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A87798 Jurisdictions or, The lawful authority of courts leet, courts baron, court of marshallseys, court of pypowder, and ancient demesne : together with the most necessary learning of tenures, and all their incidents, of essoynes, imparlance, view; of all manner of pleadings, of contracts, of the nature of all sorts of actions, of maintenance; of diverse other things, very profitable for all students of innes of court and chancery : and a most perfect directory for all stewards of any the sayd courts. / Heretofore writ in French by the methodically learned, John Kitchin of Grays-Inne, Esq; and now most exactly rendred to more ample advantage in the English tongue; with a demonstrative table, pointing out all matter of consequence, throughout the whole work. Whereunto is added the authentick formes of all manner of writs, with their severall returnes in English, very usefull for all men in this Common-wealth, as they be now used.; Court leete et court baron. English Kitchin, John. 1651 (1651) Wing K656; Thomason E1225_1; ESTC R211060 481,896 637

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which abjured and for which he is hanged and for that it is said if one rise against the King and is slain that he shall not forfeit his Lands untill he be afterwards attaint by Parliament as in use 7 H. 4. fol. 33. the same 7 H. 4. fol. 48. See Stamford fol. 49. The King shall have yeare day and Waste and Chattells forfeited Fitzh 144. It seemeth that the King shall have yeare day and waste where one is convict of Felony and that is the next yeares profits for if one taketh the profits that yeare and day the Lord shall have a Writt to the Sheriff to deliver him possession and he which hath taken the profits shall answer to the King for that Fitzh 144. N. The King shall have the escheat of Tenements in Cities and Borroughs which are held of him in fee farme Fitzh 6. b. The King as it appeares by the Register shall have a Writ of escheate returned into the Kings Bench for the King may sue in what Court he will 31. Ed. 1. tit discent 17. f. If the Son and Heire of A. be Outlawed in the time of his Father of Felony and after he purchase his Charter of pardon in the life time of his Father and after the Father dies he shall not have the Lands descended from his Father but the Lord of whom they are held by escheate 9 H. 5. fol. 9. the same 1. Ed. 1. tit discent 15. the blood is corrupt which cannot take by discent 26. Of the booke of Assises 2. If the Son be attainted of Felony in the Life time of his Father and hanged his Sister shall have the Land by descent from the Father and it shall not escheate 46. Ed. 3. tit discent 6. If the Father have a Son and a Daughter and the Son be attaint of Felony in the life time of his Father and dieth there the Daughter shall have the Land and if he survive the father then the Lord by escheate 8 Ed. 1. tit Assise 421.49 book of Ass 4. 3. booke Assise Where the Tenant grants a rent-charge out of his Land and after that escheates the Lord shall hold this charged but otherwise it is where a Tenant which holds of the King chargeth and dieth without Heire 4 Ed. 4. fol. 2. If that be found by Office yet it cannot be Natura brevium 103. In a Writ of Escheat it is no Plea that he died not seised but it is a good Plea that he did not dy his Tenant Fithz 144. C If the Tenant be disseised and after dieth without Heire it seemeth the Lord shall have a Writ of Esch eate for that that his Tenant died in his Homage 2 H. 4. fol. ninth the same Fitzh 144. If a man be beheaded for Felony or dy after Judgment before he be put in execution by the Officer yet the Writ shall say for which he was hanged Na Bre fol. 104. the same 11 H. 4. fol. 16. One may have escheate and ward before he be seised of the services Littleton 106. if a Signiory be granted by fine See 2 and 3 Ed. 6. chap. 8. Where one hath a Rent c. The King is intitled to the Land by attainder and that is not found in the Office yet he himself shall have his Rent by the Statute And it is to see now where a forfeiture shall be of Goods onely and not of Lands and where not ONe indicted that he killeth one in defending himself by Fairefax he shall be arraigned and shall loose his Goods 21 Ed. 3. fol. 18. and shall not forfeit his Lands 4. H. 7. fol. 2. fol. 18. Where one killeth one in defending himselfe or by mischance he shall forfeit his Goods and not his Lands Stamford fol. 45. If one kill another by misfortune he shall forfeit his Coods and it behoveth that he have his pardon of grace Stamford fol. 185. the same 26 H. 6. fol. 6. the same and he shall not forfeit his Lands 2. H. 4. fol. 20. One arraigned pleads not guilty and it was found that the dead struck the other to the ground and for haste fell upon the blade of him that lay upon the ground he lying upon the ground shall not forfeit his Goods but if it were found that he kils him in defending himself it is otherwise 44 Ed. 3. fol. 44. 49. Ed. 3. fol. 5. Where a man is indebted to a man attainted by specialty the King shall have it contrarily if it be without specialty for the Debtor may wage his Law against him which is attainted contrary against the King but in the Exchequer it was held that debt to be forfeit to the King 16. Ed. 4. fol. 4. A man cannot wage his Law against the King 50. Ed. 3. fol. 1. Stamford 183. See forfeiture upon he made his flight and fol. 184. upon an Exigent awarded and fol. 185. upon a Clerk convict and fol. 187. of Lands and of a thing in action and so further of Forfeiture Clerke convict shall forfeit all his Goods but not his Lands but the Clerke attaint shall forfeit his Lands 40 Ed. 3. fol. 42. Fitzh fol. 66. yeare 20 Ed. 4. fol. 5. Clerke convict shall forfeit his Goods notwithstanding that after he makes his purgation which now is not made by the Statute of 18. Eliz. chap. 7. And then he shall forfeit the Issues of his Lands till he hath made his purgation 8. Ed. 2. Forfeiture 34. and Stamford fol. 185. A Clerk convict is not out of the Law as an Alien is for his Heire shall inherit his Lands after his death 3. H. 7. fol. 12 and 21. H. 7. fol. 31. A Woman out of her wits killeth her Husband she shall forfeit nothing Stamford fol. 45. Where a man distracted kill one he shall forfeit nothing 3. Ed. 3. forfeiture 25. Executors Outlawed shall not forfeit the Goods which they have as Executors nor by attainder of Felony 32 H. 6. fol. 34. By award of Exigent in Felony though he be acquitted afterwards his Goods are forfeited 44 Ed. 3 fol. 17 and Stamford fol. 184. D 22 booke of Assises 81. By award of Exigent Goods and Profits of his Lands are forfeited if the Exigent be not erroniously awarded Stamford fol. 47. If one be indicted upon the view of the body before the Coroner of death all his goods are forfeited though that he be acquit afterwards Stamford fol. 45. See 5. H. 4. 13. H. 4. fol. 15. If a man be convict of Heresie and be delivered to the Lay power his Goods are forfeited though that he be not put in execution but his Lands he shall not forfeit unlesse he be put to death Doctor and Student fol. 14. One killeth himself he shall forfeit his Goods and not his Lands 3 Ed. 3. Tit. Coron 201. 8. Ed. 2. Tit. Corone 420. The Goods of them which hang themselves are confiscate 8. Ed. 4. fol. 4. One put to his penance shall not forfeit his Lands but Goods 14. Ed. 4. fol. 7. For
furrender and shall not be avoided by the Disseisees nor otherwise by him which surrender nor by his Heire In pleading of a copy is that the Lord by such a one his Steward did demise and not that the Lord did demise and also that a Woman be alone and privately examined by the Steward and it behoveth in pleading to say by such a Steward and name the name of the Steward and for that it is good order to expresse in the copy and the Court-roll that to this Court came J. S. and Alice his Wife she alone and privately being examined by J. K. the Steward there and to set the name of the Steward to every copy and also to every Court-roll for pleading in divers cases 〈◊〉 the Lord by J. K. his Steward granted him Seisin by a Rod c. 8 H. 5. fol. 4. and 10 Ed. 4. f. 6. Limitation THE Statute of 32 H. 8. chap. 2. extends to copy-holds for the Statute is that none shall make prescription Title nor claim c. above forty yeares c. and that doth a copy-holder and for that is within the Statute 6 Ed 6. Brook Limitation 2. 38 H. 8. chap. 1. Copy-holder which is Tenant in common is not compellable by this Statute to make partition for the Statute gives remedy for one Tenant in common against another by a Writ of making partition and it seems that a Copy-holder is not within the Statute of 27 H. 8. chap. 10. of Joynture of Women for that Statute bars Women which have Joyntures before Marriage to have Dower that is of Lands given in Dower by the Law and not by custome Where a copy-holder by the custome may surrender his Land out of the Court into the hands of the Lord by the hands of two copy-holders or one to the use of J.S. and a copy-holder so makes surrender to two and one dies or both dye before the next Court and yet Homage findes it this is good surrender and J. S. shall be admitted Tenant by copy of Lands of the nature of Gavell-kinde hath Issue two Sons his eldest Son hath Issue a Son and dies seised this Land shall descend to the youngest Son and to his Nephew the same Law is if the Son have Issue a Daughter and dies seised this Daughter and the youngest Son shall have this Land by discent and yet the Statute of Prerog Regis chap. 16. is that Women shall not share with Men. Tenant by copy surrenders to the use of one for life the remainder to the use of one most neere in blood and hath Issue two Sons the eldest hath Issue and dies the Tenant for life dies the youngest Brother shal have the Land and not the Issue of the eldest Brother for the youngest Brother is more neere of blood to his Father then is the ●on of his eldest Son by wich 30 Ass 47. but the youngest Son is not next Heire Where the copy-hold is of the nature of Borrough English and this copy-holder having three Sons surrenders this to the use of his youngest Son in taile the remainder to the use of the Heires of the Body of the Father ingendred and for default of such Issue to the use of the right Heirs of the Father and the youngest Son dies without Issue of his Body it is said that the eldest Brother shall have this as Purchasor Two Joyntenants of one copy-hold are and one surrenders his part to his companion for life this is a severance of the Joynture Lit f. 56. Where the custome of a Mannour is that the youngest Son shall inherit by discent the copy-hold and A. being a Villaine purchase copy-hold there and the Lord seises them and grants them out of his hands by copy the y●●ngest Son of the Grantee shall have this by discent If the tenant by copy of Court-roll hath paid to his Lord more Rent then he ought and the Lord of that Surplusage of Rent was seised by the hands of his tenant yet the tenant shall avoid that in Avowry for he is but tenant at will by the course of the common Law otherwise it is of very tenant of charter land Where a copy-holder in Fee surrenders into the hands of the Lord to the use of J. S. without more all is in the hands of the Lord and the Steward admits J. S. to have and to hold to him and his heirs yet J. S. hath an Estate in Fee and yet the admittance is but allowance of J. S. to be tenant of such Estate which is surrendred but the use is in most courts to enter that it was surrendred to the use of J. S. without more and the Steward enters that the Lord hath granted to him Seisin to have to him and his heirs and taken good but it is better when one surrenders into the hands of the Lord to say and enter to the use and behoof of J. S. for life or to the use and behoof of J. S. and his heirs so that by to the use and behoof the Estate is limited that J. S. shall have it and that makes the admittance accordingly to be good without doubt and yet the other is good for by the surrender all the interest is in the Lord. If the Homagers gives false Verdict in the court of copy-hold the party shall not be bound but he shall traverse that but if such a Verdict be found for the Lord though the Verdict be false yet the party cannot traverse that there but is put to his Petition touching his land or to sue in the Chancery for if the Verdict finde false that waste was made in the Tenements of the Grand-father the Son of the Father shall loose after his land for that it is a forfeiture which runs with the land but seek for it is made by the person of the Father and the Son hath no remedy if the Verdict be true but if the Verdict be false then his remedy is by Petition and by no other remedy in this Court If Tenant by copy makes a Lease for years by license of the Lord and after in the same Court the Tenant will release to his Lessee by such words to remise and release such release seems void for that that it ought to be a Surrender into the hands of the Lord c. as he hath surrendred and released c. Use may be of Copy-holds as well as of Free-hold but the Statute of 27 H. 8. for uniting the possession to the use doth not extend to such tenures Nor he to whose use cannot forfeit the Land by cutting Trees if it were not by the consent and commandement of the Copy-holder If the Lord let severall Copies for one intire Rent and service and the Tenant makes waste in any parcell of them and that be presented in his Court he shall seise all the Copy as it was intirely let A Rent of a Copy-holder may be apportioned as well as another Rent Tenant by copy of Court-Roll in the Court sold
and bargained his copy-hold to J. S. and his heires J. S. was admitted to have to him and his heires according to the custome this is not good for that it wants this word Surrendred Tenant in taile by copy the remainder over to I. S. in Fee surrender his Lands into the hands of two Tenants to the use of I.N. and his heirs and dyes before that be presented and after that was presented and I. N. admitted this is not good but contrary Law if Tenant in Fee had made that surrender and dyed as above Seek By the custome of a Mannor some Lands are copy-hold for three lives and some to them and their heires and the Lord grants by copy that which was for three lives after those three lives ended to one and his heires this is not good but the custome of the Mannor is good though there be severall copy-holders of severall customes The Lord of a Mannor within which are copy-holders and the Lord grants over the Demesnes to I. S. in Fee so that he hath no Court yet it is said that the copy-holders may surrender as before they did And that the Lord by his Grant cannot destroy their surrender and Copies The Lord may avow for Rent of his Copy-holder before admittance where it descends to a copy-holder but he shall not be sworn of the Homage before admittance If the custome of copy-hold be that the Lord may grant for three lives if all dye and then when the land is come into the hands of the Lord he is bound in a Statute and after he grants that over according to the custome this Land shall not be extended upon the Statute And if a copy-holder be bound in a Statute his copy-hold land shall not be extended and if the Lord be bound in a Statute the land of the copy-holder shall not be extended If an Infant be a Lord and admits a copy-holder to him and to his Heires this is good and he cannot avoid that by his Infancy for he is but an instrument to convey that according to the custome and departs with no Estate If a copy-holder will exchange this is not good unlesse there be a surrender and admittance If a Villaine purchase copy-hold and the Lord of the Villaine enter he shall not have possession of the copy-hold till he be admitted Copy-hold shall not be forfeit by attainder of Heresie for ●he blood is not corrupted for the Statute of 5 H. 5. is not to be intended of copy-hold Lands for it is said by the Statute that he shall forfeit his Lands Tenements and Hereditaments and that the Lord of whom the Lands are held shall have the Lands after the King hath yeare day and waste and this is intended of free-hold and not of Copy-hold but if a Copy-holder be attaint of Treason or Felony as it is aforesaid there the Lord shall have the Land for that that the blood is corrupt and so there is none to inherit but by attainder in Heresie is no corruption of blood If a copy-hold be furrendred to my use simply and the Lord admit me upon condition this condition is void for the Lord gives nothing but is an instrument to convey that according to the surrender so if it be surrendred to me for life and the Lord admits me to have to me and my Heires it is not good If a copy-holder of a Mannour takes a Lease for yeares of this Mannour seek if his copy-hold be extinct But if a copy-holder makes a Lease of his copy-hold to his Lord this was held no extinguishment of his copy but a suspension But if the Lord by Indenture make a lease for yeares of copy-hold land to his copy-holder of that the copy-hold is there held to be extinct so if the Lord make a feoffment to his copy-holder of all his Mannour upon condition and after enter for the condition the copy-hold is extinct and if a copy-holder take a lease for years of the Mannour with a remainder over by Indenture this extincts the Copy-hold If a Disseisor be of a Mannor whereof there are copy-holders for three lives and he grant copies for three lives and after the Disseisee re-enter this shall avoid the grant of the copies by the Disseisor But if the Lord of that Mannor make a feoffment in fee upon condition and the Feoffee grants copies for three lives and after the Feoffor enter for the condition broken he cannot avoid the copies If Tenant in taile or in fee of a Mannour will grant Lands by copy which were no copy-hold Lands before and that hath contiuned by divers admittances after as copy-hold and was never interrupted at any time by the Issue in taile but hath been allowed for him so that that hath continued by sixty or eighty yeares this is very good and shall not be ever after avoided but if it may be shewed to have been an Interruptation then it is otherwise 15 Eliz. If a copy-holder surrender to the use of his Wife for life the remainder to him and his Heires and after the Husband surrender to J. D. and his Heires and dies the Wife may enter by Dyer and Mounson Justices and shall hold for life but the Heires of the Husband are bound otherwise it is if the remainder were to the right Heires of the Husband for they are purchasors of this remainder and may enter after the death of the Wife A Copy-holder hath a Son and a Daughter by one Belly and a Son by another Belly and surrenders to the use of his Wife for yeares and conveyes after her death the remainder to his Son of the first venter his Heires and Assignes and dies the Tenant for years is admitted the remainder in form aforesaid the Son of the first Belly dies without Issue before admittance and during the Tearme and Dyer saith that the possession of the Wife of the Termor or of the Guardion is a sufficient possession to make a Brothers possession 16 Eliz. Mounson saith Copy-holders are within all statutes which speake of Tenants for if a copy-holder had not been excepetd in the Stat of dissolution of Monastries the King had had them which Geffrey and Bendlowes granted The Husband by surrender discontinues the copy-hold which he hath in right of his Wife the Wife is put to her Cui in vita and she is not aided by the Statute of 32 H. 8. 24 Eliz. A copy-holder surrenders to the use of his last will and deviseth that his Executors shall sell the Land to J. S. and makes two Executors and dies and one Executor takes a Wife and surrenders to the use of J. S. the Devisee and was said that by the admittance of J. S. that he was copy-holder though that the surrender be made by both the Executors Taile of Copy-hold EState taile may be of a copy-hold and Formedon in descender may lye of that that is to say may sue plaint and make protestation in nature of a Formedon in discender at the
23 H. 8. chap. 15. If any be troubled by attachment or arrested by Latitat or in London or in a Court which hath liberty to hold Plea and no Count be put in within three daies after the Baile put in otherwise appeares unlesse the Court of discretion gives longer day the Defendant shall recover costs and dammages the same Law is if a Suite be discontinued after Count or that the Plaintiff be non-suited then the Defendant forthwith by discretion of the Court shall recover costs and the Statute gives Debt for the costs 8 Eliz. Chap. 2. But one arrested by Bill of Middlesex shall not recover costs though the Plaintiff do not count to be nonsuited If a matter passe against an Informer by Verdict or Judgment the party shall have costs and shall have execution by a Capias to satisfie fieri facias or Elegit but these two last Statutes do not extend to a Court-Baron 18 Eliz. C. 5. 22 H. 8. B. Tit. Costs 25. in quare impedit the Plaintiff shall not recover costs for that the dammages are great 35 H. 8. Tit. 258. 2 Ma. Tit. Costs 23. Debt by Lessor if he be non-suted or bar'd the Defendant shall recover costs by the Statute for it is upon a contract for Rent 2 H. 7. f. 13. Account the Plaintiff shall not recover costs but where the Defendant is adjudged to account and pleads Barr c. It is otherwise 9 H. 6. fol. 66. He shall not recover costs for that the dammages are tremble by the Statute 14 H. 6. fol. 13. forcible entry the same In London by act of common Councell in trespasse by force of Armes and in all other Actions personalls if the Plaintiff be non-suited or a Verdict against him and Judgment upon it or Judgement upon demur against him the Defendant shall recover his costs by discretion of the Court but if the Plaintiff sue as Executor or Administrator which is not upon his own act the Defendant there shall not recover costs and yet trespasse by force of Armes is not within the Statute 23 H. 8. chap. 14. to have costs Damages IT seems if one take my Beasts and after they return to me again I shall have trespasse for taking but upon the evidence I shall not recover the value though the value be in the Writ 11 H. 4. fol. 23. 1 H. 6. fol. 8. 19 H. 6. fol. 34. In what plaints Damages shall be recovered in Court-Barons and in what cases in Court-Barons and other Courts and in what not In plaint in nature of Assise of novell disseisin Grandfather and Great Grandfather Entry by disseisin Dower Nuper obiit Mortdancester Cozenage Replegiare Covenant Debt Action upon the Case Deceit and trespasse Damages and costs shall be recovered by the Plaintiffe Eight Marks were given in plaint of Land in Court-Baron Plowdens Commentaries f. 394. B. If any avow for Rent or doing damage custome or service if the Plaintiffe be non-suited or otherwise barred then the Avowant shall recover damages and costs as the Plaintiffe ought See 19 H. 8. fol. 8. 12 H. 8. chap. 19. Rast tit Avowry 1. Discent THen for that that the second Article is to inquire who is Tenant and what advantage the Lord shall have by the death of his Tenant It behoveth to know who is in by discent to be your Tenant that you may know of whom to have releife and who to be in Ward and who not and who shall be sayd in by discent and where by purchase and where hee shall not be in by discent Gift to one in taile remainder to the right heires of J. S. which was dead T. S. hath that as right heire and is in by purchase and shall not pay releife nor be in ward 40 Ed. 3.9 32 Ed. 3. Fitzh Discent 8. Lord and Tenant the Tenant aliens in Mortmain and the Alience is disseised and the Disseisor dyeth seised his Heire is in by discent yet the Lord may enter within the yeare for he hath only a Title to enter and cannot have an action but contrary of him that hath right of entry and may have action 1 Ed. 6. Tit. Mortmaine 6. Bro. Lease for life the remainder to the right Heires of J.S. the Tenant for life dies living J.S. the remainder is void and J.S. nor his Heires shall not be said in by discent to pay releife nor otherwise shall have the Land as purchasor 9 H. 6. f. 24. Perkins f. 12. the same Lease for life the remainder to the right Heires of J.S. and J.S. dies Tenant for life hath aid of T.S. Son and Heire of J.S. and though he were within age he shall not have his age and shall not pay releife nor be in ward if they hold by Knight service and be within age for that he is in as a Purchasor 11 H. 4. f. 74. Lease for life the remainder to another in taile which dies his Issue within age and after the Tenant for life dies the Issue is in by discent and if he be within age and hold by Knight service he shall be in ward to the Donor 33 H. 6. f. 5. And for that that in the said second Article of Charge you ought to inquire if any Tenant be dead who is his next Heire Let us now see where a Woman is with child at the time of the death of her Husband Tenant and by whom she shall be Judged with child and who shall be said in after the death of the Husband as Heire and shall be Tenant to the Lord and who not IF the Husband Tenant dye seised and his Wife with Child and a Brother of the Husband enter as Heire as he may and after Issue is born this Issue is Heire to the Husband and Tenant to the Lord and not the Brother though he were Tenant and Heire before the Issue was borne 41 Ed. 3. fol. 11. A man Tenant hath a Daughter his Wife with child with a Son and makes a Feoffment upon condition and dies and the Daughter enters for the condition c. and after the Son is born this Son shall not be Heire nor Tenant of this Land the same Law is where there is a Lease for life the remainder to the right Heires of J.S. Tenant for life dies the Daughter enters and after the Son is born he shall not be Heire and Tenant of that Land 9 H. 7. f. 25. Plow f 56. Daughter enters after the Death of her Father Tenant and takes profits and after the Son with which the Wife was with child is borne he may enter and have that as Heire and shall be in by discent and Tenant but hath no remedy for the profits taken by the Daughter before he was born 9 H. 6 fol. 26. If a Woman Tenant seised in Fee hath a Daughter and being with Child with a Son the Husband dies and after the Wife is ravished and consents to the Ravishor and the Daughter enters by the Statute as next of blood as
she may and after the Son is born he cannot enter upon the Daughter and be Heire and Tenant to the Lord Plowd Com. f. 56. 5. Ed. 4. f. 6. By Tearmes of the Law thirty and Wilby if a man Tenant seised of Land in Fee dies seised his Wife privily being with Child with a Son and another man marryes her and after the Son is born he shall be adiudged the Son of the second Husband and not of the first Husband and shall be Tenant to the Lord of the Land of the second Husband and Berrey Justice said that the Infant might choose which he would for his Father 21 Ed. 3. f. 39. Otherwise it is if she had been great with Childe If a Woman be with Child by her Husband Tenant or by another it shall not be tryed but if she be with Child at the time of the death of her Husband or not shall be in Issue for by 1 H. 6. f. 3. If the Wife of J.S. go away with an Adulterer and hath Issue if J.S. her Husband be within the foure Seas the Issue is Heire of J.S. for by whom the Woman is with Child it cannot be tried and for that it shall be intended by J.S. 41 Ed. 3. f. 11. and 7. H. 4. f. 9. the same If a man marry a Wife which is great with Child by another man and within three daies after Marriage she is delivered and the Husband dies the Issue is lawfull and Heire and Tenant to the Lord and no Bastard 18. E. 4. f. 30. a. 24 H. 8. Br. Title Bastardy 44. it was said if a man marry his Cozen within the degrees of Marryage and have Issue and are divorced in their lives and by that the Marriage is avoided and the Issue is Bastard contrary if one dye before the Divorce 21 H. 7. f. 41. If a Deacon takes a Wife and hath Issue this Issue is no Bastard otherwise it is of a Marriage between a Fryer and a Nunn if they have Issue 11 H. 4. fol. 76. Sayd by our Law if one marry his Cozen their Issue is no Bastard till they are divorced but shall take by Discent 42 Ed. 3. fol. 11. If a man marry a Wife and living that VVife marry another and hath Issue by the second this Issue is a Bastard notwithstanding that the first VVife after dies and shall not take by Discent For that that in the same second Article of Charge it is inquired if any Tenant of the Lord be dead who is Heire and Tenant to the Lord let us now see where the halfe blood is impediment and where not TEnant gives Land to the Father for life remainder to Rich. his Son in taile The remainder to the right Heire of the Father the Father dies Rich. enters and dies without Issue of his Body his Brother of the halfe blood shal have the Land and not the Uncle of Rich. and shall be Tenant and the halfe blood is no impediment 39 E. 3. tit 5. A man Tenant had Issue by two severall Bellyes and dies the eldest Son enters and endowes his Mother the Heire dies without Issue the Tenant in Dower dies the youngest Son of the halfe blood shall inherit it and shall be Tenant 7 H. 5. f. 2. 58. Assises 6. accordingly Father seised of an Advowson in grosse hath a Son and Daughter by one Belly and a Son by another and dies and the eldest dies before presentment the youngest Son shall be Heir and the half blood is no impediment 3 H. 7. f. 5. Fitzh f. 36. O. If the Father Tenant hath a Son and a Daughter by one Belly and a Son by another and lets to one for life and dies and the Reversion is discended to his eldest Son which dies before the Tenant for life this is no possession that the Daughter shall have the Land but the Son of the halfe blood shall be Tenant to the Lord but if reversion of tearm of yeares were in the eldest Son which dies before the Tearm ended the Daughter shall have the Land and shall be Tenant to the Lord and not the Son for halfe blood is impediment 5 Ed. 4. f. 9. But in the case next before where there is a Rent reserved upon the Estate for life by the Father and the eldest hath the reversion and Rent and dies the Daughter there shall inherit and the halfe blood is an impediment to the Son to be Heire and Tenent yet if the Father dies and the eldest Son dies before payment of Rent there it is otherwise 35 Book of Ass 2. If a man Tenant hath Issue two Daughters by severall Bellies and dies and they enter and make division betwixt them if one dye without Heire generall or speciall her part shall escheate to the Lord and not discend to the Sister of the halfe blood but if that Sister hath an Uncle it ought to discend to him and if he enter and dies without Issue it shall discend to the Sister of the halfe blood see Littleton fol. 3. Natura brevium fol. 10. If a man Tenant hath three Daughters by on Belly and a Daughter by another and dies and the foure Daughters enter and two of them by the first Belly dye now the third of the whole blood shall have three parts and shall be Tenant of that to the Lord 10 Ed. 3. Tit. 13. and 10 Ass 27. accordingly Note that the possession of a Brother to make the Sister inheritor and not the Son of the halfe blood is only of fee and not of fee taile 32 Ed. 3. Tit. 8.37 Book of Ass 15. accordingly If the Donee in taile have a Son and a Daughter by one Belly and a Son by another and dies and the Son of the first Belly enter and dies seised without Issue the Son of the second Belly shall be Heire and Tenant to the Donor and not 〈◊〉 the Daughter Natura brevium fol. 147. If a man hath a Son and a Daughter by one Belly and a Daughter by another and Lands are given to the Father for life the remainder to the Son in taile the remainder to the right Heires of the Father the Father dies and the Son enters and dies without Issue the two Daughters shall be Heires and Tenants to the Lord for the Son was not actually seised of the Fee 5 Ed. 1. Tit 14.32 Ed. 3. Tit. 9.24 Ed. 3. fol. 24. and 37. Book of Ass 4. accordingly The possession of the Brother of Lands held by Knights service there the possession of the Guardian if the Son dyes in Ward is possession of the heire to make the Sister inherite and to be Tenant to the Lord and not the Son of the halfe blood 8 Ed. 3. tit 12. and 8 Booke of Ass 6. accordingly Lands discends to two Coparceners which are by severall bellies and one dye before entry into the Land the other shall have Mortdancester as heire of her Father of the whole Land for that that the other was never seised 34
to pay his Rent it is no forfeiture The same Law is if he be much in Debt and in feare to be arrested or if one be bankrupt and keep his House and doth not come to the Lords Court but makes divers defaults these are no forfeitures of their copy-holds But if he deny to come to the Court of the Lord this is a forfeiture of his copy-hold But if the Lord claime a Fine custome or services which is in doubt whether due or not and the Tenants pray the Lord that the Homagers may inquire if it be due or not and saith if it be found by the Homagers upon their Oath that they are due or if there can be Presidents shewed that it is due he will pay it this is no forfeiture of his copy-hold If twelve are assembled against the form of this Statute then if any copy-holder being a Yeoman Handy-crafts-man Artificer Husbandman or Laborer and being of the age of eighteen yeares or more and under forty years not Impotent Lame Maimed nor having reasonable excuse and being required to serve the Queen for any the causes in the Statute and refuses he shall forfeit his copy-hold during his life 1 Marie chap. 12. If a copy-holder in Court-Baron will say to his Lord that he extorts and exacts Fines and Services not due or such unreverent words of his Lord and they be false that is finable but no forfeiture But if he deny to be Tenant to the Lord and to be a Juror of the Homage it is a forfeiture but if a copy-holder indict his Lord or gives in evidence in an action against his Lord or arrest him or commence a Suite against his Lord in any Court of the Queens these are not finable nor no forfeiture If Tenant in taile be of a copy-hold the remainder over in Fee if the Tenant in taile be attaint of Felony it seems that the Issue in taile shall have the Land and not the Lord. If a copy-holder make a Feoffment of his copy-hold and the Feoffee dies seised and his Heires levy a Fine of that and five yeares passe the Lord is barred to seise the Land by forfeiture as it seems Some Copy-holder by the custome may make waste and is no Forfeiture and waste by some Copy-holder is Forfeiture LOpping of Trees by a copy-holder is no forfeiture but a copy-holder cannot lop Trees and burn that in the house upon other Land or Mannor nor sell the lops unlesse by the custome he may make wast If a Guardian in Socage of a copy-hold make waste the Infant shall not forfeit his copy-hold but only the Interest of the Wardship but inquire If Lessee for yeares of a Copy-hold make wast and inquire when he is Lessee for yeares by surrender and when he is Lessee by the license of the Lord it is said it is a forfeiture but during the Tearm J. S. Seised in fee of an Acre in D. by Charter and of another by copy and make a Feoffment and Livery in the Acre by Charter in name of them both it is no forfeiture of the Acre by copy but if he make Livery in the Acre by copy in name of both the Acre by Charter passes and it is forfeiture of the Acre by copy If a copy-holder suffer a common recovery against him at the common Law and after surrenders to the use of another which is admitted and after one or two admittances passe upon surrender yet after when the Lords takes notice of the forfeiture he may well seise it for that forfeiture for that that the copy-hold was destroyed by the forfeiture But otherwise it seems if the forfeiture do not destroy the Copy-hold as if he make wast or break any custome the Lord is barred by this admittance as it seems If a copy-holder levy a Fine and five yeares passe after Proclamation this seems barres the copy-holder and his Heires but it seems doth not barr the Lord but if a copy-holder make a Feoffment and Livery of his copy-hold and after levy a Fine and six yeares passe now the Lord is barred If two Joynt Tenants by copy are and one makes wast in all the Land yet he shall forfeit but one part If the Heire of a copy-holder having notice of the death of his Ancestor do not claime within the yeare and day after the death of the Ancestor and Proclamation made he shall loose it for ever but otherwise it is if he be beyond Sea or within age or a Woman having a Husband it seems she shall not loose by not claiming Tenant for life of a Mannor is and copy-holder of that commits wast and the Tenant for life dyes he in remainder may seise the Land for this wast for that it is a forfeiture which runs with the Land See before forfeiture touched in the Title of copy-holder Formedon In so much that plaints are sued in nature of Formedon for Copy-holds something shall be said touching Formedon and first let us see where a Formedon lies and where not and for that that there are three manner of Formedons that is Formed on in Discender Remainder and Reverter in Fitzh Nat. Brevium and there declared how everyone lieth much shall not be said but what is in Fitzher Natura brevium touching the lying of a Formedon FOrmedon in Discender lieth where the Donee in taile or free Marriage aliens that Land so given in taile or is disseised and dies his Heire shall have a Formedon in Discender to recover these Lands so given in taile Fitzh f. 211. A. Where Tenant in taile aliens or is disseised or if recovery be against him by default after default and hee dies his heire shall have a Formedon for the heire shall not have other recovery of the possession of his Ancestor then by Formedon but if he be outed of his own possession as if he be seised and be put out he shall have Assise Natura brevium fol. 145. Formedon lies by the heire of a gift made before the Statute of Westm 2. Where the Donee after the Statute aliens and dies and yet the Statute is to gifts before made it shall not be extended 12 H. 4. f. 9. Where there is a Tenant in Dower or by the curtesie the reversion to another in taile if one intrude after the death of the Tenant in Dower or by the curtesie he in reversion shall not have Intrusion but Formedon Fitzh 204. D. Woman Tenant in taile takes a Husband which aliens and after they are divorced and after the Wife dies the heire of the Wife shall not have A cui in vita but a Formedon Fitzh f. 204. K. If Tenant in taile lets for life and the Tenant for life aliens in fee the Tenant in taile shall have a consimili casu or a Formedon at his pleasure Fitz. f. 207. D. Where land is given to one for life the remainder to the Father in tayl if it were executed in the Father and he Alien the Issue may have a Formedon
she be of the age of 14 years there she shall be in ward but to the age of 14 yeares and then may sue Livery for the two years to make 16 years are not given but to tender marriage and for that she shall be out of ward at 14 years The husband seised in fee of Lands held in Knights service enfeoffs diverse at this day to the use of himselfe and his Wife and the heires of their two bodies begotten and for default of such Issue to the use of the right heires of the Husband and the Husband and the VVife have Issue within age and the Husband dyes though the VVife live and hath the Land the Issue shall be in VVard of the body as it is sayd The same Law where a man seised in Fee of Lands held by Knights service makes a gift in taile to J. S. the remainder to his right heires and dyes his Issue within age he shall be in ward of the body though Tenant in taile have the Land If a Reversion of an Estate for life or for yeares be in my Father and that discends to me I shall be in ward but otherwise it is of a Remainder but if a Remainder of an Estate for life be in my Father and that discends to me and after Tenant for life dyes I shall be in ward 11 H. 7. fol. 19. 33 H. 6. fol. 6. 8 Edw. 3. tit 23. and 33 Edw. 3. tit 8. By Choke If Infant be Tenant for life and the Reversion discends to him he shall not be in VVard 9 Ed. 4. fol. 19. Where an Estate is to an Husband and his VVife and to the heires of the body of the Husband the remainder to the right heires of the Husband the Husband hath Issue within age and dyes the VVife is Tenant to the Lord and for that the Issue shall not be in ward And if Lands be let to one for life the remainder to the right heires of J. S. the same J.S. dyes and Tenant for life dyes T. S. being right heire of J. S. and within age shall not be in ward for he is a purchasor 15 Ed. 4. fol. 10. Tenant for life the remainder to another in taile he in remainder dyes his Issue within age the Issue shall be in VVard if Tenant for life be dead 33 H. 6. fol. 6. Tenant for life the remainder in Fee dyes his heir shal not be in VVard for Tenant for life is Tenant Lord and Tenant the Tenant is disseised and dyes his Issue within age he shall be in VVard Fitzh fol. 142. B. C. D. Stamf. fol. 8. the same 3 H. 4. fol. 16. the same Littleton fol. 87. the same Lord and Tenant the Tenant hath a Daughter within age being his heire and he marries that Daughter to a Husband of full age and dyes the Lord shall not have VVard of the body but if he marry his Daughter to a Husband within age shee shall be in VVard Natura brevium fol. 98. Tenant for life the remainder in taile to the Husband and his VVife the remainder to the right Heires of the Husband the Husband and the Wife dye his heire within age living the Tenant for life the heire shall not be in ward Fitzh 143. A. A man makes a Feoffment before the Statute of Uses to the use of himselfe for life the remainder to W.S. in taile the remainder to the right Heires of the Feoffor the Feoffor dyes and W.S. dies without Issue the right heire of the Feoffor being within age shall be in ward for he is in by discent for the Fee was not out of the Feoffor But where one makes a Feoffment in Fee upon condition to re-enfeoffe him and the Feoffee gives to the Feoffor for life the remainder to another in taile the remainder to the right heires of the Feoffor and the Feoffor dyes and he in remainder in taile also dyes without Issue the heire of the Feoffor within age he shall not be in ward 32 H. 8. tit Ward 93. Estate is made to one for life the remainder to the Husband and Wife in taile the remainder to the right heires of the Tenant for life the Husband and the Wife have Issue a Son which hath Issue two Daughters and after the Son and the Wife dyes and after the Son dyes and after the Tenant for life dyes the two Daughters within age shall be in Ward 28 Ed. 3. tit 48. Marlebridge chap. 6. Gives the Lord remedy where his Tenant aliens by Collusion to defraud the Lord. Marlebridge chap. 16. Gives Mortdancester for the heire in Ward against the Lord unlesse he may have his Land at full age Prerog chap. 6. If a Woman before the death of her Ancestors which holds of the King in cheife before the yeares of marriage be marryed then the King shall have the Custody of her body till the age that shee may consent and then let her choose c. If an Infant be marryed before the yeares of marriage in the life of her Father and the Father dyes and the Wife dyes before the dayes of marriage of an Infant yet the Infant shall be in VVard and shall be marryed againe by the Lord Stamf. fol. 27. 5 Mar. tit Ward 124. it is held That marriage is as nothing for shee may marry another without Divorce within the yeares of marriage A gift is made to one in taile the remainder to the right heires of J. S. which was dead T. S. hath that as right heire but if he be within age he shall not be in VVard for he is in as purchasor 12 Ed. 4. fol. 2. 7 H. 4. fol. 5. 11 H. 4. fol. 72. 15 Ed. 4. fol. 13. the same A VVoman of the age of fifteen yeares at the time of the death of her Ancestor shall not be in VVard for the Lord shall not have VVard there till sixteen 35 H. 6. fol. 48. 28 H. 8. tit 86. If the King hath a woman in VVard and shee marry before fourteen shee shall be in VVard but to fourteen for the two yeares are given to tender marriage and shee is marryed See Westminst 1. chap. 22. Merton chap. 6. Gives ravishment of VVard and double value And Merton chap. 7. gives the value of the marriage West 2. chap. 12. Magna Charta chap. 6. The heires shall be marryed without disparagement Merton chap. 7. Of Lords which marry those that they have in their custody to Villaines or others as Burgers where they are disparaged If such an heire were within fourteen yeares and of such yeares that shee cannot consent to the marriage then if the Parents complaine of that Lord the Lord shall loose the custody till the age of the heire c. But if shee were of fourteen yeares and more and agreed to such marriage no punishment follows Littleton 21. See what are disparagements and what not Now let us see where your Lord shall loose the ward for that that he holds part in cheife and what
hee shall loose by that THe Lord the King shall have the Custody of all the Lands of those which of him hold in cheife by Knights service of which the sayd Tenants were seised in their Demesne as of Fee the day that they dyed of whomsoever they held by the like services c. Prerogative chap. 1. If any hold of Us by Fee farme or by Socage or Burgage and of another holds Land by Knights service We shall not have the custody of the Heire nor of the Land which is of anothers Fee by the reason of Fee farme or Socage or Burgage Magna Charta chap. 27. 11 H. 7. fol. 18. If one hold of the King in cheife and dyes his heire within age and hath Lands discended from another Ancestor the King shall not have the Lands in VVard which discended from another Ancestor And it seemes if a Remainder be in my Father and that discends to me I shall be in VVard of the body living the Tenant for life otherwise it is of a Reversion for Reversion is a Tenement and held but if a Reversion discend and the Tenant for life living I shall not be in VVard but if hee dye first otherwise it is And if my Father dye seised of a Remainder and the Tenant for life after dye seised during the time that I am within age I shall be in VVard 32 H. 8. tit Ward 97. Where a man holds certaine Land of the King in Socage in cheife the King shall not have Livery of more then of the Land in Socage The same Law where he holds in Knights service of the King Rastall Ward 13. and not in cheife the King shall not have more in Ward but onely that which is held of him immediately If one hold of the King in cheife the King shall have all his Land in Ward as well held of him as of others But otherwise it is if he hold of the King only by Knights Service Stam. fol. 6. Though that the Tenant of the King be in possession of Lands held of others the King shall have them in ward by his Prerogative Stamford fol. 7. Where the Tenant of the King doth not hold of the King in cheife the King shall not have the ward of Lands held of other Lords Stamford fol. 10. Grand-Father Father and Son Infant the Grand-Father is seised of a Mannor held of J.S. and the Father of another Mannor held of the King in cheife the Father dies the King shall have the ward of that Mannor and after the Grand-Father dyes the King shall not have the Ward of his Mannor the Statute of Prerog is That the King shall have the custody of all the Lands c. of which the Tenants themselves were seised of in fee the day that they dyed and for that that the Father was not seised of that the King shall not have it in ward 15 Ed. 4. f. 10. If any hold of the King in fee Farm Socage or Burgage and holds also of another in Knights Service the King shall not have the Lands held of another in Ward by reason of those Magna Charta chap. 17. Where a man holds certain Lands of the King Rastall Ward 3. in Socage in cheif of these he shall not have Livery of more then the Land in Socage 32 H. 8. Tit. 97. Also where one holds of the King by Knights Service and not in cheife the King shal not have more in ward but that only which is held of him immediately during the time that the Lands are seised in the Kings hands in Ward otherwise Lords shall loose their Rents that is to say that they cannot distraine during that time Stam. f. 9. Where one holds part of his Land of the King in cheife and part of another Lord and dies his heire within age and the King seises the Ward of all it seems that the Rent of another Lord and Service is but suspended for the time that it is in the hands of the King 26 H. 8. fol. 9. The Signiorie of another Lord in the case next before is suspended but from the distresse during the possession of the King 13 H. 7. f. 15. If a man holds part of the King and part of another Lord and dies his Heire within age which intrudes at his full age and paies the Rent to the other Lord this is a good Seisin and shall binde him after he hath sued his Livery for the Signiorie was not suspended by the possession of the King but only the distresse for after Livery the other Lord may distrain for the Arrearages due before see now 34 H. 8. Tit. Seisin 48.2 Ed. 6. chap. 8. That the Lords shall have their Rents during the minority at the hands of the Kings Officers 26 H. 8. Tit. ward 85. If the Kings Tenant alien in fee without license and dies his Heire within age the King shall not have ward for that that there is nothing discended to him for the alienation is good saving the trespasse to the King which is but Fine by Seisor 1 H. 7. f. 5. If the Heire intrude upon the possession of the King and levy a Fine this is void by the Statute of Prerog chap. 13. Which is where one intrudes there ariseth unto him no Free-hold but if the Heire levy Fine without intrusion that shall binde him and his Heires Time of H. 8. Tit. alienation 22. Tenant of the King in cheife cannot alien for tearm of life without license for he alters the Free-hold Magna charta chap. 4. If a Guardian by the Kings Grant makes destruction or waste he shall loose his Guardianship c. Magna charta chap. 5. The Guardian shall keep up the Houses Parkes Warrens Stanks Mills c. West 1. chap. 11. Where a Tenant lets for yeares and dies the Lord by Knights Service in time past might have outed a Farmor during the Nonage but it is not so at this day IF the Tenant let for yeares and dies his Heire within age the Guardian shall out the Farmor yet he shall have Covenant against the Heire at his full age for this Tearm which the Guardian hath during his Nonage 34 Ed. 1. Title 120 Guardian may out the Farmor and yet at full age the Lessee shall have his Tearm again Britton fol. 163 It is held that a Guardian may out the Farmor for yeares but not the Farmor for life 5 H. 7. f. 37. Fitzh f. 142. C. the same 33 H. 6. f. 47. the same and 14 H. 7. fol. 24. Guardian cannot out Tenant by Elegit but he may out the Farmor Statham 1 Ed. 3. Tit. 13. 1 Ed. 3. fol. 103 by Sharde A Guardian may out the Farmor and so may out him which hath execution by a Statute Merchant inquire of Tenant by Elegit 33 H. 6. fol. 47. and 36 Ed. 3. Tit. That Guardian may out Tenant by Statute Merchant Guardian in Knights Service cannot out the Termor 36 H. 8 Lease 58. 35 H. 8. Tit.
where the Lord prescribes to have the best he may seise for that that it is certaine 6 Ed. 3. Tit. but inquire Who shall pay Hariot and who not and when it shall be paid and what remedy upon putting it away ISsue in avowry if he die his Tenant for the Lord shall have Hariot though that the Tenant do not dye scised for it is sufficient if he dyed his Tenant though that he did not dye seised 44 Ed. 3. fol. 13. Br 1. and 7 H. 4. fol. 17. The Husband and Wife and their Son purchase lands joyntly hariotable and the Husband dies the Lord shall not have a Hariot till after the death of the last of them 24 Ed. 3. fol. 50. Br. 4. and Fitzh 3. 25 Ed. 3.7 and 19. R. 2. tit Hariot 5. Where a man dies seised of two Houses hariotable the Tenant shall pay two Hariots and note there the prescription that a Parson shall have the best Mortuary and the Lord the second best and if the Lord shall have the second best was the Issue taken 7 H. 6. fol. 26. Br. 3. Beasts which are remaining within the Fee of the Lord if they be removed out of the Lordship the Lord may take them for Hariot where he is to have Hariot after the death of every Tenant 27 Book of Ass 24. If my Tenant which holds of me by a Hariot aliens parcell of his land to another every one of them shall pay Hariot for that that it is intire 34 Ed. 3. Fitzh 3. After the death of a Prior Hariot shall not be paid for that he hath no property in the Beasts 32 Ed. 2. Fitzh 7. If a Husband Wife and their Son are seised for their lives the remainder to their said Son in taile after the death of the Husband the Lord shall not have a Hariot for he was not sole seised 24 Ed. 3. Tit. 3.19 R. 2. Tit. 5. The same for it is said there that if one do not dye sole Tenant there shall be no hariot paid Recordare longum If the Lord purchase the Tenancy held by hariot service then the hariot is extinct by the unity of possession for that that it is service annexed to the Land but I intend that it is otherwise of hariot custome where the Lord grants over the land 14 H. 4. f. 8. and 8 H. 7.11 Note that hariot is due immediately after the death of the Tenant Trespasse the Defendant as Lord may justifie taking of hariot within his Fee or if the taking were out it is good and the conveying it out is to no purpose but that the Lord may seise hariot out of his Lordship for it is not in case of the Statute where the Lord distraines within his fee for his services 19 R. 2. Fitzh 5. The Lord may seise Hariot which is the best Beast that his Tenant hath which held of him by hariot though they be in some place out of his Mannor for that that it is certaine 6 Ed. 3. Fitzh 4. If one which holds by hariot service to pay the best Beast dies and hath a Cow at the time of his death which is the best though that the Executors sell that the Lord may seise that in the hands of him to whom shee is sold if the Sale be not in an open Market and not there if without fraud 16 Ed. 3. Fitzh 2. By the custome of some Mannor and of most Mannors the Lord shall have only one hariot upon the dying seised of his copy-holder and discent and not upon every surrender But by the custome of some Mannor hariot is due upon every surrender for life in taile or in Fee as well as upon discent and that in nature of a hariot custome at the Common Law and by the custome of divers Mannors the Lord hath no hariot of some of his Tenants within the Mannor and of some he hath The Lord may seise for hariot custome the hariot and is to seise that of the Goods of the dead and for hariot service to distraine upon the land If a Copy-holder of Inheritance of lands hariotable lying in extreamity upon his bed surrender into the hands of two Tenants to the use of his eldest Son in Fee and dies before that surrender be presented in the Court the Lord shall have hariot but if this surrender had been presented in Court and the eldest Son had been a●●●ted accordingly and after the Father had dyed there the Lord shall have no hariot unlesse it be hariot custome due to him onely by custome upon every alteration and exchange of Tenant for life and in Fee The same Law is if the Father copy-holder of Land hariotable surrencer in the Lords Court to the use of himself for life of the Son of his Daughter for life and after to the use of the Son of his Daughter and to the Heires of the Son and they are admitted accordingly and after the Father dies the Lord shal not have hariot unlesse it be hariot by custome due upon every Estate for life in tail and fee upon every surrender which is due by the custome but in this case if the hariot were due by the death of his Tenants and discends to the heire only then the Lord shall not have the hariot If the Father being a Copy-holder of Inheritance or by the custome the Lord is to have Hariot upon every discent only and he lying in extreames surrenders into the hands of the Steward to the use of his eldest Son and his heirs and dies and after that surrender is presented in Court and he is admitted accordingly it seems that the Lord there shall have a hariot But if the Father being Copy-holder of Inheritance or by the custome the Lord having Hariot upon every discent only surrender in full Court to the use of his eldest Son and his heirs and the eldest Son is admitted accordingly and after the Father dies there the Lord shall have no Hariot So it seems if in this case the Father surrender to the use of himselfe for life the remainder to the use of his eldest Son and his heires and they both are admitted accordingly and after the Father dies there the Lord shall not have hariot 34 Ed. 3. Statham If my Tenant which holds of me by a hariot alien parcell of that land to another every of them is charged to me of a hariot for that it is intire and though the Tenant purchase the land again yet if I be seised of a hariot by another man I shall have of him for every portion a hariot and that by the opinion of Wilby and Sharde 4 Ed. 3. Statham Tit. Avowrie one avowes for hariot Plaintiff demands Judgement for that he doth not allead ●●eisin of the hariot and it seemes of hariot custome he need not to alleadge Seisin but otherwise it is of hariot service 6 Ed. 3. Statham Tit. avowrie if one avow for hariot custome he shall recite the custome in his Avowrie 24 Ed. 3. Statham
Tit distresse 6. He which distaines beasts may put them in a close house if he will give them meat for the putting them in open pound is but to the intent that the owner may give them meat 1 2 Phil and Ma chap. 12. tit Distresse That no distresse shall be driven out of the hundred unles to the open Pound nor above 3 miles and one distresse shall not be impounded in severall pounds upon forfeiture of 5 l. And for poundage of an Intire distresse a man shall not take above 4. d. poundage 20. H. 7. fol. 1. Where the Lord destraines beasts and they are taken out of the Pound the Lord shall have a Parco fracto and the party may have trespasse for the property lies in him by Forwick Fitzh 101. Where a man distraines for doing dammage Rent or service and puts them into the common Pound or into an other lawfull Pound and he which owes the beasts or another person takes them out of the Pound then he which distrained shall have a Parco fracto and if a man send his servant to distrain for rent or service and the servant distrain and put them into the Pound and a stranger takes them out of the Pound now the Master shall have a Parco fracto for it is the pound of the master 21. Ed. 4. fol. 19. Fitzh 101. E. if a man distrain for Rent doing dammage or services and puts the beasts in the ground or close of another his friend by his license and he which ows them takes out the beasts he which distrained shall have a Parco fracto and not he which hath the close Fitzh 101. H. For amercement in hundred one cannot distraine but the proper goods of him that is amerced not others but for rent or service is otherwise for the party may distrain the beasts found in the Land which are rising and lying and Impound them Releife IF one have a tenement in chief and dyes c. and after such Heir be in Wardship when he shall come to age that is 21 years he shall have his Inheritance without releife But by the stature of Marlebridge chap. 10. and by the Prerogative of the King the 3. chapt the King shall have the first seisin nor the Heir shall not enter before he hath received it out of the Kings hands whatsoever Age he be of Magna charta 2. 3. 4. Where one holds of a common person by Homage fealty and escuage and dies his Heir male being within Age of 21 years he shall be in ward untill 2● years and if he were not in ward but were of ful age that is 21 yeers then the Lord shall have a 100 s. for a whole Fee for relief and if he hold by a moitie 50 s. and so who by more more and who by lesse lesse Litt. fol. 24. But by Marlebridge chapt 17. If the Heir within age be in ward and at full age the Lord will not suffer him to enter without Suit but holds him out to have relief or otherwise holds him out that he cannot enter without plea he shall have a Mortdancester against his Guardian and recover his dammages Fitzh fol. 196. F. If one holds of the Lord in Socage that is by fealty and 10 s. payable at a certain day and dyes then the Lord shall have 10 s. for relief over the 10 s. which he paies for his Rent and such relief is due forthwith of what age the Heir be so that he passe the age of 14 years But if he hold by a Rose that shall not be paid forthwith but when the time of the year is that they grow Litt. fol. 28. And this releif by Bracton and Britton is not so properly to be called releif as that which is paid at full age by him that holds in Chivalrie 16. H. 7. fol. 4. and 18. Ed. 3. Tit. Avowrie 99. Note when a man holds of the King in chief and of other persons by Knights service The King shall have the Ward of all and the Heir shall pay relief to every Lord at his full age 24. Ed. 3. fol. 8. fol. 24.39 Ed. 3. tit 1. the same 26. H. 8. fol. 8. the same and Nat. bre fol. 95. notwithstanding see Stamf Title Prerogative The Father dyes seised and the eldest brother of full age dyes before that he enters and before that he hath possession in deed the yongest brother being of full age he shall pay two releifs one for the death of the Father the other for the death of the Brother for that that both were Tenants to the Lord Time of Ed. 1. Tit. 12. and 13. Ed. 3. Tit. 6. the same If my Tenant enfeoffes his son and Heir of full age and dyes before the Son gives notice to me I shall have releif of him for that that his Father dyed my Tenant to the avowrie 7 Ed. 3. chap 11.17 Ed. 3. fol. 3. Enquire See 3. H. 6. fol. 47. Where Land is given to the Father for life the remainder to his right Heirs the which tenements are held by Knight service the Father dyes his Heir of full Age he shall pay releif 32. Ed. 3. fol. 4. Estate is made to the Father for life the remainder in tail to his eldest Son and his Wife the remainder to the right Heirs of the Father in fee the father dies the eldest son and his Wife die without Issue the youngest son is in by discent and shall pay releif 40. Ed. 3. fol. 9. Gift is made to one in tayl the remainder to the right Heirs of J. S. which was dead Donee dyes without Issue T. S. had that as right Heir but is in as a purchasor and for that shall not pay releif 12 Ed. 4. fol. 2. A Lease for life the remainder to the right Heirs of J.S. tenant for Lease dies living J.S. the remainder is void and J.S. and his Heir shall not be said in by discent to pay releif 9. H. 6. fol. 23. Lease for life the remainder to the right heirs of J. S. and J. S. hath Issue T. S. and dyes T. S. shall pay no releif for he is in as purchasor 11. H. 4. fol. 72. Lease is made to one for life the remainder to another in tail the remainder over to J. S. in fee he in remainder in tail dyes his Issue of full age he shall pay no releif for tenant for life is tenant but when tenant for life dyes he shall pay releif 33. H. 6. fol 5.6 Lord and tenant the tenant lets for life the remainder in fee to another and he in remainder dies his Heir of full age shall pay no releif for the tenant for life is tenant to the Lord Fitzh 142. B. Where an estate is to the husband and to his Wife and to the Heirs of the body of the husband the remaindet to the right Heirs of the husband the husband hath Issue of full age and dyes the Wife is tenant to the Lord and for that
the Issue shall not pay releif when tenant for life dyes he shall pay releif 5 Ed. 4. fol. 10. If the Heir of full age recover In a whilest he was not Compos mentis or in dum fuit infra aetatem or if his Father had made a feoffment upon condition and he enters for the condition broken he shall pay releife 11. H. 7. fol. 12. Tenant in fee farme upon discent shall pay no releife for that that his rent is entended the very value of the Land 45. Ed. 3. tit 8. B. old tenures the same 20. H. 7. fol. 1. Debt lyeth for releife by Brud Debt is said lies by the Lord for releife but it is held cleer that Executors of the Lord shall have debt for releife So it seems one may have debt for releife or distrain 39. H. 6. and 32. H. 8. Brook Releife 11. Notwithstanding that by will in writing Lands are devised to another in fee yet the Lord may have releife and harriots and may distrain for releife and hariott as he might have done before the making of that statute and though this statute never had been made 32. H. 8. ch 1. Note that releife shall be paid to the Lord which hath an estate in fee or in tail for life or for years for that it is a Perque Site incident to the Lordship and if the Lord dyes his Executors shall have the releife due to him The tenant shall pay but once releife in his life time he shall not pay again by change of the Lord Britton fol. 177. and Bracton accordingly and sayes but once as long as the Heir lasteth 34. Ed. 1. Tit. Anowrie 233. fol. 1. If the releife be due to the Lord and the Lord dyes that shall be a chattell to his Executors 14. H. 4. fol. 8. If one be enfeoffed before the statute to hold by a penny for all services exactions and all demands yet releife shall be due by Sherne Magna Carta chap. 2. If any holds of the King in cheife and owes us releif he shall have his Inheritance by the old releif that is the Heir or heirs of an Earl of a whole County by a 100 l. the Heir or heirs of a Baron of a whole barony by a 100 marks the Heir or heirs of a Knight of a whole Knights fee 100 s. at the most and who lesse hath shall give lesse according to the old custome of the Fee Magna Charta chap. 3. After the Heir be in Ward when he comes to age that is 21 years he shall have his Inheritance without Releife By Glanvile and by Littleton for a whole service of a Knight he shall pay for Releife a 100. s. and to that agrees the Stat. of Mag. Char. Chap. 2. and the Statute is over the heire or heires of a whole Barony 100. Markes and the heire or heires of an Earle of a whole Earldome 100 l. and Lit●f 35. saith that Tenant by grand Serjeanty shall pay for releife the value of his Land by a yeare beyond all reprises If any hold of any Escheat as of the honour of Wallingford Notingham Bullen and other Escheats which are in our hand and are Baronies and dies his heire shall give no other releife then the Barons did Magna Charta chap. 31. Note that hariot service is to be paid by the common Law upon discent as Releife is to be paid upon difcent and for that where Releife shall be paid let us see where one shall be said in by discent in the title of discent before VVhere land is given to be held by Homage and having his services rendring yearly foure Markes for all services and demands yet releife shall be paid for releife is a thing which growes by reason of services and is incident 18 E. 3. tit avowrie 99. Bracton saith he shall give releife which succeeds by hereditary right but not he that purchaseth All Purchasors are quit of releife all their lives of land purchased and also those which held only for life and also those who have married VVives which have been in ward to their Lords nor he which was in ward to the Lord ought to pay releife Brit. 177. If Mesnalty discend to a Tenant he shall pay the releife if he be of full age holds by Knights service and if within age shall be in ward where a Reversion of Tenant for life discends to one he shall pay releife but otherwise it is if one Tenant levy a Fine to one and his heirs which dies before entry and after the heire of the Conisee hath execution by Scire facias he shal not pay releif so it is if the Father recover in value or in Mortdancester and dies and the heire hath Execution by Scire facias shall not pay releife 11 H. 7. f. 12. No feoffment upon collusion nor use shall defeate releif nor any other fraudulent gift Rastall Uses 7. Rastall Fraud 1. Covin for they are uses executed releife shall be paid as well as of lands by the Statute 19 H. 7. chap. 15. and also by the Statute of 13. Eliz. chap. 5. All fraudulent acts are void against their Lords as touching their Hariots and releifs If there are two Daughters one within age and in ward and the other of full age she shall pay releif for her part Abbot nor Corporation shall not pay releife after the death of the Predecessor for that that they are in by election and not by discent and the Corporation doth not dye 8 R. 2. Tit. 14. But by that booke one by prescription or Deed may have releife after the death of every Abbot or Prior Statham 3 Ed. 3. Tit. 162. Opinion is that after receit of Homage a man cannot avow for releife But Glanvile and Lit. say that it is due immediately after full age that is if they hold by Knights service and by Lit. if they held in Socage it is due forthwith as before it is said if he passe the age of foureteen yeares 15 Ed. 3. Tit. 5. Britton fol. 178. No releife be given before that the Lord be seised of his Homage nor before that the Lord have delivered him the writings of his Heritage if he have them Magna Charta chap. 3. The Lord shall not have the custody before he hath taken homage but the Law is contrary at this day see Title fealty Br. 9. Suit OF making Suit truly c. none that by Deed is infeofted c. doth not make Suit to Court unlesse it be specified in the Deed unlesse he and his Ancestors have used to make it and if he be distrained to make it in another manner it is against the form of the Feoffment and where the writing is to hold by certaine service for all services as to hold by Fealty for all services shall make no suit Marlb chap. 9. And over Rastall Suit 1. If the Inheritance hath more heires let it be appointed that he that hath the eldest part shall only make suit for
243. 26 Ed. 3. tit 246. Note as it is aforesaid that suit of Court is not incident to a Tenure but is due by Formam charte or by prescription as before the said Statutes Lords are to distraine every Tenant to make suit to their Courts and that suit is called suit service If a man seised of two Acres held by one Hauke makes a Feoffment of one the Feoffor shall hold by one Hauke and the Feoffee by another Littleton fol. so shall it be of suit of Court Brook Tenure 64. Tenant in Dower shall not make Suit if the Heire have sufficient land to be distrained Naturae Brevium fol. 159. B. Tenant in Fee It behooveth that the Steward shall have knowledge of all manner of Estates because of making surrenders of Copy-holders and also because of their Suits Wards Releifs and Services for if the Steward do not know the Estates of the Tenants how can he do Justice And for that somthing ought to be said of Estates and first of an Estate in Fee WHere lands are given to the Abbot of Battell and his Covent he hath Fee for that that they are a Corporation and Corporation i● intended to have continuance 11 H. 4. fol. 84. Br. Inquire and see in the next case Where land is given to Maior and Comonalty of London they have Fee without more saying that is without saying to have to them and their Successors 11 H. 7. f. 12. Notwithstanding it seems that Spirituall Corporation may die in some case If I have Common in the Land of an Abbot and I release to an Abbot and not to him and his Successors the Common is extinct but not for the life of the Abbot 26 H. 8. fol. 6. Where land is given to two to have and to hold to them and heires and Suis is left out they have but an Estate for life and not Fee 19 H. 6. f. 73. 20 H. 6. f. 35. the same Devise to one for ever be to him and his Assignes for ever he hath Fee 19 H. 6. f. 9 Where a Devise is to one without more that is is not said what Estate is for life only 22. Ed. 3. Where a Devise is to one and his Heires Males he hath taile and not Fee 27 H. 8. f. 32. If land be given to one to have and to hold to him and his Heires Males he hath Fee Littleton fol. 6. and 9 H. 6. fol. 25. A man devises his land to one to give and sell or to do with that at his will and preasure he hath Fee without more 19 H. 8. f. 9 and 7 Ed. 6. Tit. Devise 39. If a man devise his land to J.S. paying to J.D. a 100 l. J.S. hath Fee but if be devise to J.S. without more he hath but for life and in the first case if he do not pay that in his life time yet if his Heires or Executors pay it that sufficeth therefore it seemeth payment is not a condition there 29 H. 8. Tit. Testament 18. If lands are given to an Abbot or Prior to have to him and to his heires yet he hath not an Estate but for life for that that his heires cannot inherit otherwise it is where land is given to a Bishop or Parson and his Heires for they have Fee 94 H. 5. f. 9. If lands be given to B. for life the remainder to C. in taile the remainder to the right heires of B. the Fee is vested in B. if C. dye without Issue in the life of B. as well as if the remainder were given to him and to his right heirs and the right Heire of B. shall be in by discent if C. dye without Issue and not as a Purchasor 18 Ed. 2. Tit. 109. If Tenant in Fee bargaine and sell his land by Deed Indent and inroll within six Moneths to another though it be not to have to him and his heires he hath in Fee 27 H. 8. f. 6. and fol. 10.32 H. 8. Tit. conscience the twenty fifth the same If lands be given to J.S. to have to him in Fee simple yet he hath no Fee but for life 20 H. 6. fol. 36. But if land be given to one to have to him and his heires so long as such a Tree growes hath Fee determinable 27 H. 6.29 B If a man lets land to J.S. to have and to hold to him and his heires for tearme of the life of J.D. he hath Fee determinable for if J.S. dye living he for whose life the heire of the Lessee may enter and not a stranger as Ocupans Lit. fol. 136. 8 H. 4. fol. 14. You shall see the same 21 H. 8. Tit. Estates 50. and inquire If a man devises lands to J.S. paying ten pounds to his Executors and dies J.S. hath Fee by reason of the payment without words heires The same Law is if one sell his land to J.S. without words heires he hath Fee 4 Ed. 6. tit estates 78. Lease was made for eleven yeares and for security of that made a Writing that if he were disturbed he should have Fee and Livery was made and hath Fee upon disturbance 10 B. of Ass 15. 10 Ed. 3. Tit. Ass 161. the same Lease is made to one for twenty yeares and the Writing expresseth over that after the twenty yeares that the Lessee and his heires shall hold it for ever paying ten pounds and Livery is made he hath Fee forthwith for if the Lessor takes a VVife within the twenty years and dies shee shall recover Dower by award of the Court 31 Ed. 3. tit Feoffment 119. If a man lets for nine yeares upon condition that if the Lessee be disturbed within the tearme that the Lessee shall have Fee if the Farmor alien before disturbance this is disseisin to the Lessor for the see is not in the lessee before the condition broken 43 Book of Ass 41. If Lands be granted to one for five yeares upon condition that if he shall pay to the Grantor within the first two yeares forty Marks that then he shall have fee or otherwise but for five yeares and Livery and Seisin is made he hath fee forthwith upon condition Littleton 81. See 14 H. 8. fol. 25. Diversity where the condition is precedent and where subsequent The Lord Lovell let to W. for life and if the Lessor dyed without Issue of his body W. should have Fee the Fee is not forthwith in W. Plowden fol. 481. Land is given to the Husband and his Wife in speciall taile the remainder in Fee to the Husband which deviseth the Fee to his Wife and dyes without Issue the Wife is seised in Fee 27 Book of Ass 60. Lit. fol. 31. B. If a Woman be seised in Fee and deviseth that to her Husband and his heires and dyes he hath no Fee Natura brevium fol. 88. 3 Ed. 3. Journey to Northampton 33 Ass 3. the same 18 E. 4. fol. 11. B. 18 H. 8. tit Patentees 104. The King gives Land to J. S. and to his
heires males adjudged that the Grant is void for that that the King is deceived in his Grant for this sounds in Fee simple whereas it is sayd the King intended but an Estate taile which is not so expressed And therefore now he is but Tenant at will and contrary in the case of a common person For Littleton fol. 6. saith Lands are given to another to have and to hold to him and his heires Males or to his heires Females or to whom the gift is made hath Fee in a common persons case for that there is no limitation in the gift of what body 6 H. 7. fol. 13. If Office be granted to one for life and after the King grants that to another and doth not recite the first Grant the King is deceived and it seemes that the second Grant is voyd 1 H. 7. fol. 13. Where the King of meer motion forgave A B of all his Debts and was Sheriff and after in the Exchequer he pleads that as Sheriff and held for that that it is of his owne motion and is generall yet he may plead that and it is a good Barr Otherwise it is where it is by suggestion for where it is of meer motion it is intended the King is not deceived but it seems if the King pardon one all his Debts he as an Executor shall not take advantage of that The same Law is if two be indebted and the King pardon one the other shall not take advanrage of that for it was the onely debt of him 9 H. 7. fol. 2. Where a Grant of the Kings is of his meer motion and the King recites that where he hath granted by his Patent he ratifies and confirmes and over We give and grant this give and grant is not but voyd for the King is Estopped to say the contrary but that he granted and ratified that but if it were as We are informed he is not Estopped and the King there is deceived And where it is of his meer motion recyted that he holds for life he is Estopped to say contrary but if it were as We are informed he is not Estopped and the King is deceived and he holds not for life 3 H. 8. fol. 7. held VVhere a Grant of the King is not onely of his meere motion but also of suggestion there if any part of the suggestion be not true the whole Grant is voyd 8 H. 7. fol. 1. VVhere the King upon information of the party Grants a Mannor which he hath by forfeiture and hath not that by forfeiture it is voyd for he is deceived So it is sayd where the King grants reversion where there is no reversion he is deceived and voyd 27 H. 8. tit Patents 100. It is sayd for Law that a false consideration in letters Patents shall not avoyd them as where the King for ten pounds to him payd gave such Land and the ten pounds is not payd the Patent is not void and shall not be repealed Contrary of Patent granted upon false surmise as to falsifie that the Land came to the King by the attainder of J. S. which is not true or such like 26 H. 8. fol. 1. If the King grants Lands to J. S. and recites for good service he hath done he grants and it is not true yet the Grant is good though the consideration is false 27 H. 8. fol. 33. by 6 H. 8. fol. 15. Will That the second Patent of an Office shall be voyd where another Patent is made before during the will of the King If mention and recytall be not made in the second Patent of the first Patent made at the will of the King if the Officer hath Fee it is voyd otherwise it is if hee have no Fee as it seemes 3 H. 7. fol. the last 6 H. 7. fol. 13. the same Where the remainder in Fee depends upon determination of Estate and where upon Condition and where upon Contingent HUsband and his VVife seised in right of his VVife in taile the Husband enfeoffs other two so long as J. S. and seven other persons live together and if it happen any of them to dye that then the remainder to the Husband and his VVife and to the heires of the VVife and J.S. dyes and the Husband and the VVife enter as they may for the remainder depends upon determination of Estate and not upon condition for death is certaine and for that the Estate is determined 18 H. 8. fol. 3. 18 Ed. 3. fol. 2. A Fine was levyed to the Husband and his VVife and to their heies Males of their two bodies begotten so that if the Husband dyed without heire Male that that should remaine to the right heires of the Husband and is received for that doth not depend upon condition but upon a limitation upon contingent of death which is certaine 27 H. 8. fol. 28. A Fine upon grant and render by which the Conisee grants and renders to the Conisor the Lands in taile upon condition that the Conisor and his heires shall carry the Standard of the Conisee in Battell and if the Conisor or his heires faile that then that shall remaine to a stranger this depends upon a condition and by Fitzherbert Fine cannot be taken upon a condition but if it be taken it is good And by Fitzherbert the Fee is in the stranger forthwith before the Tenant for life dyes otherwise it takes no effect for this word that then it shall remaine referrs to the possession of the Lands that is that then the possession of the Land after the death of the Tenant for life should remaine but if one let for life upon condition that if he dye c. the remainder to a stranger that is in him presently Plowdens Commentaries fol. 487. Nichols Case If a Lease be made upon condition that if the Lessee pay certaine Moneys within the tearme that he shall have it in Fee he hath no fee forthwith but upon the payment but it seemes this varies from the remainder If a man makes a Lease for life upon condition that if the Lessor dye without Issue that then the Lessee shall have fee the Lessee enters into Religion and after the Lessor dyes without Issue and after the Lessee is drawne out of Religion he shall not have fee in so much that at the time of the condition the fee could norvest in him 21 H. 7. fol. 11. Gift is in taile upon condition that if he alien in Fee that his Estate shall cease and that this shall remaine to a stranger it is not good for an Estate of Inheritance cannot cease also it cannot remaine without particular Estate and it cannot be upon a condition repugnant Where your Tenant hath the fee in him in expectancy and not executed in him and where it is executed in him A Lease to the Father for life the remainder to the eldest Son in taile the remainder to the right heires of the Father the Father dyes and the eldest Son dyes
by the Statute of 35 H. 8. chap. 20. It shall not binde the Issue in taile but that he may enter see M. 33. H. 8. Tit. 31. Recovery in value Seek if the Statute of 34. 35. H. 8. Provides for any Issues in taile but only the Issues of the Donees of the King for the Preamble speakes only of those but the Statute is whereof the reversion or remainder is in the King and for that it seems every Issue in taile where the Reversion or remainder is in the King may enter but a Fine with Proclamation by such Tenant in taile the Reversion or remainder in the King seemes is not remedied by this Statute but by 32 Hen. 8. chap. 36. Where Reversion is in the King is no discontinuance for though the Heire in taile shall be barred by Fine with Proclamation after Proclamation made yet there is an exception in the Ststute of those whereof Reversion or remainder is in the King so that it shall not binde such Issue in taile title assurance 6. see 4 H. 7. chap. 24. 37 H●● Where Tenant in taile is attaint of Treason before the Statute of 26 H. 8. His Son shall have the land for he doth not claime only as Heire but by the Statute and by the form of the gift see the Statute of 5 and 6. Ed. 6. chap. 11. That for high Treason Tenant in taile shall forfeit his Lands Com. f. 237. 27 H. 8. f. 6. If Tenant in taile sell Trees and dies and after he that hath bought them cuts them trespasse lies but if they be cut in his life time it seems the Buyer may take them 18 Ed. 3. Tit. Disseisin 92 Where Tenant in taile is bound in a Statute and dies and his Issue enters and the Conisee outs him by execution which is an act of Law he is a Disseisor Plowd Com. f. 235. before the Statute of Westm 2. he had but an Estate of Inheritance and that was Fee but this was in two manners absolute and conditionall and Formedon in Reverter was at the common Law and Formedon in Remainder by the Statute 1 H. 4. f. 6. If Tenant in taile by Estoppel or livery suing holds of the King and dies his Issue shall not be Estopped 43 Ed. 3. f. 14. Presentment to an Advowson in the life of the Tenant in taile puts him during his life out of possession but not his Issue 38 Ass 5. Tenant in taile is bound in Recognisance and Execution is sued by Elegit and this Land delivered in execution and after the Tenant in taile dies his Issue may enter without suing Audila querela 17 Ass 21. If Tenant in taile be bound in a Statute and hath Issue and dies and after execution is sued against the Issue this is disseisin to him and he shall have Assise though he comes in by processe by Law 14 Ass 3. It seems if Tenant in taile be bound in a Statute and dies and after his Issue infeoffs J.S. that the Conisee may have Execution against the Feoffee 35 H. 8. fol. 38. If the King gives in taile by his Letters Patents and after the Donee surrenders the Letters Patents to the King the taile by this is not extinct 38 H. 8. Tit. 39. Land is given in taile to the King he is Tenant in taile and cannot have greater Estate then the giver will depart to him and if the King let for yeares or for life or make a Feoffment in fee and hath Issue ●nd dies the Issue may enter for this is no discontinuance Tenant in Frank-marriage GIft was to the Husband and his Wife in Frank-marriage and this may be as well after the marriage as before 4 Ed. 3. Title Taile 6. Perkins fol. 48. C. If a gift be made with a woman in Franke-marriage which is not Cozen to the giver this is but for life Old Tenures Gift in frank-marriage with the Son of the giver his Cozen is no frank-marriage Time of H. 8. Tit. 10. but Fitz f. 172. H. and 7 E. 4. f. 12. A. by Moile in the Prior of Spaldings case seems contrary Gift in frank-marriage within the yeares of Marriage with a Daughter and they were divorced at full age at the Suit of the Husband yet the Daughter shall have all for she was the cause of the gift 19 Book of Assise 2. 19 Ed. 3. Title Assise 83. If a gift be to the Husband and his VVife in taile and they are divorced it seemes that they have not now but a freehold and though that they have Issue before the Divorce that shall not inherite But if a gift in tayle be made to two men or to one man and his Mother or Daughter and to the heires of their bodies their severall heires of their bodies shall inherite for that that they cannot marry 7 H. 4. fol. 16. and 17 Ed. 3. fol. 51. and Title tayle the 15. This is where the Divorce defeats the marriage from the beginning Gift in Frank-marriage rendring twenty shillings rent this reservation is void 4 H. 6. fol. 22. by Martin But the old Tenure is contrary tit Frank-marriage and 17 Ed. 3. fol. 66. also contrary If a gift be in Frank-marriage with his Cozen rendring Rent this is Intaile and not Frank-marriage and if a gift be with a Woman in Frank-marriage which is no Cozen to the giver this is but for life See before the 45 Ed. 3. fol. 20. If a man give in Frank-marriage rendring Rent the reservation is voyd till the fourth degree be past 26 Book of Ass 66. Land was given to a man and his Wife in Frank-marriage to have and to hold to the Husband and his heires and adjudged they have taile and not Fee for the frank-marriage shall not be defeated by words afterwards 32 Ed. 1. tit Taile 25. Reversion was given with his Daughter to one in Frank-marriage and is good 26 Ed. 3. tit 27. Taile Gift is made with Agnes his Daughter to A. in Frank-marriage and after A. marries Agnes and dyes and hee gives another Acre with Agnes to B. her second Husband in Frank-marriage and both are Frank-marriage 31 Ed. 1. tit Taile 30. Gift in Frank-marriage the remainder to J. D. in fee is not good for there cannot be an acquittall where remainder is given over Time of H. 8. tit 11. 19 Ed. 3. tit 1. If Lands be given in Frank-marriage to have for their lives the To have shall not abridge but inlarge the Estate and for that is is Frank-marriage 2 E. 3. tit 94. One gives Land to A. with Alice his Daughter in Frank-marriage to have and to hold to the aforesayd A. and his heires and it seemes Frank-marriage 13 Ed. 1. tit Formedon 63. I. gave R. and Alice his Daughter Lands in Frank-marriage to have to the aforesaid R. and Alice and their heires or to whom he will assigne it and the sayd R. did beget no heire of the sayd Alice nor the sayd R. and A. did not assigne it to any
in their life time and it seemes that after the death of R. and A. without Issue the Land ought to revert to J. See 45 Ed. 1. fol. 20. Tenant after possibility of Issue extinct TEnant after possibility of Issue extinct shall not have ayd of him in reversion but he in remainder shall be received upon his default 2 H. 4. fol. 17. 7 H. 4. f. 10 11 H. 4. fol. 14. the same Time of Ed. 1. Fitzh wa st 125. shall not be punished in wast Nor shall be compelled to attorn in a Quid juris clamat 46 Ed. 3.25 39 Ed. 3. the same and 12 Ed. 4. fol. 3. the same If he alien he in reversion may enter for forfeiture 45 Ed. 3.25 11. H. 4. f. 14. the same 10 H. 6. f. 1 and 39 Ed. 3. f. 20. Tenant after possibility of Issue extinct shall not have wast 2 H. 4. f. 21. wast doth not lie against Tenant after possibility of Issue extinct 45 Ed. 3. f. 25. He shall not have aid but if he alien he in reversion may enter for forfeiture 10 H. 6. f. 1. 39 Ed. 3. f. 20. Lit. f. 7. and 11 H. 4. f. 14. the same 39 Ed. 3. tit 17. Taile Tenant after possibility of Issue extinct which is impleaded shall not have aid of him in reversion but if he alien in Fee he in reversion may enter and shall not be compellable to attorn nor wast lies against him but if he makes default after default he in reveresion may be received Tenant by the Curtesie IF a married woman be Tenant after possibility of Issue extinct and the Fee discends from her Ancestor and she dies it is held that the Husband shall be Tenant by the curtesie 9 Ed. 4. f. 19. and 14 Ed. 3. f. 7. Husband discontinues Lands of his Wife and takes an Estate again to them in fee and hath Issue and the Wife dies then the Husband shall not be Tenant by the curtesie 9 H. 7. f. 1. If a man have Issue by his Wife Inheritrix though she had Issue a Daughter before she inherited yet he shall be Tenant by the curtesie 21 H. 3. Title Dower 198. If a woman Signioresse take her Tenant to Husband and hath Issue and dies the Husband shall not be Tenant by the curtesie of Services 1 Ed. 3. Tit. Dower 70. A man shall not be Tenant by the curtesie unlesse his VVife have possession in Deed of it but of an Advowson and Rent where she dyed before day of payment he shall be Tenant by the curtesie 21. Ed. 3. fol. 49. the same If the Issue be born living notwithstanding that he dies before he be heard cry the Husband shall be Tenant by the curtesie for the Issue shall not be taken if the Infant were heard cry after he was born but if he were born alive or not Perkins f. 89. A man seised of Land in fee is attaint of felony his Wife shall loose Dower but if the VVife seised in fee be attaint of felony and hath Issue by her Husband and she is hanged yet the Husband shal be Tenanr by the curtefie 21 Ed. 3. f. 49. A man takes a VVife seised in fee and hath Issue he commits felony for which he is attaint the King pardons him it seems he shall not be Tenant by the curtesie by reason of the Issue which he had before his attainder but if he had Issue after his pardon it is otherwise 13 H. 7. fol. 17. If a man takes a VVife seised in fee and she is attaint of Felony and hanged the King shall have the Land forthwith if the Husband were not intitled to be Tenant by the curtesie 11 H. 4. f. 19. b. Daughter and Heire endows her Mother and after takes a Husband and hath Issue and dies the Mother after dies the Husband shall not be Tenant but by the curtesie of that 8 Book of Affises 6. 3 H. 7. f. 5. If Rent discends to a Daughter which takes a Husband and she dyes before the day of payment the Husband shall be Tenant hy the curtesie Fitzh f. 149. D. A man shall not be Tenant by the curtesie of Land of the VVife unlesse the VVife have possession in Deed of that Land if it be not in a special case as of Advowson or Rent where she dies before the day of payment of the Rent Tenant in dower THE Wife after the death of her Husband shall remain in the cheife House by forty daies after the death of her Husband within which daies her Dower shall be assigned unto her unlesse before it were assigned and there shall be also assigned unto her the third part of all the Land of her Husband which was his in his life time Magna Charta chap. 7. Of Widowes which cannot have their Dowers without Suit that is that whosoever shall deforce them of their Dowries of the Tenements of which their Husbands died seised and afterwards the same Widowes by Suit recover them they shall give unto the said Widowes all their dammages according to the value of the whole Dowrie due unto them from the time of the death of their Husbands Merton chap. 1. If a Woman of her own accord leave her Husband and departeth and liveth with an Adulterer she shall for ever loose her action of recovering her Dower which was due unto her of her Husbands Tenements and be of that convicted unlesse her Husband of his own accord and without cohersion of the Church shall receive her and suffer her to dwell with him West 2. chap. 34. If the Hnsband be attaint convict or out-Lawed of Felony yet his Wife shall be indowed but if the Husband be attaint of Treason his Wife shall not be indowed by 1 Ed. 6. chap 12 5 Ed. 6. chap. 11. Where a woman shall beindowed and where not WHere the Husband Tenant of the King dies and his Wife is committed to the King during that time she shall not have Dower if she be not surprised of Dower 2 H. 4. f. 7. 6 H. 4. f. 7. It seems if a woman takes a lease by Indenture for years that during this lease she is not Dowable but if she take the Lessor to Husband and after he dies she is Dowable notwithstanding the lease 6 H. 4. fol. 7. Fitzh 149. E. the same Dower shall not be where the Husband dies having the reversion of a Free-hold that is of a reversion of an Estate for life as a man lets for life and afterwards takes a Wife and dies 2 H. 4. f. 27. 1 Ed. 6. tit Dower 89. 7 H. 6. f. 9. by June Fitzh 149. C. A woman may be endowed of a mine of Coals but she cannot make new mines for that shall be said wast Where the Estate is made to the Husband for life the remainder to another for life the remainder to the Husband in fee the Husband dies his Wife shall not have Dower unless that the Husband survive him in remainder for life 46 Ed. 3. f.
cannot enter without Assignement but in other Precipe if one recover he may enter but here it shall be assigned to her by the Sheriff by metes and bounds 40 E. 3. fol. 22. Where the Woman recovers damage and where the Tenant may say he is yet ready to excuse him of damages if it be in Copy-hold and otherwise A VVoman shall recover damages where the Husband dyed seised if the Tenant do not come in the first day ready to render Dower Nat Bre fol. 7. If the Tenant come at the first day and saith that he was alwaies ready the Plaintiffe may averr that she hath demanded Dower and she cannot have it 2 H. 4. fol. 8. and this found she shall recover damages At the Summons returned the Tenant comes and saith that he was alwaies ready to render Dower and yet is for the Plaintiff to say that he was not ready alwaies is no Plea but by Thirne she ought to shew that her Husband died seised and she demanded in the Country and you refused but by Hank the bringing of the Writ is a demand in Law but he agreed that she ought to aver the dying seised of her Husband if she will recover dammages 6 H. 4. f. 5. Dower the Tenant saith that he was alwaies ready and yet is and the Demandant avers that her Husband died seised and saith that he was not ready and for that this is no Issue but she shall say that she demanded inquest of Office was awarded which findes he died seised and the Wife shall recover dammages from the time of his death but where the Tenant was ready though that the Husband died seised the wife shall not recover dammages 11 H. 4. f. 39. 6 H. 4. f. 5. Dower the Tenant saith that he hath been alwaies ready to render Dower and yet is the Plaintiff saith that her Husband died seised And she required the Defendant at D. and he refused and the Issue shall not be that he did not refuse generally but he offered and she refused without that that he refused 13 Ed. 4. f. 7. Dower the Tenant acknowledgeth the action and the Demandant to have dammages surmiseth that her Husband died seised and hath a Writ to inquire of dammages and held that if the Tenant come at the first day and will aver that he was ready and yet is if the demandant cannot aver the contrary the Demandant shall not recover dammages 14 H. 8. f. 28. If the Tenant be effoyned yet he may say yet ready for the Essoyne may be put in by a stranger 7 H. 7. f. 7. f. the last the same 2 Ed. 4. f. 20 and 14 H. 6. fol. 4. The same Dower after imparlance the Tenant cannot say that he was alwaies ready and yet is 5 Ed. 4. f. 141. Tenant for Life A Man devise all his Goods to his Wife and would that his Son should have his House after the death of his Wife notwithstanding that it is not devised to the Wife she shall have that for her life 13 H. 7. fol. 17. Lease to a Woman as long as she lives unmarried or as long as she behaves her self well it is for life conditionall 37 H. 6. fol. 28. Land is given to one to have and to hold so that he paies to the Grantor for his Life 10 l. this is an estate for life 3 Book of Ass 9. An Estate to one till he hath levied ten pounds he hath that for life till c. 21 Book of Assise 18. If I let to W.N. to hold till a hundred pound be paid and without making Livery and Seisin he hath an Estate but at will and if there be Livery it is for life upon condition to cease the hundred pound levied 2 Mar. Brook Lease 67. And so in the three cases next it is to be intended Livery to be made J.S. Tenant for life aliens to B. to have to him and to his Heires for the life of J.S. B. hath an Estate but for the life of J.S. 24 H. 8 Tit. Forfeiture 87. If Lands be given to a man and his Wife and to the Heires of their two Bodies begotten and they are divorced now they have but an Estate for their lives 7 H. 4. f. 18. If I grant Rent to you without more you shall have that for life 7 Book of Ass 1. If a devise be to one without more he hath an Estate for life 22 Ed. 3. f. 16. Tenant for yeares What Act determines a Lease for yeares and who shall have the Corne what is a good Lease for yeares and what not THE Husband seised in right of his Wife le ts for seven yeares and dies the Wife may enter but if the Termor had sowed the Land in the life time of the Husband the Termor shall have the Corn 7 Book of Assises 19. If the Lord enter upon a Copy-holder for Forfeiture and the Land be sowed the Lord shall have the Corn 42 Ed. 3. f. 25 The Husband and the Wife lets the Land of the Wife for twenty yeares rendring Rent and the Husband dies the Wife accepts the Rent it is a good Lease and was not void 3 H. 6. fol. 2.2 H. 6. fol. the same and 21 H. 6.24 If a Parson or a Prebendary let for yeares rendring Rent and dies though that the Successors accept the Rent the Lease is not good 32 H. 8. tit acceptance 14.32 H. 8. Tit. Dean and Chapter 20.24 H. 8. tit B. 19.38 H. 8. Lease 18. 22 H. 8. tit Ancestor 14. If Tenant in Dower lets for yeares rendring Rent and dies the Lease is void and acceptance by the heire of the Rent will not make the Lease good for it was void before 9 E. 4. f. 37. by Nedham If I let Land for yeares in which is a Mine I cannot enter and take that nor Trees but I shall be punished The Bishop lets for yeares rendring Rent and dies and the Successor accepts the Rent this makes the Lease good for the Bishop hath Fee and may have a Writ of Right 2 Ed. 6. tit acceptance 20. The same Law is where an Abbot lets for yeares rendring Rent and dies the Successor accepts the Rent the Lease is good 21 Ed. 4. f. 5. B. Where Tenant in taile lets for 21. yeares and dies and the Issue in taile outs the Lessee as he may and doth not accept the Rent the Lessee may have covenant against the Executor of the Lessor and recover dammages though it be not warranted 48 Ed. 3. f. 2. A Lease by Tenant in taile for 21. yeares made according to the Statute rendring ancient Rent or more though Tenant in taile dye this is a good Lease against the Issue but if Tenant in taile dy without Issue the Donor may avoid this Lease by entry 32 H. 8. chap. 28. Tenant in taile the remainder over le ts for yeares rendring Rent and dies without Issue and he in the remainder accepts the Rent this shall not binde him insomuch that when
covenant to deliver great Timber of the said Land to repair the House let and will not and for lack of that the Lessee will not repair that but suffers the House to fall he is punishable for this waste but if the great Timber were to be taken from other Land and is not delivered this excuses him and he is not punishable for this waste 44 Ed. 3. f. 21. If Land be let to a lone Woman and she takes a Husband which makes waste and dies she shall be punished for that waste but if the Lease were made to the Husband and his Wife and he makes the waste and dies for that waste she shall not be punished Nat. brev f. 36. B. 3 Ed. 3. Tit. 20. Register f. 72. against the Husband and the Wife summoned B. and E. his Wife that they be c. to shew why they made waste c. of Lands c. which they held for the Dower of the said E. Register fol. 74. against a Woman Summon B. which was the Wife of C. that she be c. to shew wherefore c. of the Houses c. which she holds for her life by a Lease which D. thereof made to the said B. and the aforesaid C. sometime her Husband and to the Heirs of the said C. 14 H. 8. f. 12. When the terme of years is ended the Writ shall be which he held and where it is during the terme shall be which he holdeth 40 Ed. 3. f. 23. Where the terme passes and where the Infant is of full age it shall be against the Guardian and Termor which they held 41 Ed. 3. fol. 23. Against Tenant for life the forme is which he holds for terme of his life 40 Ed. 3. f. 33. 14 H. 6. f. 14. the same 46 Ed. 3. f. 25. If a Lease be made to one for life which grants over his Estate the VVrit shall say which he holds but where a Lease is made for anothers life and he for whose life dies the VVrit shall say he held by Finchden and not denied And if a Lease be made to a woman for years which takes a Husband before the terme ended which makes waste and the VVife dies waste lies against the Husband for the occupation See Brook Tit. 47. The same Law where a Lease was to the VVoman for life which takes a Husband c. Nat. Brev. f. 36. If Land be let to a single VVoman and she take a Husband and the Husband makes waste and dies the Wife shall answer for this waste but otherwise it is where the Land is let to the Husband and his Wife for terme of their two lives and the Husband makes waste and dies the wife shall not answer for that waste for it was the folly of the Lessor to let that to him 15 H. 3. Tit. 133. Fitzh Time of Ed. 1. Tit. 128. Fitzh If a woman Tenant for life take a husband which makes waste and dies it seems that the woman shall be charged of that for that that the woman agreed to the Lease after the death of her husband 10 E. 3. Tit. 17. Tit. 21. 133. 23 H. 8. Tit. 138. If a single woman Tenant for life takes a husband which makes waste and dies Action of waste lies against the wife but if a Lease be made to the husband and the wife and the husband makes waste and dies it is otherwise and held there for Law that if the Termor make waste and make his Executors and dies the Action of waste is gone for it is as a Trespasse which is a personal Action which dies with the person but if the Executors make the waste it lies against them Fitzh f. 56. A. If a Guardian in Knight-service grant over his Estate and the Grantee makes waste the writ of waste shall be brought against the Grantee and not against the Guardian but if the Guardian make waste and after grant over his Estate waste lies against the Guardian and not against the Grantee and so where Tenant for life or for years makes waste and grants over his Estate the writ of waste lies against him that made the waste but waste shall be alwayes brought against Tenant in Dower or Tenant by the Curtesie notwithstanding their Grant over Fitzh 550. Register fol. 72. 40 Ed. 3. Tit. 33. Waste against Tenant for life it is no Plea to say that he had nothing in the Tenancy Day of the writ purchased nor ever after for if he hath made waste and granted his Estate over yet he shall answer for this waste and though the writ be which he holdeth it is good and by Finchden waste is a writ of Trespasse in his nature and cannot be brought but against him which is Tenant when the waste was made unlesse he be Tenant by the curtesie or Tenant in Dower 41 Ed. 3. fol. 23. 44 Ed. 3. fol. 21. Fitzh 55. C. In waste against Tenant in Dower the Statute need not be rehearsed nor in waste against Guardian but against Tenant for life or for years by Demise shall be rehearsed Fitzh 56. C. In waste against Tenant by the curtesic without rehearsing the Statute that is without when of the common Councel of our Kingdome of England it is good and so it seems it is if it be rehearsed Every writ of waste is to the dis-inheriting of him which brought the writ and for that it shall be shewed in the writ though the Plaintiff hath Reversion by the Assignement of the Lessor Fitzh 58. A.B.C.D.E. Register 74. 75. And the writ of waste is of me that is the Plaintiff holds and for that it is shewed by Assignement as 46 Ed. 3. f. 25. Waste by the Assignement of the Defendant Dd. that you have it by Assignement and the Plaintiff shews that he had a Feoffment and Livery saving the terme and good Also it shall be shewed in the writ of whose Demise the Defendant hath it that is as by the Demise of another Fitzh 57. A.B.C.D.E. Register 745. that is for the Plaintiff is to recover the place wasted 34 H. 6. fol. 6. Tit. Waste Brook 121. 11 H. 6. f. 8. If waste or Quare ejecit infra terminum be brought and the terme ends hanging the writ the writ shall not abate for though he cannot recover the place wasted he shall recover Damages Also if waste be brought Quas tenuit after the terme ended he shall recover Damages though he do not recover the place wasted So where one which holds for terme of anothers life makes waste and after he for whose life dies the Lessor shall recover Damages though he do not recover the place wasted Fitzh 60. 10 H. 6. fol. 8. Waste supposed by the writ that the Defendant hath that by Legacy of one such ancester of the Plaintiff for that that the custome was so that he might devise and good 8 Ed. 2. tit 112. Waste was found in a House which was principal and the Plaintiff by Award recovered
Dover is a Tenure in cheif See Littleton 23. See 5 Ed. 4. f. 127. 19 R. 2. Tit. 185. Guard F. Keeper of a Castle in England is Knights Service for it countervailes Escuage and is of the same nature 8 H. 7. fol. 12. If I hold of the King and he grants the same Service to me yet I shall hold of the King for all is held of the King mediately or immediately Magna Charta chap. 20. See there for keeping of a Castle 38 H. 8. Tit. 60. B. Livery where the Heir was in Ward to the King and come to full age there he shall sue Livery out of the Kings hands and the first Seisin is where the Heir is of full age at time of the Death of his Ancestor and where his Tenant holds in Socage in cheif and dies 10 H. 7. f. 23. If one hold of the King to inclose a Park he may by his Grant after reserve for that six Marks and the King is not bound by the Statute of Westminster the third It is held 21 Ed. 3. fol. 41. The King gives the honour of Barkhamsted to the Prince and his Heirs Kings of England and so it seems that Lands held of that Honour seems to be held in cheif yet Magna Charta is that Honour is not properly in cheif 26 H. 8. fol. 10. By Fitzh Lands in the County Palatine of Lancaster held of the Dutchy the King there hath kingly Rights and there Livery shall be sued 17 H. 8. fol. 31. Tenant of the King in cheif makes a Gift in Tail without licence the King may choose the Donee or Donor for his Tenant And if Tenant of the King before the Statute of We m. 3. make a Feoffment the King may choose the Feoffee or Feoffor for his Tenant 4 H. 6. f. 19. 33 H. 8 Tit. 94. B. in the Exchequer 3 Ed. 3. Rot. 2. It was found that a man held of the King in cheif as of his Honour of Raleigh and it was taken no Tenure in cheif but a Tenure of an Honour otherwise it is if the Honour be annexed to the Crown for then the Honour is in cheif And in the year 11 H. 7. The Honour of Raleigh was annexed to the Crown and so it is in cheif But where the King gives Lands to be held of him by Fealty and two pence for all Services that is Socage in cheif for it is of the Kings person and contrary if it were to be held of the Mannour of B. 24 Ed. 3. Tit. 19. He which holds of the King by Service to finde a Man to serve in the War by forty Dayes at his own Charge this is great Serjeanty Tit. 69. Br. That a Tenure to finde one Horse and such like is but small Serjeanty for it is not corporal Service 44 Ed. 3. f. 45. The King gives the Fee-farm of a Town that is such a Rent to be held for term of life and after confirmes to him and to his Heirs to be held by the Services due and this is held Knights Service of the King for the most high and better shall be taken for the King and by Fitzh 263. B. it appears that Rent may be held of the King by Knights Service in cheif as well as Land c. 10 H. 6. f. 12. Rent lies in Tenure of the King 14 H. 6. f. 12. If the King grant Land to me in Fee to be held as freely as the King is in his Crown yet I shall hold of the King and if I alien without licence I shall make Fine for this is vested in the King by his Prerogative and shall not pass out of his Person by general words by Paston in the end of the Case 45 Ed. 3. fol. 6. By Finchden if my Tenant infeoff the King and takes back of the King to hold of the King yet he is my Tenant in right and shall hold of the King also But inquire of the Tenure of me for the Tenure was once extinct by the Kings Possession 29 H. 8. Tit. 61. B. If the King purchase a Mannour which J. S. holds the Tenant shall hold as he held before and he shall not render Livery nor first Seisin and he shall not hold in cheif and it is said if the King grant the Mannour to W. N. in Fee except the Services of J.S. Now J.S. holds of the King as of the Person of the King and yet he doth not hold in cheif but as he held before for the act of the King shall not prejudice the Tenant 31 H. 8. Tit. 70. B. Lord and Tenant the Tenant is attaint of Treason by Act of Parliament and so forfeits all his Lands and after is pardoned and restored by another Act of Parliament to have to him and his Heirs as if no such Attainder or former Act had been now he shall hold of a common person as before and yet once the Tenure was extinct 3 H. 3. Tit. 94. B. Where the King gives Lands to be held of him by Fealty and twelve pence for all Services this is Socage in cheif for it is of the Kings person 23 H. 3. Tit. 148. Guard F. If a man holds of the King to go with him in the Army against Scotland in the Vanguard and in his Return in the Rereward and so if he hold to give to the King Hornegild which is said Cornage it is great Serjeanty 38 H. 8. Tit. Livery 60. The Heir of him which holds of the King in cheif in Socage shall not pay first Seisin to the King for all his Lands but onely for those Lands held in Socage in cheif contrary of him which holds in Knights Service in cheif and where he holds in Socage in cheif the other Lord shall have Ouster le main with Issues 2 Ed. 4. fol. 6. Land is given in Tail to be held of the cheif Lords these words to be held c. are void and he shall hold of the Giver Where there is Lord and Tenant if the Tenant be disseised and the Disseisor dieth seised and his Heir is in by Discent the Lord ought to advow upon him but if there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant infcoffs another which doth not give notice to the Lord now the Lord during the life of the Feoffor may take him for his Tenant or the Feoffee at his pleasure 4 H. 6. f. 19. 3. Book of Assise 8. Lands is given in Tail without saying of whom to hold the Donee shall hold of the Giver and if a man before the Statute of Quia Emptores give in Fee without saying of whom to hold the Feoffee shall hold of the Feoffor Littleton f. 5. 16 Ed. 3. Statham fol. 23. If Lands be given in Tail to be held of the Lord this to be held is void and the Lord ought to avow upon the Feoffor 5 H. 7. fol. 35. Mesnalty lies in Tenure by a Mesne contrary of an Advowson appendant 1 H. 4. f. 1. the same 33 H. 6. f. 34.
preserved and you shall live in quiet and hold your Goods Lands and Lives in peace and quietnesse and you shall be accounted after this life among the Saints of God and shall have life eternall and over that observe you that I may by the Law charge another Jury immediately to inquire of your concealments and perjuries and that you shall finde by putting great Fines and Amerciaments upon you and imprisoning your bodies And to conclude first now if you remember your duties to God as I have said that will move you to keep your Oathes and the love that you owe to the Common-wealth with consideration of your selves wives sonnes and posterity and the fear of God and regard of honesty and all these well considered then you will present justly and truly the things which I shall give to you in Charge and I make an end and the Articles of your Charge follow Then followeth the Charge in Court Baron The Charge in Court Baron FIrst you ought to inquire of all persons which owe Suit to this Court and who make default and present their names and you ought to note that all such persons which hold any Land of the Lord by Suit of Court in what place they dwell and of what age he is that should make Suit to the Court or otherwise he ought to be amerced and Amerciament is by custome for by the Common-Law they shall be distrained and that is called Suit-service and that is by reason of the Tenure and if any such person which oweth Suit to the Lord be in Ward to the King neverthelesse he may be amerced for not making Suit to the Court of the Lord but the Lord cannot destraine for this Amerciament during his Wardship yet after Livery the Lord may destraine for the whole Amerciament And if there be two Coparceners Coparceners Joynt-Tenants for which one Suit ought to be made the eldest sister ought to make the Suit onely and the other shall be contributary Fitzh 159. B. And so it is of Joyn-Tenants the Suit may be made by agreement by one and the other shall be contributary by Marleb chap. 9. but if one holds twenty acres by Suit of Court and alien that to twenty severall persons by the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum every one shall make Suit severally 2. Rastal Suit 1. Also if any Tenant be dead after the last Court or before and his death not presented you ought to inquire what Lands he holds of this Mannour and if they were held by Knights service Ward Releif Soccage or by Copy and what advantage the Lord shall have by his death Scilicet Wardship Marriage Releif Escheate or other Profits and who is his next Heire and of what age and in whose custody he is 3. Also if any Tenant which holds by Knights Service alien his Land by collusion to defeat the Lord of his Ward and other Profits it is inquirable 4. Also if any Tenant which holds by Knights service be disseised and dieth disseised his Heire within age the Lord shall have him in Ward and if any Tenant which holdeth by Knight-Service die his Heire male within age of 21. years the Lord shall have the Land in Ward till the age of 21 years and also his Marriage unlesse he be married Littleton fol. 19. 5. If the Father which holds in Knights Service marry his daughter within age to a husband of full age and dies the Lord shall not have the Wardship of the Land and if she were of full age the Lord shall not have the Wardship of the Land but if she were within age and marry to a husband within age the Lord shall have the Land in Ward till the age of 14. years Natura brevium fol. 98. But if such Tenant die his heire female being of the age of 14. years or more and not married she shall not be in Ward nor her Land but if she were within age of 14. years and not married she shall be in Ward of Body and Land till the age of 16. years and if she were married in the life of her father within the age of 14. years her land shall be in Ward till the age of 14. years and no more Littleton fol. 19. 6. And you ought to note that there is Knights Service of a common person that is where one holds of his Lord by Homage Fealty and Escuage that is to say when it is assessed to more more and when to lesse lesse Littleton fol. 19. and where one holdeth by keeping a Castle or by blowing a Horn that is Knights service 7. And Soccage Tenure is where one holds by Homage and Fealty or by Fealty and Rent or by Homage Fealty Rent and by Suit of Court for all manner of Services or in Burgage and if such Tenant die his issue within age of 14. years then the next freind of the heire to whom the inheritance cannot descend shall have the Ward of the Land and of the Heir till 14. years and then give an account to the Heir of the profits taken but this Gardian shall have his reasonable allowance for his costs and expences Littleton fol. 22. See Natura Brevium fol. 97. 8. Releife by Soccage is as much as the cheif Rent is by the yeare which he payes to his Lord and this is due forthwith after the death of his Tenant in Soccage so that the Heire be past his age of 14. yeares Littleton fol. 24. 9. And if Land be held by Knight Service and his Tenant dies his Heire of full age the Releif is due to the Lord and if he hold by an intire Fee of a Knight the Releife is one hundred shillings and if he hold by the halfe of a Fee fifty shillings and so according to the rate Littleton fol. 21. and all these profits are inquirable 10. Also if any Rent Custome Rent not paid or Service be withdrawne which ought of right to be made by whom it is with-drawne and what Custome and Service it is and in what Bailiffs time it was with-drawne and where the land is that the Lord may distrain for the Arrearages and what Rent that is and how many years it hath been with-drawn 11. Lands concealed Also if any Land of the Lord be withdrawne or used by any without license of the Lord by whom it is and how much Land hath been so used and of what value by the yeare that is is inquirable 12. Also if any Villaine of the Lord be and what Goods Villaine Chattels and Lands he hath what estate he hath in them that the Lord may seise them and what other things he hath And if any Villaine withdraw his Goods out of the Lordship without license of the Lord or if a free man marry a Villain woman without the license of the Lord it is inquirable Note If a Villaine purchase Lands and doe not alien them before the Lord enter into them the Lord shall have them
Court of copy-hold he doth it as Judge and is allowed Judge by the Lord. The same Law is if the Steward which is out-Lawed in a personall action or excommunicated take a surrender out of the Court and at the next Court enter it it is witnessed by the Steward and such a surrender is made and admits him to whose use the surrender was made in full Court though it was not found by the Homage yet this surrender is good If a Judge or a Justice be out of his Wits yet the Fines Judgments and other records which were before him shall be good but contrary the gift of an Office or such like by him for that is a matter indeed and the others are matters of Record for a matter in deed may be avoyded by being out of his Wits contrary of matter of Record 1 Ma. Tit. whilest he was not in his Wits 7. The same Law is if the under Steward takes a surrender out of the Court and at the next Court makes his entry of it at this Court it is witnessed that J. D. surrendred and in full Court he to whose use the surrender is made is admitted this is a good surrender though it be not also it is found by the Homage for when he holds Court he is a Judge between the Lord and the copy-holders and yet 2 Ed. 6. Br. Court-Baron 22. and copy-hold the 26. is if the under Steward holds a Court-Baron and in full Court grants copy-hold without the authority of the Lord or high steward this is good contrary Law where it is done out of the Court for it seems if the under Steward grants copy-holds it is intended that if he admits any out of the Court without authority it is not good for it is the Lord granted by his Steward and not that the Steward granted for he cannot grant And also the high Steward may admit out of the Court by speciall usage and custome within the Mannor used for one which holds by copy of Court roll ought to have his Estate entred in the Court held and his admittance to be entred in the Court and for that if the under Steward or the high Steward which hath no Patent as above take surrender out of the Court and present that in Court and the Tenant be in the Court admitted it is good for it is the Lord by his Steward hath admitted and the admittance makes him a copy-holder and the Entry of that in Court makes him Tenant by copy of Court roll for copy-holder is he which holdeth by copy of Court roll so where one admitted in Court and the Lord allowes a Steward is good If a copy-holder of an Estate in fee according to the custome of the Mannour by license of his Lord let for twenty yeares rendring forty shillings yearly he may have an action of Debt in the common place for this Rent or as it seems he may distraine and avow and yet the avowrie is in the nature of an action reall and it seems no doubt if the Rent be reserved by Deed Indent but that he may distraine and avow and yet if he to whose use before the Statute of 27 H. 8. lets by Indenture for yeares rendring Rent he to whose use shall have Debt for that Rent but he cannot avow and if the Lessee in this case make waste he to whose use shall not have an action of wast 26 H. 8. f. 8. The same Law is where a copy-holder by the custome of the Mannour is not punishable for waste by license of the Lord makes a Lease for thirty yeares and the Lessee makes waste the copy-holder shall not have a Writ of waste but shall sue in the Lords Court to punish this waste by plaint in nature of an action upon the case If a coppy-holder of an Estate taile by license of his Lord let for twenty yeares rendring the ancient Rent and dies the Issue in taile may enter and defeat the Lessee but if the Tenant in taile of coppy-hold let for forty years by the Lords license and after the Lease makes a forfeiture of his coppy-hold and the Lord seises it and grants that over again by copy to the Tenant in taile and his Heires or to J. S. and his Heires it seems there the Issue of the Lessor nor J. S. nor the Lord cannot enter and defeat this lease The same Law is if a coppy-holder of an Estate taile lets for forty yeares by the Lords license and dies and his Issue surrenders to J. S. and his Heires this Issue nor J. S. cannot enter and defeat this Lease To this Court came T. R. and did demand license of the Lord to demise all and singular his customary Lands and Tenements scituate lying and being within his Lordship to what person or persons the said T. R. pleased to the tearm and for the tearm of 21. yeares next following the date of this Court to which T. R. the Lord gave license in form aforesaid for the Fine often shillings paid in the Court at the view of the Lord of this Mannor And it is used that the Steward in ful Court licenses a copy-holder to lease a copy-hold for 20. or 40. years more or lesse at their pleasure in the absence of the Lord and this seems good for he is Judge in the Court and when he makes it and enters it in the Court roll the Lord cannot enter for forfeiture because of this lease for when the Steward hath entred it that at this Court T. R. craved license of the Lord to let c. to whom the Lord gave license c. the Lord is estopped to say the contrary but that he gave license the same Law is where a coppy-holder is admitted in Court and is entred in the roll to whom the Lord by such a one his Steward granted him Seisin the Lord cannot afterwards gainsay this admittance and this is to be collected of the case aforesaid in 2 Ed. Brok. Court-Baron 22. If a man lets a Mannor for yeares in which are copy-holders and after a copy-holder dies the Termor of the Mannour grants the Land by copy for three lives this is good the same Law is if a Copy-holder of Inheritance surrender in the Court of the Termor of a Mannour to the use of one and his Heires it is good so that the Lord for the time being may take surrender in his Court but in the first case such a Termor of a Mannor cannot let a Copy-hold reserving lesse Rent then the ancient Rent but ought to reserve the ancient Rent or more 4. M. 1. But it seems if a Disseisor of a Mannour be and the Disseisor seises a Copy-hold by forfeiture or Escheate and grants that over by Copy to a stranger and the Disseisee enter in the Mannor this surrender shall not binde the Disseisee and yet if a Copy-holder of Inheritance furrender in the Court of the Disseisor to the use of J. S. and his Heires this is a good
the Husband may alien all or part without the Wife and then shee cannot claime Dower Custome in some Mannor is Heire among Copy-holders that the youngest Son shall inherite as in Borrough English and if he have no Sonne his younger Brother as at Edmonton Custome of some Mannor is Heire that all the Sons and all the Brothers shall inherite together as in Gavel-kind at Islington Custome of some Mannor is Heire That if the Tenant dyes seised of five Acres or lesse then the youngest Son ought to inherite but if it be above then all the Sons as in Gavell-kinde ought to inherite Custome of some Mannor is Clivenor If a Copy-holder surrender his Land to the use of a stranger that before the stranger be admitted Proclamation shall be made in the Court thereof and if the next of the blood will come in or Clivenor Land mark those next adjoyning to the bargaine from the East of the Son and will pay so much for the Land surrendred as hee which made the bargaine ought together with all his costs which had the Land so surrendred and then the Bargainee shall make Oath in Court what he payd and that shall be payd him forthwith in Court and then the next of blood or Clivenor which pay that shall be admitted and shall have the Land Custome in some Mannor is Where surrender is of Copy-hold made to him and his that is an Estate of Inheritance in Fee by the custome though it be not to him and his heires And in some Mannor it is to him and his in Villainage and yet it is a good Estate of Inheritance by the custome Custome of some Mannor is That surrender may be made into the hands of the Bailiffe in the presence of two Tenants witnessing that and in some Mannor in the hands of two Tenants to the use of him to whom c. And in some Mannor in the hands of one Tenant to the use of him which should have it and all these are good customes and allowed Custome of some Mannor is Dower that the Wife shall have no Dower nor the Husband shall not be tenant by the curtesie And the custome in some Mannor that she shall have the third part of the Rent and not any Land for her Dower as at Bush Custome in some Mannor is Surrender that surrender may be made into the hands of a tenant in the presence of other persons to the uses c. and is good Tenant at will by the common Law Waste may cut Trees to repaire his Houses and also may take House-boot Hedge-boot and Plough-boot and all this Tenant by Copy may doe And by the custome in diverse Mannors copy-holder may cut his Trees and Wood and sell it at his pleasure and also to suffer the Houses to decay and yet it is not forfeiture as it is at Islington Custome of some Mannor is Lease that copy-holder may let that by Indenture for three yeares without license of the Lord and in some for nine yeares and in some Mannor for more and in some Mannor hee may let from three yeares to three yeares to the terme of one and twenty yeares and is no forfeiture Custome of some Mannor is Harriot that where the copy-holder is Inheritable that the heire shall choose the best Beast and the Bailiffe of the Lord shall seise two of the next best Beasts and for a Cottage two shillings in Silver for Harriot shall be payd and no Beast Custome of some Mannor is Fine to pay six shillings eight pence for a Harriot and no Beast Custome of some Mannor is Ward that a copy-holder pay but one penny for a Fine though there be a hundred Acres or more and in some Mannor six shillings eight pence for every dwelling House and also for every Acre six shillings eight pence and for every Cottage six shillings eight pence and also six shillings eight pence for every Hampsell that is an ancient House or Cottage decayed six shillings eight pence And in every Mannor the Fine is uncertaine but yet the Lord there shall not take more for his Fine then hath heretofore been taken for a Fine and if he doe otherwise the remedy for the copy-holder is in the Chancery against his Lord. Custome of some Mannor is that if copy-holder dyes his heire within age the custome in most Mannors is that the custody shall be committed by the Lord to the next of blood to whom the Land cannot descend And in some Mannors the Bailiffe of the Lord shall have the custody and render the heire an account at fourteene years of the profits and by the custome in some Mannor at fourteene yeares the heire may choose to him a Guardian Custome in some Mannor is Workmen to have certaine dayes of labour in harvest for a day or two dayes and in some Mannor he shall pay foure pence for every day labour of that Custome of some Mannor is Releife that he shall pay for Releife upon a discent but halfe that which is due by common Law as if he hold by six pence he shall pay but three pence for Releife but yet he ought to pay that releife by the custome Also if he come in by Purchase he ought to pay in the like manner halfe his Rent as afore is sayd that is to say three pence where his Rent was six pence Custome of some Mannor is to pay but one penny for releife and not more nor lesse though his Rent be ten shillings Custome in some Mannor is Dower that if a man marry a Mayd and dye seised of copy-hold this Wife shall have all the Land during her life for her Dower but if hee marry a Widdow and dye seised shee shall have no Dower Custome of some Mannor is that if one were no copy-holder of that Mannor before and purchase Lands at first the Fine is arbitrable and granted at the will of the Lord but he nor his heires after shall pay no Fine but shall be admitted free without paying Fine for all the Lands which he after purchaseth within the Mannor If a man let to three for life to have successively yet this is a Joynt Estate and successively is void but by custome of copy-hold successive holds place and one shall have it after the other 30 H. 8. tit Leases 54. And note that you doe not say as many use to say that there is such a custome when they see the Law to be contrary to their intent as diverse Stewards doe when for favour that they beare to one party will ayde him by customes when there is no such custome to helpe him And I have heard a Steward say By the custome of a Mannor a Wife is dowable and by the custome that shall be assigned by the Homagers without plaint in nature of Dower against the Tenant of the Land and without answer of the Tenant and without any processe made against him contrary
Book of Assises 10. Escheats Where it shall Escheat and not discend and where not And for that in the same second Article is also inquirable what advantage the Lord may have by the death of his Tenant that is to say Ward or Escheat Now let us see what is impediment by attainder and otherwise that the Issue of the Lands in Fee cannot be heire by discent not that his Father and Mother were marryed and where the Lord shall have that by Escheat and where not IF an Infant of the Age of seven or eight yeares marry a Wife and his Wife have Issue within one yeare or two after marriage this Issue shall not be his heire and if he have no other heire generall or speciall the Land shall Escheat 38 Book of Assises 24. If the Father being an Alien hath a Son and after the Father is made Denizen and after hath another Son and after purchase Lands and dyes the youngest Son is heire and if he dye without Issue the Lord shall have the Land by Escheat and not the eldest Son for he is an Alien Doctor and Student fol. 12. The eldest Son is attaint of Felony in the life time of his Father and is hanged the Father dyes the youngest Son shall inherite and it shall not Escheat But if the eldest Son be attaint in the life time of his Father and survive the Father the Land shall Escheat 20 Booke of Assises 2.46 Ed. 3. tit Discent 6.49 Ed. 3. fol. 11. 31 Ed. 1. tit 17. accordingly If the Son be attaint of Felony or Treason and after is pardoned and after that his Father dyes seised of land the Lord shall have that by Escheat rather then the Son 13 H. 4. fol. 8.1 E. 3. lit 15. accordingly See before that Doctor and Student fol. 25. Where the Husband is attaint of Felony and purchase his pardon and after dyes his Wife shall not be endowed of Land which he had before the attainder but it ought to Escheat but of those which he purchases after shee shall have Dower and shall not Escheat Littleton fol. 11. If the Husband seised of Land commit Felony and after alien and after is attaint the Wife shall have Dower against the Feoffee but otherwise it is if it were Escheated Nat. bre fol. 7. If the Son be outlawed of Felony in the life time of his Father and hath a pardon and after the Father dyes seised of Land the Son shall not have these Lands but the Lord by Escheat though he hath diverse Sons 31 E. 1. tit 17.11 H. 4. fol. 11. 22 H. 6. fol. 38. The Father outlawed of Felony purchaseth a pardon and after purchaseth Lands the Son hee had before the Felony may inherite them and the Lord shall not have them by Escheat 9 H. 5. fol. 9. If one dye Tenant to the Lord without heire generall or speciall as if the Tenant be disseised and dyes without heire generall or speciall the Lord shall have the Escheat of this Land though he did not dye seised for that that he dyed Tenant 2 H. 4. fol. 9. 7 H. 4. fol. 18. accordingly 32 H. 6. fol. 31.36 H. 6. fol. 1.6 H. 4. fol. 5. the same And Nat. bre fol. 103. the same Where an Alien purchases the King may seise 11 H. 4. fol. 25. 14 H. 4. fol. 20. accordingly And if a Denizen purchase and dye without Issue born within the obedience of the Queen this Land shall Escheat to the Lord. If an English Tenant marry an Alien she is forthwith upon the marriage of the Kings allegiance and their Issue shall inherite and it shall not Escheat Abridgement of the Book of Assises fol. 39. Where there is Lord and Tenant and the Tenant grants Rent charge and dyes without heire generall or speciall the Lord shall have the Land by Escheat Rastall Escheat 15. but hee shall hold it charged 3 Book of Ass 1. The same Law is of the Kings Tenant which grants Rent and dyes c. and his heire in Ward by the Statute 2 3 E. 6. chap. 8. Lord and Tenant the Tenant is disseised and the disseisor dyes seised and the disseisee dyes without heire the Lord shall not have that as by Escheat for I intend hee dyes not in his Homage 32 H. 6. fol. 31. B. Lord and Tenant the Tenant lets for life and dyes without heire though he dyed not seised the Lord shall have Escheat 2 H. 4. fol. 9. If one be attaint of high Treason the King shall have Escheat of whomsoever he hold notwithstanding if it be of petty Treason the Lord shall have the Escheate 22 Book of Ass 49. If the Tenant be beheaded for Felony the Lord shall have Escheat and shall say for which he was hanged Natura brevium fol. 100. 8 E. 3. in the Register f. 165. accordingly If my Tenant within age alien to one in Fee and within age dye without heire the Lord may enter by Escheat 16 E. 3. tit Statham fol. 84.3 E. 3. Journey to North See 6 H. 4. fol. 3. North that he cannot enter but he may have Escheat It seemes that the Lord cannot enter by Escheat where his Tenants entry is taken away as if the Husband discontinue the Lands of his Wife and the VVife dyes without heire the Lord cannot enter by Escheat 32 H. 6 fol. 27. by Littleton If a man goe over the Sea without license and there takes a Wife and there by her hath Issue if the Issue survive his Father the Land of the Father shall Escheat 22 H. 6. fol. 38. by Newton 1 R. 3. fol. 3. by Hussey He which is borne beyond the Sea and his Father and Mother were English that their Issue shall inherite by the common Law but by the Statute aforesaid it is cleer The same Law is where an Alien borne purchase lands of the King before he be made Denizen or if hee be a Denizen and purchase Lands and dyes without heire borne under the obedience of the King there the King shall have that Land as Perquisite in manner as Escheat Where the Tenant hath an Estate in fee and dyes without heire generall or speciall his Land shall Escheat to his Lord Fitzh 143. T. 32 H. 6. fol. 31. The Lord cannot enter but where his Tenant might enter and for that if the Husband and the Wife discontinue and the Wife dyes without heire the Lord cannot enter by Escheate And if the Tenant be disseised and the Disseiser dyeth seised and his heire enter and after the Disseisee dyes without heire the Lord cannot enter 37 H. 6. fol. 1. It seemes by Fortescue that the Lord shall have Escheat or Ward though his Tenant did not dye seised 2 H. 4. fol. 9. The Lord shall have a Writ of Escheat though his tenant dyed not seised for if he dye his tenant that sufficeth If my tenant lets for life and dyes without heire he doth not dye seised and yet the Lord shall have the
Recognition of the Assise and in evidence that the Plaintiffe is Bastard it is not good for it is contrary to this thing admited and imployed 22 Book of Ass 3. Covenant Issue was If the Defendant had made an Estate sufficient to the Plaintiffe of Higgens Close or not and evidence that it is not so much in value it is not good for it is not answerable to the matter in Issue 27 H. 8. fol. 35. Trespasse The Defendant justifies for Common appendant and gives in evidence that he hath Common by reaion of Neighbourhood it is not good for it is not answerable to the matter in Issue 13 H. 7. fol. 13. 11 H. 4. fol. 63. Trespasse of beating not guilty and evidence that it was in his defence it is not good for it is a matter of justification and contrarying 7 Ed. 6. tit 14. In Debt upon an Obligation made for Usury If the Defendant plead it is not his Deed he cannot give in evidence that it was made for Usury for it is contrarying 5 Ed. 4. fol. 5. Debt upon obligation for letting him to baile and doth not name Sheriff the Defendant gouht to plead that and so not his Deed but not generally not his Deed and give that in evidence for it is contrarying 3 H. 7. f. 5. Where two are bound joyntly and severally and one Seale is broken yet in Debt against the other or against him he cannot plead not his Deed and give that in evidence for it is contrary but he may plead the speciall matter and conclude so not his Deed. 5 H. 7. f. 2. If one plead nothing passed by the Deed he cannot after give in evidence that it is not his Deed for it is contrarying 9 H. 7. fol. 3. Derinue the Defendant saith he doth not detaine and he cannot give in Evidence that he hath that in pawn for it is contrarying Where the Evidence proves the effect and substance of the Issue is good THE Plaintiff Pleads a Lease simply and gives in evidence a Lease upon condition and for that that the condition is performed it is good for the evidence proves the effect and substance of the Issue and for that it is good 14 H. 8. f. 20. 38 H. 6. f. 9. The Array was challenged for that that was made at the denominating of the Clerke of the Plaintiff Evidence that it was made by the Bailiff of the Franchise at his denomination is good 44 Ed. 3. fol. 39. J.S. pleads a Feoffment made to him and gives in evidence that there was a Fine which is a Feoffment of Record and is good 27 H. 8. fol. 29. Action upon the case by the Husband of an Assumpsit made to him and given in evidence that it was made to his Wife to which he agreed and is good 14 H. 8. fol. 18. False Imprisonment If the Defendant justifie by Warrant if the Warrant were after the Arrest the Plaintiff may say of his own wrong without that that he had any warrant and may give this matter in Evidence Forraine matter plead in Court-Baron IF a Plaint be in the Court-Baron of a Debt or trespass and forraine matter is pleaded there it shall not be tried in Bench though that this Court shall be out of the Jurisdiction but it seems shall be tried in the County where the Court-Baron is or the forraine matter is alleadged to be done 1 H. 5. f. 12. A man cannot remove a Plea out of Court-Baron into Bench but in a Replegiare and not in Debt or trespasse unlesse that the Damages are not to forty shillings 14 H. 8 f. 17. by Fitzh Note more before that Fine Where it shall be paid by Copy-holder that I have seen used is as insues NOte that it is commonly said and the ground of paying Fines is that a Fine is due to the Lord upon every alteration and change of Tenant that is to say upon every admittance of every new Tenant to the Lord by copy as upon every alienation by surrender and admittance upon that and upon every discent and admittance upon that also if a Copy-holder surrender into the hands of the Lord to the use of diverse and their Heires as to 2.3 or 4. and their Heires upon the admittance of them the Lord shall have but one Fine for it is but one surrender and one admittance of a Tenant and upon the death of the Survivor and the admittance of his Heire then an other Fine so that the Fine is to be adjudged due alwaies upon admittance of Tenant and not without admittance And for that if two be admitted and one dies the other shall have his part by Survivor without new admittance and shall not pay a Fine Also where a Surrender is made to the use of a Husband and his Wife and to the Heires of the Husband upon their admittance the Lord shall have but one Fine for it is one surrender and both are but one new Tenant and after the death of the Husband and the Wife upon admittance of the Heire of the Husband the Lord shall have another Fine Also where a surrender is made to one for life and after his death the remainder to another and the Heires of his Body begotten and for default of such Issue remainder to a third and his Heires in this case admittance of the Tenant for life vests the remainder in the others and divers learned Stewards take but one Fine only of admittance of a Tenant for tearme of life and nothing of those two in remainder when the Remainder falls but I have seen that every one in the remainder when they come to the Land shall make Fine though it be not the whole fine but a halfe and every one is admitted when a remainder falls but it need not for by the admittance of the Tenant for life the remainder is so vested that he in remainder need no other admittance and they are but one Estate and one surrender the same Law is where there is a surrender to one for life the remainder to another and his Heires there shall be but one Fine But then it is good that both be admitted together according to the surrender at the time of the surrender made Also where one out of the Court by custome surrenders into the hands of two Tenants to the use of himselfe for life and after his death to the use of J.S. and his Heires and dies before the next Court and then all this is presented at the next Court he in the remainder shall be admitted and pay but one Fine for it is impossible to admit one which is dead and by the act of God his Fine is gone and now there is but one to be admitted and upon one surrender and one being to be Copy-holder shall be paid but one Fine Also where a Copy-holder is admitted upon surrender he shall pay a Fine but if it be so that he have common recovery in plaint in nature of a VVrit of entry in the
Post upon his better assurance and for to defeat an estate taile those which recover have Seisin by command by Habere facias Seisinam and also they are in in the Post and by the recovery and for that no Fine shal be there payd to the Lord but one for the recovery was also but for further assurance and the surrender and all make but one Tenant by Copy and so there is due but one Fine Also where the custome is that for every Cottage and for every House the Lord shal have upon every alteration and admittance of Tenant for one Fine three shillings and there is a Cottage or a House is decayed it is called a Home-stall and by the custome also for every Home-stall he shall pay for a Fine three shillings there if the Tenant makes of one House two Houses or build a new House he shall not pay a Fine for these new Houses nor for two Houses which before was but one for the prescription doth not hold place but for the old Houses Also where the custome is that for a Fine for a license to let for yeares the Tenant shall pay for every House which the Tenant lets for every yeare that he hath license foure pence there if he make of one House diverse Cottages as of Barnes and Stables diverse Cottages there for license to let his House he shall pay but foure pence for every yeare that he hath license to let the whole and not for divers Houses for otherwise the prescription doth not hold place Also if Tenant for life and he in remainder or reversion ioyne in a surrender to one and to his Heires he to whose use the surrender is made shall pay but one Fine for it is but one admittance and not severall and one surrender and not severall and there is but one Tenant admitted the same Law where two Joynt-Tenants two Tenants in Common or two Coparceners surrender to one and his Heires shall be payd but one Fine Also a woman is marryed a Virgin she shall have all for her Dower by the custome there it is used she shall pay a Fine and it is reason for that she is admitted the same Law is where a VVoman hath a third part by the custome for Dower but it is used commonly within Mannors to pay but halfe a Fine which is paid for Inheritance but the custome of the Mannor is to be considered in this case If a Copy-hold be surrendred upon condition and the condition is broken he which surrenders may re-enter without paying Fine or new admittance Forfeiture of Copy-hold WHere a Copy-holder of Inheritance according to the custome of the Mannor is out-Lawed in an action personall as in Debt or other Action personall he shall not forfeit the profits of his Copy-hold to the King for that that he hath but an Fstate at the VVill of the Lord and the Free-hold is in the Lord but where a copy-holder is attaint of Felony or Treason the Lord shall seise the Copy-hold as forfeit to him and not to the King notwithstanding where one holds by Charter and is out-Lawed in Action personall the King shall have the profits of that Land 9 H. 6. fol. 20. But if he make a Feoffment after he is out-Lawed then the Feoffee shall have the profits 21 H. 7. fol. 7. accordingly Yet it is otherwise as is aforesaid where a copy-holder is out-Lawed in a personall action If one by an Indenture bargain and sell all his Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in D. and Inrol tha● accorcording to the Statute of 27 H. 8. C. 16. and hath in D. Lands held by Charter and other Lands by copy and after levy a Fine and suffers recovery of that accordingly yet the copy-hold is not forfeit The same Law if a copy-holder hath so much Land in D. held by copy and makes a Feoffment of all his Land in D. and makes no Livery this is no forfeiture for the Feoffee is but Tenant at will the same Law is if the copy-holder let to one for life and makes no Livery it is no Forfeiture The same Law is if one enfeoff J.S. by Deed of all his Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in D. and holds in D. part by Charter and part by copy-hold and makes Livery of that held by Charter these other Lands held by copy are not forfeit but if he make Livery in any part held by copy there is forfeiture of all his copy-hold in D. expressed in the Deed. But if one hath in D. certaine Lands in Socage by Charter and certaine other by copy and devise all his Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in D. this is no forfeiture of the copy-hold there It is said that a copy-holder cannot alien by Deed and for that some collect if A. let copy-hold without Deed for yeares that it is no forfeiture Littleton fol. 15. Yet inquire And Littleton fol. 45. is Where Lord lets to his Villain by Deed for yeares he is made free and without Deed it seems he is not made free and 24. Ed. 3. in Villainage after by Wilby without Deed is no infranchisement by Lease And so some say that a Lease by copy-holder by Deed for yeares is forfeiture and where it is without Deed proving the Lease it is no forfeiture yet inquire but if it be not a perfect Lease by word for yeares but by words of implication and gives no Fine nor other consideration and the copy-holder gainsay that Lease when it comes in question in the Lords Court this seems no forfeiture also if a Stranger makes wast as in cutting Trees growing upon the copy-hold where by the custome of the Mannor the copy-holder cannot make wast that is no forfeiture the same Law is where a copy-holder by license of his Lord hath let for yeares to J.S. which makes wast this is no forfeiture of copy-hold of Inheritance Also if one within the view of copy-hold saith to one I will not out you during your life or within the copy-hold he saith I am content that you shall have my copy-hold Land for tearme of your life or lets to him for life without Deed and without Livery upon the Deed it is no forfeiture Where one hath a Rent-Seck if the Tenant upon demand deny to pay it or if the Tenant be not then ready to pay this is a denying which is Disseisin but if the copy-holder do not deny to pay his Rent upon demand though he hath no Money ready to pay that and so doth not pay that is no forfeiture Lit. 51. See 42 Ed. 3. fol. 25. If a copy-holder be in prison divers yeares and by that meanes comes not to make suit at divers Courts but is absent yet this is no forfeiture of his copy-hold the same Law is if his Rent be demanded upon the Land and he is in prison in the Goal this is no forfeiture the same Law is if he be hindred by infirmity or by stop of Waters to come to the Lords Court or
and this land intailed is delivered in execution and the Tenant in tail dies after that his issue may enter notwithstanding this Act without suing Audita querela 38 book of Assisse 5. Tenant in tail grants a rent charge and dies the issue enters and enfeoffes I. S. and takes back an estate the charge is determined for by the entry of the issue the rent was extinct notwithstanding execution upon the Statute was executed against the Feoffee of the Tenant in tail and not against his issue 14 Book of Assises 4. Inquire and see the case of Trapps Plow Com. f. 436. 5 H. 7. f. 12. Rent charge is granted by Tenant in tail and after he dies this is determined If issue in tail be outlawed of felony in the life time of his father and hath a Charter of pardon in the life time of his father and after the father dies the issue may enter otherwise it is if the Charter were granted after the death of the father for then if he enter the King shall seise for his life but his issue may enter 29 Book of Assises 60. If Tenant in tail be bound in a Statute Merchant and hath issue and dies and execution is sued against the issue this is disseisin to him 17 book of Assise 21. If Tenant in tail grant a Rent charge and dies the Rent is determined and shall not bind the issue 5 H. 7. f. 14. B. 38 Ed. 3. tit 13. Tenant in tail chargeth the land enters into a Statute or Recognizance and dies it shall be void against the issue If one recover against the Tenant in tail and the Tenant in tail dies before he which recovers enters or hath execution the issue in tail may enter and is not bound by that 7 H. 4. f. 17. B. Littleton f. 155. Tenant in tail of a reversion acknowledgeth that by fine to one with warranty and dies yet this shall not bind his issue for it is no discontinuance by the Common-Law 9 Ed. 4. f. 19. But by 32 H. 8. chap. 36. this fine with Proclamation is now a barr after the year Tenant in taile of Rent grants that to one with warranty and dies this shall not binde the Issue for it is no discontinuance but at pleasure that is if he bring a Formedon and then warranty with Assets is a Barr 15 Ed. 4. fol. 6. 21 H. 7. fol. 10. and 13 H. 7. fol. 10. the same If the Tenant in taile exchange or devise his land in taile and dies this shall not binde the Issue but that he may enter for it is no discontinuance 9 Ed. 4. fol. 22. Tenant in taile grants a Rent charge for release of right in the Land this shall binde his Issue after his death 44 Ed. 3. f. 22. 8 H. 6.23 If Tenant in taile be attaint of Felony and dies that shall not bind the Issue but that he may enter by the common Law 12 H. 4. f. 3. Nat. Bre. f. 102. the same Tenant in taile of full age le ts for 21. yeares according to the Statute of 32 H. 8. chap. 28. reserving the ancient Rent or more and dies this is a good Lease and shall binde the Issue If Tenant in taile let for 22. yeares and dies this shall not binde his Issue but he may enter and our the Lessee but yet he may have covenant against the Excutors of Tenant in ta●le though it were not warranted in the Indenture 48 Ed. 3. fol. 2. 18 Ed. 3. Tit. 13. the same If the father Tenant in taile of land suffers recovery and execution and dies or cause collaterall warranty to he made one or other shall binde the Issue untill c. for it is discontinuance 3 H. 7. f. 13. The Issue in taile in Formedon may falsifie a recovery by default had against his Father and also where it is by fained action as there was a release made to his Father not pleaded and so recovery joynt Littleton fol. 155 The Issue in taile is not bound by a recovery against his Father but that he may say that his Father discontinued and took another intaile and so was seised of another intaile then he demanded time of the recovery 12 Ed. 4. fol. 15. and 13 Ed. 4. f. 1. the same The Issue in taile is not bound by recovery against his Father if his Father were not Tenant but one J.S. 14 Ed. 4. fol. 2. and fee Plowd Com. fol. 1. the case of Mansell If Tenant in tail infeoffs one against whom a Precipe quod reddat is brought or an entry in the Post and he voucheth the Tenant in taile which made the Feoffment and he over the common Vouchee this double Voucher is the most sure conveyance to Barr the Issue by reason of the recompence in value and this is the common conveyance at this Day where there is an Estate taile and this barrs the Issue in taile forthwith and also is a Barr to him which hath over that in remainder in taile by reason of the recompence which the first Tenant in taile hath by his Voucher 13 Ed. 4. f. 1. and 27 H. 8. Tit. Recovery in value 28. Recovery upon Voucher against Tenant in taile is a Barr by reason of the recompence in value and recovery by Writ of Entry in the Post by single Voucher doth but give the Estate which the Tenant in taile hath in possession at the time of the recovery so that if he were in of another Estate then in taile there the taile is not bound against the Heire 23 H. 8. Tit. 32. Note that a Fine levied by Tenant in taile where the remainder is to another in taile with Proclamations if he dye without Issue he in remainder hath five yeares to make his claime and for that recovery is better for it is a Barr forthwith 30 H. 8. Tit. Recovery in value 30. Of Lands in taile the Issue in taile shall be bound and charged of these Lands to the payment of Debt which his Ancestor ought by obligation made to the King as I take it 33 H. 8. chap. 39. inquire Land that a woman holds in Dower of her Husbands shall be charged where the Husband was indebted to the King if the Heires or Executors have not sufficient but where the title of Dower was before the Debt to the King otherwise it is Fitzh fol. 150. Q. It seems that the Heire in taile shall be charged for Debt due in the Exchequer to the King by his Father if the Executors have not sufficient Fitzh fol. 117. C. Notwithstanding if Tenant in taile Debtor of the King in the Exchequer dy his Issue shall not be charged as it is held in Plowd Comment fol. 249. See there 440. For Debt of the King against the Heire in Fee 32 H. 8. Tit. Discont 32. Recovery against the Tenant in taile the Reversion or remainder in the King in Fee shall binde the Tenant in taile and the Issue in taile but shall not binde the King but now
the intaile is determined the Lease is determined and void 1 Ed. 6. tit acceptance 19. Lease for yeares and so from yeare to yeare as long as both parties pleased after he hath entred into every yeare it is a Lease for that yeare and a Lease for a thousand yeares is good 14 H. 8. f. 1. Lease for three hundred yeares is good and is but a Chattell notwithstanding the long time 32 Book of Assises 6. If a man lets for sixty yeares and so from sixty yeares to sixty yeares untill two hundred yeares be ended this is also one self same Lease and good 29 H. 8. tit Lease 49. and Plowdens Commentaries 273. the same The Husband and his Wife purchase to them and to the Heires of the Husband and after the Husband lets for yeares and dies the Wife may enter and avoid the Lease for her Life but if she dy before the residue of the Tearm it is good to the Lessee against the Heire of the Husband 33 H. 8. tit Lease 58. And note by all the Justices that the Guardian by Knight Service shall not out the Termor where he hath a Lease of his Tenant which dies his Heire within age contrary was the Law in times past as it appeares before in the title Ward VVhere it is agreed and granted to J.S. that he shall have twenty Acres in D. for twenty yeares this is a good Lease for this word Concessit is as strong as devised 37 H. 8. tit Lease 60. If one license one to enter and to occupie his Land for years it is a Lease for yeares in Law 10 Ed. 4. f. 4. 5 H. 7. f. 1. the same Tenant in taile lets for twenty two yeares rendring Rent and dies and the Lessee lets that over for ten yeares and the Issue accepts the Rent of the second Lessee this is no confirmation of the Lease for there is no privity betwixt the second Lessee and him 32 H. 8. Tit. Acceptance 13. A man lets for ten yeares and the next day lets the same Land to another for twenty yeares this is a good Lease for the last ten yeares of the twenty yeares which are ended after the first ten yeares 26 H. 8. Tit. Lease 48. See the time of H. 8. Tit. Lease 35. Weston saith If I let for so many yeares as J.S. shall name and after J.S. in my life time names certaine years the Lease is good for those yeares Plowdens Commentaries 273. A man lets a House with the Appurtenances no Land passes but if a man lets a House with all the Land to the same belonging there the Lands with that used passe and it is a good Lease of those Plowd Com. f. 273. 31 H. 8. tit Lease 55. See Plowd Com. 85. b. and f. 170.23 H. 8. tit Feoffments 53. If a man lets for life to J.S. and the next day lets to W. N. for yeares the second Lease is void if it be not granted of a Reversion 37 H. 8. tit Lease 48. A man lets for yeares to have after the Lease thereof made to J.N. ended and in truth J.N. hath no Lease this begins forthwith 3 Ed. 6. tit Lease 62. A man hath a Lease for yeares as Executor of J.S. and after purchaseth the Reversion the Lease is extinct and determined yet it may be assets 4 Ed. 6. Tit. Extinguishment 24. Leases made by a Bishop otherwise then for 21. yeares or three lives from the time that such Lease begins and where upon the old Rent is not reserved is void 1 Eliz. not in Print and for that a Lease made for thirty yeares by a Bishop and confirmed by the Dean and Chapters under their Seale shall not binde their Successor but if the Bishop Dean and Chapter joyne in a Lease for thirty yeares this is a good Lease notwithstanding this Statute And see Pulton tit Ecclesiasticall persons What Lease by Spirituall persons is good and what not And see 13 Eliz. chap. 10. That a Lease by Bishop Dean and Chapter for longer time then twenty one yeares or three lives is not good and by 14 Eliz. chap. 11. They may make a Lease of Houses in Cities and Borroughs for forty years and by 18 Eliz. chap. 11. They cannot let where there is an old Lease which hath continuance for three yeares or more A man possessed of a Tearm for forty yeares grants so many of them to J.S. which shall be behinde at the time of his death and it seems it is void for the Incertainty otherwise it is if it were by devise But if a man lets his Land to have after his death for forty yeares this is good for this is certaine 7 Ed. 6. tit Lease 66. See 8 H. 7. fol. 4. Grant of Rent but if a man let for life and foure yeares over is good Tenant which holds in cheife dies his heire before Livery sued makes a Lease for yeares this is good if no Intrusion be found by Office and if after the Lease the dying seised be found by Office and no intrusion it hath no relation to the death of the Ancestor unlesse for the profits and not to defeat the Lease 5 Ed. 6. Tit. Lease 57. Tenant at will What acts Tenant at will may do and what to him and what by him are good and what not IF Tenant at will lets for yeares in his own name He is a Disseisor 12 Ed. 4. f. 12. Release made to the Tenant at will by the Lessor is good Lit. f. 108. If one alien his Mannor there need not that Tenant at will attoin Lit. f. 125. Tenant at will cannot grant over his Estate to any for he hath no Interest certaine 27 H. 6. f. 3. B. If a man lets to one at will the Lessor dies the will is determined 21 H. 6. f. 42. If Tenant at will be outed this is Disseisin to the Lessor and yet the Tenant at will may enter without commandement of his Lessor for the will continues 38 H. 6. fol. 28. If Tenant at will make wast action upon the case lies against him and not wast 48 Ed. 3. f. 25. 11 H. 6. f. 38. the same See Lit. f. 15. 12 Ed. 4. f. 8. the same 22 Ed. 4. f. 5. Trespasse lies 14 H. 8 f. 12. By Brown If Tenant at will makes wast action upon the case lies and by Roo if my Father lets at will and dies the will is determined Littleton fol. 14. If Tenant at will makes voluntary wast he saith that the Lessor shall have an action of trespasse but it seems he intended trespasse upon the case 48 Ed. 3. f. 2. Action upon the case lies against Tenant at will which makes wast in burning of Houses willingly and not action of wast 2 Ed. 4. fol. 5. By Littleton If I deliver to you my Gown and you burn it action upon the case lies and not trespasse By force of Armes 43 Ed. 3. f. 30. If one hath Goods by delivery trespasse doth not lye against him but
Detinue 21 H. 6. fol. 43. is That an action of wast doth not lye against Tenant at will which makes wast but trespasse 41 Ed. 3. f. 24. Where a Miller takes more tole then he ought action upon the case lies against him and not trespasse 2 Ed. 4. f. 5. If my Servant of a shop which hath power to sell gives my Wares it seems that I shall have trespasse against the Donee Tenant at will may cut Trees seasonable but if he cut great Trees wast doth not lye but action upon the case Tenant at will of a Mine may take the Oare and sell it 12 Ed. 4. f. 8. He which holds at will hath that at the will of both and Debt lieth for the Rent reserved 20 Edw. 4. fol. 9. If the Lessee at will sow the Land and after be outed he shall have the Crop but if he be outed after the plowing and before the sowing he shall loose the Costs of plowing and the compost of that 11 H. 4. fol. 90 Tenant at sufferance Who is Tenant at sufferance and who not and what acts he may do TEnant at sufferance is where one of his own head occupies my Land and claims nothing but at my will and release to him is not good Littleton f. 108. There is no Tenant at sufferance but he which first enters by authority and Lawfully as a man lets for yeares or for anothers life and holds in further after the Lease expired or after the death of him for whose life time of H. 8. tit Tenant by copy 15. Tenant at sufferance is when Lessee for yeares after the tearm ended occupies the Land by consent of the Lessor without a Lease at will 21 H. 6. f. 42. Tenant at sufferance may distrain doing dammage upon the Land and yet release made to him is not good 4 H. 7. f. 3. and he may have trespasse Villainage For that that in the fifth Article villainage is to be inquired in Leet and in Court-Baron and is to be inquired who is Villainof the Kings Somthing shall be said touching that and first how they began and where the Lord may seise and have them and how their Goods and Chattells and other things and how contrary and how not VIllaines began after Noahs Flood that is when all things were in common and when they increased and also were taken in Battells and one kil'd another to avoid this mischeife it was ordained that none should kill another but those which they overcame should be their Villaines to use at their pleasure but not to kill them Britton f. 77. If the Villaine buy Goods and sell them or give them to another before the Lord seise them then the Lord cannot seise them nor have them otherwise it is of the Kings Villaine Littleton f. 39 Lord and Villaine the Lord is indebted to one which makes the Villaine his Executor the Villaine shall have Debt against his Lord and the Lord cannot seise and have the Goods which the Villaine hath as Executor 3 H. 4. f. 15. the same 47 Ed. 3. f. 16. Littleton f. 41. and 21 Ed. 4. f. 50. Old Tenures 2. If a Villaine dy before the Lord seise his Goods or claim by word the Lord cannot seise them not have them but his Executors 3 H. 4. f. 17. If a villaine purchase Lands and alien them before that the Lord enter or buy Goods and sells them before that the Lord seise them the Lord shal not have them Lit. f. 39. If the Lord seise Goods and deliver them to the Villain again if they be taken from him the Lord may have trespasse or take and seise them again and have them 11 H. 4. f. 2. Lit. f. 39. If he seises parcell of the Goods in name of all that suffices for●ll The Lord hath possession of Goods of his Villaine by Seisure of land by entry of Rent Reversion and Advowson by claim Perkins f. 6. Littleton 40. The Lord cannot seise his Villaine in the presence of the King and yet after he may have him 27 Book of Ass 49. If my Villaine Infant be in ward of one by reason that he holds of him by Knights service I may enter and seise the Infant and out the Guardian and shall have him 40 Book of Ass 7. The Lord cannot take and seise his Villaine out of the service of another which hath retained him unlesse that he hath more Servants but he may seise the Goods 39 R. 2. tit action upon the case 52. The Lord may take the Rent which a Villaine hath in possession but not a thing in action as obligation of Debt or Covenant What is infranchisement and what not IF a ●ree-man marry his she Villaine she is infranchised Little fol. 41. And that their Issue is free 46 Ed. 3. fol. 4. If a she Villaine marry a Free-man she is made free for ever and shall not be a Villaine again unlesse by a speciall act afterwards as being divorced or acknowledgeth her self a she Villain in Court of Record ●itzh fol. 78. G. 33 Ed. 3. f. 187. Statham is that shee is infranchised but during the marriage If a Villaine woman marry a Free-man she and all her Issue have a free Estate for ever and a Villaine becomes free if he marry his Mistris the same Law if a she Villaine marry her Lord Brit. f. 78. a. If a Villaine dwell in ancient Demesne of the King by a year and a day without claime he is infranchised Fitzh f. 79. A. But there held if he dwell in the ancient Demesne of another Lord then the King by a yeare and a day without claime he is not infranchised 39 H. 6. tit 20. and 39 E. 3. f. 6. If the Lord and his Villaine vouch together where the Villaine hath purchased Lands if he be not from all benefit shut up being called to warranty it is an infranchisement 33 H. 6. f. 1. The Reversion is granted to a Villaine and his Lord being Tenant for life attornes this doth not infranchise the Villaine for the Lord gives nothing to the Villaine and he cannot otherwise have the Reversion 11 H. 7. fol. 13. If a man infranchise his Villaine with the whole sequell it behoveth to be for those created and to be created some born before that infranchisement is not made free 15 H. 7. f. 14. Though the Lord make Attorney where his Villaine is Plaintiff it is no infranchisement 22 Book of Ass 4. 29 Ed. 3. f. 24. the same If the Lord suffer his Villaine to be sworn of a Jury in the Kings Court it is an infranchisment Britton fol. 83. Villaine shall not be infranchised for that his Lord sues a Recordare upon a plaint of Replegiare 5 Ed. 3. f. 187. Statham Tenant in taile of a Mannor to which is a Villaine regardant aliens the same Land to the Villaine and dies The Issue recovers the Land against the Villaine yet he may after seise the Villain and he is not infranchised notwithstanding that
he hath brought action against his Villaine for he cannot otherwise come to the Land 24 Edw. 3. fol. 187. If in an action a Villain imparle with his Lord or hath a day by Prece partium he is infranchised 9 H. 6. f. the last and 22 Ed. 4. f. 36. the same If the Lord suffer his Villaine to be made a Knight it is an infranchisement Britton f. 79. If the Lord infcoffs his Villaine it is an infranchisement for ever 12 H. 3. tit 42. If the Plaintiff in a Writ of Neife be non-suited he shall not have again in his life time any other Nativo habendo but the Villaine by that is infranchised during her life time 6 Ed. 2. tit Villainage 26. See 19 Edw. 2. Tit. 31. If the Lord make to his Villaine an obligation or grant to him an anuity or let to him by Deed for yeares or make to him a Feoffment and Livery and seisin he is infranchised otherwise it ●s if he makes to him a Lease at will or a Feoffment and no Livery Littleton fol. 45. By Wilby if the Lord infeoffs his Villaine without Deed he is not infranchised 24 Ed. 3. tit 32. Villaine to two Coparceners he marries one of them yet he is not infranchised against the other coparcener Fitzh f. 197. N. If a Copy-hold escheat or come to the Lord by forfeiture and the Lord grants that over by Copy to J. S. his Villaine and to his heires to hold at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor by the services due and used to be paid this is an infranchisement but if a Copy-holder surrender into the hands of the Lord to the use of J.S. the Lords Villaine and to his heires and the Lord by his Steward grant to him Seisin by the rod accordingly this is no infranchisement How the Lord may take advantage of things which he hath by his Villaine by act of his Villaine MAnnor to which a Villaine is regardant is let to one for life and the Villaine purchase in fee the Tenant for life enters he shall have lands to him and to his heires for ever Perk. f. 20. If a Villaine be granted to one for Life and the Villaine purchase in fee the Lessee enters he shall have Fee but if the Lord be Lessee for life and the Tenancy escheat he shall not have that but for life Doctor and Student fol. 90. If Lessee for yeares of a Mannor to which a Villaine is regardant dies and the Villaine purchase Lands and the Executor of the Lessee enter he shall have the Land in fee but it shall be to the use of the Testator Doctor and Student f. 90 Where a Parson hath a Villaine which purchases lands and the Parson enters he shall not have that to the use of himself but in the right of his Church 32 H. 8. tit Villainage 46. Where a Villaine is infeoffed with warranty the Lord may rebut by that if it were discended in possession of the Villaine but not vouch to have in value 18 Ed. 3. f. 29. 22 Book of Ass 37. If a Villaine and his Wife purchase joyntly in Fee and the Lord enters in the half as he may he shall have it but if he do not enter but the Husband dies the wife shall have all by the Survivor and the Lord hath lost his advantage to have the moity A bridg of ass fol. 37.40 assis 7. If a Villain be bound in a statute and before the day incurred his Lord enters the Lord shall have such advantage that execution shall not be sued against him 18. Ed. 3. Tit. Execution Statham If my villain purchase Land and I seise it and the villain dies yet the wife of the villain shall be endowed by Herl 13. Ed. 3.74 Statham 19. Ed. 2. Waste And in so much that you ought to inquire if any Farmer which hath part of the Demesnes of your Lordship hath made wast or any Copy-holder unlesse by the Custom of the Mannor he may make wast if any of them have made wast or not First let us see what is wast in Land and to be punished and what not IT is not wast to suffer the arable Land to lie fresh so that it is full of thorns Fitz. fol. 59. N. 2. H. 6. fol. 11. To suffer a Meadow to be drowned which is rushie or little worth or arable land to be drowned that nothing remains but tough Clay this is wast 20. H. 6. fol. 1. 15. H. 3. Tit. 131. Wast was brought for making meadow arable by Plowd 2. and it seems it lies If a Farmer plough meadow it is wast Fitzh fol. 59. N. and 15. H. 3. tit 131. the same 12. H. 8. If a Farmer do not repair banks of his Land in Lease by which the Land is drowned or if he dig for Copper or Stone or Coals it is wast Fitzh fol. 59. N. 20. H. 6. fol. 1. Wast lies against a Farmer for fish in a Poole 6. R. 2. Statham If there be a Myne in the Land if the Farmer dig the Land and take it it is wast 9. Ed. 4. fol. 35. B. Raising up a Furnace fixed is wast 42. Ed. 3. fol. 6. What is wast in houses to be punished and what not IF a house be uncovered by suddain tempest it is not wast but if the Lessee suffer that to be uncovered that the timber rot it is wast and if the house fall by suddain tempest it is no wast 12. H. 4. fol. 4.33 H. 6. Tit. 155. B. By Danby and Choke If strangers enemies of the King destroy a house or that it be blowen down by suddain tempest wast lies not contrary where it was by enemies traitors subjects 12. H 8. fol. 1. See the time of Ed. 1. tit 123. where it was burnt by I. S. his Neighbour by mischance It seems that not covering of a house is no wast till the great beam of that is rotten 10 H. 7. fol. 2. B. It seems wast may be assigned in breaking a stone-wall and also in a mud-wall for that it is fixt to the free-hold But the Lessee may plead that the lessor licensed him to break it down and this is a good barre And adjudged that if a house be not covered at the time of the Lease made the Lesse is not bound to cover that and also if a house were curious at the time of the Lease made that is a good barr to plead in wast 10 H. 7. fol. 2. B. 40 assis 22. the same and 10 H. 7. fol. 5. the same where a house falls by tempest though the lessee Covenant to repair it he may plead in barr in a writ of wast that it fell by tempest though he cannot plead it in a writ of Covenant 40. Ed. 3. fol. 6. If a Farmer build a house where there was none before the Lease and suffers that to decay it is wast 11 Ed. 2. Statham 12 H. 4. fol. 6. the same 42 Ed. 3. fol. 21. the
have it Perkins 165. A man hath twenty yeares terme in right of his VVife and lets for ten yeares rendring rent and dyes his VVife shall have the Rent and the residue of the terme Fitzh 119 O. If a man takes a VVife which was indebted to other persons the Husband and the VVife shall be ●ued for this debt living the VVife but if the VVife dye the Husband shall not be charged unlesse it were recoverd during the Coverture Fitzh 121. If a man lets Land to a VVoman for life rendring Rent and shee takes a Husband and after the Rent is behind and the VVife dyes the Husband shall be charged for that that he took the profit otherwise it is of an Obligation made by his VVife before marriage the Husband shall not be charged unlesse recovery were of that during the marriage Fitzh 121. D. A woman hath Rent for Dower and takes a Husband and the Rent is behind and the VVife after dyes the Husband shall have Debt for this Rent But if a man be bound to a woman and she takes a Husband and the day of payment comes during the marriage and after the VVife dyes the Husband shall not have debt upon this Obligation for that that it was a duty to the VVife and a thing in action before the marriage Essoyne AFter that any hath put himselfe into any Inquest who hath appeared or might have appeared in these VVrits shall have but one Essoyne or one default c. West 2. chap. 27. Marlcbridge chap. 13. Marlb chap. 19. Of Essoynes it is provided that in Counry Hundred or in Court-Baron or other Courts none shall have need to sweare to warrant his Essoyne Westm 1. chap. 42. For that that Demandants which bring actions against many Coparceners and Joynt-Tenants they often avoid by Essoyne It is provided that those Tenants shall not have Essoyne but for one day no more then one sole-Tenant should have so that now he cannot avoid but only have an Essoyne see Marleb chap. 9. Westm 1. chap. 43. If one be essoyned as beyond the Seas where he is in England day of the Summons it is provided that this Essoyne be not allowed if the Demandant will averr that he was in England the day that the Summons was made and three weekes after But let it be adjourned And if the Tenant be attaint which was in England day of the Summons and three weeks after the Essoyne shall turne to him for a default Westm 1. chap. 41. In a Writ of Assise of Attaints and Juris utrum provided it is for travaile of Jurors that if the Tenant once appeare in the Court never after no Tenant can essoyne him Glocester 1. chap. 18. Provided that in other Pleas then Trespass or Attachments and Distresse lying if the Defendant make himself to be essoyned of the Kings Service and doth not bring his Warrant at the day which is given unto him by his Essoyne he shall render to the Plaintif Dammages of the torne of twenty shillings or of more according to the discretion of the Justices and be in the Kings mercy Westm 2. chap. 12. There lies not for one that brings an appeale of the death of a man an Essoyne West 2. chap. 17. In the Circuit of the Justices there is no Essoine admitted of being sick in bed of a Tenement unlesse he which makes himself to be Essoyned truly be sick for if it be excepted against by the Demandant that the Tenant is not sick nor in that state that he cannot come before the Justices they will receive a reproach and if this be disproved by an Inquest let that Essoyne be turned to a default neither lies that Essoyne in a Writ of right between two claimings by the same discent West 2. ch 27. After that any hath put himself upon any Inquest at the next day let there be an Essoyne allowed to him but at other dayes following by Essoyn let there be no deferring of taking the Inquisition whether he first had an Essoyne or not neither let any Essoyne be admitted after the day given by the request of the parties in case that the parties consent to come without an Essoyne Westm 2. chap. 28. When by the Statute of Westm 1. chap. 41. It is appointed that after the Tenants have once appeared in the Court there shall be no Essoyns allowed them in VVrits of Assise in the same manner from hence let it be observed of Petitioners The Statute of Essoynes questioned 12 Ed. 2. That Essoynes do not lie in these following Cases that is There lies no Essoyn Because the Land is taken into the Kings hand Because he is restrained by Land Because there is granted to him from hence Judgement if the Jurors come Because he was seen in the Court. Because at another time he essoyned himself as being not able to come He shall not be essoyned as being beyond Sea Because such a one essoyned him such a Day Because it was commanded the Sheriff that he should make the party to come 41 Ed. 3 f. 29. Because a VVoman is not in the Kings Service but because a Nurse Midwife or sent for by a VVrit to inspect the Belly Because she seems to be deceived in her Dower and deferring of Right Because such a Complaint hath not found Sureties to prosecute Because the Attorney was essoyned Because he hath an Attorney in his Complaint Because he is essoyned witnessed c. that he is not in the Kings Service Because the Summons is not testified or part of the Return not attached Because at another time he was essoyned of the Kings Service and now did not send his VVarrant Because re-summons was in the last Presentment or Death of his Ancestor 30. Book of Assises 51. Because such a one is not named in the VVrit Because it was commanded the Sheriff that he should distrain him to come by his Land and Chattels Because it was commanded the Bishop that he should make him come Because the time was past But it is to be known that an Essoyn of the Kings Service is allowed after the great Cape and the small Cape 1 H. 6. f. 4. Trespasse Issue was if the Land were the Freehold of the Plaintiff or of the Lessor of the Defendant and after Issue the Defendant prayed aid of his Le or and at the Summons returned the Prayee was essoyned and at the Day which he had by the Essoyn he joyned and at the Venire facias returned the Prayee cast Essoyn and it lies for that that the Statute is Por●quam c. 44 Ed. 3. fol. 38. Precipe the Tenant tenders his Law and this is at Issue for that after he shall have but one Essoyn 37 H. 6. f. 2. The Plaintiff was essoyned at the Day of the Law 9 H. 5. f. 5 the same 48 Ed. 3. fol. 21. One is essoyned after Issue in London and at the Day in Bench upon a forreign matter is there essoyned again for it is the
of his own wrong the Plaintiff shall say and where not 436 Where the Defendant conveys from the Plaintiff or pleads special matter this shall be answered and of his own wrong c. it is no plea 437 Where the Defendant justifies as Constable Sheriff or by warrant of the Sheriff or by the Kings Patent of his own Wrong is no plea. 430 Where as Servant or Bailiff of the Sheriff by his commandement in aiding a Constable or Bailiff of his own wrong is good 439 Pleas after View See what Pleas he shall have 426 He may plead ancient Demesne matter apparent Joint-tenancy and non-tenure 420 Farmedon that be doth not omit any degrees nor no such Town nor to the Jurisdiction 421 Of what Precipe and Plaint in this nature 149 Presidents c. 467 Prescription Who may prescribe and who not 204. Town Inhabitants and Officers 205. Of Rena and of another thing without Deed 207 Presentment What traversable and what not 84. Prerogative of the King What the King shall have without Office found and what not 221. Where part in cheife of the King the Seigniory of another suspended but to the distresse 261. Pound open Pounds and for dead Chattels 71 VVhat is open and what other and where cattell dye in pound 71 Distress taken unlawfully and pound unlocked 284. VVho shall have Parco fracto and poundage for intire distresse 4 d. 285. Proclamation VVhere there shall be three and where but one 11. Process In Court-Baron 152 Grand Cape in Dower and Precipe of that 505. Between Petty Cape and the Petty Cape 505 Precept of summons in a Plea of Land 506. Precept of Summons in Assise of Mordancester 506 Habere facias sesinam upon a recovery by default 506. Attachment and form of that 155. Process of Execution 283 Recoveries IN Court-Baron in ature of a Right Patent Common recovery in Entry in the Post 497. Replication Where the Barr is vicious is made good by replication and where not and Jeofailes 474. Rescous It cannot be brought if the Lord distrain within his Fee and not out but if one distrain doing Dammages or not where out of his Fee he may 72 Releif Shall be paid at full age if he were not in ward and for Socage forthwith if he passe fourteen yeares 286. Part of the King yet the other Lord shall not loose Releife and two releifs by one and Tenant dies before notice 286 Where he is in by discent he shall pay and where by purchase and Fee farm not 287. where Devise and where a hundred shillings and a hundred Marks and grand serieanty 288. Corporation shall not pay that unlesse by prescription 290. Resiants And Suitors to a Leet Who are 65. Ryots Routs unlawfull assemblies and forcible entries 36. and 37. Roy. Ordained of God for Government The King is alwaies of full age 2. To disobey the King or Law is iniquity 5. and 6. He is the Lord of narrow Seas 45. He ought to scowre the Sea of Pyrats 45. He ought to defend Banks and Sewers of the Sea 46. Roigne The wife of the King differs from another marryed wife 2. Assurance of her power 39. Steward ANd his Authority in Leet and that he is a Judge of Record 81 82 He may amerce any of his own head without cause 154 Seisin Of what thing it sufficeth to have Ward Ass Advow and what not 287 Serement or Oath of Officers Of the Reve Bailiff and Heyward c. 91 Desiners Affirors Aletasters and Constables 92 Several Tenancy In what Action it may be pleaded and where he ought to maintain his Writ without that c. 476 Servant See before Husband and Wife 364 Statutes How it shall be expounded and taken by intendment Suit of Court Suit by Charter or Prescription 291 Coparceners and Joint-tenants 291 Suit by Coparceners of the King 292 By Attorney and not by Tenant in Dower 293 Tenant in Fee Lease for years upon condition if he disturbe he shall have Fee 296 Where the Fee in expectancy and where executed 298 See 149. b. and by devise 298 Where the Remainder is upon limitation and upon condition 298 Tenant in Tail What is an Estate Tail and what not 301 Lease by tenant in taile 302. Taile and forfeiture by attainder 303. Tenant in taile reversion in the King and rec Fine with Proclamation 355. He charged where he is bound in a Statute or Recognisance and dyeth 355. What is discontinuance of it and what not 355. What recovery the Issue in taile may falsifie and what not 307. Where a double Voucher and where a single is to barr 308 What debt due to the King shall binde the Issue in taile 308. Recovery against tenant in taile where the reversion is in the King the Issue is not bound by 34 H. 8. 308 Tenant in Frank-marriage After marriage as before 310. With a woman that is not cozen it is no Frank-marriage 310 After they are divorced the woman shall have all and where in Tail a Free-hold 310 Tenant after possibility of Issue extinct Shall not have aid nor waste and waste doth not lie against him 312 Is not compellable to attorn and if he alien he in Reversion may enter 312 Tenant by the curtesie VVhere he hath Issue a Daughter that shall not inherit yet he shall be and where a woman hath possession in Deed and where not 312. 313. A woman attaint the Husband shall be where he is born alive and doth not cry he shall be 313 Tenant in Dower See before Dower 314. Tenant for life VVhat is an Estate for life and what not 320. Tenant for years VVhere the Husband lets dies and where a Parson Prebendary or Tenant in Dower and dies 320. 321. VVhere Tenant is and dies without Issue and where Barr 321. Lease for life and forthwith another for years Bishop only and where he and the Chapter 323. He grants so much as shall be behinde the time of his death not good 303 Tenant at will He lets for years this is a Disseisin 324 Release to him is good he need not attorn Lessor dyes 324 Makes waste it seems action upon the case lies 324 He shall House-boot and debt lieth for his Rent 325 Tenant at sufferance VVho is and what Acts he may do and what not 325. Tenures In cheife is meerly of the King as of his Crown 406. Of the King as of an Honour Castle Mannor are not in cheife 406. To be held of the Dutchy of Corn waile Castle of Dover of the Honour of Barkhamstead are Tenures in cheife 409. Of the King in Burgage is Socage 407 To hold of us by Fealty and two pence is Socage in cheife 409. But where it is of us of the Mannor of E. by Fealty and 2d it is not Socage in cheife 409. Grand serianty and petty serianty 409. Rent held of the King 409. Of what Tenure the King shall have the first Seisin 409 Advowson Fishing Mesnalty lies in Tenure 411 VVhere
JURISDICTIONS OR THE LAWFUL AUTHORITY OF Courts Leet Courts Baron Court of Marshallseys Court of Pypowder and Ancient Demesne TOGETHER WITH THE MOST NECESSARY Learning of Tenures and all their Incidents of Essoynes Imparlance View of all manner of Pleadings of Contracts of the nature of all sorts of Actions of Maintenance of diverse other things very profitable for all Students of Innes of Court and Chancery And a most perfect Directory for all Stewards of any the sayd Courts Heretofore writ in French by the methodically learned JOHN KITCHIN of Grays-Inne Esq And now most exactly rendred to more ample advantage in the English tongue with a demonstrative Table pointing out all matter of consequence throughout the whole Work Whereunto is added the authentick formes of all manner of Writs with their severall returnes in English very usefull for all men in this Common-wealth as they be now used LONDON Printed by T Roycroft for M Walbancke at Grays-Inne Gate and H Twyford in Vine Court in the Middle Temple 1651. TO The Students of the Innes of COURT AND CHANCERY JOHN KITCHIN wisheth happinesse TO the end no failer in the administration of Lawes from which the Common-Wealth receives its establishment may through ignorance be admitted as much as my abilities have prompted me unto for direction of such as keep Courts I have here preferred at once both to profit and censure both which I shall as justly expect as that I am confident my indeavours are neither fruitlesse nor free from Errings having neither been industriously idle nor blessed with infalibility yet such as they are I most seriously wish them to your advantage who are many of you imployed in the keeping of Court Leets Court Barons and other Courts and Jurisdictions And therefore I have here in this Book collected all such cases out of our Books of Law under such generall heads and notions which are upon any occasion to be discussed so that those who either have not the said Books at large or have them and yet want time to peruse them may here for sweatlesse labour receive satisfaction in exchange whereupon I have fixt my hopes that ignorance the naturall Mother of Errour which hath so much fostered it selfe in those imployments into which many Ignaro's have thrust themselves with ignorance and confidence of equall size will lose its no-being in Judiciall performances and that the knowledge of the Law in this kinde may prove impulsive to the Love of Justice which is alwaies the lesse regarded by how much Ignorance is her Enemy Ignoti nulla Cupido For desire and nothing are the same where the understanding is not felicitated with apprehension which here I teach as far as it is essentiall for any man Quatenus he is a Steward of Courts in which duty I wish him Jurisprudentiall for his owne Honour and the Publique benefit desiring nothing in requitall but your kinde accepctance From GRAYS INNE THE PREAMBLE FIRST before I write of the Order of Courts Leets Courts Barons you ought to consider for what cause the King was ordained of God Secondly For what cause the Law was ordained Thirdly How ancient these Courts are and for what causes and matters they were ordained and also how necessary it is that the Law be duely and truely administred in these Courts And first Fortescue leafe the 30. saith As a naturall body cannot be without a head so a Realme cannot be governed without a head which is the King And there he further saith That whensoever of many one is constituted amongst them one shall be Governour and the rest shall be governed Britton leafe the 1. saith The King is ordained of God that the Peace be kept the which cannot be well without Law And Fortescue also saith All power is of our Lord God Bracton saith also That the King is Gods Vicar upon Earth to seperate right from wrong Justice from Injustice that all which are Subjects to him should live honestly and none should hurt another but that to every man which is his owne by a rightfull contribution should be given for he is called King by well Governing Stamford leafe the first saith The King is the preserver nourisher and Defender of all his people and that by his great travell study and labour his people onely injoy their lives Lands and Goods But all those which they have in peace and tranquility and that by the Law And as the body of a man cannot live without the head but will fall downe unto the ground so the Common-wealth cannot be governed without a head which is the King Also Seneca saith Where there is not a Governour there the people will be confounded Prov. Chap. 11. Where there is not a Governour the people goe to ruine Rom. chap. 13. There is no power but of God and which are the true Powers are ordained of God The Person of the King and the Queen his Wife By the Commentaries leafe the 45. By the 7. of Edw. 2.34 The King is a Corporation See 1 H. 7. leafe 10.21 Edw. 4. Title Age it is no Plea that the King is within Age 1 Edw. 6. title 373. the King shall have his Age as Duke of Lancaster and not as King by the Commentaries leafe 213. See Stamford 10. If the King grant a Lordship to one in Fee the Grantee shall not have his Prerogative but if he grant that for life to the Queen and Prince that remaineth in the King and for that the Queen and Prince shall have Prerogative and though that the Queen is a person exempt from the King and may sue and be sued in her owne name yet that which shee hath is the Kings 1 H. 7. leafe 29. where a Reversion was to the Queen Ayd shall be of the King by Townsend and by some of both the Benches Stamford 75. Petition shall be to the King himselfe onely and not to the Queen or Prince 3. H. 7. leafe 14. The Queen is as a common person and as a Woman alone to let for life and to make personall things 11. H. 7. leafe 7. The King letteth to the Queen for life and shee leaseth at will In Trespas against the Tenant at will he shall not have aide of the King for he is a stranger to the Patent of the King 7. H. 7. leafe 17. 18. Edw. 3. leafe the first Phillip the Queen brought a Quare impedit and held that the Queen may bring a Writ in her owne Name and shall finde no pledges and for that it shall not be in the Writ Vnde c. 20 Edw. 4. leafe 1. Fitzherbert 101. 21. Of the Book of Assises 13. the sayd Phillip brought Deceit of a Fine levyed by Tenants in ancient Demesne at the Common Law 19. Edw. 4. leafe 2. J. B. granteth to the Queen the next Advowson of the Church of Dale and shee alone of that bringeth her Quare Impedit 49. Edw. 3. leafe 4. The King may give to the Queen for her life and shee may have
Ignorance and wilfulnesse and some Stewards to please their Lords and for feare of loosing their Fee being but Stewards at the will of their Lords and some for Letters and other causes that Justice many times hath not place there to the perillous example and overthrow of Estate and for that that henceforth hereafter Justice in these Courts may be the better administred before that I shall treat of the Courts aforesaid I think it is convenient to write to the Stewards these sentences insuing to be a Glasse to Stewards to reade their better remembrance to administer Justice and for that it thus followeth Who worketh Justice he shall be advanced Eccles 20. Blessed are they which hunger and thirst for Justice for they shall be satisfied Matth. 16. Justice advanceth a Nation and it maketh a miserable people to be pacified Prov. 19. He that justifieth a wicked man and condemneth the just man he is most abominable with God Pro. 17.15 Unless your Justice abound more then that of the Scribes and Pharisees you cannot enter into the Kingdome of Heaven Matth. 18. The soules of the Just are in the hands of God Wisedome In the streight path of Justice but the contrary way leadeth to death Prov. 12. Love God and thy neighbour as thy selfe then if you doe not Justice how doe you love him who is Justice and truth and how doe you love your neighbour as your selfe Matth. 22. Justice surely is immortall and everlasting Injustice is the wages of death love Justice you that Judge the Earth Wisedome 1. Riches doe not prevaile in the day of revenge but Justice shall free from death Prov. 2. God shall give to the Just the reward of their labours Wisedome 10. And if any love Justice his labours have great vertues sobriety and vertue then which there is nothing more profitable in this life to men Wisedome 1. Nothing truely can be honest which wanteth Justice Tully in his Offices From Justice as out of a certaine Fountaine all rights doe spring for a just man hath a will to give to every man his owne Bracton Another Cause of doing Justice It is appointed for all men once to dye and afterwards to come to Justice And as Athanasius saith At whose comming all men shall rise with their bodies and shall give a reason and account of their owne workes and they that have done good shall goe into life everlasting but they that have done evill into everlasting fire What men have done this present time of life Shall reap the Harvest when Goe and Come is rise Rev. 14. Blessed are the dead which dye in the Lord for their workes follow them Corinth 1. Chap. 3. Every one shall receive his reward according to his worke 2 Corinth 4. Who soweth in blessednesse shall reape in blessednesse if Christ had not been borne of the Virgin Mary and dyed for us no man could have come to eternall life therefore beleeve and doe Justice and then shall yee have the aforesaid thing promised And note That though Christ hath redeemed us yet if we doe evill it is written We shall goe into everlasting fire and for that obey and feare to breake the Commandements of God and then in doing of Justice you doe the Commandement of God for which you shall have the thing promised that is to say Eternall life for not all which say unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of Heaven but those that doe the will of the Father saith Saint John Therefore if you will have eternall life doe Justice and also remember that death doth not delay no man knoweth his day and therefore prepare your life and doe Justice because no man knoweth his end and as Fishes are taken with a hook and Birds taken with a Snare so the body of a man in the day of evill The third Cause of doing Justice is to have a good Report Have a care of a good name It is better to have a good name then much Riches Cursed is the man that neglecteth his good Name It is better to have a good Name then precious Oyntments and to conclude he saith What profiteth If you shall gaine the whole World if you shall loose your owne soule First the Steward shall make a Precept to warne the Court by reasonable warning as by six or more dayes as followeth and it is the better if it be by fifteene dayes according to the common dayes in the Bench. The Precept J. K. Steward to the Bayliffe thereof health Prebenda de Islington I command likewise and appoint that diligently you give to understand the view of Frankpledge of the Court there to be held against the Thursday that is to say the sixteenth day of October next comming after the date of these presents and have there this command And as c. Dated under my Scale the first day of this moneth of October the yeare of the Reigne of Queen Elizabeth by the grace of God of England France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. 21. Then enter your beginning of your Court-Rollin manner following The view of Frankpledge with the Court J. F. Prebenda de Islington Order de tenor Leet Clerk there held the Thursday Viz. The sixteenth of October the yeare of the Reigne of our Lady Elizabeth Queene by the grace of God of England France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. the 21. held by J. K. the Steward there It is good to make this entry that is to say Held by J. K. Steward there If there be any Copiholders there for that the Name of the Steward is in the Copy to the admittance then after this entry the Steward shall cause the Bayliffe to make Oyes three times if it be a Leet for this is the Kings Court though the other hath that by Grant or by Prescription In the yeare 21. Edw. 4. fol. 37. is that where either adjournment of the Terme or other matter for the King B. Proclamation 6. is There at the beginning there shall be three Proclamations made and in all other matters which are not for the King but one Proclamation and for that at the beginning in the Court-Baron shall be but one Proclamation and in Court Leet for that it is the Kings Court shall be three Proclamations Scilicet O yes three times shall be made Note that none may make Proclamation but by authority of the King or Maiors and such like where they have used it by Custome 22. H. 6. fol. 19. Then forthwith after the three Proclamations made the Steward shall make the Bailiffe to say All manner of Persons which are resident or Deciners and doe owe Suit royall to this Leet come in and make your Suit and answer to your names every one upon paine and perill which shall ensue And after that all are called and all which are absent are marked to be amerced then the Steward shall cause againe if it be in a Leete to be made three
not to make claime till the Tenant for Life be dead for if he in Remainder will wave this is no Mortmaine for if the Tenant will make a Feoffment in Fee to the use of A. for life and after to the use of a Religious man and his Successors that is not Mortmaine till the Tenant for life in use dieth and he in Remainder takes the profits 29 H. 8. Mortmain 37. Lord and Tenant Where one gives in Mortmaine he ought to have license of the King to do it and of the cheife Lord otherwise they may enter for Mortmain and before the license there ought to issue out a Writ of Ad quod damnum to the King but is used to omit that and to have the license without any Writ of Ad quod damnum Fitzh 221 K. Where an Abbot holds of J S. by five shillings and J. S. releaseth to the Abbot this shall go by extinguishment and for that it is no Mortmain 22 Ed. 3. fol. 22. 47 Ed. 3. fol. 10. If alienation in Mortmain be and the Alienee is disseised and the Disseisor dieth seised his Heir is in by discent yet the Lord may enter within the year for he hath but a Title of entry and cannot have an action but contrary of him which hath a Right of Entry and may have and Action 39 Ed. 3. fol. 38. Lord and Tenant the Signiory is granted to A. in Taile the Remainder to B. in Taile the Tenant Alien in Mortmaine the first Tenant in Taile cannot enter within the yeare and after the second Tenant in Taile dye without Issue and B. in Remainder enter within halfe a yeare and held that he could not for the Tenant in Taile and he in Remainder have but one Signiory and are but one Lord and both shall have but one yeare by the Statute Fitzh 223 E. If a man will exchange Land with an Abbot or other body corporate that is Mortmaine and he ought to have a License Fitzh 222 If an Abbot give Lands to another Abbot or a Corporation it is Mortmaine and ought to have a License and Ad quod damnum shall be sued and see the Ad quod damnum 221. R. 48 Ed. 3. fol. 29. Abbot purchase Lands with warranty by License and is impleaded and vouch c. and Judgment is given against the Abbot and he recovers over in value it is not Mortmaine for the Lands recovered in value and he ought not to have license of the Lands recovered in value for the first license serves in that see 45 Ed. 3. fol. 18. Where an Abbot recovers in value 9 H. 6. fol. 9. If an Abbot have Rent out of my Land and I grant to him that he may distraine for the same Rent in other Land this is no Mortmain for he hath nothing but ancient Rent and for that it is no Mortmain 3 Ed. 4. fol. 14. By Laicon the Statute of Religious holds place of common and Rent charge which is no Land nor Tenement and yet the words of the Statute are Lands and Tenements 25 H. 8. tit 37. Lord and Tenant the Tenant lets for life to J.S. the Remainder to an Abbot and his Successors The Lord need not to make claime till the Tenant for life be dead for if he wave the Remainder it is no Mortmain and held that the Appropriation of an Advowson without licence is Mortmain Fitzh 211. The King may give licence to his Tenant to alien in Mortmain for he may dispence with the Statute but a common person cannot but the King and the Mesne Lords may give licence to a Tenant to alien in Mortmain for the Statute was made for the advantage of the Lords and they may dispense with it Treasure Trove TReasure hid in the ground and found belongeth to the King and if it be found in the Sea it is to the finder Britton fol. 26. He to whom the property is shall have Treasure found because it belongeth not to the King unless when no man knoweth who hid the Treasure Statham Tit. Coron and 22 H. 6. Coron 446. Punishment of taking Treasure found is not of life and member but shall be by Imprisonment and Fine Statham Tit Coron and 22 Ed. 3. Coron 265. Treasure found belongeth to the Lord the King and not to the Lord of the Liberty unless by special words in the Deed of the Liberty contained or by prescription Statham Tit Coron and 8 Ed. 2. Coron 436. Treasure found is a certain old hiding Money or other Mettall of which there appeareth no memory so that now it hath no Owner therefore all such Treasure is no mans proper Goods and by the old Law it was the finders but now by the Law of the People it is made the Kings Stamford fol. 39. Fstrey WHere the Lord hath by a year and a day a Beast and it be cried in the Church and in the Market the property is changed 39 Ed. 3. fol. 3. A man cannot intitle him to an Estrey till the year and the day be past for he to whom the property is may take him within the year but Statham seemed he could not take it without agreeing for his meat 31 Ed. 3. Estrey 4. Detinue Issue if sufficient was tendered for his meat before claim or not 44 Ed. 3. fol. 14. Young Swans may be taken for a Stray and Proclamation made in Fairs and Markets 7 H. 6. fol. 29. If the Owner do not come within a year and a day and be proclaimed in Markets and Parish Churches then the property remains to the Lord Britton fol. 26. One justifies to have a stray in his Mannour according to the custome used in the Kingdom of England he proclaimed them in two Markets scil in D. S. on the Market days Brook Estrey 10. If one have a stray by three quarters of a year and after that strays and another happens it within his Mannour the second shall not have it for he hath no property untill the year and day and Proclamation 33 H. 8. Estrey 11. If a man have a Weif or a Stray by prescription and another taketh that out of his Mannour he shall have Trespass though he did not seise them before Fitzh fol. 91. B. One cannot take the Kings Beasts for a stray though they were within the Mannour by two years 39 Edw. 3. fol. 4. If one hath taken a stray and doth not proclaim it the Owner may take it again though he comes to claim it after a year and a day Britton fol. 26. Book of Entries One which justifies for a stray shall make prescription that is to say That according to the custome in the Kingdome of England used he proclaimed them in two Market Towns scil in D. R. and so it seemeth that an Estrey shall be proclaimed in two the next Market Towns upon Market days and yet it seemeth that Strays shall be proclaimed once in the Church and twice in the Markets Waife Where Goods waived are seised by an Officer
and took Hares Coneys and Pheasants and not his and good for he hath no property 22. H. 6. fol. 65. Doctor Student fol. 9. None hath property of Birds Fowle wilde Beasts of Forrest and Warren yet the eggs of Hawks Herons and such like are to them which owe the Land Fitzh 67. No man shall be taken and imprisoned for Vert or Veneson if he be not found with the manner or indicted Nat. bre fol. 41. the same See Britton fol. 84. 18. Ed. 4. fol. 14. Where a man licenses me to hunt and kill a Buck in his Park my servant cannot come in by my commandment for the license shall be strict to him to whom it is given 2. Ed. 4. fol. 5. Trespasse one cannot justifie by license of a Keeper to kill a Deer 16. Ed. 4. fol. 7. Trespasse by force of armes he broke his Dove-house and took his Pigeons in the same and good but not abroad when they are out and have no mark and are in the fields 38. Ed. 3. fol. 12. Trespasse for entering into his Warren and took his Pheasants it was held that if the Defendant fly a Pheasant in his own land out of the Warren and his Hawke fly and kill in anothers Warren his entry into the Warren is a wrong Treheron in his reading shewed that Forrest ought to be by Commission and Proclamation and that a common person cannot have a Forrest that is to say cannot make a Forrest nor use Forrest-Lawes as it is said And to a Forrest there are divers Officers and to this is incident a Court of Swannimote but a common person may have a Chase or Park by Grant or Prescription and Forrest-Lawes shall not be to a Chase nor Court of Swannimote the Statute of 13. R. 2 is not inquirable in a Leet but before Justices of Peace that is to say that it is that no Artificer nor Lay man which hath not Lands to the value of forty shillings per annum and no Clark which is not advanced to ten pound per annum shall not keep a Harrier or other Dog to Chase nor shall use Ferrets Hayes Nets Harepipes nor Cords nor other Engines to take or to distroy wilde beasts upon pain of imprisonment for a year yet it is inquirable in a Court Baron if any hunt or hawke within a Park Chase Warren or Demesne Lands of the Lord of the Mannour without his license and for that something of that shall be said 12. H. 8. fol. 3. Trespasse lieth for taking a Hound or Deere out of the possession of the Plaintiffe and hath possession and not property 12. H. 8. fol. 10. One hath but possession of a Deer and if they go out catch that catch may and if any Hawke kill a Pheasant in your Land it seems that I shall have the Pheasant and yet it seems that one cannot hunt nor hawke in anothers Land 10. H. 7. fol. 30. Account lieth against a Keeper for the Deer for he hath possession as a Bailiffe one may grant liberty to one to take every year a Deer or to the Keeper the shoulders of them killed 13. H. 7. fol. 10. Where a Deer is given to one he may bring in his servants to take it for otherwise peradventure he cannot serve his Warrant 13. H. 7. fol. 13. It is said If one hath license to chase he cannot kill 18. Ed. 4. fol. 14 15. H. 7. fol. 16. Fine for hunting shall be greater then the trespasse 21. H. 7. fol. 30. It is lawfull for one to kill a Hart out of the Forrest though he be proclaimed 12. H. 8. fol. 4. saith That one may distrain a Brache doing damage which enters into my Close to chase 2 Ed. 3. tit distresse 20. 48. Ed. 3. fol. 8. He that hath land adjoyning to a Chase may hunt Deer out of his ground with a little Dog but not with Begles and by some if the Dog follow them into the Chase and the owner drives them back yet if they kill the beast trespasse doth not lye Seek 18 H. 6. f. 22. Held that if a man goe in the way adjoyning to a Park and his Dogs break his Leash and kill a Deere in the Parke against his will and he call them back he shall not be punished but it seems that if he doe not what he can to hinder them it shall be a trespasse Fitzh 19. If one incite or procure his Dog to bite a man he shall have his trespasse upon that Assise IN so much that an Assise is brough of a Copy-holder some thing is to be noted to you touching Assises And first I intend That if a Copi-holder of Inheritance dyeth seised of a Copi-hold and his heire enter as he may though there be no Court kept and he not admitted and be outed by a stranger of that diss●isic he shall have a Plaint in nature of an Assise Seek for it is 13 Eliz. by the Justices If Tenant by Copy of Court Roll dye seised and his heire enter and take the profits he is no trespasser though the Lord hath not admitted him Tenant and though no Court were held there in seven yeares and further there said that it was adjudged in the Chancery That if Tenant by Copy of Court Roll hath issue two Daughters by diverse Women and they enter and take the profits and one dyes before any Court held now her Cozen collaterall ought to Inherite as heire to her and not the other Sister as heire to the Father which proves that this was a seisin according to their Custome The same Law is if a Copl-holder be admitted and after is thrust out by another or if another be admitted to it and by this he that was first admitted is thrust out by him which was secondly admitted the first Admittee shall have a Plaint in nature of an Assise of that disseisin Plowden Com. fol. 528. Parson before Induction cannot grant an anuity for he hath no possession so it seems if a Copi-holder dye seised his issue shall not have an Assise before admittance Fitz. 177. a. Where Tenant for life in Fee simple or Fee taile is disseised of his Lands and Tenements or outed of that against his will this is disseisin and he shal have an Assise of novel disseisin Nat. brevium fol. 107. Fitz. 195. c. Where my Father or my Mother my Brother or my Sister or my Unkle or my Aunt or Nephew or Neece dye seised of any Lands or Tenements or of Rents of an Estate of Fee simple now if a stranger take possession of this Land or Rent after their death I which am their heire shall have an Assise of Mortdancester Nat. brevium fol. 118. So for a Copi-hold in Fee If my Father Mother Brother or Sister Unkle Aunt Nephew or Neece dye seised of that and a stranger enters I shall have a plaint and make protestation to Sue in nature of a Mortdancester and upon disseisin as above in nature of an Assise of novel Disseisin
and by some if he mischoose his Tenant the Writ shall abate 8 Ass 1. Assise against two one pleads that he is a Villaine of J. S. and the other by Bailiff plead to the Assise and the Plaintif chose him which pleads by Bailif to the Assise for his Tenant and pray the Assise and he comes and pleads in Barr and was suffered the same day 22 book Assises 7. Assise against an Infant and two others where each one severally takes the whole tenancy upon him and pleads in Barr the Plaintif shall choose his Tenant at his perill and he chooseth the Infant for the Tenant and the Tenant and they found the Infant Tenant and the two others Disseisors also and the Plaintif recovers but it seems there if he mischoose his Tenant the Writ shall abate and for that that the Diffeisin was made to the use of the Infant which did not enter and is Tenant only by agreement for that it seems it is here an Errour to adjudge the Infant Tenant which had nothing but by agreement to the Disseisin 3 H. 4. fol. 16. If the Plaintif choose one to be his Tenant of all which is not tenant the Writ shall abate Abridgment of the Assises fol. 41. B. By Fortescue in Assise against two one takes the tenancy severally and pleads in Barr the Plaintif shall not answer to their Pleas in Barr nor to none of them but first shall choose his Tenant then after may the Plaintif answer to his Barr sufficiently in time and if he ill choose his Tenant the Writ shall abate Abridgment of the book of Assises fol. 116. a. Returne of Assise against J. S. Pledges to prosecute Adam Clarke David Parke THe within named J. S. is attached by one Oxe of price twenty shillings The Rest of the execution of this complaint and before the Justices of Assise and of this Writ doth appear in ●●●ertaine Scedule annexed to this Writ J. D. Esquire Sheriffe The Pannell THe recognition of an Assise of novell Disseisin betwixt J. D. Plaintiffe and J. S. Deforceant of a Freehold in D. and then the names of the Recognitors follow and afterward The sum of the Jurors aforesaid and every of them John Hart. Richard Smart Manucaptors summoners of the aforesaid Jurors and every of them John Doo Christopher Croo. John Den. Richard Fen. This by Plowden Com. fol. 37. Ass 12. What is a good Title in Assise for the Plaintiffe and what not TEnant plead in Barr it is no title for the Plaintif to say that he was seised tell by the Tenant disseised and traverse the Barr without conveying unto him possesion by title before his possesion as by feoffment or otherwise 27 H. 6. fol. 2. Tenant pleads a feoffment made by J. S. to him and gives colour Plaintif saith that J. D. levied a fine upon release to him and it is not good but to say that he was seised and levied a fine otherwise the title is good so if he be intitled by feoffment or recover of a stranger he shall say for title that the stranger was seised and infeoffed him 10 H. 6. fol. 22. Where the Barr is materiall as diffent feoffment of Ancestor the Plaintif with Warranty Recovery Fine c. Plaintif shall not make title at large but ought in his title answer the Barr as confesse and avoid or traverse it but where it is a Barr at large he may make title at large without answering the Barr 34 H. 6. fol. 46. 35 H. 6.67 and the book of Entries 120. 5 H. 7. fol. 29. Where the Barr is not sufficient the Plaintif may demur and need not to make title and where the tenant in his Barr gives sufficient title to the Plaintif Plaintif need not make title as if the tenant saith that his Father had him eldest and the Plaintif youngest Plaintif may say that the tenant is a Bastard without making title and is good 20 H. 6. f. 38. and 39. Where the Plaintif makes title at large the tenant may say come the Assise upon the title and is good 15 H. 7. f. 13. The tenant pleads that he recovered against J. S. and the Estate of the Plaintif mean by abatement upon J. S. hanging the Writ Plaintif saith that long time before the Writ that he himself was seised and good without shewing how he came to it for the Defendant hath given to him possession seek 9 book of Ass 10. The tenant pleads feoffment of the Grand-Father of the Plaintif with Warranty Plaintif saith that his Grand-Father was seised and he as Cosen and Heire to him entered and is good without shewing how his Grand-Father came to it see 10 Ass 23. 9 Ass 11. The tenant pleads one Barr the Plaintif intitles himself by release with collaterall Warranty and it is good 17 Assise 18. 38 H. 8. Tit. 3.26 Br. Tit. Traverse P. 26. if the tenant plead that his Father was seised in Fee and by protestation died seised it is said that the Plaintif may make title by a Stranger without that that the Father of the tenant was seised in Fee 5 H. 7. fol. 29. Where the Barr is materiall the Plaintif shall not make his title at large without answering to the Barr but in Assise 34. H. 6. fol. 24. 11 H. 7. fo 28. If the Barr be ill the Plaintif may pray the Assise without title 6 Ass Tenant pleads Fine of an Ancestor of the Plaintif to which the Plaintif saith the same Ancestor had but for life the reversion in him and that he entred by forfeiture and good without shewing how he hath the reversion Nat. Bre. 109. If the tenant pleads Plea in Barr and the Plaintif makes him title and traverseth the Barr although the title of the Plaintif be false yet the tenant shall not have advantage to take the Assise upon the title but he shall be driven to maintain his Barr otherwise it is where the Plaintif makes him title and doth not answer the Barr. Abridgment of book of Ass fol. 81. VVhere the title is found for the Plaintiffe and there is no Disseissor the VVrit shall abate The tenant saith that J. S. held the Land of him and died without Heire by which he entred as in his Escheate and gives colour c. the Plaintif faith one H. enfeoffed him and it is no title for he ought to answer to the Barr as well as where the tenant makes title by discent 27 Assise 71. Assise of Rent it is no title to shew that J. S. granted to him the Rent by Deed or by Fine but he ought to shew how the Rent began that is to say If it be a Rent charge or a Rent service or a Rent Seck 31 Ass 16. Assise the tenant pleads in Barr feoffment of the Father of the Plaintif with warranty and the Plaintif saith that his Ancestor died seifed and this discended to him and allowed by Scroope without shewing how he came to that afterwards 10 book Ass 23. VVhere the
tenant praies the Assise upon the title and upon that the Assise is awarded the Assise cannot finde other title for the Plaintiff but he may finde matter which may stand with the same title to inforce it but if the title be traversed he cannot finde another title but only the point put in the Assise 28 book of Assises 17. An Act of Parliament Fine or Recovery are of such a force that if one be bound by them the Plaintif cannot make title to this Land unlesse by reason of a title to him grown of later times As if one recovers against me or my Ancestor and hath execution and after Lenten and dye seised my Heire shall not make him title by his discent against the Recovery without shewing he hath title after the recovery the same Law of a Fine see 10 H. 7. fol. 5.32 H. 6.5 and 33 book of Assises fol. 19. Pleas in Barr and in Abatement IT seems a feoffment of the Plaintif is no Plea in Barr for that amounts to no wrong nor Desseisin 2 H. 4. fol. 20. the same 15 Ed. 4. fol. 11. 18 Ed. 4. fol. 11. A Lease for yeares or for life the reversion to the Plaintif or a feoffment of the Plaintif with warranty and rely upon the warranty is a good Bar● Abridgment of Ass fol. 31. The tenant may plead that partition was made between the Plaintif and J. S. whose Estate he hath and it is a good Barr. 30 H. 6. fol. 1. Assise the tenant saith that the Lands put in view and in plaint are in another Town and if it be found no tenant of the Free-hold named in the VVrit c. By the Court he shall not have the second Plea for none may say that the Land is in another town but the tenant and so hath accepted the tenancy by his Plea 30 H. 6. fol. 7. Assise the tenant saith that T. B. was seised and disseised by W. W. to whom T. B. made release and against his own Deed disseised W.W. and infeoffed five persons which infeoffed the Plaintif upon which W. W. re-entred whose Estate the tenant seised hath it is good see Pleas in Barr Tit. Abridg. Ass fol. 30. Abridgement Assise fol. 41. If the Plaintiffe choose one to be his tenant of all where he is not the Writ shall abate Abridgement of Assise fol. 42. A man cannot plead in Assise that there is another hanging to which he hath appeared unless that he take the tenancy upon him and for that it is no Plea for the Disseisor Bridgement Ass 44. Death of one of the tenants shall not abate the Assise but for the portion if he be a Disse●sor and tenant of another parcell 27 Ass 45.40 Ass 15. Abridgement Ass fol. 43. Assise of tenements in D. and S. the tenant sayes that all is in S. if that be so the Writ shall abate for he cannot abridge a whole Towne but see now by the Statute of 21 H. 8. chap. 3. where he may abridge Abridgement of Ass fol. 45. Assise of Lands in D. is no Plea if there be two Dales for that the Plaintiff shall recover by the view of the Jury 29 Ass 59. Abridgement of Ass 106. Assise tenant pleads in Barr and after the Jury hath the view he leaves his Barr and pleads to the Assise Plaint in Assise PLaint of profits of an Office though it hath no form it shall not abate as first it ought to suppose disseisin and after shall make title and though it were not so it shall not abate 12 H. 6. fol. 22. Plaint of a Croft is good but Precipe of a Croft is not good Abridgment of Assise fol 130. b. and 8 Hen. 6. fol. 3. Time of Ed. 6. Brook tit False Latine and forme 66. Wood was put before Pasture in a Plaint of Assise and exception thereof taken yet good though it were contrary to the Register by the Commentaries fol. 169. Plaint of a Croft and was amended 14 Ass 13. and 25 Ed. 3. tit 25. the same Brook demand 17.34 Plaint of a peice of Land containing in length twenty feet and in breadth ten and is good 14 Ass 13. and 9 H. 4. fol. 3. the same Plaint by the Governour of an Hospitall it shall be of a House and not of an Hospitall 8 Ass 29 and Assise 137. Plaint of two parts of Salt Coot is good ninth Book Ass 12. Plaint of a Garment or thirty shillings though it be uncertaine for that it is according to the Deed it is good 11 Book of Ass 8. Plaint in Assise of a Garden lyeth but not a Precipe 22 Ed. 3. tit 22. 5 Ed. 2. Brook demand 39. and Fitzh breife 797. Plaint was of a Mill and doth not say a water-Mill nor VVinde-Mill yet good 21 Assise 23. Plaint of a Garment and the specialty is of a Garment with furr and the plaint good for the Garment conteines all 22 Ass 10. Where the Plaintiff may abridge in Assise and in what other Actions he may abridge and how IN a VVrit of ward the VVrit is of the custody of the Land and Heire and is not certain and for that he may abridge as he may in assise and VVrit of Dower 39 Ed. 3. Tit. Breif 10. and 32. In trespasse the VVrit is of Goods and Chattells and hee counts of Corne and ten pounds and for that that Money is not Goods and Chattells he abridged it see 8. Tit. abridgment 11. which saith that he ought to expresse the Money in the VVrit and for that he did not he abridged 39 Ed. 3. Tit. Breife 11. In all cases where the VVrit is of a Free-hold and uncertain he may abridge by June as in assise of Dower and a VVrit of ward 14 H. 6. fol. 4. In ward for that the Demand is not certain but of the custody of the Land and Heire therefore the Plaintif counts of the Mannour of D. and twenty acres and the Defendant saith that the twenty acres are parcell of the Mannor the Plaintif may abridge the twenty acres 39 E. 3 f. 10. Brooks abridgment 10. Assise of Land in great Dunmowe and little D. you cannot abridge all in one Town 8. H. 6. fol. 56. Assise and in Dower he may abridge but he cannot abridge a whole Town 14 H. 6. fol. 4. Assise where a plaint is of a Mannor he cannot abridge for that it is entire 19 H. 6. fol. 13.33 H. 6. Tit. abridgment 2. Assise plaint of Rent and Land after that the Tenant hath pleaded in Barr the Plaintif shall abridge in right of the Land 14 Ass 9. Plaint abridge in attaint Rast Assi 17. 35 H. 6. fol. 13. Assise of Common in forty acres the Plaintif cannot abridge for that that the Common is Intire but at this day it is contrary by the Statute of 31 H. 8. chap. 3.29 Ass 10. Plaintiff in every Assise at his pleasure may abridge and for that also by the Statute may abridge where the plaint is of a Mannor 21 H.
8. chap. 3. After Verdict he cannot abridge IT is said that after Verdict the Plaintiff cannot abridge his Plaint 28 As 38. Dower demanded may abridge after view Edw. 3. fol. 3. Assise they were adjourned upon Title ASsise they were adjourned upon Title and for that that they cannot agree at the day of the Adjournment after the argument Plaintiff abridge and might 10 H. 6. fol. 22. After the Jury in Assise were together in the house before their Verdict came the Plaintiff and abridged and was suffered 33 H. 7. Tit. 6. B. Attornement WHen any Mannour descends to the Lord upon every descent to the Lord it belongeth to the Steward at the first Court to make all the Tenants to make Fealty and also upon every purchase of Mannour to enter the Fealty of every Tenant which holds of that and also to enter their Attornement and Seisin of Services to the end that the Lord may by this means distrain for his Services and the Tenants may hereafter be better known to him and by 28 H. 8. Tit. 40. Attornement may be made by Tenants to the Lord in his Court to the Steward or Purchasor and not to his Servant in absence of the Lord. For that something shall be said of Fealty and where there ought to be Attornement and where not IT is said that the Tenant that hath made Homage to the Father shall not make Homage to the Son for that he hath once made Homage to his Lord but yet he shall make Fealty to the Son though he have made it to the Father but if the Mannour be recovered against the Father which hath taken Homage now he shall make Homage again Littleton fol. 29. If a Mannour be exchanged yet there ought to be Attornement otherwise the Lord cannot distrain for the Arrearages Perkins fol. 47 56 58. If one alien his Mannour by Deed indented of Bargain and Sale and inrolls that according to the Statute that is good without Attornement and the Lord may distrain for his Services and the same Law is of a Reversion so granted Rastall Inrolment 2. but of a Grant by Fine it is otherwise 27 H. 8. chap. 16. 30 H. 8. Tit. Attornement If the King grant Reversion of Lands or grant a Mannour to one and his Heirs or otherwise by his Letters Patents the Patentee may distrain or avow without Attornement and he need no Attornement 34 H. 6. fol. 7. Fitzh fol. 60. J. 6 Ed. 3. Tit. 13. Natura brevium fol. 171. accordingly 12 Ed. 4. fol. 3. Where a Mannour or Reversion is devised by Will in writing that is good and shall passe without Attornement 19 H. 6. fol. 24. Littleton fol. 132. accordingly of Devise where Lands were devisable by Custome 34 H. 6. fol. 7. The Lord may avow upon the Tenant by the Curtesie and in dower and upon him which recovered against his Tenant without Attornement for they are in by Law and need to have no Attornement 36 H. 6. fol. 35. If one have a Mannour delivered in Execution by vertue of a statute Merchant or an Elegit he may avow without Attornement 20 H. 6. fol. 7. Where a Mannour Escheats or the Lord have that as a Perquisite by his Villain he may avow without Attornement Littleton fol. 132. 34 H. 6. fol. 7. accordingly and Fitzh fol. 60. J. If a man have a Common of Pasture to a certain number or a Common of Estovers certain and grants them over these shall passe without Attornement for that they are not to be taken by the hands of Tenants but by the mouths of Beasts and where no attendance nor payment is to be made by the Tenant there the things may passe without Attornement 31 H. 8. Tit. Attornement Where a man lets for forty years and after lets the same Land to another to have the Land from the end of the first Terme for twenty years there need no Attornement and contrary when he grants a Reversion to have the same Reversion at the end of the first Terme for twenty years then next ensuing there ought to be Attornement by Horewood 37 H. 8. Tit. 41. and 1 Ed. 6. Tit. 4. A man lets a House for Life and after grants the Reversion of the said House to have from the Feast of Saint Michael next after the Death of the Tenant for Life for 21 years then next following this is go●● without Attornement for this passeth by to have the House as a Lease and not as a Reversion and also the Tenant for Life is not attendant to him 3 Mary Tit. 69. One lets for twenty years and this Lessee lets that for ten years rendring Rent and after this Lessee for twenty years grants the Reversion of the Terme Rent to a stranger it behoveth that the Lessee for ten years attorne otherwise it is if no Rent be reserved 2 Ed. 6. Tit. 45. If a man lets for ten years and the same Lessee lets that to another for four years the Lessor makes a Feofment to a stranger by sufferance of the second Lessee this is a good Feofment without Attornement of the first Lessee 28 H. S. Tit. Feofments 68. B. Two joint-tenants and one release to the other it is good without Attornement 28 H. 6. Then let us see what is good Attornement and what not WHere a Reversion is granted and the Tenant attorn by a Penny it is good for it an Agreement 8 Book of Assise 25. A man grants four divers Rents and the Tenant attornes by a Penny this is good for them all that is to say for them all to distrain but not for them all to have an Assise for it is not Seisin 22 Book of assise 66. Attornement ought to be made by the Tenant in the life of the Grantor for Attornement after is not good 16 Book of Assises 25. A Lease is made for Life and after the Reversion is granted to one and the Tenant for life surrender to him this is a good attornement 23 As 18. A man seised of two acres or of two Mannours le ts one for years and after makes a Feofment of both and makes Livery of that in Possession yet the other shall passe without attornement 7 Ed. 4. fol. 20. Where a Feofment and Livery is made of a Mannour that one hath in execution by a Statute this Livery is as an attornement if the Tenant by Statute enter again 46 Ed. 3. fol. 30.7 H. 4. Statham 46. the same If a man lets a Mannour for years and after outs the Termor and enfeoffes another and makes Livery and the Termor re-enter it is good without other attornement 5 H. 5. fol. 12. the same 9 H. 6. fol 16. the same Littl. fol. 130. If a Feofment be made and Livery also and do not out the Termor nor he attorne it is not good 5 Book of Ass 1.17 Ass 3.2 Book of Ass 1. the same and 21 H. 7. fol. 7. If my tenant for life lets his Estate to another upon
condition for default of payment to re-enter and after I grant the Reversion and the first tenant attorns this is not good for he hath nothing at the time of the Grant of the Reversion 8 H. 5. fol. 10. A man lets his Mannor for life and after grants the Reversion of that to another if the tenant for life attorne it is good and all the services of all the Free-holders of the Mannour shall passe without other attornement 21 Ed. 3. fol. 34. Payment of Rent is good attornement 49 Ed. 3. fol. 15. Payment of Rent in name of Seisin is agreement and Seisin 40 Ed. 3. fol. 34. Where they are compellable to attorne and where not and what Tenants are compellable to attorne and what not WHere a Reversion or a Mannour is granted unlesse it be by Fine there lies no Quid juris clamat to compell the tenant to attorne but upon a Grant by Fine and not upon a Grant of Reversion by Deed Nat. brevium fol. 170. If a man alien his Mannour he need not that the tenants at will attorne and the same seems of tenants by Copy of Court-roll Br. Tit. 44. Littleton fol. 125. By Seisin by the hands of the tenant at will the Lord by that cannot avow 8 H. 6. fol. 65. Tenant for life grants his estate to J.S. upon condition and after the reversion is granted by fine and the first Tenant for life attorns it is not good and he is not compellable to attorn but J.S. 8. H. 5. fol. 10. If I let for life and after grant the reversion by fine and after Tenant for life grants over his estate to J.S. yet after attorns it is good for he was compellable to attorn and not J.S. 18. Ed. 4. f. 10. and 21 H. 6. fol. 61. If Tenant in Dower grant over her estate to J.S. and after the reversion is granted by fine she is compellable to attorn and not J.S. 10. H. 4. fol. 10.1 H. 4. fol. 18. the same If Tenant by the Curtesie grant over his estate and after the reversion is granted by fine Tenant by the Curtesie is compellable to attorn 18. Ed. 3. fol. 3. He which was Tenant day of the fine levyed though he hath granted over his estate is compellable to attorn 18. Ed. 4. fol. 10. Also 18. H. 6. fol. 25 and 21. H. 6. fol. 6. the same After a fine ingrossed and that delivered the Tenant is not compellable to attorn for a Quid juris clamat lieth against him Fitzh fol. 147. and 11. Ed. 3. Statham If I give lands in tail reserving rent and I grant that rent by fine the Tenant shall be charged to attorn otherwise it is if I grant the reversion for there he is not compellable to attorn 5. H. 5. Statham Where any person is not cempellable to attorn and yet attorns and their attornement good and where not TEnant after possibility of issue extinct is not compellable to attorn and yet if he attorn it is good 43 Ed. 3. fol. 15.46 Ed. 3. fol. 13. If Tenant in tail attorn it is good and yet he is not compellable to attorn 3. Ed. 4. fol. 11. If Donor grant the reversion of Tenant in tail to another in fee if the Donee attorn gratis it is good and yet he is not compellable 12. Ed. 4. fol. 3. If a Lordship or Mannor be granted by fine and after the Tenant which hold of that makes a feoffment or is disseised if the feoff●e or disseisor attorn it is good and yet they are not compellable to attorn 18. Ed. 4. fol. 10. If a man lets for 10 years and the same lessee lets for four years attornement of the second lessee is good and yet he is not compellable to attorn and clear is attornement of the first for he ought to attorn 28. H. 8. tit feoffments 68. If I let for life and grant the reversion by fine and after the grant and before attornement the Tenant for life lets over his estate to J.S. and he attorn gratis it is good and yet he is not compellable to attorne 21 H. 6. f. 54. and 20. Ed. 3. Brook Tit. 24. Fine is levied of a Lordship and before attornement the Tenant makes a feoffment and after the feoffee attorns this is good and yet he was not compellable to attorn but his feoffor was compellable 18. Ed. 4. fol. 10. Now let us see that the grantee by fine without attornement cannot have action nor avow for rent which is in lieu of action nor have wast but may have all other things as entry for forfeiture and have escheat and things in seisin and take and have aid WHere a reversion is granted by fine the right passeth and for that Tenant for life shall have aid though he make no attornement 12 E. 4. f. 3.37 H. 6 fol. 5. the same 35. H. 6. fol. 5. Where a Mannor is granted by fine and Tenants do not attorn the Lord cannot distrain for rent but shall have escheat of them 10 H. 6. fol. 17.34 H. 6. fol. 7. the same 20. H. 6. fol. 7. The Lord grants his Lordship by fine the grantee shall have such things which lie in taking as ward but he cannot avow for rent Natura brevium fol. 172. Grantee by fine of a Lordship cannot distrain but shall have escheat and ward though there be no attornement But if Tenant for life alien in fee he may enter for forfeiture Tit. fol. 130. B. p. 131. A. Wast before attornement is dispunishable but the grantee may enter for forfeiture or seisure but shall not have wast before attornement 48 Ed. 3. fol. 15. and 34. H. 6. fol. 7. the same Note that one cannot have an action without attornement though the grant be by Fine Attorney in Court Baron THey that have tenements in divers Counties and fear to be impleaded in a County or in a Court Baron may make a generall Attorney to prosecute for them in all Pleas Westin 2. chap. 10. It is likewise provided that every free man which oweth suite to the County Court tything hundred or to the Court of his Lord freely may make his Attorney to follow his suits for him so it appears that a Copi-holder cannot so do but by assent of the Lord he may compound to pay a certainty yearly to release his suit and that which he holdeth he may freely by the Statute and it seems that the making of an Attorney ought to be by writing sealed and not by word Merton chap. 10. A Writ of making an Attorney or receiving lieth in Court Baron to make the Attorney to make suit Fitzh 175. B. there lieth an Alias pluries and an attachment if he be not allowed but Copi-holder shall not have that writ Fitgh 156. D. One may make an Attorney to make suit personall which is in a hundred or other Court Baron but for suit Reall at the Leet or turn of the Sheriff he shall not make that by an Attorney Fitzherbart 25. C. What
forfeit Littleton f. 15. If a man lets a Mannor for years in which there are copy holders and after a copy-holder dies surrender and admittance by the Lord the termor in Court of that Mannour is as well as if he had the fee simple 4 Mar. tit Copy Br. 1.7 Copy-holders shall not have false Iudgement for then they shal be restored to the freehold or shal not lofe the free-hold but ought to sue by Bill that is to say by Plaint in Court 7 Ed. 4. f. 19. the same Littleton f. 16. They shall not be impleaded by the Kings Writ but by Plaint in the Lords Court in nature of what t●● VVrit will Nat. Brevium fol. 16. Coppy-holders have an Estate of Inheritance according to the custome of the Mannors yet they have no Free-hold by the course of the Common Law Littleton fol. 16. Tenant by Copy shall make scalty to his Lord and Tenant at will by the Common Law Lit. fol. 17. It is said though Coppy-holders have Inheritance according to the custome yet they have but an Estate at the will of the Lord according to the course of the Common Law and cannot have Frespasse against their Lord yet they may bar their Lord in trespass brought by the Lord against his Coppy-holder as it appears lit f. 15. and 16. Tenant by the Verge in ancient Demesne LAnds hold by the Verge are not pleadable by the Kings Writ but by Bill for that that the Free-hold is in the Lord but there is a diversity between plow-holders of frank tenure and Plow-holders of base tenure which are dwelling in ancient Demesne for Plow-holders of Free-hold are pleadeable by a Writ of Right close but Plow-holders of base tenure are those which hold by Verge at the Will of the Lord and the Free-hold is in the Lord and are not pleadable by a Writ of Right close 14 H. 4. fol. 1. and 34 Fitzh fol. 14. C. Tenant by coppy which holds by the Verge in ancient Demesne commits Felony and was attaint the King hath yeare day and waste for that that the Free-hold was in the Tenant in ancient Demesne and yet they have no other evidence then copies of Court Roll otherwise it is of meere Coppy-holders which are out of ancient Demesne for the Free-hold is in the Lord I have seen in the County of North Coppy-holders of frank tenure out of ancient Demesne and have used a Writ of right close and have no other Evidences but by coppies according to the custome of the Mannor but their Coppies are not at the will of the Lord 3 Ed. 3. Tit. Br. 22. Stamford fol. 50. Fitzh 11. Coppy-holder of a base tenure shall not have a Writ of Right close but ought to sue by Bill in the Lords Court Nat. Bre 11. Right close lieth alwaies between ploughholder and no plow-holders may implead another plow-holder of Lands within ancient Demesne unless by this VVrit and shall make his protestation to sue in nature of what Writ he will Britton fol 16● Calls Tenants in ancient Demosne Plow-holders and saith that Plow-holders are such which gain our Land Fitzh 14. D. Those Tenants in ancient Demesne which hold by the Verge by Coppy at the will of the Lord shall not have Monstraverunt against their Lord. Where a Coppy-holder enters and dies before be was admitted Tenant IT was held in the case of one Horewood that where a Coppy-holder hath a Daughter by one Belly and a Son and a Daughter by another and dies and after the Son enters and dies before admittance that the Daughter of the second Belly shal have the Land for it is a possession of the Brother and so it was adjudged in the case of one Stegnes These Cases following I heard agreed for Law IF Tenant by Coppy surrender generally into the hands of the Lord and it do not appeare who shall have the Land nor to what use the surrender is then the Lord shall be seised to his own use If Tenants by Coppy let for yeares by license of the Lord and after release to the Lessee by these words in the Court remise and release it is void for that it ought to be surrendred into the hands of the Lord and then the Lord ought to grant the Reversion to the Lessee for by Littleton fol. 15. It cannot passe without surrender and yet a Release is used of Coppy-hold in the Court in presence of the Steward If the Lord grant parcell of his Demesne Lands to hold by Coppy to one and his Heires this Coppy is not good but at the will of the Lessor for one cannot make Coppy-hold at this day but that shall be by prescription which hath been demised and demisable by Coppy time out of minde c. But if a Coppy-hold escheate to the Lord or he enter in that by forfeiture and at this day grant that over to J.S. by Coppy this is good Coppy and yet in 13 H. 4. fol. 7. If Lands in ancient Demesne are escheated and the King seiseth them and grants them over to J. S. they are frank fee and not ancient Demesne 6 H. 4. fol. 2. But if a Coppy-hold shall be escheated to the Lord and twenty yeares after that he grants them over by Copy againe they are Copy-hold as they were before for that that this Land hath been demised and demisable time out of minde c. If two be Joyntenants by Copy and one of them makes waste in all the Land that shall not be forfeiture but for his part and also if a stranger cuts Trees and makes waste without assent of the Coppy-holder it is no forfeiture If the Lord of a Mannor to which there are Coppy-holders grant by Copy the tenements of one tenant Coppy-holder without just cause to another Tenant in Fee or for life and the Grantee enter by vertue of that grant this Tenant which hath right and which was admitted before may have a plaint in nature of an Assise of novel disseisin against the Grantee If the Husband surrender into the hands of the Lord to the use of his Wife and doth not say A. his Wife it is a good surrender for she is certainly known by that name the same Law is if one surrender into the hands of the Lord to the use of J. his Son and hath two Sons named J. it is to the use of that J. which it is ment to If Tenant by Copy surrender his Lands by custome of the Mannour to two good men out of the Court to the use of a stranger and that made for Money paid he which surrendred cannot countermand his surrender before the two good men have presented it at the next Court for it is much like acknowledging of a Fine before a Justice of Record but where the surrender is to two to the use of his Wife or Son and not to a stranger for Money paid by one lying in extreamity in perill of death and after he revives he may well countermand his
to Fortescue fol. 85. which is That none is to be sued but by the Law And the case was this That the Husband before that he tooke a Wife made an Estate for life reserving Rent and after he took a Wife and dyed so that by the Law the Wife is not Dowable of the Land much more shee shall not be assigned there by the Homagers but saith the Steward in such a case shee is by the custome of this Mannor dowable in this case and such blinde and unreasonable customes are alleadged many times amongst copy-holders where there is no President nor usage in this case to be shewed But you ought not to allow any custome but that which hath been used from time to time and from time out of minde and there ought to be Presidents in the Court-Rolls or good proofe of that to be shewed to the Court accordingly otherwise it is not to be allowed for a custome And for that that you ought to note what custome ought to have lawfull beginning as might take lawfull effect by Grants at the beginning for if it be against common right and reason it is not good and for that you ought to regard these Grounds and Customes FIrst That it be reasonable 2 H. 4. tit 10. And for that custome that no Tenant of the Mannor put in his Beasts to use his common in Feilds sowed after the corne is taken off till the Lord hath first put in his Beasts is not good for it may be the Lord will not put in his Beasts and then the Tenants shall loose their profits Also that it be according to common right 42 Ed. 3. fol. 4. Prescription of the Sheriffe that the Tenants of the place ought to give to the Sheriffe for easement for reward at the Turne of the Sheriffe halfe a Marke and this is against common right for every gift cometh upon his liberality and at the will of the giver and for that it is not good and also saith that the Sheriffe cannot prescribe Also that it be upon good consideration 42 Ed. 3. fol. 4. In the case next before where the Sheriffe prescribes for that that there is nothing which toucheth the King of which he is charged in account it is not good for there is no consideration And as 5 H. 7. fol. 9. prescription that if any pasture Sheep upon his Land by day that hee may have Foldage of them in the night upon his Land it is good for it is with consideration And you ought to note that prescription custome and usage are as Brothers and yet some thing they differ in their natures for Prescription is when by continuance of time out of memory one particular person hath particular right against another particular person And custome is where by continuance of time out of memory one right is had concerning diverse persons and usage is by continuance of time the efficient cause of them both and usage is the life of Prescription and custome for Prescription and custome have their being by usage of time out of mind c. Custome or prescription that every one which breaks the Lords pound shall pay three pound nine pence is not good against a Stranger to the Lord but that every tenant which breakes the pound shall pay three pound nine pence to the Lord is good for the Lord may give the Tenements of his Tenant to hold by such c. 11 H. 7. fol. 14. So that at the beginning the Lord may create these customes aforesaid amongst copy-holders Custome to prescribe to have used fold-gate in the night for pasture in the day is good for it is one for another and it is with common right 5 H. 7. f. 9. Custome that the Tenant of time out of minde hath used to pay so much for the Marriage of his Daughter is good 43 Ed. 3. and 6. but Littleton fol. 46. contrary Custome or prescription against common Right is not good and for that that it hath been used in Leet that if the petty twelve present false and the other twelve inquire of that and finde that false shall be amerced is not good the same Law for the Lord of the Leet which hath no Land to prescribe to be Lord of Waste 9 H. 6. fol. 44. Custome or prescription of folding Sheep in the night gathered to the Fold is not good unlesse it be as above for their pasture 46 Ed. 3. fol. 13. Custome or prescription that one may keep the distresse till he be satisfied at his Will is not good for it is against common right Lit. fol. 46.5 H. 7.9 Custome or prescription that one shall have the Land to plow and sow and when the Corn is carryed another may have that as his severall is good time of Ed. 2. Tit. prescription 55. Custome or prescription to have Toll through which is in the high-way is not good for it is against common Right but to have Toll travers is good 22 Book of Assise 58. Custome or prescription to have Warren in his Signiory Lands is good but not of Lands which are not held of him 3. H. 6.13.43 Ed. 3.13 and see 44 Ed. 3.13 Custome is good which is not against the Law of Reason nor the Law of God as customes of Gavelkinde and Borough English and Doctor and Student fol. 20. B. Custome that every Tenant of the Mannor ought to pay two Markes for Releife hold they more or lesse is good 40 Ed. 3. f. 6. Custome that the Tenants of the Mannor time out of minde have used to choose a Beadle for them to gather the Lords Rents is good 44 Ed. 3. fol. 13. Custome that none of the Town of D. shall put in their Beasts into the Feild after the corn taken off untill the Feast of S. Michaell is a good custome of the Town after 46 Ed. 3. fol. 24. But custome that none shall put his Beasts into the Feilds after the corn severed and carryed before the Lord put in his Beasts is not good for paradventure the Lord will never put in his Beasts 2 H. 4.24 Custome of the Town of Barton or of a Mannor that a Wife shall have all the Land of her Husband for her dower or a halfe or fourth part is a good custome 2 Ed. 4.17 and 21 Ed. 4. fol. 64. by Choke It is held that custome throughout the whole Kingdome is common Law and one cannot prescribe that it is a custome throughout the whole Kingdome but it is a custome in such a City or such a County 34 H. 8. Tit. custome 59.30 Ed. 3.25 2 H. 4. fol. 18. custome of County 21 Ed. 4.54 Custome of the Town which is no Burrough nor corporation allowed there but see 4 Ed. 3.38 in a reasonable part and see 21. Ed. 4. f. 53. and 54.40 Book of As 27. and 45 As 48. against the custome of the Villiage That he hath been by prescription the keeper of a Wood and custome to have of every comer a measure of
in Discender generally or may have special Writ making mention how it was given for life the remainder to his Father in tayl and one or other is good 44 Ed. 3. fol. 6. In conveyance of Degrees ye need not name him Heir but Son of him which was not seised but it is a surer way to name him Son and Heire to every one if hee were seised or not but he cannot omit any in his VVrit which was seised If the Demandant omit in Formedon one which held the Estate that is to say who was seised the VVrit shall abate otherwise it is in Scire facias 4 Ed. 2. tit 48. Formedon in Discender shal abate for that he omitted one in the VVrit which held an Estate 44 Edw 3. fol. 40. The Demandant in Formedon ought to make his discent by all which held the Estate otherwise the VVrit shall abate 46 Ed. 3. fol. 9. Though the Demandant be made heire to him which dyed in the life of his Father which was not seised yet the Writ shall not abate but is good 48 Ed. 3. fol. 7. Where the Demandant in Formedon in Discender makes mention of any and not of all the VVrit shall abate 49 Ed. 3. fol. 20. Formedon and the Register was shewed by which it was held that he ought to make him Son to every one and Sonne and Heire to him which last held the Estate but if he makes him Son and Heire to every one that is more and good notwithwanding that every one did not hold the Estate 11 H. 6. fol. 25. The Writ is not the worse though in the same it be mentioned that he is the heir of one or that he should have scarce been heir to him if he had lived if he be heir to him that last was seised 11 H. 4. f. 70. The Demandant in Formedon ought to name him Son and Heir to him that was seised But if one survive his father and were not seised he need not name himself heir but son onely but it is a sure way to name him son and heire or cozen and heire to every one Fitzh fol. 212. F. Formedon abate for that he made himself cozen and heir to the Donee where his father was seised after the death of the Donee and no mention was made of him 10 Edw. 3. tit 41. Esplees shall be alleadged in Formedon in reverter in the Donor and in the Donee and in formedon in descender and remainder in the Donee onely Formedon in reverter It behoveth to lay the Esplees in his Count in the Donor and Donee but in formedon in descender and remainder in the Donee onely 50 Ed. 3. fol. 1. Fitzh fol. 220. Formedon in remainder he alleadgeth Esplees in the Tenant for life and not in the Donor and in formedon in reverter in the Donor and Donee 9 H. 6. fol. 53. 11 Ed. 3. tit 31. the same and 18 Ed. 2. tit 20. Formedon in remainder he counts upon the matter without laying the Esplees in the Donor and it is good 27 Ed. 3. tit 36. Of what things Formedon lyeth and of what not Formedon lyeth of Gorse but not of an Advowson Fitzh fol. 217. B. It lies of pasture for 10 beasts and not of common but a Writ called quod permittat Fitzh 212. B. Formedon lyeth of Common in gross Inquire of 15. Ed. 3. Statham fol. 95. It lyes of a Corody that is to say of Rent and certain breads by the opinion of the Court 18 Ed. 3. Statham 10 book of Assise fol. 11. Nuper obiit was maintained of a Corody Ward For that that in the second Article is inquired if Tenant of the Lord dies if his Heir shall be in ward or not and for that let us see where the Lord shall have the Ward of the heir of his Tenant within age which holds of him by Knights service and where not ANd note where the Heir of Lands held by Knights service shall be said in by discent to be in Ward and where not If the father devises his Land held in Knights service to his Son and Heir in fee and dies hie Heir within age he shall be adjudged in by discent and shall be in Ward But if it were devised to his Son and Heir and to the Heires of his body the remainder to another in fee and dies the Son within age he shall not be in Ward for he is in as purchasor 3 H. 6. fol. 47. Where the Heir recovers Land held in Knight-service in formedon in discendor he shall be adjudged in by discent and if he were within age shall be in ward 2 R. 3. fol. 14. and 11 H. 7. fol. 12. Inquire if he recover in Dum non fuit compos mentis See Fitzh fol. 114. If the Heir enter for the condition broken in lands held by Knights service he shall be adjudged in by discent and shall be in ward if he be within age when he enters 11 H. 7. f. 12. 7 H. 4. f. 13. and 6 H. 4. f. the same If the Father and the Son purchase land held by Knights service to them and to the heires of the father and the father dies though the son within age he shall not be said in by discent to be in ward 43 Ed. 3. fol. 36. But by 32 H. 8. ch 1. If they be held of the King by Knights service the King shall haue the ward of them Where two or more hold joyntly lands held of the King by Knights service to them and to the heires of one of them and he which hath the Inheritance dies his heir within age the King shall have the ward of the body of the infant though that the other which hath the Free-hold be alive See the Stat. of Wills 32 H. 8. chap. 1. If an Infant in the life of his Father be made Knight Rastall Wills 23. and his Father dies he shall be in ward but otherwise it is where an Infant in ward is made a Knight there he shall be out of ward 2 Ed. 6. Tit. Ward 42. Magna Charta chap. 3. Where Reversion discends to the Issue within age he shall be in ward but where he hath a remainder by purchase is otherwise and where he in remainder dies his heir within age shall be in ward Stamf. fol. 6. and 7. the same See the Comment 35 H. 8. tit 119. A person twice in ward where a woman was young with child as a man dies seised of land held in Knights service his brother and heir within age the Lord seises the Ward the wife of the Tenant being young with child with a Son and after the wife is delivered the brother is out of Ward But if the Infant die the brother yet within age there the brother shall be in Ward again the same law where a Daughter is in Ward and after the Son is born 28 H. 8. T it Ward 86. If the King hath an Heir in ward which is a woman and she marry to one before
85. the same It is granted by all the justices that the King shall not out the Farmor of his Tenant by reason that the heire of his Tenant is in ward nor he which hath execution upon the Statute nor Rent charge granted by his Tenant nor grant of next Advowson Time of H. 8. Tit. Ward 44. Now if the Tearm be not found in the Office for the King yet the Farmor shall injoy his Tearm 2 Ed. 6. chap. 8. Where there is Lord and Tenant Rastall Escheat 15. and the Tenant grants a Rent charge and dies his Issue within age the Lord being Guardian shall hold this Land charged 3 Book of Ass 1. Seisin Seisin of the Guardians vests Free-hold in the Heire and Chattell in the Guardian and Seisin of the Lord of parcell sufficeth to have ward but not to avow for all and see what Seisin is materiall WHere by Office one is found in ward to the King that settles the profits in the King and the Freehold in the Heire 1 H. 7. fol. 6. and 42 Ed. 3. f. 4. Seisin of the Ward is Seisin of the Son within age so that if he dye without other Seisin the Daughter of the halfe blood shall not have this Land 8 Book of Assises 6. Possession of the Guardian is possession of the Heir for if the Guardian be outed the Heire shall have Assise without other Seisin 2 Ed. 4. f. 5. Though the Free-hold be in him which is in ward yet if he being in Ward cut the Trees of his Land in Ward the Lord may have trespasse against him 5 H. 4. fol. 2. If the Tenant holds by Homage Fealty and Rent and the Lord hath been seised of the Rent but not of the Homage within memory yet this sufficeth to have the ward 6 Ed. 6. Tit. Ward 122. If the Tenant hold by Rent and Knights Service and the Lord and his Ancestors have been alwaies seised of the Rent but not of the Homage Escuage not of the ward yet if the ward fall The Lord shall have the Ward of the Heire by Seisin of the Rent for the Seifin is not traversable notwithstanding otherwise it seems to make avowrie 7 Ed. 6. tit 69. 13 H. 4. Seisin of Homage without Escuage is sufficient to have releife for avowrie 22 Ed. 3. Tit. 90. Tenure B. By the Seisin of Escuage the Lord may distraine and make Avowrie for Homage 27 H. 8. fol. 25. Avowrie for Fealty and Rent and Issue upon the Tenure Seisin of the Rent is not good evidence nor Seisin of Suit of Court for it is another thing that the Avowrie is made for 44 Ed. 3. f. 11. Seisin of Fealty is not iufficient Seisin to have Assise of Rent but sufficient Seisin to make Avowrie for all 45 Ed. 3. fol. 23. the same Seisin of Escuage nor releife shall not be traversed and for that where one avows for Homage Fealty Releife and Escuage it is no Plea that he was not seised of Escuage nor of releife for paradventure Escuage is not assessed by Parliament within memory 13 H. 4. f. 6. Where one holds by Fealty and Rent If the Lord were seised of the Rent it is sufficient to avow for all see 29 Ed. 3. fol. 31. and 27. H. 8. f. 24. But the Issue was upon the Tenure Where one holds by Fealty and Rent Seisin of Fealty is sufficient to avow for all 45 Ed. 3. f. 28. 44 Ed. 3. f. 10. See 27 H. 8. f. 24. Seifin of parcell of Rent is sufficient to have Assise of all 8 Book of Ass 4. But if one hold by Fealty and Rent Seisin of Fealty is not sufficient to have an Assise of Rent Nat. Bre. fol. 109. If one hold by Fealty and Rent Seisin of Fealty is not sufficient to have an Assise of Rent Abridg. Book of Ass fol. 16. Seisin of Rent by the Predecessor of a Parson c. Of a corporation if it be gainfaid to the Successor it is sufficient to have an Assise of this Seisin Fitzh fol. 179. C.F. Seisin of Fealty is not sufficient to have Assise of Rent 20 H. 3. Tit. Avowrie 433. Where one holds by Fealty and ten shillings Seisin of parcell of the Rent sufficeth to have Assise for all Inquire time of Ed. 1. Tit. Avowrie 229. One may avow for releif without alleadging any Seisin of it 20 Ed. 3. Title One may have Escheat and Ward before that he be seised of the Services 11 H. 4. f. 16. Where one avows for that that the Plaintiff hath common in his Land and hath used to pay to him ten shillings and hath used to distraine for that it is not good without alleadging Seisin of that Rent 26 H. 8. fol. 6. Homage and Fealty And for that that the third Article of the charge is to inquire of Services withdrawn and for that that some Tenants make Homage and Fealty and some Fealty only you ought to see the form in Master Littleton fol. 18. and 19. Of making of one and of another and what shall be one and what the other and that none shall make Homage nor take Homage but such a one which hath an Estate in Fee simple or in Fee taile in his own right or in right of another and if a Woman having Lands in Fee or in taile takes a Husband and have Issue The Husband in the Life of his Wife shall make Homage but before Issue it shall be made in both their names and if the Wife dye the Husband shall not make Homage HOmage shall not be made to Tenant in Dower for it shall be made to none if he hath not Inheritance 22 Ed. 3. f. 19. 7 H 4. fol. 21. He which holds by Knights Service shall make Homage Litt. fol. 22. He that holds by Socage may hold by Homage and shall make Homage One cannot avow upon a Husband and a Wife as of right of the Wife for Homage unlesse that the Husband hath Issue by the Wife but if he avow upon them it need not be alleadged but it shall be intended that they have Issue see 44 Ed. 3. fol. 41. and 43 Ed. 3. fol. 13. Corporation cannot make Homage for corporation cannot appeare but by Attorney 33 H. 8. Title Fealty 15. Bishop or Abbot may take Homage contrary of Parson of a Church Time of Ed. 1. Tit. Fealty 12. In a Perque servitia an Infant was constrained to attorn and to make Fealty notwithstanding his nonage 20 Ed 3. Tit. 19. Tenant for yeares shall make Fealty to his Lessor Lit. fol. 29. D. 9 H. 6. fol. 43. and 5 H. 7. fol. 11. accordingly where a Rent is reserved By all the Justices that Tenant for yeares shall not make Fealty for it is as I beleeve to be intended not to the Lord but to the Lessor 10 H. 6. f. 13. It seems that a Lessor may avow upon a Lessee for years as within his Fee by the Mannor and for that shall make Fealty to his Lessor and may avow for
that 40. Ed. 3. fol. 34. If Rent of a Lessee for yeares be behinde the Lessor cannot avow upon the Termor as of Tenant upon the Land but upon the matter 47 Ed. 3. fol. the last 24 H. 8. Tit. Fealty 8. In the Exchequer held that if Lands discends to me which is held of J.S. by Homage and I make to him Homage and after other Land discends to me by another Ancestor held of J.S. also by Homage I shall make Fealty but not Homage again for I am become his man before the same Law is if both the Tenements are held of the King by Homage he shall not have two Homages but one Homage only Lit. f. 29 Tenant at will by the common Law shall not make Fealty to the Lessor but Tenant by copy at will according to the custome of the Mannor shall make Fealty to his Lord Lit. in the end of the first book and f. 29. and 10 H. 6. f. 13. accordingly If there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant holds three Acres of the Lord by Fealty and Rent and aliens all the three Acres the Lord is not held to change his Avowrie without notice and to avow upon the Feoffee for Fealty and Rent But if he will he may the same Law if he alien but one Acre not that the Statute of Westminster the third is that he shall hold for that particular yet this is upon notice 8 Ed. 4. fol. 12. and 47. Ed. 3. fol. 4. If the Tenant make a Feoffment and there is no notice made to the Lord and the Tenant dies the Lord may distraine the Issue for Fealty and Rent and avow upon him for it sufficeth that he dies Tenant though he doth not dye seised of the Land 44 Ed. 3. fol. 13. If the Tenant be disseised and the Disseisor dyeth seised the Lord there cannot distraine the Tenant for Fealty but the Issue of the Disseisee 32 H. 6. fol. 31. and 34 H. 6. fol. 51. If the Tenant hold by Fealty and Rent if the Tenant make a Feoffment in Fee the Lord may distraine the Beasts of the Feoffee for Fealty and Rent And make avowrie upon the Feoffor till notice be given and after notice given he shall avow upon the Feoffee if he tender the arrearages otherwise not for by the Feoffment and notice he shall not loose the arrearages but may distrain as above and avow upon the Feoffor for the arrearages But I intend if the Lord accept Fealty of the Feoffee he hath lost the arrearages 47 Ed. 3. f. 4. Note that by the Statute of 21. H. 8. chap. 9. One may avow the taking in the Land if he will as within his Fee and Lordship as in Lands held of him without avowing or justiffing of any person certaine Where one in ward of the King holds of a common person also by Homage or Fealty the Lord cannot distraine for Homage or Fealty during the time that it is in the Kings hand and yet the Signiorie is not suspended but only from distresse so that after he may distraine 13 H. 7. fol. 16. If Tenant in taile which holds by Fealty makes a feoffment yet the Donor cannot avow upon the Feoffee for Fealty but if one recover against a Tenant in taile the Donor ought to avow upon him which recovers for the Fealty and if there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant were disseised and the Lord accepts the Rent of the disseisor yet that shall be but as a Bailiff to the Disseisee and ought to avow upon the Disseis otherwise I suppose of Fealty 41 Ed. 3. f. 26. If there be Lord and Tenant by Homage and Fealty and the Tenant be disseised and the Lord accept Homage of the Disseisor he cannot avow for Homage upon the Disseisee Fitzh 142. E. Hariot For that that diverse Lords of Mannors have Hariots and these are to be inquired for the Lord in Court-Baron in the second Article of Charge It is to be noted that there are two manner of Hariots that is to say Hariot custome and Hariot service and for that Hariot custome is properly as it seems after the death of the Tenant for life and for yeares and of every Estate and also is upon altenation IT is properly Hariot custome after the death of the Tenant for life 8 H. 7. fol. 11. To have a Hariot after the Death of every Tenant that is to say for life and for yeares is a Hariot custome 21 H. 7. f. 16. f. 13. the same To have a Hariot after the death of the Tenant for life is Hariot custome for Hariot service is after the death of the Tenant in Fee 21 H. 7. Tit. 5. Br. Custome that every Tenant of every Estate ought to pay Hariot after his death is Hariot custome 14 H. 4. f. 5. Where the Lord is to have Hariot upon every surrender or upon every alienation is Hariot custome 3 H. 6. Tit. 8. b. Note that a Hariot custome may be due after death or alienation as the custome will serve It seems Hariot service is properly after the Death of Tenant in fee upon discent and not upon every Estate as before is said HAriot service is by reason of the Tenure 8 H. 7. fol. 20. Hariot service is by the Tenure and if the Tenant alien the Land without notice yet the Lord may distraine upon the Land for the Hariot for it is by reason of the Tenure and the Land is charged 8 H. 7. f. 10. B. 6. that is by prescription Hariot service is after the death of the Tenant in fee and not of every Estate 21 H. 7. f. 13. B. 5. You shall see more for payment of Hariot service title discent before and title releife after Where a Ha●iot is certaine the Lord may seise that as Hariot custome and note that for Hariot service he may distrain it seems where it is certaine to have the best Beast that he may seise THE Lord may seise as well for Hariot service where he is to have the best Beast as for Hariot custome But it is said in another place that for Hariot custome he shall alwaies seise and not distraine for the property is in the Lord forthwith 38 Ed. 3. fol. 7. Br 2. For Hariot custome the Lord may seise and if it be conveyed away he shall have a Detinue and for Hariot service if it be conveyed away he may distraine time of H. 8. Br. 6. Doctor and Student f. 65. The Lord hath property in Hariot custome and may seise that and for Hariot service he may distrain and not seise 8 H. 7. f. 10. Br. 7. He cannot prescribe to distraine for Hariot custome though that it be conveyed away for that that he may have a Detinue for the Law adjudges possession in him 13 Ed. 3. Br 9. It is adjudged that the Lord may seise Hariot service as well as Hariot custome See Plowdens Commentaries fol. 96. between Woodland and others and 16 H. 7. f. 5. It seems
life by Deed and I deliver it out of the view and no livery of seisin that he is but Tenant at will by Newton as it is sayd before 18 H. 6. fol. 16. Note where a Deed shall enure as a confirmation without Livery of Seisin and where not A Lease for yeares is made and after the Lessor makes a Deed by I have given granted and confirmed to the Lessee to him and his heires and deliver to him this Deed this is good without livery 22 Ed. 4. fol. 37. and 19 H. 6. fol. 44. the same If I let to one for yeares and after make to him a Deed by I have given and granted to have the Land for life or to him and to his heires and deliver to him the Deed he hath an Estate according to the Deed without livery and seisin the same Law where a Disseisee makes a Deed by I have given to the Disseisor and delivers to him the Deed as before is sayd Lit. fol. 121. Feoffment to diverse and livery to one where both take and where not and where one makes a Letter of Attorney by words is not good A Man makes a Feoffment by Deed to twenty and delivers the Deed and Seisin to one in the name of all this is good to them all but if he enfeoffe twenty without Deed and Delivers seisin to one in name of all this is good to him onely Time of H. 8. Br Feoffment 72.15 Ed. 4. fol. 18. and 10 E. 4. fol. 1. by Choke Tenant enfeoffs the Lord and another and makes livery to the other nothing vests in the Lord without his agreement 10 E. 4. fol. 12.6 E. 4. fol. 4. Where a Corporation and another are enfeoffed livery to one is not good to both for that that they take in Common and for that livery shall be to both of them 7 H. 7. fol. 9. by Hussey Attorney by word cannot make livery 19 H. 8. fol. 9. by Shelley and Englefeild A man enfeoffe foure by Deed and one makes letter of Attorney to J. S. to take seifin for him and the rest and he takes seisin accordingly the residue take nothing by the seisin 17 H. 8. Br Feoff 67. Mortdancester Many times Mortdancester is brought of Copy-hold Land and for that some thing shall be said of Mortdancester and it seemes if the Tenant traverse one point of the writ the residue shall not be inquired Contrary is by 9 Ed. 3. fol. 30. Fitzh Mortdancester 13. IF one takes Issue upon one point and found against him the residue shall be held confessed 27 H. 8. fol. 12. and 39 Ass 13. But Abridgement of Assise fol. 120. If the Tenant plead in Barr which is found against him the Assise ought not to inquire of the points at large Mortdancester If the Tenant traverse one of the points of the Writ as to say that he is not next heire and is found for the Plaintiffe there he shall not inquire of other points for when one point is traversed all others are in manner acknowledged otherwise it is where he acknowledgeth no point as pleading that the Plaintiffe is a Bastard there they ought to inquire of the residue of the points Statham 35 E. 3. If the Tenant traverse one of the points of the Writ the remainder shall be held not gainsayd by Sharde 14 E. 3. tit Fitzh 8.33 E. 3. Fitzh 34. accordingly Abridgement of Assise fol. 118. The points of the Writ are three that is First if the Ancestor of the Demandant was seised in his Demesne as of fee the day that he dyed Secondly If he dyed seised within fifty yeares last past Thirdly If the Demandant be next heire The Tenant saith that the Ancestor of the Plaintiffe did not dye seised in fee and the Assise charged upon all the points 9 Ed. 3. tit 13. and 9 Book of Assises 14. according B. 21. If the Tenant plead in Barr without that that the Father of the Demandant dyed seised if that be found against him the points of the Writ shall not be inquired but if he plead to the Writ it is otherwise 27 H. 8. fol. 12. by Fitzherbart Where the Tenant traverseth one of the points of the Writ and the Assise is awarded and found for the Plaintiffe he shall not inquire of the other points but shall be taken confessed Abridgement Book of Ass fol. 118. If the Tenant pleads Feoffment or Surrender he ought to traverse the dying seised IF the Tenant pleads matter in Deed as Feoffment of the same Ancestor they ought to traverse the dying seised but if hee plead recovery this is a Barr unlesse the Tenant convey title afterwards 6 Ed. 4. fol. 11. Mortdancester Natura brevium 119. By Thorpe Feoffment of the same Ancestor is no Plea in Barr but to the Assise for the Action is taken of dying seised after that is to say The day that he dyed or not 34 Book of Assises 20. Where there shall be a re-summons and where the Assise shall be awarded upon default and the points shall be inquired THe Tenant was Essoyned and at the day made default and re-summons was awarded and sayd that it ought 8 Book of Assises 13. Inquire Fitzh fol. 196. G. The Tenant was effoyned and at the day made default and adjudged that the Assise shall be taken by his default and that resummons shall not be but immediately after Summons 4 H. 7. f. 23. and 4 Ed. 2. Fitzh 37. A man cannot recover by default in this Writ without inquiring of the points of the Writ 31 Ed. 3. Tit. 58. Abridgment Book of Assises f. 119. The Tenant makes default by which resummons went out upon which he comes and pleads and doth not answer to the default Where it is found against the Tenant upon Plea which trencheth to the action the points of the Writ shall not be inquired otherwise it is upon a Plea in abatement see 39 Book of Assises 13. and 29 Book of Assises 48. Mortdancester If the Tenant plead non-tenure of parcell to the Writ and if found c. And is ready to heare the Recognisance of the Assise the points shall be inquired 20 Book of Assises 19. and 4. Ed. 2. fol. 39. Mortdancester the Tenant saith that he is ready to heare Recognisance of Assise the points inquired 12 Ed. 3. f. 10. If the Tenant plead non-tenure of parcell he ought to plead over to the Assise that is to pray that the Points be inquired 12 Book of Assisee 8. and Abridgment Book of Ass fol. 122. See there Where Mortdancester lyeth IT lyes for the Heir where his Father Mother Brother Sister Uncle Aunt Nephew or Neece dieth seised of any Lands of an estate in Fee and an Estranger abates there the Heir shall have a Mordancester and when his Father were seised and disseised the day that he dyed yet it lyes Fitzh fol. 195. C.D. If Tenent by the Curtesie alien the Heir shall have Mordancester unlesse he hath assets by him And if a
Guardian hold over the Heir at full age shall have a Mortdancester Fitzh fol 196. E. F. Mordancester doth not lye upon Lands devisable by Will and it is reason for it is true that the Ancester was seised the day that he dyed and that he dyed seised and the Tenant is Heir in apparence Fitzh fol 196. I. 4 Ed 2. Fitzh Mordancester 39. It is a good bar to plead devise of the same Ancester and so it seems where there is a devise now by the Statute of Wills Abridg Book of Assises fol 120. 32 H. 8. Chap. 2. One Coparcener shall not have a Mortdancester against another where their Ancester dyed seised and one enters in all and holds out his companion but nuper obiit and if the Ancester dye seised of an estate tail and one enter and deforce the other he shall have a Formedon and not a Mortdaneester Fitzh fol 196. L. Mortmain For that that by the 9th Article it is inquirable of Mortmain to the intent that none shall give in Mortmain but that the Lord may make his claim within the time limited in the Statute Let us therefore see what is an alienation in Mortmain and what not IF Villain of an Abbot or of a Corporation purchase and the Abbot or the Corporation enters this is in Mortmain and the Lord may enter within the yeer 41 Ed 3. fol 16. Fitzh 224. B. Contrary of Land which discends to a Villain 41 Ed 3.21 and 48 Ed. 3.27 If a Feoffment be made to the use of an Abbot or a Corporation this is Mortmain and within the Statute that the Lord may enter 8 H. 4. fol 16. Br 11. If an Abbot Mayor and Commonalty Dean and Chapter or other Corporation alien to another Corporation or Abbot without license this is Mortmain Fitzh 212. D. The same Law if one exchange with an Abbot or Corporation this is Mortmain and the Lord may enter Fitzh fol 223. E. Lord Dean and Chapter or other Corporation are Tenants and the Lord releases to Dean and Chapter or to the Corporation his Rent without license this is Mortmain But if he be licensed of the King and of the cheif Lord and Ad quod damnum be sued or in the license of the King this clause be that is to say without any Writ of ad quod damnum then the Mortmain is not to be inquired in no case where such license is used for that is dispensation that the King nor the Lord cannot enter for Mortmain But if the Lord with license in this case aforesaid be Tenant in tail or for life and dyes I think it is there inquirable Fitzh fol 222. D. and 223. I. But if the King grants to a Corporation liberty to purchase Lands and Tenements to the clear yearly value of 40 li. provided that it be not held in cheif as divers Grants are If such a Corporation purchase Lands and Tenements held of the King as of his Mannours of East Greenwich Depford otherwise West Greenwich Sayes Court Lewsham fee or held of the Queen as of her other Mannors there it is not inquirable of Mortmain but it is to be enquired in the Leet if they have purchased any Lands held in chief or over such a value in the Grant And also it is to be inquired in Court Baron for the Lord. If any Corporation have purchased any Lands or Tenements held of the Lords Mannor notwithwanding the Grant and license of the King aforesaid for this shall not be to dispence against the Lord for Mortmain Where anuity is granted to a Parson or a Vicar of a Church or to a Prior or an Abbot by any tenant It is no Mortmain to be inquired for in anuity if they recover collusion shall not be inquired for that doth but charge the Parson of the grantor and not the freehold 10 Ed. 4. fol. 6.34 H. 6. fol 37.3 Ed. 4.14 33. H. 6.27.20 H. 6.7 and 17. Ed. 3.5 But if any Tenant of the Lord grant by deed out of his Land any rent charge with clause of distresse to any corporation that is Mortmain and inquirable The same Law is If any tenant will that a Corporation shall have to them and their successors a rent charge issuing out of his Land and will not that his Parson be charged in any manner by Writ of an uity but hath in the end of his Deed provided alwaies that this present writing nor any thing in that specified shall in no wife extend to charge my person by Writ or Action of anuitie but onely to charge my Lands and Tenements of the yearly Rent aforesaid This is Mortmain and inquirable The same Law is if any Tenant of the Lord grant by Deed that if the Dean and Chapter Mayor and Commonalty and their successors be not yearly paid at the feast of Christmas 20 s. that then it shall be lawfull for them to distrain for the same in the manner of D. this is Mortmain and inquirable Littl fol. 30. proves this a good Grant See Fitzh 224 G. But where personall things are given to a Corporation as Horse Cow Ox Sheep hoggs or other goods there in this case Mortmain is not to be inquired for these so given are not within the statute 10. H. 7. fol. 3. If a Bishop or an Abbot appropriate to themselves an Advowson held of a Lord of which they are seised in Fee without License that is Mortmain and inquirable Eitzh fol 223. H. and 5 H 7. fol 37. saith that an Advowson lyeth in tenure 40 Ed 3. fol 44. accordingly If a Fishing held of the Lord be granted by the Tenant to a Bishop and his Successors or to a Dean and Chapter and their Successors this is Mortmain and inquirable 40 Ed. 3. fol 44. proves that it lyes in tenure The Statute of Religious fol 79. is That no Religious or other whatsoever shall presume to buy or sell any Lands or Tenements either under colour of gift or tearm or by reason of any Title whatsoever or by any means whatsoever art or wit presume to appropriate them to him under the penalty of forfeiting the same by which the Lands or Tenements may come into Mortmain by any means And the Statute gives liberty to the next Lord if he come within the yeer to enter and if he be negligent and do not enter then the next Lord within half a yeer and if not then the King after the yeer and half may enter And it is inquirable in the Court Baron for the benefit of the Lord that he may enter within the yeer and if the Lord be negligent and do not take his time limited by the Stature then the King may enter and that is inquirable in Leet for the King 25 H. 8. tit 37. Lord and Tenant the Tenant lets for life to I. S. the remainder to an Abbot and his Successors the Lord need not make claim till the Tenant for life be dead for if he will waive the Remainder it is
without Issue the youngest Son shall pray releife and the Fee was but in expectancy 40 Ed. 3. fol. 9. A gift to three Brothers for life the remainder to the middlemost in taile the remainder to the right heires of the elder in Fee the middlemost and the youngest dye without Issue the Fee is executed in the eldest 40 Ed. 3. fol. 20. Tenant for life the remainder to J. S. in taile the remainder to the right heires of the Tenant for life the Tenant for life is impleaded and hath ayde of him in remainder for that that the Fee is in expectancy 41 Ed. 3. fol. 16. Lease for life the remainder in taile the remainder to the Tenant for life in Fee yet if he make waste hee shall be punished in waste for that he hath the Fee in expectancy but not executed Fitzh fol. 60. B. Gift in taile the remainder to his right heires in Fee this remainder is not executed yet it is in him to grant Perkins fol. 19. 12 Edw. 3. the same and 7 H. 5. fol. 2. the same Where one hath an Estate in taile Rastall Treason 12 19. the remainder to his right heires and is attaint of Felony he shall forfeit the Fee but the Issue hath the Estate taile 12 H. 4. fol. 3. But by the Statute of 5 Ed. 6. chap. 12. and 26 H. 8. chap. 13. One attaint of high Treason against the Queen the Issue shall not have the Land intailed 7 H. 8. fol. 48. Fitzh fol. 30. B. Tenant in taile Land is given to R. and Katharine and to their Heires and to the other heires of the said R. If the said heires of the said R. and K. Issuing dye without heire of them it is an Estate taile 5 H. 5. fol. 6. Perk. fol. 35. a. LAnd was given to one and to his Heires if he have Issue of his Body begotten and if not that the Land should return it is an Estate taile 35 Book of Ass 14. Land is given to one to hold to him and his heires if he have an heire of his own flesh and if not it should return it is an Estate taile 37 Ass 15. Land is given to one to have to him and the heires of his Body and to one heire of the said heire only it is and estate taile for two Discents at least Plowdens Commenfol 39. Book of Assises 20. Gift to the Brother and to his Sister and to the heires of their two Bodies begotten is an Estate taile that is severall tailes 18 Ed. 3. f. 39. and 17 Ed. 3. f. 51. Land is given to a married man and to a woman married to another man and to the heires of their Bodies begotten they have an Estate taile presently 15 H. 7. fol. 10. If Lands be given to one to have and to hold to him and his Heires And if it happen that he dy without heire of his Body then it shall remaine c. It is an Estate taile 5 H. 5. f. 6. and 19 H. 6. f. 75. the same Land is given to the Husband and to his Heires of the Body of Margaret his Wife begotten though that Margaret were dead at the time of the gift it is an Estate taile 12 H. 4. f. 2. Lit. f. 6. Lands was given to the Husband and his Wife and to their heires saving the reversion it is an Estate taile 9 Ed. 3 Statham Lands were given to Maude late the Wife of John Mandevill and to the heires of the said John which he begot of the body of the said Wife the Wife hath an Estate for life the Issue an Estate taile 2 E. 3.7 17 E. 2. Tit. Fitzh 23. Taile 7. 23. Where lands were given to one and his Heires of his body begotten before the Statute of Westm 2. he had fee conditionall and after Issue had had power to alien and now by the Statute they have taile Lit. f. 3.12 Ed. 4. f. 3.19 Ed. 2. Tit. 61. and 18 Book of Ass 5. the same A man gives to the Husband and his Wife for their lives and the longest liver of them the remainder to the Heires of their Body this is a good intaile executed immediately 35 H. 8. Brook Estates 75. Lands are given in frank-marriage to have to them and to their heires it is said that they have Fee but if it were given to them in taile to have to them and their Heires they have taile and Fee expectant 45 Ed. 3. fol. 20. and 32 Ed. 1. there Fitzh Taile 25. it is adjudged taile If Lands be given to a man and his Wife in frank-marriage to have to him and to his heires they have taile for the frank-marrying shall not be defeated by these Words afterwards 31 Ed 1 Tit 25. Lands are given in Frank-marriage the remainder over to a stranger and for that it cannot be an acquittall it shall be called speciall intaile 31 Ed 3 Tit gard 116 and 17 Ed 3 Taile 2. Gift to one in taile the remainder to his right heires he hath taile and Fee expectant 7 H 5 fol 2. Lease is made for life the remainder to another in taile the remainder to E. Daughter of the Earl of Arundell in taile saving the Reversion and all dye and E. is heire to the Donor and hath taile as Purchasor but shee hath fee expectant and she shall have aid but not age if she be within age for that that the Fee is but in expectancy 40 Ed 3 f 13. 24 H. 8. Tit. 33. Tenant in taile hath Issue and aliens with warranty and levies Assets and dies the Issue cannot recover by Formedon for the Warranty and Assets is a Barr and if the Issue alien the Assets his Issue shall not have Formedon but his Issue shall have a Formedon for no Assets discends to him 35 H. 8. tit 39. Land is given in taile to the King and after the King by his Patent lets for yeares or for life and hath Issue and dyes the Patent is voyd for it is no discontinuance Tit. Discent 35. for a Grant without livery doth not make discontinuance 32 H. 8. If Tenant in taile lets for yeares and dyes without Issue the Lease is voyd and hee in remainder may enter 5 Ed. 4. fol. 2. Tenant in taile shall not have a Quo Jure nor Ne injuste vexes for they are VVrits of Right 14 Ed. 4. fol. 6. If one recover in a Writ of Right against Tenant in taile of a Rent he hath Fee till he be defeated The same Law if tenant in tail be disseised the disseisor hath fee till he be defeated and so hath the discontinuee 39 Ed 3 tit 18 Tenant in tail of a Lordship by default of entry within a year after the alienation of the land in Mortmain may prejudice him in remainder in tail and by consequence his issue Fitzherbert 224 Tenant in tail shall have a Quod permittat Fitzherbert 136 shall have a VVrit of Mesne Fitzherbert 151 O shall have a VVrit of customes and services
in the Debet and Solet Fitzherbert 134 C shall not have a VVrit of Rationabilibus divisis which is a VVrit of Right Fitzh 10. D. The issue in tail shall not be estopped by Seisin of more rent in the time of his father and for that he shall not have a Ne injuste vexes but may avoid that in Avowrie Fitzh fol. 9. If Tenant in tail hath Issue two Daughters and one enters in all the other shall have a Formedon and not Nuper obiit nor Rationabili parte Fitzh 39. If Tenant in fee of an advowson be disturbed he shall have a Writ of Right of advowson But Tenant in tail of advowson if he be disturbed shall have a Quare Impedit and not a Right of advowson Fitzh 105. S. If Tenant in tail be barred in a Formedon by false verdict and after releases and dies his heir shall have Attaint Fitzh 158. L. The Issue in tail shall have Detinue against the Discontinuee for the deed by which the land was given in tail Fitzh 155. If Tenant in tail lose by default and dies without Issue he shall not have quod ei deforceat but a formedon 7 H. 4. fol. 48. Tenant in tail before the Statute had fee conditional and now by the Statute hath tail and for that shall not forfeit for Treason nor for Felonie but that the Issue shall inherit but by the Statute now he shall forfeit for Treason Nat. bre fol. 102. If tenant in tail be attaint for Felonie his Issue shall inherit 12 H. 4. f. 3. If tenant in tail forfeit his land his Issue shall inherit and yet his wife shall not be endowed by Hank Litt. fol. 11. If a man be seised of land and commits fellonie and after aliens and after is attaint his wife shall have a Writ of Dower against the Feoffee by Navisor But if it be escheated to the King or Lord she shall have no Writ of Dower see 8 Ed. 3. contrary in the like case Nat. Brevium fol. 101. If tenant in tail commit felony for which he is attaint the King shall have escheat for his life 5 6 Ed. 6. cap. 11. VVhere the Husband commits high treason the VVife shall not be received to demand her Dower Perkins fol. 61. If tenant in general tail takes a VVife and hath Issue by the same VVife and the Husband is attaint of felonie and dies his VVife shall not be endowed and yet by the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 1. the Issue shall inherit Stamf. fol. 194. By the Common-Law the offender in felonie or treason shall forfeit the title that his VVife shall have by the marriage to be endowed of the land But by the Statute of 1 Ed. 6. cap. 12. though any person be attaint convict or outlawed of any misprision of treason murther or felonie yet their VVives shall be endowed But by 5 6 Ed. 8. cap. 11. it is otherwise of treason as afore is said see 5. Eliz. cap. 1. cap. 11. 18 Eliz. cap. 1. for certain treasons 19 Ed. 2. tit 61. Fitzh Before the Statute of West 1. after Issue had tenant in tail hath power to alien but not before Issue had 4 Ed. 3. tit 22. Fitzh Land given in special tail to have to them in fee and if they die without Issue of their body that the land shall revert c. this is adjudged a special intail 24 Ed. 3. tit 4. Fitzh If lands be given to two Husbands and their VVives and to the heirs of their bodies begotten it is held clearly that this is a several intail that their Issues shall have several actions Littleton fol. 52. If lands be given to two men and to their heirs of their two bodies begotten the Donees have joynt estate for their two lives and yet have several inheritances that the Issue of one shall have one half and the Issue of the other the other half 8 book of Assise 33 the same 30 book of Assise 9 by Shard If the Ancestor at one time was seised of an estate tail and after purchaseth in fee and after charges the land and dies and his issue enters he shall hold it discharged 18 Ed 2 tit 856. Lands given to one and the heirs of his body to be begotten is a good intail and the issue before as after shall inherit 4 Ed 2 tit 22 Lands given to the Husband and his VVife and to the heirs of their bodies to have to them and their heirs and if they die without heirs of their body that the land shall revert and adjudged a special intail 2 Ed. 4. fol. 6. Land is given in tail to be held of the cheif Lords it is a void Tenendum and shall hold of the Giver 3 book of Assise 8. 4 H. 6. fol. 19. 27 H. 8. f. 31. If Tenant of the King makes a gift in tail without license the King may choose the giver or the to whom it is given for his Tenant but if he take the ward of one he shall not have the other 5 H. 4. f. 3. Where lands was given to Eme to have to the said Eme and the heirs of the body of Iohn late her Husband the remainder to the right heirs of Eme and for that the heirs of John were not named before the habendum he hath nothing but Eme hath an intail c. 12. H. 4. f. 2. Where lands was given to J.M. and to the heirs of the body of Eliz. late his Wife begotten and though Eliz. was dead at the time of the gift yet this is a good intail that W. the issue of J.M. of the body of Eliz. shall inherit Littleton 6. If a man have issue a Son and dies and land is given to the Son and to the heirs of the body of his Father begotten this is a good intail and yet the Father was dead at the time of the Gift What Acts by Tenant in tail shall bind his issue and others and what not TEnant in tail the reversion to the King Rastall Recoveries 4. makes a feoffment and dies his issue enters and is Tenant in tail for he cannot discontinue And 34. H. 8. chap. 20. If he suffer common Recovery or Voucher where the reversion is in the King this shall not bind the issue 40. Ass 36. Fine levied by tenant in tail in possession reversion Rastall Proclam 3. remainder or in use of full age with Proclamation according to the Statute of 4. H. 7. chap. 12. immediately after the Fine levied and Ingrossed and Proclamations made shall be a Barr against the Tenant in tail and also against his heirs claiming the tail But if Tenant in tail the reversion in the King levie such a fine Rastall Fines 9. this is in such force and effect as it was before the making of this Statute and not otherwise 32 H. 8. chap. 36. See 30 H. 8. tit Barr the 97. Assurance 6. Tenant in tail is bound in a recognisance and execution is sued by Elegit
16. B. by Finchden If a lease be made of lands for years to A. the remainder to B. for life the remainder to the right heirs of B. and after B. takes a wife and dies during the term of years his Wife shall recover Dower But execution shall cease during the term of years Perkins fol. 67. A. 1 Ed. 6. tit 89. VVhere a woman is endowed of land which her Husband took in Exchange she shall not be endowed of the land given in Exchange 31 Ed. 2. tit Dower 204. 17 Ed. 2. tit Dower 162. the same VVhere the Husband holds joyntly with one and no partition made his wife shall not be endowed 8 Ed. 2. tit 167. Littleton f. 9. the same VVhere the Husband enters in Religion the heir shall inherit and yet his wife shall not be endowed for the wife may have him again out of Religion 32 Ed. 1. tit 136. Perkins f. 91. D. the same If the Husband be Tenant in common with two others in Fee and dies now his wife shall be endowed but not by metes and bounds Eitzberbert fol. 149. I Littleton fol. 9. the same If a villain takes a wife and purchaseth land and after the Lord enters and then the villain dies the wife shall be endowed 19 Ed. 2. f. 71. A woman of eight years three quarters at the death of her husband shall have no Dower Littl. 8. 12 Ed. 2. tit 159. the same A woman of the age of ten years at the death of her Husband shall be endowed 12 R. 2. tit 54. 8 R. 2. tit 122. the same VVhere the Husband hath an Office eo keep a Park to him and to his heirs his wife shall be endowed of that Pl. Com. f. 379. If the Lord enter for Mortmayn yet the wife of the Tenant shall have Dower Perk. f. 76. A. The same Law if the Lord recover against the Husband in Cessavit the Wife of the Tenant shall be endowed 34 book of Assise 15. where the Husband dies without heir and the land escheats the wife shall be endowed Tenant by the Curtesie surrenders to the Husband in reversion upon condition and enters for the condition the wife of him in reversion shall not be endowed 14. Ed 4. f. 6. VVhere a man enfeoffs one upon condition to re-enfeoff the feoffer again it behoveth that be made to a man unmarried or to a Chaplain that hath no wife for if it be to a man which hath a wife she shall be endowed 38. H. 8. tit Assurance 3.28 Book of Ass 4. the same Lands is mortgaged to the Husband and after the condition broken the Husband by agreement takes his money and dies his wife shall be endowed 42 Ed. 3. fol. 1. A woman hath title of Dower and enters upon the heir and enfeoffs him by Deed she hath given him her title of Dower included and is not now Dowable of that land 11 H. 7. f. 20. The husband Tenant in general tail makes a feoffment and takes back a special tail and his first wife dies and he takes another wife and he dies and his issue enters this second wife shall not be endowed for the heir was remitted 41 Ed. 3. f. 30. 46 Ed. 3. f. 24. the same VVhere land is given to the husband and his wife in special tail the remainder to another in tail the remainder to the right heirs of the husband and the wife dies and the husband takes another wife and dies living him in remainder the second wife shall not be endowed of that land 46 Ed. 3. f. 16. Land is given to the husband and K. his wife in special tail the remainder to the husband in general tail and K. dies without issue and the husband takes another wife and dies this second wife shall be endowed 50 Ed. 3. fol. 4. Where the husband and his wife have special tail the second wise shall not be thereof endowed 22 Ed. 3. fol. 9. B. Littleton 11. the same Where land is given to the husband and his heirs which he begets of the body of Margaret his wife which was dead at the time and he takes Eliz. and dies this second wife shall not be endowed 12 H. 4. f. 2. If a woman go away with an Adulterer into some land of her husbands and be not reconciled yet she shall not lose Dower otherwise it is if she were out of the lands of her husband 8 R. 2. tit 253. If a woman go away and dwell with an Adulterer she shall not have Dower But if she were carried away against her will and was carried 20 miles and returns and her husband dies she shall have Dower 43. Ed. 3. fol. 19. 47. Ed. 3. fol. 13. VVhere a recovery is by default or a reddition against the husband without title the wife shall have Dower 46 Ed. 3. fol. 23. VVhere a recovery is against the husband the wife is barred of Dower But if the recovery were by default it is remedied by the Statute and where by render is aided by the Common-Law and other recovery is not remedied Against whom Dower may be brought and what Assignement is good and what not WHere a Guardian in Socage endowes a Wife it seemes it is disseisin for a Writ of Dower doth not lye against a Guardian in Socage but against a Guardian by Knights service it lyeth 29 Book of Ass 68. Assignement of Dower by the Disseisor is good if it be not by Covin of the wife The same Law is by Abator or Intruder Perk. fol. 76. Assignement of Dower by the Tenant of the Freehold is good and ought to be by him 12 Ed. 3. tit 86. Perkins 78. the same Guardian in Socage cannot assigne Dower but Guardian by Knight service may 3 Ed. 3. tit 108. Perkins fol. 78 G. It appeares that Guardian by Knights service may assigne Dower Fitzh fol. 148 A. Where the Husband was seised of diverse Tenements and Manners and the Sheriff assignes the VVife which recovers one Mannor and a whole Advowson it is good for it is an infinite work to assigne part of every Acre 12 E. 4. fol. 2. If the Husband hath three Mannors and during the marriage charges them with a Rent and dyes if the wife take the third part of every Mannor she shall hold it discharged but if she take one Manner onely she shall hold two parts charged 17 Ed. 2 tit 164. It seemes it is good barr in Assignement that her Husband before the marriage granted by Deed to her a Rent in the name of Dower to which she agreed after his death 20 Ed. 4 fol. 3 in Dower but inquire Rent assigned out of Land of which she is dowable without Deed is good but out of other Land it is not 33 H. 6. fol. 2 B. Assignement of Rent out of the same Land of which she is Dowable is good barr in Dower if shee agree 7 H. 6 fol. 36. Perkins fol. 76 D. the same If a woman recover in a VVrit of Dower shee
not good without concluding and so not Parson 7 E. 4. fol. 16. Assise and Trespass Diversity between pleadings in Assise and Trespass for in Trespass need not make Title under Possession otherwise in Assise TRespasse the Defendant ought to convey to him an Estate immediate and for that to say that J. S. was seised till by J. D. disseised which infeoffed the Plaintiff upon whom J. S. entered whose Estate he hath it is not good but if the Defendant saith that he was seised till by the Plaintiff disseised upon whom he entered it is good but not in Assise 5 H. 7. f. 11. Trespasse the Defendant saith that he was seised till by the Plaintiff disseised and he entered and it is good and he need not to convey to him a Title and the Plaintiff saith that he was seised till by the Defendant disseised without that that he disseised the Defendant for if the Defendant had first Possession it is good in Trespasse 26 H. 8. f. 6. Trepasse the Defendant may plead Fine with Proclamation Judgement if Action but not relie upon Estoppell 17 H. 8. f. 27. Trespasse the Defendant pleads his Free-hold the Plaintiff saith that he was seised in Fee till disseised by the Defendant and he re-entered and the Trespasse in the mean time the Defendant maintains his Barr without that that he disseised the Plaintiff 1 Ed. 4. f. 3. Trespasse the Defendant pleads Gift in Tail to his Ancestor and conveys to him by divers Discents the Plaintiff saith that he was seised in Fee and traversed the Gift and it is good and need not make Title beyond his Possession otherwise of Assise 3 Ed. 4. f. 19. Trespasse to plead a Feoffment of the Plaintiff it seems to be good or he may say that he himself was seised but in Assise Feoffment of the Plaintiff is no Plea for that amounts to no wrong no Disseisin 15 Ed. 4. f. 31. 29. Book of Ass 24. Trespasse if the Defendant plead that he was infeoffed the Plaintiff may traverse the Feoffment without making to him Title otherwise it is in an Assise 18 Ed. 4. f. 10.10 Ed. 4. f. 3.27 H. 6. f. 1. 40 Ed. 3. f. 5. Trespasse the Defendant saith that H. his Tenant at will infeoffed the Plaintiff and he entered the Plaintiff saith that J. S. infeoffed H. and he died seised and his Issue infeoffed me the Defendant cannot traverse the Feoffment but the Discent otherwise it is in Assise 10 H. 4. f. 1. Assise by Littleton the Tenant may plead let to him for years or for life the Reversion to the Plaintiff and it is good and so is it of a Feoffment with Warranty of the Plaintiff and relie upon Warranty 18 Ed. 4. fol. 10. 8 Ed. 2. Tit. Ass 391. 18 Ed. 3 f. 13. the same Assise the Tenant pleads that the Plaintiff let to him for life and is good but a Feoffment of the Plaintiff is not good in Assise but in Trespasse it is good 6 H. 7. f. 14.27 Book of Ass 31. the same 29. Book of Ass 24. Trespasse at Compton over C. and neither C. it is no Plea in Trespasse but it is good in Assise 8 H. 6. f. 18. Trespasse at D. there are two Dd. within the County and none without addition it is no Plea for the Visne shall be of the Body of the County 3 Ed. 4. f. 26. and 9 H. 6. Tit. 5. the same Assise of Lands in Osgodby the Tenant saith there are two Osgodbyes within the County none without addition and it is no Plea for the Plaintiff shall recover by view of the Jurors 5 Book of Assises 9 and 27 Ed. 3. f. 2 Trespasse in Otterton and H. which H. is a Hamlet of Otterton it is a good Plea in Precipe and not in Trespasse where Damages onely are recovered 7 E. 4. f. 18 4 E. 4 Tit Breif 155 179. Trespasse may be in a Hamlet but not in a place onely known 11 H. 7 fol. 24 2 R. 3. fol. 1 43 E. 3. fol. 30 the same Precipe in D. is a good Plea in Abatement that D. is a Hamlet and not a Town but otherwise it is in Assise 8 E. 4. f. 6 Pleas in Barr. Barr is good at the first shew or by common reason and intent such intent is a Plea which hath not more vehement presumption then to intend contrary but if the intent be indifferent it is not good at the first shew by Intendment FOrmedon in Discender that he gave not is good and yet it may be that he did recover in value but the most pressing Intendment is to the contrary but if in Debt I plead Release bearing Date after the Obligation it is not good at the first face unlesse he saith that it was delivered after the Obligation Plowd Com. f 32 Forging of Deeds the Defendant saith that he himself was seised at the time of the Forgery and it might be by Disseisin but it shall not be intended and for that it is good at the first shew 8 H. 6. f. 34 Trespasse that he entered into a Warren the Defendant pleads his Free-hold and it is good and yet one may have the Warren and another the Free-hold 44 E. 3. f. 12 17 E. 4. f. 6 10 H. 7. f. 24 34 H. 6. f. 28 Trespasse in a severall fishing the Defendant pleads that the place is his Free-hold and is good as above at the first face 18 H. 6. f. 29 10 H. 7. f. 24 20 H. 6. f. 4 17 E. 4. f. 6 18 E. 4. f. 4 Assise of Mortdancester because his Mother took the habit of Religion the Defendant saith that your Mother had a Husband alive when she entered into Religion and it is not good for it is indifferent whether he be alive or not and for that he ought to aver that the Husband is yet alive 5 E. 4. f. 3 Trespasse of Goods c. the Defendant justifies that the property was to J. S. which gave them to him at D. and though he do not say where the property was in him it shall be intended at D. and good 1 E. 5. f. 3 It is said there though the Barr be good to common intent yet it shall not be good where parcell of the substance is left out but where such things are left out which by special intendment and not by general intendment are omitted the Law shall keep such a barr Plowd Com fol 27. Accounts the Defendant saith that he hath accounted before the Plaintiffe himself and it is good yet he doth not say that he was before Auditors before him c. 4 Ed. 4. fol. 6. Trespasse the Defendant pleads that he to whose use enfeoffed him and doth not say if he were out of Prison and of full age according to the Statute and yet being in Barre it was said that it shall be so intended 6. H. 7. fol. 6. Where Count is upon matter of Reords or of Specialty the Barre shall be
for life to bind the Fee in Reversion Tenant ought to pray aid of him in remainder and they ought to vouch 25 H. 8. Tit. Recoverie in value 33. where Tenant for life vouches a stranger and the Demandant recovers and he over in value this shall not go to him in Reversion and shall not bind him 27 H. 8. Tit. Recovery in value 28. Tenant in Tailremainder over Entrie in the Post gainst Tenant in Tail and he vouches over this is a recompence and shall barr the remainder Pleas in Court Baron Count upon Lending J. S. complains against T.D. in a Plea of Debt of thirty Shillings four pence for that that is to say c. and thereof the same J.S. by W. T. his Attorney saith that when the aforesaid T.D. tenth day of February the year of the Reigne of Elizabeth now Queen of England twentieth at Islington within the Jurisdiction of this Court borrowed of the aforesaid J.S. the aforesaid thirty shillings four pence to be paid to the sald J.S. when he was required notwithstanding the aforesaid T.D. though he hath been often required the aforesaid thirty shillings and four pence hath not restored it to the said J.S. but to him to pay them as yet hath denied and yet doth denie upon which he saith that he is damnified and hath losse to the value of ten shillings and thereof bringeth his Suit Form of a Plaint in a Court Aaron upon buying of Oyland Madder c. G.B. complaineth agrinst R.C. in a Plea of Debt thirty Shillings four pence for that that is to say that when the aforesaid R.C. eleventh day of April the year of of the Lord 1540. at J. within the Jurisdiction of this Court bought of the said G. B. fourteen gallons of oyl called Meat oyl for fifteen Shillings and three pence one Hundred of Madder for fifteen shillings a penny to be paid to the said G.B. when he should be required which truly in all doth amount to the sum of the aforesaid thirty Shillings four pence notwithstanding the aforesaid R.C. although he hath been often requested the said thirty Shillings four pence to the said G.B. hath not restored but that to him as yet to restore hath denied and yet doth denie by reason whereof he is the worse and hath losse to the value of ten Shillings and therefore bringeth his suit c. and the foresaid R.G. by J.A. his Attorney comes and defends the force and injury when c. and saith that he doth not owe to the aforesaid G.B. the aforesaid thirty Shillings and four pence nor any penny thereof in Form in which the said G.B. complains against him therefore it is considered that the said R.C. should wage his Law and put in two Sureties for the Law J.M. and R.J. and should come with his Law here at the next Court in proper person and it is said to the aforesaid Attorney of the aforesaid R. T. that then he should have here the said R.C. his Master in his proper person to finish his Law aforesaid c. Plaint for accusing a man of Pelony and imprisoning him T.H. complaines against S. D. for that that is to say that when the said Complaint a true and faithfull Liege-man and Subject of our Lady the Queen now and of her Progenitors of the Kingdom of England from the time of his Birth did appear alwayes and as a true Liegeman of our said Lady the Queen and all her Progenitors aforesaid from all the time aforesaid without any Crime of Theft stealing Felony or any other notorious Crime whatsoever from the time of his Birth hitherto hath carried had and kept himself and so with all honest men was reputed and accounted by reason of which name of Honor Fame and Coversation the same Complainant much and great gain and profit to the maintenance of his Living did get and had the foresaid Defendant notwithstanding not ignorant of the Premises the eighteenth Day of July the year of the Reign of our Lady Elizabeth the sixth at J. within the Jurisdiction of this Court out of his meer malice and ill minde threatning and envying the good Report Living Degree state and condition of the said Plaintiff and to blot it and to bring the Complainant into an ill name and Danger of his Life as much as in him lay spoke certain false malicious and scandalous words of the aforesaid Complainant and did publish and openly say that T. H. meaning the said Complainant hath robbed me of forty pounds of money by reason of which scandalous and false words proclaiming and publishing the said Plaintiff not onely in his good name and same for which aforetime he was know and reputed with many honest men and cheifly with J.A. Inholder greatly hurt and wronged he did appear and did incurr and fall into great Infamy and Discredit with the said J. H. and many other of the said Queens now faithfull Subjects Likewise W. G. and W. C. the Constables of L. aforesaid by reason of an ill opinion by them conceived by reason of the said Scandall against the foresaid Complainant published then by reason of the open speaking of those words that the foresaid Complainant was guilty of the Felony aforesaid afterwards that is to say the eighteenth Day of July they took the Complainant and imprisoned him in a Prison of the said Queens called c. Scituate c. In which Prison the said Plaintiff from the said eighteenth Day of Iuly till the twentieth Day of the same Moneth of Iuly for the cause aforesaid was detained which twentieth Day of Iuly the Plaintiff from the said Prison to the Prison c. of the said Queens in c. Scituate c. was removed and then and there imprisoned and in prison from the said twentieth Day of Iuly till the eight and twenty Day of the said Moneth of Iuly for the said cause was detained so that the same Plaintiff not onely suffered and sustained great Cost and Charges by the occasion of his Restraint and Imprisonment but also lost wholly many great profits and gaines which of the said Subjects he might have gained for his maintenance and living if the said scandalous and malicious words so openly proclaimed had not occasioned it to the losse of the said Plaintiff c. three and thirty shillings and four pence and thereof brings his Suit c. Trespass Plaint for walking with his Feet J.R. complaineth against T. B. that is to say in a Plea why by force and armes the Close of the said J. R. at D. he broke and his Grasse to the value of five and thirty shillings and eight pence there late growing walking with his Feet trod down and spoiled and other Injuries offered to him to the great losse of the said J. R. and against the peace of our Lady the Queen now c. and whereof the said J. R. saith that when the aforesaid T.B. the seven and twentieth Day of Ianuary in the year of the Reign of
Affraies and blood-shed but not if one hath broken my Close or if one hath beaten me but if any Affray were so that the Kings People were disturbed for that is more then particuler 1 R. 3 fol. 1. If one come to make a Boothe and doth it not and yet one maketh a Fray upon him and upon him draw blood with his Sword or Dagger it is punishable by presentment in Leet 11 H. 6. fol. 29. If one assault to beat you and you fly and he inclose you or if you be at Hedge or Ditch and then you beat him and wound him this is not punishable in a Leet 34 H. 6. fol. 8. and 33. H. 6. fol. 20. If J. S. makes an Assault upon a Stranger and J. D. draws his Sword and beats and wounds J. S. in defence of the Stranger this is punishable by a presentment in a Leet But if a Servant beat and wound one which maketh an assault upon his Master in defence of his Master he is not punishable by presentment in Leet 12 H. 8. fol. 3. and 9 Ed. 4. fol. 51. If one lay his hands unlawfully upon any unlesse that he arrest him or part two that fight he is a trespassor but that is not punishable by presentment in Leet 9 Ed 4. fo 3. If one beat one in defence of his Goods this is not punishable in a presentment in Leet Booke of Entries fol. 553. and 19. H. 6. fol 21. Trespss of Assaults and Fraies TRespass by a Chaplain of Grayes Inne the Defendant pleads of his own Assault and it was held if he upon whom the Assault is made can escape with his life it is not lawfull for him to beate the other which made the Assault but it is held that I ought not to stay till the other hath given me a blow for paradventure he commeth too short 2 H. 4. fol. 9.10 Ed. 4. fol. 7. Trespasse of Grassetrod and threatning of life and member a man cannot justifie the menace of death and for that to that he pleads not guilty 21 H. 6. tit 26. the same 33 H. 6. fol. 20. Trespasse of Threatning by Prisot I cannot threaten one of Life and Member but if he upon whom the Assault is made fly and the other followeth him so neere that he cannot escape or hath him under him upon the Ground or hath chased him to a Wall Hedge Water or Ditch there it is lawfull for him to say if you will not depart that he to save his Life will kill him 3 H. 4. fol. 8 Trespasse of Assault Imprisonment and Battery Defendant plead to the Battery not guilty and to the Assault that the Plantiff came to such a River where the Defendant had a Mill and would have stopt the River and the Defendant took him by the Arme without that that he made other Assault and to the Imprisonment the Defendant pleads that the Plantiff Assaulted him and would have beate him by which he prayed the Constable to arrest him and he came in aid of him judgment if action and good 22 H. 6. fol. 48. Trespasse of a Servant beaten and Entry into his House yeare 7 H. 6. Defendant saith that yeare 8 H. 6. he served a Subpena upon the Plaintiff and that the Plaintiff and the Servant took him and carried him to his House and there deteined him half a day which is the same Trespasse and to any Trespasse before not guilty to the Battety of his Servant which was of his Assault at another day and to any Assault before not guilty Bracton saith he is not worthy of Peace which will not keep it Stamford fol. 30 a. 40 Ed. 3. fol. 40. Trespasse of Assault and Battery and found the Assault only and Plaintiff recover but shall not have action of Assault only 42 Ed 3 fol 7 the same and see 22 Assise 60. 9 Ed 4 fol 30 Trespasse of Battery it was held that if a man will take my goods I may lay my hands upon him and rather beate him then suffer him to carry them away 19 H. 6. fol. 33 the same that he may beat one in defence of his Goods 19 Ed 4 fol 189 Trespasse of Battery a man may Justifie the beating of another in his defence but by Catesby a man cannot beat another in defence of his Son but a Servant may beat one in defence of his Master or Mistris 21 H 7 fol 39. the same Mortmaine Mortmaine is inquirable in a Leet for that it is for the benefit of the King and in the Kings Court What is Mortmaine within the Statute and what not WHere one Abbot aliens to another Abbor or Bishop to another Bishop and his Successor it is Mortmaine Fitzh fol 222 D. 16 Assise 1. VVhere Land is divised to one to pay twelve pound to finde two Chaplaines for ever to sing in the Church of Saint Albanes in Wood street for ever if it be behinde that the Chaplaine may distraine that is Mortmaine see 32 Ed 3 10 and 40. Assise 29. J. S. deviseth certaine Land to his Executors that they should provide a fit Chaplaine in the Church of D. to celebrate for ever which Chaplaine shall receive yearly out of the aforesaid Lands six markes that is no Mortmaine for nothing is divised to the Chaplaine 4 Assise 27.43 Assise 27. Foure Acres were devised to one in Fee so that he and his Heires should pay yearly six pound for the maintaining of one Chaplaine to celebrate yearly for ever in the Church of Saint Leonards in Estcheape and that the Rector for the time may levie it for ever that is Mortmaine 43 Assise 33. J. S. deviseth Land and two shillings Rent for the maintaining of a Chaplaine in the Church of D. yearly to celebrate and I will that my Executors should ordaine the aforesaid Chaplaine and the Executors do nothing therefore no Mortmaine 43 Assise 34. If a Villain of a Bishop purchase Lands in Fee and the Bishop enter without license it is Mortmaine 41 of Assises 4 Fitzh 224 B. 41 Ed. 3. fol 16. If a Feoffment be made to the use of a Bishop and his Successors it is within the Statute De religiosis and so it is where he takes profits 8 Ed 4. fol. 18. A Bishop cannot appropriate an Advowson of which he is seised in Fee without the Kings license and if he doth it is Mortmaine Fitzh 223 H. see 21 Ed. 3. fol 5. seemeth contrary If one let to a religious man for a hundred yeares and so from a hundred to a hundred during eight hundred yeares this is Mortmaine but it seemeth that a lease to a Religious man for eighty years or for a hundred yeares is no Mortmaine but in the first case it is by colour of a Tearme and Mortmaine 29 H 8 Mortmaine 39. Lease for eighty years to an Abbot by Martin is Mortmain Quere 4 H. 6. fol. 9. The Tenant lets for life to J. S. the Remainder to a Religious and his Successors the Lord need
Escheat 7 H. 4. fol. 18. the same 6 H. 4. fol. 5. Lord and Tenant within age the Tenant is disseised and dyes without heire the Lord may enter by Escheat The same Law is if he being an Infant tenant alien and dyes without heire the Lord shall have by Escheat Fitzh fol. 144. A. If Tenant in taile dye without heire he in reversion shall not have a Writ of Escheat But if Tenant in taile the remainder to his right heires and dyes without heire then the Lord of whom the Tenant in taile holds shall have a Writ of Escheat Fitzh 144. E. Where the Tenant is a Bastard and dyes without Issue this Land shall Escheat Tit. Escheat 34. B. Where there is a Bastard eldest and a legittimate younger and the Bastard enters and dyes seised without Issue the Land shall not Escheat Natura brevium fol. 103. If the Tenant be disseised and is attaint of Felony the Lord may enter by Escheate Abridgement of Assise fol. 88. Lord and Tenant the tenant being within age aliens and dyes without heire the Lord may enter by Escheat 6 E. 3. Statham If my Tenant within age alien in Fee and dyes without heire I may enter by Escheat the same Law is if my tenant within age be disseised and dyes without heire I may enter by Escheat Stamf. 42. If any free tenant of any Bishop be attaint for Felony during the time of the vacation the King shall have Escheat of his Lands By Prerogative ch 14. Fitzh 144. O. If the Lord have title to have a Writ of Escheat if he accept Homage of his tenant he shall not have a Writ of Escheat against him afterwards 7 H. 4. fol. 18. Lord and Tenant the Tenant is disseised and dyes without heire the Lord may enter for right of entry may Escheat against a Disseisor but if the Disseisor dye or alien the Lord cannot enter by Escheat upon the heire of the Disseisor nor upon the Alience 22 Book of Assises 49. The King shall have the Lands by Escheat of one attainted of high Treason of whomsoever hee hold notwithstanding of petty Treason the Lord shall have them 29 Book of Assise 61. Note that Lands in taile shall not Escheat for the Felony or attainder of his Father but by the Statute of 5 6 Ed. 6. chap. 11. for high treason the King shall have his Lands 6 H. 7. fol. 9. by Keble Right of entry may Escheat as where the Disseisee dyes without heire or is attaint of Felony the Lord may enter 7 Ed. 6. tit 18. It was held If there he Lord and Tenant by Fealty and Rent the Tenant is disseised the Disseisee dyes without heire the Lord accepts the Rent by the hands of the Disseisor yet he may enter for Escheat or have a Writ of Escheat and the receit of the Rent no Barr contrary if he had avowed for that in Court of Record or if he had taken corporall service as Homage c. Contrary of acceptance of Rent by the hands of the heire of the Disseisor or of his Feoffee 48 Ed. 3. fol. 2. by Belk Where a man commits Felony and after purchase Land or Land discends to him after this is forfeited and Escheated as well as the Land which he had time of the Felony made 22 H. 6. fol. 37. by Newton A man seised of Land in fee goes beyond the Sea to B. out of the Kings Allegiance without the Kings license and there marries a Wife and there hath Issue and dwells there all his life and dyes without other Issue his Land shall Escheat and none other of the blood shall inherite 1 R. 3. fol. 4. by Hussey He which is borne beyond Sea and his Father and Mother English and faithfull to our King that their Issue shall inherite by the Common Law but the Statute makes that cleer and his Lands shall not Escheat 9 H. 7. fol. 2. If Tenant of the King dyes without heire and none enters the Freehold is in the King without Office by Escheate But if Tenant of the King alien in Mortmaine it is not in the King without Office 27 H. 8. tit Office 90. Br Where one is attaint by Parliament his Lands are not in the King by Escheat to grant over without Office 29 H. 8. tit 52. Charter of pardon Br. The King may be intituled to goods without Office by Outlawry but not to Lands 38 H. 8. title Thing in action 211. Br By the Statute of 31 H. 8. gives to the King possession of Lands of Monastries without Office for the words are that the King shall be in possession of them yet if an Abbat were disseised of foure Acres of land the King cannot grant that over before entry made by him into it Time of H. 8. tit 119. Pre. Br It seemes that the King shall not have a Precipe quod reddat as a Writ of Escheat but his title shall be found by Office Time of Ed. 6. tit Denizen 17. Where an Alien born purchaseth the King shall have it but the purchase ought to be found by Office 33 H. 8. tit Fines levied 115. Title Office before Escheator 60 Br King shall have Chattels without Office but not Ward 2 H. 7. fol. 8. The King may re-enter without demand where there is a clause of re-entry in his Lease but then that shall be found by Office Tit. Escheat 23. Br Alien borne hath Issue a Son and after is made Denizen and after hath Issue another Sonne and purchase Land and dyes the youngest Sonne shall have the Land and not the eldest nor the Lord by Escheat Tit. Escheat 29. B. VVhere a man is attaint of Heresie and delivered to Lay men to be burnt yet he shall not forfeit his Land unlesse he be put in execution and there by the execution the Lord shall have Escheat unlesse the Land be held of the Ordinary then the King shall have it Enquest FOR that that you try your Copy-holders and other Issues by consent by Jury let us see how many shall be sworn of a Jury The Statute of Westm 2. chap. 13. is that the Sheriff shall inquire by twelve and not by lesse and the same Law shall be in Leet and for that that this Statute doth not extend to Court-Baron Presentment of Articles there by lesse then twelve may be for one may hold Court-Baron though there be but two Suitors and then they may inquire by two of Articles for the Lord but hard it is when every one is inheritable to the Lawes of the Realme and the triall of the Law is by twelve of Issue joyned between party and party that by your not power that is to say that there should not be twelve Tenants of every Jury to take from me my Triall which the Law gives to me and if you will try Issue by lesse then twelve you may impannell three or foure of the Freinds to the parties and to have no number certain under twelve but to have such a