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A58086 Les termes de la ley; or, Certain difficult and obscure words and terms of the common laws and statutes of this realm now in use, expounded and explained Now corrected and enlarged. With very great additions throughout the whole book, never printed in any other impression.; Expositiones terminorum Legum Anglorum. English and French. Rastell, John, d. 1536. 1685 (1685) Wing R292; ESTC R201044 504,073 1,347

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Ancestors repossed great reverence for the nearness of that solemn Feast so that all Suits in Law were then remitted for a season wherefore there was a Statute ordained Westm 1. cap. 48. that not withstanding the said Solemnity it might be lawful in respect of Iustice and Charity to take Assies of Novel disseisin and Darreigne Presentment in the times of Advent Septuagesima and Lent This is one of the times from the beginning of which until the Octaves of Epiphany the solemnizing of Marriages is prohibited to be Solemnized without special Licence according to the Verses Advent all Marriage forbids Hilarys Feast to Nuptials tends And Septuagint no Wedding rids Yet Easters Octaves that amends Rogation hinders hasty Loves But Trinity that lett removes But the Bishop may dispense with a Marriage within these times and it is good Advowson ADvowson is where a man and his heirs have a right to present their Clerk to a Personage or other spiritual Benefice when it becomes void And he which hath such right to present is called Patron In gross is when one is seised of it only by it self And there is an Advowson appendant to a Mannor or to a Rectory and this may be sold by it self and then it is in gross and is severed from the Mannor and Rectory Affeerors AFfeerors are such as be appointed in Court-leets c. to mulct those who have committed any fault which is arbitrably punishable and for which no express penalty is prescribed by Statute You may see the form of their Oath in Kitchin fol. 46. If the Iurors in the Leet receive the Articles and being commanded to answer to them and present they refuse so to do then they shall be amerced yet the Amerciament of every Iuror shall be affeered according to his offence So in Assise of Novel disseisin all the Disseisors shall be amerced and every one shall be affeered by himself But if a Town be amerced there the Afferance shall be general for there is not any certain person named as in the cases aforesaid And if a Iury in a Leet tax an Amerciament this suffices without any Affeerment for the Amerciament is the act of the Court and the Affeerment is the act of the Iury. Coke lib. 8. fol. 39 40. b. Affiance AFfiance is the plighting of troth betwixt a man and a woman upon an agreement of a Marriage to be had between them and affidare from whence this word is derived is as much as fidem ad alium dare And this word Affiance is used by Littleton Chap. Dower Sect. 39. Afforest AFforest is to turn ground into Forest Charta de Foreseta cap. 1. 30. Anno 9 Hen. 3. Affray AFfray comes of the French word effrayer which signifies to affright or scare therefore an Affray may be without word or blow given and so this word is used in the Statute of North. 2. E. 3. cap. 3. But it is in our Books many times confounded with the word Assault as it appears by Lambert in his Eirenarch lib. 1. cap. 17. Yet as it is there said they differ in this that an Assault is but a wrong to the party but an Affray is a wrong to the Common-wealth and therefore an Affray is inquirable and punishable in a Leet Also an Assault is made most commonly but on one side but an Affray is the fighting of many together Age prier AGE prier is when an Action is brought against an Infant for Land which he hath by descent there he shall shew the matter to the Court and shall pray that the action may stay till his full age of 21 years and so by award of the Court the Suit shall surcease But in a Writ of Dower and in Assise and also in such actions where the Infant is supposed to come to the Land demanded by his own wrong he shall not have his age And note well that there are many diversities of ages For the Lord shall have aide of his Tenant in Socage to marry his daughter when the daughter is of the age of 7 years and aid to make his son and Heir a Knight when he is of the age of 7 years A woman who is married at the age of 9 years if her husband die seised shall have dower and not before And 14 years is the age of a Woman who shall not be in ward if she were of such age at the time of the death of her Ancestor but if she were within the age of 14 years and in ward of the Lord then she shall be in ward till the age of 16 years And 21 years is the age of the Heir male to be in ward and after that out of ward Also that is the age of male and female to sue and to be sued for Lands which they have or claim by descent and to make all manner of Contracts and Bargains and not before but if such an infant within the age of 21 years give his goods and the Donee take them the infant may have an Action of Trespass but otherwise it is if he deliver them himself See Coke lib. 3. fol 13. a. l. 6. f. 3. Agent Patient AGent Patient is when a man is the doer of a thing and the party to whom it is done as where a Woman endows her self of the fairest possession of her husband So if a man hath ten pounds issuing out of certain land and he disseises the Tenant of the Land in an Assise brought by the Disseisee the Disseisor shall recoup the Rent in the damages so that where the mean profits of the land in such case were to the value of 13 l. the Disseisee shall recover but three pounds Also if a man be indebted to another and after makes the party to whom he is so indebted his Executor and dies the Executor may retain so much of the goods of the dead in his hands as his own Debt amounts to and by this Retainer he is the Agent and the Patient that is the party to whom the Debt is due and the party that pays the same But a man shall not be judge in his own case as is resolved Coke lib. 8. fol. 118. in Bonham's Case That the Censors cannot be Iudges Ministers and Parties Iudges to give sentence or judgment Ministers to make summons and Parties to have the half of the forfeiture And although an Act of Parliament yields to any one to hold or to have conusance of all manner of Pleas arising before him within his Mannor of D. yet he shall hold no Plea to which he himself is party Quia iniquum est aliquem suae rei esse judicem Agist AGist seems to come of the French Giser i jacere or of Gister i. stabulari a word proper to Deer and therefore Budaeus lib. poster Philologiae says that Gist idem est quod Lustrum vel Cubile And Agist in our Common Law signifies to take in and feed the Cattel of a stranger in the Kings Forests and
therefore those Officers in the Forest that thus take in Cattel and gather the money for the Feed of them are called Agistors and the feed or herbage of the Cattel is called Agistment which in a large signification extends to all manner of Common of Herbage of any kind of ground or land or woods or the money that is due or received for the same as well out of Forests as within them See Manwood's Forest Laws c. 11. fol. 80. Agreement AGreement is thus defined or expounded in Plowdens's Commentaries Aggreamentum is compounded of two words namely Aggregatio and Mentium that is Agreement of minds So that Agreement is a consent of minds in some things done or to be done and by drawing together the two words Aggregatio and Mentium and by the hasty and short pronouncing of them they are made one word to wit Aggreamentum which is no other than a joyning coupling and knitting together of two or more minds in any thing done or to be done See after in Testament And this Agreement is in three manners The first is an Agreement executed already at the beginning The second is an Agreement after an act done by another and is an Agreement executed also The third is an Agreement executory or to be done in time yet to come The first which is an Agreement executed already at the beginning is such whereof mention is made in the Stat. of 25 E. 3. c 3. of Clothes in the 4 th Sat. which saith That the goods and things bought by forestallers being thereof attainted shall be forfeit to the King if the buyer have made gree with the seller In which case the word gree which is otherwise called Agreement shall be extended to Agreement executed that is payment for the things The second manner of Agreement is where one doth a thing or act and another agrees or assents thereunto afterwards as if one make a Disseisin to my use afterwards I agree to it now I shall be a Disseisor from the beginning And such Agreement is an Agreement after an act done The third agreement is when both parties at one time are agreed that such a thing shall be done in time to come and this agreement is executory in as much as the thing shall be done after and yet there their minds agreed at one time But because the performance shall be afterward and the thing upon which the Agreement was made remains to be done that Agreement shall be called Executory And that the Stat. of 26 H. 8. c. 3. doth prove which saith That every Vicar Parson and such liks c. before their actual possession or medling with the profits of their Benefices shall satisfie content c. or agree to pay the King the First-fruits c. if any such Parson or Vicar c. enter in actual possession c. this Agreement is to be understood executory as common usage proves for it is used that he with one or two with him do make two or three Obligations for it is to be paid at certain days after And this Agreement executory is divideded into two points One is an Agreement executory which is certain at the beginning as is said last before of the First-fruits The other is when the certainty doth not appear at the first and the parties are agreed that the thing shall be performed or payed upon the certainty known as if one sell to another all his Wheat in such a bay of his Barn unthres ed and it is agreed between them that he shall pay for every bushel 3s when it is threshed clean and measured Aid AID is when a Tenant for term of Life Tenant in dower Tenant by courtesie or Tenant in Tail after possibility of issue extinct is impleaded then for that they have no estate but for term of life they shall pray in aid of them in the Reversion and process shall be made by Writ against him to come and plead with the tenant in the defence of the land if he will But it behoves that they agree in the Plea for if they vary the plea of the Tenant shall be taken and then the aid-prayer is void but if he come not at the second Writ then the tenant shall answer sole Also Tenant for years Tenant at will Tenant by Elegit and Tenant by Statute-Merchant shall have aid of him in the Reversion and the Servant and Bailiff of their Master when they have done any thing lawfully in the right of their Master shall have aid This word is sometimes applied to Subsidies as in 14 E. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 1. Other times to a Prestation due from the Tenants to their Lords as for relief due to the Lord paramount or for the making of his Son a Knight or for marrying of his Daughter Glan lib. 9. c. 8. This aid the K. or other Lord by the ancient Law of England may lay upon their Tenants to make his son Knight at the age of 15 years and to marry his daughter at the age of 7 years Regist orig fol. 87. a. and that at what rate they please But the Stat. of West 1. made An. 3. Ed. 1. ordained a restraint for any great or large demand made by common persons being Lords in this case and hath tied them to a certain rate and the Stat. of 25 Ed. 3. Stat. 5. c. 11. provides that the rate which is appointed by the former Stat. shall be held in the King as well as in other Lords Aid of the King AID of the King is in like case as it is said before of a common person also in many other cases where the King may have loss although the Tenant be Tenant in fee-simple he shall have aid as if a Rent be demanded against the Kings Tenant who holds in chief he shall have aid so he shall nor of a common person And where a City or Borough hath a Fee-farm of the King and any thing is demanded against them which belongs to the Fee-farm they shall have aid for it of the King Also a man shall have aid of the King in the stead of Voucher And the Kings Baliff the Collector and the Purveyor shall have aid of the King as well as the Officers of other persons Aile AILE is a Writ which lies where Land descends from the grandfather to his nephews sc the son or daughter of the son of the grandfather the father being dead before the entry by him and one abates the heir shall have against the Abator this Writ Aler sans jour ALer sans jour is word for word to go without day that is to be dismist the Court because there is no day of farther Appearance assigned Ale-Taster ALe-taster is an Officer appointed and sworn in every Leet to look that the due Assise be kept of all the Bread Ale and Beer sold within the Iurisdiction of the Leet Alien ALien is a Subject born out of the liegeance of our King and he cannot
the View that is that he may see the Land which he claims But if the Tenant hath had a View in one Writ and after the Writ is abated in misnaming the Town or by Ioyntenure and after the Demandant brings another Writ against the Tenant then the Tenant shall not have the View in the second Writ View of Frank pledge VIew of Frank pledge Visus franci plegii is the power to hold a Turn or Leet in which Courts every Free-man in ancient time became bound with Sureties at the age of fourteen years for his Truth to the King and his Subjects and thereupon those Courts were called the View of the free Pledges that is of such Free-men as were Pledges or Sureties one for another See Deciners Vi Laica removenda VI Laica removenda is a Writ that lies where Debate is between two Parsons or Provisors for a Church and one of them enters into the Church with great power of Lay-men and holds the other out with force and arms he that is holden out shall have this Writ directed to the Sheriff that he remove the Power which is within the Church and the Sheriff shall be commanded that if he find any men there withstanding he take with him the Power of his County if need be and arrest the Bodies of all those that resist and put them in Prison so that he have their Bodies before the King at a certain day to answer the Contempt And this Writ is returnable and shall not be granted before the Bishop of the place where such Church is hath certified in the Chancery such Resisting and Force Villain and Villainage TO hold in pure Villainage is to do all that that the Lord will him command The division of Villainage is Villain of Blood and of Tenure And he is a Villain of whom the Lord takes Redemption to marry his Daughter and to make him Free and it is he whom the Lord may put out of his Lands or Tenements at his will and also of all his Goods and Chattels A Sockman is no pure Villain nor does a Villain owe Ward Marriage or Relief nor does he any other Services real Tenure in Villainage shall make no Free-man Villain if it be not continued time out of mind nor shall Villain Land make a Free-man Villain nor Free-land make Villain Free except the Tenant have continued Free beyond the time of memory But a Villain shall make Free-land Villain by Seisin or by Claim of the Lord. If a Villain purchase Land and take a Wife and alien and dies before the Claim of Seisin of the Lord the Wife shall be endowed In case the Lord bring a Praecipe quod reddat against the Alience of his Villain who vouches to warrant the Issue of the Villain which is Villain to the Lord he shall have the Voucher And by protestation the Lord may notwithstanding he plead with his Villain save his Villain from being infranchised A Bastard shall not be judged Villain but by knowledge in Court of Record If Debt be due by a Lord to a Free-man and he makes two Men his Executors who are Villains to the said Lord and dies the Villains shall have an Action of Debt against their Lord. And notwithstanding that he plead with them and if he make Protestation they shall not be thereby infranchised for that they are to recover the Debt to the use of another person that is to say their Testator and not to their own use And if the Tenant in Dower have a Villain who purchases certain Land in Fee and after the Tenant in Dower enters she shall have the Land to her and her heirs for ever And the same Law is of Tenant for term of years of a Villain The Lord may rob beat and chastise his Villain at his will save only that he ● ay not maim him for then he shall have an Appeal of Maihem against him A Villain may have three Actions against his Lord that is to say an Appeal of the death of his Ancestor an Appeal of Rape done to his Wife and an Appeal of Miahem If two Parteners bring a Writ of Niefty and one of them be Nonsuit the Nonsuit of him shall be judged the Nonsuit of both so that if that Nonsuit be after Appearance they shall be barred from that Action for ever for such is the Law in favor of Liberty If two have a Villain in common and one of them makes him a Manumission he shall not be made free against both In a Writ de Nativo habendo it behoves that the Lord shew how the Defendant comes to be privy of the Blood of the Villain of whom he is Lord c. And if he nor any of his Aucestors were seised of any of his Blood he shall not gain by his Action if the Villain have not acknowledged himself in Court of Record to be his Villain In a Writ of Niefty may not be put more Niefs then two and this was first introduc'd in hatred of Bondage But in a Writ de Libertate probanda may be put as many Niefes as the Plaintiff will If the Villain be fled into Ancient Demesne of the King or other Town priviledged within a year and a day the Lord may seise him and if he dwell in the same Town or other place Franchised by a year and a day without seisin of the Lord he hath no power to seise him after if he go not out of the foresaid Franchise Some are Villains by title of Prescription that is to say that all their Blood have been Villains regardants to the Mannor of the Lord from time out of mind And some are made Villains by their Confession in a Court of Record Also the Lord may make a Manumission to his Villain and enfranchise him for ever If a Villain bring any Action against his Lord other then an Appeal of maihem and the Lord without protestation make answer to it by this the Villain is made free Also if a Villain purchase Land and hath Goods and sell the Goods and Lands before any Entry or Seisin made by the Lord the sale is good But the King Lord of a Villain in such case may enter and seise the Land after such sale made For no time runs against the King Note that this Title and Tenure are abolished by the Statute of Car. 2. R. Villanous judgement VIllanous judgment is that which is given upon an Indictment of Conspiracy viz. that the party found guilty shall lose the benefit of the Law shall never more be sworn in Iuries or Assises nor admitted to give any Testimony cise where and if he have to do in the Kings Courts he shall come by Attorney and not in person that his Lands Goods and Chattels shall be seised in the Kings hands and estreaped if he find not the more favor and his Trees digg'd up and his Body imprisoned See 24 E. 3. fol. 34. b. 27 Ass pl. 59. Virgata terrae VIrgata terrae
Instruments have been heretofore used and of force in this Land but by the Statute of 28 H. 8. c. 16. it was e ● acted That all Bulls Breves Faculties and Dispensations of whatsoever name or nature that it was had or obtained from the B. of Rome should be altogether void and of no effect See Rastal 328. C. D. Bullion BUllion comes from the French word Billon which is the place where Gold is tryed And so Bullion is taken in the Statutes made in 27. E. 3. Stat 2. c. 14. and in 4 H 4. Stat. 1. c. 10. for the place whither Gold or Silver is brought to be tryed or exchanged But Bullion is also taken in the Stat. 9 E. 3. Stat. 2. c. 2. for Gold or Silver in the Mass or Billet Burbreach BUrbreach is to be quit of Trespasses done in City or Borough against the Peace Burgage TO hold in Burgage is to hold as the Burgagers hold of the King or of another Lord lands or tenements yielding him a certain Rent yearly or else where another man then Burgers holds of any Lord Lands or Tenements in Burgage yielding him a certain Rent Burghbote BUrghbote is to be quit of giving aid to make a Burrough Castle City or Walls thrown down Burgh English BUrgh English or Borough English is a Custome in some ancient Borough that if a man hath issue divers sons and dies yet the youngest son only shall inherit and have all the Lands and Tenements that were his fathers whereof he died seised within the same Borough by descent as Heir to his Father by force of the Custome of the same Borough This Tenure is also of Copyhold Estates by Custome of divers Mannors Burglary BUrglary is when one breaks and enters into the House of another in the night with felonious intent to rob or kill or to do some other Felony in which cases although he carry away nothing yet it is Felony for which he shall suffer death Otherwise it is if it be in the day-time or that he break the House in the night and enter no therein at that time But if a Servant conspire with other men to rob his Master and to that intent opens his Masters doors and windows in the night for them and they come into the house by that way this is Burglary in the Strangers and the Servant is a Thief but no Burglar And this was the opinion of Sir Roger Manwood Knight Lord chief Baron of the Cxchequer at the quarter Sessions holden at Canterbury in Jannary 1579. 21 Eliz. Buttlerage IS an old Duty to the Kings of this Realm for Wine imported by Aliens Moor Rep. 833. C Cablish CAblish among the Writers of the Forest Laws signifies Brushwood Manwood pag. 84. Cromp. Jur. fol. 165. Cantred CAntred is as much in Wales as an Hundred in England for Cantre in the British tongue signifies Centum The word is used An. 28. H. 8. c. 3. Capacity CApacity is when a man or Body politick or corporate is able to give or take Lands or other things or sue Actions As an Alien born hath sufficient Capacity to sue in any personal Action but in a real Action it is a good Plea to say he is an Alien born and pray if he shall be answered Dyer f. 3. pla 8. If a man enfeoff an Alien and another man to the use of themselves or c. it seems that the King shall have the moiety of the Land for ever by reason of the Incapacity of the Alien Dyer f. 283. pla 31. By the Common Law no man hath Capacity to take Tythes but Spiritual persons and the King who is a person mixt but a Lay-man who is not capable of taking Tithes was yet capable of discharge of Tithes in the Common Law in his own land as well as a Spiritual man See Coke l. 2. f. 44. Cape CApe is a Writ judicial touching Plea of Lands or Tenements so called as the most part of Writs are of that word which in it self carries the especiallest intention or end thereof And this Writ is divided into Grand Cape and Petit Cape both which take hold of things immovable and seem to differ in these Points First because Grand Cape lies before Apparance and Petit Cape after Secondly by the Grand Cape the Tenant is summoned to answer to the default and over to the Demandant Petit Cape summons the Tenant to answer to the default only and therefore it is called Petit Cape in the Old N. B. 161 162. Yet Ingham saith that it is not called Petit Cape because it is of small force but because it is a little Writ in words This Writ seems to contain in it a Process with the Civilians called Missio in possessionem ex primo secundo Decreto For as the first Decree seises the thing and the second gives it from him that made the second default in his Appearance so this Capias seises the Land and also assigns over to the party a day of Appearance at which if he comes not in the Land is forfeited Yet there is difference between these two courses of the Common and Civil Law for this Missio in possessionem extends to touch as well Goods movable as immovable where a Cape extends only to the immovable Secondly in this That the party being satisfied of his demand the residue is restored to him that defaulted but by the Cape all is seised without restitution Thirdly That is to the use of the party agent the Cape is to the use of the King See Bract. l. 5. tract 3. c. 1. num 4 5 6 Regist Judic fol. 2. a. Cape ad Valentiam CApe ad Valentiam is a Writ or Execution and is thus defined in the Old Nat. Brev. fo 161. 162. This writ lies where the Tenant is impleaded of certain Lands and he vouches to Warranty another against whom the Summons ad warrantizan ● hath been awarded and the Vouchee comes not in at the day given then if the Demandant recover against the Tenant he shall have this Writ against the Vouchee and shall recover so much in value of the Vouchees land if he have so much and if he hath not so much then the Tenant shall have Execution by this Writ of such Lands and Tenements as descend to him in Fee-simple or if he purchase afterwards the Tenant shall have against him a Resummons and if he can say nothing he shall recover the value And know that this Writ lies before Apparance Of these and their divers uses see the Table of the Reg. jud the word Cape Capias CApias is of two sorts The one before Iudgment called Capias ad respondendum in an action personal if the Sheriff return upon the first Writ Nihil habet in Balliva nostra And the other is a Writ of Execution after Iudgment which also is of divers natures which see in the Title Process Capite CApite is a Tenure that holds immediately of the King as of his Crown
to shew a difference between them and base Courts as Customary Courts Court-Barons County Courts Pipowders and such like as when a Plea of land is removed out of ancient Demesne because the land is Frank-fee and pleadable at the Common Law that is to say in the Kings Court and not in ancient Demesne or in any other base Court Thirdly and most usually by Common Law is understood such Laws as were generally taken and holden for Law before any Statute was made to alter the same as for example Tenant for life nor for years were not to be punished for doing Waste at the common Law till the Statute of Gloucester cap. 5. which gives an Action of Waste against them But Tenant by the courtesie and Tenant in dower were punishable for Waste at the Common Law that is by the usual and common received Laws of the Realm before the said Statute was made Common Pleas. COmmon Pleas is the Kings Court now held in Westminster-Hall but in ancient time moveable as appears by Magna Charta cap. 11. But Gwyn in the Preface to his Reading saith That untill the time that Henry the third granted the Great Charter there were but two Courts only called the Kings Courts the Exchequer and Kings Bench which was called Aula Regia because it followed the Court and that upon the grant of that Charter the Court of Common Pleas was erected and setled in a place certain viz. at Westminster and therefore all the Writs were made with this Return Quid sit coram Justiciariis meis apud Westmonasteriū where before the partie was commanded by them to appear coram Me vel Justiciariis meis without any addition of any place certain All Civil causes as well Real as Personal are or were in ancient time tried in this Court according to the strict Law of the Kingdom And by Fortescue cap. 50. it seems to have been the only Court for Real Causes The thief Iudge thereof is called The Lord chief Justice of the Common pleas accompanied with three or four Assistants or Associates who are created by the Kings Letters Patents and as it were installed or placed upon the Bench by the Lord Chancellor and Lord Chief Iustice of the Court as appears by Fortescue cap. 51. who expresses all the circumstances of this Admission The rest of the Officers appertaining to this Court are these The Custos Brevium three Prothenataries Chirographer fourteen Philasers four Exigenters Clerk of the Warrants Clerk of the Iuries Clerk of the Treasurie Clerk of the Kings Silver Clerk of the Essoines Clerk of the Outlawries Common day in plea of land COmmon day in plea of land Anno 13 R. 2. Stat. 1. cap. 17. signifies an ordinary day in the Court as Octabis Michaelis Quindena Paschae c. as you may see in the Statute ● 1 Hen. 3. concerning general days in the Bench. Commotes COmmotes seems to be a compound word of the Preposition Con and Motio that is Dictio Verbum and signifies in Wales part of a County or Hundred An. 28 H. 8. cap. 3. It is written Commoithes Anno 4 H. 4. cap. 17. and is used for a Gathering made upon the people of this or that Hundred by Welsh Minstrels Communi Custodia COmmuni Custodia is a Writ which didlie for that Lord whose Tenant holding by Knights service dies his eldest son within age against a stranger who entred the land and obtained the Ward of the body It seems to take name from the common Custome or right in this case which is That the Lord shall have the wardship of his Tenant untill his full age or because that it is common for the recovery both of the Land and Tenant as appears by the form thereof Old N. B. 89. Regist Orig. 161. Compromise COmpromise is a mutual Promise of two or more parties that are at controversie to submit themselves and all differences between them unto the Award Arbitrement or Iudgment of one or more Arbitrators indifferently chosen between them to determine and adjudge upon all matters referred and upon which the parties differ Computation COmputation is used in the Common Law for the true and indifferent Construction of time so that neither the one party shall do wrong to the other nor the determination of times referred at large be taken one way or other but computed according to the just censure of the Law As if Indentures of Demise are ingrossed bearing date the eleventh day of May 1665. to have and to hold the land in S. for three years from henceforth and the Indentures are delivered the fourth day of June in the year aforesaid In this case from henceforth shall be accounted from the day of the Delivery of the Indentures and not by any computation from the Date And if the said Indenture be delivered at four of the clock in the afternoon of the said fourth day this Lease shall end the third day of June in the third year for the Law in this Computation rejects all fractions or divisions of the day for the incertainty which alwayes is the Mother of contention So where the Statute of Inrollments made Anno 27 Henr. 8. cap. 16. is That the Writings shall be inrolled within six moneths after the Date of the same Writings indented if such Writings have Date the six months shall be accounted from the Date and not from the Delivery but if they want Date then it shall be accounted from the Delivery Co. li. 5. fol. 1. If any Deed be shewed to a Court at Westminster the Deed by Iudgment of the Law shall remain in Court all the Term in which it is shewed for all the Term in Law is but one day Co. lib. 5. fol. 74. If a Church be void and the true Patron doth not present within six months then the Bishop of the Diocess may collate his Chaplain but these six months shall not be computed according to 28 days to the month but according to the Kalendar And there is great diversity in our common speech in the singular number as a Twelve-moneth which includes all the Year according to the Kalendar and twelve-months which shall be computed according to 28 days to every month See Coke lib. 6. f. 61. b. Computo COmputo is a Writ so called of the effect because it compells a Bayliff Chamberlain or Receiver to yield his Account Old Nat. Brev. fol. 53. It is founded upon the Statute of Westm 2. cap 2. which you may for your better understanding read And it also lies for Executors of Executors 15 Ed. 3. Star de Provis Victual cap. 5. Thirdly against the Gardian in Secage for Waste made in the Minority of the Heir Malbr cap. 17. And see farther in what other cases it lies Reg. Orig. fol. 135. Old N. B. fol. 58. F. N. B. fol. 116. Concealers COncealers are such as find out lands concealed that is such lands as are secretly detained from the King by common persons having nothing to shew
the Law gives much credit and authority to Coroners Corporation Corporation is a permanent thing that may have succession And it is an Assembly and joyning together of many into one Fellowship Brotherhood and mind whereof one is Head and chief the rest are the Body and this Head and Body knit together make the Corporation And of Corporations some are Spiritual some Temporal and of Spiritual some are Corporations of dead persons in Law and some otherwise and some are by authority of the King only and some have been of a mixt authority And of those that are Temporal some are by the authority of the King also and some by the Common Law of the Realm Corporation Spiritual and of dead persons in the Law is where the Corporation consists of an Abbot and Covent which had beginning of the King and the Pope when he had to do here Corporation Spiritual and of able persons in Law is where the Corporation consists of a Dean and Chapter Master of a Colledge or Hospital and this Corporation had beginning of the King only Corporation Temporal by the King is where there is a Mayor and Commonalty Corporation Temporal by authority of the Common Law is the Assembly in Parliament which consists of the King the Head of the Corporation the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons of the Realm the Body of the Corporation Bodies politick BOdies politick are Bishops Abbots Priors Deans Parsons of Churches and such like which have succession in one person only If land be given to a Maior and Commonalty for their lives they have an Estate by intendment not determinable So it is if a Feoffment be made of land to a Dean and Chapter without speaking of Successors Release of a Mayor for any summ of money due to the Corporation in his own name is not good in Law In case of a sole Corporation or Body politick as Bishop Parson Vicar Master of Hospital c. no Chattel either in action or possession shall go in succession but the Executors or Administrators of the Bishop Parson c. shall have them for Succession in a Body politick is as Inheritance in case of a body private But otherwise is in case of a Corporation composed of many as a Dean and Chapter Mayor and Commonalty and such like for there they in judgement of the Law never die Yet the case of the Chamberlain of London differs from all these and his Successors may in his own name have Execution of a Recognisance acknowledged to his Predecessor for Orphanagemoney and the reason is because in this case the Corporation of the Chamberlain is by Custome and the same Custome that hath created him and made a Corporation in Succession as to the said special purpose concerning Orphanage hath enabled the Successor to take such Recognisances Obligations c. that are made to his Predecessor And this Custom is founded upon great reason for the Executors or Administrators of the Chamberlain ought not to intermeddle with such Recognisances Obligations c. which by the said Custom are taken in the corporate capacity of the Chamberlain and not in his private But a Bishop Parson c. or any sole Corporation that are Bodies politick by prescription cannot take a Recognisance or Obligation but only to their private and not in their politick capacity for they want Custome to take a Chattel in their politick or corporate capacity Corpus cum Causa or Habeas Corpus COrpus cum Causa is a Writ issuing out of the Chancery to remove both the body and the Record of the Cause of any man lying in Execution upon a Iudgement for Debt into the Kings Bench c. there to lie till he have satisfied the Iudgement Fitzh Nat. Brev. fol. 251. e. It lies also to remove any Action from inferiour Courts of Record into any of the 3 Courts in Westm Corruption of Blood COrruption of Blood is when any one is attainted of Felony or Treason then his Bloud is said to be corrupt by means whereof neither his children nor any of his bloud can be heirs to him or to any other Ancestor for which they ought to claim by him And if he were a Noble or Gentleman before he and all his children are made thereby ignoble and ungentle having regard to the Nobility or Gentry they claim by their father which cannot be restored by the Kings Grant without authority of Parliament But if the King will pardon the offendor it will cleanse the corruption of the Blood of those children which are born after the Pardon and they may inherit the land of their Ancestor purchased at the time of the Pardon or afterwards but so cannot they who were born before the Pardon Also he that is attainted of Treason or Felony shall not be heir to his father but this disability shall hinder others to be heir so that during his life the land shall rather escheat to the Lord of the Fee then discend to another But if he who is attainted dies without issue of his body during the life of his Ancestor then his younger Brother Sister or Cousin shall inherit for if the eldest Son be hanged or abjure the Realm for Felony during the life of the Father it is no impediment but that the youngest Son may inherit 27 Edw. 3. c. 77. And if he who is attaint of Treason or Felony in the life of his Ancestor purchase the Kings Pardon before the death of his Ancestor yet he shall not be Heir to the said Ancestor but the Land shall rather escheat to the Lord of the Fee by the Corruption of bloud 26 Ass pla 2. But if the eldest son be a Clerk convict in the life of his Father and after his Father dies in this case he shall inherit his Fathers Land because he was not attainted of Felony for by the Common Law he should inherit after he had made his Purgation And now by the Statute of 18 El. cap. 6. he shall be forthwith enlarged after burning in the hand and delivered out of prison and not committed to the Ordinary to make his Purgation but he is in the same case as if he had made his Purgation If a man that hath Land in right of his wife hath issue and his Bloud is corrupt by Attainder of Felony and the King pardons him in this case if the wife dies before him he shall not be Tenant by the courtesse for the corruption of the blood of that issue But it is otherwise if he hath issue after the Pardon for then he shall be Tenant although the issue which he had before the Pardon be not inheritable 13 H. 7. c. 17. If a man seised of Land hath issue two sons and the eldest is attainted in the life of his Father of Felony and therefore executed or otherwise dies during the life of his Father and after the Father dies seised the Land shall descend to the youngest son as Heir unto his Father if
the Kings Debts Apparances and for observing of Orders also he takes all Obligations for any of the Kings Debts for Apparances and observing of Orders and makes out Process upon them for the breaking of them The Lord Treasurers Remembrancer makes out Process against all Sheriffs Escheators receivers and Bailiffs for their Accounts he makes the Process of Fieri sacias and Exteut for any Debts due to the King either in the Pipe or with the Auditors and he makes Process for all such revenue as is due to the King by reason of his Tenures The Remembrancer of the First Fruits takes all Compositions for First fruits and Tenths and makes Process against such as pay not the same Of these Officers see more in Dalton's Book of the Office and Authority of Sheriffs f. 186. Remitter REmitter is when a man hath two Titles to any Land and he comes to the Land by the tast Title yet he shall be judged in by force of his elder Title and that shall be said to him a Remitter As if Tenant in tail discontinue the Tail and after disseises his discontinuee and dies thereof seised and the Lands discend to his issue or Cousin inheritable by force of the Tail in that case he is in his Remitter that is to say seised by force of the Tail and the Title of the Discontinuee is utterly adnulled and defeated And the reason and cause of such Remitter is for that such an Heir is Tenant of the Land and there is no person Tenant against whom he may sue his Writ of Formedon to recover the Estate tail for he may not have an Action against himself Also if Tenant in tail infeoff his Son or Heir apparent who is within age and after dies that is a Remitter to the Heir but if he were full of age at the time of such Feoffment it is no Remitter because it was his folly that he being of full age would take such a Feoffment If the Husband alien Lands that he hath in right of his wife and after take an Estate again to him and to his Wife for term of their lives that is a Remitter to the Woman because this Alienation is the act of the Husband and not of the Woman for no folly may be adjudged in the Woman during the life of her Husband But if such Alienation be by Fine in Court of Record such a taking again afterward to the Husband and Wife for term of their lives shall not make the Woman to be in her Remitter for that in such a Fine the Woman shall be examined by the Iudge and such Examination in Fines shall exclude such women for ever Also when the Entry of any man is lawful and he takes an Estate to him when he is of full age if it be not by Deed indented or matter of Record which shall estop him that shall be to him a good Remitter Rents REnts are of divers kinds that is Rent-service Rent-charge and Rent-secke Rent-service is where the Tenant in Fee-simple holds his Land of his Lord by Fealty and certain Rent or by other service and rent and theu if the rent be behind the Lord may distrain but shall not have an Action of Debt for it Also if I give Land in tail to a man paying to me certain Rent that is Rent-service But in such case it behoves that the reversion be in the Donor For if a man make a Feoffment in fee or a Gift in tail the remainder over in Fee without Deed reserving to him a certain rent such reservation is void and that is by the Statute Quia emprores terrarum and then he shall hold of the Lord of whom his Donour held But if a man by Deed indented at this day make such Gift in tail the remainder over in fee or lease for term of life the remainder over or a Feoffment and by the same Indenture reserve to him rent and that if the rent be behind it shall be lawful for him to distrain that is Rent-chage But in such case if there be no clause of Distress in the Deed then such a rent is called Rent-seck for which he shall never distrain but if he were once seised he shall have Assise and if he were not seised he is without remedy And if one grant a rent going out of his Land with clause of Distress that is a Rēt-charge and if the rent be behind the Grantee may chuse to distrain or sue a Writ of Annuity but he cannot have both for if he bring a Writ of Annuity then the Land is discharged And if he destrain and avow the taking in Court of Record then the Land is charged and the person of the Grantor discharged Also if one grant a Rent charge and the Grantee-purchases half or any other part or parcel of the Land all the Rent is extinct But in Rent service if the Lord purchase parcel of the Land the Rent shall be apportioned If one hath a Rent charge and his Father purchase parcel of the Land and that parcel discends to the Son who hath the Rent charge then the Rent shall be apportioned according to the value of the Land as it is said of Rent-service because the Son comes to that not by his own act but by discent Also if I make a Lease for term of years reserving to me a certain Rent that is called a Rent service for which it is at my liberty to distrain or to have an Action of Debt but if the Lease be determined and the Rent behind I cannot distrain but shall be put to my Action of Debt And note well that if the Lord be seised of the Service and Rent aforesaid and they be behind and he distrain and the Tenant rescues the Distress he may have Assise or a Writ of Rescous but it is not more necessary for him to have Assise then a Writ of Rescous for that by Assise he shall recover his Rent and his Dammages but by a Writ of Rescous he shall recover only Dammages and the thing distrained shall be reprised If the Lord be not seised of the Rent and Service and they be behind and he distrain for them and the Tenant take again the Distress he shall not have Assise but a Writ of Rescous and the Lord shall not need to shew his right If the Lord cannot find a Distress in two years he shall have against the Tenant a Writ of Cessavit per biennium as it appears by the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 21. And if the Tenant die in the mean time and his Issue enter the Lord shall have against the Issue a Writ of Entry upon Cessavit or if the Tenant alien the Lord shall have against the Alienee the foresaid Writ But if the Lord have Issue and die and the Tenant be in arrearages of the said Rent and Service in the time of the Father and not in the time of the Issue he may not distrain for the Arrearages in the time of