Selected quad for the lemma: life_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
life_n fee_n heir_n remainder_n 4,383 5 10.8794 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A58990 The second part of Reports of cases taken and adjudged in the court of Chancery, from the 20th year of King Charles II. to the first year of Their present Majesties, King William and Queen Mary Being special cases, and most of them decreed with the assistance of the judges, and all of them referring to the register books, wherein are setled several points of equity, law and practice. To which is added, the late great case between the Dutchess of Albemarle and the Earle of Bathe.; Reports of cases taken and adjudged in the court of Chancery, from the 20th year of King Charles II. to the first year of Their present Majesties, King William and Queen Mary. Part 2. England and Wales. Court of Chancery. 1694 (1694) Wing S2297; ESTC R217071 188,405 430

There are 29 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

years Did by Deed in 1639. in consideration of a Marriage with Elizabeth his then Wife and for that she had parted with her Interest in Goods Consideration c. which by Agreement she had the Disposition of for her own use and other Consideration herein mentioned did Assign over the said Premisses and all his Term therein Lease Assigned in Trust for a Joynture and after for Children to Rumbald Jacobson and Abrah Beard on Trust that the said Eliz. should have the profits during Life and after to James Paul Jane and Mary her Children or such of them as the said Elizabeth should appoint by her Will and for want of such Appointment to the said James Paul Jane and Mary or so many of them as should be living at her decease share and share alike and after Elizabeth dyed Paul the Son being dead in her Lifetime Afterwards by deed in 1643. in consideration of a Marriage between the said Philip Jacobson and Frances Earnely and for a Joynture for the said Frances and for Provision for such Children as he should have by her the said Philip Jacobson and James his Son Assigned over the said Premisses for the remainder of the said Term of 60 years and all his Goods and Houshold stuff unto William Daniel and Alexander Staples their Executors c. on Trust Trust to permit the said Frances and Philip and such Children as they should have between them to receive the profits during the said Term and after the decease of him and his said Wife without Issue then on Trust as to part to suffer the Executors of the said Frances and as to the residue the said James Jacobson his Executors c. to receive the profits during the Term afterwards by deed in 1646. Reciting all Assignments and Indentures aforesaid he the said Philip Jacobson Assigned over the said Premisses and his Term therein to Alexander Staples and Jeffery Daniel their Executors c. on Trust as to the said Frances Jacobson for the Premisses limited to her by her first Joynture and as to several other parcels of Land named as in the said Deed is recited which said last premisses contain 132 Acres which are in Trust for the said James Jacobson from the death of his Father during the residue of the Term and in case the said James should remain unmarryed or being Marryed and should dye without Issue and his Wife being a Widow then the Rents and Profits thereof to remain and be to his younger Brother and Sister Lelease of Trusts and afterwards James and Thomas Earneley Son in Law of the said Philip having Marryed Jane one of the Daughters of the said Philip did 22 Car. 1. Release to Staples and Daniel and to the said Phillip and Joanna Jacobson vid. Executrix of Rombold Jacobson who Survived Beard all and all manner of Trusts and demands whatsoever and Suits in Law or Equity which they or either of them their Executors c. had from the beginning of the World unto the date thereof in all the Lands and Tenements with the Appurtenances then or theretofore in the tenure of Philip Jacobson aforesaid in the County of Wilts and by another Release in Jan. 1647. the said James and Thomas Earneley Released unto the said Philip Jacobson and Joanna Jacobson all manner of Trusts and demands whatsoever in all Lands in the County of Wilts as in the former Release and afterwards by deed in 1653. reciting that there was a Marriage then shortly to be had between the said James Jacobson Son and Heir of Philip Jacobson and one Margaret Still the said Philip did Assign over unto John Still and Nicholas Still their Executor c. the said 123 Acres for the Residue of the Term to the use of James and Margaret for their Lives and after their Deceases to the right Heirs of the said James begotten of Margaret and if Margaret should Survive James and have no Child by him and he dye before the end of the Term then she should have power to sell 51 Acres of the premisses and the Residue to the Executors of Philip and if Margaret dye in the life-time of James not having any Issue of her Body by him begotten then living then to the use of the said James Jacobson his Executors Administrators and Assigns for the residue of the Term which Marriage took effect and Margaret dyed without Issue in the Lifetime of James after whose Decease the said James being in possession by Deed in 1661. for 400 l. Mortgaged the 123 Acres to Elizabeth Brinley and yet enjoyed the 123 Acres till he dyed and the said Elizabeth Assigned over the said Mortgage which now by mean Assignments is come to the Plaintiff and James is dead without Issue or Brother and the Defendants Zenobia Frances and Rachell do him Survive This Court was fully satisfied that the Deed in 1653. Voluntary conveyance by which the said James derived his Title and afterwards made the said Mortgage under which the Plaintiff claims Remainder after a Limitation of a Term to an Issue Male void in Law was a good Conveyance and well executed in James and that the Conveyance in 1646. was a voluntary Conveyance and the Estate thereby claimed by the Defendants created being an Estate in remainder after a Limitation of a Term for years to an issue in Tail was void in Law and Decreed the Plaintiff to the possession of the 123 Acres or the Mony due on the Mortgage and to enjoy against all the Defendants and Decreed that the Plaintiff and Defendant Hopkins who is Administrator of the Mortgager James Jacobson to come to an account Oliver contra Leman al' 29 Car 2. fo 102. A Trial at Law is directed to the Plaintiff to try his Right to a Reversion of Lands after the Death of the Defendant Wainwright so the Plaintiffs desire what time they think fit to try the same A Tryal at Law directed to be within a precise time but the Defendant insists that the Plaintiff ought to be confined to a convenient time which was prayed might be the Rule in this Case and that the Defendant might not be kept in suspence and to wait on the Plaintiffs Convenience when he shall think fit to try the same This Court ordered it to be Tryed in Easter Term next or the Issue be taken pro confesso Stawell contra Austin 29 Car. 2. fo 579. THat George Stawell Father of Vrsula and Elizabeth Stawell being seized in Fee of Lands Construction of a Will by Deed and Recovery thereon setled all the said Lands on the Defendant Sir John and Robert Austin and their Heirs to the said George for Life remainder for such Estates and Charges as he by Will or other writing should appoint remainder to the Heirs Males of his Body with remainders over and by Will persueant to the power reserved by the said Deed devised the premisses setled by the said Deed to the said
not having made an Appointment it ought to be taken for her Intention that the Plaintiff should have the Mony and therefore decreed the Defendants the Trustees to convey to the Plaintiff and deliver to him 1400 l. and the Securities for the 2000 l. Green contra Rooke 31 Car. 2. fo 351. THat Lawrence Rooke Devise Father to the Defendant Heyman Rooke and to the Plaintiff Mary being seised in Fee or Fee-tail or other Estate of Lands by Deed of the 26th of August 1650. granted the premisses to Edward Scot and others for 80 years if he so long lived and afterwards conveyed the sameon the 27th of the same Month unto Sir Henry Heyman and Peter Heyman and their Heirs for the term of his life and by Deed the 20th of October then next following and by a Recovery in pursuance thereof the said premisses were setled on the said Sir Henry and Peter Heyman and their Heirs for the life of the said Lawrence Remainder as to part to the use of Barbary Wife of the said Lawrence for her life for a Joynture and after as to part to the said Sir Henry and Peter Heyman for 99 years in Trust to raise 1000 l. for the portion of the eldest Daughter of the said Lawrence and then to the use of the first Son of the said Lawrence in Tail Male with the Remainder over That the said Lawrence and Barbara are dead and the Defendant Heyman Rooke is his first Son and the Plaintiff Mary is his eldest Daughter and the Portion of 1000 l. is due to her and the same being unpaid Peter Heyman the surviving Trustee assigned the term of 99 years to the Plaintiff Greene to enable him to raise the Mony and the Defendant Heyman Rooke hath mortgaged the same premisses to the other Defendants so the Question is Who hath the right or equity of Redemption and the Bill is also to have the Plaintiff Maries Portion paid or the equity of Redemption foreclosed The Defendant Heyman Rooke by Plea insisted That George Rooke his Grandfather by Will in 1647. devised the premisses unto Lawrence Rooke his eldest Son and Father to the Defendant Heyman Rooke for life only Remainder to the first second third and fourth Sons of the said Lawrence in Tail Remainder to John Browne and others for their lives in Trust for the better securing and preservation of the several Remainders limited unto the several Sons of the said Lawrence Rooke with Remainders over That the said George Rooke died without revoking or altering the said uses limited in his Will and so Lawrence Rooke could not by the said Deeds or Recovery bar or cut off the Remainder limited in and by the said Will in regard the said Browne and the other Trustees for preserving of the contingent Remainders were living since 1650. in which year the term of 99 years was created This Court declared Devise to Father for life Remainder to the first Son c. Remainder to Trustees for 99 years to support the Remainders it s a good term to support the Remainders notwithstanding the same is limited and inserted after the limitation to the first Son it being in the case of a Will That the term limited to the Trustees in the Will for their Lives for the preservation of the contingent Remainders to the several Sons of the said Lawrence Rooke was a good Term and a State to support the said contingent Remainders notwithstanding the same is limited to the said Trustees and inserted in the said Will after the limitation to the first and other Sons of Lawrence Rooke in Tail Male for the same being in the Will and the intent of the Testator plainly appearing so in the Will they held the said Plea and Demurrer to be good and so dismist the Plaintiffs Bill Trethervy contra Hoblin 26 Car. 2. fo 114. THe Plaintiff being a Purchaser of the premisses Bill to discover a Title calls the Defendant to discover his Title who insists on a long Lease of a 1000 years which was found by Verdict for the Defendant And the Defendant insists for Cost Costs for that the Plaintiffs Suit in this Court was causlesly and vexatiously brought by the Plaintiff The Plaintiff insists 〈◊〉 That he being not able to try the validity of the said Lease at Law during the life of Oliver one of the Defendant This Court is satisfied Suit for discovery and to preserve Testimonies and the Plaintiff to pay no Costs that the Plaintiff had good ground to bring this Suit for a discovery and relief and to preserve the testimony of his Witnesses it falling out to be a severe Case upon the Plaintiff so no reason for the Plaintiff to pay any Cost either at Law or in this Court Boughton contra Butter 32 Car. 2. fo 379. THis Cause was referred to Sergeant Rainsford to certifie touching the Inclosure whether advantagious and whether the Parties had consented thereunto who had drawn up a Certificate Certificate ordered to to be filed though not delivered in the life of the Certifier all written with his own Hand but he dying before he had declared the same It was prayed by the Plaintiff that the said Certificate might be filed and taken to be authentick as if he had delivered the same to either party The Defendant insisted That the said Certificate had no date and that the Sergeant never intended to deliver the same This Court Ordered the said Certificate to be filed notwithstanding the Objections made thereto by the Defendant Tucker contra Searle 31 Car. 2. fo 423. THat John Bassano the Plaintiff Frances Father by deed 20 July 1640. Marriage Settlement in consideration of a Marriage between him and Elizabeth the Plaintiff Frances Mother and a Marriage Portion Covenanted to stand seized of Lands to the use of the said John and Elizabeth for their lives and after to the first Son of the said John and Elizabeth and so to the second third and other Sons and the Heirs of their Bodies remainder to the right Heirs of the said John Bassano the Elder for ever on Condition and Limitation that if the said John Bassano should have Issue Female and not Issue Male by Elizabeth then his Right Heirs to pay the first and second Daughters of the said John by the said Elizabeth 300 l. a piece to be chargeable on the said Lands and if more than two Daghters then the said Lands for the full value of them to be sold should equally be divided amongst such Daughters that the said Bassano had no Issue Male by Elizabeth but had Issue Female viz. Elizabeth their Eldest Daughter the Plaintiff Frances their Second and another Elizabeth their youngest that Elizabeth the Eldest died in the life of her Father and Mother and that at the death of John the Father there being only the Plaintiff Frances living but the said Elizabeth the Mother being ensient with Elizabeth the youngest Daughter of the said John Bassano
the Plaintiff and the Heirs Males of his Body That Thomas the Plaintiffs Father died leaving Issue Male only Earl William and the Plaintiff and Earl William is dead leaving Issue Male only the last Earl Thomas the Plaintiffs Nephew and the said last Earl Thomas upon his marriage with his now Wife levied a Fine and suffered a Recovery but not with intent to defear the Remainder to the Plaintiff but only to settle a Joynture and several Deeds were executed leading the Uses by which there was a Remainder in Fee reserved for the Plaintiff for want of Issue Male of the last Earl Thomas and the said last Earl Thomas to the intent the Reversion of the premisses should come to the Plaintiff and the Heirs Males of his Body did for 300 l. convey the said premisses to the use of the last Earl Thomas for life and in case of failure of Issue male of his Body to the Plaintiff and the Heirs males of his Body with Remainders over That Earl Thomas the Plaintiffs Nephew coming over into England and getting acquaintance with the Defendant Muschampe and being in want of Mony the said Muschampe lent him 100 l. and for Security he prest the said Earl to make it out of his Estate in Ireland and the said Defendant having the drawing the Security brought the said Earl some Writings ready to be executed of which the said Earl had no Copies or Counterparts neither did he give time to peruse the same and the said Earl relying on the Defendants Integrity Sealed the same believing the said Security to be void on payment of the said 100 l. as the Defendant affirmed it should but the said Deeds being made to settle on the Defendant a Rent charge of 300 l. per Ann. to his own use which being done by Fraud there ought to arise a Trust which ought to go and be enjoyed by the Plaintiff according to the aforesaid Settlement made on the Plaintiff and the Plaintiff is willing to pay the Defendant whatsoever Sum of Mony he hath really lent or paid to the said last Earl Thomas with Interest The Defendant insists That the said last Earl Thomas by Deed in 1675. for 300 l. per Annum and other Considerations granted to the Defendant a Rent-charge of 300 l. per Annum without any deduction to be issuing out of the Estate in Ireland to be held by the Defendant and his Heirs and to commence at such of the Feasts as should first happen after the death of the said last Earl of Arglas without Issue male with power to distrain and a Proviso That if the said last Earl should during his life time have or at his death leave Issue male which do attain to the Age of 21 then the said Grant to be void and of the said 300 l. there was at one entire payment 180 l. paid to the said last Earl and the Defendant hath a Receipt for the said 300 l. and says the Deed was fairly executed and made without any fraud or practice and insists That the said Grant of a Rent-charge was on a Contingency so uncertain that 300 l. was a sufficient Consideration for the said Grant which 300 l. was paid thus viz. 100 l. after the Agreement and before the Conveyance of the said Rent charge and 184 l. to the said Earl the same day the Conveyance was executed and the said Mony was paid as Purchase-mony and not as Mony lent and the said Earl approved of the said Conveyance though he had no Copy and after the said Defendants purchase of the Rent-charge and since the exhibiting of this Bill the said Earl Thomas hath given the Defendant a general Release under Hand and Seal wherein is declared that the Bill is exhibited against the Defendant contrary to the said Earls direction and disallowed all further proceedings thereon against the Defendant This Court upon reading the said deeds and several presidents in this Court as well in the Reigns of Queen Elizabeth King James King Charles the first as in his now Majesties Reign where relief hath been given against Over reaching Bargains and Contracts made by young Heirs and taking into consideration the Circumstances of this Case it appeared to him That Thomas Earl of Arglas at the time of this bargain was very young and of an easie nature and had forsaken his Wife and Friends and came to London where he lived in Riot and Debauchery and for the supply of his Expences therein was this bargain made wherein it doth not appear he took the Advice of any Friends or Councel but relyed wholy on the Defendant That the consideration of this grant is very small being but one years purchase for a Rent-charge in Fee-simple which is now hapned in possession and the over-value be it never so great is not of it self sufficient ground to set aside a bargain Fraud or not or whereupon this Court can presume fraud Yet it is a great evidence of fraud where there are other Circumstances concurring as there is in this Case And whereas the Defendant insisted that the Contingency of the death of a young Man without Issue Male was so great that it cannot be esteemed an over-value such a Reversion not being worth one years purchase His Lordship declared He looked upon it as an Artifice of the Defendant for it was easie to perswade the Earl Thomas who could not judge of his own defects that the Defendant had the worst of the Bargain Whereas it is not likely the Defendant would have made it but that he thought Earl Thomas would in a short time destroy himself by his Vitious and Debauched course of life and his Lordship was of Opinion the Defendant had Circumvented the Earl Thomas in this bargain and concluded upon the whole matter that the Plaintiff ought to be relieved in this Court A proper Bargain tho' over-reaching especially upon a Contingency relieveable but not to the damage of the bargaince and the Release made by Earl Tho. without any consent after the Settlement made upon the Plaintiff ought to be no Bar thereunto but in as much as his Lordship found by the presidents that in such cases This Court doth not turn any loss upon the Defendant but only correct the Excess and Extravagancy of such bargain Therefore his Lordship thought fit the 300 l. should be restored to the Defendant with consideration for the same at 6 l. per Cent. and on payment thereof the Defendant to convey the said Rent-charge of 300 l. per Annum and all his Title Interest and Demand in the premisses to the Plaintiff and granted a perpetual Injunction not only to stay all proceedings at Law but for quieting the Plaintiff his Heirs c. in the possession of the premisses Langton contra North al' 35 Car. 2. fo 95. THat Sir Robert Gouning Deceased Marriage Settlement being Seized of Lands and a great Personal Estate upon a Marriage to be had between him and the Defendant
the same that she shall release the 2000 l. per Annum within Three years after his death or else that Devise to be void The Remainder of his Lands in Berks to Sir Walter Clergyes pur vie and after in Tail Male Remainder to his Cousin Henry Monk in Tail Male Remainder to his own Right Heirs To Bevile Greenvile Son to the Earl of Bath his Freehold Lands in Surrey and Southampton for life and then in Tail Male Remainder to his Cousin Tho. Monck pur vie and then in Tail Male Remainder to his Cousin Henry Monck in Tail Male Remainder to his own right Heirs His Lands in Devon to Colonel Thomas Monck for life and then in Tail Male Remainder to his Cousin Henry Monck in Tail Male remainder to his own right Heirs All his Lands in Ireland to his Cousin Henry Monck in Tail Male with Remainder to his own right Heirs Provided That if he have any Issue all devises of any Sums of Mony except for his Funeral his Father's Monument Alms-houses and Legacies to his Executors shall be void and if he leave any Issue the premisses devised to Sir Walter Clergyes Mr. Greenvile Thomas and Henry Monck and their Issue shall go to his Issue viz. to his Sons successively in Tail Male if Daughters in Tail with Remainders to the said persons as before Provided If he leave Issue Male he deviseth to his Wife as an Additional Joynture to her Rent charge Lands in Devon and Essex for her life and makes the Dutchess during her life and in case of her death the Dutchess of Newcastle Guardians of his Children he shall have And in case it happen that Colonel Thomas Monck or any Heirs males of his Body shall live to come and be in possession of the premisses devised to him he desires they will live at Potheridge the Ancient Seat of the Family and desires his Majesty to grant them the Title of Baron Monck of Potheridge that it may remain in the Family in Memory of his Father and himself and his Service his Father had the Honour to do the Crown in the Restauration and makes the Duke of Newcastle Lord Cheney Jarvis Peirpoint Sir Walter Clergyes Sir Thomas Stringer Henry Pollexfen Esq and others Executors That the Duke gave direction to Henry Pollexfen Esq to make this Will and when drawn was fully approved of by the Duke upon mature deliberation Which Will being in Three parts he carefully lock'd up and after leaving Two parts of his Will to two persons and kept the Third he went to Jamaica That the Duke when in Jamaica heard Colonel Thomas Monck was dead in Holland sent to the Earl of Bathe Sir Tho. Siringer and others to send over for Chripher Monck the Colonels eldest Son to Educate him so as to fit him to bear the Character of one to whom he intended the greatest part of his Estate if he died without Issue In September 1688. the Duke sickned in Jamaica and there again published his said Will and declared that if he died the Box and Will should be delivered to the Dutchess and died in October following That the Dutchess at her Return from Jamaica found that the Earl of Bathe set up another Will dated 3. Aug. 1675. whereby the Remainder of the greatest part of the Estate was given to the Earl of Bathe and his Heirs and likewise a Settlement by way of Lease and Release in corroboration of that Will by which he seeks to avoid and frustrate the Will of 1687. That the Duke sent to the Earl of Bathe for the Will of 1675. if any such to have it delivered to him that he might make another Will That the Will of 1687. was Sealed at Sir Robert Claytons the same day after other Writings had been by him sealed to the Lord Chancellor Jeffreys of some Lands sold to him and that the Dutchess nor any of her Relations ever knew or heard of the said Deeds till after the Dukes death nor known to Sir Thomas Stringer who was the Dukes standing Councel and the Plaintiffs farther insist if there were such Deed yet it ought not to avoid or impeach the said last Will though the power of Revoking the same was not literally pursued yet the same in Equity ought to be taken as a Revocation and the rather for that at the making of the Will the Duke remained owner of the Estate and he lookt upon himself so to be for that he had since the said pretended Deeds sold some part of the Estate to Chancellor Jefferies without any Revocation and the Earl of Bath paid no valuable Consideration and that he ought to be protected in the enjoyment of the personal Estate and the Specifick Legacies devised to her in the Will of 1687. tho' the Will of 75. if any such be was intended by the Duke principally to hinder the discent to his next Heir and the Deeds if such there be were for the same purpose and that tho' the Deed recites to confirm the last Will of 75. yet does in several places controul it and alter it whereby and by the extraordinary strange and unprecedented Declarations Provisoes and Covenants therein the Plaintiff believes the Deeds were never executed by the Duke or if so that he was surprised therein and pray Relief in the premisses To this the Defendant makes Answer Answer and sets forth the Will of 1675. whereby the greatest part of the whole Estate was given to the Earl and his Heirs and sets forth the Considerations of his so doing as Antient Kindred and Esteem between Duke George and the Earl of Bath and several Services and good Offices that he had done the Family and likewise sets forth that being well satisfied with such his disposition of his Estate and finding that he had been often importuned to alter the same and fearing lest the repeated Practises and Arts attempted against such his Disposition might some time or other surprise him into a Compliance Consulted with Sir William Jones and other his Councel how to Obviate such practises and to settle his Estate in such manner as that it might not be avoided although for his ease he should at any time seem to yield to the Sollicitations of his near Relations whereupon in Anno 1681. the Duke makes a Settlement wherein he begins That for the assuring of the Honour Manours c. upon a Person of Honour c. and for the Corroborating and Confirming the said Will of 75. and to the end that no pretended last Will should be set up by any Person whatsoever and for the Natural Affection that he beareth to the Earl of Bath c. grants by Lease and Release several Mannors Lands and Tenements c. some in Possession and some in Remainder upon the Earl of Bath in Fee and so to Walter Clergies c. in which Deed there was this Proviso Proviso That if the Duke shall at any time during his life be minded to make void the said Indenture
Children This Court is of Opinion That the said 60 l. belonged only to the Children of the said Mark Warren which he had by his then Wife at the time when the said Mony was given and decreed the same accordingly Wallop contra Dominam Hewett 24 Car. 2. fo 218. THe Plaintiffs Henry and John Wallop seek Relief for 400 l. Legacies given by a Will and a Codicil and are distinct not one and the same viz. 200 l. apiece Legacy given them by the Will and Codicil of the Lady Crofts The Case is That the Lady Crofts by her Will gave the Plaintiffs 100 l. apiece and afterwards by a Codicil annexed to her Will gave the Plaintiffs 100 l. apiece The Question is Whether the said Legacies so given be one and the same or distinct and several Legacies or what her Intention was in reference to the same and desire the Judgment of the Court therein This Court with the Judges on Reading the said Will and Codicil were of Opinion and satisfied That the said Legacies in the said Will and Codicil mentioned are not one and the same but distinct and several Legacies of 200 l. and decreed the Defendants to pay the said Plaintiffs 400 l. Thorne contra Newman 24 Car. 2. fo 371. 24 Car. 2. fo 8. THat Nicholas Burnell Deed of Revocation Father of the Defendant Margaret Newman being seised of the premisses in 1652. demised the same to Elizabeth Stone for 99 years at a Pepper-Corn with a Proviso to be void on payment of 590 l. and the said Elizabeth died and made Elizabeth Wheat her Executrix and Thomas Baker marrying the Defendant Margaret Newman in November 1657. Elizabeth Wheat and the said Nicholas Burnell Assigning the premisses to Thomas Baker and the said Baker for 500 l. borrowed of the Plaintiff Assigned to one Minterne in Trust for the Plaintiff in 1659 and Baker failing in payment contracted with the Plaintiff for 770 l. more that he would give his Interest in the premisses absolutely without any power of redemption and Baker and Minterne did joyn accordingly in 1660. And the Plaintiff insists That the Defendant claims the premisses by a Deed dated the 19th of August 1659. whereby it is pretended That by Indenture made between the said Old Burnell of the one part and Thomas Lewis and Bartholomew Pickering of the other part the said Burnell in Consideration of the Natural love and affection to the said Margaret and for the setling and confirming of the premisses for the uses therein and for 5 s. Covenanted to stand seized of the premisses to himself for life Remainder to the Defendant Margaret for life then to the Wife of the said Thomas Baker Remainder to the Heirs of her Body with Remainders over and the said Burnell dying in 1659. the premisses then vested in Margaret and that Baker in her Right became seised of the Freehold thereof and that thereby the Remainder of the said term of 99 years was drowned Term drowning in a Freehold and so the Assignment to Minterne and the Assignment by Baker and Minterne to the Plaintiff was void and so the Plaintiff a purchaser for 1300 l. like to be defeated And the Plaintiff further insists That if the said Deed were ever sealed it is with a Proviso of Revocation to be void on payment or tender of 12 d. to Lewis or Pickering or either of them in the Middle-Temple-Hall and that Burnell did tender 12 d. to Lewis with intention to make void the said Deed and declared so to Lewis that she did revoke the said Deed and pulled the Seal off from it and that a Memorandum was Indorsed on the backside of the Deed That there was 22 Octob. 1659. 12 d. tendered to Lewis to revoke the said Deed but the Defendants pretend because the 12 d. was not tendered in the Middle-Temple-Hall therefore the Revocation was not legal and so the said Deed still in force and the Plaintiffs Estate drowned The Defendants admit the Case to be as aforesaid but insist That the said Deed 19 Aug. 1659. was intended for a Settlement on the Defendant Margaret for a provision for her after the death of the said Baker her Husband he having not made any Joynture and that the said Defendants claim the premisses by the said Deed whereby immediately upon the death of Burnell the Freehold of the Premisses vested in Baker in right of the said Margaret his Wife and so the Plaintiffs Estate was drowned and that Baker was not by intention of the said Deed to sell away the premisses for any longer time than his own life without the said Margarets Consent and Joyning with him in a Fine thereof And the Defendants further insist That the 12 d. ought to have been tendred in the Middle-Temple Hall else the Deed must be in force and if any Memorandum or Declaration were made as aforesaid the same was done out of design only to have the said Baker make the said Margaret a Joynture But the Plaintiff insists That he ought to hold the said premisses for the residue of the said term for 99 years against the said Deed. This Court was satisfied That the Plaintiff ought in Equity to enjoy the premisses against the Defendants Voluntary Deed set aside against a purchaser and that the said Deed ought to be set aside as against the Plaintiff but the Defendants are to redeem The Bill being to set aside a pretended voluntary Conveyance set on foot by the Defendant Conveyance with power of Revocation on payment of 12 d. at such a place 12 d. was tendered at another place with express declaration to revoke the Deed. which Deed is with power of Revocation upon the tender of 12 d. and the 12 d. was tendered accordingly with intent to revoke the said Deed and the said Deed is accordingly Cancelled but the Defendants in respect the 12 d. was not tendered at the place appointed set the said Deed up at Common Law and upon a Trial at Law without any defence made by the Plaintiff the Defendants were Nonsuited and the Plaintiff being a purchaser of the premisses first by Mortgage for 500 l. and afterwards by absolute Assignment for 770 l. more The Lord Keeper upon reading the said Cancelled Deed saw no cause to alter the Master of the Rolls his Decree aforesaid but ordered the same to stand Confirmed Comes Sterling contra Levingston 24 Car. 2. fo 113. 432. THat Sir Peter Vanlore the Elder being seised in Fee of the Lands by Deed Covenanted to stand seised thereof to several uses under which all parties to the Suit claim several parts of the premisses and here being a Proviso in the said Deed That if young Sir Peter Vanlore or the Issue whose Issues and Heir the now Plaintiffs are should attempt to impeach the said Settlement that then the uses to him and them limited by the said Deed should be void and that by the death of several persons several parts
Deed made by the Plaintiff Eliz. in Feb. 1666. Frandulent Deed. before her Marriage with the Plaintiff Sir Philip Howard and that the Plaintiff Sir Philip in right of his said Wife might have all her benefit and interest in or to the Estate of Sir John Baker her former Husband and receive the Rents and profits of the premisses The Case being that Sir John Baker the Father being seized in Fee of Lands by two Deeds Tripartite of Lease and Release made between himself of the one part Sir Robert Newton deceased of the second and Sir John Baker the Son and Dame Eliz. the Plaintiff and sole Daughter of Sir Robert Newton of the third part in consideration of a Marriage between the Plaintiff Dame Eliz. and Sir John Baker the Son and 4000 l. portion conveyed the same to Sir Robert Newton and his Heirs part of which Lands were for the said Dame Eliz. Joynture and Sir John Baker the Father and Dame Mary his Wife being dead Sir John the Son sold part of the premisses for payment of debts part whereof was the Joynture of Dame Eliz. and in consideration of the said Dame Elizabeth joyning in such sale and parting with her Joynture Sir John her Husband in lieu thereof and of 1500 l. to be paid to Dame Elizabeth for a Joynture house limitted the premisses unsold to the said Dame Elizabeth and the Defendants for 400 years upon Trust by Sale thereof to pay the said Dame Elizabeth the said 1500 l. and also the Rents and profits of the whole until Sale and the residue of the said premisses remaining unsold to Dame Elizabeth during her life and after to wait on the Inheritance And in 1658 the Inheritance was conveyed to Sir Robert Newton and his Heirs and he by Will devised the same to the said Dame Elizabeth for life Remainder to the first Son of the Plaintiff Sir Philip and Dame Elizabeth so the Plaintiff being intituled to the 1500 l. and the term of 400 years after the Trusts performed and so ought in right of the said Dame Elizabeth his Lady to continue in the possession of the premisses and receive the Rents and profits thereof which the Defendants refused to do pretending the term of 400 years is limited to them upon other Trusts and in particular that the Plaintiff Dame Elizabeth before her Marriage to the Plaintiff Sir Philip by her Deed of the 9th of February 1666 Assigned to the Defendants all monies then due or to be payable to her by vertue of the Deed in Trust for her benefit and to be at her disposing during the Joynt lives of her and the said Sir Philip whether she Married or continued Sole and that she should have power by writing under her Hand and Seal to dispose thereof for the benefit of her Daughter by her former Husband and that she hath disposed thereof accordingly which said Deed the Plaintiff insists is fraudulent or with power of revocation and never mentioned to Sir Phillip and that Sir Philip after his Marriage setled 500 l. per Annum on the said Dame Elizabeth for a Joynture which he would not have done if he had known or understood the said Dame Elizabeth had made such Deed or disposition as aforesaid of her former Husbands Estate and since their Marriage she desired leave of Sir Philip that she might receive the Rents and profits of the said Lands of her former Husband without mentioning the said Deed and therefore the same ought to be set aside The Defendants do insist the said Dame Elizabeth before her Marriage with the said Philip did declare to him that who ever did Marry her should have no benefit of any Estate that she had by her former Husband and that Sir Philip did agree to bar himself thereof and take no benefit thereby A Widow makes a Deed of her former Husband Estate and marries the second Husband not privy to it the Deed set aside and the second Husband to enjoy the Estate and that Sir Robert Newton looking upon the Estate as setled on his Grand-children as aforesaid and had given his personal Estate and 700 l. per Annum to the Plaintiffs and their Sons and the said Sir Robert Newton never pretended right to the said Estate or intermedled therewith that there is no reason to set a side the said Deed of the 9th of Feb. aforesaid This Court being assisted with the Judges on reading the said Deed it not appearing unto this Court that the said Sir Philip had any notice of the said Deed 9th of Feb. 1666. till after the death of the said Sir Robert Newton which was several years after the Marriage nor was privy or consented to the making of any such Deed but haveing intimation that Dame Elizabeth intended to dispose of her interest in her former Husbands Estate from such Husband as she should Marry broka off the treaty of Marriage which was afterwards brought on again by some Friends of the said Dame Elizabeth and that the said Sir Philip was induced to Marry the said Dame Elizabeth upon the hopes and confidence of having the interest she had in the Estate of the said Sir John Baker her former Husband without which he would never have married her and that the said Sir Philip never knew of the said Deed of the 9th of Feb. 1666 but the same was a fraud upon Sir Phillip and that therefore no use ought to be made thereof and decreed the said Deed of the 9th of Feb. 1666 be absolutely set aside and no use to be made thereof against the said Sir Philip or any claiming under him Poter contra Habbert 24 Car. 2. fo 591. THis Bill is to have a redemption of a Mortgage made in 1636 Mortgage by the Plaintiffes Father to one Abraham Dawes for 5000 l. and for non-payment of the Mortgage mony Sir Thomas Dawes Son and Heir of the said Abraham Dawes entred in 1641 and he and his Assigns have ever since taken the profits And the Defendant insists that the said Thomas Dawes in 49 conveyed the mortgaged premisses to Hugh Hubbert the Defendants Father for 7000 l. and that in 1641 when Sir Thomas Dawes entred there was 5000 l. due on the Mortgage besides interest so he would be charged without 350 l. per Annum for mean profits since that time and would have 6 l. per Cent. Interest for the 7000 l. from the time it appearing on the conveyance This Cause being first heard by Judge Ransford who ordered the Plaintiffs to redeem Computation of interest monies according to the Statute in force and the account for the Interest of the 500 l. to begin from 1636 the time of lending the mony and from that to 1642 Interest to be paid according to Acts then in force and from 42 to 46 Interest at 8 l. and 4 l. per Cent. The Cause being heard again by the Lord Keeper Bridgeman assisted with Judge Tyrrle Morton and Wild who ordered the
of the Estate to the Testator Whereto the Plaintiff insisted That the Custom of a Sum certain to be mentioned appeared only by a By-Law called Judd's Law in 5 Ed. 6. the which is no estabiished Law in the City to bind the Right of any and there is a great difference in the By Laws in the City which ought to respect their Government and not bind the Right of any person which is governed by the general Custom of the City and which is paramount to any of their By-laws and by the Custom the Right of a Freemans Child is as much preserved to him as any mans Right by the Common Law of the Kingdom besides the naming of the Sum is no more than in order to the setling the Accounts of the said Estate which may be done before a Master in this Court This Coutt upon Reading several Presidents on both sides declared That the said Certificate was conclusive and that the Plaintiff must be let in for a Customary part of her Fathers Personal Estate and decreed the same accordingly The Defendant was ordered to Account for all the Personal Estate of Bennony Honywood Fo. 598. and the Plaintiff thereout to have her Customary part her Marriage Portion being brought into Hotch potch with the rest of the Personal Estate and the Plaintiff to discover the said Portion on Oath and the Defendant to do the like as to what provision he had The Defendant insists What provision he had was Mony deposited by his said Father in the hands of Mr. Colvile and others to purchase Lands or Houses in or near London in pursuance of Articles between the Defendants said Father and the Defendants Wives Father which were made before the Marriage of the Defendants which Lands and Houses so to be purchased is by the said Articles covenanted to be setled on the Defendant and his Wife for life and for her Joynture Remainder in Tail and was in consideration of the Defendants wives Portion and Houses were purchased therewith in Bennony's life and the Defendant is his Son and Heir And the Defendant insists What Mony is deposited by the Father to purchase Lands in pursuance of Marriage Articles is to be taken as Real and not as a Personal Estate and shall not be brought into Hotch-potch That what was so deposited as aforesaid is to be taken as if the Defendants Father himself had purchased Lands and setled the same to the uses aforefaid and ought not to be accounted a personal Estate of the Defendants Father but as Land This Court declared what was deposited by the Defendants Father to purchase Lands in pursuance of the said Articles is to be taken as Lands and not as personal Estate of the Defendants said Father and also declared what was deposited as aforesaid shall not be brought into Hotch-potch but the Defendant is to discover what he had from his Father upon his said Marriage Prigg contra Clay 32 Car. 2. fo 198. THat John Clay by his Will devised 100 l. Will. to the Plaintiff Philip Prigg Jun. and Deborah Prigg his Sister in manner viz. 50 l. to the said Philip at his Age of 21 years on day of Marriage which should first happen by the Defendants his Executors and in the mean time the whole 100 l. to be secured and improved by his Executors for their use and in case either the said Philip or Deborah should die before payment of their Legacies the Survivor to enjoy the whole 100 l. and if both die before payment of their said Legacies then the Testator decreed the whole 100 l. to his Sister the Plaintiff Elinor their Mother besides 100 l. to her to be paid within 6 Months after his death That the said Deborah Prigg died unmarried and before 21 and before she had received the 50 l. Legacy so that the whole 100 l. became due to the Plaintiff Philip Junior The Defendants insists That Deborah died before the Testator and her Legacy of 50 l. became void This Court was sully satisfied Legacies of 50 l. apiece given to two and if either die before 21 the Survivor to have all One dies before the Testator yet the Survivor decreed to have all though Deborah died before the Testator yet the said Devise of 50 l. to her did not become void and being devised over to her Brother Philip the surviving Legatee it belonged to him according to the devise in the Will the rather for that it being a contingent Remainder and might vest after the death of the Testator so long as there was a Survivor it did not belong to the Executors and for that the Testator who lived for some time afterwards did not alter the devise thereof by his Will nor otherwise dispose thereof in Writing and decreed the Defendants to pay the Plaintiff the two 50 Pounds This Order was confirmed by the Lord Keeper Sanders contra Earle 32 Car. 2. fo 102. THat the Plaintiffs late Husband Daniel Earle Will. or some in Trust for him was at his death seised in Fee and also intituled to the Trust of a long Term of the Mannor upon a Sore and Lands in Com' Nottingham which said long Term was in being and subject to be disposed as she should appoint so that he had full power to settle devise or charge the same by his Will and the said Daniel in consideration of a Marriage with the Plaintiff and 2000 l. Portion he in 1676. by Will devised to the Plaintiff besides a Joynture of 1200 l. and if she were with Child of a Son he gave all his Lands and Tenements to such Son in Tail but for default of such he gave them to the Defendants his Brother and their Heirs and if he had a Daughter he devised to such Daughter 500 l. to be paid when she attained her Age of Sixteen and the same to be secured out of his Lands aforesaid and made his said Brothers Executors That the Plaintiff had no Son but a Daughter who lived some time and is since dead and the Plaintiff is her Administratrix whereby she is intituled to her 500 l. presently The Defendant insists That the Plaintiffs said Husband devised to the Plaintiff 1200 l. and devised to her all her Plate Jewels and Goods and Stock in and about the House at Normanton and made the Plaintiff Executrix till the last day of August after the Will and if she who was then with Child had a Son by that time then she to continue Executrix otherwise the Defendants to be joynt Executors and made such devise to the Daughter and the rest of his personal Estate he devised to his Executrix or Executors That the Plaintiff Margaret having but a Daughter the Defendants proved the Will and are intituled to the Legacies therein to them devised and the refidue of the personal Estate and insists That if the Plaintiff as Administratrix to her Daughter be intituled to the 500 l. yet she is not to receive it till
Mudghill as well as the other Lands and made other particular provisions further which shews he did not intend that for her for if he had he would not have Revoked the former Trusts as to that by which she would have been intituled as Heir especially when he hath devised all the Surplus of his Estate which involves Mudghill as well as the rest amongst his own three Daughters and her equally nor doth it any where appear that Mudghill is in any sort exempted from Satisfaction of the Creditors nor could it so be by the said deed made by Sir Olando Bridgman who best knew the intention of all Parties in this matter But the Plaintiffs insisted That the said Duke could not intend Mudghill should be conveyed to the uses declared in the Will for that the same is to be conveyed to the said Lord John and the Heirs Males of his Body which is an Estate of Inheritance and he had power by a common Recovery to have bound the remainder and the reversion after the Estate tale is not Assets in Law and therefore cannot be conceived for the payment of his debts and the rather for that he recites deeds in 1652. and April 1654. and directs the Trustees therein to convey all his Lands and Mannours in those deeds to his Dutchess and others as to the Mannour of Mudghill as before he declared by his Will and as to all the rest of the Mannours he declared for the payment of his Debts so that all the rest excludes the Mannours of Mudghill and upon the whole Will it doth appear the Duke intended no Reversion should pass but Reversions after Estates for life or years and therefore this Reversion of Mudghill which is after an Estate Tail doth not pass and if it had been intended to pass he would have limited it to the said Lord John for life without remainder to his first or other Sons in Tail for he had before given him a better Estate in Mudghill to him and the Heirs of his Body and the Trustees were not to settle Mudghill accordingly until the same fell in possession the same being yet for Pleydalls life This Court on reading the several Deeds and Will declared That although the Lord John might possibly have an Estate Tail in him and doct it but he not doing it this Court can take no notice of it though probably he did forbear to do it because Duke William had Signified his desire Reversion after an Estate in Tail subject to Trusts for payment of debts that he should not have an Estate executed to him till it should fall in possession and not before except the Trustees pleased But the case must be taken as it doth appear before the Court that is Mudghill was once liable to the payment of the Debts of Duke William and tho' 't is pretended that the Will hath taken out Mudghill yet the said Will doth only take out an Estate Tail but the Revesion thereof when the same falls in possession is subject to the same Trust and goes in company with the other Reversions and the same is legally conveyed and doth pass in the general words and therefore this Court is of Opinion that the Reversion of Mudghill is part of the unrevoked Estate and that the Lord Bridgman did well when he made the said Conveyance to the Lady Dutchess and that when the 19100. l. and the said other debts are paid to which Mudghill is as well liable as the other Mannours and Lands then the Trustees ought to convey all the premisses in Fourths and decreed accordingly Maddocks contra Wren 32 Car. 2. fo 22. THe question in this Cause is Mortgage Account with what profits the Defendant Wren shall be charged in ease of the Plaintiff who claims the premisses in question by virtue of a second Mortgage and is admitted to a Redemption on payment of what shall appear due to the Defendant Wren who hath the prior Mortgage The Plaintiff insists That the said Mortgage being of a Lease and the Defendant Wren having possession by Attornment of Tenants he ought to have received the profits whereby his Mortgage would have been fully satisfied yet he permitted the other Plaintiff Dorothy Wife of the Plaintiff Maddox the Mortgager to receive the same and therefore the said Wren ought to be charged whereby the Plaintiff may be let in to have Satisfaction of his Debt This Court declared The prior Mortgagee upon Redemption by the second Mortgagee shall be charged with the profits by whom soever Received after the Second Mortgage That the Defendant Wren ought to be charged with the Rent whether received by the Wife or any other Person after the Plaintiffs second Mortgage made but all received by her before the said second Mortgage he ought not to be charged Coles contra Hancock 32 Car. 2. fo 112. THat Benjamin Coles the 11th of June Revocation of a Will 1678. made his Will in writing and thereby gave to and amongst his then Children naming them viz. Benjamin Samuel Mary and Hannah Portions and appointed his Real Estate to be Sold and added to his Personal Estate and made Elizabeth his Wife his Executrix and the Testator being a Melancholy Person and fearing he might forfeit his Estate by making himself away to prevent a forfeiture by deed the 14 of June 1678. made over all his Personal Estate to Trustees first to pay his debts then to pay some Legacies and all the rest of his Estate to be divided amongst the aforesaid four Children That the Testator afterwards died a natural death but before his death had another Child viz. Sarah who is not provided for either by the said Will or Deed. The question is whether the said Will be Revoked by the said Deed of Trust that if it be Revoked then the said Sarah insists to have her share of her Fathers Estate and that he ought to be looked upon as dying Intestate and at least the Personal Estate ought to be distributed by the Act for distributing Intestates Estates and the deed ought not to stand in her way for that great part of the Estate did consist in debts which were made after the said deed and did not pass to or was vested in the said Trustees and that it is against Natural Right and Conscience that her Father leaving a considerable Estate she should have nothing of it This Court on reading the said Deed and Will is of opinion A Deed of Trust no Revocation of a Will that the said deed of Trust is no Revocation of the said Will being not made with intent to revoke the same but only to prevent the forfeiture in a case which never hapned and Decreed the same to be set aside and the Personal Estate to be distributed according to the Will and the remainder to be divided amongst the four Children Benjamin Samuel Mary and Hannah Estate Devised to be sold for increase of his Childrens Portions and a Child
is born since the Will that Child shall have a share the same being given to them by Name and as to the Real Estate it being ordered by the Testator to be added to his Personal for increase of all his Childrens Portions and the said Sarah being born before he died the same to be Sold and divided amongst the five Children viz. Benjamin Samuel Mary Hannah and Sarah equally Sale contra Freeland 32 Car. 2. fo 272. THat Thomas Freeland the Defendants great Grandfather Will. Settlement Revocation being Seized of the premisses did by his Will in writing devise the same to Nicholas his Son for life only and afterwards to his Grandson John late Husband of the Defendant Frances and Father of the Defendant John and his Heirs for ever That the said Thomas and Nicholas being dead John the Grandson entred and for 300 l. Mortgaged the premisses to the Plaintiff and not long after the said John on confidence of the power he had to dispose of the premisses made his Will and the Defendant Frances Executrix and devised the premisses to be Sold for payment of his Debts But the Defendant insists That the said Thomas the great Grandfather had no power to dispose of the same premisses and if he had he did not pursue it regularly for that he had made a Settlement of the premisses in 1651. upon one Henry Weston and his Heirs to the use of him the said Thomas for life and after to Nicholas his Son for life and after to the use of the said John his Grandson and the Heirs of his Body with remainder over and that the Defendant John the Grandson by virtue of the said deed as Heir in Tail claims the premisses whereas if any such deed were it was with a power of Revocation by any Writing or Will in writing to be executed in the presence of three Witnesses and was revoked by his making his said Will in the presence of three Witnesses though one of them then present did not subscribe the same That the said John the Grandson had the full power of the Estate and the grant made to the Plaintiff ought to be supported in Equity being for valuable consideration though the power was not litterally pursued in the Circumstances of three Witnesses the intent of the Person appearing as sufficiently by two Witnesses as if there were three and submit to the Judgment of this Court The Plaintiff farther insisting That the said Thomas the great Grandfather takes notice in the preamble of his Will of the power by him reserved upon the said Settlement to make any alteration thereof during his life and then by the said Will deviseth the premisses to the said John his Grandson in Fee and he Mortgages to the Plaintiff and there is no Colour but the Defendants ought to redeem or be foreclosed This Court it appearing that there was more than two Witnesses present at the publishing the Will A Settlement with power of revocation by Will in writing executed in the presence of three witnesses but one of them did not Subscribe his Name yet Decreed a sufficient Revocation though two only Subscribed their Names thereto and upon hearing the words of the power and also the Will of the said Thomas Read declared that as this case was Circumstanced there ought to be a Redemption or a foreclosure and that the Will although but two Witnesses to it did sufficiently revoke the said deed of Intail Rose contra Tillier 33 Car. 2. fo 435. THat William Tillier deceased Copyhold Surrendred on Condition to pay 200 l. to Katherine at 21 years of Age and if she die before 21 without Heirs of her Body then to the Surrendree Katherine dies before 21 leaving a Son Decreed the 200 l. to be paid to the Son and the Lands to stand charged therewith 14 Car. 2. Surrendred Copyhold Lands of Inheritance to the use of the Defendant J. Tillier his Heirs and Assigns for ever upon condition that the Defendant should pay or cause to be paid to Katherine Tillier the Daughter of the said William Tillier 200 l. when she should accomplish the Age of 21 and if the said Katherine should die before 21 without Heirs of her Body then the said 200 l. to be for the use of the said Defendant but if default should be made by the said Defendant then the said Copyhold Lands should be to the use of the said Catherine her Heirs and Assigns and the said Surrender to be void and the said Willian Tillier after the said Surrender and before he died by writing appointed the said Defendant not only to pay the said 200 l. to the said Katherine but also 6 l. per Cent. till such time as the same became due That the Plaintiff married the said Katherine and had by her one Son named George that after Katherine died and then George and the Plaintiff took Administration to them both whereby he is intituled to the said 200 l. with damages The Defendant insists That Katherine died before the Age of 21 and so he is not liable to pay the said 200 l. or to give any Account of the Lands or Profits in the Surrender This Court decreed the Defendant to pay the Plaintiff the said 200 l. and that the said Lands so surrendred stand charged therewith Thompson contra Atfield 33 Car. 2. fo 412. THe Bill is to discover a purchase Deed of Frogpoole Marriage Settlement purchased by Henry Atfield the Plaintiffs Great Grandfather to him and his Heirs and that William Thompson the Plaintiffs Grandfather married Mary the eldest Daughter of the said Henry Atfield who declared that he had made the purchase aforesaid for the benefit of the said William and Mary his Wife and for the Heirs of the said Mary and that he would settle the same accordingly but the said Henry Atfield dying before any such Deed was executed yet the said William and Mary were in possession long before the death of the said Henry and paid no Rent and the said Henry leaving a Son at his death viz John Atfield the Defendants Father who having a great affection for Anthony Thompson the Plaintiffs Father who was the Son and only Child of the said William and Mary his Aunt a Match was proposed between the said Anthony and Elizabeth Smith the Plaintiffs Father and Mother which took effect but before and in consideration of the said Marriage the said John Atfield the Defendants Father setled the said premisses on the said Anthony the Plaintiffs Father and his Heirs for ever and the said Anth. had by the said Elizabeth the Plaintiff his eldest Son and Heir But the Defendants pretend the said Deed is defective in Law to have which Deed made good and supply the defect thereof by Equity by the Defendant according to the intent of the original Settlement made by John Atfeild the Defendants Father is the Bill The Defendant insists There could be no such Marriage Agreement for setling
the premisses as aforesaid for that Mary sued her Mother and had her portion out of the personal Estate and though the Defendants Father might intend to give the Plaintiffs Father the premisses and sealed a Deed for that purpose yet he altered his Mind and never perfected it and there was no Consideration for his so doing And the Defendant insists He ought to enjoy the premisses for that by the Plaintiffs own shewing his Title is defective and therefore ought not to receive any countenance in a Court of Equity against the Defendant who is Heir at Law to his Father and Grandfather and comes in and ought to have the Aid of the Court to protect his Title But the Plaintiffs Council insisted That the Defendants detaining of the said Deed is a Fraud and the Consideration of making the said Deed is valuable Defect of Livery and Seisin aided in Chancery and there is no defect therein but want of Livery and Seizin which defect this Court hath often supplied when no Fraud appears in gaining the Deed. This Court the said Deed appearing to be fairly executed by the Defendants Father and that there was no defect therein save only the form of Livery and Seizin and made on such valuable Consideration as Marriage decreed the Defendant to execute Livery and Seizin in the said Deed and make farther assurance of the said premisses to the Plaintiff and his Heirs and the Plaintiff is decreed to enjoy the same against the Defendant Barker contra Hill 33 Car. 2. fo 278. THe Plaintiff having Contracted with the Defendants Father for the purchase of a Copyhold Estate Upon a Contract for Copy-hold Estate and purchase Mony paid the Bargainor dies before Surrender his Heir decreed to surrender the Plaintiff paid the purchase Mony and the Defendants Father agreed to surrender the premisses at next Court and said He had made a Surrender lately to the use of his Will which would enure to the benefit of any Purchaser but before next Court day and any Surrender made the Defendants Father died so the Bill is to have the Defendant his Son and Heir to confirm the Plaintiffs purchase by Surrender or otherwise as this Court shall direct This Court decreed the Defendant when he came of Age to surrender effectually the premisses to the Plaintiff and the Lord of the Mannor presently to admit the Plaintiff Tenant to the premisses Bonnington contra Walthall 33 Car. 2. fo 37. THe Defendant Walthall claims an Annuity of 100 l. per An. Annuity and Interest out of the Estate in question ever since August 1642. with Interest by virtue of a Deed of that date made by himself to Mr. Serjeant Willmot and others whereby it is appointed that the Trustees in the said Deed should dispose of the Monies by them raised by profits and sale of the premisses for payment to the said Defendant and his Assigns during his life and the life of Peter Bonnington the yearly Sum of 100 l. and the said demand of the said 100 l. per Annum and Interest being a Matter of great value and moment in the Cause it is referred to the Judgment of the Court whether all or how long the said 100 l. per Annum shall or ought to be allowed in this point as also the original Cause which was heard 19 Nov. 1679. coming now to be heard again The Plaintiff insisted That the 100 l. per Annum if it was created the same determined by the death of Peter Bonnington But the Defendant Walthall insists to have Allowance for the said Annuity of 100 l. and Interest for the same for 40 years past whereas the Plaintiff insists That the 100 l. per Annum never was nor ought to be allowed to the Defendant for that the Deed of August 1642. under which the Defendant claims the said 100 l. per Annum the same was to be paid in the first place before debts and there being a debt due to one Chambers which the said Defendant brought in against which debt if the said Annuity had been real the Defendant would have opposed the payment of his said 100 l. per Annum being to be paid in the first place and the Defendant not demanding the said Annuity in 40 years and suffering debts to be paid before it it ought to be adjudged a Trust for Peter Bonnington and the rather for that no Consideration appears for such Annuity The Defendant insists That the Plaintiff admits it a Trust and seeks Relief only for the Surplus after Trusts satisfied and determined and this Trust being Continuing the same with Arrears and Interest ought to be paid to the said Walthall This Court on reading the said Deed Annuity not being demanded in 40 years time conceived to be a Trust saw no Consideration for granting the said Annuity and it never being demanded this Court conceived it was a Trust for Bonnington and would not charge the Estate therewith and decreed the Estate to be discharged thereof Ring contra Hele 33 Car. 2. fo 270. THe Plaintiffs Rings Bill is for the Writings and Estate of Sir Henry Hele which he claims by virtue of an Agreement made by the said Sir Henry and him wherein it was agreed that the said Sir Henry should settle his Lands in Wigborough and Bridges in Com' Sommerset on himself for life after to the Heirs of his Body with power to make his Wife a Joynture of Wigborough and to grant Estates thereout for three lives with a Remainder to the Plaintiff Ring and the Heirs of his Body if he Survived and Sir Henry died without Issue with Remainder to Sir Henry's right Heirs with power to Sir Henry to sell Pooles Tenement part of the premisses and Sir Henry was forthwith to suffer a Recovery to dock the Intail of the premisses Consideration and in consideration thereof the Plaintiff Ring was to settle his Estate in Dorset and Sommerset to the use of himself in Tail with Remainder in Tail to Sir Henry Hele with Remainder in Fee to the Plaintiff and that if either party leave Issue to be at liberty to make new dispositions as he pleased That Sir Henry imployed one Chubb and Patten to assist the Plaintiff Ring in Surveying Sir Henry's Estate and after both the Plaintiff Ring and Sir Henry went to Counsel who advised a Deed of bargain and sale of the said Estate from Sir Henry to the Plaintiff Ring which was executed between the said Sir Henry and the Plaintiff Ring and Inrolled and bears date the 26 of March 1673 That before the said Recovery the Plaintiff Ring prepared another Deed dated the 6th of May following to lead the uses thereof according to the said Agreements and a draught of a Settlement of the Plaintiff Rings Estate on Sir Henry both which being perused and approved by Sir Henry were also executed and the Deed to lead the uses of the Recovery recited the said Agreement and Inrolled Deed to make the Defendant
dying of Thomas without Issue whereby the Earldom shall descend this shall go over to Charles that cannot be for it hath no Freehold to support it and so it s a Term in gross further there cannot by the Rules of Law or Equity be a Remainder for years of a Term limited after an Estate Tail neither directly nor upon Contingency as in Burges's Case but the Law will allow a remainder directly upon an Estate for life so likewise upon a Contingency if that were to happen during the Continuance of the particular Estate But this case is a step further and not to be allowed they relied chiefly upon Child and Bayles Case which was put thus by Chief Baron Mountague a Devise by A. of a Term to William his Eldest Son and his Assigns and if he die without Issue then to Thomas his youngest Son It was Judged in the Exchequer Chamber to be a void remainder because thereby a perpetuity would ensue though it was argued in that case that it was given upon a Contingency to the younger Son which would soon be Determined and end in a short time Chief Baron Mountague put this for Law a Term may be limited to one and the Heirs Males of his Body upon a Contingency to happen first with Limitation over if that Contingency do not happen it is a good Limitation as if a Term be limited to the Wife for Life and then to the Eldest Son if he over-live his Mother and the Heirs Males of his Body the remainder over to a younger Son if the Eldest Son dye in the life of the Mother the Limitation to the second Son may be good but if there be an Instant Estate Tail created of a Term tho there be a Contingency as to the expectation of him in remainder yet this is such a Total Disposition of a Term as after which no Limitation of a Term can be and so the Judges were of Opinion that the Plaintiff had no Right to the Term but the decree ought to be for the Defendant The Lord Chancellor Nottingham differed from the Judges and Decreed for the Plaintiff He put some steps or Preliminaries which he agreed with them and which were clear 1. That the Term in question though it were attendant on the Inheritance at first yet upon the hapning of the Contingency it s become a Term in gross 2. That the Trust of a Term in gross can be limited no otherwise in Equity than the Estate of a Term in gross can be limited in Law 3. The legal Estate of a Term for years whether it be a long or a short Term cannot be limited to any Man in Tail with the remainder over to another after his death without Issue this is a direct perpetuity 4. If a Term be limited to a Man and his Issue and if that Issue die without Issue the remainder over the Issue of that Issue takes no Estate and yet because the remainder over cannot take place till the Issue of that Issue fail that remainder is void too Reeves Case 5. If a Term be limited to a Man for his life and after to his First Second and Third Son in Tail Successively and for default of such Issue the remainder over though the Contingency never happen yet the remainder is void though there were never a Son born to him that looks like a perpetuity Sir William Buckhursts Case 6. One Case more and that is Burgesss Case A Term is limited to one for life with Contingent remainders to his Sons in Tail with remainder over to his Daughter though he had no Son yet because it was foreign and distant to expect a remainder after the death of a Son to be born without Issue that having a prospect of a perpetuity was adjudged void 7. If a Term be Devised or Trust of a Term limited to one for life with twenty remainders for life Successively and all the Persons in Esse at the time of such limitation these are all good remainders 8. A Term is Devised to one for 18. years after to C. his Eldest Son for life and then to the Eldest Issue Male of C. for life though C. had not any Issue Male at the time of the Devise or death of the Devisor but before the death of C. it s good being a Contingency that would speedily be worn out Cotton and Heaths Case for there may be a Possibility upon a Possibility and a Contingency upon a Contingency and in truth every Executory devise is so and therefore the contrary Rule given by Lord Popham in the Rector of Chedingtons Case is not Reason These things were agreed by all But the Point is The Trust of a term for 200 years is limited to Henry in Tail provided if Thomas die without Issue in the life of Henry so that the Earldom shall descend upon Henry then to go to Charles in Tail and whether this be a Limitation to Charles in Tail is the Question My Lord Chancellor conceived it a good Limitation as a springing Trust to arise upon a Contingency and which is not of a remote or long Consideration As for the Legal Reasons of this Opinion they were these 1. Many Men have no Estates but what consist in Leases for years Now it would be absurd to say That he who has no other Estate than what consists in Leases for years should be uncapable to provide for the Contingencies of his own Family though they are directly in his immediate prospect he shall not make provisions for Wife and Children upon Marriage 2. It was the Opinion of the Lord Chief Justice Pemberton That had it been thus Penned it had been good If Thomas die without Issue Male living Henry so that the Earldom descend upon Henry then the 200 years limited to him and his Issue shall cease but then a new Term of 200 years shall arise and be limited to the same Trustees for the benefit of Charles in Tail Now what difference is there why a man may not raise a new springing Trust upon the same Term as well as a new springing Term upon the same Trust It is true in 6 Ed. 6. in the time of Lord Chancellor Rich all the Judges delivered their Opinion If a Term of years be devised to one provided if Devisee die living I. S. then to go to I. S. is absolutely void But in 19 Eliz. Dier fo 277 328. it was held by the Judges to be a good Remainder Executory Remainder and that was the first time that an Executory Remainder of a Term was held to be good As for Child and Bayles Case the Case is truly Reported by Crook A Term of 70 years is devised to Dorothy for life then to William and his Assigns all the rest of the Term provided that if William die without Issue living at the time of his death then to Thomas which is in effect the present Case but there was more in it William had the whole Term to him and his
Dame Ann Daughter of Sir Robert Cann Articles of Agreement were executed and in pursuance of the Articles a Settlement of part of the premisses was made upon the Defendant Dame Ann for her Joynture and in the said Settlement there was a Covenant on the said Sir Robert Gounings part to lay out as much Mony in the Purchase of Lands as would amount to 110 l. per Annum to be setled on the said Dame Ann for her life remainder to the Heirs of the said Sir Robert Gouning which was intended to be an Inlargement of his Real Estate and to be for the benefit of his Heir but the said Defendant Dame Ann refuseth since the death of Sir Robert Gouning her Husband to whom she is Administratrix to execute the said Covenant in Specie by Purchasing of Lands of 110 l. per Annum to be setled according to the Covenant as aforesaid and which ought to come to the Plaintiffs as Coheirs of the said Sir Robert Gouning The Defendants insisting Covenant to settle Lands of 120 l per Annum to the said Remainder to the Heirs of the Husband Wife Administratrix refuseth the Bill was dismist that the said Covenant was made in favour of the said Dame Ann only and not for the Plaintiffs the Heirs benefit and the Defendant also as Administratrix claims Title to the Mortgaged Lands at Siston insisting that the same are a Chattel Lease for a long Term of years which by Assignment came to Mary Gouning Sister of the said Sir Robert and that she afterwards procured a Release of the Equity of Redemption for 950 l. including therein the Mony due upon the said Mortgage and that she purchased the Reversion in Fee thereof in the name of her Brother Sir Robert which she did on purpose to keep the Lease distinct and separate and that it ought not to go to the Heir but to the Administratrix But the Plaintiff insists That the said Lease ought to attend the Inheritance which Mary Gouning to whom the Plaintiffs are Heirs bought in for that purpose in the name of the said Sir Robert her Brother and that the same ought to come to the Plaintiffs as other the Real Estate of the said Sir Roberts This Court declared Lease to attend the Inheritance as to the Lands at Siston it was an Inheritance and ought to go to the Heirs at Law and decreed accordingly And as touching the Covenant for Purchasing Lands of 110 l. per Annum this Court dismist the Bill Eyre contra Hastings 35 Car. 2. fo 590. THat Henry Eyre deceased Relief upon a Mortgage the Plaintiffs Brother being seized of Lands 22 Car. 2. Mortgaged the same for 200 l. to Giles Eyre the Plaintiffs Son and the said Henry Eyre Covenanted to pay the Mortgage money and gave Bond for performance of the Covenants and the said Henry dying without Issue and Intestate the premisses descended on the Plaintiff as Brother and Heir and Administration was granted to Dorothy his Relict who paid the Mortgage money and Interest then due to the said Giles Eyre the Mortgagee in relief of the Plaintiff who ought to enjoy the premisses discharged of the Mortgage money and the said Dorothy made her Will and the Defendant Ralph Hastings Senior her Executor hath got the Mortgaged premisses Assigned to him and insists He ought to hold the same till the 200 l. and interest be paid him by the Plaintiff That the Defendant Ralph Junior an Infant claims the premisses by the Will of the said Dorothy who devised the same to him To be relieved against them and the Plaintiff to have the Inheritance of the premisses discharged from the payment of the Mortgage money and Interest and the Bond delivered up is the Bill The Defendant Hastings Senior insists Whether Mortgage Money be paid by the Administrator in relief of the Heir That the said Dorothy paid the said Mortgage money and interest but not in relief of or for the benefit of the Plaintiff and thereupon the premisses were Assigned to the said Hastings Senior in Trust for the said Dorothy who had an equitable Right to all her Husbands Estate and Dorothy devised the said premisses to Hastings Junior her Godson The Master of the Rolls decreed the Plaintiff to enjoy the premisses against the Defendant This Cause was Re-heard by the Lord Keeper and this Defendant the Infant insists That he is much prejudiced by the Decree for that thereby he is stript of the Estate in question devised to him by the said Dorothy's Will without payment of the money and interest there being no Covenant in the said Mortgage Deed for payment of the money and interest or any Bond but the Plaintiffs Counsel insisted That Dorothy paid the Mortgage money and interest for the Plaintiffs benefit The Defendant insisted that Dorothy declared the Mortgage money and interest was paid in relief of the Heir at Law This Court declared If there be no Covenant in the Mortgage Deed for payment of the Money the Administrator is not obliged to discharge it That in Case there was not any Covenant in the Deed for payment of the Mortgage money and Interest the said Dorothy the Administratrix was not obliged to discharge the same Massingberd contra Ash 35 Car. 2. fo 466. THis Court ordered a Case to be Stated in this Cause Executory Devises upon the Deed only by way of Executory Devise to bring the question arising into Determination as if in a Will and in such method as if the Trust and Limitations in the deed had been Limited and Created by the Will upon which Case the Judges of the Common Pleas were to Certifie their Opinions Whether the Remainder of a Residuary Estate of the two Leases or Terms in question limited to the Plaintiff were a good Devise or Limitation or not and the said Judges were also to be attended with another Case made upon both Deed and Will and they are to Certifie what the Law is in Case of Executory Devise as also what is fit to be Decreed in Equity The Case on the Deed only by way of Executory Devise is viz. Two several Terms one for 500 and the other for 99 years by Will dated the 1st of November 1679. and devised in these words viz. That Sir Henry Massingberd and his Assigns shall take the Rents Issues and Profits for and during the Term of his life And that after his Decease Elizabeth his Wife should receive the Rents Issues and Profits during her life And after the Decease of the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth the Eldest Son of the said Sir Henry begotten upon the Body of the said Elizabeth shall take the Profits of the said Lands till Age and then to have the whole Term to him his Executors and Administrators And if such Eldest Son happen to dye before he comes of Age then the second Son of their two Bodies shall take the profits of the said premisses till he come of Age
said Francis Pawlet and the other Trustees Executors Will pursuant to a Settlement for raising Portion That Vere Pawlet one of the said Daughters died and the Plaintiff her Mother took Administration to her Estate and thereby intitles her self to the said Portions of 4000 l. appointed to be paid to the said Vere at her Age or day of Marriage And the Question now being Whether the Plaintiff by virtue of such Administration is intituled to the Portion of her said Daughter Vere who died before her Age or day of Marriage and the Trustees should be compelled to raise the same out of the Trust of the Term of 500 years which was granted out of the Defendant the now Lord Pawlet the Infants Inheritance This Court upon perusal of Presidents declared Difference between a Legacy and a Trust they did not find any of the Presidents that came up to this Case and conceived there was a great difference between a Legacy and a Trust for that a Trust is expounded according to the intent of the party but a Legacy is governed by the Rules of Common Law and an Executor who is to have the residue in one case is not of so great regard as the Heir who is to have the residue in the other Settlement for the raysing of 4000 l. Portion to two Daughters to be paid at Age or day of Marriage one dye before her Portion shall not go to her Administrator but the Heir shall take profits That this case is of general concern to all Families for it was grown a thing of course to charge the younger Childrens Portions upon the Heirs Estate which would not have been charged but for these occasions of providing for Children And in this case the time of payment never hapning but becoming impossible by the death of the Child before the Portion was payable the Plaintiff has no right to demand it And it were hard for this Court to make a Strain against the Heir where the consideration failes for which the Portion was given viz. the advancement of the Children and altho' there were a Will in the case yet it refers to the Deed and was made at the same time so that it does not at all alter the consideration of the Case and it would be hard to decree the payment presently for that were to wrong the Heir who is to have the proceed of the Mony beyond the maintainance until the time of payment This Court saw no ground to take it from the Heir at Law to give it to an Administrator who might have been a Stranger and so dismist the Plaintiffs Bill The Presidents used in this Cause for the Administrators were Rowley contra Lancaster Brown contra Bruen Clobery contra Lampen The President for the Heir Gold contra Emery This Cause was heard in Parliament and the dismission confirmed Woodhall contra Benson al' 36 Car. 2. fo 314. THat John Wirley deceased Settlement Will. being possessed of divers Mannors and Lands for 320 years that the said Term came to the Defendants Adams and Shagburgh in Trust for payment of Monies and after in Trust for Edward Colley Grandson of John Wirley for his life and after his decease to the Plaintiff Ann late Wife of the said Edward Colley and the said Plaintiff Ann to have 130 l. per Annum for her life which Settlement was made in consideration of Marriage and after the death of Edward Colley the Trustees were directed to permit the Heirs Males of Edward on the Plaintiff Ann to be begotten to receive the residue of the profits and in case of no Issue Male of her there is provision for Daughters and Limitations over to the said Edward Colley's Heirs Males and it was also declared that in case the Plaintiff Ann should Survive the said Edward then she to have the moiety of the Mannor house for her life that the Trust limited to the Heirs Males of Edward and the Remainders thereupon depending are void and the benefit of the whole Trust was in Edward for that the Trust would not be Intailed That by another Deed it was declared by the said Edward Colley and his said Trustees that in case the Plaintiff Ann should have no Issue she should have the whole Mannor house above the 130 l. per Annum and by another Deed the said Edward Colley by consent of his said Trustees declared in case the said Edward should die leaving the Plaintiff Ann no Issue and should not otherwise dispose of the residue of the profits of the premisses over and above the Rents and Charges payable as aforesaid then his said Trustees after his death should by Sale or Leases of the premisses pay all debts and after all debts paid to permit the Plaintiff to receive the residue of the profits for her life and after her death to permit the right Heirs of Edward to receive the same That the Trust for the right Heirs of Edward was void and reverted and the said Edward did afterwards declare that in case he had no Issue he intended to leave his whole Estate to the Plaintiff Ann. That the said Edward 22 Jan. 26 Car. 2. made his Will in writing reciting the Agreement in the last Deed touching payment of his debts and after some small Legacies devised to his said Trustees all the rest of his personal Estate in Trust that they should pay his debts as aforesaid and declared his meaning to be that his Executors after his debts paid should deliver the overplus to the Plaintiff Ann deducting 5 l. a-piece for their pains and all charges That Edward soon after dying the overplus belonged to the Plaintiff and the said Trustees possessed the premisses and the personal Estate and the Plaintiff Ann having since intermarryed the Plaintiff Woodhal whereby the whole belongs and remains unto him in right of his Wife and the said Trustees ought to Assign to the said Plaintiff But the said Trustees pretend the Trust and Term aforesaid doth after the Plaintiff Anns death belong unto the Defendant Gabriel Ciber and Jane his Wife she being the only Sister and Heir at Law of the said Edward Colley That the Defendant Benson knowing of the Will and Settlement aforesaid purchased the premisses of the Defendant Ciber and his Wife and the Trustees Assigned to him The Defendants the Trustees insisted That their names were used in the Marriage Settlement of Edward Colley upon his Marriage with the Plaintiff Ann in which Settlement was recited a Conveyance made by John Wirley whereby he did demise the Trusts therein mentioned and the premisses in Trusts as to Clark's Farm for such persons as he or his Executors should by Will or otherwise direct and several other persons upon several other Trusts and as to several parcels of the said premisses which the said Defendant conceived was the Estate lately enjoyed by Edward Colley in Trust for such persons as the said John Wirley should direct and for want of such appointment to
Jane his Daughter for her life and after to John Colley her Son and Heir and his Issue Male and for want of such Issue in Trust for the Daughters of the said Jane and after the death of Jane and John Edward was intituled and he together with Sir John Wirley the Surviving Trustees upon Edwards marrying with the Plaintiff did Demise to the said Defendants the Trustees the Mannor-house c. for the Term of 20 years in Trust to pay certain Annuities therein mentioned and to permit Edward Colly for his life to receive the profits of the residue and in case the Marriage took effect and the Plaintiff Ann Survived him then to pay her 130 l. per Annum for her life and after Edwards death to permit the Heirs males of their two Bodies to receive the residue of the profits and for default of such Issue male there is provision for Daughters and supposes the residue of the profits may be limited to any Issue male of Edwards and for want of such Issue to permit the Defendant Jane and Ann since deceased Sister of the said Edward to receive the profits of the Estate as the Deed expresses and that he remembred no other Agreement than what is mentioned in the said Deed and sets forth the Deed of 21 Jan. 26 Car. 2. whereby the said Defendants the Trustees were intituled by Sale or Leases to pay debts and after payment thereof if the Plaintiff Ann should be then living should permit her to receive the residue of the profits for her life and afterher decease the right Heirs of Edward to receive the same that after the time of executing the last mentioned Deed the said Edward made his Will and after some Legacies took notice of the said Deed bearing date the day before and it was declared thereby that the Defendants the Trustees should out of the profits pay all his debts and being fearful those profits should not do did Devise to them all the rest of his personal Estate and made them Executors and after debts paid the residue to the Plaintiff Ann. That Nov. 1676 Edward Colley died after which the said Defendant proved the Will and entred on the Estate But the Defendants Ciber and Jane his Wife insisted That the said Defendant Jane being the only Sister and Heir to Edward Colley are after his debts intituled to the premisses for a long Term to commence after the death of the Plaintiff Ann and have sold their interest to the Defendant Benson Upon reading the said Deed and Will A Term in gross and not to be Entailed the Lord Keeper North was of opinion that the said Term so as aforesaid Created was a Term in gross and so not capable of being intailed and therefore it could not descend to the Heir of Edward Colley but that the same should be liable to the payment of his Debts and that the Plaintiff Ann should hold the 130 l. per An. for her life and after the said Debts paid the Plaintiff Ann should receive the profits of the whole Estate for her life charged with the said Annuity and the said Plaintiffs were to redeem the Mortgage to the Defendant Woodward But as to the Residue of the said Term after the death of the Plaintiff Ann and debts paid how the same should be disposed a Case was ordered to be made A Case being Stated this Cause came to be heard thereon before the Lord Chancellor Jefferies and all the former pleadings being opened as also the Defendant Cibers cross Bill which was to this effect viz. to have the said Term of 820. years to attend the Inheritance and the Case stated appearing to be no otherwise than before is set forth His Lordship on reading the said Deed and Will A Residue of a Term after debtspaid and a life determined Decreed not to the Residuary Legatee but to the Heir the Question being who shall have the remainder of the Term in the said Lease whether the Plaintiff Ann as Residuary Legatee or whether she shall have only an Estate for life his Lordship declared that the Deed and Will do make but one Will and by them there was no more intended to the Plaintiff Ann than an Estate for her life and that she ought to enjoy the whole Mansion House cum pertin ' during her life and also the overplus of the profits of the Residue of the said Estate after Debts and Legacies paid and the Defendant Benson who purchased the Inheritance of Ciber to enjoy the same discharging all things as aforesaid Hall contra Dench 36 Car. 2. fo 799. THat the Plaintiff Grace Hall Will. Revocation being Daughter of William Knight deceased who was Son of Susanna one of the Sisters and Coheirs of Thomas Bridger deceased which said Thomas Bridger being seized in Fee of Lands in Binstead and Middleton and having no Children made his Will in 1663. by which he gave to Tho. Knight Son of the said Willi. Knight all his Lands in Binstead to the said Thomas Knight and the Heirs of his Body and for want of such issue then to the Plaintiff Grace and the Heirs of her Body with Remainders over and by the same Will Devised one Moiety of the Lands in Middleton to the said Thomas Knight and the Heirs of his Body with the like Remainders over and sometimes after the said Will the said Thomas Bridger Mortgaged the said Lands in Binstead to John Comber and his Heirs for 500 l. and the said Bridger repaid the 500 l. and had the Mortgage delivered up and Cancelled but no Reconveyance of the Lands and that the said Comber after that was but a Trustee for Bridger the Mortgagee who in 1682. declared that the Will he made in 1663. should stand and be his last Will and then denied But the Defendant Dench having got the Cancelled Deed in his Custody and the Plaintiff brought an Ejectment under the Title of the Will and got a verdict for the Lands in Middleton but the Defendant at the Tryal setting up a Title in the Defendant Comber upon the Cancelled Mortgage for the Lands in Binstead a Verdict passed for the Defendant so to have the said Mortgage deed delivered up and the Plaintiff to enjoy the premisses according to the said Will is the Bill The Defendants as Co-heirs at Law to Bridger insist That the Testator Bridger never intended that the Estate should go as that Will directed in regard he soon after the said Will Mortgaged the same to Comber and besides the Legatees and Executors in the said Will were most of them dead before the said Bridger and the Mortgage money was not paid till after the Estate forfeited and that the Mortgage to Comber was an absolute Revocation of the said Will and upon an Ejectment brought by the Plaintiff under the said Will the Defendants obtained a Verdict for the Lands in Binstead wherein the validity of the said Will was in issue The Plaintiffs insist That the Verdict obtained
and Seisin This Court declared and was fully satisfied That in this Case his Majesty ought to be relieved Grant and Inrolment in the Dutchy-Court vacated and the Patentees decreed to Reconvey to the King and the said Grant set aside and made void and decreed the same accordingly and the Inrolment thereof in the Dutchy-Court vacated and the Defendants to procure those in whom the Estate in Law is to Reconvey unto his Majesty and the Defendants at liberty to apply to his Majesty for to have the Mony paid back which was paid to Sir Thomas Chichley and Cuxton as aforesaid Beckford contra Beckford 1 Jac. 2. fo 196. THat Richard Beckford Citizen and Freeman of London had several Children and by his Will in writing after Debts and Funeral Charges paid appointed one full third part of his Personal Estate to the Plaintiff Frances Beckford his Relict according to the Custom of the City of London and declared that Frances and Elizabeth two of his Daughters had been fully advanced in his life-time and that Mary and Jane two other Daughters had not and directed they should bring their Portions they had received into the third part of his Personal Estate belonging unto his unpreferred Children and they should have equal shares with his unpreferred Children Now the question between the Plaintiff Frances and the unpreferred Children how the said Estate should be divided by the Custom of London the Plaintiff Frances insisting that the Children not fully Advanced ought to bring what they had received into the whole Estate and then she ought to have one full third part of the whole Personal Estate insisting That every Widow of a Freeman ought by the Custom of London to be indowed with one full third part of the whole Personal Estate This Court declared the Custom to be The unadvanced Children by the Custom of London to bring in what they had received into Hotch-potch with with the Orphanage thirds after the Estate is divided into thirds and not with the whole Estate That the Testators two Children Mary and Jane who were not fully Advanced were to bring what they had received into Hotch-potch with the Orphanage thirds after the Estate is divided into thirds and not into Hotch potch with the whole Estate and decreed accordingly And what hath been received by any one more than their share and Legacies is to be Repaid as the Master shall appoint Halliley contra Kirtland 1 Jac. 2. fo 566. THat John Park Mortgaged Lands to the Defendant Kirtland for 60 l. Mortgage and was also indebted to the Defendant Sanderson 50 l. on Bond and the said Kirtland wanting his money Assigned the said Mortgage to the said Sanderson so that Sanderson on payment to him the money paid to Kirtland on the said Mortgage and his 50 l. on Bond and Interest is willing to Reconvey to the Plaintiff which they refuse to do This Court in as much as the Estate so vested in the Defendant as aforesaid The Plaintiff decreed to pay off a Bond of 50 l. as well as the Mortgage money upon Redemption is a Chattel Lease and so liable to debts and the Defendant having an Assignment of the Mortgage and his debt on Bond being a just debt declared that the Plaintiff ought not to be let in to a Redemption of the said Mortgage but upon payment of the said 50 l. and interest due on the said Bond as well as the Mortgage money and decreed accordingly Coltman contra Warr 1 Jac. 2. fo 566. THis Court would not Rehear a Cause after decree Signed and Inrolled No re-hearing after a Decree Signed and Inroled notwithstanding the said Cause had been opened since the Inrolement in order to Re-hearing and discharged the Order for Re-hearing Jones al' contra Henley 1 Jac. 2. fo 995. SIR Robert Henley by Will gives 100 l. Legacies a piece to all his Servants which Will is Dated the 10th of November 1680. and Sir Robert lived afterwards till the 7th of August 1681. but made no Republication of the said Will and the Plaintiffs as Servants to Sir Robert demands 100 l. apiece Legacy That these Servants viz. Jones Clerk Meeke Serle and Hanbury were all Menial Servants before the 10th of November 1680. and so continued till the 7th of August 1681. That these Servants viz. Litchfield Davies Deacon Booth Noon c. were all Servants at the time of his death but were not in his Service at the time of making of the Will that Cook and Hawkes were both Servants at the 10th of November 1680. but before the 7th of August 1681. were discharged from his Service That William Harris son was a Menial Servant the 10th of November 1680. but dyed before the 7th of August 1681. That Castilian Goddard c. were Servants at large but not Menial viz. as Steward and Bailiff before the 10th of November 1680. and so continued till the said 1681. but did not Inhabit in the House That Stranger and Long were Chairmen and agreed with after the said 1680. at 20 s. per week so The Plaintiffs insist That such that were his Servants at the time of his death ought to have the benefit of the said Devise But the Defendant insisted That none of the Plaintiffs can be any ways intituled to that benefit but only such as were Menial Servants before the publishing of the said Will and did so continue all along to be Menial Servants and live in the House with him to the time of his death This Court declared Who are Servants capable to receive Legacies by the general words of a. Will To all my Servants c. that none of the said Plaintiffs but such as were Servants to the said Sir Robert before the making the said Will and did so continue to be Servants to him until the time of his death could have any pretence to the said Legacy and such only as were his Menial Servants and lived all along in the House with him from before the 10th of November 1680. until the 7th of August 1681. and no others and ordered that Jones Clerk c. only and no other of the Plaintiffs be paid their Legacy of a 100 l. a piece by the said Defendant and ordered the Bill as to all the other Plaintiffs to be dismissed Fenwick al' contra Woodroffe al' 1 Jac. 2. fo 400. THat Doctor Smalwood deceased Agreement on Marriage to purchase Lands by Deed in 1672 conveys the Land and premisses to Trustees and their Heirs to the use of himself for life Remainder to Theophania his Wife for life Remainder to Mary their sole Daughter and the Heirs of her Body Remainder to his own right Heirs with a proviso That if his said Daughter Mary should then after Marry in his life time without his privity and consent first had then all and every the uses and limitations therein mentioned and made should cease and be utterly void That the said Mary
Kindid before distribution that share shall go to her or his Executors or Administrators and not to the Survivor next of Kindred to the first Intestate and before any actual distribution made vest an Interest in the respective persons appointed to have distribution of the surplus of his Estate as much as if it had been Bequeathed by Will and that if any one of them dye before distribution tho' within the year yet the part or share of such person so dying ought to go over to the Executors or Administrators of such party so dying and not to the Survivor or next of Kindred to the first Intestate and that the Lady Katherine was at her death well intituled to a share of her Brother Thomas Wentworths Estate as an Interest thereby vested in her notwithstanding she died within a year after the Intestate and before any distribution made and that the Lord Winchelsey as her Administrator is now well intituled therto and decreed a distribution and the Plaintiff the Lord Winchelsey shall have the Lady Katherines share and proportion of the said Thomas Wentworths Estate accordingly and the Plaintiff the Lady Elizabeth shall have a like share thereof with the Defendant Lister and John Wentworth 2 Jac. 2. so 315. The question being Whether the respective shares of the Plaintiff and Defendant Lister the said Lady Katherine and Elizabeth and the Defendant Lister being only of the half Blood to the Intestate and whether the Mony be vested in Lands or the Lands themselves should be accounted part of the personal Estate of the said Thomas Wentworth or not His Lordship ordered a Case to be made as to those two points The Case being viz That the said Thomas Wentworth died an Infant and unmarried leaving such Brother of the whole Blood and such Brother and Sisters of the half Blood as aforesaid who were his next of Kindred in equal degree and that upon his death a real Estate of near 2500 l. per Annum discended to the Defendant John Wentworth his Brother and Heir and that above 3000 l. of the profits of that Estate received in the Intestates life time by Dame Dorothy Norcliff and the said Trustees which belonged to him and his proper Monies were by them during his Non age and without any direction or power in their Trust but of their own Heads laid out in Purchases in Fee and Conveyances in their Names but in Trust for the said Intestates and his Heirs with this express Clause in the said Conveyances viz. in case-he at his full Age would accept the same at the Rate purchased the purchase being made with his Mony and for his advantage This Court as to the said two Points Half Blood to have an equal share with the whole Blood being assisted with Judges declared That the Plaintiff and the Defendant Lister ought each of them to have an equal share with the Defendant John Wentworth of the surplus of the personal Estate of the said Intestate and the distribution thereof ought to be made among them share and share alike and decreed accordingly And as to the other Point declared Trustees lay out the Monies of an Infant in Lands in Fee This shall be accounted part of his personal Estate he dying a Minor That the Monies laid out in the said Purchases ought to be taken and accounted for as part of the said personal Estate and distributed with the rest and decreed a Sale of the said purchased premisses and distribution thereof to be made as aforesaid Dom ' Middleton contra Middleton 1 Jac. 2. fo 793. THat Sir Thomas Middleton upon his Marriage with the Plaintiff Dame Charlotta Middleton Devise setled a great part of his Estate in Com' Flint and other Countries for her Joynture being seised in Fee of Lands in several Countries viz. Flint Denbigh and Merioneth and setled all his Estate on his first and other Sons on her Body in Tail Male and charged the same with several Terms of years for raising Portions for Daughters viz. If one Daughter and no Issue male 8000 l. and out of his personal Estate intending to make an addition to the Portion of the Plaintiff Charlotta his only Child and to increase the Plaintiff Dame Charlotta's Fortune and Joynture made his Will in 1678. and thereby reciting that whereas upon his Marriage-Settlement it was provided That if he should have a Daughter she was to have 6000 l. Portion as his Will was and he gave to his only Daughter Charlotta in case she should have no Son living at his death 10000 l. more as an addition to her Portion to make her up the same 16000 l. and for raising of the said portions and payment of his debts and Legacies he devised all his said Lands except his Lands limited for his Wives Joynture for her life unto Trustees and their Heirs in Trust to raise out of the Rents and profits of the said premisses the several Sums mentioned for his Daughters portion and the sums of Mony thereafter mentioned and Willed That till one half of the said Daughters portion should be raised his Daughter Charlotta to have 100 l. per Annum for the first four years and afterwards 200 l. per Annum till her moiety of her portion should be raised and after payment of the said portions maintenance debts and legacies he devised the said Trustees to stand seised of all the said premisses except before excepted to the use of the Heirs males of his Body with a Remainder to the Defendant Sir Richard Middleton his Brother for life without impeachment of Waste Remainder to his first Son and Heirs males of his Body with other Remainder to the Defendants Thomas Richard and Charles Middleton Remainder to the right Heirs of the said Thomas and he bequeathed to his said Daughter Charlotta the Plaintiff his Diamond-pendants which his Wife wore and bequeathed to his Wife Dame Charlotta after his death one Annuity of 200 l. per Annum for her life to be raised out of the profits of the said premisses and bequeathed the great Silver Candlesticks to go according to his Grandmothers Will to the Heirs of his Family with his Estate as an Heir Loom and bequeathed the use of all his Goods Stock and Housholdstuff to his Wife the Plaintiff Dame Charlotta for so long as she should live at Chirke Castle and from thence he left the same to his eldest Son and Heirs or such as should be Heir male of his Family according to the limitations aforesaid and his further Will was that his said Wife should have such proportion of the Goods Housholdstuff and Stock for the stocking and furnishing of Cardigan-House and Demean being part of her Joynture as should be judged fit by her Trustees that she might be supplied with Goods and Stock requisite for her House and left to whomsoever should be his Heir all his Stable of Horses and made the Plaintiff Dame Charlotta Executrix and died in 1683. leaving the
of his Real Estate on Trustees and thereby made a provision for the Maintenance of William the younger during his Minority and therefore they opposed the Plaintiff Frances getting Administration of William the Elder The said Plaintiff Frances Whitmore insisted That by the Will of William the Elder there was no joynt devise made to the said William the Son and the Issue Male and Female of the Sisters of William the Father but a several devise to William the Son with Remainder to the Sisters Issue and that the said William the Son having an Interest vested in him by the Will of his Father and being 18 years Old when he died and he having then a power to have proved his Fathers Will the Earls Executorship during his Minority being determined might have spent or given away the said Estate in his life-time he might surely give away the same by his Will which he having done to the Plaintiff Frances she is thereby well Intituled to the same and that the remainder over to Issue Male and Female of the Sisters the Estate being purely personal is absolutely void This Court hearing several Presidents quoted Devisee Infant lived to 18 years and makes his Will and Executors and dies the Executor shall have the Legacy for that an Interest was vested in the Infant declared That by the Will of the Father there was an Interest vested in William the Son and the remainder over to the Issue Male and Female of the Sisters of William the Elder was void and that William the Son living to 18 years and making his Will as aforesaid and the Plaintiff Frances his Executrix she is thereby well intituled to the surplus of the said personal Estate and decreed the same accordingly Whitlock contra Marriot 1 Jac. 2. fo 700. THis Case being upon a Scandalous Answer Defendant ordered to pay the Plaintiff 100 I for putting in a Scandalous Answer His Lordship declared the said Answer to be very Scandalous and Impertinent and that the expressions taken by the Defendant to the Masters Report were not only more scandalous but also Malicious and that it appearing that Ryley the Defendants Solicitor had put Mr. Lynn a Councellors Hand to the Exceptions without his Knowledge This Court Ordered the said Ryley to be taken into Custody of the Messenger and declared the Answer and Exceptions were not pertinent to the Cause but meerly to defame the Plaintiff His Lordship Ordered the Defendant Marriot to pay to the Plaintiff 100 l. for his Reparation and Costs for the abuse and scandal aforesaid and the said Ryley to pay 20 l. and to stand committed to the Prison of the Fleet till payment thereof be made Ash contra Rogle and the Dean and Chapter of St. Pauls 1 Jac. 2. fo 154. THis Case is upon a Demurrer Bill to enforce the Lord of a Mannour to receive a Petition in nature of a Writ of false Judgment to Reverse a common Recovery demurred to and the demurrer allowed the Plaintiffs Bill is to inforce the Defendant the Lord of the Mannour of Barnes in Surrey to receive the Plaintiffs Petition or Bill in the Nature of a Writ of false Judgment to Reverse a Common Recovery suffered of some Copyhold Lands in the Mannour by Susan R●gle Widow which the Defendant R●gle holds under the said Recovery the Bill setting forth that Katherine Ferrers by the Will of her Husband or by some other good Conveyance was seized in Fee of Free and Copyhold Lands in Barnes formerly her said Husbands in Trust to Convey 200 l. a year thereof upon William Ferrers her Eldest Son and the said Susan his then Wife and Heirs Males of the Body of William Remainder in Tail to Thomas Ferrers the Plaintiffs Father second Son of Katherine and the Heirs of his Body Edward being obliged by Articles upon Susans Marriage with his Son William to settle Lands of that value on Susan for her Joynture That Katherine on that Trust in 1642. surrendred the premisses to the value of 100 l. per Annum to the use of the said William and Susan and the Heirs of their two Bodies begotten remainder to the Right Heirs of William which was a Breach of the Trust in Katherine in limiting an Estate Tail to Susan when it should have been but an Estate for life That William died before the Admittance leaving Issue only his Son William and in 1652. Susan surrendred to one Mitchell against whom the Common Recovery in question was then obtained wherein one Walter was Demandant the said Mitchell Tenant and Susan Vouchee to the use of her self the said Susan for life the Remainder to William Ferrers and the Heirs of his Body the Remainder to the Right Heirs of the Survivor of them the said Susan and William her Son That William the Son died soon after and Susan died in 1684. and the Plaintiffs Father Thomas being dead without Issue Male in case the Common Recovery had not been suffered the premisses would have come to the Plaintiff being the youngest Daughter to her Father as Couzen and Heir both of William Ferrers the Father and William the Son the premisses being Burrough-English and so the Plaintiff was well Intituled to prosecute the Lord of the Mannour in the Nature of a Writ of False Judgment to Reverse the said Recovery wherein there are manifest Errors and Defaults but the said Lord refuses to receive the said Petition and combine with the Defendant Rogle who is Son and Heir of the said Susan by a second Husband who pretends that his Mother Susan surviving her Son William Ferrers the premisses are discended to him by virtue of the use of the said Recovery limited to the Right Heirs of the Survivor of Susan and her Son William so the Plaintiffs Bill is to examine the defects of the said Recovery The Defendants demur for that the Relief sought by the Bill is of a strange and unpresidented Nature being to avoid and reverse a Common Recovery had in the said Mannour 30 years ago and that upon a bare Suggestion generally that the Recovery is erroneous without instancing wherein which may be said in any case The Master of the Rolls declared That as that part of the Bill which seeks to impeach or reverse the said Recovery for any errours or defects therein or compel the said Lord to receive any Petition for reversal thereof or any ways to impeach the same his Honour declared That this Court being the proper Court to supply the defects in Common Assurances and rather to support than to assist the avoiding or defeating of them and there being no presidents of such a Bill as this is he thought not fit to admit of this nor to introduce so dangerous a president whereby a multitude of Settlements and Estates depending on Common Recoveries suffered in Copyhold Courts for valuable Considerations would be avoided and defeated through the negligence or unskilfulness of Clerks and therefore conceived the said Common Recovery ought
c. upon Trust to himself for life and after his death to satisfie the said Bond of 3000 l. for payment of 1500 l. to Sir Jonathan for the future Maintenace of the said Frances according to the said Marriage Agreement and in full of Dower and to do all things according as he by his last Will should direct That the said Benjamin by Will 10 Dec. 1681. therein reciting the Condition of the said Bond gave his Wife 1000 l. unpaid of Sir Jonathans Bond and his Trustees to pay 1500 l. with 500 l. he had received of Sir Jonathan in part of his Wives portion which Sums made in all 3000 l. and was to be laid out in a purchase of Lands to be setled to the uses aforesaid and made Hulkot and Fowler Executors in Trust to manage for the Plaintiff whom he made his sole Executor who afterwards took upon him the Execution of the said Will and claims the said 3000 l. to be laid out in Lands to be setled according to the said Marriage Agreement which was in case Benjamin died without Issue the said Lands so to be setled were to come to Benjamins right Heirs and the Plaintiff is Instituted as Heir and Executor of Benjamin The Defendant Pierce confesses the Marriage Agreement and Bonds as in the Bill and that the Marriage between the said Henry and Frances took effect and the said Benjamin is since dead and that since his death the said Defendant Pierce hath married the said Frances and is thereby intituled to the benefit of the Bond entred into by the said Benjamin to Sir Jonathan and the Monies due thereon and to the Third part of Benjamins Lands The Plaintiffs insist That the said Frances dying without Issue the Mony in Sir Jonathan Atkyns his hands ought now to be paid to the Plaintiff This Court upon reading the said Bond and Condition and the Deed and Will of Benjamin declared That by the Marriage Agreement and Condition of the Bond it was very clear that the said Frances having no Issue by the said Benjamin could only have an Estate for life or the Interest of the Mony for her Maintenance and that the Plaintiff is well intituled to have the said 3000 l. paying the Defendant Pierce Interest for the 1500 l. which the said Benjamin the Plaintiffs Testator was bound to lay out and decreed accordingly Kettle by contra Lamb 2 Jac. 2. fo 1064. THat on a Treaty of Marriage between Richard Kettleby the Plaintiffs younger Brother Monies to be laid out in Lands for a Joynture by Marriage Articles and the Defendant Ann now Wife of the Defendant Atwood Articles were entred into and made between Thomas Laud Father of the Defendant Ann of the first part and the said Richard Kettleby of the second part and the Plaintiff and others Trustees of the third part whereby the said Lamb Covenanted to pay 1500 l. to the said Trustees as a Marriage-portion with the Defendant Ann his Daughter and the said Richard Kettleby Covenanted to pay 500 l. more which being 2000 l. was agreed to be laid out in the purchase of Lands to be setled upon the said Richard for life and after on the said Trustees and their Heirs during the life of Richard to preserve the contingent Remainders and after to the use of the said Ann his Wife during her life for her Joynture and after to their first and so to their seventh Son of their two Bodies and their Heirs successively and for want of such Issue to the Daughters and for want of such Issue to the right Heirs of the said Richard Kettleby for ever and that by the said Articles it was agreed that before such purchase could be made the said Trustees should place out at Interest the said 2000 l. and from time to time pay over the Interest to such person to whom the Lands are intended to be purchased was limited as if the same had been purchased and setled accordingly and there was a Proviso in the Articles That if the said Richard died before a purchase should be made leaving no Issue of his Body on the Body of the said Ann his intended Wife and Ann survived him that in that case the 2000 l. or so much thereof as was not laid out in Lands should either be laid out in the purchase of Lands to be setled upon the said Ann for life with Remainder to the right Heirs of Richard or else Three parts thereof the whole to be divided into Four parts of such Moneys as should be paid to the said Ann her Executors c. at her Election so as she made such Election within six Months after the said Richards death otherwise at the Election of Richards right Heir That afterwards the Marriage took effect and 1500 l. of the 2000 l. placed with the said Lamb by the Trustees who paid the Interest thereof to the said Richard Kettleby during his life and before the Mony was laid out in a purchase Richard died Intestete leaving Issue one Daughter named Ann who likewise died in a Month after the said Richard whereupon the Right of the 2000 l. or Lands to be purchased therewith after the death of Ann the Wife accrued to the Plaintiff Edward Kettleby as right Heir of the said Richard Kettleby so to have the 2000 l. invested in Lands and setled according to the said Articles for the benefit of the Plaintiff is the Plaintiffs Suit The Defendant Atwood who hath married the said Ann the Relict of the said Richard Kettleby insists That the said Ann his Wife is Administratrix to Richard her first Husband and the said Ann her Daughter and thereby well intituled to the personal Estate and that according to the Proviso in the said Articles the said Ann had made her Election to have 1500 l. of the 2000 l. to be at her own disposing and that she was well intituled to the other 500 l. as Administratrix to Richard and Ann her said Daughter and that the Marriage Articles being meerly for the benefit of the said Defendant Ann Atwood and her Issue and the Plaintiff no way intituled under the Consideration thereof there was no ground in Equity to compel a performance so as to give the Plaintiff the Defendants portion This Case being heard by the Lord Keeper North he declared That the 2000 l. did belong to the Administratrix of the said Richard Kettleby and ought not to be setled upon his Heir and dismissed the Plaintiffs Bill which dismission being signed and inrolled the Plaintiff brought his Bill of Review against the said Defendants and for Error Assigned that whereas it was declared by the said Lord North that the 2000 l. did belong to the Administratrix of Richard Kettleby and not to be setled upon his Heir That the same ought to be Decreed to be laid out in Land to be setled upon the said Ann only for life Remainder to the Plaintiff as Right Heir of Richard and his Right Heirs for ever according
Rent-charge devised in lieu of a Joynture and by the same Will an implicit Devise of Lands to her Decreed she shall have only the 200 l. per Annum 64 Parol Declaration of ones Intent not good against a Declaration in Writing 78 Deed tho' Cancelled yet good 100 Demurrer to a Bill of Discovery whether the Defendant be married or not good for that if she be married it s a forfeiture of the Estate 68 Bill to discover Settlements in Trust Plea That the Defendant was a Scrivener and had taken Oath not to discover the Secrets of his Clients Overruled 29 E DEfendant in what cases not to be Examined upon Interrogatories 16 Estate Personal Trustees lay out the the Monies of an Infant to purchase Lands in Fee this shall be abcounted part of his Personal Estate he dying a Minor 377 Personal Estate not specifically devised to be applied to the payment of Debts and the Real Estate not subject thereto 383 Remainder of a Personal Estate devised after Issue to J. S. a void Remainder 66 Articles of a Purchase and 600 l. paid Contractor dies before any Conveyance executed it was accounted part of his Personal Estate 139 F FOreign Attachment London 109 Fraudulent Deed or not 33 A Widow makes a Deed of her former Husbands Estate and marries the second Husband not privy to it the Deed set aside and the second Husband to enjoy the Estate 1 G GVardian takes Bond in his own name for Arrears of Rent by this the Guardian hath made it his own debt 97 H A Residue of a Term after Debts paid and a Life determined decreed not to the residuary Legatee but the Heir 296 No Re-hearing after a Decree Signed and Inrolled 361 The Heir relieved against a Contingent Contract made in his Fathers life time because it seemed unconscionable Marriage Agreement to have Mony laid out in Lands for a Joynture to such Vses the Remainder to the use of the right Heirs of the Husband the Mony is not laid out the Husband dies without Issue the Mony decreed to the Plaintiff being right Heir 400 Portion devised upon a Contingency of dying or Marriage decreed to be paid into Court for the benefit of the Heir if the Devisees dye 150 Persons by Habeas-corpus brought to Bristol and turned over to the Fleet for that he was in Contempt 151 I. THe certain profits of the premisses set against the Interest Interest upon Interest decreed 82 286 Where there is no Contingency of Survivorship but the Interest presently vests 133 Plaintff not relieved against a Judgment entred into 60 years ago and no consideration proved 54 From what time of the entring Judgment to be accounted 90 Examination of the actual entry of a Judgment in Chancery to what purpose 91 Judgments to Attach Lands according to the Priority of Originals 148 K. THe Kings Officer previledged from Parish Offices tho' he drive a Trade in the Parish 197 L. OF Leases to attend the Inheritance 233 243 273 Legacy vid. Wills Difference between a Legacy and a Trust 288 Who are Servants capable to receive Legacies by the general words to all my Servants c. Legacies to Poor Kindred how far to be Extended 395 Estate decreed to the residuary Legatee and not to the Administrator 100 Legacies given by a Will and a Codicil are distinct and not the same 74 Land Legatees and Mony Legatees decreed to abate in proportion 155 Legacy to be paid at 16 Legatee dies before her Administrator shall not receive it till the 16 years end 191 Legatee dies before payment of his Legacy yet payable to his next of Kin 98 Legacies devised to such who shall be his Servants at the time of his death who shall be said to be such Servants 101 Two Legatees and if either dye then to the Survivor one dies in the life of the Testator the Survivor shall have all 188 What Amounts to an Assent to a Legacy 250 Difference between a Lease which is to commence after failure of payment and a Mortgage with a Condition subsequent 54 Limitation of a Trust for the Heirs Males void and the benefit of the Trust belongs to the Executor 58 Defect of Livery and Seision aided in Chancery 250 M BIll to enforce the Lord of a Mannor to receive a Petition in nature of a Writ of false Judgment to reverse a common Recovery demurred to and the Demurrer allowed 387 Of Marriages by consent 24 95 366 Marriage Agreement provided if the Wife claims any of the personal Estate by the Custom of the Province of York then the Estate to go to other uses decreed she is bound by the said Settlement and ought not to claim any part of the personal Estate 251 Mean profits decreed tho' a long time since the mean profits tho' omitted in a former Decree yet decreed in a Later 261 The prior Mortgagee upon redemption by the second Mortgagee shall be charged with the profits by whomsoever received after the second Mortgage 209 Mortgage for 2000 l. before which time the Mortgagor borrowed of him that was afterwards Mortgagee 300 l. which was agreed should be secured by the said Mortgage both sums must be paid upon the Redemption 247 Whether Mortgage Mony to be paid by the Administrator in relief of the Heir and when not 274 275 The Plaintiff decreed to pay off a Bond of 50 l. as well as the Mortgage Mony upon Redemption 361 Creditors on Judgments and Bonds decreed to redeem Mortgages 396 Mortgage Mony to whom payable to the Heir or Executor who shall have the Equity of Redemption 42 140 143 155 Rent charge in Fee Mortgaged is devised then the Mony is paid the Administrator shall have it and not the Heir 162 An Ancient Recognizance not set aside to let in a Mortgage 106 Adventure in the East India Company Mortgaged is Redeemable 108 Purchase Mony Bill for the Remainder of Purchase Mony Defendant pleads it is 33 years since and never any Suit for it but the Land enjoyed and former parties concerned dead a good Plea 44 N. NE exeat Regnum 19 And the Causes of it 20 Laymen to find Security as well as Clergy-men upon a Ne exeat Regnum 20 O THE unadvanced Children by the Custom of London to bring in what they had received into Hocpoch with the Orphanage thirds after the Estate is divided into thirds and not with the whole Estate 360 Executor decreed to pay in Orphans Mony into the Hand of W. B. c. 12 What Declaration in writing of a Freeman will let in his Child to have a Customary part 183 What Mony is deposited by the Father to Purchase Lands in persuance of Marriage Articls is to be taken as Real and not as personal Estate and shall not be brought into Hochpoch vid. 50 92 Title under an Occupant demurred to 112 P INformation by English Bill proper to relieve against a Patent granted by Surprize 357 Patent not reversable by Scire facias ib. Of Perpetuities
284 Middleton conta Middleton p. 377 Com' Montague contra Com' Bathe p. 417 N NEwton contra Langham p. 108 Newport contra Kinaston p. 110 Nowell contra Robinson p. 248 Nodes contra Batle p. 283 Norton contra Mascall p. 304 O OLiver contra Leman p. 124 P POtter contra Hubbert p. 85 Plummer contra Stamford p. 106 Prigg contra Clay p. 187 Dom ' Pawlet contra Dom ' Pawlet p. 286 Pullen contra Serjeant p. 300 R DOm ' Read contra Read p. 19 Rowley contra Lancaster p. 24 Ramsden contra Farmer p. 115 Ray contra Stanhope p. 157 Raymond contra Paroch ' Buttolphs Aldgate p. 196 Rose contra Tillier p. 214 Ring contra Hele p. 221 S SMith contra Holman p. 23 Shalmer contra Gresham p. 29 Stowell contra Botelar p. 68 Com' Sterling contra Levingston p. 75 Sutton contra Jewke p. 95 Stickland contra Garnet p. 97 Sowton contra Cutler p. 108 Salter contra Shadling p. 117 Still contra Lynn p. 120 Stawel contra Austin p. 125 Stewkley contra Henley p. 166 Saunders contra Earle p. 188 Sale contra Freeland p. 212 Stapleton contra Dom ' Sherwood p. 255 Skinner contra Kilby p. 491 T TOlson contra Lamplugh p. 43 Thorne contra Newman p. 71 Tregonwel contra Lawrence p. 94 Twyford contra Warcup p. 106 Turner contra Turner p. 154 Trethervy contra Hoblin p. 172 Tucker contra Searle p. 173 Thompson contra Atfield p. 216 Turner contra Crane p. 242 W WIndham contra Love p. 14 Wiseman contra Foster p. 22 White contra Ewens p. 49 Warren contra Johnson p. 69 Wallop contra Dom ' Hewet p. 70 Wall contra Buckley p. 97 Winchomb contra Winchomb p. 101 Woolstenholme contra Swetman p. 129 Warwick contra Cutler p. 136 Warner contra Borseley p. 151 Windham contra Jennings p. 247 Woodhall contra Benson p. 290 Com' Winchelsey contra Dom ' Norcliff p. 365 Whitmore contra Weld p. 382 Whitlock contra Marriott p. 386 Y YAte contra Hook p. 39 Books lately Printed for John Walthoe in Vine Court Middle-Temple AN Exact Table of Fees of all the Courts at Westminster as the same were by Orders of the several Courts carefully Corrected and diligently Examin'd by Records and Ancient Manuscripts by the Persons following Viz. The CHANCERY by Sir Miles Cooke Samuel Keck Esq and others The KINGS-BENCH on the Plea-side by W. Turbill and Nicholas Harding On the Crown-side by R. Seyhard and Richard Horton The COMMON-PLEAS by W. Farmerie Silv. Petyt and H. Clift The EXCHEQUER On the Plea-side by R. Beresford Tho. Arden c. On the Equity-side by Butler Buggins Esq Very useful and necessary for all Attorneys Solicitors and Entring-Clerks and indeed for all Persons that have any Business of moment To which is added a Table for the ready finding out the Fees belonging to each Office 2. Reports of Cases Taken and Adjudged in the Court of Chancery in the Reign of King Charles the First and to the 20th Year of King Charles the Second Being Special Cases and most of them decreed with the Assistance of the Judges and all of them referring to the Register-Books Wherein are setled several Points of Equity Law and Practice To which are added Learned Arguments relating to the Antiquity of the said Court its Dignity and Jurisdiction 3. Observations Historical and Genealogical in which the Originals of the Emperor Kings Electors and other the Sovereign Princes of Europe with a Series of their Births Matches more Remarkable Actions and Deaths As also the Augmentations Decreasings and Pretences of each Family are drawn down to the Year 1690. 4. The Law of Obligations and Conditions or an acurate Treatise wherein is contained the whole Learning of the Law concerning Bills Bonds Conditions Statutes Recognizances and Defeazances as also Declarations on Special Conditions and the Pleadings thereon Issues Judgments and Executions with many other useful Matters relating thereunto digested under their proper Titles To which is added a Table of References to all the Declarations and Pleadings upon Bonds c. now extant 5. A compendious and acurate Treatise of Fines Fines upon Writs of Covenant and Recoveries upon Writs of Entry in the Post with ample and copious Instructions how to draw acknowledge and levy the same in all Cases Being a Work performed with great Exactness and full of Variety of Clerkship The Third Edition enlarged REPORTS AND CASES Taken and Adjudged in the COURT of CHANCERY In the REIGN of King CHARLES II. Every contra Gold 20 Car. 2. fo 921. THE Bill is to be Relieved for two Legacies of 1500 l. apiece which the Plaintiff claims as Administratrix to her Daughters Susanna and Martha Every given and secured to them by several Conveyances and by the last Will of William Every their Grandfather The Case is viz. Portions raised by Deed. That the said William Every the Grandfather in consideration of a Marriage between William Every his Son and the Plaintiff Martha a Daughter of Sir John Pool by Deed 22 April 7 Car. 1. did provide That if William his Son should die without Issue male by him on the body of the said Plaintiff Martha and should have two Daughters by the Plaintiff Margaret then living or if the said William should fail to have issue Male which should be living until the same Daughters should respectively attain 18 years of Age or be married that then the Recoveror therein named should stand seised of the Premisses to the use of the Recoverors and their Heirs for the raising 1500 l. apiece for the Portions of the said Daughters and 20 l. a piece per annum for each of their Maintenance in the mean time to be paid at their respective Ages of 18 years or days of Marriage which should first happen and if either of the said Daughters should die before that Age or Marriage the Portion of her so dying to be distributed to the Survivor and if all the said Daughters should die their Portions not paid or payable then the same should be paid to the next Heir of William Every the Grandfather That William Every the Son New Provision by a second Deed and a Will thereupon had Issue by the Plaintiff one Son named William and two Daughters the said Susan and Martha and by Deed of Bargain and Sale and Release thereupon both dated in December 1651 in which Release so much of the Tripartite Indenture as relates to the Daughters Portions is recited William Every the Grandfather Conveys to Gold Doble and Holloway and their Heirs Lands in Somersetshire to the use of William the Grandfather for life and after to Gold Doble and Holloway for 200 years with other Remainders over upon Trust out of the Profits or by granting Leases or Estates to pay his Debts first and then for raising to and for the said Susan and Martha so much Mony as should supply and advance their respective Portions to them severally thereafter to be given by William
of the said Testator Joseph Jackson This Court upon reading the said Deeds and Will Mortgage-Mony payable to the Executor and not to the Heir by several good circumstances in the Conveyances conceived that there was no question in the Case but that the said several Sums of 2000 l. and 500 l. being the Mortgage-mony ought to go not to the Heir but to the Executors and to be accounted part of the Testators personal Estate he having by his Will given his real Estate by Name to his Heir besides his Portion of 2000 l. and one 4th part of the Overplus of his personal Estate the rather for that it was not in the power of the Heir to discharge the Judgment or the Mortgage and the Moneys by the several Provisoes being made payable to the Executor and not to the Heir and the Original Mortgage being but for years though altered by Act in Law and the Testator having by Will charged the Lands devised to his Heir to supply the deficiency if the personal Estate should not be sufficient Whereas if he had not taken the Mortgages to be part of his personal Estate he would have supplied the same out of the Mortgages and decreed Sir Thomas Hooke to Redeem and he pay the Plaintiffs the Executors the Mortgage-Mony with Interest Tolson contra Lamplugh 21 Car. 2. fo 786. THe Plaintiff prays liberty to make use of Depositions taken in a former Cause wherein Henry Tolson Depositions taken in a former Cause made use of the Plaintiffs late Father deceased was Plaintiff against Abraham Molline and his Wife and Mr. Winstanley Defendants The Defendant Lamplugh insisted That there is no colour or ground for the using the said Depositions taken in the Cause wherein the said Henry Tolson was Plaintiff at the Trial directed those Depositions being taken in a Cause whereto neither of the Defendants the Lamplugh's are parties and there is more difference of the Title between the Defendants the Lamplugh's and Mr. Moline and Winstanley than between the said Lamplugh and the Plaintiff Tolson The Plaintiff Tolson insisted That the Defendants the Lamplugh's claimed and derived their Title under Mr. Moline and his Wife and Winstanley and so the said Depositions ought to be used at the Trial which the Defendant denied This Court declared That the Depositions in the said former Cause ought to be used against the now Defendants the Lamplugh's unless they claim under the said former Defendants but if they do then the said former Depositions ought to be admitted as Evidence against them Hunton contra Davies 22 Car. 2. fo 386. THE Bill is for 500 l. Remainder of 2900 l. which Mr. Hugh Ordley was to pay for the purchase of Land to the Plaintiffs Father which 500 l. was decreed to be paid to one Castle in 1637. for the use of the Plaintiff which 500 l. and Interest comes to 1184 l. and to have the Defendants the purchasors of the Land to pay it To which Bill the Defendants Bill for Remainder of purchase-Mony Defendant pleads it is 33 years since and never any Suit for it but the Land enjoyed and former parties concerned dead per Cur ' a good Plea the Executors of Ordley pleaded That Mr. Ordley lived in London till 1662. and the Plaintiff might have had remedy against him and it being a debt 33 years since and no Suit commenced against Ordely in his life time nor any till now and the Lands enjoyed by others now and the Defendants the Executors have nothing to shew for the payment and Case and all former parties concerned therein being dead and therefore after all this time the Defendants hope this Court will not suppose that the said Mony is unpaid or that the Defendants ought to be charged therewith and the Defendants being Executors and Strangerr to all the Matters aforesaid This Court held the Plea and Demurrer good Malpas contra Vernon 22 Car. 2. fo 360. A Bill of Review Bill of Review to Reverse a Decree whereby the Plaintiff is decreed to pay more Mony than by his Agreement on his Purchase he was to pay This Court declared That without a special Agreement at the time of the purchase for payment of the debt claimed by the Defendant the Plaintiff ought not to be oblig'd by the Decree to pay the Defendants no such Agreement appearing by the Decree or any Proof offered at the Hearing The Defendant insisted That by the Proofs there is an Agreement proved whereby the Defendant amongst other Creditors was to be satisfied his debt Now the Point being No new Proofs admitted upon a Bill of Review upon a second Agreement whether any special Agreement was made for the purpose aforesaid and the Court had declared no new Proofs could be admitted in the Cause this Court Ordered by consent That the Cause be heard on the said point of Agreement on the old Proofs and no other Comes Castle-Haven contra Vnderhill 22 Car. 2. fo 106. THis is a Bill of Review Bill of Review to Reverse a Decree in 12 Car. 1. wherein the now Defendant was Plaintiff against the Lady Vice Countess of St. Albons his Wife and others Defendants The points of Error were That the Decree was grounded on a Bill exhibited by the now Defendant against the said Lady St. Albons his then Wife and was made by Consent without any Judicial Hearing whereby a Settlement and disposition of the said Ladies Lands whereof she had an Estate in Fee was made without any Fine or Recovery levied or suffered or any other legal Act done to bar and bind her or her Inheritance which the said Plaintiff conceives could not be done the said Lady being a Feme Covert and could not in Law or Equity consent nor could her Trustees by her consent charge the Inheritance wherein they had no legal Assurance The now Defendants insist That 2 Car. 1. the said Lady St. Albons after her Intermarriage with the now Defendant did settle 300 l. per Annum and several Recoveries were suffered whereby the same would have come to the Defendant after the said Ladies death as an Estate in Fee the said Lady dying without Issue That afterwards the said Lady and the Defendant came to another Agreement viz. That the Defendant should have 400 l. per Annum out of the said Ladies Estate to him and his Assigns for life and in consideration thereof the said Defendant agreed to quit and debar himself of and from all claim and interest to any of the rest of the said Ladies Estate real or personal during their joynt Lives or after her death and in case of failure of payment or the said Ladies death the Defendant was to enter into all the Estate for Satisfaction which said 400 l. per Annum was setled by Deed Tripartite 14 Car. 1. and the said Agreement and Settlement was confirmed by a Decree 17 Car. 1. by the consent of all parties and that the said Lady by Will gave away
to the Administrator This Court declared And the benefit of the Trust belongs to the Executor or Administrator That both in Law and Equity the benefit of the Trust in such case doth belong to the Executor or Administrator but the Plaintiff Hunt having married the said Plaintiff Mary and claiming in right of her who is Administratrx to her former Husband Edward Palmer the Court thought it hard that by virtue of the said Administration she should carry away the Estate to her second Husband and thereby strip the Infant thereof from whose Father the Estate first moved and it not appearing that the Ecclesiastical Court when they granted the Administration took any Consideration for a distribution to be made for a provision for her this Court would consider of the Case and also of the Limitation and Consideration of the said Deed and deliver their Opinion This Court being assisted with the Judges it appearing that the Interest and Estate of the Terms and the Trust and Benefit thereof is by the death of the said Edward Palmer and his Mother come to the Plaintiff Mary for her life and there being but 30 years of the said Term to come and in regard the Ecclesiastical Court cannot make a distribution of the remainder of the Terms not knowing but that the said Mary may live till the Expiration thereof This Court directed the Defendant Jones to assign and transfer the premisses and all his Interest therein The Trustee decreed to assign to the Admistratrix c. in the said Terms to the Plaintiff or such as they should appoint Darrell contra Whitchot 20 Car. 2. fo 516. THe Plaintiff had a Trust in a Lease of a Coal Farm by Patent from the late King Trust which Lease was afterwards renewed by the King and other Trustees named therein and the Defendant being one of the Trustees insists he was a joynt Patentee for the valuable Consideration of 500 l. But the Plaintiff insists The Defendant comes in as the Plaintiffs Trustee and not to be subject to the same Trust in the New Lease as he was under the Old Lease But the Defendant insists The New Patent was to the New Trustees for Service done by them to this King and this Defendants 500 l. and this Defendant was not Trustee for the Plaintiff but was in for his own use which Patent this Defendant had pleaded and was allowed Yet the Plaintiff insisted An Old Trust continned upon a new Lease or Patent No Tenant Right against the King There was a continued Trust and the Defendant and the King declared he had a respect for the Old Tenants and the Defendant coming in under the Tenants Interests ought to be in Trust for the Plaintiffs and that tho' there be no Tenant Right against the King yet the King did consider the Tenants and that this Case is but the same with that where a Mortgage or Trustee renews a Church Lease Mortgagee or Trustee renewing a Church-Lease the Cestuy que Trust relieved Bill dismist in which Cases this Court had given Relief This Court with the Judges declared their Opinion That there was no ground at all to Relieve the Plaintiff and so dismissed his Bill Episcopus Sarum contra Nosworthy 23 Car. 2. fo 720. THis Case is touching a Rent of 67 l. per Annum reserved on a Lease of Lands made by John late Bishop of Exon to the Defendant Arrears of Rent and the Plaintiff by his Bill says the Defendant never paid the said Rent to the Plaintiff nor any part thereof during all the time he was Bishop of Exon which was for 6 years whereby a great Arrear is incurr'd and due to the Plaintiff from the Defendant for which the Plaintiff seeks Relief The Defendant insists That he directly tendered the said Rent to the Bishop while he was Bishop of Exon but he refused the same having an intention to impeach the said Defendants Estate and now the Plaintiff is Translated to another See and so he ought not in Law or Equity to demand the said Arrears but ought to be debarred from receiving the same by his refusal as aforesaid His Lordship was clear of Opinion that by Law the Plaintiff could not recover the said Arrears but how far the Plaintiff was relievable in Equity was the question and his Lordship ordered Presidents to be produced where there hath been a Just duty but no Legal remedy and ordered a Case to be stated It appearing that the Plaintiff Upon refusal to accept of Rent no Relief in Law or Equity for the Arrears while he was Bishop of Exon would not accept the said Rent his Lordship with Judges assisting him were clear of Opinion That there was no ground in Equity to give the Plaintiff any Relief and dismist the Bill Barthrop contra West 23 Car. 2. fo 744. THe Plaintiffs Suit is to have the benefit and equity of Redemption of Leases mortgaged Assets and other Trust Estates made liable for the payment of his debt being on Judgment for 2000 l. and to have a voluntary Deed of Trust set aside as against the Plaintiff This Court decreed the Plaintiff to have the Equity of Redemption to be liable Equity of Redemption Assets and as Assets to satisfie his said debt of 2000 l. and set aside the said voluntary deed of Trust and all Trust Estate and Surplus thereof after preceding debts paid to be Assets in Equity for the payment of the Plaintiff Hooker contra Arthur 23 Car. 2. fo 523. THe Defendant having recovered damages for breach of a Covenant in a Lease at Law but the Plaintiff insists That there is not so much damages due as the Defendant hath sworn in his Answer therefore the Plaintiff hopes this Court will reimburse him what is overpaid to the Defendant This Court declared they would not try nor ascertain the damages in this Cour The Court of Chancery will not try or ascertain damages recovered at Law but ordered the parties to Law on the Covenant Domina Kemp contra Kemp 23 Car. 2. This is on a Case stated viz. THat upon Articles of Agreement between Sir Robert Kemp and Thomas Steward Devise the Plaintiffs Father upon the Marriage of Sir Robert with the Plaintiff it was agreed 500 l. Marriage portion should be paid unto Sir Robert or his Executors and in consideration thereof the said Sir Robert should settle a Joynture of 200 l. per Annum on the Plaintiff his wife and if the said Sir Robert should dye before such Joynture settled then he was to have Lands chargeable with the Plaintiff Dower which should fully recompence the 200 l. and that Sir Robert by his last Will devised to the Plaintiff a Rent-charge of 200 l. for her life to be issued out of the Mannor of Spenishall and Lands thereto belonging and of certain Farms called Lininlts and Mortimore and Ravels and the Frywoods in full satisfaction of the said Articles and all
Dower claimable by the Plaintiff and also devised the said Farms unto the Defendant Mary his Grandchild To have and to hold immediately after the death of the Plaintiff his Wife and by a subsequent Clause in the Will he devised all the Lands not therein before disposed of to the Defendant Thomas Kemp the Father for life Remainder to Thomas his Son for life with remainder over and also gave the Plaintiff his Coach Horses Plate and Jewels c. and one Third part of his clear Personal Estate And the Plaintiff conceived that she ought by the Will to have both the Rent-charge and the Farms for her life by the aforesaid devise 200 l. Rent-charge devised in lieu of Joynture and by the same Will an implicit Devise of the Lands to her Decreed she shall have only the 200 l. per Annum viz. where the same are devised to the Defendant Mary To have and to hold after the Plaintiffs death so to have the same by the said implicit Devise without Extinguishment of the said Rent charge is the Plaintiffs suit This Court declared they saw no Cause to decree both the Rent charge of 200 l. per Annum and the Farms aforesaid to the Plaintiff but the Rent charge of 200 l. per Annum to the Plaintiff only Boucher contra Antram 23 Car. 2. fo 97. THe Bill is Will. That Alice Lowman the Plaintiff Katherines late Mother did in Decemb. 1669. by Will give and dispose unto the Plaintiff Katherine a Legacy of 160 l. and made the Plaintiff who married another of the Daughters Executor The Defendant insists That the Testatrix made her Will in these words viz. Item I give unto my Daughter Katherine Boucher the sum of 160 l. for her to have the use of it during her life and her Child or Children to have it after her decease but if she happens to dye leaving no Child surviving her I Will that the said 160 l. shall be to and for the sole benefit and use of my Daughter Elizabeth Antram and her Children which Elizabeth is the Defendants Wife and the Defendant is willing to pay the said 160 l. to the Plaintiffs or either of them he being secured against the title and claim of the surviving Child or Children of the Plaintiff Katherine and if she should die leaving no Child or Children behind her then against the Title of said Elizabeth and her Children This Court decreed the Defendant to pay unto the Plaintiff 160 l. with full Interest Personal Estate devised to one for life and after to her Children and if they have no Issue the Remainder over is a void Devise as to the Remainder but as to the Clause on the Will which directs That for want of Issue by the Plaintiff Katherine the said 160 l. after her decease shall be to and for the benefit and behoof of the Defendants Wife and her Children His Lordship declared it being a Personalty is in the nature of a Perpetuity and so a void devise and therefore the Defendant nor his Wife and Children ought to have any benefit thereby but be debarred from the same and that the said 160 l. ought to be absolutely vested in and come unto the Child or Children of the Plaintiff Katherine and decreed the same accordingly Chambers contra Greenhill 24 Car. 2. fo 288. A Bill of Review brought by the Plaintiff Bill of Review because the Plaintiff can now prove a Tender and Refusal which he could not prove before dismist to Reverse the Decree in this Cause the Plaintiff would now Examine to a matter of Tender and Refusal which he could not prove before the Hearing but since the Decree signed and inrolled he can prove it The Court ordered Presidents to be searched which being produced by the Plaintiff his Lordship declared the said Presidents seemed of no weight to the Plaintiffs purpose and dismissed the Bill of Review Croster contra Wister 24 Car. 2. fo 688. THe Defendant insists Bill of Reviver The Plaintiff ought not to have brought a Bill of Reviver in this Case but to have taken out a Subpoena in the nature of a Scire facias to revive the Decree the same being signed and inrolled in the life time of the Plaintiffs Testator therefore the Defendant demurs to the said Bill The Plaintiff insists It is at the Plaintiffs election to revive the said Decree inrolled and to have Execution thereof by Bill or Subpoena in the nature of a Scire fac ' And as this Case is the whole Proceedings could not be revived by Subpaena Revivor by Bill or by Scire fac ' when proper in regard several Proceedings have been relating to Costs since the Decree which proceedings can be only revived by Bill and therefore the most proper course was to revive all things by Bill This Court held the said Bill to be well brought and held the Demurrer insufficient Stoell contra Botelar 24 Car. 2. fo 390. THat a Writ of Supplicavit of the Peace Supplicavit of the Peace on Petition and not on Motion nor any Indorsement on the back thereof yet good issued against Sir Oliver Botelar upon a Petition and Articles exhibited by the said Stoell The Defendant insists The said Writ issuing on Petition and not on a Motion in Court nor any Indorsement made on the back of the Writ as by the form of the Statute is required and but three of the said Articles are sworn to by the Articulate so it is irregular This Court on reading Presidents notwithstanding the Objections aforesaid of Botelar was fully satisfied that the Supplicavit was well granted and warranted Monnins contra Dom ' Monnins 24 Car. 2. fo 85. 178. BILL is to have the Defendant to discover Demurrer to a Bill for discovery whether the Defendant be married or not good for that if she be married it would be a forfeiture of her Estate and the Bill dismist whether she be married since the death of Sir Edmond Monnins her late Husband The Defendant demurred for that in case she was married since the death of her said Husband the same amounts to a forfeiture of her Estate and Interest in several goods and things devised to her by the Will of her said Husband to be held and enjoyed by her during such time as she should continue her Widowhood and so ought not to discover as aforesaid This Court held the Demurrer good unless the Plaintiff produced Presidents which the Plaintiff could not so the Bill was dismissed with Costs Warren contra Johnson 24 Car. 2. fo 543. THat Mary Warren Mony in Trust for the Children of I. S. it shall be for the benefit only of the Children that he then had and not born afterward the Plaintiffs Grandmother put 60 l. into the Defendants hands in trust for the benefit of the Children of Mark Warren her Son who at that time had but three Children whereof the Plaintiff was one but now hath six
to be defalked out of 1500 l. because of Marriage against Consent That the Plaintiffs said Marriage was without the Defendants privity and against his consent and that therefore the Plaintiff Ann cannot have the said 500 l. But decreed the Defendant to have the same with Interest from the Plaintiffs Marriage Wall contra Buckley 26 Car. 2. fo 178. THat the Plaintiffs Father Guardian takes Bond in his own Name for Arrears of Rent by this the Guardian hath made it his own Debt as his Guardian takes Bond for 100 l. Arrears of Rent due from the Tenants and takes it in his own Name This Court is of Opinion That the Plaintiffs Father hath by that means made it his own debt Stickland contra Garnet al 26 Car. 2. fo 340. THe Bill is for a Legacy of 20 l. Bill for a Legacy given to the Plaintiffs late Husband by the Will of George Coker Deceased to be raised and paid upon the Sale of Customary Lands mentioned in the said Will which said Lands are by the Will Devised by the said Coker to Jennet his Wife for her Life with remainder over to the said Defendants in Trust that after the Death of Jennet the said Trustees should Sell the same and with the Money thereby Raised to pay the Legacies in the Will and the Trustees to be Accountable over for the Surplus to other Persons and the said John Stickland the Legatee Dying before the said Jennet and before the time the said Lands out of which the said Legacy was to be Raised were appointed to be Sold. The Defendants Crave Judgment of the Court Legatee dyes before the time of payment of the Legacy yet payable to his next of Kin. whether the said Legacy of 20 l. was due to the Plaintiff or Determined by the Death of the said John Stickland This Court was of Opinion that the 20 l. did notwithstanding the Death of the said John Stickland continue payable to the Plaintiff Brond contra Gipps 26 Car. 2. fo 763. THis Court declared Lands Decreed to be Sold to supply the Personal Estate that the Plaintiffs Legacies ought to be paid out of the whole Estate of the Testator viz. out of the Personal Estate so far as that will extend and if that will not satisfie the same then the Testators Mannors and Lands undivided and unsold shall in the next place come in Aid of the Personal Estate for Satisfaction thereof and if that be not sufficient then the whole Mannors Lands and Tenements though Sold and Divided shall notwithstanding such Sale and Division come in supply thereof in proportion to be Refunded and paid by the Person or Persons in whose Hands soever the same shall be found Bowyer al' contra Bird 26 Car. 2. fo 769. THe Suit is to have an Account of a Legacy of 500 l. given by George Dale Father of the Plaintiff Ann to George his Son also Deceased to whom the Plaintiff Ann was Administatrix and to have an Account of the Residuary Estate of George the Father after his Debts and Legacies paid the Bill Charging that George the Father made his Will in Writing and thereof his Son Thurston Dale and one Dakin Executors and upon Publishing of his Will Declared Dakin only to be Executor in Trust for his Children and to take no Benefit thereby but the Estate to go to the Children and Dyed leaving the Plaintiff Ann and three Sons viz. the said Thurston George and Robert Dale all Deceased and that Thurston made the said Dakins his Sole Executor and the Plaintiff Ann is the only Surviving Child of the said George Dale the Father and claims the said 500 l. and the Residuary Estate This Court it appearing by the said Will Estate Decreed to the Residuary Legatee and not to the Administrator that the said Thurston who was Named Executor without any Trust was Residuary Legatee of the said George Dale his Father who had given by the said Will considerable Legacies to every one of his Children was fully satisfied the Plaintiffs were not intitled to the said 500 l. nor the Residuary Estate but that the said Thurston as Residuary Legatee was well intituled to the Residue of the said Estate and that the said Trust in Dakins ought to be Construed as is most Consistent with the Will in Writing and Dismist the Plaintiffs Bill Dom. Leech contra Leech 26 Car. 2. fo 369. THis Court declared A Deed tho' Cancelled yet good and the Estate shall not be Divested out of the Trustees tho' the Deed appeared Cancelled yet it was a good Deed and that the Cancelling thereof did not Devest the Estate of the Trustees therein named and that the Trust thereby Created ought to be performed Feake contra Brandsby 26 Car. 2. fo 74. THat William Crowe by Will Bill for a Legacy Devised to every one of his Servants living with him at the time of his Death 10 l. a piece and that the Plaintiff was Servant to the Testator at his Death so the Plaintiffs Suit is for the 10 l. Legacy The Defendant insists that the Plaintiff was not Servant to the said Crowe at his Death or lived with him as a Servant but the Plaintiff at the Testators Death and long before and after was the Servant of Mary Brandsby the Testators Mother This Court was Satisfied Who shall be said to be a Servant living with the Testator at his Decease that the Plaintiff was a Servant to the Testator and intrusted in his House-keeping and imployed in washing his Linnen and Tended him in his Sickness and therefore Decreed the Defendant the Executor to pay the Plaintiff her 10 l. Legacy Winchcombe contra Winchcomb 26 Car. 2. fo 654. THat in Michaelmas Term 2 Car. 1. John Carter obtained a Judgment against John Winchcomb the Defendants Grandfather of 400 l. upon two several Bonds both Dated 17 June 1623. for the payment of a 100 l. each Bond one payable the 1st of May then next and the other the 1st of May 1625. That the said Carter made Humfrey Coles his Executor and Dyed and the said Humfrey Coles Dyed and his Son John Coles took Administration De bonis non of the said John Carter who produced the Bond payable the 1st of May 1625. whole and uncancelled and thereupon insisted to be a Creditor for the said 400 l. on the said Judgment But the Defendant Winchcomb produced one of the said Bonds Cancelled Judgment upon Bonds of long standing ordered to be paid and insisted that the same was satisfied for that Humfrey Coles 12 Car. 1. had an Elegit returned and Lands delivered by the Sheriff which being near 40 years since the same would not have slept so long had not the said Debt been satisfied one Bond being Cancelled And the said Coles insisted that the said Carter was kept out by prior Incumbrances and that he Exhibited a Bill against John Winchcomb the Father to discover the same who by
that it should extend only to the Testators Sister Ann Carr and her Children and to the Testators Nephews and Nieces now living and that no Kindred out of the degree of a Brother or Sister to the Testator or a Child of such Brother or Sister ought to come in or have any share of the said Residue and that amongst those that are to come into the Distribution the Executor ought chiefly to consider those that have most need that so they that have more need may have more than they that have less and decreed the same accordingly and as to the said John Buncher who was his Sisters Son and so to have share and was particularly recommended to the Executor who the Court declared had a power to give some more than other this Court ordered the Executor to give him somewhat considerably out of the Residue of the said Estate and the Executor to distribute the remainder to such of the Kindred as are to come into the Distribution as shall appear to the said Executor to have most need and in such manner and proportion as he shall think fit and Sir Samuel Clark one of the Masters of this Court is to see right done in this Case Distribution and the Bill wherein the Plaintiffs which are beyond the degrees of Nephews of the said Testator is to stand dismist Bourne contra Tynt 30 Car. 2. fo 636. THe Case is Will. that Roger Brown the Plaintiffs Brother by his Will in 1671. devised to Executors in Trust all Lands as before that time were Mortgaged to him and all Money due thereupon that they should lay out so much of his Personal Estate as remained after Debts and Legacies paid in a purchase of Lands of Inheritance to be setled on the first Son of his Body and the Heirs Males of the Body of such first Son and so to all Sons in Tail Male and for want of such Issue on the Plaintiff for life remainder to the Plaintiffs eldest Son in Tail remainders over to the Plaintiffs Children in Tail and by his Will declared and devised that in case the Child his said Wife was then big withal should be a Daughter then he gave to her 1000 l. to be paid to her at 21 or 6 Months after Marriage and in case she Marryed with consent of the Trustees then the said Portion to be 3000 l. and it was provided by the said Will that the Trustees out of the Interest of the said 3000 l. should pay for the Maintenance of the said Child 80 l. per Annum and it was also provided that in case such Daughter should dye before such Marriage or Age of 21 then her Portion and Mony so devised to her should go and be for the use and benefit of such Person or Persons as should at any time enjoy his Lands of Inheritance according to the Will and thereby declared the same Money to be laid out in a Purchase of Lands to be setled as aforesaid and also declared that the rest of the Personal Estate not given or disposed of by his Will should all be bestowed in Lands of Inheritance and setled as aforesaid and the said Roger Burne dyed without Issue Male of his Body and about three Months after the said Defendant Florence his only Daughter was Born and the Trustees have not pursuant to the Will laid out the Personal Estate in Lands so that the Plaintiff ought to have the Interest of such Money as should have been laid out in Lands The question in this case being whether the 3000 l. and the Interest thereof over and above the 80 l. per Annum Maintenance of the Defendant Florence should be paid to the Defendant or to the Plaintiff who claims the same by virtue of the Will in case the said Defendant Florence had not happened to be Born the Will being made before she was Born and the Plaintiff claiming the 3000 l. and Interest over and above the said 80 l. per Annum in Case she should dye or not be Marryed or incapacitated to dispose thereof The Defendant insists that the Plaintiff having a very considerable Estate from the Testator by the said Will which would have descended to the Defendant Florence in case she had been born and living at the time of the Death of her said Father and that the Plaintiff cannot have any pretence to the interest of the said 3000 l. as aforesaid for that there is not any Clause or Direction in the Will touching the same Portion and Interest devised upon a contingency of dying or Marriage decreed to be paid into Court for the benefit of the Heir according to the Will in case of the Devisees death This Court declared the 3000 l. and Interest over and above the said 80 l. per Annum belongs to the Plaintiff in case the said Florence dye before she receive the same by the said Will and Decreed that the Interest of the 3000 l. be paid into Court and not to be taken out without good Security given by the said Helena to make good the Benefit thereof to the Plaintiff in case the said Florence dye before 21 years or Marryed as aforesaid as the Will directs Elvard contra Warren al' 31 Car. 2. fo 350. THe Defendant being in Contempt for disobeying a Decree Prisoner by Habeas Corpus brought from Bristol and turned over to the Fleet for that he was in contempt and being a Prisoner in Bristol a Habeas Corpus cum causis was ordered to bring him to the Bar of this Court who was brought up and turned over to the Fleet who is there a Prisoner and refuses to obey the said Decree The Court ordered a Sequestration against his Real and Personal Estate Warner contra Borsley 31 Car. 2. fo 629. THe question being Devise whether a Devise of the Plaintiffs Father by his Will of his Personal Estate and Debts to the Plaintiff in remainder after the death of his Mother and the Devise thereof to her in the first place she being Executrix to the said 1st Testator and the Defendant her Executor were good or not The Plaintiff insisted That the Devise of the personal Estate by the Will of the Testator to his Wife was an absolute Devise to her by operation of Law and was vested in her and so consequently in the Defendant who is Executor of the said Alice by virtue of the said Executor and the Devise or Limitation over to the Plaintiff after the death of his said Mother who was Executrix of the first Testator was absolutely void in Law and the said Defendant as Executor to the Plaintiffs said Mother is well intituled to the said personal Estate devised by the Testators said Will. The Plaintiff insisted That the Devise to the Plaintiff in Remainder after death of his Mother was a good Devise and ought to be countenanced the rather in regard such Devise in the life time of the said Testator and Testatrix was
Assigns Dorothy was Executrix and granted the Lease to William And the Record goes further After the death of Thomas without Issue it was to go the Daughter which was a plain affectation of a Perpetuity but however this Case is contradicted by other Resolutions Cotton and Heath before cited and Wood and Sanders in this Court which was this a long Lease is limited and declared thus To the Father for 60 years if he lived so long then to the Mother for 60 years if she lived so long then to John and his Executors if he survived his Father and Mother and if he died in their life time having Issue then to his Issue but if he die without Issue living the Father or Mother then the Remainder to Edward in Tail John died without Issue in the life time of the Father and Mother It was Resolved by Lord Keeper Bridgman assisted by two Judges That the Remainder to Edward was good The whole Term had vested in John if he had survived yet the Contingency never hapning and so wearing out in the compass of two Lives in being the Remainder over to Edward might well be limited upon it Object Where will you stop if not at Child and Bayles Case Resp Every where where there is apparent danger of a Perpetuity but so is not this Case The Equitable Reasons were 1. It was Prudence in the Earl to take care that when the Honour descended upon Henry a little better support should be given to Charles who was the next Man and trod upon the Heels of the Inheritance 2. It was very probable and almost morally certain that Thomas would die without Issue he being not of a good state of Body or Mind and while such they were circumspect that he should not Marry 3. It s an hard thing for a Son to tell his Father That the provision he has made for his younger Brothers is void in Law But it is much harder for him to tell him so in Chancery for there no Conveyance is ever to be set aside where it can be supported by a reasonable Construction The Law doth in many Cases allow of a future Contingent Estate to be Limited where it will not allow a present Remainder to be Limited A man hath an Estate Limited to him his Heirs and Assigns this is a Fee-simple but if he die without Issue living I.S. or in such a short time to I. D. this is good Though it be impossible to limit a Remainder of a Fee upon a Fee yet it s not impossible to limit a Contingent Fee upon a Fee Pell and Brownes Case If a Lease comes to be limited in Tail the Law allows not a present Remainder to be limited thereupon yet it will allow a future Estate arising upon a Contingency only and that to wear out in a short time The Limitation in Wood and Sanders Case is after an express Entail and yet Adjudged good because it was a Remainder upon a Contingency that was to happen during two Lives which was but a short Contingency and the Law might very well expect the hapning of it But our Case is stronger because it is only during one life It was decreed the Plaintiff should enjoy this Barony for the residue of the Term and the Defendants to make him a Conveyance accordingly and to account with the Plaintiff for the Profits received since the death of Duke Thomas and which they or any of them might have received without wilful default The Duke of Norfolk exhibited a Bill of Review in Chancery to which Charles Howard put in a Plea and Demurrer which was Argued before Lord Keeper North and he Over-ruled the said Plea and Demurrer and Reverst the Lord Chancellors Decree But afterwards this Decree was Reverst in Parliament and the first Decree affirmed in behalf of Charles Howard Turner contra Crane 34 Car. 2. fo 668. THat Robert Newell and his Wife Copyhold Mortgage for 220 l. paid by the Plaintiffs Wife Susan then a Widow did Surrender the Copyhold Premisses to the use of the said Susan and her Heirs on condition that the said Robert Newell and his Wife 's paying to the said Susan her Executors and Assigns 230 l. in March next after then the Mortgage to be void and the Mony not being paid the said Susan was admitted to the premisses and afterwards Marryed the Plaintiff and they received the profits of the premisses and afterwards Susan died Intestate no ways indebted leaving Susan her Daughter by the Plaintiff her Heir an Infant and the said Susan the Infant was admitted by the Plaintiff her Guardian Admittance of Guardian as Heir to Susan the Mother who received the profits and died leaving the Defendant Jane Crane her Aunt as Heir and she was admitted and the Plaintiff on Susan the Daughters death took Administration of Susan the Mothers Estate and claims the Mortgaged Lands insisting That though the Defendant Jane was Heir to Susan the Daughter who was Heir to Susan the Mother yet the premisses being a Mortgage belonged to him as Administrator to Susan the Mother This Court would consider of this Case and of Cases of Mortgages in Fee where no Covenant is made for the payment of the Mortgage-Mony to the Executor or Administrator and no debts owing by the Mortgagee whether the Heir or Administrator of the Mortgagee shall have the Lands This Court upon reading Presidents declared The Heir of the Mortgagee in Fee there being no debts owing shall have the Redemption Mony and I not the Administrator That he was fully satisfied that the Plaintiff as Administrator to the said Susan ought not to have the mortgaged premisses from the Defendant Jane Crane the Heir of the Heir of the said Mortgagee but the said Jane ought to enjoy the same and dismist the Plaintiffs Bill Dowse contra Percivall 34 Car. 2. fo 186. THe Plaintiffs Father John Dowse Lessee purchased the Inheritance in Trustees Names and dies Intestate This Lease shall attend the Inheritance took a Lease of the City and afterwards purchased the Inheritance in Trustees Names for him and his Heirs and the said Dowse died Intestate the Defendant his Wife as Administratrix claims this Lease to belong to his personal Estate This Court decreed it to attend the Inheritance Magistr ' c. Vniversit ' Colleg ' in Oxon ' contra Foxcroft 34 Car. 2. fo 522. THe Bill is to Revive a former Decree made against the Defendants Father whereby the said Defendants Father was decreed to pay the Plaintiff 2000 l. and Interest To which the Defendant demurs A Decree and Sequestration against one who dies this shall not be Revived against his Heir or Real Estate though it were for Mony payable on the behalf of a Charity for that the said Defendants Father against whom the said Decree and a Sequestration is had is dead whereupon the Sequestration being granted purely for his Contempt of a Decree which was for a personal duty only
should joyn with the Countess from time to time in the disposing thereof as she should appoint and the Defendant Mr. Powle thereby Covenanted that if the Marriage took effect Mr. Powle his Execuecutors or Administrators without the consent of the Countess in writing would not incumber the premisses or receive the Rents and Profits to their own use but from time to time would upon request Authorize such persons after receiving the same for the Countess's separate use as she should think fit so as he might have nothing to do therewith either in Law or Equity and that upon request he would make reasonable Leases of the premisses for such Considerations and Terms and under such Covenants as the Countess should think fit and gave such Acquittances for the Rents as should be requisite and convenient and at the Charges of the Countess and her said Trustees should Commence and Prosecute any Suit necessary for the Recovery of any part of her Estates and in defence of her Right thereto and that the said Countess might dispose of the premisses and receive the profits according to the true intent and meaning of the said Indenture Tripartite without the Interruption of Mr. Powle his Executors or any claiming under him or them And by another Indenture Tripartite 28 June 31 Car. 2. between the Countess of the first part Sir Thomas Littleton and Mr. Brett of the second part and Mr. Powle of the third part reciting that where as there was a Marriage to be had between Mr. Powle and the Countess and that by agreement she was to have and dispose to her own use and at her pleasure all her Jewels Plate Goods and Chattels both Real and Personal and the benefit thereof so as Mr. Powle his Executors or Administrators were not to intermeddle therewith the Countess by Mr. Powles consent did make a Bargain and Sale to the said Littleton and Brett of all her Jewels Plate Houshold-stuff Money Goods and Chattels Real and Personal upon Trust that they should dispose of the same and the proceed thereof to such persons and such uses as the Countess by any writing or by her Will should appoint so as Mr. Powle might not have any power or interest in Law or Equity to Sell Charge or Dispose of the same or any part thereof and for want of such appointment upon Trust to deliver the same or such part thereof as should be undisposed of by the said Countess to her Executors or Administrators and Mr. Powle by the last Deed covenanted not hinder the same and also that they should be free from all debts and ingagements of the said Powle That Mr. Powle and the Countess intermarried and afterwards the said Countess according to the said agreement and power as long as she lived disposed of all the Rents and profits of her real Estate and without Powle's intermedling That aftewards the said Trustees dying Mr. Powle by Deed with the said Countess transferrd the said Trust to other Trustees and also covenanted not to intermeddle but the said premisses to be solely in the power of the said Countess And it was agreed that the receipts of the Countess should be sufficient for the premisses or the preceed thereof notwithstanding tthe Coverture That the Countess by her self and the Trustees received the rents and profits of the premisses and disposed thereof without Mr. Powle That the said Countess by Deed of appointment in 1682 and by her Will in 1684 whereof she made the Plaintiff the Earl of Dorset her Son Executor to whom she after some Bequests and appointments to other persons Bequeathed and appointed all the rest of her personal Estate and also gave to him all her Monies and Rents and all Arrears of Rents in her Steward and Tenants Hands to all which the Plaintiff the Earl the said Countess being dead is intituled The Defendant Powle insists that as to the Rents and Profits of the Real Estate he claims the same and that he was so far from not intermedling therewith that he would not permit the Stewards to receive the Rents without Warrant from himself and that he passed all the Accounts thereaf and rectified them after the Countess had signed them This Court declared Feme Coverts disposing of her personal Estate according to Agreement at Marriage decreed good But not as to the Rents and Profits of her real Estate There was an absolute Power in the said Countess of disposing all her personal Estate that she was possest of at the time of her Marriage and the proceed thereof and that she had pursuant to such Power well disposed of the same and decreed the Defendant Powell to confirm the said Will and Appointment But as touching the rent and profits of the real Estate upon Consideration of several Clauses of the Deed relating to the said Estate and different Penning of the same from the other Deeds that concerned the personal Estate This Court declared the said Countess had no power to dispose of the same and all the Arrears thereof to be accounted for to the said Mr. Powle THE CASE OF The Duke of Albemarle With the Arguments thereon Com' Mountague al' contra Com' Bath al' 4 W. M. fo 90. THe Plaintiffs Revocation Will. after a Trial at Law directed out of this Court wherein the Point in Issue was Whether a Settlement was well made and executed and a Verdict for the Defendant that it was good and valid in Law They come into this Court to seek Relief upon the Equity reserved against the said voluntary Settlement wherein was a power of Revocation by virtue of a Will afterwards made the Question being Whether in Equity the said Will was a Revocation of the Deed tho' not strictly pursued The Bill was That Christopher Bill late Duke of Albemarle being seised of several Mannors Lands and Tenements in several Counties having married the Duke of Newcastle's Daughter and being possest of a considerable personal Estate frequently declared That he would make ample provision for the Dutchess who then had but 2000 l. per Annum Annuity setled on her for a Joynture by George Duke of Albemarle upon her Marriage with Duke Christopher for the support of her Dignity in case she survived him and that if he should have no Issue Male he would leave to her for her life at least 8000 l. per Annum out of his real Estate and in pursuance of such his Resolutions and likewise for the setling of the Remainder of his Lands upon his dying without Issue on Colonel Monk and others made and published his last Will in writing dated 1 July 1687. Whereby He gives to his Wife Coaches Jewels Plate c. and for advancing her living and support if he have no Issue Male and in full of her 2000 l. per Annum Rent-charge and Dower he gives her his Lands in Essex Stafford Lancaster York Lincoln Surrey Devon Hertford Middlesex Berks and Southampton for her life and if she accept
on Intayling of a Term for years with Remainders over 229 Remainders succesively in a Deed of Trust being limited and confined to fall within 21 years are good and no Perpetuities 282 Q EStates Devised to be sold for increase of Childrens Portions and a Child is Born since the Will that Child shall have a share 211 Portions to be paid to two Daughters at Age or Marriage one dies before her Portion shall not go to the Administrator but the Heir shall have the profits upon the Settlement 289 Devise by Will and an Agreement about a Portion not intended several sums 35 Where Lands to be charged with Portions or not upon the Construction of a Will 126 On Constructions of a Marriage Settlement and a Will only one Portion decreed and not double 165 Payment Whether payment of Mony shall be applied to discharge Interest of the original debt or towards satisfaction received by Judgment on the same Bond 89 Priviledge from a Parish Office for the Kings Officer grantable out of Chancery as well as Exchequer 197 Power to make Leases if well pursued 157 Prohibition out of Chancery for Arresting in the Marshalls Court for matters arising in Berks 301 R. UPon refusal to accept of Rent no relief in Law or Equity for the Arreares 61 Recognizance entred into by the Wife the day before Marriage set aside and a perpetual Injunction 80 Release pleaded against the Redemption of a Mortgage and allowed 131 Reversion after an Estate Tayl subject to Trust for payment of debts 208 Contingent Remainders Devise to Father for life Remainder to his first Son and Remainder to Trustees for 99 years to support the Contingencies good tho' the Limitation is misplaced 171 A Suit cannot be revived for Costs alone where no Duty is decreed 246 A Settlement with power of Revocation by Will Executed in presence of three Witnesses but one of them did not subscribe his Name yet decreed a sufficient Revocation 214 Proofs in an original Cause not to be allowed on a Bill of Review 18 45 Bill of Reviver dismist for that 't is a long time since the Decree was made and the Plaintiff Rested under it without any complaint 48 Bill of Review for that the Plaintiff can now prove a tender and refusal which he could not prove before dismist 66 Reviver by Bill or Scire facias when proper 67 Where no ordinary Process upon the first Decree will serve but there must be a new Bill to pay Execution of the first Decree by second Decree 128 No Reviver for Costs there being no Decree Inrolled 195 No Defence in case of Abatement before the Decree signed can revive 195 S SEpecial Maintenance 411 feme Coverts disposing of her personal Estate according to Marriage Agreement decreed good but not as to the Rents and Profits of her real Estate 416 A prior Deed of Settlement barred by a subsequent Deed and new provision made for Portions 8 Supplicavit of the Peace on Petition and not on Motion nor any indorsment on the back thereof yet good 68 Want of a Surrender Aided 129 Mony decreed to be paid out of a Sequestered Estate and the Commissioners had power to sell the Term 192 A Decree and Sequestration against one who dies shall not be revived against his Heir or real Estate 244 T DEed in Trust to pay debts tho' the Creditors are not parties and no certainty of debts therein appearing yet yet good against an after Purchasor who had notice of the Trust 31 An old Trust continued upon a new Lease or Patent 60 No Tenant right against the Crown ibid. Mortgagee or Trustee renewing a Church Lease the cesty que Trust relieved ib. Where Executor shall have a Trust and where not 78 After a Statute acknowledged and a Mortgage the Conisors Trustees renew Leases in their own Names yet decreed lyable to the Statute 213 Trust assigned Trust determined 115 c. a general Trust and not a fixed Trust 141 2000 l. Allowed a Trustee for charges and expences in managing the Trust 158 Springing Trust 233 Difference between a Trust and a Legacy 288 Term i● Gross and Term to attend the Inheritance 233 Trayal at Law directed within a precise time 124 U Will vid. Legacies DEvise of Mony to be paid at a day to come Devisee dies before the day yet it shall be payable to the Administrator 25 Land devised on Condition the Devisee Marry with consent the Limitation over Devisee Marries without consent she shall not be relieved but the Land decreed to the Remainder man 28 Clause in a Will If any Legatee shall oppose or hinder the Execution of the Will then such persons to lose the Legacy a Suit for the Legacy is no forfeiture 105 Construction upon the words of a Will about a double Legacy 111 Construction upon the words of a Will about the profits of Land and Trusts 117 118 Devise of Goods to J.S. for 11 years Remainder over J. S. decreed to deliver the Goods after the 11 years 137 Devise the residue of his Estate amongst his Kindred according to their most need how to be expounded 147 By the general words of a Will I Devise all my Goods Chattels and Household-Stuff in and about my House to J. S. ready Mony in the House shall not pass to the Devisee she having a Legacy 190 A Deed of Trust no Revocation of a Will Estate Devised to be sold for encrease of Childrens Portions and a Child is Born since the Will that Child shall have no share 211 Devise of a Plantation in Barbados 250 Executory Devises 275 Vide Perpetuities A Will and after that a Mortgage the Will is republished it s a good Will and not revoked 299 Lands devised to be sold and none expressed to sell the Executors shall sell 304 Mony devised to one for life with Limitation over good Limitation 410 One of the Plaintiffs a Witness 32 W Wast Injunction against Plowing or Burning of Pasture 94 Y THe Custom of the Province of York as to the distribution of Decedents Estates 258 FINIS
consented and agreed to by the Relict and Executrix and so decreed at the former hearing This Court declared Devise of a Personal Estate in Remainder after the death of J.S. is a void Devise and Vests wholy in J.S. she being Executrix That the Devise of the personal Estate to the Plaintiff in Remainder was a void Devise and the said Estate to the Testator immediately thereupon did Attach and vest in the said Alice his Relict and Executrix and the Defendant as her Executor was and is well intituled thereto and decreed accordingly Bredhust contra Richardson 31 Car. 2 fo 695. THat Samuel Russell by his Will gave to his three Daughters Sarah Christian and Elizabeth 540 l. to be divided amongst them viz. For each of them in particular 180 l. but if any one or two of them 540 l. To be divided amongst three Daughters and if one or two dyes without Issue the Daughters to Inherit each other one Marries the Plaintiff and dyes Sans Issue the Plaintiff is intituled to the 180 l. as Administrator to his Wife should dye without leaving a Child that the Daughters should Inherit one anothers Goods Monies Lands and Chattels which the deceased should leave behind them and that the Plaintiff intermarried with the said Elizabeth and that she died without leaving a Child before payment of the said 180 l. The Plaintiff insists That he as Administrator to the said Elizabeh his Wife is intituled to the said 180 l. and her share of the said Goods The Defendant insists That by the words and true intent of the Testator and the said Will the same doth not belong to the Plaintiff but came or in Equity belongs to the Defendants as Surviving Sisters This Court declared the Plaintiff is well intituled to the said 180 l. and decreed accordingly Turner contra Turner 31 Car. 2. fo 102. THat the Plaintiffs Father lent to Ayloff 700 l. and 200 l. at another time for which Ayloff Mortgaged Lands to the Plaintiffs Father and his Heirs with proviso that on payment of 600 l. to the said Plaintiff Father or Heirs then the premisses to be reconveyed to Ayloff that the Plaintiff is Executor to his Father and Brothers and so claims the Mortgages as vesting in the Executors of his Father and not in his Heirs The Defendant being the Son and Heir of the Plaintiffs eldest Brother deceased and Grandson and Heir to the said Plaintiff's Father insists That the Plaintiff and Defendant and others who claimed several shares and parts of the Plaintiffs Fathers personal Estate agreed to a Division thereof amongst themselves and a Division was made and Releases given of each ones demands in Law or Equity to the said Estate and the Plaintiff in particular released and the said Ayloff's Mortgage with the Mony due thereon with other things was set out and allotted to the Defendant by consent of all the parties and received by the Defendant in part of his share and the Plaintiff accounted to the Defendant for the profits of the said Ayloffs Mortgaged premisses received by him and afterwards in 1664 the Defendant had a Decree for the Mortgage Mony against Ayloffs Executor and received the same to which proceedings the Plaintiff was privy and the Defendant says it is unreasonable that the Plaintiff should now make a demand to the said Mortgage to unsetle matters so setled by his own consent but the Plaintiff insists he looked on the premisses at that time to come to the Defendant as Heir and knew not his own Titile thereto and the shares set out came but to 250 l. apiece and Ayloffs Mortgage was worth 800 l. This Court is of Opinion The Heir is decreed to have a right to a Mortgage in Fee and not the Executor that the Plaintiff ought to be relieved and had an undoubted Right to the said Mortgaged premisses and decreed the Defendant to repay all the Mony received by him thereon to the Plaintiff Bois contra Marsh 31 Car. 2. Land Legatees and Mony Legatees decreed to abate in proportion notwithstanding an Agreement to the contrary fo 441. THis Court declared That all the Legatees both Land Legatees and Mony Legatees ought to abate in propotion notwithstanding the Agreement to the contrary and that the said Agreement be set aside Audley contra Dom ' Audley 31 Car. 2. fo 848. THe Bill is to set aside a Lease made by Sir Henry Audley the Plaintiffs Father Power to make Leases if well pursued to the Defendants as Trustees for the Defendant the Lady Audley for 99 years if Henry Francis and Ann Audley Children of Sir Henry by the Defendant the Lady Audley should so long live paying yearly so much Rent as amounts to two parts in three of the yearly Value of the said Houses according to the best improved Value But the Plaintiff insists The said Lease is not made pursuant to the power reserved to the said Henry by a Deed of Settlement made by one Packington in 4 Car. 1. in Consideration of a Marriage between the said Sir Henry and Ann one of the said Packingtons Daughters and Coheirs by which it was declared That the benefit of such power in the said Sir Henry to make Leases was to be for the younger Children of the said Sir Henry by the said Ann his first Wife and the said Lease was not well gained from Sir Henry The Defendant insisted it was made pursuant to the power which was That Sir Henry should have power to make Leases for a provision of any thing he should have or otherwise as he should direct Which Matter was referred to the Lord Chief Justice Hales who declared the power good and that Sir Henry had pursued that power The Plaintiff insisted That the Rent reserved is altogether uncertain and lies only in Averment and that if the Value averred by the Plaintiff should in the least be disproved the Plaintiff would be Nonsuited in any Action And so insisted That it was proper for this Court to fix and establish that for a standing Rent which can be made out to have been two parts of the best improved Value at the time of making the said Lease and that the Rent so to be ascertained the Defendant might Covenant for constant payment thereof This Court on perusal of the said Lease and power and of the Lord Hales Opinion declared the said Lease to be good and sufficient and that unless proof be made of a greater value than the Sum of 290 l. Two parts in three of the improved value reserved as a Rent by a power the constant payment of such a Sum at the time of making the said Lease decreed to be paid whether the premisses rise or fall which hath been constantly paid by the Defendant the Lady Audley and accepted of by the Plaintiff that the said Sum must be taken as two parts of the full value of the premisses at the time of making the said Lease which or the greater