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A85670 Bouleutērion, or A practical demonstration of county judicatures. Wherein is amply explained the judiciall and ministeriall authority of sheriffs. Together with the original, jurisdiction, and method of keeping all countrey courts. / By Will: Greenwood, philomath. Greenwood, Will. William. 1659 (1659) Wing G1870; Thomason E1789_1; ESTC R209680 323,562 484

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office how derived 279 When first established ibid. His office is duplicate viz. general and special 280 and 281 What person ought to be a Coroner and how qualified 281 282 283 Of the number of Coroners in each County 284 Of the power and jurisdiction of Coroners ibid. What persons are to be of the Coroners Inquest and how qualified 286 287 The Method of keeping the Coroners Court 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 His Ministerial power 294 His Fees ibid. Custome to pull downe houses and cut downe trees not good 368 Constables 327 Crossebows 337 Copiholder may not let longer then a year and a day 355 Copihold granted by a disseisor may be avoided by the disseisee 357 But admittance upon surrenders good ibid. None can passe a larger estate then he hath ibid. Copiholder What person is sufficient to be a Copiholder 358 What interest he hath in his estate ibid. 359 Husband to a woman Copiholder shall not be tenant by the Curtesie without speciall custome 360 The heire of a Copyholder not bound to come to any Court during his non-age ibid. Whether a Copyholder may lop trees ibid. Copyholders for life cannot claim custome to cut down and sell trees 361 No tenant by the Curtesie or Dower shall be of Copyhold lands 361 An estate taile cannot be of Copyhold lands without use ibid. Copyholder may assigne one to essoin for him but not to do his service 362 Copy-hold not extendable by Statute-Staple but it is upon the Statute of Bankrupts not lyable to any charge of the Lord 363 Common Nusance 327 Common Pownds 328 Common Barretors 331 Curriers 336 Court-Baron 349 How Court-Barons were first instituted 352 VVhat parts a Court-Baron doth consist of 338 Court-Baron cannot be separated from a Mannor 337 The difference between Court-Leet and Court-Baron 340 341 Of the time When and the place Where the Court is to be kept 342 The manner of keeping the Court ibid. and 343 344 The charge of the Court 345 D DUces tecum What 14 Declaration What it is 14 15 Modo forma 15 Demurrer what 18 Distress what good and What not 26 27 28 29 30 31 Ditches hedges and high-Wayes kept and scoured 330 Discontinuance one seized in the right of his wife surrenders it and dies no discontinuance to the wife 370 E ESsoin what it is 14 Execution in the County Court and What goods may be taken upon it and what not 32 33 34 Where the under Sheriffe justified the breaking of three doors to do execution 185 Elegit Where it lies 71 174 What it is 176 The Sheriffe may take a moyety of the Lands of the Conusor and all his goods and chattels and the valuation of the goods and lands must be found by inquisition ibid. He must return the extent and that he hath delivered the Lands 177 Term of years delivered in execution upon Elegit good and also rents ibid. The Sheriffe must return the moyety distinctly unlesse they be tenants in common ibid. He cannot deliver a Lease at another value then What the Iury had found it at ibid. Goods cannot be sold by the owner after the Teste of the Elegit ib. An execution valuable Without satisfaction ibid. VVhere a Cap. lies after an Elegit 178 Lands sold after judgement shall be liable to satisfie it ibid. Two Writs of Elegit delivered to the Sheriff at one time how to be executed ibid. Several Elegits may issue into Counties ibid. No Cap. ad sat nor fieri fac doth lie after an Elegit and why 179 An Elegit sued after one is taken for the Protetectors fine he shall go at large 181 Escapes 208 What an Escape is ibid. For felony it is felony in him that suffers the escape ibid. If a prisoner escape yet upon fresh suit and taken he shall be in execution ibid. One in execution cannot go out of the Goale though with the assent of the Sheriffe ibid. The Protector cannot command without Writ to free a man c. ibid. If the Sheriffe die and one breakes the Goale no escape 209 If a woman-Goaler marry a Prisoner adjudged an escape ibid. It is no escape if Prisoners be removed out of the County that they may be removed to another place within the same County but not for their ease for then it is an escape ibid. The Sheriff upon fresh suit may take a prisoner in another County ibid. No felony in the Goaler to kill a prisoner that attempteth to escape ibid. All that come into the Goale ought to be kept close and safe ibid. One taken upon a Cap. by a wrong name c. a Testat issued out against him by his right name and was taken in Execution and suffered him to escape and the Sheriffe was judged answerable for the escape 210 A mans wife taken in execution and suffered to go at large before the debt satisfied adjudged an escape ibid. A reprisall by fresh suit before the action brougt excusable but a reprisall after the action brought no excuse 211 212 213 Exigents and Proclamations to be proclaimed five County dayes 10 Extendi facias what 168 Election of Parliament men how and when they are to be elected 216 Who may be electors 217 Time when they are to be elected ibid. What persons are elegible and what not 218 Punishment of Sheriffes for their negligence in elections or returnes 219 Penalties on Counties and places for not electing ibid. Escape voluntary what 326 Escape negligent what ibid. Evesdroppers 338 Estrayes 340 F FEes to the County Clerke 54 To the Attorney in the County Court 55 To the Bayliffe for executing Processe out of the County Court 55 56 Fees of the Sheriff 221 222 223 VVhat fees the Vnder Sheriffe of Middlesex useth to take 223 Fees payd by the Sheriffe in rendring his accompts into the Exchequer 225 226 227 Fees of the Coroner 294 Fees of the Court-Baron 373 374 Fieri facias where it lies 71 174 VVhat it is 183 The Sheriff must be cautious in executing this Writ c. ibid. If he for a debt of twenty pounds takes goods and sells them for forty pounds he may keep the surplusage till the Defendant demand it of him ibid. Sale upon a Fi. fa. shall stand though judgment be after reversed 184 Vpon a judgment against an Executor or Administrator no Cap. ad sat lies but a Fi. fa. c. but if a Devast be returned then a Cap. ad sat or a Fi. fa. de benis propriis c. ibid. After Scire fac no Elegit lies until the tenant be warned but a Fi. fa. doth ibid. Goods taken upon a Fi. fa. and no buyers found an order to levy the goods and lands of the Bayliffe ibid. If no goods be found the Sheriffe may sell a Lease for years c. ibid. A Scire facias issued out against an old Sheriffe after a new one elected for money levied by him c. 185 Bond taken by the Sheriff not within the Stat. ibid. VVhere
sealers of leather Vnlawfull games Shooters in handguns Croshowes c. Fry of fish Phesant and Partridges Hawking or hunting with spaniels c. Tracing of hare Breaking of ponds Evesdropers Musters Horses infected Watch and Ward Mortmaine Treasure trove Waifes Estrayes c. Conclusion Proclamation The Oath Adjournment What a Mannor is L. Dyer How Mannors were created F. N. B. 3. 8 Leonards Reports first part 33. Marsh against Smith Customary Mannor what Co. 11. 17. 18. Sr. Henry Nevils case 17. E 3. fo 8. Bolstrod first part fo 54. Mich. 8. Jac. Lamb fo 128. 146. Cambden Brit. 1216. Britton fo 274 Mirror cap. 1. Sect. 3. 12 Eliz. Dyer 288. Brownlows rep 175. Bolstrod 1. part fol. 54. Bolstrod 1. part fol. 57. Of the Lord. Of the Steward The Freeholders The Copyholders The Bayliff Fleata lib. 2. cap. 73. Mag. Char. c. 35. 31 E. 3 cap. 15. Coo. l. 4. 26. 6. 27. Owens Reports fol. 35. Mic. 13. 14 Eliz. Leonards Rep. 133. Marsh against Smith Co. 4 fol. 24. Murrell and Smith and fo 27. Cliftons case The Stile of the Court. Proclamation Essoyn Plaint Amerciament Jurrors The Foremans oath The oath of the rest Proclamation The tenants are obliged to appeare at every three weeks end at the Lords Court-Baron What tenants are dead since the last Court What lands he held and by what service Who is his next heire Knights service what it is Homage fealty and Escuage Knights service Knights service is done by a man in propria persona In Scobels acts in Wards c. See the Act of Parliament for the taking away of the Court of Wards If Tenant by Knights service made any Feofmēt to his heir Alenation by collusion holding by Knights service Feofment to his use the land holden in Knights service Entry for Conditions broken Disseizin of the Tenant and death before any re-entry What Soccage tenure is Reliefe is as much money as one years rent Copyholder If tenant by Socage made any feofment to his use Whether any Freeholder hath aliened any of his freehold Lands Herriot service Herriot custom Whether any Copyholder died seized of any such Lands How a Copyholder ought to surrender his Copy-hold Whether any Copyholder hath made any surrender Mortmain What Mortmain is Waste What waste is and how the same is committed Whether any tenant in possessiō or reversion died seized without any heir A Bastard may not inherit Whether any tenant died being put out of his land by one that had no right to Petty Treason felony or murder committed of any Tenant for which he was hanged or had judgment to be hanged Whether there be any rents lost or services with-drawn Whether the Tenants do uphold and repair their tenements Whether any tenāt hath with-drawn his services Waife and stray Rescous What it is Breach of pownd Whether any Tenant hath let any Farm fall to decay viz. not maintained for husbandry as before If any have overcharged the common or high wayes or put Cattel in them before the dayes agreed upon If any persons have made pits in the high wayes breaking of hedges c. Stopping of wayes waters c. Whether any have encroached Whether any have removed any marks Whether any have stalked with bush or beast Whether any have or do keep away any Evidences Whether any have fished fowled c. Whether any have taken any Feasants c. Swans or swans eggs Concealed land Trespass in the corne grass c. For inclosing in several grounds without the L. licence c. A Copyholder may not let longer then a yeare and a day Granting greater estates Whether the Baylifs c. do execute their office Whether the defaults plaints be amended Conclusion Adjournment The discharge of the Court. A Copyhold granted by a Disseisor may be avoyded by the Disseisee But admittance upon surrenders c. good Owen Rep. fol. 115. Trin. 1 Iet rot 853. None can passe it larger estate then he hath Copyhold estates not to be avoyded for dower What person is sufficient to be a Copyholder Eliz. Dyer 301. What interest a Copyholder hath in his estate 8 Eliz. Leonards rep first part fo 8. Mich. 25. 26 Eliz. Copyholder and Tenant at will Bolstrod first part fo 51. 7 E. 4. Tenant may have an action of Trespass against the Lord. Husband to a woman Copy-holder shall not be tenant by the Curtesie without speciall custome The heire of a Copyholder not bound to come to any Court during his nonage Whether or no a Copyholder may lop trees Copyholder for life cannot claim custome to cut downe and sell trees No tenant by the Curtesie nor Dower shall be of Copyhold lands Leonard rep 1 part 126. An estate tayle cannot be of Copyhold lands without use Crook 1 part fo 31. 32. Poph. fol. 38. A Copyholder may assigne one to essoyn for him but not to do his service Copyhold not extendible by Stat. Stap. but it is upon the Stat. of Bankrupts not lyable to any charge of the Lord c. Upon a surrender action lies not against the Lord for refusing admittance In ministeriall offices action lies against him that will not do his office but not so in cases of trust A surrender to the Lord good A surrender to the use of another c. In a surrender it matters not if the party to whom it is be precisely expressed c. Surrender to the Lord c. Surrender to A. B. until be marry C. D. c. Surrender to the use of a stranger c. Surrender to A. B's use if he pay 20 l. at a day c. Surrender to the Lord to the use of I. S. paying 100 l. c. Surrender to the use of one for life c. Copyhold may be extinguished without an actual surrender Huttons Rep. fo 65. Blemerhassets case Leonard first part 133. Leonard first part 124. Poph. fol. 39. Lanes Rep. 20. A surrenderer of a Copyhold cannot surrender before admittance Poph. fo 128. No surrender by an Attorney without deed but an admittance may be Crook first part fo 142. 28 H. 8. Dyer fo 24. pl. 151. Plow fo 273. b. in Say Fullers case 14 H. 8. fo 14. b. Coo. 6. 35. Bolstrod first part so 50. A forfeiture to build and pull down again No good custom to pull downe houses or cut down trees c. Bolstrod first part fo 51. 52. A Copyholder by the common law without special custome cannot make a Lease for one yeare but it is a forfeiture Crook first rep fo 169. A lease for one year by a Copy-holder c. a forfeiture Bolstrod rep first part f. 215. Lutterels case Mich. 8 Jac. B. R. rot 602. Hetleyes rep fo 122. A Copyholder may inclose where it hath been formerly inclosed and may digg Ma●l but it must be laid upon the some land Winches rep fo 8 The heir may take the profits before admittance and make a lease c. Poph. rep fo 39 To refuse to pay a Fine certain is a forfeiture Or refuse to appear at his Lords Court Some excusive reasons why he may not appear at the Lords Court A general warning of the Court within the parish is sufficient Leonards first part fo 133. Hetleys rep fo 7. One seised in the right of his wife surrenders it and dyes no discontinuance to the wife Co. rep 4. 23 Co. super lit fo 61. a. b. Fleta lib. 2. cap. 26. How he may be retained Co. rep 4. 30. Dyer 8. Eliz. 248. Leonards first part fo 309. Co. 4. of Copy-holds fo 143. Carthrop sc 47. 2 H. 4. 24. Leonards first part fo 299. How he may forfeit his office Co. 4. rep of Copyholds fo 146 c. Mr. Kitchin in his Jurisdiction of Courts c. A pain set for an incroachment A pain set for the amending of the same c. The finding of a pain forfeited The verdict of homage touching their former charge A Surrender and remise of lands made in Court before the Steward and the examination of the wife A Surrender made by one to his mother of lands for her life the reversion to the Son againe and his heires The definition of Pypowder 8 H. 7. fol. 4. b. St. 17. E. 4. c. 2. 1. R. 3. c. 6. Bolstrod 2. part fol. 21. Cro. 1. part fol. 33. Prescription 13 E. 4. fo 8. b. Hil. 33 Eliz. Rot. 124. Pypowders by way of grant confirmation 12 H. 7. fo 16. b. 13 H. 7. fo 19. 13 E. 3. fo 8. b. Old book of Ent. 168. Fit dette en Gailor pl. 1. fol. 18. Fit account in Execution pl. 3. 6 E. 4. fol. 3. b. The Steward is Judge 7 E. 4. fol. 23. This Court is incident to a Fare or Market and by a grant of them it passeth 19 H. 8. Brookes case fol. 2. pl. 7. Brook tit incidents pl. 34. 2 3 Phil. and Mar. Dyer fol. 133. pl. 80. Co. 10. fol. 73. Bracton lib. 5. fol. 335. De brevi de recto 1. 17 E. 4. cap. 2. No plea shall be holden in this Court unlesse the Plaintiffe or his Attorney do sweare that the contract was made during the time of the Faire Stat. 1. R. 3. cap. 6. Note
tenant such reliefe is due to the Lords maintenance so that the heire be of the age of fourteen yeares and he ought to tarry for his reliefe untill the day of payment of the Rent but he ought to have his reliefe maintenant and for that he may distrain immediately after the death of his Tenants 9. Also if a Copyholder die sole seized of any Lands or Tenements so holden his heire being of the age of fourteene yeares then he shall pay a fine unto the Lord and do Fealty and be admitted Tenant but if the heire be within the age of fourteene yeares then some Guardian shall be admitted to occupy his Copyhold and to pay and doe his service due for the same viz. If Lands descend from the Father then the Mother or some of her next kindred shall have the occupation of the same Lands untill the Heire be at age and they shall a little fine for the Guardianship and the Heire at his entry shall pay the whole fine you shall enquire thereof and present the same 10. Also you shall enquire whether any Tenant which held by Soccage Tenure did make any Feofment in fee to his use and died seized of the use his Heire being within age and no will by him declared of the use and present it for that the Lord shall have his Reliefe as well as if he had died seized of the same Lands 11. Also you shall inquire whether any Freeholder hath aliened or sold away his Free hold Lands or Tenements or any parcel of them and present it for he which hath purchased the Land before he enter ought to come and give notice unto the Lord that he hath purchased the same and so the Lord shall know his Tenant and the service which the former paid unto the Lord shall be apportioned according unto the value of the Lands 12. Also you shall enquire whether any that held by Herriot service or Herriot custome died seized of any Lands or Tenements so holden and present it for their service shall be apportioned also the Lord shall have of every of their severall parts divers Herriots at their severall deaths Also if one man have two severall parcels of Lands holden by Herriot-service and by two severall titles and dieth seized of the same the Lord shall have after his death two Herriots 13. Also you shal enquire if any Copyholder died seized of any Lands so holden and present it also whether any Copyholder hath made any Lease of his Copyhold or otherwise aliened or sold the same and present it for it is a forfeiture of his Copyhold for if a Copy-holder will alien or sell away his Copyhold he ought to come into the Court and surrender the same into the hands of the Lord to the use of him who shall have the Estate or else out of the Court he ought to surrender it unto the Bayliffe or to some of the Tenants of the Lord-ship to the use of him who shall have the estate and they to whom the surrender is made ought to present the same at the next Court and then pay his fine for the same and take it to his use in the Court and do his endeavour to be admitted and if he be not at the same Court then the Lord shall have the meane profits of the same Lands all the rent-services and repairations being deducted until he be amerced of his fine according to his duty 14. Also you shall enquire if any Copyholder hath made any Surrender of his Copyhold or any part thereof since the last Court-day or before and present it and into whose hands it was made and in whose presence or to whose use for at every surrender the Lord ought to have a fine and the party into whose hands the surrender is made ought to come to the next Court and present the same and to yield up his right into the Lords hands to the use of the alienee according to the trust reposed in him or otherwise he forfeiteth his Copyhold except he have a treasonable excuse for that he doth as much as in him lies to defeat the Lord of his Fine and also to defeat the other party to whose use the surrenderd was made 15. Also you shall enquire if any Tenant of the Lordship have given any lands into Mortmain and present it Mortmain is if a man give or sell any lands to any House of Religion or to any other which be corporate by the Knights grant also if one make a Foefment upon trust to the use of a Religious House or to the use of a Fraternity corporate that is Mortmain Also if one exchange Lands with a body corporate this is Mortmain Also if a Religious person or other body corporate doth hold of any man by Knights service and he release unto him this is Mortmain and then the Lord may enter and shall hold the same by force you shall therefore present them that have given any Lands or tenements in Mortmain 16. Also you shall enquire whether any tenant for term of life or years or any Copiholder of this Lord-ship hath committed any waste or suffered any waste to be committed upon their Lands or Tonements Waste is when any tenant for terme of life yeares or any Copyholder pulleth downe any house or cutteth down any timber trees or suffereth the house willingly to fall being on their Copyhold Tenements or if any of the Tenants plow up any Meadow ground or if they suffer any wall or pale which were covered to be uncovered by reason whereof the same wall or pale falls into decay or if any of them dig coals chalk or sand or make any Mines in their grounds this is waste Also if they cut downe a tree to the value of three shillings four pence this is admitted waste but if a man cut down timber to repair the old houses that stand upon parcel of the same ground and therewith doth repair them then it is no waste but if he with the timber build a new house then the cutting down of such timber is waste Or if he cut down any timber to sell to repaire such houses which are fallen into decay such is waste But if waste be done with a tempest no tenant shall be punished for such waste but if waste be done by any danger the tenant shall be punished for such waste Also it is no waste to sell in a reasonable time such trees as have been selled within twenty yeares before But if Tenants cut downe such trees to burn upon their Tenements where they have wood sufficient this is waste Also a Copyholder may not cut down wood to sell but he may to burne upon his tenement or to make reparations as aforesaid 17. Also you shall enquire whether any tenant in possession or reversion died seized of any Land or Tenements holden of this Lordship having no heire at the time of his death yea or no
all the vacant and waste land within the Mannor belongeth to the Lord of the Mannor 30 You shall also enquire whether any person hath plowed up or removed away any Mere marks baulks or limits between one piece of Land and another and present it 31 Also you shall enquire if any have stalked with a bush or beast to kill Deere which is in the Lords Close or Parke and present it 32 You shall also enquire if any person hath concealeth or keepeth away any Evidences Charters or Court Rolls Customary terres or any other evidence which concerns the Lordship or any parcel thereof and present it 33 Also you shall enquire if any person have fished fowled hawked or hunted in this Lordship or Lords Warren and present it 34 You shall enquire also if any person have taken any Feasant Partridges with net snare or other Engine upon the Free-Hold of the Lord of this Mannor and present it 35 Also you shall enquire if any have taken away any Swans Signets or eggs of the Lords Swans out of their nests and present it 36 You shall likewise enquire if any lands of the Lord be concealed or kept back or occupied by any without the license of the Lord Also what land it is and how much land hath been so occupied and of what value by the yeare the same is and present it 37 Also you shall enquire if any Trespasse be done in any of the Lords liberty viz. in his Corne Grasse Meadows Pasture Woods Hedges Waters or Pounds or if any take Hawks or ayre of Hawks or such like trespasse and present them 38 You also shall enquire if any Land be inclosed and the same kept in severalty which ought to lye open without licence of the Lord and other Free-holders you shall present it for no Tenant of the Lordship shall loose the Common in the same 39 Also if any Copyholder let his Copyhold Land for longer time then a yeare and a day without licence except it be by Custome that he may let for longer time and if he do it is forfeiture and present the same 40 You shall also enquire whether any Tenant for yeares or life have granted any greater or larger estate then they had in their Lands or Tenements and present it for that is a forfeiture of their estate 41. Likewise you shall enquire if the Bayliff Headborough Constable and Hayward and all other Officers have well and truly executed their offices and present it 42. You shall likewise enquire whether all the defaults and plaints that were prosecuted at the last Court be sufficiently amended and whether all the orders and Lawes heretofore made be observed and kept and present it 43. To conclude you shall enquire of all other things by me omitted which you know to appertain to your charge and by the Oaths that you have taken you shall truly and diligently enquire of all the premisses and plainly without concealing of any fault and make a return of your presentment subscribed with your hands and sealed with your seals by three a clock in the afternoon Then command the Bayliffe to make proclamation O yes and adjourn the Court till after dinner in this manner All manner of persons that have any more to do at this Court may for this time depart and keepe their hour here at two of the clock in the afternoon After your return from Dinner if any surrenders or admittances be to be made or Actions to be tried let them be done Otherwise call the Jury for their presentments if they be ready and swear two affeerers to affer them as before at the Leet Then discharge the Court the Bayliffe making an O yes thus All manner of persons that have any more to do at this Court holden here this day let them come forth and they shall be heard otherwise they every one else may for this time depart and keep their day here upon a new warning And so God save the Lord Protector and the Lord of this Mannor Some select cases out of the new Reports and others concerning the Lord Copyholder and Copyholds Surrenders Forfeitures c. First of the Lord. HEe that is a Lord to grant and allow a Copyhold must be such a one as by Littletons definition is seised of a Mannor so that he must be in possession at the time of the grant for though he have good right and title yet if he be not in possession of the Mannor it will not serve And on the other side if he be in possession of the Mannor though he have neither right nor title thereunto yet in many cases the grant and allowance of such a Copy is good as he is Dominus de facto sed non de jure Calthrop 48. A Copyhold granted by a Disseisor or any other who hath the Mannor of which it is parcell by wrong shall be avoyded by the Disseisee or any other who hath right to the Mannor by his entry or recovery of the Mannor Pophams Rep. fo 71. Yet it was agreed that admittance upon surrenders of Copyholders in fee to the use of another or if an heire in case of a dissent of a Copyhold were good being made by a Disseisor of a Mannor or any other who hath it by Tort because these are acts of necessity and for the benefit of a stranger viz. of him who is to have the Land by the surrender or of the heire And also Grants made by Copy by the Feoffee upon Condition of a Mannor before the Condition broken are good because he was lawfully Dominus protempore ibid. If a Lord grant a Copy in Fee having but an estate for life in the Copyhold no larger estate shall passe then he himselfe hath Quia nemo potest plus juris in altenum transferre quam ipse habet Co. of Copy-holds fol. 96. If the Lord of a Mannor taketh a Wife and after maketh Copyhold estates according to the Custome and dyeth though the Feme hath this Mannor assigned unto her for her Dower yet cannot she avoyd the Copyhold estates because the Copyholders are in by a title paramount the title of the Feme viz. by Custome Co. of Copyholds 45. Secondly of the Copy-holder HE is Tenant by copy of Court-roll being admitted of Lands or Tenements within a Mannor that time out of minde by use and custome of the said Mannor have been demiseable and demised to such as will take the same in Fee in Fee-taile for life yeares or at will according to the custome of the said Mannor by Copy of Court roll of the same Mannor West part 1. Sym. lib. 2. sect 646. And that person is sufficient to be a Copyholder who is of himselfe able or by another to do the service of a Copyholder as an Infant may be a Copyholder for his Guardian and prochein amy may doe the service But a Lunatick
or Idiot cannot be a Copyholder because they cannot do the service themselves nor depute any other and the Lord shall retain the Copyhold of an Ideot Carthrop fo 52. Nor a man cannot be a Copy-holder unto a Mannor whereof he himselfe is Lord although he be but Dominus pro termino annorum or in jure Vxoris ibidem Let us enquire what interest Copyholders have in their estates and that will appeare to be very strenuous for although Customary Tenants are termed in Law Tenants at will yet are they not simply so nor meerly Tenants at will for every Copyholder is but only Tenant at will secundum consuetudinem Manerii which custome warrants his possession and therefore it is a more certaine estate then an estate at will for the Copyholder may justifie against his Lord so cannot a Tenant at will whose estate is determined at the will and pleasure of his Lessor And although his estate is but by custome and by no conveyance the state is raised it is as materiall so as it be an estate and this estate being supported by custome is known in Law an estate and so attainted in Law and the same Law hath notably distinguished Copyhold Tenancies by custome and Tenancies at will by the Common Law for a Copyholder shall do fealty shall have ayde of his Lord in an Action of Trespasse shall have and maintaine an Action of Trespasse against his Lord his Wife shall be endowed the Husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesie without new admittance And it was adjudged in the Common Pleas 8 Eliz. That if a Copyholder surrender to the use of another for yeares the Lessee dieth his Executors shall have the residue of the terme without any admittance Mic. 14 and 15 Eliz. A Copyholder made a Lease for yeares by Indenture warranted by the custome it was adjudged that the Lessee should maintain Ejectione firmae although it was objected that if it were so then if the Plaintiff doth recover he shall have Habere facias possessionem and then Copyholds should be ordered by the Lawes of the Land 10 Eliz. Lord and Copyholder for life the Lord grants a Rent-charge out of the Mannor whereof the Copyhold is parcell the Copy-holder surrenders to the use of A. who is admitted accordingly he shall not hold it charged but if the Copyholder dyeth so that his estate is determined and the Lord granteth to a stranger de Novo to hold the said lands by Copy this new Tenant shall hold the Land charged Leonards rep first part fo 8. Mich. 25. 26 Eliz. Tenant by Copy of Court Roll hath an Inheritance by the custome but when he doth that which is contrary to the Custome he shall be then in no better condition then a bare Tenant at will Bolstrod 1 part fo 51. so that performing the duties and services according to the Custome doth so establish and fixe the estate that the same by the Custome of the Mannor is descendable and his heires shall inherit the same and therefore his estate is not meerly as I have said before ad voluntatem Domini but ad voluntatem Domini secundum consuetudinem Manerii so that the custome of the Mannor is the soule and life and also the chiefe basis upon which stands the whole fabrick of Copy-hold estates for without custome or if they break their custome they are subject to the Lords will And by custome a Copyholder is as well inheritable to have his land according to the Custome as he who hath a Free-hold at the Common Law for consuetudo est altera lex custome and usage time out of minde c. may create and consolidate Inheritances Consuetudo vincit legem 7 E. 4. Danby chiefe Justice said that a Copyholder is aswell inheritable to have his Land according to the Custome as he who hath Free-hold at the Common Law Co. 4. 21. If Tenant by custome paying his services be ejected by his Lord he may have an action of Trespasse 21 E. 4. 80. Co. 4. 22. If a woman Copyholder in Fee have a Husband who hath Issue and the Wife dyeth the Husband shall not be Tenant by the Courtesie without speciall custome Co 4. 22. If a Copyholder dye his heire within age the heire is not obliged to come to any Court during his non-age to pray admittance or to tender his Fine Also if the death of the Ancestor be not presented nor Proclamation he is not at any detriment although he be of full age Leonards rep first part fol. 128. Pasch 30 Eliz. B. R. Brownloes Rep. first part fol. 231. Swain and Becket a question was that whereas there is a Mannor wherein are Copyholders for life who used to lop Trees growing upon the Copyholds for their necessary fire and repaire of their customary Tenements the Lord of the Mannor maketh a Lease of the Mannor for yeares excepting the Trees The Lessee of the Mannor granteth a Copy for life the Copyholder loppeth his trees growing in his Copyhold whether or no he might doe it by Law was the doubt of the Iury. And it was held by all the Court Hill 6 Jac. that the Copyholder might lop the Trees because he is in by the custome which is above the Lords estate after he is admitted and that the Copyhold depends not upon the Lords interest And that the trees excepted and the soyle remained parcel of the Mannor because the Lease was but for yeares but if the Lease had been for life it had been otherwise because it had been severed from the Mannor But note that in Justice Crooks Rep. first part fol. 160. That a Copyholder for life may cut downe and sell Timber trees and dispose of them at his pleasure is a voyd and unreasonable custome and not allowable by Law for it is a destruction of the Inheritance and against the nature of a Copyholder for life For a Copyholder hath but a particular estate in the Land and so he hath in the Trees And it is unreasonable that he should cut downe sell and destroy the Inheritance and it would be to the great prejudice of those who succeeded for they should not have to maintain the house and the plough And it is against the nature of the estate of a Copyholder that he should do Acts in destruction of his estate therefore customs which maintaine them are allowable but not è converso Vide 24 E. 3. Barr. 77. 21 H. 7. 40. 11 H. 7. 14. 9 H. 4. Wast 59. If a Copyholder of inheritance grant his Copy-hold to one and his heires this shall descend and no Tenant by the Courtesie nor yet Dower shall be thereof without a speciall custome for the same Bolstrod second part fo 275. Mich. 12 Jac. If I give all my Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in D. my Copyholds do not passe Leonard Rep. first part 126. An estate tayle cannot be of Copyhold Lands unlesse it be in case where it hath
been used for the Statute De donis conditionalibus shall not enure to such customary Lands but to Lands which are at Common Law and therefore an estate tayle cannot be of these customary Lands but in case where it hath beene used time out of minde Popham fol. 34. And it was holden afterwards that an estate tayle is wrought out of Copyhold Land by the equity of the Statute De donis conditionalibus for otherwise it cannot be that there can be any estate taile of Copy-hold land for by usage it cannot be maintained because that no estate tayle was known in Law before this Statute but all were Fee-simple and after this Statute it cannot be by usage because this is within the time of limitation after which an usage cannot make a prescription as appeareth 22 and 23 Eliz. in Dyer And by 8 Eliz. a custome cannot be made after Westminst 2d And what estates are of Copyhold land appeareth expresly by Littleton in his Chap. of Tenant by Copyhold c. And in Brook tit Tenant by Copyhold c. 15 H. 8. In both which it appears that a Plaint lyeth in Copyhold land in the nature of a Formedon in the Discender at the Common Law and this could not be before the Statute De donis conditionalibus for such land because that before that Statute there was not any Formedon in the Discender at Common Law and therefore the Statute helps them for their remedy for intayled Land which is but customary by equity And if the Action shall be given by equity for thy land why shall not the Statute by the same equity worke to make an estate in tayle also of this nature of the land Poph. ibidem And Copyholds are now become by usage by such estates that Law allows them to be good against the Lords themselves they performing their customes and services and therefore are guided by the guides and rules of the Common Law Dyer Trin. 12 Eliz. And to say that estates of Copyhold land are not warranted but by custome and every custome lyes in usage and without usage a custome cannot be is true but in the usage of the greater the lesser is alwayes implyed Omne majus in se continet minus As by usage three lives have been granted by Copy of Court Roll but never within memory two or one alone yet the grant of one or two lives onely is warrantable by this custome for the use of the greater number of lives warrants the lesser number but not è converso If the Copyholder by his letter of Attorney appoint the son of his Farmer his Attorney to do the services for him due for his Copyhold Such a person so constituted and appointed may Essoyne for the Copyholder but not do the services for him for none can do the same but the Tenant himself Leonard first part fo 139. Copyhold land is not extendable upon a Statute-Staple but upon the Statute of Bankrupts it is extendable Brownlows first part 34. As long as a Copyhold of Inheritance is in the Tenants hands it is not lyable to any estate or charge of the Lord as Dower Curtesie Elegit Statute c. But when it is in the Lords hands it is liable Co. 4. 22. But a custome in this case may make it chargeable Calthr 88 89. 92 93. We will now declare something of Surrenders Of Surrenders what are good and what not LOrd and Tenant Copyholder by Surrender or by nomination by force of a Custome precedent desires his Lord at his Court to admit him to the Copyhold estate and offers him his Fine the Lord refuses he cannot take the profits before admittance here is damnum injuria whether for refuall he may have an action of the Case or not And it was resolved Pasch 13 Jac. P. R. That an Action of the Case lies not against the Lord for his refusall to admit him without a speciall custome or prescription for the same Omnis innovatio plus novitate perturbat quam utilitate prodest for if upon every such refusall an Action shall be brought this will introduce many inconveniencies C. 4. 22. in Brownes case But note that in all cases of Ministeriall offices if they refuse to do their offices Actions upon the case shall well lye against them as against the Clarke of the Inrollments if he refuseth to inroll a Deed an Action upon the case lyeth against him for this but it shall not be so in cases of trusts Bolstrod second part fol. 337 338. Foords case Hill 12 Jac. If a Surrender be to the Lord generally without saying to whose use it is good enough Kitch 81. If the Copyholder surrender to the use of another and the Lord grant it to the Cestuy que use not naming the surrender this is good enough by Calthr fo 99. In a surrender it matters not if the party to whom it is be precisely expressed if by any circumstance he may be known And therefore to surrender to the Major of Yorke next of his kin or next of his blood his Brother Sister or his sonne may be good and it may be made certaine by averment So if it be to a mans Wife without warning of her or the High Sheriffe of Yorkeshire But a surrender to the use of ones Cousin or Friend is voyd for incertainty so it is if it be to the use of A. B. or C. Coo. 4. 29. of Copy-hold 96. If a surrender be made to the Lord in generall without expressing to what use it shall be taken to the Lords use Kitch 81. If a Copyhold be surrendred to the use of A. B. and his heires till he marry C. D. and then to the use of them two in speciall tayle this is valid and shall enure accordingly Calth fo 22. If a Copyholder surrender to the use of a Stranger in consideration that the stranger shall marry his daughter before such a day In this case if the marriage succeeds not the stranger shall take nothing by the surrender But if the consideration be that the stranger shall pay such a summe of money at such a day although the money be not paid yet the surrender is valid Calth fo 37. If the Copyholder surrender his land to the use of A. B. so that A. B. pay 20 l. at such a day if he please this is an absolute not a conditionall surrender Calth fol. 39. If a Copyholder surrender his Coyphold of Inheritance into the hands of the Lord to the use of I. S. paying one hundred pounds to his Executors within such a time after his death he to whose use this surrender is made takes by force of this presently Bolstr 2d part fo 275. Mich. Jac. 12. If a Copyholder surrender to the use of one for life who is admitted and dyeth he in the Reversion may enter without a new admittance Leonard first part Rep. 144. If a Copyholder bargain and sell his
return ibid. False imprisonment lies against the Sheriffe for not returning a Cap. in processe c. but otherwise in a Cap. ad sat ibid. VVhere one hath liberty to returne writs the Sheriffe cannot enter to make execution of any processe ibid. In a Scire fac the Sheriffe must returne the names of the summoners c. ibid. The Sheriffe may take pos com upon a Replev ibid. A Scire fac against a Husband and his wife to say they are divorced no good return 195 A Fi. fac against Executors no good returne to say the goods were sold before the writ purchased ibid. Nulla bona returned upon a Fi. fa. against Executors an enquiry of waste and found that divers goods were wasted upon which a Sci. fa. awarded and upon two nihil's returned execution awarded ibid. Outlawry returned in Lond where not good ibid. The County omitted in the return of an Exigent erroneous 196 Vpon an Exigent returned that the party hath rendred himselfe and not so not good ibid. Cepi corpus upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum and not so erroneous ibid. Processe against the husband and wife and the wife appeares not at the day not good ibid. Vpon an enquiry of damages return of damages no hurt to the Sheriff and why ibid. Vpon accompt or debt where the Sheriffe returned no lands found and he had lands c. not good ibid. To say upon a Replevin that there is no goods c. not good the like in detinue c. or upon a Hab. fac seisin ibid. If the Sheriffe return Cepi corpus he shall be chargeable with the body at the day of the return 197 Return of Jurors 206 If two sufficient Hundreders do appeare it is sufficient ibid. None are to be returned above the age of seventy years ibid. None shall be impannelled out of their proper County except c. ibid. None to be returned but such as have 40 l. per annum 207 Twenty and foure Jurors must be returned otherwise error ibid. He must summon the grand Iuries to the Assizes and Iuries for the quarter Sessions c. ibid. None must be returned upon an Indictment but c. probi legales homines ibid. Return of issues 207 The Sheriff must return good issues ibid. Rescue what 326 Rescous 331 Regrator 332 S SHire what it is 1 By whom instituted ibid. Sheriff why so called 2 Instituted Governor of his Shire ibid. He only hath power to delegate the office of County Clerk 7 Custos vitae Reipub. Custos vitae Justitiae Custos vitae Legis 157 His Judicial power 158 To enquire of wast and execute a writ of Redisseisin 159 He may commit a disseisor to prison ibid. His Ministerial power ibid. The new Sheriff is to take notice who are in execution 160 He is to preserve the Protectors right c. 160 He must levy his Highnesse debts c. 161 He is to gather up amerciaments and fines c. ibid. and 162 He is to seize no goods of Felons till they be lawfully forfeited 162 But take Sureties he may that the goods shall not be imbezelled ibid. He must receive all Writs and execute them 163 He may command his Bayliffe to execute tem either by word or precept ibid. He must not dispute the authority of the Judges that send writs to him but must execute them 164 His Bayliffe need not shew his writ when he executes it but a special Bayliff must shew his warrant ibid. An arrest by an old Sheriff after his discharge tortious 165 He cannot execute processe on the Sabbath day ibid. He may break open a door to execute processe concerning his highnesse but not in case of a common person ibid. He must proclaim the Statute of Winchester four times a year 166 And also the Statute against unlawfull games ibid. Steward of Court-Baron how he ought to be qualified 371 How he may be retained 372 How he may forfeit his office 373 Sur-rejoinder what 17 Suit-royall what it is 161 Suit-service what ibid. Statute-Merchant what it is ibid. How to sue out execution upon it ibid. All the Fee-simple Lands of the Conusor at the time of the Statute acknowledged shall be liable to the said Statute 169 Copyhold lands are not lyable nor Lease for life but Lease for term of years shall be extended c. Goods pawned or pledged may not be taken nor goods distrained for rent c. ibid. If the Conusor die in execution the Conusee may have execution of his Lands and goods or if the Conusor escape his goods and Lands shall be extended ibid. Non est invent returned upon the first Certificate a second not grantable ibid. Severall Certificates in divers Courts upon one Stat. Execution sued in the one shall not stay that in the other 170 A Stat. certified for the Testator shall be certified for the Executor ibid. Non est inventus returned upon a Cap. in the Common Pleas Cap. and Extendi facias shall not issue out there without shewing the Statute to the Justices c. ibid. Statute must be shewed at the day of the return ibid. A stranger may have Execution where the Recognusee is dead or if a Stat. be made to two yet one may have Execution c. 171 Executors must sue out a Scire fac before they can have Execution ibid. Execution upon the Statute sued into divers Counties upon Nihil returned in one County he shall have execution of the whole in the other ibid. Stat. sued of parcel of the Lands in the name of all shall never extend the rest ibid. Three bound to one in a Statute severally Execution may be against one or all ibid. Infant bound in a Statute may avoid it during his minority c. the like by Dures imprisonment 172 Statute-Staple what it is ibid. The manner of proceeding upon it ibid. and 173 Scire facias issued out against the old Sheriffe after a new one elected for money levied by him c. 185 Sorcerers Conjurers and Witches 325 Sacriledge ibid. Stocks 327 Surveyors of high-wayes 329 Shoomakers 336 Searchers and sealers of Leather ibid. Soccage tenure what it is 347 Surrenders what are good and what not 363 Vpon a Surrender action lies not against the Lord for refusing admittance ibid. A surrender to the Lord good 364 A Surrender to the use of another c. ibid. In a Surrender it matters not if the party to whom it is be precisely expressed ibid. Surrender to the Lord c. ibid. Surrender to A. B. until he marry C. D. c ibid. Surrender to the use of a stranger ibid. Surrender to A. B.'s use if he pay 20 l. at a day ibid. Surrender to the Lord to the use of S. paying 100 l. c. ibid. Surrender to the use of one for life 365 Copyhold may be extinguished without an actuall Surrender ibid. A Surrender of a Copyhold cannot surrender before admittance 366 No surrender by an Attorney without Deed but an
admittance may be ibid. T TYthing men 327 Tanners 335 Tracing of hares 338 Treasure trove 339 Tenants by Copy of Court-Roll are obliged to appear at every three weeks end at the Lords Court-Baron 345 Tenant at will and Copyholder 359 Tenant may have an action of Trespasse against the Lord 360 No tenant by the Curtesie or Dower shall be of Copyhold lands 361 V VErdict ambiguous and incertain no judgment ought to be given upon it 25 Part of the issue found and nothing for the residue insufficient ibid. Under-Sheriff what he is 210 He hath power to execute all the ordinary offices of the Sheriff that may be transferred by the Law c. ibid. The Sheriff must take good security of him c. ibid. Victuallers 334 Vnlawfull gains 336 W WItnesses who are suficient to give evidence and who are not 22 Withernam what with the proceedings upon it 35 Weights and Measures false 335 Watch and ward 339 Waifes 340 353 Wast what it is and how it is committed 350 A TABLE OF ALL THE PRESIDENTS Contained in this BOOK A ARticles betwixt the high Sheriff and a Bayliff of a Weapentake or Hundred 266 Appeale of Murther by the wife of him that is slain 297 Appeale by the heir of the person murthered 298 Appeale of Mayhme 299 Appeal of wounds ibid. Admission of the younger son to lands according to the custome 389 B BArgain and sale of Goods made by the Sheriff by vertue of his Office 277 Bond upon a Replevin vide Obligation Bond for the appearance in the County Court vide Obligation Bond to the Sheriff for ones appearance in the Common-Bench and another in the Vpper-Bench vide Obligation C CAse for not delivering of a pawn upon tender of the money borrowed 102 Against a Carrier for losse of goods delivered to him 103 For Coals promising to pay so much as they should reasonably be worth 104 For a horse sold warranted to be sound 105 For a horse lent promising to deliver him ibid. For adgysting of beasts 106 For curing a wound 107 For laborious hire 108 In consideration that the Plaintiffe would deliver unto one E. L. certain mercery wares if he did not pay for them the Defendant would 109 Slander for calling the Plaintiffe Thiefe c. 110 Same for calling the Plaintiff Bankrupt 111 In consideration that the Plaintiff would marry E. R. the Defendant promised to make him worth 200 l. 113 For stopping up of anothers light 114 For teaching the Defendants childe the Latine tongue 115 For Dyet and time given for payment of the debt 116 Vpon an Assumpsit to save one harmlesse upon an Obligation 117 For keeping a dog accustomed to bite sheep 118 Another ibid. Against an Inn-keeper for a horse lost ibid. Vpon a horse-race 119 Another upon a horse-race 122 For keeping a child and finding it meat drink and apparrel 123 For breach of Articles ibid. Vpon a promise for the loan of a Mare which was killed in riding 125 Vpon a promise to save harmlesse a Surety against a Bond 126 Detinue 128 Condition the form of it for the performance of the Indentures between the high-Sheriff and under-Sheriff 258 Another 259 and 260 Condition for executong of a Goalership 263 Another 265 Condition that the Sheriff executing a writ may detain out of the goods and lands extended so much money c. 276 D DIstringas or County warrant 37 Duces tecum 38 Decem tales 50 Deputation for a Bayliffe of a Hundred 53 Discharge to the Sheriff for a Prisoner from him to whom the Prisoner is indebted 275 Another ibid. Declarations in debt 88 Executor against an Executor ibid. Vpon a Bill to be paid at the day of Marriage and issue upon it 89 90 91 Vpon retainder for sheoing of horses 91 Vpon an Accompt 92 Money lent by joynt partners for a certain time and to be paid to the survivor ibid. For rent in arrear 93 For servants wages 94 For not setting forth of Tithes ibid. Vpon an award 95 For Attorneys Fees 96 Vpon a Lease for Tithes 97 Vpon a Bond where one is bound to two and one dies before the commencement of the Suite 98 Another upon the same ibid. Vpon a Bond for an Executor against Sisters as Co heirs one of them being married 99 Vpon a Bond against an Administrator during the minority of the Executor of an Executor 100 F FIeri facias against an Executor 44 Vpon a non suit for costs ibid. Vpon a Verdict for the Defendant 45 After a Scire facias against an Administrator upon a Verdict had against the intestate ibid. Fine in Court-Baron desired for respite of suit to be done 382 G GRant of a Bayliwick 348 Grant of a Stewardship 341 I INdorsement of such writs as are turned over to the new Sheriffe by the old Sheriffe 160 Indenture by a high-Sheriff deputing one to be his under-Sheriff 237 Another 246 Indenture for the setting over of Prisoners and Writs between two Sheriffs 261 Indenture for the Knights of the Parliament 262 Indenture upon choosing a Burgesse to serve in Parliament 263 Indenture of Covenants to a Sheriff to save him harmlesse for returning of a Devastavit against an Executor 272 Inquisition in man-slaughter 299 Inquisition in manslaughter where one was starved and perished for want of sustenance 301 Inquisition where one is slain by misfortune by a Cart loaden with hay 303 Inquisition where one by misfortune is slain by the fall of a scaffold 304 Inquisition where one drowns himselfe 305 Inquisition where one hangs himselfe ibid. L LIberate To deliver goods taken upon original or mean processe 50 Lease and Surrender made in Court with the examination of the Wife 385 Lease made by the Lord of parcel of his Lands 388 Licence by a Lord of a Manner to a Copyholder to pull down houses standing upon Copyhold lands 390 Letter of Attorney to surrender a Copyhold ibid. O OAth of the Jury in the County-Court and of the witnesses 24 Oath of the Coroner 51 Oath of an Attorney in the County Court 52 Oath of the Sheriff 235 Oath of the Foreman of a Coroners Inquest 289 Oath of witnesses before the Coroner 291 Oath of the Foreman of the Inquest in a Court-Leet 318 Oath of a Steward in a Leet 344 Oath of the Bayliffe in a Leet ibid. Oath of a Constable in a Leet 345 Oath of the Affeerer in a Leet 346 Oath of the Aletaster c. ibid. Oath of the Hayward Beadle or Greve 347 Oath of the Foreman of the Inquest in a Court-Baron 343 Oath of the Bayliffe of a Mannor 374 Obligation upon a Replevin 41 42 Obligation for an appearance in the County Court 52 53 Obligation entred to a Sheriff for ones appearance in the Common Bench 271 Another in the Vpper-Bench ibid. Order of the Judges of Assize at York concerning essoins illegally returned into the County Court 56 P PLeas He owes nothing 133 He made no such promise and Replication ibid. He made