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A84200 The exact law--giver faithfully communicating to the skilfull the firm basis and axioms of their profession. To the ignorant their antient and undoubted birthrights and inheritances. Being as a light unto all the professors of the law, as well counsellors as atturneys, clerks, soliciters, scriveners, &c. Or a manu-ductio, or a leading, as it were, by the hand, all such, both of the gentry or laity (as desire to be instructed how to gain or preserve their estates from the hands of their cruell adversaries) to the perfect knowledg of the common and statute law of this nation. 1658 (1658) Wing E3652; Thomason E2128_1; ESTC R201913 81,570 230

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discontinuance but shall hold now by the vulgar and accustomed Homage CHAP. XXXI Of Liveries WHen one dieth which held of the King by Knights-service in Capite that is to say in chief Tenant in chief of the King his Heirs being within age the King as before is declared shall have the wardship and custody as well of the Lands as of the body that is to wit the marriage if he be unmarried but if the Heir be of full age at the time of the death of such ancestor yet shall the King by his Prerogative royall have primer Seisin of all the Lands Tenements Primer seisin and other Hereditaments whereof such his Tenant was seized in his demeane as of see Intruder upon the Kings possession And if such an Heir will enter into his Lands when he cometh to his full age before he sue his Livery and receive Seizin by the King no Freehold shall accrew nor grow unto him but he shall be deemed an intruder into the Kings possession yea and if he die so seized in the mean time his Wife shall have no Dowrie of such Lands wherefore it behoveth in any wise that such Heir as well male as female coming to full age before he or she enter into their Land to sue Livery the manner and form whereof according to the Act of Parliament lately promulgated and set forth I intend briefly to recite CHAP. XXXII How Heirs ought to sue their Liveries enacted 33 H. 6. Cap. 21. NO Person or Persons having Lands or Tenements about the yearly value of five Pound Writ Diem clausit extremum shall have any Livery before Inquisition or Office found before the Eschetor or other Commissioner by virtue of the Kings Writ of Diem clausit extremum or Commission directed out of the Chancery or other Courts having authority to make such a Writ or Commission which shall not pass out of the same but by Warrant or Bill assigned and subscribed by the Master of Wards or Liveries the Surveyor Atturney and recoverer of the said Court or three two or one of them to be directed and delivered to the Chancellor of England or to any other Chancellor or Officer having power to awarde such Writs and for the writing and sealing of the same shall be paid of the accustomed Fees But if the Land exceed not the said yearly value of five Pounds then they shall pay for the Seals of every such Writ or mission eight Pence and for the Comwriting six Pence and not above And the Inquisitions and Offices hereupon found shall be returned by the said Escheters or Commissioners into the same Court from whence the Writ or Commission was awarded which done the Clerks of the Petty-bogg shall receive the same Offices and and make a Transcript thereof to the Master of the Wards and Liveries And then the said Master and the Surveyor Atturney and generall Receiver or three of them whereof the Master or Surveyor to be one shall Covenant and Indent with such Persons for their Livery of the Castles Mannours Lordships Lands Tenements and Hereditaments comprized or not comprized in such Offices and shall make and set a rate and price of the same and appoint the daies of payment thereof by Obligation to be taken for the same to the King And every Bill for any speciall or generall Livery assigned by the hands of the said Master Surveyor Atturney Receiver or three of them whereof the Master or Surveyor to be one shall be Warrant sufficient to the Lord Chancellor or other Officer having power to pass Liveries under any of the Kings Seals accordingly In which case the Clerks of the Petty-bogge or other Clerks by whom the Liveries be written shall receive as well for themselves as for other such Fees as hath been accustomed Item Generall Livery Every person may sue at his pleasure a generall Livery for any Mannours Lands Tenements Rents Reversions Remainders or other Hereditaments whereof the clearly yearly value shall not exceed twenty Pounds provided that an Office be thereof found and a Warrant first obtained of the said Master and others as is aforesaid And where such generall Livery is sued if the Lands exceed the yearly value of five Pounds they shall pay for the Seal twenty Shillings four Pence and all other Fees accustomed as afterwards shall be declared But if they exceed not the yearly value of five pound they shall pay but these Fees following that is to say for the Seal of the Livery twelve Pence to the Clerks of the Petty-bogge for the writing and the inrolling twenty Pence for the respect of the Homage in the Hanapar eight Pence to the Lord great Chamberlaine twenty Pence to the Master of the Rolles twenty Pence and the Clerk of the Liveries for the Warrant and Inrolling of the Livery twenty Pence Item Respect of Homage No person or persons shall pay in the Exchequer or any other Rents for the respect of Homage for any Lands or Hereditaments not exceeding the yearly value of five Pound above eight Pence and for the entering thereof and Warrant of Atturney above four Pence And the value of such Lands and He-Hereditaments not exceeding the yearly value of twenty Pound shall be taken as it is limited in the Offices founden thereof except by the examinations and Certificate of the said Master Surveyor Atturney and Receiver or three of them It shall otherwise appear and be declared in any of the Kings Courts Also no Eschetor shall sit only by virtue of his Office for the inquiry of the Tenure Title or value of any Lands or other Hereditaments holden of the King being of the yearly value of five Pounds Paines of forfeit or above without the Kings Writ to him directed upon pain to forfeit five Pound for every time he shall so do neither shall he take for the finding of any Office of Lands Fees of Office not exceeding the yearly value of five Pound above fifteen Shillings That is to say six Shillings eight Pence for his own Fee and three Shillings four Pence for the writing of the Office and for the Charges of the Jury three Shillings and for the Officers that shall receive the Offices in any Court of Record two Shillings upon pain that the Eschetor doing otherwise shall for every time forfeit five Pound And upon like pain the Officers of every Court of Record where such Inquisitions shall be returned being offered unto them within one Moneth next after the finding thereof shall receive them the one Moity of all with forfeitures to the King and the other to the Party that will sue for the same c. And they which hereafter shall be in case to sue Livery whose Lands and Tenements exceed not the yearly value of five Pound may lawfully sue forth that general Livery by Warrant from the said Courts as is aforesaid although none other Inquisition be thereof had nor certified paying nevertheless the Fees above
some such Tenants have an Inheritance according to the custome of that Mannor yet in very deed they are but Tenants at the will of the Lord for as some men think if the Lord will expell them and put them forth they have no remedy at all but to sue unto their Lord by way of Petition desiring him to be a good and gracious Lord unto them for if they might have any remedy by the Law then should they not be called say they Tenants at the will of the Lord after the custome of the Mannor but other men of no less Learning and prudence have been of contrary judgment as Lord Brian Chief Justice in the time of King Edward the fourth whose opinion was alwayes that if such a Tenant by the custome paying his Services be ejected and put forth by his Lord without cause reasonable Action of Trespass he may very well bring and maintain an Action of Trespass against his Lord at the Common Law as appeareth Termino Hillarij An. 21. E. 4. Also Lord Danby Chief Justice likewise was of the same judgment as appeareth Termino Mich. An. 7. E. 4. where he saith That the Tenant by the custome is as well Inheritable to have his Land after the custome as is he that hath a free-hold at the Common Law but the determination of this question I remit to my great Masters which can lose the knots and ambiguities of the Law forasmuch as yet still of this matter Causidici certant adhuc sub judice lis est Also ye shall understand that the usage of some Mannor is when the Tenant will surrender his Land to the use of another that he shall take a Wand or a Rod in his hand and deliver it to the Steward of the Court and the Steward shall deliver the same Wand in name of Seisin to him that shall take the Land and such a Tenant is called Tenant by the Verge Divers other customs there be of surrendring of Copyhold Lands which here for tediousness I will omit And forasmuch as Tenants by custome of the Mannor have by the course of the Common Law no free-hold therefore they be called Tenants of base Tenure Base Tenure Also if such a Tenant letteth to farme his Copyhold Land for longer time then a twelve moneth and a day without the Lords licence it is a forfeiture of his Land to his Lord. And know ye that if this Tenant fell any Timber that groweth upon the Land but only for the reparation of the same this is Wast and a forfeiture of his Copyhold Hitherto have I treated of the first member of our division that is to wit of Chattels for as I said all Leases for terme of years and at will be accounted in the Law but as Chattels and be comprised under that name save that these be called Chattels reals whereas Kine Oxen Chattell reall and personall Horses Money Plate Corn and such like be called Chattels personals Now we will proceed to the explanation of the second member that is to say of Freeholds CHAP. VIII Of Freeholds FReeholds or Frank-tenements a man may have in sundry wise for either he is seized for terme of his own life or for terme of another mans life if he be seized for terme of his own life either he hath gotten such estate by way of Purchase or else the Law hath intituled him thereunto I call it by purchase whether he cometh unto it by his own bargaining and procurement or by the gift of his friend and I call it by the operation of intituling of the Law when a man marrieth a woman that is an inheritrix and hath issue by her Tenure by the Courtesie and she dieth now shall he have the Lands during his life by course of the Law and shall be called Tenant by the courtesie of England Likewise if a man be seized in fee-simple or fee-taile of Lands and taketh a wife and he dieth the Law giveth unto the wise the third part of her husbands Lands for terme of life Tenant in Dower and she shall be called Tenant in Dower CHAP. IX Tenant for terme of Life TEnant for terme of Life is he that holdeth Lands or Tenements for terme of his own life or for terme of anothers life howbeit the most frequent and common manner of speaking is to call him that hath an estate for terme of his own life Tenant for life and him that hath an estate for terme of anothers life Tenant for terme dauter vie that is to say Tenant for terme of anothers life Ye shall note that like as he that maketh the Lease is called the Lessour and he to whom the Lease is made is called the Lessee so he that maketh the Feoffment is called the Feoffer and he to whom the Feoffment is made the Feoffee Also if the Tenant for terme of life or Tenant for terme of another mans life doe waste Waste the Lessour or he in the reversion shall maintain very well an Action of Waste against him and shall by the same recover trebble damages Finally Ye shall understand that by an Act of Parliament made in the 27. year of our Soveraign Lord King Henry the eight it is enacted That no Freehold nor estate of Inheritance shall pass nor take effect by reason of any bargain and sale except the same be made by writing indented sealed and enrolled in one of the Kings Majesties Courts at Westminster or else within the County where the Land doth lie before the Custos Rotulorum and two Justices of Peace and the Clerk of the Peace of the same County or two of them at least of which the said Clerk shall be one and that such enrolment be made within six moneths after the date of such writing and for the enrolment of every such writing where the Land comprised therein is not above the yearly value of Fourty shillings they shall take two shillings that is Twelve pence to the Justices and Twelve pence to the Clerk and if the Land be above the yearly value of Fourty shillings then they shall take Five shillings that is Two shillings and six pence to the Justices and Two shillings and six pence to the Clerk which shall enroll and ingross sufficiently in parchment such Deed and writing and at every years end he shall deliver the same to the Custos Rotulorum of the same County to remain in his custody among other Records of the same County so that the parties resorting thither may see them provided that this extend not to any Tenements or Hereditaments lying within any City or Town Corporate wherein the Majors Records or other Officers have authority or have lawfully used to enroll any Evidences or writings within their Precinct CHAP. X. Tenant by the Courtesie TEnant by the Courtesie of England is he that hath married a Wife inherited and hath had issue by her and she is dead in this case the Law of England permitteth and
and again Mutually and on the other side the said Farmours and Grantees for term of years life or lives their Executors Administratours and Assigns shall have like advantage against them for any Condition Covenant and Agreement contained in the said Indenture as they might have had against their said Lessors and Granters their Heirs Successors all benefits and advantage of recoveries in value by reason of any warranty of deed or in Law by voucher or otherwise only except Provided that this Act shall not extend to charge any Person for Breach of any Covenant or Condition comprised in any such writing but for such as shall be broken and not performed after the first day of September in the 32. Year of this King and not before CHAP. XXIII Livery of Seisin and Atturnement IN all Feoffments gifts in tayle Leases for term of anothers life of Lands or Tenements there can be no Alteration Transmutation of Possession by the Antient Laws of this Realme unless there be a certain Ceremony Adhibited and Solemnized in the presence and sight of neighbours or others which Ceremony is called Livery of Seisin And ye shall understand The manner Livery of Seisin that this Ceremony of Livery of Seisin is done when the Feoffour Donour Lessour or other Deputy come with the Neighbours Solemnly to the Lands or Tenements and they put the Feoffe Donee or Lessee in possession of the said Lands or Tenements by delivering to him a Clod of Earth or the ring of the Door or some other thing in the name of Seisin and for this self cause this Ceremony of Law is called Livery of Seisin that is to say a Tradition or giving of Seisin But this Ceremony is not required in Leases for term of years Diversity between Possession and Seisin or in Leases at will For as much as the Lessour in such Lease remaineth still seized and the Lessee only hath possession without any Livery of Seisin and therefore the terms of the Law be that such a man is possessed whereas in Feoffments gifts in tayle and Leases for life he is called seized Wherefore if a Feoffment or Lease for life be made of Lands or Tenements and before that the Livery of a Seisin be made the Feoffour dieth the Heir of the Feoffour shall have Lands Per summum jus that is to say by the Rigour of the Law Notwithstanding that the Feoffee have paid to the Feoffour the price of the Land and although the Feoffee be in possession but otherwise it is of a Lease for term of Years A like Ceremonie is used Atturnment when Rent-charge Rent-service Rent in gross a Villain in gross common in gross common for Beasts certain Estovers and such other things as pass by way of grant be granted for it is no full and perfect grant till it be consignat and sealed as it were with the Ceremonie of Atturnment this Atturnment is nothing else but when the Tenant of Land of which a Rent granted is granted or out of which a Rent is granted doth make some evident signification and token that he accepteth the person to whom the grant is made to be in the same respect unto him that the granter was as for an example if the Tenant of the Land after he have heard of the grant cometh to the grantee that is to wit to the person to whom the grant was made and say in this wise or in like effect I agree unto the Grant made unto you by such a man How attu nment shall be made or I am well apaid and contented of the Grant that such a man hath made unto you but the most usuall frequent form of Atturnment is to say Sr I atturn unto you by force of the said Grant or I become your Tenant or to deliver unto the grantee a Peny or a Halfpeny by way of atturnement If a man maketh first one grant to one person and after another to another person that grant shall stand to which the Tenant will atturn although it be to the later grant And ye shall note That if a man be seized of a Mannour which is parcell in demean and parcell in service and doth alien the same Mannour to another unless the Tenant of the Mannor do atturn the Service shall not pass only Tenants at will excepted for it needeth not to cause them to atturn Note furthermore Diversity there is a great difference between giving a Peny in name of Seisin and giving by way of Atturnement for when it is given by the Tenant to the Grantee in the name of Seisin it doth not only imply an Atturnment Assize but also it giveth him such a seizin that if the Rent afterward were behind and not paid he may now upon the seisin of the Peny after a lawfull distress taken and after Rescous made Writ of Rescous bring an Assize of Novel Disseizin whereas if it were given only by way of Atturnement he could not bring the Assize but his Writ of Rescous only if Rescous were made Also ye shall understand That where Lands be deviseable by Testament by the custome of any ancient Borough or City if the reversion of any Lands be by Testament bequeathed to a man in fee and the Testator which we call the devisor dieth the devisee that is to wit he to whom the devise was made hath forthwith the reversion in him without further ceremonie of Atturnement Atturnment likewise it is if a man by testament doth bequeath a Rent-charge that he is seized of or of a Rent-service there needeth none atturnement at all If two Joyntenants of Land and the Lord granteth the services to another if one of the Joyntenants atturneth it is enough Finally If a Lease be made for terme of life the remainder to another in tayl the remainder over to the right Heir of the Tenant for terme of life in this case if the Tenant for terme of life will grant his remainder in fee to another by his deed this remainder passeth forthwith without any atturnement For if any Atturnement were requisite it should be made of the Tenant for terme of life Not Requisite which in this case is the granter himself And in vain it is that the granter should be inforced to atturn sith an atturnment is adhibited and had to none other purpose then to have the consent and agreement of the particular Tenant to the intent that it may appear that he hath notice and knowledg of this grantee but here where the particular Tenant himself is the granter an atturnement were superfluous and more then needed Note furthermore That where there is Lord and Tenant and the Tenant leaseth his Tenements to a woman for life the remainder over in fee the woman taketh a Husband and after the Lord granteth the services c. to the Husband in this case during the coverture the services be put in suspence Suspence but if the Wife die leaving the Husband
the Feoffer and the Feoffee otherwise it is of Feoffments in Fee simple made before the Statute of Westminster the third Cap. 1. called Quiae emptores terrarum For before the making of that Statute if a man had made a Feoffment in Fee-simple reserving to him a certain Rent yet though it had been without Deed here had been begun and Created a new Tenure between the Feoffor and the Feoffee and the Feoffee should have holden of the Feoffor who by virtue of the same might of Common right have distrained for such Rent but at this day by force of the said Act there can be no such holding or Tenure Created or begun and consequently no Rent-Service can be at this day reserved upon any gift in Fee-simple except it be in the Kings case who being chief Lord of all ever might and may give Lands to be holden of him thus ye see that at this day no Subject can reserve any Rent Service unto him unless the reversion of the Lands or Tenements that he shall grant be still in him as where he granteth them in Fee-tayle or maketh but a Lease for term of life or for certain years or else at Will For in all these cases the reversion of the Fee-simple remaineth still in him and therefore if there be any Rent reserved it is to be called a Rent-Service and is of Common right distrainable though there be no Clause of distress in the Deeed of Feoffment or Lease But here ye will ask me when in the case before remembred a man at this day giveth clean away the Land or Tenement from himself in fee-simple so that there is no manner of Reversion of the same remaining in him at all and yet nevertheless reserveth unto him by his deed a certain Rent what manner of Rent shall this be called I answer if there be in the Deed indented any clause of distress Charge that is that if the Rent be behind unpaid it shall be Lawfull for the Feoffour to enter and to distrain it is called a Rent-charge for as much as the Land is charged therewith but how of Common Right no but only by virtue and force of the wriing but on the other side if there be no such Clause of distress put in the Indenture then the Rent so reserved shall be called a Rent secke Likewise if a man that is seized of certain Land will grant either by Indenture or by Deed-poll that is to say single and not indented a Yearly Rent out of the same Lands to another whether it be in the Fee-simple Fee-tayle for term of Life for Years or at Will with Clause of distress then this Rent is called a Rent-Charge and he to whom such Rent is granted may for default of Payment thereof enter and distraine But contrary if the grant be made without any such Clause of distress it is called a Rent-seck that is to say a drie Rent because he cannot come to it in Case it be deemed by way of distress Insomuch that if he were never seized of it he is by Course of the Common Law without remedy otherwise it is of a Rent Charge for here he to whom the grant is made when the Rent is behind may chuse whether he will sue a Writ of Annuity against the granter or distrain for the Rent behind and retain the distress till the time he be paid accordingly but he cannot have both remedies together but must take him to the one for if he once recover by a Writ of Annuity Annuity then is the Land discharged and if he Sue not his Writ of Annuity but distraine for the Arrerages and the Tenant Sueth a Replevin whereupon the other anoweth the taking of the distress in Court of Record then is the Land charged and the Person of the Granter dischared of the Action of Annuity Estopple Ye shall understand That if a man will that another shall have a Rent-charge coming out of his Land and yet will not that his Person shall be by any means charged by Writ of Annuity he may then have such Clause in the end of his deed Proviso Proviso quod praeseus Scriptum nec quicquam in eo contentum ullo pacto se extendat ad onerandum Personam meam per breve seu Actionem de Annuitate sed tantum modo valeat ad onerandum Terras Fundas Tenementa mea de annuo redditu Praedicto If this or such like Clause be added then the Land is charged and the Person of the Granter is discharged Also if a man will make a Deed of Grant in this wise that if John at Stile be not Yearly paid at the Feast of Christmas for term of his life Twenty Shillings Sterling that then it shall be Lawfull for the said John at Stile to distrain for it in the manner of Dale this is a good Rent charge because the mannour is Charged with the Rent by way of distress and yet nevertheless in this Case the Person of him that made such Deed is discharged of any Action of Annuity For as much as he granted not by his Deed any Annuity to the said John at Stile but only granted that he might distrain for such Yearly Rent Furthermore ye shall note That if a man hath a Rent-charge to him and to his Heirs coming out of certain Lands and doth Purchase any parcell of these Lands to him and to his Heirs in this Case the whole Rent-charge is quenched and gone and the Annuity also Extinguishment the Cause is this that a Rent-charge cannot be in such Case apportioned Otherwise it is of a Rent-Service as for example If one which hath a Rent-Service of 20d by Year doth Purchase parcell of the Land out of which this Yarely Rent of 20d is coming this shall not extinguish or drown the whole Rent but for the parcell only For Rent Service in such case may very well be apportioned and rated according to the value of the Land Yet there be some sort of Rents-Services Rent service cannot be apportioned which in no wise can be apportioned As where a Tenant holdeth his Land of his Lord by the service to render to his Lord Yearly at such a Feast a Horse lading of Gold a red Rose a Gilliver or such like If in this case the Lord doth Purchase parcell of the Land thus of him holden this Service is gone because such Service cannot be Severed and apportioned Also Escuage is a Service that may be very well apportioned according to the difference and rate of the Land But where any Land is holden by Homage and Fealty if the Lord purchase parcell of the Land yet he shall have his Homage and Fealty still of his Tenant Ye shall mark also That if a man maketh a Lease of Land to another for term of life reserving to him certain Rent if in this case he granteth that Rent to John at Stile saving to himself the Reversion of the said Land