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A33627 Certain select cases in law reported by Sir Edward Coke, Knight, late Lord Chief Justice of England ... ; translated out of a manuscript written with his own hand, never before published ; with two exact tables, the one of the cases, and the other of the principal matters therein contained.; Reports. Part 13. English Coke, Edward, Sir, 1552-1634. 1659 (1659) Wing C4909; ESTC R1290 92,700 80

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Ayd and therefore a Tenant in Burgage shall be contributary to it And it is to be observed and so it appeareth in the Register fo 1 2. That in a Writ of Right if the Lands or Tenements are holden by Knights service it is said Quas clamat tenere de te per servitium unius feodi Militis and if the Lands be holden in Socage the Writ is Quis clamat tenere de te per liberum servitium unius libri cumini c. so as Socage Tenure in all Writs is called Liberum servitium And by the Writ of Ayd Fitz. N. B. 82. it is commanded to the Sheriff Quod juste c. facias habere A. rationabile Auxilium de Militibus liberis tenentibus suis in Baliva tua c. so as the same Writ makes a distinction of Knights service by the name of Militibus and of Socage by the name of Liberis tenentibus And in the Register fol. 2. 6. the Writ of Right for a House in London which is holden of the King in Burgage is in these words Rex Majori vel Custodi Vicecom London Praecipimus vobis quod sine dilatione teneatis G. de uno Messuagio c. in London quae clamat tenere de nobis per liberum servitium c. which proves That Tenure in Burgage is a Tenure in Socage But it appeareth by the Books of Avowry 26. and 10 H. 6. so Ancient Demesne 11. it was resolved by all the Iustices in the Exchequer Chamber That no Tenure should pay for a reasonable Ayd to marry the Daughter or to make the Son a Knight but Tenure by Knights service and Tenure by Socage but not Tenure by Grandserjanty nor no other and 13 H. 4. 34. agrees to the Case of Grandserjanty and by the said Books it appeareth that Tenure by Frankalmoign and Tenure by Divine Service shall not pay for they are none of them but Tenure in Burgage is a Tenure in Socage and therefore the said Books prove that such a Tenure shall pay Ayd And I conceive that Tenure by Petit-Serjanty shall pay also Ayd for Litt. lib. 2. cap. 8. fo 36. says That such a Tenure is but Socage in effect but Fitz. N. B. 83. a. avoucheth 13 H. 4. 34. That Tenant by Petit-Serjanty shall not pay Ayd but the Book onely extends to Grand-Serjanty If the Houses in a City or Borough are holden of the King in Burgage and the King grant the Seignories to one and the City or Borough to another to hold of him then those Houses shall not be contributary to Ayd for they are not immediately holden of the King as is required by the Law And I conceive that he who holdeth a Rent of the King by Knights service or in Socage shall pay Ayd for the words of the Act of VVestm 1. cap. 35. are From henceforth of a whole Knights Fee onely be taken 20 s. of 20 l. Land holden in Socage 20 s. and the Mean is said in supposition of Law to hold the Land and it is not reason that the Tenant by his Feoffment before the Statute should prejudice the Lord of his benefit And although it was said that a Tenure in Socage in servitium Socae as Littleton saith and the same cannot be applyed to Houses to that it was answered That the Land upon which the House is built or if the House falleth down may be made arable and be ploughed And a Rent may be holden in Socage and yet it is not subject to be plowed but by a possibility after words escheat to the Lord of the Land See Huntington Polidor Virgill and Hollinsheds Chronicle fol. 35. 15 H. 4. Ayd was levyed by Hen. 7. 1. to marry Mawd his eldest Daughter to the Emperor viz. 3 l. of every Hide of Land c. And see The Grand Customary of Normandy cap. 35. there is a Chapter of Ayds whereof the first is to make the eldest Son of his Lord a Knight and the second to marry his eldest Daughter And see a Statute made in anno 19 H. 7. which begineth thus Item praefati Communes in Parliamento praedicto existentes ex assensu duorum Spiritualium Temporalium in dicto Parliamento similiter existen concesserunt praefato Regi quandàm pecuniae summam in loco duorum rationabilium auxiliorum suae Majestatis de jure debit tam ratione creationis nobilissimi filii sui primogeniti bonae memoriae Domini Arthuri nuper Principis VValliae quam ratione Matrimonii traductionis nobilissimi Principis Margaritae filiae suae primogenit quam etiam multiplicare pro Regni sui perpetua pace tranquillitate c. certis viis modis levand cujus quidem concessionis Tenor c. sequitur in haec verba For as much as the King our Soveraign Lord is rightfully intituled to have two reasonable Ayds according to the Laws of this Land the one for the making Knight the right honorable his first begotten Son Arthur late Prince of VVales deceased and the other for that the marriage of the Right Noble Princess his first begotten Daughter Margaret now marryed to the King of Scots and also that his Highness hath born great and inestimable charges for the defence of the Realm c. considering the premisses And if the same Ayds should be levyed and had by reason of their Tenures according to the ancient Laws of the Land should be to them doubtful and uncertain and great unquietness for the search and not knowledg of their several Tenures and their Lands chargeable to the same have made humble Petition unto his Highness graciously to accept and take of them the sum of 40000 l. as well in recompence and satisfaction of the said two Ayds as for the said great and inestimable charges c. as is aforesaid The King to eschew and avoyd the great vexation troubles and unquietness which to them should have ensued if the said Ayds were levyed after the ancient Laws and for the good and acceptable services of the Nobles of this Realm and other his faithful Subjects in their own persons and otherwise done to his Grace and thereby sustained manifold costs and charges to his great honor and pleasure doth pardon the said two Ayds and accepteth the offer aforesaid and that the poorest of his said Commons should not be contributary to the said sum of 40000 l. hath pardoned 10000 l. parcel thereof and doth accept of 30000 l. in full satisfaction c. And that the Cities and Boroughs Towns and places being in every Shire not by themselves accountable in the Exchequer for Fifteens and Tenths be chargeable with the Shires c. And all Cities and Boroughs not contributary c. but accountable by themselves c. shall be chargeable by themselves towards the payment of the said 30000 l. with such sums as under the Act particularly appear c. And there under the Act appear the several Taxations of every several County City
and Seale put to the Transcript ingrossed and not to the Testament it self and so out of the Statute and the Statute extends only when the Probat and Seale is put to the Testament it self and for the ingrossing of it after the Probate no certain Fee is provided by the Statute But for the Registring of it after it is proved there is an expresse Fee in the Statute But I conceived that the said taking of the fourteen shillings ten pence in the Case at Bar was directly against the Statute For the Act is in the Negative and if the Executor requireth the Testament to be ingrossed in Parchment he ought to agree with him who he requireth to do it as he may But the Ordinary Officiall c. ought not to exact any Fee for the same of the party as a thing due to him for divers Causes 1. Because the words of the Act are expressed for the Probation c. and for the registring sealing writing praysing making of Inventories Fines giving of Acquittances c. which word writing extends expresly to this Case 2. The words are Or any thing concerning the same Probate and when the Seal and Probate is put to the Transcript the same without question concerns the Probate for the Probat is not put to any writing but only to that therefore the same concerns the Probate 3. Such a Construction should make the Act idle and vain for if the Ordinary Officiall c. might take as much as he pleaseth for the ingrossing done by his Ministers as a Fee due to him all the purview of the Statute which is penned so precisely concerning persons scil Bishops Ordinaries and all persons who have power to prove Wills and Testaments Registers Scribes Summoners Apparations or any other the Ministers as for the thing it self scil the probation insinuation approbation registring sealing writing praysing making of Inventories Fines giving of Acquittances or any other thing concerning the same should be all in vain by that evasion of Transcribing of it as well against the expresse Letter of the Act as the intention and moving of it Also the Statute saith five shillings and not above so as the manner of precise penning of it excludes all nice evasions And the Act ought to be expounded to suppresse Extortion which is a great affliction and impoverishing of the poor Subjects 4. As this Case is he annexeth the Probate and Seale to the Transcript ingrossed which the Plaintiff brought with him and offered to the Defendant so as the Case at Bar was without question And generally the Ordinary Officiall c. cannot exact or take any Fee for any thing which concerns the Probate of a Will or Testament but that which the Statute limits And afterwards the Iury found for the Plaintiff and of such opinion was Walmesley Warberton Daniel and Foster Iustices the next Term in all things But upon exception in Arrest of Iudgment for not pursuing of the Act in the Information Iudgment is not yet given c. X. Hillar Anno 6 Jacobi Regis In the Common Pleas. NOta that in this Terme a Question was moved to the Court Aide to make the Kings eldest Son Knight which was this If Tenant in Burgage should pay Ayde unto the King to make his eldest Son Knight And the Point rests upon this If the Tenure in Burgage be a Tenure in Socage For by the ancient Commmon Law every Tenant in Knights Service and every Tenant in Socage was to give to his Lord a reasonable Ayde to make his eldest Son a Knight and to marry his eldest Daughter and that was incertain at the Common Law and also incertain when the same Vide F. N. B. 82. 20. should be paid And this appeareth by Glanvil Lib. 9. cap. 8. fol. 70. who wrote in the time of Henry the second Nihil autem certum Statutum de hujusmodi auxiliis dandis vel exigendis c. sunt alii praeterea See the statute of 27 H. 8 cap 10 of uses in the Preamble concerning Aides to make the eldest Son Knight and to marry the Daughter Casus in quibus licet Dominis auxilia solvenda sunt certa forma praescripta ab hominibus suiis ut silius suus haeres fiat miles vel si primogenitam suam filiam maritaverit c. And in the beginning of the Chapter it is called Rationabile Auxilium because that then it was not certain but to be moderated by reason in respect of Circumstances And by the Preamble of the Statute of West 1. An. 3 E. 1. cap. 35. Where it is said Forasmuch as before that time reasonable Ayde to make ones Son Knight or to marry his Daughter was never put in certain nor when the same ought to be payd nor how much be taken the said Act put the said two incertainties to a certainty 1. That for a whole Knights Fee there be taken but 20 s. and of 20 l. Lands holden in Socage 20 s. and of more more and of less less according to the rate by which the Ayd it self was set certain 2. That none might levy such Ayd to make his son a Knight until his son be of the age of fifteen years nor to marry his daughter until she be of the age of seven years And Fleta who wrote after the said Act calls them rationabilia auxilia ad filium militem faciendum vel ad filiam primogenitam maritandum And by the Statute of 25 E. 1. where it is provided That no Taxes shall be taken but by common consent of the Realm there is an exception of the ancient Ayds c. which is to be intended of these Ayds due unto the King by the ancient Common Law But notwithstanding the said Act of VVestm 1. it was doubted whether the King because he is not expresly named were bound by it and therefore in the twentieth year of E. 3. the King took an Ayd of 40 s. of every Knights Fee for to make the Black Prince Knight and nothing then of Lands holden in Socage and to take away all question concerning the same the same was confirmed to him in Parliament and afterwards anno 25 E. 3. cap. 11. it is enacted That reasonable Ayd to make the Kings eldest Son Knight and to marry his eldest Daughter shall be demanded and levyed after the form of the Statute made thereof and not in other manner that is to say Of every Fee holden of the King without Mean 20 s. and no more and of every 20 l. Land holden of the King without Mean in Socage 20 s. and no more Now Littleton lib. 2. cap. 10. fol. 36. b. Burgage Tenure is where an ancient Borough is of which the King is Lord and those who have Tenements within the Borough hold of the King their Tenements that every Tenant for his Tenement ought to pay to the King a certain Rent and such Tenure is but Tenure in Socage and all Socage Land is contributary to