. 92. And it is to be noted that no man may make Proclamation but by authority of the King or Majors and such like as have proviledges in Cities and Boroughs so to do or have it by Custom And therefore where an Executor made Proclamations in certain Market-towns that the Creditors should come by a certain day and claim and prove their Debts due by the Testator and because he did this without Authority he was committed to the Fleet and Fined Brook Proclamation 10. Procurator PRocurator is used for him who gathers the Fruits of a Benefice for another man Anno 3 Ric. 2. Stat. 1. cap. 2. Prohibition PRohibition is a Writ that lies where a man is impleaded in the Spiritual Court of a thing that touches not Matrimony nor Testament nor meerly Tithes but the Kings Crown This Writ shall be directed as well to the party as to the Iudge or his Official to prohibit them that they pursue no farther But if it appear afterward to the Iudges temporal that the matter is fit to be determined in the Spiritual Court and not in the Court Temporal then the party shall have a Writ of Consultation commanding the Iudges of the Court Spiritual to proceed in the first Plea Also there are many other Prohibitions to the Admiralty and to other Courts of Common-Law if they exceed their power Properite PRopertie is the highest Right that a man hath or can have to any thing which no way depends upon another mans courtesie And this none in this Kingdom can be said to have in any Lands or