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A19476 The interpreter: or Booke containing the signification of vvords wherein is set foorth the true meaning of all, or the most part of such words and termes, as are mentioned in the lawe vvriters, or statutes of this victorious and renowned kingdome, requiring any exposition or interpretation. ... Collected by Iohn Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1607 (1607) STC 5900; ESTC S108959 487,900 584

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See Fitzh nat br fol. 198. L. Exigendarie of the common banke Exigendarius de banco comuni is otherwise called Exigenter anno 10. H. 6. cap. 4. and is an officer belonging to that court for the which see Exigenter Exigent Exigenda is a writ that lyeth where the defendant in an action personall cannot be found nor any thing within the county whereby to be attached or distrained and is directed to the Shyreeue to proclaime and call fiue county daies one after another charging him to appeare vnder the paine of outlawrie Termes of the law This writ lyeth also in an indictment of felony where the party indicted cannot be found Smith de Rep. Angl. li. 2. ca. 19. It seemeth to be called an Exigent because it exacteth the party that is requireth his expearance or forth-comming to answer the lawe for if he come not at the last daies proclamation he is saide to be quinquies exactus and then is outlawed Crompton Iurisd fol. 188. and this M. Manwood also setteth downe for the law of the forest parte i. of his forest lawes pag. 71. See the new booke of Entries verbo Exigent Exigenter Exigendarius anno 18. H. 6. ca. 9. is an officer of the court of common plees of whom there be foure in number They make all Exigents and proclamations in all actions where proces of outlawrie doth lie and writs of supersedeas as well as the protonotaries vpon such exigents as were made in their offices Ex mero motu are words formally vsed in any charter of the Prince whereby he signifieth that he doth that which is cōtained in the charter of his owne will and motion without petition or suggestion made by any other And the effect of these words are to barre al exceptions that might be taken vnto the instrument wherein they be contained by alledging that the Prince in passing that charter was abused by any false suggestion Kitchin fol. 151. Exoneratione sectae is a writ that lyeth for the kings ward to be disburdened of all suite c. to the Countie Hundred Leet or court Baron during the time of his wardship Fitz. nat br fol. 158. Exparte latis is a writ that lyeth for a Bayliffe or Receiuer that hauing Auditours assigned to heare his accompt cannot obtaine of them reasonable allowance but is cast into prison by them Regist fol. 137. Fitzh nat br fol. 129. The maner in this case is to take this writ out of the Chauncerie directed to the Shyreeue to take foure mainperuours to bring his bodie before the Barons of the Echequer at a day certaine to warn the Lord to appeare at that time Newe Tearmes of the lawe verb. Accompt Expectant is vsed in the common lawe with this word fee and thus vsed it is opposite to Fee-simple For example lands are giuen to a man and his wife in franke mariage to haue and to hold to them and their heires In this case they haue Fee simple But if it be giuen to them and the heires of their body c. they haue tayle and see expectant Kitchin fol. 153. Mathaeus de afflictis vseth the Adiectiue expectativa substantiuely in the same signification Descis 292. num 2. pag. 412. Explees See Espleese Expeditate expeditare is a word vsuall in the Forest signifiing to cut out the balles of the great dogges feet for the preseruation of the Kings game Euery one that keepeth any great dogges not expeditated forfeiteth to the king 3. shillings 4. pence Crompt iurisd fol. 152. M. Manwood vseth the same word parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 205. and pag. 212. he setteth downe the manner of expeditating dogges heretofore viz. Quòd tres ortelli abscindantur sine pellota de pede anteriori i. that the three clawes of the sorefoot on the right side shall be cut off by the skinne whereunto he also addeth out of the same ordinance called the Assise of the Forest that the same maner of expeditating of dogges shall be still vsed and kept and none other Quaere whence it groweth that M. Crompton and hee differ the one saying that the ball of the foote it cut out the other that the three foreclawes are pared off by the skinne Expensis militum levandis is a writ directed to the shyrecue for levying the allowance for Knights of the Parlament Register original fol. 191. b. Expensis militum non levandis ab hominibus de antiquo dominico nec à natiuis is a writ whereby to prohibite the Shyreeue from levying any allowance for the Knights of the Shire vpon those that hold in auncient demesn c. Regist orig fol. 261. b. Extend extendere commeth of the French estendre i. dilatare dispandere distendere and signifieth in our common lawe to valew the lands or tenements of one bound by statute c. that hath forfeited his bond to such an indifferent rate as by the yearely rent the obligour may in time be paide his debt The course and circumstances of this see in Fitzh nat br fol. 131. Brief d'execution sur statut Merchant Extendi facias is a writ ordinarily called a writ of extent whereby the valew of lands c. is commaunded to be made and leavied in divers cases which see in the table of the Register originall Extent extenta hath two significations sometime signifiing a writ or commission to the shyreeue for the valuing of lands or tenements Register iudiciall in the Table of the booke sometime the act of the Shyreeue or other Commissioner vpon this writ Brooke titulo Extent fol. 313. Extinguishment in our common law signifieth an effect of consolidation For example if a man haue due vnto him a yearely rent out of any lands and afterward purchase the same lands now both the property and rent are consolidated or vnited in one possessour and therefore the rent is said to be extinguished In like maner it is where a man hath a lease for yeares and afterwards buyeth the property this is a consolidation of the property and the fruites and is an extinguishment of the lease See the terms of lawe Extirpatione is a writ Iudiciall that lyeth against him who after a verdict found against him for land c. doth maliciously ouerthrow any house vpon it c. and it is two-fold one ante iudicium the other post iudicium Register iudiciall fol. 13. 56. 58. Extortion Extortio signifieth in our common law an vnlawfull or violent wringing of mony or mony worth from any man For example if any officer by terrifiing any the kings subiects in his office take more then his ordinary duties he committeth and is inditeable of extortion To this by M. Wests iudgment may be referred the exaction of vnlawfull vsurie winning by vnlawfull games and in one word all taking of more then is due by colour or pretence of right as excessiue tolle in milners excessiue prices of ale bread victuals wares c. West parte 2. Simbol titulo Indictments sect 65. M
called the foote of the fine The Chirographer also or his debuty doth proclaime all the fines in the court euery tearme according to the Statute and then repayring to the office of the custos breuium there indorseth the proclamations vpō the backside of the foot thereof and alwaie keepeth the writ of couenant as also the note of the fine Chivage See Chevage Chivalrie servitium militare commeth of the French chevalier i. eques and signifieth in our common lawe a tenure of land by knights seruice For the better vnderstanding whereof it is to be knowne that there is noe land but is holden mediatly or immediatly of the Crowne by some seruice or other and therfore are all our free-houlds that are to vs and our heires called feuda feese as proceeding frō the benefit of the King for some small yearely rent and the performance of such seruices as originally were laid vpon the land at the donation thereof For as the king gaue to the great Nobles his immediat tenents large possessions for euer to hold of him for this or that rent and seruice so they againe in time parcelled out to such as they liked their lands so receiued of the kings bountie for rents and seruices as they thought good And these seruices are all by Litleton diuided into two sorts chivalry and socage The one is martiall and military the other clownish and rusticall Chivalrie therefore is a tenure or seruice whereby the tenent is bound to performe some noble or military office vnto his Lord and is of two sorts either regall that is such as may hold onely of the king or such as may also hold of a common person as well as of the king That which may hold onely of the King is properly called servitium or sergeantia and is againe diuided into grand or petit i. great or small Great commonly called grand sergeantie is that where one holdeth lands of the King by seruice which hee ought to doe in his own person vnto him as to beare the kings baner or his speare or to leade his hoast or to be his Marshall or to blow a horne when he seeth his enemies inuade the land or to find a man at armes to fight within the foure Sease or else to do it himselfe or to beare the kings sword before him at his coronation or at that day to be his sewer caruer butler or chamberlaine Litleton tit Sergeantie Petit Sergeantie is where a man holdeth land of the king to yeeld him yearely some small thing toward his warres as a sword dagger bowe knife speare paire of gloues of maile a paire of spurs or such like Litleton titulo petit Sergeanty Chivalry that may hould of a common person as well as of the king is called scutagium escuage that is seruice of the shield And this is either vncertaine or certaine Escuage vncertaine is likewise two-fold first where the tenent by his tenure is bounde to follow his lord going in person to the kings wars against his enemies either him selfe or to send a sufficient man in his place there to be maintained at his cost so many daies as were agreed vpon betweene the lord and his first tenent at the graunting of the see And the daies of such seruice seeme to haue bene rated by the quantity of the land so houlden as if it extend to a whole knights fee then the tenent was bounde thus to follow his lord fourty dayes And a knights fee was so much land as in those dayes was accoumpted a sufficient liuing for a knight and that was 680 acres as some opinion is or 800 as others thinke or 15 pounds per annum Camdens Brittan pa. 110. in meo S. Thomas Smyth sayeth that census equestris is 40. poundes reuenew in free lands If the law extend but to halfe a knights fee then the tenent is bounde to follow his lord as aboue is said but twenty dayes If to a fourth part then ten daies Fitzh nat br fo 83. C. 84. C. E. The other kinde of this escuage vncertaine is called castelward where the tenent by his land is bound either by him selfe or by some other to defend a castell as often as it shall come to his course Escuage certaine is where the tenent is set at a certaine summe of money to be paide in lieu of such vncertaine seruice as that a man shall yerely pay for a Knights Fee 20. shillings Stow annal pag. 238. for halfe a Knights Fee tenne shillings or some like rate And this seruice because it is drawne to a certaine rent groweth to be of a mixt nature not meerely socage for that it smelleth not of the plough and yet so cage in effect being now neither personall seruice nor vncertaine Litleton titulo Secage This tenure called chiualry hath other conditions annexed vnto it as homage fealty wardship reliefe and mariage Bracton li. 2. ca. 35. which what they signifie looke in their places Chilualry is either generall or especiall Dier fo 161. nu 47. Generall seemeth to be where only it is said in the feofment that the tenent houldeth per seruitium militare without any specification of sergeanty escuage c. Speciall that which is declared particularly what kinde of knights seruice he houldeth by Chorall choralis seemeth to be any that by vertue of any of the orders of Clergie was in auncient time admitted to sit and serue God in the Quier which in Latine is tearmed Chorus Chose res is the French word as generall as thing is with vs. It is in the common lawe vsed with diuers epithites worthie the interpretation as chose locall is such a thing as is annexed to a place For example a mill is chose locall Kitchin fol. 18. Chose transitorie in the same place seemeth to bee that thing which is moueable and may be taken away or caried from place to place Chose in action is a thing incorporeall and onely a right as an annuitie an obligation of debt a couenant or vowcher by warrantie Broke titulo Chose in action And it seemeth that chose in action may be also called chose in suspence because it hath no reall existence or being neither can be properly sayde to bee in our possession Broke ibid. Churchwardens Ecclesiarum gardiani be Officers yearely chosen by the consent of the Minister and parishioners according to the custome of euery seuerall place to looke to the church church-yard and such things as belong to both and to obserue the behauiours of their parishioners for such faults as appertaine to the iurisdiction or censure of the court ecclesiasticall These be a kind of corporation inabled by lawe to sue for any thing belonging to their church or poore of their parish See Lamberd in his pamphlet of the duty of Church-wardens Churchesset is a word that I find in Fleta lib. 1. cap. 47 in fine whereof he thus writeth Certam mensuram bladi tritici significat quam quilibet olim sanctae Ecclesiae die
both in his commentaries and disputations And no man may graunt that our king or Crowne oweth fealty to any superior but God onely Yet it may be said that land c. with vs is termed fee in two respects one as it belongeth to vs and our heires for ever and so may the Crowne land be called Fee the other as it holdeth of another which is and must be farre from our Crowne Britton ca. 32. defineth fee to this effect Fee is a right consisting in the person of the true heire or of some other that by iust title hath purchased it Fleta saith that Feudum est quod quis tenet ex quacunque causa sibi haeredibus suis siue sit tenementum siue reditus qui non proveniunt ex camera alio modo dicitur feudum sicut eius quifeoffat quod quis tenet ab alio sicut dicitur talis tenet de tali tot feuda per servitium militare li. 5. ca. 5. § Feudum autem And all that write de feudis doe hold that Feudatarius hath not an entire propertie in his fee Nay it is held by right learned men that these fees were at the first invention or creation of them either all or some of them temporarie and not perpetuall and hereditarie Iacobutius de Franchis in praeludio fend ca. 2. nu 133. The diuisions of fee in diuers respects are many and those though little knowne to vs in England yet better worthie to known then we commonly thinke But for our present purpose it is sufficient to diuide Fee into two sorts Fee absolute otherwise called simple and Fee conditionall otherwise termed fee tayle Fee simple Feudum simplex is that whereof we are seised in these generall words to vs and our heires for ever Fee tayle Feudum talliatum is that whereof we are seized to vs and our heires with limitation that is the heires of our body c. And fee taile is either generall or speciall Generall is where land is giuen to a man and the heires of his body The reason whereof is giuen by Litleton ca. 2. li. 1. because a man seised of land by such a gift if he marie one or more wiues and haue no issue by them and at the length marie another by whome he hath issue this issue shall inherit the land Fee taile speciall is that where a man and his wife be seised of lands to them and the heires of their two bodies The reason is likewise giuen by Litleton in the same place because in this case the wife dying without issue and he marying another by whome he hath issue this issue cannot inherit the land being specially giuen to such heires c. this Fee taile hath the originall from the statute of Westm 2. cap. 1. which was made anno 13. Ed. 1. yet see Bracton li. 2. ca. 5. nu 3. hiis verbis Item quaedam absoluta larga quaedam stricta coarctata sicut certis haeredibus to whome adde Plowden casu Willion fo 235. a. b. seqq for before that statute all land giuen to a man and his heires either generall or speciall was accompted in the nature of fee and therefore held to be so firmely in him to whome it was giuen that any limitation notwithstanding he might alienate and fell it at his pleasure much like that which the Civilians call Nudum praeceptum binding rather by way of counsell and aduice then compulsion or restrainte And this thing seeming vnreasonable to the wisedome of our realme because so a man meaning well to this or that posterity of himselfe or his freinds might be forthwith deceiued of his intention the said statute was made for redresse of this inconvenience wereby it is ordained that if a man giue lands in fee limiting the heires to whome it shall descend with a reversion to himselfe or his heires for default c. that the forme and true meaning of his gift shal be obserued Wherefore in what conscience our lawyers haue invented meanes so easily to cut off this forme of gift it is to be considered He that hath fee then holdeth of another by some dutie or other which is called seruice and of this seruice and the diuersitie thereof See Chivalrie and Seruice He that will learne from what fountaine these feuds or fees did first spring let him read Antonius Contius his first chapter de methodo feudorum where he shal receiue great light for his guide into so obscure a dungeon See Liege This word Fee is sometime vsed with vs for the compas or circuit of a Lordship or maner Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. in these words In eadem villa de eodem feodo Thirdly it is vsed for a perpetuall right incorporeall as to haue the keeping of prisons in fee. old nat br fol. 41. Foster in fee eod fol 6. Rent granted in fee. eod fo 8 Shyreeue in fee. ann 28. Ed pri stat 3. ca. 8. Lastly fee signifieth a reward or ordinarie dutie that a man hath giuen him for the execution of his office or the performance of his industrie in his art or science as the lawyer or the phisitian is said to haue his fee when he hath the consideration of his paines taken the one with his client the other with his patient Fee expectant is by the feudists termed feudum expectativum or expectatiua substantiuely vsed Mathaeus de Afflictis decis 292. nu 2. pag. 417. See expectant Fee fcrm feudi firma is a compound of Fee whereof see Fee and ferm i. coloma villa praedium rusticum of Ferme commeth Fermier du prince i. manceps redemptor publicorum vectigalium Publicanus Feeferm signifieth in our common lawe land held of another in fee that is in perpetuitie to himselfe and his heires for so much yearely rent as it is reasonably worth more or lesse so it be the fourth part of the worth old tenurcs See exposition of the statute of Glocester anno 6. Ed. pri without homage fealtie or other seruices other then be especially comprised in the feofment but by Fitzh it seemeth that the third part of the value may be appointed for the rent or the finding of a chaplaine to sing diuine seruice c. nat br fol. 210. C. And the nature of it is this that if the rent be behind and vnpaid for the space of two yeares then the feoffour or his heires haue action to recouer the lands as their demesnes Britton ca. 66. nu 4. but obserue out of West symbol parte 1. lib. 2. sect 463. that the feofment may containe seruices and suite of court as well as rent and the author of the new terms of law saith that Feeferm oweth fealtie though not expressed in the feofment for that fealtie belongeth to all kind of tenures This is neere the nature of that which among the Civilians is called ager vectigalis qui in perpetuum licetur i. hac lege vt quam diu pro eo
vectigal pendatur tam diuneque ipsis qui conduxerunt neque iis qui in locum eorum successerunt auferri eum liceat l. 1. Π. siager vectigalis c. Feede Feida alias Faida signifieth in the German toung Guerram i. capitales inimicitias vel bellum Hotoman disputat de feudis ca. 2. B. Foemina dicitur faidam non facere gloss in § vlt. De lege Conradi lib. 2. de feudis by reason that women by the law are not subiect to warfare to battell or proclamatiō made for that cause Skene de verbo signif verbo Assidatio M. Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words writeth it Feeth and saith likewise that it signifieth capitales inimicitias and also that Feud vsed now in Scotland and the north parts of England is the same and that is a combination of kindred to reuenge the death of any of their blood against the killer and all his race Felonie Felonia seemeth to come of the french Felonnie ā impetuositas atrocitas immisericordia Felonia saith Hotomande verbis feudalibus non praescisè contumaciam vasalli in dominum huiusue in vasallum perfidiam significat verum quoduis capitale facinus And againe Felonia Gothis Longobardis dicitur quod Germanis hodie Schelmarey latinis Scelus S. Ed. Cooke saith thus Ideo dicta est felonia qua fieri debet felleo animo li. 4. fo 124. b. Hostiensis in sua summa titulo De feudis and others speak of this to this effect Felonia aliàs Fallonia est culpa vel iniuria propter quam vasallus amittit feudum Sedhec respicit dominum feudi Est alia fallonia quae non respicit dominum sc quando vasallus interficit fratrem vel filium suum vel filium fratris vel aliud crimen commisit quod parricidii appellatione continetur plures aliae falloniae tam respicientes dominum quàm alios propter quas feudum amittitur ibi not antur We account any offence felonie that is in degree next vnto petit treason and compriseth diuers particulars vnder it as murder theft killing of a mans selfe Sodometrie rape wilfull burning of houses and diuers such like which are to be gathered especially out of statutes whereby many offences are dayly made felonie that before were not Felonie is discerned from lightter offences by this that the punishment thereof is death How be it this is not perpetuall For petit larcenie which is the stealing of any thing vnder the valew of twelue pence is felony as appeareth by Broke titulo Coron num 2. his reason is because the indictment against such a one must runne with these words felonicè cepit and yet is this not punished by death though it be losse of goods Any other exception I know not but that a man may call that felony which is vnder petit treason and punished by death And of this there be two sorts one lighter that for the first time may be releeued by cleargie another that may not And these you must also learne to know by the statutes for Cleargie is allowed where it is not expressely taken away Of these maters reade Stawnfords first booke of his pl. cor from the end of the second Chapter to the 39. and the statutes whereby many offences be made felonie since he writ that learned booke See also Lamberds Iustice of peace lib. 2. cap. 7. in a Table drawne for the purpose As also lib. 4. cap. 4. pag. 404. and Crompton in his iustice of peace fol. 32. c. Felonie is also punished by losse of lands not entayled and goods or chatels as well real as personall and yet the statutes make difference in some cases touching lands as appeareth by the statute anno 37 H. 8. cap. 6. Felonie ordinarily worketh corruption of bloud though not where a statute ordaineth an offence to be felonie and yet withall saith that it shall not worke corruption of bloud As anno 39. Eliz. cap. 17. How many wayes felonie is comitted see Cromptons Iustice of peace pag. 32. c. Feyre See Fayre Felo de se is he that committeth felonie by murthering himselfe See Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 28. and Lamberds Eirenarcha lib. 2. cap. 7. pag. 243. Fencemoneth is a moneth wherein it is vnlawful to hunt in the Forest because in that moneth the female Deere do faune and this moneth beginneth 15. dayes before Midsomer and endeth 15. dayes after So that to this moneth there be 31. daies See Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 86. but more at large parte secunda cap. 13 per totum It is also called the defence moneth that is the forbidden moneth and the word defence is vsed in like sort West 2. cap. 47. anno 13. Ed. 1. in these words All waters where Salmons be taken shall be in defence for taking of Salmons from the Natiuitie c. Fennycricke or rather Fenegreeke Foenum Graecum is a medicinall plant or herbe so called because it groweth like hey and commeth out of Greece Of this you may reade more in Gerrards herball lib. 2. cap. 483. The seede therof is reckoned among drugs that are to be garbled an 1. Iacob cap. 19. Feofment feoffamentum by the opinion of Sir Thomas Smith de Repub. Anglor lib. 3. cap. 8. and M. West part prim symbol lib. 2. sect 280. is descended from the Gottish word feudum which you haue interpreted in fee and signifieth donationem feudi But as M. West also addeth it signifieth in our common lawe any gift or graunt of any honors castels maners mesuages lands or other corporall and immoueable things of like nature vnto another in see simple that is to him and his heires for euer by the deliuerie of seisin and possession of the thing giuen whether the gift be made by word or writing And when it is in writing it is called a deed of feofment and in euery feofment the giuer is called the Feaffour feoffator and he that receiueth by vertue thereof the Feoffee feoffatus and Litleton saith that the proper difference betweene a feoffour and a donour is that the feoffour giueth in fee-simple the donour in fee-taile lib. 1. cap. 6. Feodarie aliâs Feudarie aliâs feudatarie feudatarius is an officer authorized and made by the master of the Court of wards and liueries by leters patents vnder the seale of that office His function is to be present with the Escheater at the finding of any office and to giue euidence for the king as well cōcerning the valew as the tenure and also to suruey the land of the ward after the office found and to rate it He is also to assigne the kings widowes their dowers and to receiue all the rents of the wards lands with in his circuit and to answer them to the Receiuer of the court of wardes and liueries This officer is mentioned anno 32. H. 8. cap. 46. Ferdfare significat quietantiam eundi in exercitum Fleta libr. pri cap. 47. Ferdwit significat
to vs reliefe he shall haue inheritance by the old Reliefe that is to say the heire or heires of an Earle for one whole Earldome one hundred pound the heire or heires of a Baron for one whole Baronie one hundred merkes the heire or heires of a Knight for one whole Knights fee one hundred shillings at the most And he that hath lesse shall giue lesse according to the old custome of the fees Reade also Glanvile lib. 9. cap. 4. fol. 68. who saith that in his dayes the Reliefe of a Baronie was not certaine The heire in francke soccage when he commeth to his full age after the death of his auncester shall double the rent that he was wont to pay to the Lord and that shall be in place of reliefe old nat br fol. 94. Somewhat more hereof you may reade in anno 28. Ed. prim statut prim and Kitchin fol. 145. ca. Reliefe and Glanvile lib. 7. cap. 9. The Feudists also write of this at large Among others Vincentius de Franchis descis 121. saith that Relevii solutioest quaedam extrinseca praestatio à consuetudine introducta quae non inest feudo quodque soluitur proconsirmatione seu renouatione investiturae possessionis See Heriot This Leo the Emperour Novella 13. calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By the auncienter ciuile lawe it is termed introitus l. penult § Alumno Π de legatis Skene de verb. signif saith that Reliefe is a French word from the Latine relevare which is to releeue or take vp that which is falen For it is giuen by the tenent or vassall being of perfect age after the expiring of the wardeship to his Lord of whome he holds his land by Knights seruice that is by ward and reliefe and by payment thereof he relieues and as it were raiseth vp againe his lands after they were fallen downe into his superiours hands by reason of wardship c. Remainder remanentia signifieth in our common law a power or hope to inioy lands tenements or rents after the estate of another expired For example a man may let land to one for terme of his life and the Remainder to another for terme of his life Litleton cap. Atturnment fol 113. And this Remainder may be either for a certaine terme or in fee simple or fee taile as might be proued by many places in the law writers But in steed of the rest take Brooke titulo Done Remainder fol 245. Glanuile lib. 7. ca. pri in fine hath these words Not andum quod nec Episcopus nec Abbas quiaeorum Baroniae sunt de eleemozina Domini Regis antecessorum eius non possunt de Dominicis suis aliquam partem dare ad remanentiam sine assensu confirmatione Demini Regis Where it appeareth that Dare ad remanentiam is to giue away for euer To the same effect doth he vse it cap. 9. eiusdem libri in these words speaking of the Lords of mancrs during the minority of their wards Nihil tamen de haereditate de iure alienare possunt ad remanentiam In the like sort doth Bracton vse it lib. 2. cap. 23. in fine and also lib. 4. tracta 2. cap. 4. nu 4. See the new booke of Entries verbo Remainder Remembrancers of the Exchequer Rememoratores be three officers or clerks one called the Kings Remembrancer anno 35. El. cap. 5. The other the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer vpon whose charge it seemeth to lye that they put all Iustices of that court as the Lord Treasurer and the rest in remembrance of such things as are to be called on and delt in for the Princes behoofe The third is called the Remembrancer of the first fruites Of these you may read something anno 5. Rich. 2. stat pri cap. 14. 15. to the effect aboue specified These anno 37. Ed. 3. cap. 4. be called clerks of the Remembrance It seemeth that the name of this officer is borowed from the Ciuilians who haue their Memoriales qui sunt notarii Cancellariae in regno subiects officio Questoris Lucas de penna C. lib. 10. tit 12. nu 7. The kings Remembrancer entreth in his office all recognicances taken before the Barons for any the Kings debts for apparences or for obseruing of orders He taketh al bonds for any of the kings debts or for apparance or for obseruing of orders and maketh proces vpon them for the breach of them He writeth proces against the collectors of customes subsidies and fiueteenthes for their accompts All informations vpon penall statutes are entred in his office And all maters vp on English bils in the Exchequer chamber are remaining in his office He maketh the bils of compositions vpon penall lawes taketh the stalments of debts maketh a record of a certificate deliuered vnto him by the clerk of the Starre-chamber of the fines there set and sendeth them to the pipe He hath deliuered vnto his office all maner of indentures fines and other euidences whatsoeuer that concerne the assuring of any lands to the Crowne He yearely in crastino animarum readeth in open court the statute for the elections of Shyreeues and giueth those that chuse them their oath he readeth in open court the oath of all the officers of the court when they are admitted The treasurers remembrancer maketh proces against all Shyreeues escheators receiuers and bayliffs for their accoumpts He maketh proces of fieri facias and extent for any debts due to the King either in the pipe or with the auditors He maketh proces for all such reuenew as is due to the King by reason of his tenures He maketh a record whereby it appeareth whether Shyreeues and other accountants pay their profers dew at Easter and Michelmas He maketh another record whereby it appeareth whether Shyreeues and other accountants keepe their daies of prefixion All extreats of fines issues and amerciaments set in any courts of Westminster or at the assises or sessions are certified into his office and are by him deliuered to the clerk of extreats to write proces vpon them He hath also brought into his office all the accoumpts of customers controllers and other accoumptants to make thereof an entry of record The Remembrancer of the first fruites taketh all compositions for first fruites and tenthes and maketh proces against such as pay not the same Remittere commeth of the French remettre i. restituere reponere and signifieth in our common law a restitution of one that hath two titles to lands or tenements and is seised of them by his later title vnto his title that is more auncient in case where the later is defectiue Fitz. nat br fol. 149. F. Dyer fol. 68. nu 22. This in what case it may be graunted to any man see in Brooke titulo Remitter and the terms of law The Doctor and Student of this mater hath these words if land discend to him that hath right to that land before heshalbe remitted to his beter title if he will capite nono fol. 19. b.
See the new booke of Entries verbo Remitter Render commeth of the French Rendre i. reddere retribuere restituere and signifieth in our common lawe the selfe same thing For example this word is vsed in leuying of a fine For a fine is either single by which nothing is graunted or rendred backe againe by the Cognizee to the Cognizoumor double which conteineth a graunt or render backe againe of some rent common or other thing out of the land it selfe to the Cognizor c. West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 21. 30. F. Also there be certaine things in a maner that lie in prender that is which may be taken by the Lord or his officer when they chaunce without any offer made by the tenent as the ward of the body of the heire and of the land escheats c. and certaine that lie in Render that is must be deliuered or answered by the Tenent as rents reliefes heriots and other seruices Idem eodem sect 126. C. Also some service confisteth in seisāce some in Render Perkins Reseruations 696. Rent Reditus commeth of the French Rent i. vectigal pensitatio annua and signifieth with vs a summe of mony or other consideration issuing yearly out of land or tenements Plouden casu Browning fol. 132. b. fol. 138. a. 141. b. There be three sorts of rents obserued by our common Lawyers that is Rent seruice Rent charge and Rent seck Rent seruice is where a man houldeth his land of his Lord by fealty and certaine rent or by fealty seruice and certaine rent Litleton lib. 2. ca. 12. fol. 44. or that which a man making a lease to another for terme of yeares reserueth yearely to be paid him for the same Termes of lawe verbo Rents who giueth this reason thereof because it is in his libertie whether he will distraine or bring an action of debt A Rent charge is that which a man making ouer an estate of his land or tenements to another by deede indented either in in fee or fee tayle or lease for terme of life reserueth to himselfe by the said indenture a summe of money yearely to be paide vnto him with clause of distresse or to him and his heires See Litleton vbi supra A Rent seck otherwise a drie rent is that which a man making ouer an estate of his land or tenement by deede indented reserueth yeerely to be paid him without clause of distresse mentioned in the Indenture Litleton vbi supra and termes of the lawe verbo Rents see the newe expositour of lawe Termes See Plowden casu Browning fol. 132. b. See the differences betweene a rent and an annuitie Doctor and Student cap. 3. O●dialo primo Reparatione facienda is a writ which lieth in diuers cases whereof one is where three be tenents in common or ioynt tenents or pro Indiviso of a mille or house which is fallen into decay and the one being willing to repaire it the other two will not In this case the party willing shall haue this writ against the other two Fitzh nat br f. 127. where read at large the form many vses of this writ as also in the Regi orig fol. 153. b. Repeale commeth of the French Rappel i. Revocatio and signifieth in our common lawe euen the same as the Repeale of a statute Rastall titulo Repeale Brooke vseth Repellance in this signification titulo Repellance Repleader Replacitare is to plead againe that which was once pleaded before Rastall titulo Repleader See the newe booke of Entries verbo Repleder Replegiare See Replevie See Second deliuerance Replevie Pleuina is the bringing of the writ called Replegiarifacias by him that hath his catel or other goods distreined by another for any cause and putting in suerty to the Shyreue that upon the deliuery of the thing distreined he will persiew the action against him that distreined Termes of lawe See Replegiare It is vsed also for the bayling of a man pl. cor fol. 72. 73. 74. West pri cap. 11. cap. 15. anno 3. Ed. 1. Replegiare de averus is a writ brought by one whose catell be distreined or put in pound vpon any cause by another vpon surety giuen to the Shyreeue to persiew the action in lawe anno 7. H. 8. cap. 4. Fitzh nat br fol. 68. See the Register originall of diuers sorts of this writ called Replegiare in the table verbo eodem See also the Register Iudiciall fol. 58. 70. see also the newe boke of Entries verbo Replevin See Dyer fol. 173. nu 14. Replevish Replegiaro is to let one to mainprise vpon suretie anno 3. Ed. 1. cap. 11. Replication replicatio is an exception of the second degree made by the plantife vpon the first answer of the Defendant West parte 〈◊〉 symbol titulo Chauncerie sect 55. Westm 2. anno 13. Ed. pri cap. 36. This is borowed from the Ciuilians De replicationibus lib. 4. Institutio titulo 14. Report Reportus is in our common lawe a relation or repetition of a case debated or argued which is sometime made to the court vpon reference from the court to the Reporter somtime to the world voluntarily as Ploydens reports such like Reposition of the Forest was an act whereby certaine forest grounds being made purlieu vpon view were by a second view laide to the Forest againe Manwood parte pri pag. 178. Reprisels Reprisalia are all one in the common and Ciuill law Represalia est potestas pignorandi contra quemlibet de terya debitoris data creditori pro iniuriis damnis acceptis Vocabularius vtriusque iuris This among the auncient Romans was called Clarigatio of the verb Clarigo i. res clarè repeto It is called in the statute anno 27. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 17. lawe of Marque of the German word March i. terminus limes And the reason may be because one destitute of Iustice in another territory redresseth himselfe by the goods belonging to men of that territorie taken within his owne bounds Requests Supplicum libelli Curia Requisitionum is a Court of of the same nature with the Chauncerie redressing by equitie the wrongs that poore men doe suffer at their hand whose might they are not able to withstand either in lawe or otherwise It tooke beginning as some men thinke by commission from King Henry the 8. before which time the Masters of Requests had no warrant of ordinary Iurisdiction but travailed betweene the Prince and petioners by direction from the mouth of the King Guins preface to his readings But see Court of Requests Resceyt Receptio seemeth to be an admission of a third person to pleade his right in a cause formerly commenced betweene other two See the newe booke of Entries verbo Resceit v. Aide prier The Ciuilians call this admissionem tertii pro suo interesse Of this you haue one example in the Termes of lawe viz. if Tenent for terme of life or tenent for terme of yeares bring an action he
the recouerie of such a rent either out of his land or out of his cofers or to be receiued of his person at a day certaine euery yere not satisfying it according to the graunt Register orig fol. 158. Fitz. nat br fol. 152. The author of the new tearmes of law defineth annuitie to be a certaine summe of money graunted to another in fee simple fee taile for tearme of life or of yeares to receiue of the graunter or his heires so that no Free-hold be charged therewith whereof a man shall neuer haue assise or other action but a writ of annuitie Saintgerman in his booke intituled The Doctor and Student dialogo primo cap. 3. sheweth diuers differences betweene a rent and an annuitie whereof the first is that euery rent be it rent seruice rent charge or rent seck is going out of land but an annuity goeth not out of any land but chargeth onely the person that is to say the graunter or his heires that haue assets by descent or the house if it be granted by a house of religion to perceiue of their coffers The second difference is that for the recouerie of an annuity no action lyeth but onely the writ of annuitie against the graunter his heires or successors but of a rent the same actions lye as do of land as the case requireth The third difference is that an annuitie is neuer taken for assets because it is no Free-hold in lawe neither shall be put in execution vpon a statute Merchant statute Staple or elegit as a rent may Dyer fol. 345. num 2. speaketh also to this effect Annise seede semen Anisi is a medicinall seed not vnknowne so called of the hearbe anisum whereof it is the fruite Of this he that listeth may reade Gerad● herball li. 2. ca. 397. It is noted among the garbleable drugs and spices anno 1. Iaco. ca. 19. Anoisance aliàs Noisance aliàs Nusance nocumentum commeth of the French nuisance i incommodum noxa and hath a double signification being vsed as well for any hurt done either to a publike place as high way bridge or common river or to a private by laying any thing that may breede infection by incroaching or such like means as also for the writ that is brought vpon this transgression whereof see more in Nusance The word anoysance I finde anno 22. H. 8. ca. 5. Apostata capiendo is a writ that lyeth against one that hauing entred and professed some order of religon breaketh out againe and wandereth the country contrarily to the rules of his order For the Abbot or Prior of the house certifying this into the chawncerie vnder their common seale and praying this writ directed to the Shyreeue for the apprehensiō of such offend our and for the delivery of him again to his Abbot or Prior or their lawful atturney were wont to obtaine the same The forme whereof with other circumstances you shall finde in the Register orig fo 71. 267. and Fitzh nat br fo 233. C. Apparelment commeth of the French pareisement i. similiter perinde itidem and signifieth a resemblance as apparelment of warre anno 2. R. 2. stat 1. ca. 6. Appeale appellum commeth of the French appeller i. accire accersere nominare evocare clamore aliquem flagitare It signifieth in our common lawe as much as accusatio with the civilians For as in the civile lawe cognisance of criminal causes is taken either vpon inquisition denunciation or accusation so in ours vpon indictment or appeale indictment comprehending both inquisition and denunciation And accusation or apeale is a lawfull declaration of another mans crime which by Bracton must be felonie at the least in the common lawe before a competent Iudge by one that setteth his name to the declaration and vndertaketh to prooue it vpon the penaltie that may ensue of the contrary To declare the whole course of an appeale weare to much for this treatise Wherefore for that I must referre you to Bracton li. 3. tract 2. ca. 18. cum sequent Britton ca. 22. 23. 24. 25. and to S. Thomas Smith li. 3. de repub Anglo ca. 3. and lastly to Stawnf pl. cor li. 2. ca. 6. 7. c. vsque 17. An appeale is commenced two waies either by writte or by bill Stawnf vbi supra fo 46. And it may be gathered by him fo 148. that an appeale by writ is when a writ is purchased out of the chauncerie by one to another to this ende that he appeale a third of some felonie committed by him finding pledges that he shall doe it and deliuer this writ to the Shyreeue to be recorded Appeale by bill is when a man of himselfe giueth vp his accusation in writing to the Vicount or Coroner offering to vndergoe the burden of appealing another therein named This pointe of our lawe among others is drawne from the Normans as appeareth plainly by the grand custumarie ca. 68. where there is set downe a solemne discourse of both the effects of this appeale viz. the order of the cōbate of the tryall by enquest of which by the common lawe of England it is in the ioyce of the defendant whether to take See the newe booke of entrise verbo Appel the booke of Assises fo 78. Appel Appeale of mahem appellum mahemij is an accusing of one that hath maymed another But that being no felony the appeale thereof is but in a sort an action of trespas because there is noe thing recouered but dammages Bracton calleth this appellum de plagis mahemio and writeth of it a whole chapter li. 3. tract 2. ca. 24. See S. Ed. Cook 4. vol. fo 43. a. Appeale of wrong imprisonment appellum de pace imprisonamento is vsed by Bracton for an action of wrong imprisonment whereof he writeth a whole itactat li. 3. tractat 2. ca. 25. Appeale appellatio is vsed in our common law diuers times as it is taken in the civile lawe which is a remouing of a cause from an inferiour iudge to a superiour as appeale to Rome an 24. H. 8. ca. 12. an 1. Elix ca. 1. But it is more cōmonly vsed for the priuate accusation of a murderer by a party who had interest in the partie murdered or of any felon by one of his complices in the fact See Approver Appendant appendens is any thing belonging to another as accessorium principali with the Civilians or adiunctum subiecto with the logicians An hospitall may be appendant to a Maner Fitzh nat br fo 142. Common of fishing appendant to a free hold Westm 2. ca. 25. anno 13. Ed. 1. Appertinances pertinentiae commeth of the French appartenir i. pertinere It signifieth in our common lawe things both corporal belonging to another thing as to the more principal as hamlets to a chiefe Maner common of pasture turbarie piscarie and such like and incorporeal as liberties and services of tenents Brit. ca. 39. where I note by the way that he accounteth common
of pasture turbarie and piscary to be things corporal looke Common Apporcu●●ent Apportion 〈…〉 tū is a dividing of a rent into parts according as the land whence the whole rent issueth is divided among two or more See the new termes of lawe Apprentice Apprenticius commeth of the French aprenti i. tyro rudis discipulus or of the verb apprendre i. addiscere discere and signifieth with vs one that is bound by couenant in word or writing to serue another man of trade for certaine yeares vpon condition that the artificer or man of trade shall in the meane time endeavour to instruct him in his art or misterie S. Thomas Smith in his booke de rep Ang. li. 3. ca. 8. saith that they are a kinde of bond men differing onely in that they be seruants by couenant and for a time Of these you may reade divers statutes made by the wisedome of our realme which I thinke superfluous heere to mention Appropriation appropriatio proceedeth from the French approprior i. apeare acc 〈…〉 re and properly signifieth in the lawe of England a severing of a benefice ecclesiasticall which originally and in nature is iuris diuini in p 〈…〉 nullius to the proper and perpetuall vse of some Religious house or Deane c. and Chapter Bishop rick or Colledge And the reason of the name I take to be this because that whereas persons ordinarily be not accounted domini but vsufructuarij hauing no right of fee simple Littleton titulo Discontinuance these by reason of their perpetuitie are accounted owners of the fee simple and therefore are called proprietarij And before the time of Richard the second it was lawfull as it seemeeth simply at the least by mans lawe to appropriate the whole fruites of a benefice to an abbey or priory they finding one to serue the cure But that King made so euill a thing more tolerable by a lawe whereby he ordeined that in euery licence of appropriation made in chauncerie it should expresly be contained that the diocesan of the place should prouide a conuenient summe of money yearely to be paide out of the fruites toward the sustenance of the poore in that parish and that the Vicar should be well and sufficiently endowed anno 15. Rich. 2. ca. 6. Touching the first institution other things worth the learning about appropriations reade Plowden in Grendons case fo 496. b. seqq as also the new termes of lawe verbo Appropriation To an appropriation after the licence obteined of the King in chauncerle the consent of the Diocesan Patron and incumbent are necessarie if the Church be full but if the Church be voide the Diocesan and the Patron vpon the Kings licence may conclude it Plowden vbi supra To dissolue an appropriation it is enough to present a Clerke to the Bishop For that once done the benefice returneth to the former nature Fitzh nat br fo 35. 〈◊〉 Approvour approbator commeth of the French approuver i. approbare comprobare calculum albo adijcere It signifieth in our common law one that cōfessing felony of him self appealeth or accuseth another one or more to be guilty of the same he is called so because he must prooue that which he hath alleadged in his appeale Stawnf pl. cor fo 142. And that proofe is by battell or by the countrey at his election that appealed The forme of this accusation you may in part gather by M. Cromptons Iustice of peace fo 250. 251. that it is done before the coroner either assigned vnto the selon by the court to take and record what he saith or els called by the felon himselfe and required for the good of the Prince common wealth to record that which he saith c. The oath of the approuer when he beginneth the combate see also in Crompton in the very last page of his booke as also the proclamation by the Herald Of the antiquity of this law you may reade something in Horns myrror of Iustices l. 1. in fine cap. del office del coroner Of this also see Bracton more at large lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 21. 34. and Stawnf pl. cor lib. 2. cap. 52. cum seq Approuers of the king Appruatores regis be such as haue the setting of the kings demeasne● in smal Manors to the kings best aduantage anno 51. H. 3. stat 5. See Approue Approue appruare commeth of the French approuer i. approbare comprobare calculum albo adiicere it signifieth in the common lawe to augment or as it were to examine to the vttermost For example to approue land is to make the best benefite thereof by increasing the rent c. So is the Substantiue approuement vsed in Cromptons iurisd fol. 153. for the profits them selues So is it likewise in the statute of Merton cap. 4. anno 2. H. 3 land newly approued Old nat br fol. 79. So the Sheriffes called themselues the kings approuers anno 1. Ed. 3. cap. 8. which is as much in mine opinion as the gatherers or exactors of the kings profits And anno 9. H. 6. cap. 10. Bailiffes of Lords in their franchises be called their approuers But anno 2. Ed. 3. cap. 12. Approuers be certaine men especially sent into seuerall counties of the Realme to increase the Fermes of hundreds and wapentakes which formerly were set at a certaine rate to the Sheriffes who likewise dimised them to others the countie Court excepted Approuement appruamentum see Approue See the Register iudiciall fol. 8. br 9. a. See the new tearmes of lawe verbo Approuement Arbitratour arbiter may be taken to proceede from either the Latine arbitrator or the French arbitre it signifieth an extraordinarie iudge in one or moe causes betweene party and partie chosen by their mutuall consents West parte 2. Symb. titulo Compromise Sect. 21. who likewise diuideth arbitrement into generall that is including all actions quarels executions and demands and special which is of one or moe matters facts or things specified eodem sect 2. 3. 4. T 〈…〉 vilians make a difference betweene arbitrum arbitratorem l. 76. Π. pro socio For though they both ground their power vpon the compromise of the parties yet their libertie is diuers For arbiter is tyed to proceede and iudge according to lawe with equitie mingled arbitrator is permitted wholy to his owne discretion without solemnitie of processe or course of iudgement to heare or determine the controuersie committed vnto him so it be iuxta arbitrium boniviri Arches court Curia de arcubus is the chiefe and auncientest Cōsistorie that belongeth to the Archbishop of Canterburie for the debating of spiritual causes and is so called of the Church in London dedicated to the blessed Virgin commonly called Bow church where it is kept And the Church is called Bow church of the fashion of the Steeple or clocher thereof whose toppe is raised of stone pillars builded arch-wise like so many bent bowes The Iudge of this Court is
See Pontage Brigbote Bull bulla seemeth to come from the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. consilium as Polidorus Virgilius saith de inventio rerum lib. 8. cap. 2. It signifieth the leters by the Canonists called Apostolique strengthened with a leaden seale and containing in them the decrees or commandements of the Pope or bishop of Rome The word is vsed many times in our Statutes as anno 28. H. 8. cap. 16. anno 1. 2. Ph. Ma. ca. 8. Bullion cometh of the French billon that is the place where gold is tried It signifieth with vs gold or siluer in the masse or billet anno 9. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 2. and sometime the Kings exchange or place whether such gold in the lumpe is brought to be tryed or exchanged anno 27. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 14. anno 4. H. 4. cap. 10. See Skene de verbo signif verbo Bullion Burghote commeth of burg i. castellum and bote i. compensatio and signifieth a tribute or contribution toward the building or repairing of castels or walles of defence or toward the building of a borow or city Frō this diuers had exemption by the auncient charters of the Saxon kings Whereupon it is taken ordinarily for the exemption or libertie it selfe Rastals expos of words Fleta hath these words of it Significat quiet antiam reparationis murorum civitatis vel burgi li. 1. cap. 47. Burgh English See Borow English Burgage burgagium is a tenure proper to cities townes whereby men of cities or borowes hold their lands or tenements of the King or other Lord for a certaine yearely rent Old Tenures It is a kind of socage Swinborn parte 3. § 3. nu 6. Burglarie burglaria is compounded of two French words bourg i. pagus villa and larecin i. furtum or of bourg laron Coke lib. 4. fol. 39. b. It is according to the acceptance of our common lawe thus defined Burglarie is a felonious entring into another mans dwelling house wherein some person is or into a Church in the night time to the end to commit some felonie therein as to kill some man or to steale somewhat thence or to do some other felonious act there albeit he execute not the same If the intent or fact of this offender be to steale this is like robberie if to murder it differeth not much from murder and so of other felonies West parte 2. symbol titulo Indictments Sect. 56. Burglarie in the naturall signification of the word is nothing but the robbing of a house but as it is vox artis our common Lawyers restraine it to robbing a house by night or breaking in with an intent to robbe or to do some other felonie The like offence committed by day they call house-robbing by a peculiar name How many wayes burglarie may be committed see Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 28. b. fol. 29. 30. Butlerage of wines signifieth that imposition of sale wine brought into the land which the Kings butler by vertue of his office may take of euery shippe anno 1. H. 8. cap. 5. For the which see more in Botyler C CAblish cablicin among the writers of the Forest lawes signifieth brush wood Manwood parte pag. 84. Cromptons Iurisd fol. 165. Calamus is a cane reed or quill the diuers kinds wherof you haue set downe in Gerards Herball lib. 1. cap. 24. This is comprized among merchandize and drugs to be garbled in the statute anno 1. Iacobi cap. 19. Calendrin of Worsseds anno 5. H. 8. cap. 4. anno 35. eiusdem cap. 5. Cantred is as much in Wales as an hundred in England For Cantre in the British tongue signifieth centum This word is vsed anno 28. H. 8. cap. 3. Cape is a writ iudiciall touching plee of land or tenements so tearmed as most writs be of that word in it selfe which carieth the especiallest intention or end thereof And this writ is diuided in Cape magnum Cape parvum both which as is before said in Attachment take hold of things immoueable and seeme to differ betweene themselues in these points First because cape magnum or the grand Cape lyeth before appearance and Cape parvum afterward Secondly the Cape magnum summoneth the tenent to aunswer to the default and ouer to the demaundant Cape parvum summoneth the tenent to aunswer to the default onely and therefore is called Cape parvum or in French English petit Cape Old nat br fol. 161. 162. Yet Ingham saith that it is called petit Cape not because it is of smal force but that it consisteth of few words Cape magnum in the old nat br is thus defined This writ is a iudiciall and lyeth where a man hath brought a Praecipe quod reddat of a thing that toucheth plee of land and the tenent make default at the day to him giuen in the writ originall then this writ shall goe for the king to take the land into the kings hands and if he come not at the day giuen him by the grand Cape he hath lost his land c. A president and forme of this writ you may see in the Register iudiciall fol. 1. b. It seemeth after a fort to containe in it the effect unssionis in possessionem ex primo secundo decrete among the Civilians For as the first decree seiseth the thing and the second giueth it from him that the second time defaulteth in his appearance so this Cape both seiseth the land and also assigneth to the partie a farder day of appearance at which if he come not in the land is forfeited Yet is there difference betweene these two courses of the ciuill and cōmon lawe first for that missio in possessionem toucheth both moueable and immoueable goods whereas the cape is extended only to immoueable secondly that the partie being satisfied of his demaund the remanet is restored to him that defaulted but by the cape all is seised without restitution thirdly missio in possess is to the vse of the partie agent the cape is to the vse of the king Of this writ and the explication of the true force and effect thereof reade Bracton lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 1. num 4. 5. 6. See Cape ad valentiam Cape parvum in the Old na br fol. 162. is thus defined This writ lyeth in case where the tenent is summoned in plee of land and commeth at the summons and his appearance is of record and after he maketh default at the day that is giuen to him then shall goe this writ for the king c. Of this likewise you haue the form in the Register iudiciall fol. 2. a. Why it is called cape parvum see in cape magnum Of both these writs reade Fleta lib. 6. cap. 44. 〈◊〉 Magnum seqq Cape ad Valentiam is a species of cape magnum so called of the end whereunto it tendeth In the Old nat br fol. 161. 162. it is thus defined or described This writ lyeth where any
the partie himselfe detaineth it and refuseth to bring it in Regist orig fo 152. b. In like maner may be said of certificando de statuto mercatorio eodem fo 148. and de certificando in cancellarium de inquisitione de idemptitate nominis fo 195. and certificando quando recognitio c. and certificando quid actum est de breui super statutum mercatorium fo 151 certificando si loquela Warantiae fo 13. Cessor is he that ceseth or neglecteth so long to performe a dutie belonging vnto him as that by his cesse or cessing he incurreth the daunger of lawe and hath or may haue the writ cessavit brought against him Old nat br fo 136. And note that where it is saide in diuers places the tenent cesseth without any more words such phrase is so to be vnderstood as if it were said the tenent ceseth to doo that which he ought or is bound to doe by his land ortenement Cessavit is a writ that lyeth in diuers cases as appeareth by Fitzh nat br fo 208. vpon this generall grounde that he against whome it is brought hath for 2. yeares foreslowne to performe such seruice or to pay such rent as he is tied vnto by his tenure and hath not vpon his land or his tenement sufficient goods or catells to be distreined Consult more at large with Fitz. vpon this vbi supra with Fleta li. 5. ca. 34. § visa sunt and with the Termes of lawe See Cessauit de cantaria Register orig fo 238. Cessavit de feodi firma eodem fo 237. Cessavit per biennium eodem folio etiam eodem See the newe booke of entrise verbo Cessavit Cestui qui vie is in true French cestui a vie de qui i. he for whose life any land or renement is graunted Perkins graunts 97. Cestui qui vse ille cuius vsui vel ad cuius vsum is broken french and thus may be bettered Cestui al vse de qui It is an ordinarie speech among our common lawyers signifying him to whose vse any other man is infeoffed in any lands or tenements See the newe booke of entrise verbo vses and in Replevin fo 508. colum 3. verbo Trespas fo 606. fo 123. a. b. colum 3. n● 7. Chafe waxe is an officer in chauncery that fitteth the waxe for the fealing of the writs and such other instruments as are there made to be sent out This officer is borowed from the French For there calefactores cerae sunt qui regiis literis in Cancellaria ceram imprimunt Corasius Chase chacea commeth of the French chasser 1. sectari belluas apros cervos It signifieth two things in the commō lawe First as much as actus in the civil lawe that is a dryving of catell to or from any place as to chase a distresse to a fortlet Old nat br fo 45. Secondly it is vsed for a receite for deere and wilde beasts of a middle nature betweene a forest and a parke being commonly lesse then a forest and not endued with so many liberties as the courtes of attachment Swaine mote and Iustice seate and yet of a larger compas and stored with greater diuersity both of keepers and wilde beasts or game then a park And Crompton in his booke of Iurisdictions fo 148. saith that a forest cannot be in the hands of a subiect but it forthwith looseth the name and becommeth a chase and yet fo 197. he saith that a subiect may be lord and owner of a forest which though it seeme a contrariety yet be both his sayings in some sort true For the king may giue or alienate a forest to a subiect yet so as when it is once in the subiect it leeseth the true property of a Forest because that the courts called the Iustice seate the Swain mote and Attachment foorthwith doe vanish none being able to make a Lord chiefe Iustice in Eyre of the Forest but the king as M. Manwood well sheweth parte 2. of his Forest lawes cap. 3. 4. And yet it may be granted in so large a maner that there may be Attachement and Swainemote and a court equiualent to a Iustice seat as appeareth by him in the same chapter num 3. So that a chase differeth from a Forest in this because it may be in the hands of a subiect which a Forest in his proper true nature cannot and from a Parke in that that it is not inclosed and hath not onely a larger compasse and more store of game but of Keepers also and ouerseers See Forest Chalenge calumnia commeth of the French chalanger i. sibiasserere and is vsed in the commō lawe for an exception taken either against persons or things persons as in assise to the Iurors or any one or more of them or in a case of felonie by the prisoner at the barre Smith de rep Anglor lib. 2. cap. 12. Britton ca. 52. Bracton lib. 2. tract 2. cap. 22. Against things as a declaration old nat br fol. 76. Chalenge made to the Iurours is either made to the array or to the polles Chalenge to the array is when the whole number is excepted against as partially empaneled chalenge to or by the polle when some one or more are excepted against as not indifferent Termes of the law Chalenge to the Iurours is also divided into Chalenge principall and Chalenge per cause i. vppon cause or reason Chalenge principall otherwise by Stawnf pl. cor fol. 157. 158. called peremptorie is that which the lawe alloweth without cause alledged or farder examination Lamberd Eirenar lib. 4. cap. 14. as a prisoner at the barre arraigned vpon felonie may peremptorily chalenge to the number of 20. one after another of the Iurie empaneled vpon him alledging no cause but his owne dislike and they shall be still put off and new taken in their places But in case of high treason no Chalenge peremptorie is allowed an 33. H. 8. cap. 23. Fortescue saith that a prisoner in this case may chalenge 35. men c. 27. but that law was abridged by anno 25. H. 8. cap. 3. I cannot here omit to note some difference that in mine opinion I obserue betweene Chalenge principall and Chalenge peremptorie finding peremptorie to be vsed onely in maters criminall and barely without cause alledged more then the prisoners owne phantasie Stawnf pl. cor fol. 124. but principall in ciuill actions for the most part and with naming of some such cause of exception as being found true the lawe alloweth without farder scanning For example if either partie say that one of the Iurors is the sonne brother cousin or tenent to the other or espoused his daughter this is exception good and strong enough if it be true without farder examination of the parties credit And how farre this chalenge vpon kinred reacheth you haue a notable example in Plowden casu Vernon against Maners fol. 425. Also in the plee of the death of a man
also a long discourse in Fleta li. 3. ca. 14. who expoundeth euery substantiall part of a deede of gift particularly in order Charter land terra per chartam is such sa a man holdeth by charter that is by euidence in writing otherwise called free-hold anno 19. H. 7. ca. 13. and Kitchin fo 86. these in the Saxons time were wont to be called bockland Idem fo 89. and Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo Terra ex scripto which was held as he there saith with more commodious easier conditions then folkland was that is land held without writing And the reason he giueth because that was haereditataria libera atque immunis whereas fundus sine scripto censum pensitabat annuum atque officiorum quadam servitute est obligatus Priorēviriplerunque nobiles atque ingenui posteriorem rustici ferè pagani possidebant Illam nos vulgò freehold per chartam hanc ad voluntatem domini appellamus Thus farre M. Lamberd Charter partie charta partita is nothing but that which we call a paire of indentures conteining the covenants and agreements made betweene merchants or sea faring men touching their marine affaires anno 32. H. 8. cap. 14. Chartis reddendis is a writ which lyeth against him that hath charters of feofment deliuered him to be kept and refuseth to deliuer them old nat br fo 66. Register orig fo 159. Chase See Chace Chatell See Catell Chawnce medley Infortunium commeth of 2. french words chance i. lapsus and mesler i. miscere It signifieth in our common lawe the casuall slaughter of a man not altogether without the fault of the slayer Stawnf pl. cor li. 1. ca. 8. calleth it homicide by misaduenture West calleth it homicide mixt parte 2. symbol titulo Indictments sect 50. and there defineth it thus Homicide mixt is when the killers ignorance or negligence is ioyned with the chaunce as if a man loppe trees by an high way side by which many vsually trauell and cast doune a bowe not giuing warning to take heede thereof by which bowe one passing by is slaine In which case he offendeth because he gaue noe warning that the party might haue taken heede to himselfe See Skene de verbo signifi verbo Melletum Chaungeour is an officer belonging to the Kings mint whose function seemeth especially to consist in exchanging coine for gold or siluer in the masse brought in by merchants or others anno 2. H. 6. ca. 12. Chawntery cantaria is a Church or chapell endewed with lands or other yearely revenewe for the mantenance of one or moe priests daily to sing masse for the soules of the donours and such others as they doe appointe anno 37. H. 8. ca. 4. anno 1. Fd. 6. ca. 14. Check rolle seemeth to be a rolle or booke that conteineth the names of such as are attendants and in pay to great personages as their houshold servants It is otherwise called the chequer rolle anno 24. H. 8. ca. 13. anno 3. H. 7. ca. 13. seemeeth to haue one etymologie with eschequer Which see Chevage cheuagium commeth of the French chef i. caput It signifieth with vs a summe of money paid by villeins to their Lords in acknowledgment of their slauerie Whereof Bracton li. 1. ca. 10. saith thus chevagium dicitur recognitio in signum subiectionis dominij de capite suo It seemeth also to be vsed for a summe of a mony yearely giuen by a man to another of might power for his avowement maintenance and protection as to their head or leader M. Lamberds li. 2. ca. 5. etrenarch writeth it chivage or rather chiefage Chevisance commeth of the French chevir i. venir a chef de de quelque chose to come to the head or end of a busines to perfect a mater This word is vsed for bargayning anno 37. H. 8. ca. 9. anno 13. Eliza. ca. 5. 8. an 10. R. 2. cap. 1. anno 3. H. 7. cap. 5. Chief See Capite Chiefe pledge plegius vel vas capitalis an 20. H. 6. ca. 8. For the vnderstanding of this word See Borowhead Childwit commeth of the Saxon word child and wit which some say in that tongue is a terminatiō of certain words without signification as dom in christendom or hood in childehood with vs. But for the signification of wit see Bloodwit Childwit signifieth a power to to take a fine of your bondwoman begotten with child without your consent Rastall exposit of words Chimin chiminus commeth from the French chemin i. aditus via and signifieth in our common lawe a way It is diuided into two sorts the Kings high way and a priuate way Kitchin fo 35. The Kings highe way chiminus regius is that by which the Kings subiects and all others vnder his protection haue free libertie to passe though the propertie of the soyle of each side where the way lieth may perhaps belong to some priuate man A way priuate is that by which one man or more haue libertie to passe either by prescription or by charter through another mans ground And this is diuided into chymin in grosse and chymin appendant Kitchin fo 177. Chymin in grosse is that way which a man holdeth principally and solely in it selfe chimin apendant is that which a man hath adioyned to some other thing as appertinent thereūto For example if a man hire a close or pasture and couenāt for ingresse and egresse to and from the said close through some other ground by the which otherwise he cannot passe Or chimin in grosse may be that which the Civilians call personall as when one covenanteth for a way through another mans ground for himselfe and his heires chimin appendant on the otherside may be that which they call reall as when a man purchaseth a way through another mansground for such as doe or shall dwell in this or that house for euer or be owners of such a maner Chiminage chiminagium signifieth a tolle for wayfarage thorough the forest Cromptons Iurisd fo 189. and Manwood farte 1. of his forest lawes pa. 86. See Chimin The Feudists call it pedagium See Chimin Chirographer of fynes chirographus finium concordiarum commeth of the greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a wrighting of a mans owne hand whereby he acknowledgeth a dept to another It signifieth in our common lawe him in the common bench office that ingrosseth fines in that court acknowledged into a perpetuall record after they be acknowledged and fully passed by those officers by whome they are formerly examined and that writeth and deliuereth the indentures of them vnto the party anno 2. H. 3. ca. 8. and. West Symbol parte 2. titulo fines sect 114. 129. Fitzh nat br fo 147. A. This officer also maketh two indentures one for the buier another for the seller and maketh one other indented peece containing also the effect of the fine which he deliuereth ouer to the custos breuium that is
from the French the other from the Saxons both conteining a circuit or portion of the realme into the which the whole land is diuided for the beter gouernment thereof and the more easie administration of iustice So that there is no part of the kingdome that lieth not within some countie and euery county is gouerned by a yerely officer whom we cal a Shyreeue which among other duties belonging to his office putteth in execution all the commandements iudgments of the kings courts that are to be executed within that compasse Fortescue cap. 24. Of these counties there be foure of especiall marke which therefore are tearmed countie Palatines as the county Palatine of Lancaster of Chester of Durham of Ely ann 5. Eliz. 1. c. 23. I read also of the county Palatine of Hexam an 33 H. 8. ca. 10. Vnde quaere And this county Palatine is a Iurisdiction of so high a nature that whereas all plees touching the life or mayhem of man called plees of the crowne be ordinarily held sped in the kings name cannot passe in the name of any other the chiefe gouerners of these by especiall charter from the king did heretofore send out all writs in their owne name and did all things touching iustice as absolutely as the Prince himself in other counties only acknowledging him their superiour and Soueraigne But by the statute anno 27. H. 8. c. 25. this power is much a bridged vnto the which I refer the reader as also to Crom. Iuris fo 137. for the whole course of this court Besides these counties of both sorts there be likewise counties corporate as appeareth by the statute anno 3. Ed. 4. 5. and these be certaine cities or auncient boroughs of the land vpon which the Princes of our nation haue thought good to bestow such extraordinary liberties Of these the famous city of London is one and the principall Yorke another an 32. H. 8. cap. 13. the city of Chester a third an 42. Eliz. cap. 15. Canterburie a fourth Lamb. Eiren. l. 1. cap. 9. And to these may be added many moe but I haue onely obserued out of the statutes other writers the county of the towne of Kingston vpon Hull anno 32. H. 8. cap. 13. the county of the towne of Havorford West anno 35. H. 8. cap. 26. and the county of Litchfield Cromptons Iustice of peace fo 59. a. County is in another significatiō vsed for the County court which the Shyreeue keepeth euery moneth within his charge either by himselfe or his deputie anno 2. Ed. 6 ca. 25. Cromptons Iuris fo 221. Bract. li. 3. c. 7. li. 3. tract 2. cap. 12. Of these counties or shires one with another there are reckoned in England 37. beside twelue in Walet 〈…〉 The word comitatus is also vsed for a iurisdiction or territorie among the Feudists Countie court curia comitatus by M. Lamberd is otherwise called conuentus in his explication of Saxon words and diuided into two sorts one retaining the generall name as the county court held euery moneth by the Shyreeue or his deputie the vnder-shyreeue whereof you may reade in Cromptons iurisd fol. 231. the other called the Turne held twice euery yeare which see more at large in his place and Cromptons Iurisd fol. 231. This countie court had in auncient times the cognition of these and other great maters as may appeare by Glanvile lib. 1. cap. 2 3. 4. by Bracton and Britton in diuers places and by Fleta li. 2. cap. 62. But that was abridged by the statute of Magna charta cap. 17. and much more by 1. Ed. 4. cap. vnico It had also and hath the determination of certaine trespasses and debts vnder forty shillings Britton cap 27. 28. what maner of proceeding was of old vsed in this court see Fleta vbi supra Coursitour See Cursetour Court curia commeth of the French court which signifieth the kings palace or mansion as curtis doth among the Lombards All these spring of the Latine curia which signifieth one of thirty parts into which Romulus diuided the whole number of the Romaines sometime also the Senate house as appeareth by Tully in his Offices nihil est quod dignum nobis aut in foro aut in curia agere possumus which in his oration pro Milone he calleth Templum sanctitatis amplitudinis mentis consilii publici caput vrbis c. Court with vs signifieth diuersly as the house where presently the king remaineth with his ordinarie retinue and also the place where iustice is iudicially ministred of which you finde 32. seueral sorts in M. Cromptons booke of Iurisdictions well described And of them most be courts of record some be not and therefore are accompted base courts in comparison of the rest Beside these also there are courts Christian Smith de repub Anglor lib. 3. cap. 9. which are so called because they handle maters especially appertaining to Christianitie and such as without good knowledge in diuinity cannot be well iudged of being held heretofore by Archb. and Bishops as from the Pope of Rome because he chalenged the superioritie in all causes spirituall but sithence his eiection they hold them by the kings authoritie virtue magistratus sui as the Admirall of England doth his court Whereupon it proceedeth that they send out their precepts in their owne names and not in the kings as the Iustices of the kings courts doe And therefore as the appeale from these courts did lie to Rome now by the statute an 25. H. 8. cap. 19. it lyeth to the king in his Chauncerie Court baron curia baronis is a court that euery lord of a maner which in auncient times were called barons hath within his owne precincts Barons in other nations haue great territories and iurisdiction from their Soueraignes as may be proued out of Cassanaeus de gloria mundi parte 5. consideratio 56. by Vincentius de Franchis descis 211. and many others But here in England what they be and haue bene heretofore see in Baron Of this court Baron you may reade your fill in Kitchin that writeth a large booke of it and of a court leete S. Edward Coke in his fourth booke of Reports amongst his copyhold cases fol. 26. b. saith that this court is two after a sort and therefore if a man hauing a maner in a towne and do graunt the inheritance or the copyholders thereunto belonging vnto another this grantee may keep a court for the custumarie tenents and accept surrenders to the vse of others and make both admittances and graunts the other court is of Freeholders which is properly called the court baron wherein the suyters that is the Freeholders be Iudges whereas of the other the Lord or his steward is Iudge Court christian curia christiana See Court Court of Pypowders See Pypowders Court of Requests curia requestarum is a court of equitie of the same nature with the Chancerie principally instituted for the helpe of such
set there seuerall seales See the rest where at the last he sheweth the cause of the name viz for that consisting of more partes eche parte is indented or cut one of them into the other that by the cut it may appeare they belonge to one busines or contract A deede poll or polled he describeth thus Sect. 46. Q. A polled deede is a deede testifying that onely the one of the parties to the bargaine hath put his seale thereunto after the maner there by him described which reade for your beter vnderstanding See the newe Tearmes of lawe verbo Fait where he sheweth that each deed consisteth of 3. points writing sealing and deliuerie Deere Hayse anno 19. H. 7. cap. 11. seemeth to be an Engine of cords to catch Deere De essendo quieium de relovio is a writ that lyeth for them which are by priuiledge freed from the payment of tolle which reade at large in Fitzh nat br fol. 226. Defalt defalta commeth from the French Defaut and is an offence in omitting that which we ought to doe West part 2. symbol titulo Indictment sect 2. Of this hath Bracton a whole tractats lib. 5. tractat 3. By whome it appeareth that a default is most notoriously taken for non appearance in court at a day assigned Of this you may reade also in Fleta lib. 6. cap. 14. Defeisance defeisantia commeth of the French Desfaire or Deffaire i. infectum reddere quod factumest and signifieth in our common lawe nothing but a condition annexed to an act as to an obligation a recognizance or statute which performed by the obligee or recognizee the act is disabled and made voide as if it neuer had bene done whereof you may see West at large part 1. symb li. 2. sect 156. Defendant defendens is he that is siewed in an action personall as tenent is he which is siewed in an action reall Tearmes of the lawe Defendemus is an ordinarie word in a feofment or donation and hath this force that it bindeth the donour and his heyres to defend the Donee if any man goe about to laye anie seruitude vpon the thing giuen other then is contained in the donation Bract. lib. 2. cap. 16. num 10. See also Warrantizabimus Acquietabimus Defender of the faith defensor fides is a peculiar title giuen to the King of England by the Pope as Catholicus to the king of Spaine and Christianissimus to the French king It was first giuen by Leo decimus to king Henry the 8. for writing against Martin Luther in the behalfe of the Church of Rome then accounted Domicilium fidei Caholicae Stowes annals pag. 863. Deforsour Deforciator commeth of the french For ceur i. expugnator It is vsed in our common law for one that ouercommeth and casteth out by force and differeth from disseisour first in this because a man may disseise another without force which act is called simple disseisin Britton ca. 53. next because a man may deforce another that neuer was in possession as for example if more haue right to lands as commō heires and one entring keepeth out the rest the law saith that he deforceth them though he doe not disseise them Old nat br fol 118. and Litleton in his chapter Discontinuance fol. 117. faith that he which is infeoffed by the tenent in taile and put in possession by keeping out the heire of him in reuersion being dead doth deforce him though he did not disseise him because he entred when the tenent in taile was liuing and the heire had noe present right And a deforsour differreth from an Intrudour because a man is made an Intrudour by a wrongfull entry only into land or tenement voide of a possessour Bracton li 4 ca pri and a deforsour is also by houlding out the right heire as is abouesaide Deliuerance See Repligiare Demaund Demanda vel Demandum commeth of the french Demande i. postulatio postulatus and signifieth a calling vpon a man for anything due It hath likewise a proper signification with the common lawyers opposite to plaint For the pursiute of all ciuill actions are either demaunds or plaints and the persyewer is called demaundant or plaintife Viz Demandaundant in actions reall and plaintife in personall And where the party persiewing is called demaundāt there the party persiewed is called tenent where plaintife there defendant See terms of law verbo Demaundant Demy haque See Haque and Haquebut Demaine Dominicum is a french word otherwise written Domaine and signifieth Patrimonium domini as Hotoman saith in verbis feudalibus verbo Dominicum where by diuers authorities he proueth those lands to be dominicum which a man holdeth originally of himselfe and those to be feodum which he holdeth by the benefite of a superiour Lord. And I find in the ciuill law Rem dominicam for that which is proper to the Emperour Cod. Ne rei dominicae vel templorum vindicatio temporis praescriptione submoueatur being the 38. title of the 7. booke And res dominici iuris i. reipub in the same place And by the word Domanium or Demanium are properly signified the kings lands in Fraunce appertaining to him in propertie Quia Domanium definitur illud quod nominatim consecratum est vnitum incorporatum Regiae coronae vt scripsit Chopinus de domanio Franciae tit 2. per legem Siquando 3. Cod. de bon vacan lib. 10. Mathaeus de Afflict is in constit Siciliae li. 1. tit De locatione Demanii 82. which may be called Bona incorporata in corpus sisci redacta Skene de verborum signif verb. Terrae Dominicales In like maner doe we vse it in England howbeit we here haue no land the Crowne land onely excepted which holdeth not of a superior For all dependeth either mediatly or immediately of the Crowne that is of some honour or other belonging to the Crowne and not graunted in fee to any inferior person Wherefore no common person hath any demaynes simply vnderstood For when a man in pleading would signifie his land to be his owne he saith that he is or was seised thereof in his demaine as of fee. Litleton li. 1. cap. 1. Whereby he signifieth that though his land be to him and his heyres for euer yet it is not true demaine but depending vpon a superior Lord and holding by seruice or rent in liewe of seruice or by both seruice and rent Yet I find these words vsed in the kings right anno 37. H. 8. cap. 16. and 39. Eliz. cap. 22. But the application of this speech to the king and crowne land is crept in by errour and ignorance of the word Fee or at least by vnderstanding it otherwise then of the Feudists it is taken But Britton cap. 78. sheweth that this word Demeyne is diuersly taken sometime more largely as of lands or tenements held for life c. and sometime more strictly as for such onely as are generally held in fee. This word somtime is vsed for
a distinction between those lands that the Lord of a maner hath in his owne hands or in the hands of his leasec dimised vpon a rent for tearme of yeares or life and such other lād appertaining to the said maner which belongeth to free or copy-houlders Howbeit the copyhold belonging to any maner is also in the opiniō of many good lawyers accounted Demeines Bracton in his fourth booke tract 3. ca. 9. nu 5. hath these words Item dominicum accipitur multipliciter Est autē dominicum quod quis habet admensam suam propriè sicut sunt Bordlands anglie Item dicitur dominicum villenagium quod traditur villanis quod quis tempestiuè intempestiue resumere possit pro voluntate sua reuocare Of this Fleta likewise thus writeth Dominicum est multiplex Est autem Dominicum propriè terra admensam assignata villenagium quod traditur villanis ad excolendum terra precariò dimissa quae tempestiuè pro voluntate domini poterit reuocari sicut est de terra commissa tenenda quam diu commissori placuerit poterit dici Dominicum de quo quis habet liberum tenementum alius vsumfructum etiam vbiquis habet liberum tenementum alius curam sicut de custode dicipoter it curatore vnde vnus dicitur a iure alius quoque ab homine Dominicum etiam dicitur ad differentiam eius quod tenetur in seruitio Dominicum est omne illud tenementum de quo antecessor obiit seisitus vt de feudo nec refert cum vsufructu vel sine de quo si eiect us esset si viueret recuperare posset per assissam nomine disseisina licet alius haberet vsum fructum sicut dici poterit de illis qui tenent in villenagio qui vtuntur fruuntur non nomine proprio sed nomine Domini sui Fleta l. 5. c 5. § Dominicū autē And the reasō why copyhold is accoūted Demeanes is because they that be tenents vnto it are iudged in law to haue nor other right but at the will of the lord Soe that it is reputed still after a sort to be in the Lords hands And yet in common speach that is called ordinarily Demeanes which is neither free nor copy It is farder to be noted that Demaine is sometime vsed in a more speciall signification and is opposite to Franck fee. For example those lands which were in the possession of King Edward the confessor are called auncient Demaine all others be called Franck fee. Kitchin fol 98. and the tenents which hould any of those lands be called tenents in auncient demaine the others tenents in franck fee. Kitchin vbi supra And also tenents at the common lawe West parte 2. Simbol titulo Fines Sect 25. The reason is because tenents in auncient Demaine cannot be syewed out of the Lords court Tearmes of the Lawe verbo Auncient Demaine And the tenents in aunciēt demaine though they hould all by the verge and haue none other euidēce but copy of court rolle yet they are saide to haue free hould Kitchin fol. 81. See Awncient demaine Demayne cart of an Abbot seemeth to bee that cart which the Abbot vseth vpon his owe Demaine Anno. 6. H. 3. cap. 21. Demurrer Demorare commeth of the French Demeurer i. manere in aliquo loco vel morari It signifieth in our common lawe a kinde of pawse vpon a pointe of difficultie in any action and is vsed substantiuely For in euery action the controversie consisteth either in the fact or in the lawe if in the fact that is tried by the Iurie if in lawe then is the case plaine to the Iudge or so hard and rare as it breedeth iust doubt I call that plaine to the Iudge wherein hee is assured of the lawe though perhaps the partie and his councell yeeld not vnto it And in such the Iudge with his Assessors proceedeth to Iudgement without farder worke but when it is doubtfull to him and his Associates then is there stay made and a time taken either for the court to thinke farder vpon it and to agree if they can or els for all the Iūstices to meete together in the Chequer chamber and vpon hearing of that which the sergeants shall say of both partes to advise and set downe what is lawe And whatsoeuer they conclude standeth firme without farder remedie Smith de Repub. Angliae lib. 2. cap. 13. West calleth it a Demurrer in chauncery likewise when there is question made whether a parties answer to a bille of complaint c. be defectiue or not and thereof reference made to any of the bench for the examination therof report to bee made to the court parte 2. symb tit Chauncery sect 29. Denariata terrae See Farding deale of land Denizen commeth of the French Donaison i. Donatio and signifieth in our common lawe an Alein that is infrāchised here in England by the Princes charter an dinabled almost in all respects to doe as the kings natiue subiects doe namely to purchas and to possesse lands to be capable of any office or dignitie Yet it is saide to be short of naturalis●●ion because a straunger naturalised may inherit lands by descent which a man made onely a denizen cannot And againe in the charter whereby a man is made denizen there is commonly conteined some one claufe or other that abridgeth him of that full benefite which naturall subiects doe inioy And when a man is thus infránchised he is saide to bee vnder the kings protection or esse ad fidem Regis Angliae before which time he can inioy nothing in England Bracton lib. 5. tractat 5. cap. 25. nu 3. Nay hee and his goods might bee seised to the kings vse Horn in his mirrour of Iustices li. 1. ca. de la Venue de franc plege Deodand Deodandum is a thing giuen or forseited as it were to God for the pacification of his wrath in a case of misaduenture whereby any Christian soule commeth to a violent ende without the fault of any reasonable creature For example if a horse should strike his keeper and so kille him if a man in dryuing a cart and seeking to redresse any thing about it should so fall as the cart wheele running ouer him should presse him to death if one should be felling of a tree and giuing warning to one cōming by whē the tree were neere falling to looke to themselues and any of them should bee slaine neuerthelesse by the fall of the tree In the first of these cases the horse in the second the cart wheele carte and horses and in the third the tree is to be giuen to God that is to be sold and distributed to the poore for an expiation of this dreadfull euent though effected by vnreasonable yea sensles dead creatures Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. ca. 2. whereof also read Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. cap. 5. and Britton cap. 7. and West parte 2.
symbolaeog titulo Indictments sect 49. And though this be giuen to God yet is it forfeited to the king by lawe as susteining Gods person and an executioner in this case to see the price of these distributed to the poore for the appeasing of God stirred vp euen against the earth and place by the shedding of innocent blood thereupon Fleta saith that this is sould and the price distributed to the poore for the soule of the king his auncesters and of all faithfull people departed this life lib. 1. cap. 25. verbo De submersis And it seemeth that this law hath an imitation of that in Exodus cap. 21. Si cornu petierit bos virum vel mulierem ita vt moriatur lapidabitur bos neque comedetur caro eius at Dominus eius erit innocens De Deonerando pro rata portionis is a writ that lieth where one is distrained for a rent that ought to be paid by others proportionally with him For exāple a man holdeth ten Oxegangs of land by fealty and ten shillings rent of the king and alienateth one Oxegang thereof to one another to another in fee. Afterward the Shyreeue or other Officer commeth and distraineth onely one of them for the Rent he that is distrained may haue this writ for his helpe Fitzh nat br fo 234. Departer is a word properly vsed of him that first pleading one thing in barre of an action and being replied thereunto doth in his reioynder shew another mater contrary to his first plea. Plowden in Reniger and Fogassa fo 7. 8. And of this see diuers examples in Brooke titulo Departer de son plee c. Departers of gold and siluer See Finours De quibus sur disseisin is a writ of entry See Fitzh nat br fol. 191. C. Dereyne Disrationare vel Dirationare may seeme to come of the French Disarroyer i. confundere turbare to confound or turne out of order or desranger 1. to set out of order or lastly of the Norman word desrene for with the Normans desrene is nothing else but a proofe of the deniall of a mans owne fact For Rubigineus in his grand custumarie cap. 122. 123. maketh mention of lex probabilis and lêx deraisnia legem probabilem or probationem he defineth to bee a proofe of a mans owne fact which he saith he hath done his aduersarie denieth His example is this A. sieweth R. for a hogge saying thou shouldest deliuer mee a hogge for 2. shillings sixe pence which mony F. paid thee wherefore I demande my hogge R. answereth It is true that thou saiest and I deliuered thee thy hog which I am ready to prooue Deraisniā he defineth to be a proofe of a thing that one denieth to be done by himselfe which his aduersarie saith was done defeating or confounding his aduersaries assertion as you would say and shewing it to be without and against reasō or likelyhood which is avouched In our commō lawe it is vsed diuersly first generally for to prooue as Dirationabit ius suum haeres propinquior Glanuile li. 2. cap. 6. and Habeo probos homines qui hoc viderunt audierunt parati sunt hoc dirationare Idem lib. 4. cap. 6. and Dirationauit terram illam in curia mea Idem lib. 2. cap. 20. 1. hee prooued that land to bee his owne c. and peroinentiam eam dirationauit in vita sua vel alio modo iuste perquisivit Idem lib. 6. cap. 12. and Bracton vseth it after the same sort in these words Habeo sufficientem disratiocinationem probationem lib. 4. tracta 6 cap. 16. and so he vseth disrationare lib. 4. cap. 22. and so in Westm 2. anno 13. Ed. pri ca. 32. an to dereine the warrantie old nat br f. 146. to dereine the warrāty paramoūt an 31. H. 8. c. primo And dereigner le Warranty in Plowd casu Basset in fine 2. partis fo 6. 7. 8. a. hath the same signification So it is vsed Westm 2. cap. 5. anno 13. Ed. 1. in these words And when the person of any Church is disturbed to demaund tithes in the next parish by a writ of Indicauit the patron of the Parson so disturbed to demaund tithes shall haue a writ to demaund the Advowsen of the tithes being in Demaund and when it is deraigned then shall the plee passe in the court christian as farre forth as it is deraigned in the kings court Bracton also li. 3. tracta 2. cap. 3. nu 1. speaking of him that appealeth another for any treason orfelonie hath these words Proponat accusans appellum suum in hunc modum sc debet dicere se interfuisse vidisse certo loco certo die certa hora scivisse ipsum accusatum praelocutum fuisse mortem regis vel seditionem suam vel exercitus sui vel consensisse vel auxilium consilium impendisse vel ad hoc authoritatem praestitisse hoc ego iuxta considerationem curiae disrationare paratus sum He vseth it likewise as the Normans vse Deraisniam for him that offereth to iustifie his deniall as lib. 3. tracta 2. cap. 28. nu 1. in these words Rex consilio episcorum bonorum misit propter comitem vt statuto die veniret ad curiam ad disrationandum vel defendendum se si posset Lastly in some places I find the substantiue deremement vsed in the very literall signification of the french Disrayer or desranger that is as a man wold say turning out of course displacing or setting out of order as dereinement or departure out of religion anno 31. H. 8. cap. 6. and dereinment or discharge of their profession anno 33. H. 8. cap. 29. which is spoken of those religious men that forsooke their orders and professions as also anno 5. 6. Ed. 6. cap. 13. Soe doth Kitchin vse the verb fo 152. in these words the leassee entreth into religion and afterward is dereigned And Britton vseth these words Semounse desrenable for a summons that may be chalenged as defectiue or not lawfully made cap. 21. Of this you may reade something more in Skene de verb. signif verbo Disrationare where in one signification he confoundeth it with our waging and making of lawe De son tort demesne seeme to be certaine words of forme in an action of trespasse vsed by way of reply to the plee of the Desendant For example A. sieweth B. in action of trespasse B. answereth for himselfe ●hat he did that which A calleth a trespasse by the commaundement of C. his maister A saith againe that B. did it de son tort demesne sans ceo que C. luy commaunda modo forma that is B. did it of his owne wrong without that that C. commaunded him in such forme c. Detin et See Debito and Debet Detynew detinendo is a writ that lyeth against him who hauing goods or chatels deliuered him to keepe refuseth to deliuer them againe See of this Fitzh
nat br fol. 147. Register fol. 170. Dotis admensuratione See Admēsurement See the Register fol. 171. Dotkins a kinde of coine pl cor fol 37. It seemeth to come of the Dutch word Duythen that is the eight part of a Stufer or French Shilling which in lat ne is called Solidus Gallicus Doubles anno 14. H. 6. cap. 6. signifie as much as leters patents being as it seemeth a French word made of the Latine diploma Double plee duplex placitum is that wherein the defendant alledgeth for himselfe two seuerall maters in barre of the action whereof either is sufficient to effect his desire in debarring the plaintiffe And this is not to be admitted in the common lawe wherefore it is well to be obserued when a plee is double and when it is not For if a man alledge seuerall maters the one nothing depending of the other the plee is accounted double If they be mutually depending one of the other then is it accompted but single Kitchin fo 223. See Broke hoc titulo But why this doublenes for so Kitchin calleth it fol. 234. should bee debarred I see no reason vnder correction all things being spoken For a man may haue two good defences and happily in the issue he shall contrarily to his hope faile in prouing the one and yet be able to carie the cause by the other And therefore not onely the Civilians but Bracton also saith Pluribus exceptionibus uti nemo prohibetur lib. 5. tract 5. cap. 5. num 4. whom also reade libro 4. cap. 17. And Sir Thomas Smiths reason of this scantly satisfieth me alledging this to be the course of our proceeding because the triall is by twelue rude men whose heades are not to be troubled with ouer many things at once lib. 2. de Repub Anglor cap. 13. Double quarell duplex querela is a complaint made by any Clerke or other vnto the Archbishop of the Prouince against an inferiour ordinarie for delaying of iustice in some cause ecclefiasticall as to giue sentence or to institute a clerke presented or such like The effect whereof is that the said Archbishop taking knowledge of such delay directeth his leters vnder his authenticall seale to all and singular clerkes of his Prouince therby commaunding and authorizing them and euery of them to admonish the said Ordinarie within a certaine number of dayes namely 9. dayes to doe the iustice required or otherwise to cite him to appeare before him or his officiall at a day in the said leters prefixed and there to alledge the cause of his delay And lastly to intimate to the said Ordinarie that if he neither performe the thing enioyned nor appeare at the day assigned he himselfe will without farder delay proceed to perform the iustice required And this seemeth to be tearmed a double quarell because it is most commonly made against both the Iudge and him at whose petition iustice is delayed Dower dos commeth of the French douaire and signifieth in our common lawe two things first that which the wife bringeth to her husband in mariage otherwise called maritagiū mariage good next and more commonly that which she hath of her husband after the mariage determined if she out-liue him Glanvile lib. 7. cap. 1. Bracton lib. 2. cap. 38. Britton cap. 101. in princ And in Scotland dos signifieth iust as much Skene de verb. signif verbo Dos The former is in French called dot the other doüayre and by them latined doarium I likewise once thought it not vnreasonable to call the former a Dowrie the other a Dower but I find them confounded For exāple Smith de rep Anglo p. 105. calleth the later a dowrie and dower is sometime vsed for the former as in Britton vbi supra yet were it not inconuenient to distinguish them being so diuers The Civilians call the former dotem and the later donationem propter nuptias Of the former the common law bookes speake very litle This onely is to be noted that whereas by the ciuile lawe instruments are made before mariage which containe the quantitie of the wiues dowrie or substance brought to her husband that he hauing the vse of it during mariage may after certaine deductions restore it againe to his wiues heires or friends after the mariage dissolued the common lawe of England whatsoeuer chatels moueable or immoueable or readie money she bringeth doth make them foorthwith her husbands owne to be disposed of as he will leauing her at his courtesie to bestow any thing or nothing of her at his death The reason whereof is said to be the holding of the wife in obedience to her husband Onely if she be an inheretrice her husband holdeth the land but during her life except he haue issue by her but then he holdeth it by the courtesie of England during his owne life See Courtesie And againe if he haue any land in fee wherof he was possessed during the mariage she is to haue a third therof during her life though she bring nothing to him except she doe by fine release her right during the mariage So that here is no great mater to bee spoken of but touching dower in the later signification You must know therfore that vpon speech of mariage betweene two the parents of both sides are commonly more carefull in prouiding each for his childe then the parties themselues and that by their meanes there bee diuers bargaines made sometime for the conueiance of lands c. to them and their issue and this is said to be giuen in franke mariage sometime to her during her life and that before or at the mariage if before mariage then it is called a Ioynture For a Ioynture is a couenant whereby the husband or some for him is tyed ratione iuncturae in consideration of the mariage that the wife surviuing him shall haue during her life this or that tenement or lands or thus much rent yearely paylible out of such land c. with clause of distresse and this may be more or lesse as they doe accord Britton cap. 101. whome read also ca. 102. 103. 104. for conventio vincit legem Bracton lib. 5. tract 4. cap. 9. The diuersitie of these Ioyntures you may see in West parte prima symbol lib. 2. sect 128. 129. 130. 131. 132. 133. But if none of these former bargaines passe before mariage then must the wife stick to her Dower and that is sometime giuen at the Church doore or the Chappell doore if the mariage bee by licence but not the chamber doore and may bee what the husband will so it exceede not a third part of his lands G lanvile libro 6. cap. pri Or the halfe as some say Fitzh nat br fol. 150. N. P. And this Dower is either certainly set downe and named or not named but onely in generalitie as the law requireth if it be not named then is it by lawe the third part and called dos ligitima Bracton lib. 4. tracta 6. cap. 6. nu 6.
some time for the place or circuit within the which the king or other Lord hath escheates of his tenents Bracton li. 3. tract 2. cap. 2. pupilla oculi parte 5. ca. 22. Escheate thirdly is vsed for a writ which lieth where the tenent hauing estate of see simple in any lands or tenements holden of a superiour lord dieth seised without heire generall or especiall For in this case the Lord bringeth this writ against him that possesseth these lands after the death of his tenent and shall thereby recouer the same in liew of his seruices Fitzh nat br fol. 144. These that we call Escheats are in the kingdome of Naples called Excadentiae or bona excadentialia as Baro locat excadentias eo modo quo locatae fuerūt ab antiquo it a quod in nullo debit a servitia minuantur non remittit gallinam debitam Iacobutius de Franchis in praeludiis ad feudorum vsum tit 1. nu 29. nu 23. v. Maranta singularia verbo Excadentia And in the same signification as we say the fee is escheated the Feudists vse feudum aperitur li. 1. feud titulo 18. § 2. ti 15. ti 26. § 4. Escheatour Escaetor commeth of Escheate and signifieth an officer that obserueth the Escheates of the king in the countie whereof he is Escheatour and certifieth them into the Eschequer This officer is appointed by the L. treasurer and by leters patents from him and continueth in his office but one yeare neither can any be Escheatour aboue once in 3. yeares anno 1. H. 8. cap. 8. anno 3. eiusd ca. 2. See more of this officer and his authoritie in Cromptons Iustice of peace See an 29. Ed. 1. The forme of the Escheatours oath see in the Register original fol. 201. b. Fitzh calleth him an officer of record nat br fol. 100. C. because that which he certifieth by vertue of his office hath the credit of a record Officium escaetriae is the escheatourship Register orig fo 259. b. Escuage Scutagiū commeth of the French Escu i. clypeus a bucler or sneild In our common lawe it signifieth a kinde of knights seruice called seruice of the shield whereby the tenent holding is bound to follow his Lord into the Scottish or Welsh warres at his owne charge for the which see Chyvalrie But note that Escuage is either vncertaine or certaine Escuage vncertaine is properly Escuage and knights seruice being subiect to homage fealtie ward and mariage so called because it is vncertaine how often a man shal be called to followe his lord into those wars and againe what his charge wil be in each iourney Escuage certaine is that which yearely payeth a certaine rent in lieu of all seruices being no further bound then to pay his rent called a knights fee or halfe a knights fee or the fourth part of a knights fee according to his land this leeseth the nature of knights seruice though it hold the name of Escuage being in in effect Soccage Fitzh nat br fol. 84. C. Esnecy Aesnecia is a prerogatiue giuen to the eldest coparcener to choose first after the inheritance is diuided Fleta li. 5. ca. 10. § in diuisionem Esplees Expletia seeme to be the full profits that the ground or land yeldeth as the hay of the medowes the feede of the pasture the corne of the earable the rents seruices and such like issues Ingham It seemeth to proceede from the latine expleo The profits comprised vnder this word the Romans call properly accessiones Nam accessionum nomine intelligūtur ea generaliter omnia quae ex re de qua agitur orta sunt veluti fructus partus omnis causa rei quaecunque ex re procedunt l. 2. Π. De in diem adiectio li. 50. Π. Ad Trebel l. 61. § hiis etiam Π. de furt See the new Terms of law Esquier Armiger is in leters little altered from the french Escuier i. scutiger It signifieth with vs a gentleman or one that beareth armes as a testimony of his nobilitie or gentrie S. Thomas Smith is of opinion that at the first these were bearers of armes to Lords and Knights and by that had their name and dignity Indeede the french word is sometime translated Agaso that is a boy to attend or keepe a horse and in ould English writers it is vsed for a lackey or one that carieth the shield or speare of a knight Mast Camden in his Britannia pag 111. hath these words of them hauing spoken of Knights Hiis proximi fuere Armigers qui scutiseri hominesque ad arma dicti qui vel a clypeis gentilitiis qua in nobilitatis insignia gestant vel quia principibus matoribus illis nobilibus ab armis erant nomen traxerunt Olim enim ex hiis duo vnicuique militi seruiebant galeam clypeumque gestabant c. Hotoman in the sixth chapter of his disputatiōs vpon the feods saith that these which the French men call Escuiers were a militarie kinde of vassall haueing ius scuti which is as much to say he there interpreteth him selfe as that they bare a shield and in it the ensignes of their family in token of their gentility or dignity Essendi quietum de telonio is a writ that lieth for Citizens or burgesses of any city or towne that haue a charter or prescription to exempt them from tolle through the whole realme if it chaunce they be any where exacted the same Fitzh nat br fol. 226. Register fol. 258. Essoine Essonium commeth of the French Essoniè or exonniè i. causarius miles he that hath his presence forborne or excused vpon any iust cause as sicknesse or other incumbrance It signifieth in our common lawe an alledgement of an excuse for him that is summoned or sought for to appeare and answer to an action reall or to performe suite to a court baron vpon iust cause of absence It is as much as excusatio with the Ciuilians The causes that serue to Essoine any man summoned be diuers infinite yet drawne to fiue heads whereof the first is vltra mare the second de terra sancta the third de malo vemendi which is also called the common Essoine the fourth is de malo lecti the fifth de seruitio Regis For further knowledge of these I referre you to Glanvile in his whole first booke and Bracton li. 5. tractat 2. per totum and Brittan ca. 122. 123. 124. 125. and to Horns mirrour of Iustices li. 1. ca. des Essoinis who maketh mention of some more Essoines touching the seruice of the king celestiall then the rest doe and of some other points not vnworthie to be knowne Of these essoines you may reade farder in Fleta l. 6. c. 8. seqq that these came to vs frō the Normans is well shewed by the Grand Custumarie where you may find in a maner all said that our lawyers haue of this mater cap. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44.
45. Essoines and profers anno 32. H. 8. cap. 21. See Profer Essonio de malo lecti is a writ directed to the Shyreeue for the sending of 4. lawfull knights to view one that hath essoined himselfe de malo lecti Register orig fol. 8. b. Establishment of dower seemeth to be the assurance of dower made to the wife by the husband or his freinds before or at mariage And assignement is the setting it out by the heire afterward according to the Establishment Britton cap. 102. 103. Estandard or Standard commeth of the French Estandart or Estendart i. signum vexillum It signifieth an Ensigne in warre as well with vs as with them But it is also vsed for the principall or standing measure of the King to the scantling whereof all the measures through the land are or ought to be framed by the Clerk of the market Aulneger or other officer according to their functions For it was established by the statute of Magna charta anno 6. H. 3. ca. 9. that there should be but one scantlin of weights or measures thorough the whole realme which is sit hence confirmed by Anno 14. Ed. 3. ca. 12. and many other statutes as also that all should be fitted to the Standard sealed with the kings seale It is not called a Standard without great reason because it standeth constant and immoueable and hath all other measures comming toward it for their conformitie euen as souldiours in field haue their Standard or colours for their direction in their march or skirmish Of these Standards and measures reade Britton cap. 30. Estate commeth of the French Estat i. conditio and signifieth especially in our cōmon lawe that title or interest which a man hath in lands or tenements as estate simple otherwise called fee simple and estate conditionall or vpon condition which is as Litleton saith li. 3. ca. 5. either vpon condition indeede or vpon condition in lawe Estate vpon condition in deede is where a man by deede indented infeoffeth another in fee reseruing to him and to his heires yearelie a certaine rent paiable at one feast or at diuers vpon condition that if the rent be behind c. that it shall be lawfull to the feoffour and to his heires to enter in the lands or tenements c. Estate vpon condition in lawe is such as hath a consideration in the lawe annexed to it though it be not specified in writing For example if a man graunt to another by his deed the office of a Parkership for terme of his life this estate is vpon condition in the lawe or imploied by lawe viz. if the Parker so long shall wel and truly keepe the parke c. I reade also of an estate particular which is an estate for life or for yeares Parkins Surrenders 581. Estopel seemeth to come from the French estouper i. oppilare obturare stipare obstipare and signifieth in our common lawe an impediment or barre of an action growing from his owne fact that hath or otherwise might haue had his action for example A tenent maketh a feofment by collusion to one the Lord accepteth the seruices of the feoffee by this he debarreth himselfe of the wardship of his tenents heire Fitz. nat br fo 142. K. Diuers other examples might be shewed out of him and Brooke h. titule Sir Edward Cooke lib. 2. casu Goddard fol. 4. b. defineth an estopel to be a barre or hindrance vnto one to pleade the truth and restraineth it not to the impediment giuen to a man by his owne act onely but by anothers also li. 3. The case of Fines fol. 88. a. Estovers Estoverium commeth of the French estouver 1. fovere and signifieth in our common lawe nourishment or maintenance for example Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. cap. 18. num 2. vseth it for that sustenance which a man taken for felonie is to haue out of his lands or goods for himselfe and his family during his imprisonment and the statute anno 6. Ed. prim cap. 3. vseth it for an allowance in meate or cloath It is also vsed for certaine allowances of wood to be taken out of another mans woods So is it vsed West 2. cap. 25. anno 13. Edw. 1. M. West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 26. saith that the name of Estovers containeth housebote hay-bote and plow-bote as if he haue in his graunt these generall words De rationabili estoverio in boscis c. he may thereby clay me these three Estrepement or Estripament estrepementum commeth of the French word estropier i. mutilare obtruncare the which word the French men haue also borowed of the Italians or rather Spaniards with whome Estropear signifieth to set vpon the racke It signifieth in our common lawe spoile made by the tenent for terme of life vpon any lands or woods to the preiudice of him in the reversion as namely in the statute anno 6. Ed. 1. ca. 13. And it may seeme by the deriuation that Estrepament is properly the vnm easurable soaking or drawing of the heart of the land by ploughing or sowing it continually without manuring or other such vsage as is requisite in good husbandrie And yet Estropier signifying mutilare it may no lesse conueniently be applied to those that cut downe trees or loppe them farder then the lawe will beare This signifieth also a writte which lieth in two sorts the one is when a man hauing an action depending as a fordom or dum fuit infra aetatem or writ of right or any such other wherein the demandant is not to recouer dammages sieweth to inhibite the tenent for making waste during the suite The other sort is for the demaundant that is adiudged to recouer seisin of the land in question and before executiō siewed by the writ Habere facias seisinam for feare of waste to be made before he can get possession sieweth out this writ See more of this in Fitzh nat br fol. 60. 61. See the Register orig fol. 76. and the Regist iudicial fol. 33. Estreate extractum vel extracta commeth of the French Traict which among other things signifieth a figure or resemblance and is vsed in our common lawe for the copie or true note of an originall writing For example of amerciaments or penalties set downe in the rolles of a court to be leauied by the Bay liffe or other officer of euery man for his offence See Fitzh nat br fol. 75. H. I. K. 76. A. And so is it vsed Westm 2. cap. 8. anno 13. Edw. 1. Estrey extrahura in our common law signifieth any beast not wilde found within any Lordship and not owned by any man For in this case if it being cried according to lawe in the market townes adioyning shall not be claimed by the owner within a yeare and a day it is the Lords of the soyle See Britton cap. 17. See Estrayes in the Forest anno 27. H. 8. cap. 7. New booke of Entries verbo Trespas concernant estrey Evidence
hath in time wrought other vses of this concord which in the beginning was but one as namely to secure the title that any man hath in his possession against all men to cut off intayles and with more certaintie to passe the interest or the title of any land or tenement though not controuerted to whome we thinke good either for yeares or in fee. In so much that the passing of a fine in most cases now is it but mera fictio iuris alluding to the vse for the which it was invented and supposing a doubt or controuersie where in truth none is and so not onely to worke a present prescription against the parties to the concord or fine and their heires but within fiue yeares against all others not expresly excepted if it be leuied vpon good consideration and without Couin as women couert persons vnder 21. yeares or prisoners or such as be out of the realme at the time when it was acknowledged Touching this mater see the statutes anno 1. Rich. 3. cap. 7 anno 4. H. 7. cap. 24. anno 32. H. 8. cap. 36. anno 31. Elizab. ca. 2. This fine hath in it fiue essentiall parts the originall writ taken out against the conizour the kings licence giuing the parties libertie to accord for the which he hath a fine called the Kings siluer being accompted a part of the Crownes reuenew Thirdly the concord it selfe which thus beginneth Et est concordia talis c. Fourthly the note of the fine which is an abstract of the original concord and beginneth in this maner Sc. Inter R. querentem S. E. vxorem eius deforciantes c. Fifthly the foot of the fine which beginneth thus Hac est finalis concordia facta in Curia domini Regis apud Westm à die Paschae in quindecim dies anno c. So as the foote of the fine includeth all containing the day yeare and place and before what Iustice the concord was made Coke vo 6. casu Teye fol. 38. 39. This fine is either single or double A single fine is that by which nothing is graunted or rendred backe againe by the Cognizeese to the Cognizours or any of them A double fine containeth a graunt and render backe againe either of some rent common or other thing out of the land or of the land it selfe to all or some of the Cognizours for some estate limiting thereby many times Remainders to straungers which be not named in the writ of couenant West vbi supra sect 21. Againe a fine is of the effect deuided into a fine executed and a fine executory A fine executed is such a fine as of his owne force giueth a present possession at the least in law vnto the Cognizee so that he needeth no writ of Habere facias seisinam for the execution of the same but may enter of which sort is a fine sur cognizance de droit come ceo que il ad de son done that is vpon acknowledgement that the thing mentioned in the concord be ius ipsius cognizati vt illa quae idem habet de dono Cognitoris West sect 51. K. and the reason of this seemeth to be because this fine passeth by way of release of that thing which the cognizee hath already at the least by supposition by vertue of a former gift of the cognizour Cokes reports li. 3. the case of fines fo 89. b. which is in very deed the surest fine of all Fines executorie be such as of their owne force doe not execute the possession in the Cognizeese as fines sur cognizance de droit tantùm fines sur done graunt release confirmation or render For if such fines be not leuied or such render made vnto them that be in possession at the time of the fines leuied the cognizees must needs siew writs of Habere facias seisinam according to their seuerall cases for the obtaining of their possessions except at the leuying of such executory fines the parties vnto whom the estate is by them limited be in possession of the lands passed thereby for in this case such fines doe inure by way of extinguishment of right not altering the estate or possession of the Cognizee but perchaunce bettring it West vbi supra sect 20. Touching the forme of these fines it is to be considered vpon what writ or action the concord is to be made and that is most commonly vpon a writ of couenant and then first there must passe a paire of indentures betweene the Cognizour and Cognizee whereby the Cognizour couenanteth with the cognizee to passe a fine vnto him of such or such things by a day set down And these indentures as they are first in this proceeding so are they saide to lead the fine vpon this couenant the writ of couenant is brought by the Cognizee against the cognizour who therevpon yeeldeth to passe the fine before the Iudge and so the acknowledgement being recorded the cognizout and his heires are presently concluded and all straungers not excepted after fiue yeares once passed If the writ wherevpon the fine is grounded be not a writ of couenaunt but of warrantia chartae or a writ of right or a writ of mesn or a writ of custome and seruices for of all these fines may also be founded West vbi supra sect 23. then this forme is obserued the writ is serued vpon the party that is to acknowledge the fine and then he appearing doth accordingly See Dier fo 179. nu 46. This word fine sometime signifieth a summe of money paide for an Income to lands or tenements let by lease sometime an amends pecuniarie punishment or recompence vpon an offence committed against the king and his lawes or a Lord of a maner In which case a man is said facere finem de transgressione cum Rege c. Regist Iud. fol. 25. a. and of the diuersity of these fines with other mater worth the learning see Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 141. b. 143. 144. and Lamberds Eirenarcha libro 4. ca 16. pa. 555. But in all these diuersities of vses it hath but one signification and that is a finall conclusion or ende of differences betweene parties And in this last sence wherein it is vsed for the ending and remission of an offence Bracton hath it li. 2. ca. 15. nu 8. speaking of a common fine that the Countie payeth to the king for false iudgemēts or other trespasses which is to be assessed by the Iustices in Eyre before their departure by the oath of knights and other good men vpon such as ought to pay it with whome agreeth the statute anno 3. Ed. pri ca. 18. There is also a common fine in leetes See Kitchin fo 13. a. v. common fine See Fleta l. 1. ca. 48. Fines pro licentia concordandi anno 21. H. 8. c. 1. See Fine Fine force seemeth to come of the french adiectiue fin and the substantiue force i. vis The adiectiue fin signifieth sometime as much as
Frauk almoine libera Eleemozyna in french frank Ausmone signifieth in our common lawe a tenure or title of lands Britton cap. 66. nu 5. saith thus of it Franke almoyne is lands or tenements bestowed vpon God that is giuen to such people as bestow themselues in the seruice of God for pure and perpetuall almes whence the feoffours or giuers cannot demaund any terrestriall seruice so long as the lands c. remaine in the handes of the feoffees With this agreeth the grand custumary of Normandie cap. 32. Of this you may reade Bracton at large lib. 2. cap. 5. 10. See Fitzh nat br fol. 211. See the new booke of Entries verbo Franke Almoine But Britton maketh another kind of this land c. which is giuen in almes but not free almes because the tenents in this are tyed in certain seruices to the feoffor Pritton vbisupra Frank bank francus bancus in true french franc banc signifieth word for word a free bench or seate and among our lawe writers it seemeth to be vsed for copyhold lands that the wife being espoused a virgin hath after the decease of her husband for her dower Kitchin fol. 102. Bracton lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 13. nu 2. hath these wordes Consuetudo est in partibus illis quòd vxores maritorum defunctorum habeant francum bancum suum de terris sockmannorum tenent nomine dotis Fitzher calleth it a custome whereby in certaine cities the wise shall haue her husbands whole lands c. for her dower Nat. br fol. 150. P. See Plowden casu Newis fol. 411. Frank chase Libera chasea is a libertie of free chase whereby all men hauing ground within that compasse are prohibited to cut downe wood or discouer c. without the view of the forester though it be his owne demesne Cromptons Iurisdictions fol. 187. Frank fee feudum francum seu liberum is by Brooke tit Dimesn num 32. thus expressed That which is in the hand of the King or Lord of any maner being auncient demesn of the Crowne viz. the Demesnes is called frank fee and that which is in the hands of the tenents is auncient demesn onely see the Register original fol. 12. a. Whereby it seemeth that that is frank see which a man holdeth at the common lawe to himselfe and his heires and not by such seruice as is required in auncient demesn according to the custome of the maner And again I find in the same booke fol. 14. b. a note to this effect that the lands which were in the handes of king Edward the Saint at the making of the booke called Doomesday is auncient demesn and that all the rest in the realme is called frank fee with the which note Fitzherb agreeth na br fol. 161. E. So that all the land in the realme by this reason is either auncient demesn or frank fee. The new expounder of the lawe termes defineth frank fee to be a tanure in fee simple of lands pleadable at the common lawe and not in auncient demesn See Fachineus lib. 7. cap. 39. who defineth feudum francum esse pro quo nullum seruitium praestatur Domino with whom agreeth Zasius de fendis parte 12. saying that therefore it is feudum improprium quia ab omni seruitio liberum Frank ferme Firma libera is land or tenement wherein the nature of fee is chaunged by feofment out of knights seruice for certaine yearely seruices and whence neither homage wardship mariage nor releife may be demaunded nor any other seruice not contained in the feofment Britton ca. 66. nu 3. see Fee ferme Frank law libera lex See Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 156. b. where you shall finde what it is by the contrary For he that for an offence as conspiracy c. leeseth his franke lawe is said to fall into these mischiefs first that he may neuer be impaneled vppon any iury or assise or otherwise vsed in testifiing any truth Next if he haue any thing to doe in the kings court he must not approch thither in person but must appoint his attourney Thirdly his lands goods and chatelsmust be seised into the kings hands and his lands must be estreaped his trees rooted vp and his body committed to prison For this the said authour citeth the booke of Assises fo 59. Conspiracy F. 11. 24. Ed. 3. fo 34. See Conspiracy Frank mariage liberū maritagiū is a tenurein taile speciall growing from these words in the gift comprised Sciant c. me M. H de W. dedrsse concessisse praesenti charta mea confirmasse I. A. filio meo Margeriae vxori eius filiae verae T. N. in liberū marit agium vnum messuagium c. West parte i. Symbol li. 2. sect 303. The effect of which words is that they shall haue the land to them and the heires of their bodies and shall doe no fealty to the donour vntill the fourth degree See new Terms of law Glanuile li. 7. ca. 18. Bracton li. 2. ca. 7. nu 4. where he diuideth maritagium in liberum seruitio obligatum See Mariage Fleta giueth this reason why the heires doe no seruice vntill the fourth discent ne donatores vel eorum haeredes per homagii receptionem a reuersione repellantur And why in the fourth discent and downeward they shall doe seruice to the donour quia in quarto gradu vehementer praesumitur quòd terra non est pro defectu haeredum donatariorum reversura libro tertio ca. 11. in princ Frankpledge Franoiplegium is compounded of Franc. i. liber and pleige i. fideiussor and signifieth in our common law a pledge or surety for free men For the auncient custome of England for the preseruation of the publique peace was that euery free borne man at fourteene yeares of age after Bracton religious persons clerks knights and their eldest sonnes excepted should finde suerty for his truth toward the King and his subiects or else be kept in prison whereupon a certaine number of neighbours became customably bound one for another to see each man of their pledge forthcomming at all times or to answere the transgression committed by any broken away So that whosoeuer offended it was forthwith inquired in what pledge he was and then they of that pledge either brought him forth within 31. daies to his aunswere or satisfied for his offence This was called Frank pledge causa qua supra and the circuit thereof was called Decenna because it commonly consisted of 10. houshouldes And euery particular person thus mutually bound for himselfe and his neighbours was called Decennier because he was of one Decenna or another This custome was so kept that the shyreeues at euery county court did from time to time take the oaths of yonge ones as they grew to the age of 14. yeares and see that he were combined in one dozen or another whereupon this braunch of the shyreeues authority was called visus Franciplegu view of frankpledge See
Habere facias visum is a writ that lyeth in diuers cases where view is to be taken of the lands or tenements in question See Fitzh nat br in Iudice verbo View See Bracton li. 5. tract 3. ca. 8. lib. 5. parte 2. ca. 11. See vi 〈…〉 See the Register Iudiciall fol. 1. 26 28. 45. 49. 52. Haberiects Hauberietus pannus magn chart ca. 25. pupilla oculi parte 5. ca. 22. Hables is the plurall of the French hable signifiing as much as a porte or hauen of the sea whence ships doe set forth into other countries and whether they doe arriue when they returne from their voyage This word is vsed anno 27. Hen. 6. cap. 3. Haerede deliberando alii qui habet custodiam terrae is a writ directed to the Shyreeue willing him to commande one hauing the body of him that is ward to another to deliuer him to him whose ward he is by reason of his land Register originall fol. 161. b. Haerede abducto is a writ that lyeth for the lord who hauing the wardship of his tenent vnder age by right cannot come by his body for that he is conueyed away by another old nat br fol. 93. See Ravishment de Gard and Haerede rapto in Regist orig fol. 163. Haeretico comburendo is a writ that lyeth against him that is an heretike viz. that hauing beene once conuinced of herisy by his Bishop and hauing abiured it afterward falleth into it againe or into some other and is therevpon committed to the secular power Fitzh nat br fol. 269. Haga is vsed as a kinde of latine word for a house I finde in an auncient booke sometime belonging to the abbey of Saint Augustines in Canterbury that king Stephen sent his writ to the Shyreeue and Iustices of Kent in this maner Stephanus Rex Anglorum vicecomiti Iusticiariis de Kent salutem praecipio quòd faciatis habere ecclesiae sancti Augustini monachis hagam suam quam Gosceoldus eis dedit it a bene in pace iustè quietè liberè sicut eam eis dedit in morte sua coram legalibus testibus c. Hagbut See Haque and Haquebut Haye boote seemeth to be compounded Haye i. Sepes and Bote. i. compensatio The former is french and the second is Saxon. And although it doe fall out sometime that our words be so compounded yet is it rare wherefore it may be thought peraduenture to come as well from Hag and boote which be bothe saxon words It is vsed in our common lawe for a permission to take thorns and freeth to make or repaire hedges Halfe haque See Haque Half merk dimidia merka seemeth to signifie a noble Fitzh nat br fol 5. where he saith that in case a writ of right be brought and the seisin of the Demaundant or his auncester alleaged the seisin is not traversable by the Defendant but he may tender or proferre the halfe merke for the inquirie of this seisin which is as much to say in plainer termes that the Defendant shall not be admitted to deny that the Demandant or his auncester was seised of the land in question and to proue his deniall but that hee shal be admitted to tender halfe a merke in money to haue an inquirie made whether the Demandant c. were so seised or not And in this signification I reade the same words in the old English natura breuium fol. 26. b. viz. Know ye that in a writ of right of Advouzen brought by the king the defendant shall not proferre the halfe merke ne iudgement finall shall be giuen against the king c. Wherof Fitz. vbi supra M. giueth the reason because in the kings case the defendant shall bee permitted to trauerse the seisin by licence obtained of the Kings Sergeant To this effect see Fitz. nat br fol. 31. C. D. E. Halfe seale is vsed in the Chauncerie for the sealing of Commissions vnto Delegates appointed vpon any appeale in ecclesiasticall or marine causes an 8. Elizab. cap. 5. Halfe tongue See Medietas linguae Halymote aliâs Healgemot is a Court Baron Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 111. and the etymologie is the meeting of the tenents of one hall or maner M. Gwins preface to his reading which for the esteeme thereof is by copies spred into many mens hands Hallage is a see due for cloths brought for sale to Blackwell hal in London Coke vol. 6. fol. 62. b. Hamlet Hameletum is a diminutiue of Ham which signifieth habitationem Camden Brit. pag. 149. 354. The French hameau i. viculus is also nere vnto it Kitchin hath Hamel in the same sence fol. 215. who also vseth hampsel for an ould house or cotage decayed fol. 103. Hamlet as Stowe vseth it in Ed. 3. seemeth to be the seate of a Free holder For there he saith that the said king bestowed two maners and nine hamlets of land vpon the monasterie of Westminster for the keeping of yearely obits for his wife Queene Eleanor deceased Hameling of dogges or hambling of dogges is all one with the expeditating of dogges Manwood parte prim of his Forest lawes pag. 212. parte 2. cap. 16. num 5. where he saith that this is the auncient terme that Foristers vsed for that mater whence this word might be drawne I dare not resolue but it is not improbable that hameling is quasi hamhalding that is keeping at home which is done by paring their feete so as they cannot take any great delight in running abroade See Expeditate Hampsell See Hamlet Hamscken see Homesoken M. Skene de verb significa writeth it Haimsuken and deriueth it from Haim a German word signifiing a house or dwelling and Suchen that is to seeke search or persiew It is vsed in Scotland for the crime of him that violently and contrary to the kings peace assaulteth a man in his owne house which as he saith is punishable equally with rauishing of a woman significat quietantiam miser●●rdiae intrationis in alienam domum vi iniustè Fleta lib. pri cap. 47. See Homesoken Hand in and Hand out anno 17. Ed. 4. cap. 2. is the name of an vnlawful game Hand full is foure inches by the standard anno 33. H. 8. cap. Hankwit alias Hangwit or Hengwit commeth of the Saxon words Hangen i. pendêre and wit whereof reade in Gultwit Rastall in the title Exposition of words faith it is a liberty graunted vnto a man wherby he is quit of a felon or theese hanged without iudgement or escaped out of custodie I reade it interpreted mulcta pro homine iniustè suspenso Or whether it may be a libertie whereby a Lord chalengeth the forfeiture due for him that fordoeth himselfe within his fee or not let the Reader consider See Bloodwit Hanper haneperium haueper of the Chauncerie anno 10. R. 2. cap. prim seemeth to signifie as fiseus originally doth in Latine See Clerke of the Hanaper Hanse as Ortelius in the Index of
sorts of homage vsed by them straunge vnto vs. whereunto ioyne Hotoman disputat de feudis in diuers places namely columna 860. C. hiis verbis Deinceps de nota hominii feudalitiae subiectionis videamus Omnium quidem video esse commune vt dexteras tanquam in foederibus iungerent plerumque etiam vt dexteris aversis osculum praeberent interdum vt ambas manus iunctas patrono contrectandas praeberent supplicum dedititiorum nomine qui velatas manus porrigebant and pag. 861. hiis verbis Multis Galliae atque etiam Angliae moribus constitutum est Quod ex Anglico Litletonio intelleximus vt hominium seruili supplici veneratione ac plane tanquam a dedititiis praestetur Nam vasallus discinctus nudo capite ad pedet sedentis patroni proiectus ambas manus iunctas porrigit quas dum Dominus suis manibus amplectitur haec verba pronunciat Here venio in tuum hominium fidem homo tuus fio ore manibus tibique iuro ac spondeo fidelem me tibi futurum eorum feudorum nomine quae tuo beneficio accepi c. Whereunto you may adde him colum 819. G. 822. F. 857. B. D. F. Of homage in Scotland reade M. Skene de verb. signif verbo Homagium to whome you may also ioyne a plentifull discourse in speculo Durandi commonly called speculator among the Civilians titulo De Feudis Homagio respectuando is a writ to the Escheatour commaunding him to deliuer seisin of lands to the heire that is at full age notwithstanding his homage not done which ought to be performed before the heire haue liuerie of his lands except there fall out some reasonable cause to hinder it Fitzh nat br fol. 269. Homine eligendo ad custodiendam peciam sigillipro Mereatoribus aediti is a writ directed to a corporation for the choice of a new man to keepe the one part of the seale appointed for statutes Merchant when the other is dead according to the statute of Acton Burnel Register orig fol. 178. a. Homine replegiando is a writ for the bayle of a man out of prison which in what cases it lyeth and what not See Fitz. nat br fol. 66. See also the Register orig fol. 77. See the new booke of Entries verb. Homine replegiando Homine capto in Withernamium is a writ to take him that hath taken any bondman or woman and led him or her out of the countie so that he or shee cannot be repleuied according to lawe Register orig fol. 79. a. See Withernam Homicide homicidium is the slaying of a man and it is diuided into voluntarie or casuall homicide voluntarie is that which is deliberated and committed of a set mind and purpose to kill homicide volūtary is either with precedent malice or without The former is murder and is the felonious killing through malice prepensed of any person liuing in this realme vnder the Kings protection West part 2. simbol tit Inditment sect 37. c. vsque ad 51. where you may see diuers subdiuisions of this mater See also Glanuile lib 14. cap 3. Bract. l 3. tra 2. c. 4. 15. 17. Brit. c. 5. 6. 7. See Muder Mans slaughter Chaūce medley Homesoken aliâs Hamsoken Hamsoca is compounded of Ham. i. habitatio and Soken i. quaerere It is by Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. c 23. thus defined Homesoken dicitur inuasio domus contra pacem Domini Regis It appeareth by Rastall in the title Expositiō of of words that in auntient times some men had an immunitie to doe this for he defineth Homesoken to be an immunitie from amercements for entring into houses violently and without licence which thing seemeth so vnreasonable that me thinketh he should be deceiued in that his exposition I would rather thinke it should be a libertie or power graunted by the king to some common person for the cognisance or punishment of such a trangression for so I haue seene it interpreted in an old note that I haue giuen me by a freind which he had of an expert man toward the Exchequer but of what authoritie I know not See Hamsoken Hondhabend is compounded of two Saxon words Hond i. hand and habend i. hauing and signifieth a circumstance of manifest theft when one is deprehended with the thing stollen in his hand Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. ca. 31. 54. who also vse the handberend for the same eodem cap. 8. Honour honor is beside the generall signification vsed specially for the more noble sort of seigneuries whereof other inferiour Lordships or maners doe depend by performance of customes and seruices some or other to those that are Lords of them And I haue reason to think that none are honours originally but such as are belonging to the King How be it they may afterward be bestowed in fee vpon other nobles The maner of creating these honours may in part be gathered out of the statutes anno 31. H. 8. cap. 5. where Hampton court is made an honour and anno 33. eiusdem cap. 37. 38. whereby Amptill and Grafton be likewise made honours and anno 37. eiusdem ca. 18. whereby the King hath power giuen by his leters patents to erect foure seuerall honours Of Westminster of Kingston vpon Hull Saint Osithes in Essex and Dodington in Berkshire This word is also vsed in the selfe same signification in other nations See ca. licet causam extra de probationibus and Minsinger vpon it nu 4. In reading I haue obserued thus many honours in England The honour of Aquila Camden Britan. pag. 231. of Clare pag. 351. of Lancaster pag. 581. of Tickhill pag. 531. of Wallingford Notingham Boloine Magna charta cap 31. of West Greenewish Camd pag. 239. of Bedford pupil oculi parte 5. cap. 22. of Barhimsted Brooke titulo Tenure nu 16. of Hwittam Camd pag. 333. of Plimpton Cromptons Iurisd fol. 115. of Creuecure and Hagenet Febert anno 32. H. 8. cap. 48. of East Greenewish of Windsour in Berk shire and of Bealew in Essex anno 37. H. 8. ca. 18. of Peverell in the county of Lincolne Register orig fol. 1. Horngeld is compounded of Horn and Gildan or Gelder i. Soluere It signifieth a taxe within the forest to be paid for horned beasts Cromptons Iurisd fol. 197. And to be free thereof is a priuiledge graunted by the king vnto such as he think eth good Idem ibidem and Rastall in his exposition of words Hors de sonfee is an exception to auoide an action brought for rent issuing out of certaine land by him that pretendeth to be the Lord or for some customes and seruices for if he can iustifie that the land is without the compas of his fee the action falleth v. Brooke hoc titulo Hospitallers Hospitalarii were certaine knights of an order so called because they had the care of hospitals wherein Pilgrims were receiued to these Pope Clement the fift transferred the Templers which order by a
day of his appearance by reason of the said common summons or otherwise But otherwise it is where a man is let to bayle to foure or two men by the lord Iustice in eyre of the Forest vntill a certaine day For there he is alwayes accounted by the lawe to be in their ward and custody for the time And they may if they will keepe him in ward or in prison all that time or otherwise at their will So that he that is so bayled shall not be said by the lawe to be at large or at his owne libertie Thus farre M. Manwood The myrror of Iustices maketh a difference also betweene pledges and mainpernours saying that pledges are more generall that mainpernours are bodie for bodie lib. 2. cap. de trespasse venial and lib. 3. cap. des pledges mainpernours When mainprises may be granted and when not see Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 136. c. vsque 141. and Lamberd Eiren. lib. 3. cap. 2. pag. 336. 337. 338. 339. 340. See also Britton fol. 73. a. cap. Des pledges mainpernours the author of the Myrror of Iustices saith that pledges bee those that bayle or redeeme any thing but the body of a man and that mainpernours be those that free the body of a man And that pledges therefore belong properly to reall and mixt actions and mainpernours to personall Maintenance manutentio vel manutenentia is a French word and signifieth an vpholding of a cause or person metaphorically drawne from the succouring of a young child that learneth to goe by ones hand In our common lawe it is vsed in the euill part for him that secondeth a cause depending in suite betweene others either by lending of mony or making friends for either partie toward his help anno 32. Henr. 8. cap. 9. And when a mans act in this kinde is by lawe accounted Maintenance and when not see Broke titulo Maintenance and Kitchin fol. 202. seqq and Fitz. nat br fol. 172. and Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 38. The writ that lyeth against a man for this offence is likewise called Maintenance Termes of the lawe verb. Maintenance Speciall maintenance Kitchin fol. 204. seemeth to bee maintenance most properly so tearmed Of this see Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 155. b. and the new booke of Entries verbo Maintenance Maintenance vid. Nouos terminos Iuris Make facere signifieth in the common lawe to performe or execute as to make his lawe is to performe that lawe which he hath formerly bound himselfe vnto that is to cleare himselfe of an action commenced against him by his oath and the oathes of his neighbours Old nat br fol. 161. Kitchin fol. 192. which lawe seemeth to be borowed of the Feudists who call these men that come to sweare for another in this case Sacramentales Of whom thus saith Hotoman in verbis foundal Sacramentales a sacramento i. iuramento diccbantur ●i qui quamuis res de qua ambigebatur testes non fuissent tamen ex eius cuius res agebatur animi sententia in eadem quae ille verba iurabant illius vide licet probitate innocentia confisi Nam tum demum adhibebantur cùm testes nulli extarent See the rest The formall words vsed by him that maketh his lawe are commonly these Heare O ye Iustices that I doe not owe this summe of money demaunded neither all nor any part thereof in maner and forme declared so helpe me God and the contents of this booke To make seruices or custome is nothing else but to performe them Old nat br fol. 14. To make oath is to take an oath Maletent in the Statute called the Confirmation of the liberties of c. anno 29. Ed. prim cap. 7. is interpreteted to be a tolle of 40. shillings for euery sacke of wooll Stow in his Annals calleth it a Maletot pag. 461 See also the Statute de tallagio non concedendo an 34. eius stat 5. Malin See Marle Manbote signifieth a pecuniary compensation for killing of a man Lambard in his exposition of Saxon words verbo Aestimatio Of which reade Roger Houeden also in parte poster suorum annal fol. 344. a. b. Mandamus is a writ that lyeth after the yere and day wheras in the meane time the writ called diem clausit extremum hath not bene sent out to the Excheatour for the same purpose for the which it should formerly haue bene sent forth Fitzh nat br fol. 253. B. See Diem clausit extremum Mandamus is also a charge to the shyreeue to take into the kings hands all the lands and tenements of the kings widowe that against her oath formerly giuen marieth without the kings consent Register fol. 295. b. See Widow Mandatum is a commaundment iudiciall of the king or his Iustices to haue any thing done for the dispatch of iustice wherof you shall see diuersity in the table of the Register iudiciall verbo Mandatum Maner Manerium seemeth to come of the French manoir i. domicilium habitatio M. Skene de verbo significatione verbo Manerium saith it is called Manerium quasi Manurium because it is laboured with handy worke by the Lord himselfe It signifieth in our common law a rule or gouernmēt which a man hath ouer such as hould land within his fee. Touching the originall of these maners it seemeth that in the beginning there was a certaine compasse or circunt of ground graunted by the king vnto some man of worth as a Baron or such like for him and his heires to dwell vpon and to exercise some iurisdiction more or lesse within that compasse as he thought good to graunt performing him such seruices and paying such yearely rent for the same as he by his graunt required and that afterward this great man parcelled his land to other meaner men inioyning them againe such seruices and rents as he thought good and by that meanes as he became tenent to the king so the inferiours became tenents vnto him See Perkins Reseruations 670. and Andrew Horns booke intituled the mirrour of Iustices li. 1. ca. du Roy Alfred See the definition of a Maner Fulb. fol. 18. And this course of benefiting or rewarding their nobles for good seruice haue our kings borowed from the Emperours of Rome or the Lombard kings after they had setled themselues in Italy as may well appeare by Antonius Contius in methodo feudorum c. i. de origine libris Feudorum And I finde that according to this our custome all lands houlden in fee throughout Fraunce are diuided into Fiefz and arrierfiefz whereof the former are such as are immediatly graunted by the king the secōd such as the kings feudataries doe againe graunt to others Gregorii Syntagm lib. 6. an 5. nu 3. But the inconstancy of mans estate and the mutability of time hath brought to passe that those great men or their posterity haue alienated these Mansions and lands so giuen them by their Prince and others that had none haue by ther welth
mesler i. miscere turbare Meere Merus though an Adiectiue yet is it vsed for a substantine signifiing meere tight Owld nat br fol. 2. in these words And knowe yee that this writte hath but two issues that is to say ioyning the mise vpon the meere And that is to put himselfe in the great assise of our Souerainge Lord the King or to ioyne battell See Mise Mesurement See Admesurement Medietas linguae signifieth an enquest empaneled vpon any cause wereof the one halfe consisteth of Denizens the other of straungers It is called in English the halfe tongue and is vsed in plees wherein the one party is a straunger the other a denizen See the statute anno 28. Ed. 3. ca. 13. anno 27. eiusdem statu 2. ca. 8. commonly called the statute of the Staple anno 8. H. 6. ca. 29. anno 2. He. 5. ca. 3. anno 11. He. 7. ca. 21. anno 1. 2. Phi. Mar. ca. 8. And before the first of these statutes was made this was wonte to be obteined of the King by graunt made to any company of straungers as Lombards Almaines c. Stawnf pl. cor lib. 3. ca. 7. Medio acquietando is a writ iudiciall to distraine a lord for the acquiting of a meane Lord from a rent which he formerly acknowledgeth in court not to belong vnto him Register iudiciall fol. 29. b. Melius inquirendo is a writ that lyeth for a second inquiry as what lands and tenements a man dyed seised of where partiall dealing is suspected vpon the writ Diem clausit extremum Fitzh nat br fol. 255. Merchenlage was one of the three sorts of lawes out of which the Conquerour framed lawes vnto vs mingled with those of Normandy Camd. Britan. pag. 94. who also pag. 103. sheweth that in the yeare of our lord 1016. this land was diuided into three parts whereof the west Saxons had one gouerning it by the lawes called West Saxon lawes and that conteined these nine shyres Kent Southsex South rey Barkeshire Hamshire Wilshire Somerset Dorset and Deuonshire the second by the Danes which was gouerned by the lawes called Denelage and that conteined these fifteene shires Yorke Darby Notingham Leycester Lincolne Northampton Bedford Buckingham Hertford Essex Midlesex Northf Southf Cambridge Huntington The third was possessed and gouerned by the Mercians whose lawe was called Merchenlage which were these eight Glocester Worcester Hereford Warwicke Oxenford Chester Salop and Stafford See Lawe Mercy Misericordia signifieth the arbitrement or discretion of the King or Lord in punishing any offence not directly censured by the law As to be in the grieuous mercie of the king anno 11. H. 6. cap. 6. is to be in hazard of a great penaltie See Misericordia Measondue domus Dei commeth of the French maison de dien by which names diuers Hospitals are named You find the word anno 2. 3. Philip. Mar. cap. 23. in fine Mese See Mease Mesn medius seemeth to come from the French mainsnè i. minor natu it signifieth in our common lawe him that is lord of a maner and thereby hath tenents holding of him yet holding himselfe of a superiour Lord. And therefore it seemeth not absurdly to be drawne from the French mainsnè because the Lordship is created after the higher whereof he holdeth Mesn also signifieth a writ which lyeth where there is Lord mesn and tenent the tenent holding of the mesn by the same seruices whereby the mesn holdeth of the Lord and the tenent of the mesn is distrained by the superiour lord for that his seruice or rent which is due to the mesn Fitz. nat br fol. 135. See Mesnaltie Mesnaltie medietas commeth of Mesn and signifieth nothing but the right of the mesn as the mesnaltie is extinct old net br fol. 44. if the mesnalty descend of the tenent Kitchin fol. 147. For farder vnderstanding wherof take these words out of the Custumarie of Norm Medietate tenentur feuda quando aliqua persona intervenit inter Dominum tenentes Et hoc modo tenent omnes post nati mediante ante nato Messenger of the Exchequer is an Officer there of which sorte there be foure in that court that be Pursuyvants attending the lord Treasurer to cary his leters and precepts See Pursuyvant Mesuage mesuagium is a dwelling house West part 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 26. But by the name of a mesuage may passe also a Curtilage a garden an orchard a doue house a shoppe a mill as parcell of an house as he himselfe confirmeth out of Bracton lib. 5. cap. 28. sect prim and Plowden fol. 199. 170. 171. and of himselfe he auoucheth the like of a cotage a tost a chamber a celler c. yet may they be demaunded by their single names Mesuagium in Scotland signifieth the principall dwelling place or house within a Barony which in our land is called a maner-house Skene de verb. significat verbo Mesuagium where he citeth Vaientine Leigh that in his booke of Suruey he affirmeth Mesuagium to be the tenement or land earable and the dwelling house or place or court hall thereof to be called the site in Latine called Situs Mile milliare is a quantitie of a thousand paces otherwise described to containe eight furlongs and euery furlong to conteine forty lugs or poles and euery lugger or pole to containe 16. foote and a halfe anno 35. El. cap. 6. Mildernix anno 1. Iacob cap. 24. Mindbruch is hurting of honour and worship Saxon in his description of Engl. cap. 71. Miniuer See Furre Minouery anno 7. R. 2. cap. 4. seemeth to be compounded of two French words main i. manus and ouvrer i. operari and to signifie some trespasse or offence committed by a mans handie worke in the Forest as an engyn to catch Deere Britton vseth the verbe Meinoverer for to occupie and manure land cap. 40. and cap. 62. main-ovre for handy-worke It is not vnlike that our English manure is abbreuiated of the French Mint commeth of the Germane word meunk i. pecunia moneta and it signifieth with vs the place where the kings coyne is formed be it gold or siluer which is at this present and long hath bene the Tower of London though it appeare by diuers stories and other anticuities that in auncient times the mint hath bene also at C●leis an 21. R. 2 cap. 16. anno 9 Hen. 5. stat 5. cap. 5. The Officers belonging to the mint haue not bene alwaies alike At this present they seeme to be these The Warden who is the chiefe of the rest and is by his office to receiue the siluer of the Goldsmiths and to pay them for it and to ouersee all the rest belonging to this functiō His fee is an hundred pounds per annum The master-worker who receiueth the siluer from the Warden causeth it to be melted and deliuereth it to the moniers and taketh it from them againe when it is made His allowance is not any set fee but according
vertue whereof a man hath some imploiment in the affaires of another as of the King or other common person but also an Inquisition made to the Kings vse of any thing by vertue of his office who inquireth And therefore wee oftentimes reade of an office found which is nothing but such a thing found by Inquisition made ex officio In this signification it is vsed anno 33. H. 8. cap. 20. and in Stawnfords praerog fol. 60. 61. where to trauers an office is to trauers the inquisition taken of office And in Kitchin fol. 177. to returne an office is to returne that which is found by vertue of the office see also the newe booke of Entries verbo Office pur le Roy. And this is by a metonymie of the effect And there be two sorts of offices in this signification issuing out the exchequer by commission viz. an office to intitle the King in the thing inquired of and an office of instruction which reade in Sir Edw. Cokes reports vol. 6. Pages case fol. 52. a. b. Office in fee is that which a man hath to himselfe and his heires anno 13. Ed. 1. ca. 25. Kitchin fol. 152. See Clerk Official officialis is a word very diversly vsed For by sundry Ciuilians of other countries that write in these daies it appeareth to be applyed in many places to such as haue the sway of temporall iustice Aegidius Bossius in pract crim tit De officialibus corruptis c. But by the auncienter ciuile lawe it signifieth him that is the minister or appparitor of a magistrate or Iudge l. 1. § si quis vltro Π. de quaestio Co. de filiis officialium c. li. 12. In the Canon lawe it is especially taken for him to whome any Bishop doth generally commit the charge of his spirituall iurisdiction And in this sence one in euery Dioces is officialis principalis whome the statutes and lawes of this Kingdome call chanceler anno 32. H. 8. cap. 15. The rest if there be more are by the canō law called officiales foranei glos in clem 2. de Rescriptis but with vs termed Cōmissaries Commissarii as in the statute of H. 8. or some times Commissarii foranei The difference of these 2. powers you may reade in Lyndwood titulo de sequestra posses ca. 1. verbo Officialis But this word officiall in our statutes and common lawe signifieth him whom the Archdeacon substituteth in the executing of his iurisdiction as appeareth by the statute aboue mentioned and many other places Officiariis non faciendis vel amovendis is a writ directed to the magistrates of a corporatiō willing them not to make such a man an officer and to put him out of the office he hath vntill enquirie be made of his maners according to an inquisition formerly ordeined Register originall fol. 126. b. Onerando pro rata portionis is a writ that lieth for a ioint tenent or tenent in common that is distreined for more rent then the proportion of his land cōmeth vnto Reg orig f. 182. a. Open Lawe Lex manifesta Lex apparens is making of Lawe which by Magna charta ca. 28. Bayliffes may not put men vnto vpon their owne bare assertions except they haue witnesses to proue their imputation Orchel anno 1. R. 3. ca. 8 Orchall anno 24. H. 8. ca. 2. anno 3. 4. Ed. 6. ca. 2. seemeth to be all one with cork Ordinance of the forest Ordinatio Forestae is a statute made touching forest causes in the 34. yeare of Edward 1. See Assise Ordinarie Ordinarius though in the ciuil lawe whence the word is taken it doth signifie any iudge that hath authoritie to take knowledge of causes in his owne right as he is a magistrate and not by deputation yet in our common lawe it is most commonly and for ought I remember alway taken for him that hath ordinarie Iurisdiction in causes ecclesiasticall See Brooke hoc titulo Lindwood in cap. exterior titulo de Constitutionibus verbo Ordinarii saith quòd Ordinarius habet locum principaliter in Episcopo aliis superioribus qui soli sunt vniuersales in suis iurisdictionibus sed sunt sub eo alii ordinarii hii viz. quibus competit Iurisdictio ordinaria de iure privilegio vel consuetudine c. v. c. Ordinatione contra seruientes is a writ that lieth against a servant for leauing his master against the statute Register originall fol. 189. Ordael Ordalium is a Saxon word signifiing as much as Iudgement in some mens opinions compounded of two Saxon words or a priuatiue as α in greeke and dael i. pars It signifieth as much as expers but it is artificially vsed for a kind of purgation practized in auncient times whereby the party purged was iudged expers criminis called in the canon lawe purgatio vulgaris and vtterly condemned There were of this two sorts one by fire another by water Of these see M. Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo Ordalium where he expresseth it at large with such superstitions as were vsed in it Of this you may likewise read Holinshed in his description of Britanie fol. 98. and also M. Manwood parte pri of his forest lawes pag. 15. But of all the rest Hotoman especially disput de feud ca. 41. where of fiue kinde of proofes which he calleth feudales probationes he maketh this the fourth calling it explorationem huius furiosae probationis 6. genera fuisse animadvertit per flammam per aquam per ferrum candens per aquam vel gelidam vel feruentem per sortes per corpus Domini of all which he alledgeth seuerall examples out of historie very worthie the reading See M. Skene also de verbor significatione verbo Machamiū This seemeth to haue bene in vse here with vs in Henry the seconds dayes as appeareth by Glanvile lib. 14. cap. 1. 2. Reade also of this in M. Verstegans Restitution of decayed intelligence cap. 3. pag. 63. seqq Orfgild aliâs Cheapegild is a restitution made by the Hundred or Countie of any wrong done by one that was in plegio Lamberd Archaion pag. 125. 126. Orgeis anno 31. Ed. 3. stat 3. cap. 2. is the greatest sort of North sea-fish now adaies called Organ ling. Oredelfe is a liberty whereby a man claimeth the Ore found in his soyle New exposition of Termes Ortelli is a word vsed in the booke termed pupilla oculi in the chapter containing the charter of the Forest parte 5. cap. 22. and signifieth the clawes of a dogges foote being taken from the French orteils des pieds i. digiti pedum the toes Osmonds anno 32. Henr. 8. cap. 14. Oath of the King Iuramentum Regis is that which the King taketh at his Coronation which in Bracton is set downe in these words Debet Rex in coronatione sua in nomine Iesu Christi praestito sacramento haec tria promittere populo sibi subdito Inprimis se esse
lyeth for the cognizee of a maner seignory cheife rent or other seruices to compell him that is tenent of the land at the time of the note of the fine leuied to atturne vnto him West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 126. To the same effect speaketh the old nat br fol. 155. See also the new booke of Entries ver●● Per quae seruitia Perquisite perquisitum signifieth in Bracton any thing purchased as perquisitum facere 〈◊〉 2. cap. 30. nu 3. lib. 4. ca. 22. Perquisites of court be those profits that grow vnto the Lord of a maner by vertue of his Court Baron ouer and aboue the certaine and yearely profits of his land as escheats mariages goods purchased by villeines fines of copie houlds and such like New terms of the law Person See Parson Personable signifieth as much as inhabled to hould or mainetaine plee in a court for example The demaundant was iudged personable to maintaine this action old nat br fol. 142. and in Kitchin fol. 214. The tenent pleaded that the wife was an alien borne in Portingall without the ligeance of the King and Iudgement was asked whether shewould be answered The plaintife saith shee was made personable by Parlament that is as the Ciuilians would speake it habere personam standi in iudicio Personable is also as much as to be of capacitie to take any thing graunted or giuen Plowden casis Colthirst fol. 27. b. Personall Personalis hath in our common lawe one strange signification being ioyned with the substantiue things goods or Chatels as things personall goods personall Chatels personall for thus it signifieth any corporeall and moueable thing belonging to any man be it quicke or dead So is it vsed in West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditements sect 58. in these words Theft is an vnlawfull felonious taking away of another mans moueable personall goods and againe fol. 61. Larceny is a felonious taking away of another mans moueable personal goods Kitchin f. 139. In these words Where personall things shal be giuen to a corporation as a horse a cowe an oxe sheepe hogs or other goods c. and Stawnford pl cor fo 25. Contrectatio rei aliena is to be vnderstood of things personall for in things reall it is not felony as the cutting of a tree is not felony The reason of this application see in Chatell Personalty Personalitas is an abstract of persouall The action is in the personalty old nat br fol. 92. that is to say brought against the right person or the person against whome in lawe it lieth I find these contrary words Personalitas Impersonalitas in the author of the booke called vocabularius vtriusque iuris as for example Personalitas significatur per has dictiones tu mihi ego tibi cum alto significato quod probabiliter conclulitur si nullo modo concludatur tunc est Impersonalitas quia actum vitiat prout ratio dictat verbi gratia Ego stipulor constituis te mihi soluturum debitum a Titio mihi debitum Tu respondes Satisfiet Haec Impersonalitas non contrahit obligationem Persons ne Praebendaries ne seront charges as quinsimes c. is a writ that lyeth for preb endaries or other spirituall persons being distreined by the shyreeue or collectours of fifteenths for the fiftenth of their goods or to be contributory to taxes Fitzh nat br fol. 176. Pesterable wares seeme to be such wares as pester and take vp much roome in a shippe anno 32. H. 8. cap. 14. Peter pence Denar 〈…〉 Sancti Petri otherwise called in the Saxon tongue Roomfooh i. the see of Rome or due to Rome and also Romescot and Rome penning was a tribute giuen by Inas King of the west Saxons being in pilgrimage at Rome in the yeare of our Lord. 720. which was a peny for euery house Lamberds explication of Saxon words verbo Numus whome see also fol. 128. in Saint Edwards lawes nu 10. where it is thus writen Omnes qui habent 30. denariatus viuae pecuniae in domo sua de suo proprio Anglorum lege dabit denariū Sancti Petri lege Danorum dimidiam merkam Iste verò denarius debet summoniri in solennitate Apostolorum Petri Pauli colligi ad festivitatem quae dicitur ad vincula ita vt vltra illum diem non detincatur Si quispiam detinuerit ad Insticiam Regis 〈◊〉 deferatur quoniam denarius hic Rogis eleemmoz 〈…〉 est Iusticia verò faciat denarium 〈◊〉 dere foriffacturam Episcopi● Regis Quòd si quis domos plures had buerit de illa vbi residens fuerit infesto Apostolorum Petri Paul● denarium reddat See also King Edgars lawes fol. 78. cap. 4. which containeth a sharpe constitution touching this 〈…〉 ter Stowe in his Annals pag. 67. saith that he that had 20. peni worth of goods of one manes catell in his house of his own proper was to giue a p 〈…〉 at Lammas yearly See Romes 〈…〉 Petit Cape See Cape Petit Larceny parvum latr 〈…〉 nium See Larcenye Petit treason parua traditio in true French is petit trahizon 〈…〉 proditio minor treason in a lesser or lower kinde For whereas treason in the highest kinde is an offence done against the securitie of the common wealth West parte 2. symb titulo Indi●ements sect 63. petit treason is of this nature though not so expresly as the other Examples of petit treason you shall find to be these if a seruant kill his master a wife her husband a secular or religious man his prelate anno 25. Edward 3. cap. 2. Whereof see more in Staw●f pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 12. See also Crom 〈…〉 Iustice of peace fol. 2. where he addeth diuers other examp 〈…〉 those of Stawnford For the punishment of petit treason see the statute anno 22. H. 8. cap. 14. and Crompton vbi supra Petition Petitio hath a general signification for all intreaties made by an inferiour to a superiour and especially to one hauing iurisdiction But most especially it is vsed for that remedie which the subiect hath to helpe a wrong done or pretended to be done by the King For the King hath it by prerogatiue that he may not be siewed vpon a writ Stawnf praer cap. 15. whome also read cap. 22. And a petition in this case is either generall or speciall It is called generall of the generall conclusion set downe in the same viz. que le Roy lui face droit reison that the King doe him right and reason wherevpon followeth a generall indorsement vpon the same soit 〈◊〉 fait aux partis let right be done to the partise Petition special is where the conclusion is speciall for this or that and the Indorsment to that is likewise speciall See the rest cap. 21. Petra lanae a stone of wooll See Stone Philiser See Filazer Piccage Piccagium is money paid in faires for breaking of the ground to set vp
Princes especially purposed But of this reade Sir Thomas Smith lib. 3. de Rep. Angl. cap. 9. Some later statutes doe cast this punishment vpon other offenders as namely the statute anno 1. El. cap. primo vpon him that denieth the Kings supremacie the second time c. and the statue anno 13. El. ca. 2. vpon him that affirmeth the authoritie of the Pope or that refuseth to take the oathe of supremacie and the statute anno 13. El. cap. 1. fuch as be seditious talkers of the inheritance of the Crowne or affirme the Queenes Maiestie to be an heritique And the word is applied most commonly to the punishment first ordeined by the statutes before mentioned for such as transgressed them but in later times imposed vpon other offences for that where it is saide that any man for an offence committed shall incurre a premunire it is meant that he shall incurre the same punishment which is inflicted against those that trangresse the statute made anno 16. R. 2. ca. 5. which is commonly called the statute of premunire which kinde of reference is not vnusuall in our statutes Cor example I shew onely the statute anno 5. El. ca. 5. where it is inacted that if any man preach or teach by wrighting that the cōmon Counsell of the Realme doe by that statute forbid flesh to be eaten as of necessitie for the sauing of mans soule that he shall for such preaching c. be punished as they be which be spredders of false newes hauing reference thereby to those statutes which conteine the punishment of such offenders Now touching the Etymologie of this word Praemunire some thinke it proceedeth from the strength giuen to the Crown by the former statutes against the vsurpation of forein and vnnaturall power which opinion may receiue some ground from the statute anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 6. cap. pri But other thinke it to grow from the verb Praemonere being barbarously turned into Praemunire which corruption is taken from the rude Interpreters of the Ciuile and Canon lawes who indeede doe vse the effect Praemunire many times for the efficient cause Praemonere according to our prouerb He that is well warned is halfe armed And of this I gather reason from the forme of the writ which is thus conceiued in the old nat br fol. 143. Praemunire facias praefatum praepositum I. R. procuratorem c. quod tune sint coram nobis c. for these words can be referred to none but parties charged with the offence Praepositus villae is vsed sometime for the Constable of a town or petit Constable Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 205. how be it the same author fol. 194. seemeth to apply it otherwise for there quatuor homines praepositi be those 4. men that for euery towne must appeare before the Iustices of the Forest in their Circuit It is vsed sometime for a Reeve See Reeve Praerogatiue of the King praeregatiua regis is that especiall power preeminence or priuiledge that the King hath in any kinde ouer and aboue other persons and aboue the ordinarie course of the common lawe in the right of his crowne And this word Praerogatiua is vsed by the Ciuilians in the same sense l. Rescriptum 6. § 4. Π. de hono muner But that priviledge that the Roman Emperour had aboue common persons they for the most part comprised sub iurefisci Π. de iure fisct per totum tit Co. li. 10. tit 1. Among the Feudists this is termed ius regalium ius regaliorum vel a nonnullis ius regaliarum But as the Feudists sub iure regalium soe our lawyers sub praerogatiua regis doe comprise also all that absolute heighth of power that the Ciuilians call maiestatem vel potestatem vel ius imperii subiect only to god which regalia the Feudists diuide into two sorts maiora sc minora regalia for to vse their owne words Quaedam regalia dignitatem praerogatiuam imperii praeemmentiam spectant quaedam verò ad vtilitatem commodum pecuniarium immediatè attinent haec proprièfiscalia sunt ad ius fisci pertinent Peregri de iure fisci li. pri cap. 1. nu 9. See also Arnoldus Clapmarius de arcanis Imperii lib. pri cap. 11. seqq who seemeth to make difference betwene maiestatem ius regaliorū Others also make those maiora regalia that appertaine to the dignitie of the prince and those minora which inrich his cofers Regnerus Sixtinus de iure rega cap. 2. By this it appeareth that the statute of the Kings prerogatue made an 17. Ed. 2. conteineth not the summe of the Kings whole prerogatiue but onely so much thereof as concernes the profit of his cofers growing by vertue of his regall power and crowne for it is more then manifest that his prerogatiue reacheth much farder yea euen in the maters of his profit which that statute especially consisteth of For example it is the kings prerogatiue to graunt protection vnto his debtours against other creditours vntill himselfe be satisfied Fitzh nat br fol. 28. B. to distreine for the whole rent vpon one tenent that hath not the whole land Idem fol. 235. A. to require the auncesters debt of the heire though not especially bound Brit. cap. 28. fo 65. b. to seise vpon money paid by his deptour into a court for the satisfaction of an executor Plowden fol. 322. a. to permit his deptours to siew for their debts by a Quo minus in the exchequer Perkins Grawnts 5. to be first paid by one that oweth money both to him and others Dyer fol. 67. nu 20. to take the lands of accountants into his hands for his own satisfaction Plowd casu Almes fol. 321. 322. to take his action of accoumpt against executors eodem fol. 320. not to be tied to the demaund of his rent Coke li. 4. fo 73. a. Now for those regalities which are of the higher nature all being within the compas of his prerogatiue and iustly to be comprised vnder that title there is not one that belonged to the most absolute prince in the world which doth not also belong to our king except the custome of the nations so differ as indeede they doe that one thing be in the one accompted a regalitie that in another is none Onely by the custome of this kingdome he maketh no lawes without the consent of the 3. estates though he may quash any lawe concluded of by them And whether his power of making lawes be restreined de necessitate or of a godly and commendable policy not to be altered without great perill I leaue to the iudgement of wisermen But I hold it incontrowlable that the king of England is an absolute king And all learned politicians doe range the power of making lawes inter insignia summae absolutae potestatis Maiora autem regalia sunt haec clausula plenitudinis potestatis ex ea aliquid statuere leges condere ac eas omnibus singulis
benefice conferreth it vpon his Clerke whilest two others be contending in law for the right of presenting Exposition of the terms of law old nat br fol. 30. and Fitzh nat br fol. 48. Register originall fol. 32. Quare intrusit matrimonio non satisfacto is a writ that lyeth for the Lord against his tenent being his ward that after couenable mariage offered him marieth another and entreth neuer the lesse vpon his land without agreement first made with his Lord and Gardian Terms of the law Quare non permittit is a writ that lyeth for one that hath right to present for a turne against the proprietary Fleta lib. 5. cap. 16. Quarentine quarentina is a benefit allowed by the lawe of England to the widow of a landed man deceased whereby shee may challenge to continue in his capitall messuage or cheife mansion house by the space of 40. daies after his decease Of this see Bracton lib. 2. cap. 40. And if the heire or any other attempt to eiect her shee may haue the writ De Quarentina habenda Fitzh nat br fol. 161. see anno 9. H. 3. cap. 7. anno 20. cap. pri and Britton cap. 103. M. Skene de verborum significatione verbo Quarentina viduarum deriueth this word from the French Quaresme Who also haue this custome called lo quaresme des vefues granted to widows after the decease of their husbands as he proueth out of Papon in his Arrests libro 15. titulo des dots cap. 7. lib. 10. tit Substitutiones cap. 30. Of this read Fleta also lib. 5. cap. 23. Quarentena habenda is a writ that lyeth for a widow to inioy her Quarentine Register originall fol. 175. Quare non admisit is a writ that lyeth against the Bishop refusing to admit his Clerk that hath recouered in a plee of Aduowsen The furder vse whereof see in Fitzh nat br fol. 47. Register originall fol. 32. See the new booke of Entries verbo quare non admisit Quare obstruxit is a writ that lyeth for him who hauing a seruitude to passe through his neighbours ground cannot inioy his right for that the owner hath so strengthened it Fleta li. 4. cap. 26. § Item si minus Quarter Sessions is a court held by the Iustices of peace in euery Countie once euery quarter The iurisdiction whereof how farre it extendeth is to be learned out of M. Lamberds Eirenarcha Sir Thomas Smith de Republ. Anglor lib. 2. ca. 19. But to these you must adde the late statutes of the Realme for their power daily increaseth Originally it seemeth to haue bene erected onely for maters touching the peace But in these daies it extendeth much farder That these Sessions shold be held quarterly was first of all ordeined so farre as I can learne by the statute anno 25. Ed. 3. stat pri cap. 8. of these read Lamberds Eirenarcha the fourth booke throughout where he setteth them out both learnedly and at large Quashe quassare commeth of the French quasser i. quassare conquassare it signifieth in our common law to ouerthrowe Bracton lib. 5. tracta 2. cap. 3. nu 4. Quekbord anno 17. Ed. 4. ca. 2. Que est mesme signifieth verbatim Which is the selfe same thing It is vsed in our common law as a word of art in an action of trespas or of like nature for a direct iustification of the very act complained of by the plaintffe as a wrong for example in an action of the case the plaintiffe saith that the Lord threatned his Tenents at will in such sort as he draue them to giue vp their tenures The Lord for his defence pleadeth that he said vnto them that if they would not depart he would siew them as the law would This being the same thretning that he vsed or to speake artificially que est le mesme the defence is good Of this see Kitchin in the chapter Que est le mesme fol. 236. where you may haue many like examples Que estate word for word signifieth Quem statum It signifieth in our common law a plee whereby a man intitling another to lands c saith that the same estate that he had himselfe hath from him for example in a Quare impedit the Plaintife alleadgeth that such foure persons were seised of lands whereunto the Advowsen in question was appendant in fee and did present to the Church and afterward the Church was voide Que estat del c. that is which estate of the foure persons he faith also that he hath nowe during the vacation by vertue whereof he presently c. Brooke titulo Que estate fol. 175. 176. But it is harder to knowe when this Que estate is to be pleaded then to vnderstand what it is as by him may appeare See the new booke of Entries verbo Que estate Queene Regina is either shee that houldeth the Crowne of this Realme by right of blood or els shee that is maried to the King In the former signification shee is in all construction the same that the King is and hath the same power in all respects In the other signification shee is inferiour and a person exempt from the King For shee may siew and be siewed in her owne name Yet that shee hath is the Kings and looke what shee looseth so much departeth from the King Stawnf praerog cap. 2. fol. 10. in fine See Kitchin fol. 1. b. See Cooke lib. 4. Copy-hould cases fo 23. b. Augusta was the like among Romaines how be it not euisdem iuris in all things Queenes siluer See Kings siluer Quem reditum reddat is a writ Iudiciall that lyeth for him to whom a rent seck or rent charge is graunted by fine leuied in the Kings Court against the Tenent of the land that refuseth to atturne vnto him thereby to cause him to atturne See old nat br fol. 156. and West parte 2. Simbol titulo Fines sect 125. See the new booke of Entries Verbo Quem reditum reddit Querela friscae fortiae is a writ See Fresh force Querela coram Rege consilio discutienda terminanda is a writ whereby one is called to iustifie a complaint of a trespasse made to the king and himselfe before the King his counsell Register originall fol. 124. b. Questus est nobis c. is the sorme of a writ of Nusance which by the statute anno 13. Ed. pri cap. 24. lieth against him to whome the house or other thing that breedeth the Nusance is alienated wheras before that statute this actiō lay onely against him that first leuied the thing to the hurt of his neighbour See the Statute Quia improvide seemeth to be a supersedeas graunted in the behalfe of a clerke of the Chawncerie siewed against the priuiledge of that court in the common plees persiewed to the exigēd See Dyer f. 33. n. 18. Quid iuris clamat is a writ Iudiciall issuing out of the Record of the Fine which remaineth with
sale conduct them back againe And therfore in those forests that haue no pouralleeses there be no Rawngers but Foristers serue the turne This Raunger is made and appointed by the King his leters patents vnder the great seale and for his beter incouragement in his dutie he hath a yearely fee of 20. pound or 30. pound paid out of the Exchequer and certaine fee Deere both redde and falow His office consisteth cheifely in these three points ad perambulandum quotidie per terras deafforestatas ad videndum audiendum inquirendum tam de malefactis quàm de malefactoribus in Balliua sua ad refugandum feras Forestae tam veneris quàm chaseae de terris deafforestatis in terras afforestatas and ad praesentandū omnes transgressiones Forestae in terris deafforestatis factas ad proximas curias illius Forestae tentas Rawnsom See Ransom Ray seemeth to be a word attributed to cloth neuer coloured or died v. anno 11. H. 4. cap. 6. Realtie See Royaltie Reasonable ayde Rationabile auxilium is a duty that the Lord of the fee claimeth holding by Knights seruice or in soccage to marie his daughter or to make his sonne Knight Westm 1. cap. 39. See Ayde See Brooke titulo Reasonable aide Reattachement Reattachiamentum is a second attachement of him that was formerly attached and dismissed the court without day as by the not cōming of the Iustices or some such like casualtie Brooke tit Reattachment where he maketh a Reattachment generall and a Reattachment speciall Reattachment general seemeth to be where a man is reattached for his appearance vpon all writs of Assise lying against him Brooke eodem nu 14. Then speciall must be for one or more certaine Register Iudiciall fol. 35. See the newe booke of Entrise verbo Reattachment Rebellion Rebellio is a French word signifiing the taking vp of armes against the King or present estate This French commeth from the Latine Rebellio which signifieth a second resistance of such as being formerly ouercome in battaile by the Romanes yeelded themselues to their subiection The French men and we vse it generally for the traiterous taking vp of armes against the estate be it by naturall subiects or by others formerly subdued Reade more of this lib. 3. feudorum cap. 61. and Hotoman vpon the same chapter See the writ of Rebellion Rebell is sometime attributed to him that wilfully breaketh a lawe anno 25. Ed. 3. cap. 6. anno 31. eiusdem stat 3. c. 2. sometime to a villein disobeying his Lord a. 1. R. 2. c. 6. Rebellious Assembly is a gathering together of 12. persons or more intending or going about practising or putting in vre vnlawfully of their owne authoritie to chaunge any lawes or statutes of this Realme or to destroy the inclosure of any park or ground inclosed or bankes of any fisheponds pale or conduict to the intent the same shall remaine voide or to the intent vnlawfully to haue common or way in any of the said grounds or to destroy the Deere in any Park or any warrē of conies or deuehouses or fish in any pondes or any house barnes mils or bayes or to burne stacks of corne or to abate rents or prices of victuals an pri Mar. c. 12. an 1. Eliza. cap. 17. See West parte 2. symbol titulo Inditem 〈…〉 s. Sectio 65. And Cromptons Iustice of peace f. 41. b. Rebutter commeth of the French Bouter i. pellere impellere propellere intrudere and signifieth in our common lawe the same thing For example a man giueth land to him and the issue of his body to antoher in fee with warranty And the Donnee leaseth out this land to a third for yeares The heire of the Donour impleadeth the tenent alleadging that the land was intailed to him The Donee commeth in and by vertue of the warrantie made by the Donour repelleth the heire because though the land were intailed to him ye● he is heire to the warranty likewise and this is called a Rebutter See Brooke titulo Barre nu 13. And againe if I graunt to my tenent to hould sine impetitione vasti and afterward I implede him for waste made he may debarre me of this action by shewing my graunt and this is likewise a Rebutter Idem eodem nu 25. See the newe booke of Entries verbo Rebutter Renant anno 32. H. 8. ca. 2. Recaption Recaptio signifieth a second distresse of one formerly distreined for the selfe same cause and also during the plee grounded vpon the former distresse It likewise signifieth a writ lying for the party thus destreined the forme and farder vse whereof you may see in Fitzh nat br fol. 71. and the Register orig fol. 86. and the Register Iudiciall fol. 69. and the new booke of Entries verbo Recaption Receyver Receptor or Receptator generally and indefinitely vsed is as with the Ciuilians so also with vs vsed commonly in the euill part for such as receiue stollen goods from theeues and conceale them l. 1. Π. de receptatoribus but annexed to other words as the receiuer of rents c. it signifieth many times an officer of great accoumpte belonging to the king or other great personage Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 18. There is also an officer called the Reiceiuer of Fynes who receiueth the mony of all such as compound with the King in the office of the finances for the buying of any lands or tenements houlden in Capite West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 106. Receiuer of all offices accounptable anno 1. Ed. 4. ca. 1. Receiuer generall of the Duchy of Lancaster is an officer belonging to the Duchy court that gathereth in all the reuenewes and fines of the lands of the said Duchy and of all forfeitures and assesments or what else is thence to be receiued Receiuer generall of the court of Wards and liueries is an officer belonging to that court that is to receiue all rents revenewes and fines of the lands belonging to his maiesties wards as also the fines for licences to the Kings widowes to mary of ouster le main sued out and for idiots and lunatikes land and finally all other profits whatsoeuer in mony arising to his maiestie out of or by reason of the court of wards and lyveries Receiuer generall of the Muster rolles anno 35. El. ca. 4. Receiuer generall of the Duchie of Lancaster of the wards and liveries anno 39. Elizab. cap. 7. Receyt See Resceit Recluse Reclusus is he that by reason of his order in religion may not stirre out of his house or cloyster Litleton fol. 92. Recognisance Recognitio commeth of the French Recognoisance i. agnitio recognitio and in our common lawe is thus defined A Recognisance is a bond of record testifing the recognizour to owe vnto the recognizee a certaine summe of money and is knowledged in some court of record or before some Iudge or other officer of such court hauing authoritie to take the same as the Masters of the Chancerie the Iudges of
the Parson of the Church dying a straunger presenteth his Clerke to the Church he not hauing moued his action of Quare impedit nor darrein presentment within sixe monethes but suffered the straunger to vsurpe vpon him And this writ he only may haue that claimeth the Aduowzen to himselfe and to his heires in fee. And as it lyeth for the whole aduowzen so it lyeth also for the halfe the third the fourth part old nat br fol. 24. Register originall fol. 29. Recto de custodia terrae haeredis is a writ that lyeth for him whose Tenent houlding of him in Chiualry dyeth in his nonage against a straunger that entreth vpon the land and taketh the body of the heire The forme and farder vse whereof see in Fitzh nat br fol. 139. and the register originall fol. 161. Recto sur disclaimer is a writ that lyeth where the Lord in the kings court sc in the common plees doth avow vpon his tenent and the Tenent disclaimeth to hould of him vpon the disclaimer he shall haue this writ and if the Lord auerre and proue that the land is houlden of him he shall recouer the land for euer old nat br fo 150. which is grounded vpon the statute Westm 2. ca. 2. anno 13. Ed. pri which statute beginneth Quia Domini feudorum c. Rector is both Latine and English signifiing a Gouernour In the common law rector ecclesia parochialis is he that hath the charge or cure of a parish Church qui tantum ius in ecclesia parochiali habet quantum praelatus in ecclesia collegiata ca. vlt De locat Conduct in glos verbo Expelli potuissent In our common law I heare that it is lately ouer ruled that rector ecclesiae parochialis is he that hath a personage where there is a vicarage endowed and he that hath a personage without a vicarage is called persona But this distinction seemeth to be new and subtile praeter rationem I am sure Bracton vseth it otherwise lib 4. tracta 5. ca. pri in these words Et sciendum quod rectoribus ecclesiarum parochialium competit Assisa qui instituti sunt per Episcopos Ordinarios vt personae Where it is plaine that rector and persona be confounded Marke also these words there following Item dici possunt rectores Canonici de ecclesus praebendatis Item dici possunt rectores vel quasi Abbates Priores alii qui habent ecclesias ad proprios vsus Rectus in curia is he that standeth at the barre and hath no man to obiect any offence against him Smith de repub Angl li. 2. c. 3. see a. 6. R. 2. sta 1. c. 12. Reddendum is vsed many times substantiuely for the clause in a lease c. Whereby the rent is reserued to the leasour Coke lib. 2. Lord Cromwels case fol. 72. b. Redisseisin redisseisina is a disseisin made by him that once before was found and adiudged to haue disseised the same man of his lands or tenements For the which there lyeth a speciall writ called a writ of redisseisin old nat br fol. 106. Fitzh nat br fol. 188. See the new booke of Entries verb. Redisseisin Redisseisina is a writ lying for a redisseisin Reg. orig fo 206. 207. Reddicion is a iudiciall confession and acknowledgement that the land or thing in demaūd belongeth to the demaundant or at the least not to himselfe a. 34. 35. H. 8. ca. 24. Perkins Dower 379. 380. Redubbours be those that buy cloth which they know to be stollen and turne it into some other forme or fashion Britton cap. 29. Cromptobs Vicount fol. 193. a. Reentry cōmeth of the French r●●trer i. rursus intrare and signifieth in our common law the resuming or taking againe of possession which we had ●●●st forgone For example if I make a lease of land or tenement I doe thereby forgoe the possession and if I doe condition with the Leassee that for non payment of the rent at the day it shal be lawfull for me to reenter this is as much as if I conditioned to take againe the lands c. into mine owne hands and to recouer the possession by mine owne fact without the assistance of Iudge or proces Reere countie See Rier Cowntye Re extent is a a second extent made vpon lands or tenements vpon complaint made that the former extent was partially performed Brooke titulo Extent fol. 313. Regard regardum is borowed of the French Regard or Regardure i. aspectus conspectus respectus and though it haue a generall signification of any care or diligence yet it hath also a speciall acceptance and therein is vsed onely in maters of the Forest and there two waies one for the office of the Regarder the other for the compasse of ground belonging tothe Regarders office or charge Cromptons Iurisd fol. 175. 199. Touching the former thus saith M. Manwod parte pri of his Forest lawes pag. 198. The Eire generall sessions of the Forest or Iustices seat is to be houlden and kepte euery third yeare and of necessity before that any such sessions or Iustices seate can be houlden the Regarders of the Forest must make their Regard And this making of the Regard must be done by the kings writ And the Regard is as he afterward there saith to goe through the whole Forest and euery Bayliwicke of the same to see and enquire of the trespasses of the Forest which he compriseth in these 4. viz. ad videndendum ad inquirendum ad imbreviandum ad certificandum Of euery of which braunches you may reade there his exposition Touching the second signification the compas of the Regarders charge is the whole Forest that is all that ground which is parcell of the Forest For there may be woods within the limits of the Forest that be no parcell thereof and those be without the Regard as the same author plainely declareth parte pri pag. 194. and againe parte 2. cap. 7. nu 4. where he sheweth the difference between these words Infra Regardum or Rewardum Infra Forestam Regarder Regardator commeth of the French Regardeur i. spectator signifieth an officer of the Forest Cromptons Iurisdict fol. 153. where it is thus defined A Regarder is an officer of the Forest appointed to survew all other officers He saith there also that this officer was ordeined in the beginning of King Henry the seconds daies M. Manwood in his first part of Forest lawes pag. 188. thus defineth him A Regarder is an officer of the Kings Forest that is sworne to make the Regard of the Forest as the same hath been vsed to be made in auncient time And also to view and inquire of all offences of the Forest as well of vert as of venison and of all concealements of any offences or defaults of the Foresters and of all other officers of the Kings Forest concerning the execution of their offices He saith there also that a Regarder may be made either by the Kings
patents to any man Brooke titulo Repellance Resumption fol. 298. Thus it is applyed anno 31. H. 6. cap. 7. See Reseiser Retainer commeth of the French retenir i. detinere retinere It signifieth in the cōmon law a seruant not meniall nor familiar that is not continually dwelling in the house of his Lord or Master but onely vsing or bearing his name or liuery This liuery was wont to consist of hats otherwise hoods badges and other suits of one garment by the yeare anno pri R. 2. cap. 7. These were taken by great Lords many times vpon purpose of maintenance and quarels and therefore they haue beene iustly for the better freedome of law forbidden by many statutes as namely by anno pri R. 2. cap. 7. vpon paine of imprisonment and greeuous forfeiture to the King and againe anno 16 eiusd cap. 4. anno 20. eiusedem cap. 1. 2. and anno pri H. 4. cap. 7. by the which the Lords offending herein should make ransome at the Kings will and any Knight or Esquire hereof duly attainted should loose his said Liuery and forfeit his see for euer and any yeoman wearing the Liuery of the King or other Lord should be imprisoned and make raunsome at the Kings will onely some fewe excepted in the said statute which statute is farder confirmed and explaned anno 2. H. 4. cap. 21. an 7. eiusd cap. 14. anno 13. eiusd cap. 3. anno 8. H. 6. ca. 4. And yet this offence was so deeply rooted that Edward the fourth was driuen to confirme the former statutes and farder to extend the meaning of them as appeareth by the statute made anno 8. Ed. 4. cap. 2. adding an especiall paine of fiue pounds to euery man that giueth such Liuery and as much to euery one so retained either by writing oath or promise for euery moneth Yet is not this fault so well looked vnto but that there is need of more pregnant lawes for the redresse thereof or at the least beter execution of those that be already made These be by the Feudists called affidati Sic enim dicuntur qui in alicuius fidem tutelam recepti sunt Neapol constitu li. 3. titulo 7. And as our retainers are here forbidden so are those affidati in other countries Retraxit is an exception against one that formerly commenced an action and withdrew it or was non-suit before triall Brooke titulo Departure in despight Retraxit fol. 216. See also the new booke of Entries verbo Deperter verbo retrar it Returne returna commeth of the French retour i. reditio reuersio recursus and in our common law hath two particular applycations as namely the return of a writ by Shyreeues and Bayliffs which is nothing but a certificate made to the Court whereunto the writ directeth him of that which he hath done touching the seruing of the same writ And this among the Ciuilians is called Certificatorium Of returnes in this signification speake the statutes of Westm 2. cap. 39. anno 13. Ed. prim and Tractatus contra Vice-comites Clericos with diuers other collected by Rastal titulo Returne of Shyreeues So is the returne of an office Stawnf prarog fol. 70. a certificate into the court of that which is done by vertue of his office See the Statutes of dayes in banke anno 51. H. 3. anno 32. H. 8. cap. 21. And in this signification Hilary terme is said to haue 4. returnes viz. Octabis Hilarii Quindena Hilarii crastino Purificationis Octabis Purificationis and Easter terme to haue 5. returnes viz. Quindena paschae Tres paschae mense paschae Quinque pasche crastino Ascensionis And Trinity terme 4. returnes i. Crastino Trinitatis Octabis Trinitatis Quindena Trinitatis Tres Trinitatis And Michaelmas Terme 8. returnes sc Octabis Michaelis Quindena Michaelis Tres Michaelis Mense Michaelis Crastino animarum Crastino Martini Octabis Martini Quindena Martini The other application of this word is in case of Repleuy For if a man distraine catell for rent c. And afterward iustifie or avowe his act that it be found lawfull the catell before deliuered vnto him that was distrained vpon security giuen to follow the action shall now be returned to him that distrained them Brooke titulo Returne d'auers hommes fol. 218. you shall finde this word often vsed in Fitzh nat br as appeareth in the word Returne in his table but in all those places it hath the one or the other of these two significations Returno habendo is a writ which lyeth for him that hath auowed a distresse made of catell and proued his distresse to be lawfully taken for the returne of the catell distrained vnto him which before were expleuied by the party distrained vpon suerty giuen to persiew the action Terms of law verbo Repleuin Returnum aueriorum is a writ Iudiciall graunted to one impleaded for taking the cattell of another vniust deteining of them contra vadium plegios and appearing vpon summons is dismissed without day by reaso● that the plaintife maketh default and it lyeth for the returne of the cattell vnto the Defendant whereby he was summoned or which were taken for the security of his apparence vpon the summons Register Iudiciall fol. 4. a. Returnum irreplegiabile is a writ iudiciall sent out of the common plees to the Shyreeue for the finall restitution or returne of catell to the owner vniustly taken by another as dammage seisant and so found by the Iury before Iustices of Assise in the County For which see the Register Iudiciall fo 27. a. b. Reue aliâs Greue Praefectus is made of Gerefa the Saxon word for a gouerner Lamb explica of Saxon words verb. Profectus and that by reiecting the first sillable which he saith among the Saxons is vsuall It signifieth in our common law the Bayliffe of a Fraunchis or maner and especially in the West parts Of this you may see Kitchin fol. 43. See Greue See Shyreeue See also of this word M. Verstigan in his restitution of decayed intelligence cap 10. speaking much to the same effect Reuels seemeth to be deriued from the French word Reueiller i. excitari vel expergefieri It signifieth with vs sports of daunsing masking comedies tragedies and such like vsed in the Kings house the houses of court or of other great personages The reason whereof is because they are most vsed by night when otherwise men commonly sleepe and be at rest In the Kings house there is an officer called the Master of these Reuils who hath the ordering and dispositions of these pastimes in the court Reuenewe is a French word signifiing as much as Reditio Reuersio Reditus It signifieth properly the yearely rent that groweth to euery man from his lands and possessions Reuersion Reversio signifieth in the comon lawe a possibility reserued to a mans selfe and his heires to haue againe lands or tenements made ouer conditionally vnto others vpon the defect or fayling of
Idem eodem Tenent vpon sufferance Idem fol. 165. Tenent of state of inheritance Stawnf praerog fol. 6. Sometime they containe a relation toward the Lord of whom he houldeth as Tenent in cheife i. he that houldeth of the King in the right of his crowne Fitz. nat br fol. 5. F. Tenent of the King as of the person of the King Idem eodem or as of some honour eodem Very tenent i. he that houldeth immediately of his Lord. Kitchin fol. 99. For if there be Lord Mesn and Tenent the Tenent is very Tenent to the mesn but not to the Lord aboue Tenent parauaile pl. cor fo 197. Fitzh nat br fol. 136. D. is the lowest tenent and fardest distant from the Lord Paramont It seemeth to be tenent per auaile See Diers commentaries fol. 25. nu 156. Noe tenent in right to the Lord but Tenent as for the avowrie to be made Litleton fol. 96. Sometime they haue a relation betweene Tenents and Tenents in seuerall kindes as ioynt tenents i. they that haue equall right in lands and tenements and all by vertue of one title Litleton li. 3. ca. 3. Tenents in common be they that haue equall right but hold by diuers titles as one or more by gift or descent and others by purchase Idem eod cap. 4. Particular tenent Stawnf praerog fol. 13. that is he which holdeth onely for his terme as tenent in dower tenent by the courtesie or otherwise for life West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 13. G. See anno 32. H. 8. ca. 31. and Cooke in Sir William Pellams case lib. 5. fol. 15. a. they be termours for yeares or life See Plowden casu Colthirst fol. 23. b. Sole tenent Kitchin 134. i. he that hath none other ioyned with him If a man and his wife hold for both their liues and the man dyeth he dieth not sole tenent Idem eodem Seuerall tenent is opposite to ioynt tenents or tenents in common See Seuerall tenencie Tenent al praecipe is he against whom the writ Fraecipe is to be brought Cookes Reports lib. 3. the case of fines fol. 88. a. Tenent in demesn anno 13. Ed. 1. cap. 9. anno 32. H. 8. cap. 37. is he that holdeth the demeanes of a maner for a rent without seruice Tenent in feruice an 20. Ed. 1. stat pri is he that holdeth by seruice v. Britton cap. 79. in principie ca. 96. Car fealte c. vel quaere whether he may be termed tenent in demesne that holdeth some of the Demeanes howsoeuer and he tenent in seruice which is a freehoulder to a maner houlding by seruice for the free houlds of a manner are not accounted of the demesne but onely that which the Lord keepeth in his owne hand or letteth out by copie according to the custome of the maner Tenent by execution an 32. Henr. 8. cap. 5. is he that holdeth land by vertue of an exeution vpon any statute recognisance c. Tendeheved decanus vel caput decem familiarum of this see Roger Hoveden parte poster suorum annalium fol. 346. a. See Frank pledge Tenement Tenementum is diuersly vsed in the common lawe Most properly it signifieth a house or home stall but in a larger signification it is taken for either house or land that a man holdeth of another And ioyned with the adiectiue Frank in our lawyers French it conteineth generally lands or houses yea or offices wherein we haue estate for terme of life or in fee. And in this signification Kitchin fol. 41. maketh frank tenement and base estate opposite the one to the other In the same sort doth Britton vse it through his whole 27. chapter as also Bracton doeth the latine liberum tenentum lib. pri cap. 5. 6. and many other places Tenentibus in assisa non onerandis c. is a writ that lieth for him to whome a disseisour hath alienated the land whereof he disseised another that he be not molested for the dammages awarded if the Disseisour haue wherewith to satisfie them him selfe Register orig fol. 214. b. Tenths Decimae is that yearely portion or tribute which all liuings ecclesiasticall doe yeeld to the king For though the Bishop of Rome doe originally pretend right vnto this revenewe by example of the high preist among the Iewes who had tenths from the Levites Numb cap. 8. Hieronimus in Ezechielem yet Iread in our Chronicles that these were often graunted to the King by the Pope vpon diuers occasions sometime for one yeare sometime for more vntill by the statute anno 26. Hen. 8. cap. 3. they were annexed perpetually to the Crown See Disms It signifieth also a taske leuied of the temporalty Holinshed H. 2. f. 111. Tenore indictamenti mittendo is a writ whereby the Record of an indictment and the proces thereupon is called out of another court into the chauncerie Register orig fol. 169. a. Tenure Tenura commeth of the Norman Teneure as appeareth by the Grand Custumarie cap. 28. where it is defined to this effect Tenure is the maner whereby tenements are houlden of their Lords What may make a tenure and what not see Perkins Reseruations 70. And in that chapter shall you finde the most of those tenures recited that be now vsually in England In Scotland I finde that there be foure maner of tenures which they call halding of land the first is pura eleemozina which is proper to spirituall men paying nothing for it but deuot a animarum suffragia the second they call Few or few ferme which houldeth of the King Church Barons or others paying a certaine duty called Feudi firma The third is a hould in Blench as they terme it by payment of a peny rose paire of guilt spurs or some such like thing if it be asked in name of Blench id est nomine albae firmae The fourth is by seruice of ward and relieue where the heire being minor is in the gard or custody of his Lord togither with his lands c. And land houlden in this fourth maner is called there feudum de Hauberk or Haubert or feudum militare or feudum Hauberticum or feudum loricatum because it is giuen vpon condition that the vassall possessor therof shall come to the host with a lack or Haubert which is a coate of maile M. Skene de verb significa verbo Haubert Tenure in grosse is the Tenure in Capite For the Crowne is called a Seignory in grosse because it consisteth as a corporation of and by it selfe not tyed to any honour or maner See Cromptons Iurisd fol 206. See the new booke of Entries verbo Tenure Term Terminus signifieth with vs commonly the bounds and limitation of time as a lease for terme of life or terme of yeares Bracton lib. 2. cap. 6. nu 4. But most notoriously it is vsed for that time wherein the Tribunals or places of Iudgement are open to all that list to complaime of wrong or to seeke their right by course of law or
Yere and day annus dies is a time thought in construction of our common lawe fit in many cases to determine a right in one and to worke an vsucapion or prescription in another As in a case of an estray if the owner proclamations being made chalenge it not within that time it is forfeit So is the yeare and day giuen in case of appeale in case of descent after entry or claime of no claime vpon a fine or writ of right at the common lawe so of a villein remaining in auncient demeane of the death of a man sore bruised or wounded of protections essoines in respect of the Kings service of a wreck and divers other cases Coke vol. 6. fol. 107. b. And that touching the death of a man seemeth an imitation of the civile lawe Nam si mortifere fuerit vulneratus postea post lon gum intervallum mortuus sit inde annum numerabimus secundum ●ulianum l. ait lex Π. ad legē Aquil. Yeare day and waste annus dies vastum is a part of the Kings prerogatiue whereby he challengeth the profits of their lands and tenements for a yere and a day that are attainted of petit treason or felonie whosoeuer be Lord of the maner whereunto the lands or tenements do belong and not onely so but in the end wasteth the tenement destroyeth the houses rooteth vp the woods gardens pastures and ploweth vp medowes except the Lord of the fee agree with him for the redemption of such waste afterward restoring it to the Lord of the fee. Whereof you may reade at large in Stawnf praerog cap. 16. fol. 44. seqq Yoman seemeth to be one word made by contraction of two Danish words yong men which I gather out of Canutus Charter of the Forest set out by M. Manwood parte prim fol. prim num 2. in these words Sunt sub quolibet horum quatuor ex mediocribus hominibus quos Angli Legespend nuncupant Dani verò yong men vocant locati qui curam onus tum viridis tum veneris suscipiant These M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 105. placeth next in order to Gentlemen calling them Ingenuos whose opinion the statute affirmeth anno 16. R. 2. cap. 4. whereunto adde the statute anno 20. eiusdem Regis cap. 2. Sir Thomas Smith in his Repub. Anglor lib. prim cap. 23. calleth him a Yoman whom our lawes call legalem hominem which as he saith is in English a Free man borne that may dispend of his owne free land in yerely reuenew to the summe of forty shillings sterling Of these he writeth a good large discourse touching their estate and vse in this common wealth The former etymologie of the name he liketh not making question whether it come of the Dutch yonker yea or not which in the Low countries signifieth a meane Gentleman or a gay fellow But he that hath added the marginall notes to that booke seemeth to draw it from the Saxon Geman which signifieth a maried man M. Versteg an in his restitution of decayed intelligence cap. 10. writeth that Gemen among the auncient Teutonicks and Gemein among the moderne signifieth as much as Common and that the first leter G. is in this word as in many others turned into Y. and so written Yemen and that therfore Yemen or Yeomen signifieth so much as Commoner Yoman signifieth an Officer in the Kings house which is in the middle place betweene the Serge an t and the Groome as Yoman of the Chaundrie and Yoman of the Scullerie anno 33. H. 8. cap. 12. Yoman of the Crowne anno 3. Ed. 4. cap. 5. anno 22. eius cap. 1. anno 4. H. 7. cap. 7. This word Yongmen is vsed for Yomen in the statute anno 33. H. 8. cap. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FINIS
kings house whose function is fragmenta diligenter colligere ea distribuere singulis diebus egenis agrotos leprosos incarceratos pauperesque viduas alios egenos vagosque in patria commorantes charitative visitare item equos relictos robas pecuniam alia ad eleemosynae largita recipere fideliter distribuere Debet etiam regem super eleemosynae largitione crebris summonitionibus stimulare praecipuè diebus Sanctorum rogare ne robas suas quae magni sunt pretii histrionibus blanditoribus adulatoribus accusatoribus vel menestrallis sed and eleemosinae suae incrementum iubeat largiri Fleta lib. 2. cap. 2. Almoine eleemosina See Frank almoyne Almond amygdalum is well knowne to euery mans sight it is the kirnell of a nut or stone which the tree in Latine called amygdalus doth beare within a huske in maner of a wal nut of whose nature and diuersities you may reade Gerards Herball lib. 3. cap. 87. This is noted among merchandize that are to be garbled anno 1. Iaco. ca. 19. Alnegeor aliâs aulnegeor vlniger vel vlnator cometh from the French aulne an elle or elwand and signifieth an officer of the Kings who by himselfe or his deputie in places conuenient looketh to the assise of wollen cloth made through the land and to seals for that purpose ordained vnto them an 25. Ed. 3. Stat. 4. cap. 1. anno 3. R. 2. cap. 2. who is accomptable to the king for euery cloth so sealed in a fee or custome therunto belonging anno 17. R. 2. cap. 2. Reade of this more anno 27. Ed. 3 cap. 4. anno 17. R. 2. cap. 2. 5. anno 1. H. 4. cap. 13. anno 7. eiusdem cap. 10. anno 11 eiusd cap. 6. anno 13. eiusd cap. 4. anno 11. H. 6. cap. 9. anno 31. eiusdem cap. 5. anno 4. Ed. 4. ca. 1. anno 8. eiusdem cap. 1. an 1. R. 3. cap. 8. Ambidexter is that iurour or embraceour that taketh of both parties for the giuing of his verdict He forfeiteth ten times so much as he taketh anno 38. Ed. 3. cap. 12. Cromptons iustice of peace fol. 156. b. Amendment emendatio commeth of the French amendement and signifieth in our common lawe a correction of an error committed in a processe and espyed before iudgment Terms of the lawe Broke titulo Amendement per totum But if the fault be found after iudgment giuen then is the party that wil redresse it driuen to his writ of errour Tearmes of the lawe Broke titulo Error Amerciament amerciamentum signifieth the pecuniarie punishment of an offendor against the King or other Lord in his court that is found to be in misericordia i. to haue offended and to stand at the mercie of the King or Lord. There seemeth to be a difference betweene amerciaments and fines Kitchin fol. 214. And I haue heard cōmon Lawyers say that fines as they are taken for punishments be punishments certaine which grow expresly from some statute and that amerciaments be such as be arbitrably imposed by affeerors This is in some sort confirmed by Kitchin fol. 78. in these words l'amerciamēt est affire per pares M. Manwood in his first part of Forest lawes pag. 166. seemeth to make another difference as if he would inferre an amerciamēt to be a more easie or more mercifull penaltie and a fine more sharpe and grieuous Take his wordes If the pledges for such a trespasse saith he do appeare by common summons but not the defendant himselfe then the pledges shall be imprisoned for that default of the defendant but otherwise it is if the defendant himselfe do appeare and be ready in Court before the Lord Iustice in eyre to receiue his iudgment and to pay his fine But if such pledges do make default in that ease the pledges shall be amerced but not fined c. The author of the new tearmes of lawe saith that amerciament is most properly a penalty assessed by the peeres or equals of the partie amercied for an offence done for the which he putteth himselfe vpon the mercie of the Lord. Who also maketh mentiō of an amerciament royal and defineth it to be a pecuniarie punishment laid vpon a Sheriffe Coroner or such like Officer of the kings amercied by Iustices for his offence See Misericordia Amoveas manum Looke ouster le r●aiue An tour waste annus dies vastum Looke yeare day and waste Ancaling of tile anno 17. Ed. 4. ca 4. Annats Annates seemeth to be all one with first fruites anno 25. H. 8. ca. 20. looke First fruites The reason is because the rate of first fruites payed of spirituall liuings is after one yeares profite Of which Folydore Virgil de inuētione rerum lib. 8. cap. 2. saith thus Nullum inuentum m●iores Romano Pontifici cumulavit opes quàm annatum quas vocant vsus qui omnino multò antiquior est quàm recētiores quidam scriptores suspicantur Et annates more suo appellant primos fructus vnius anni sacerdatii vacantis aut danidiam eorum partem Sanè hoc vectigal iam pride cùm Romanus Pontifex non habuerit tot possessiones quot nunc habet eum oportuerit pro dignitate pro officio multos magnosque facere sumptus paulatim impositum fuit sacerdotiis vacantibus quae ille conferret de qua quidem re vt gravi saepe reclamatum fuisse testatur Henricus Hostiensis qui cum Alexandro 4. Pontifice vixit sic vt Franciscus Zabarellus tradat post hac in concilio Viennensi quod Clemens quintus indixit qui factus est Pontifex anno salutis humanae 135. agitatum fuisse vt eo deposito annatum onere vigesima pars vectigalium sacerdotalium penderetur quotannis Romano Pontifici id quidem frustrà Quare Pontifex annatas in sua nassa retinuit vt ne indidem exire possent lege caetera Anniented commeth of the French aneantir i. se abiicere atque prosternere It signifieth with ourlawyers as much as frustrated or brought to nothing Litlet●n lib. 3. cap. warrantie Annua pensione is a writte wherby the king hauing due vnto him an annuall pension from any Abbot or Prior for any of his Chaplaines whom he shal think good to name vnto him being as yet vnprouided of sufficient liuing doth demaund the same of the said Abbot or Prior for one whose name is comprised in the same writ vntill c. and also willeth him for his Chaplaines better assurance to giue him his leters patents for the same Register orig fol. 265. 307. Fitzh nat br fol. 231. where you may see the names of al the Abbeyes and Priories bound vnto this in respect of their foundatiō or creation as also the forme of the leters patents vsually graunted vpon this writ Annuitie annuus reditus signifieth a yearely rent to be paide for tearme of life or yeres or in fee and is also vsed for the writ that lyeth against a man for