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A60117 Cases in Parliament, resolved and adjudged, upon petitions, and writs of error Shower, Bartholomew, Sir, 1658-1701. 1698 (1698) Wing S3650; ESTC R562 237,959 239

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after Judgment affirmed in the Exchequer Chamber Or if that proceeding in the Exchequer Chamber doth not come in lieu of Error in Parliament according to the Statute of Eliz. William Bridgman al' Versus Rowland Holt al' A Writ of Error and Petition in Parliament The Case below was thus William Bridgman brings an Assize for the Office of chief Clerk for inrolling of Pleas in the Court of King's Bench and the Plaintiff declares that the Office of chief Clerk for inrolling of Pleas in the Court of King's Bench was time out of mind granted and grantable by the Kings and Queens of this Realm and that King Charles the Second by Letters Patents under the Great Seal of England Dated the Second of June in the Five and twentieth Year of his Reign after a Recital that Robert Henley and Samuel Wightwick were duly admitted to this Office for their Lives granted this Office upon the Petition of Eliott to Silas Titus so soon as it should become void and that Wightwick was dead and Titus had surrendred his Patent did in consideration of Service done by the Earl of Arlington grant this Office to the Plaintiff and his Heirs for the Lives of the Earl of Arlington Duke of Grafton and Dutchess of Grafton and the longer liver of them from and after the Death Forfeiture or Surrender of Sir Robert Henley and that Sir Robert Henly was dead and that thereupon the Plaintiff became seized and was seized of the Office till the Defendants did disseize him c. The Defendants pleaded that they did not wrong or disseize the Plaintiff Upon the Trial of this General Issue at the Bar of the King's-Bench before the three puisne Judges the Chief Justice then sitting near the Defendant's Counsel upon a Chair uncovered the Plaintiff gave in Evidence the Letters Patents of 2 June 25 Car. 2. Then it was proposed by the Counsel for the Defendant That they would prove their Allegation that the Office was anciently granted by the Kings and Queens of England as was declared but no Evidence was given besides this Patent of Car. 2. Then the Counsel for the Defendant waving the just Exception which they might have taken to the Plaintiff's Grant as to him and his Heirs which ought not to be of such an Office for that by that means it might come to an Infant They insisted upon the meer right of Granting the said Office viz. that it was not grantable by the Crown but was an Office belonging to the Chief Justice of the King's Bench and grantable by him Then to prove this it was shewn That this Officer is to Inroll Pleas between Party and Party only and had nothing to do with any Pleas of the Crown or Criminal Matters that all the Rolls and Records in this Office were in the Custody of the Chief Justice that all the Writs to certifie or remove the Records in this Clerk's Office are directed to the Chief Justice and from the nature of the Imployment 't was insisted that in truth he was but the Chief Justices Clerk and that consequently the same must be granted by the Chief Justice And for further proof it was shown by the Records of the Court that for the space of Two hundred thirty five years past this Office when void had been granted by the Chief Justice and enjoy'd accordingly under such Grants In Trin. 36 Hen. 6. Rot. 36. inter placita Reg. Anno Dom. 1458. It is inrolled thus Be it remembred that the Tenth of July this Term in the Court of our Lord the King at Westminster came William Sond chief Clerk of our Lord the King for inrolling Pleas before the King himself in his proper Person and in the same Court of his Free-will did surrender his said Office into the hands of Sir John Fortescue Kt. Chief Justice of that Court to whom of right it doth belong to grant that Office to whomsoever he pleaseth whensoever that Office shall be void during the time that the said Sir John Fortescue shall be Chief Justice and that Office doth resign and relinquish to the use of William Brome and the said Chief Justice doth accept the said Surrender and doth the same day grant the said Office to the said William Brome who is presently admitted into the said Office for his Life and sworn accordingly Mich. 1. Edw. 4. Rot. 51. Upon Brome's Surrender to Sir John Markham then Chief Justice the Chief Justice grants it to Mr. Sonde who is admitted for Life and sworn Mich. 8 Edw. 4. Rot. 26. 1467. Upon the Surrender of William Sonde to the said Sir John Markham then Chief Justice he grants it to Reginald Sonde who is admitted and sworn Reginald Sonde enjoyed this Office till the time of Henry the Seventh and then Bray came in and was Clerk till the 13 H. 7. and then came in Roper Hill 9 Hon. 8. Rot. 3. Anno 1518. Upon the Surrender of this place to Sir John Fineux Chief Justice by John Roper the Chief Justice grants the Office to Sir John Roper and William Roper who are admitted for their Lives and sworn Hill 1 2 Edw. 6. Anno 1547. Upon the Surrender of William Roper Sir John being then dead to Sir Richard Lister then Chief Justice he grants the Office to William Roper and Rute Heywood and they are admitted and sworn Hill 15 Eliz. 1573. Upon the Surrender of William Roper Heywood being dead to Sir Robert Catlin then Chief Justice he granted this Office to John Roper and Thomas Roper for their Lives and they are admitted and sworn Mich. 14 Jac. 1 Rot. 2. Anno 1616. Upon the Surrender of John Roper Thomas being dead to Sir Henry Mountagne then Chief Justice he grants the Office to Robert Heath and Robert Shute for their Lives who are admitted and sworn thereupon Hill 18 Jac. 1. 1620. Shute being dead upon Sir Robert Heath's Surrender to Sir James Leigh then Chief Justice he grants the Office to Sir Robert Heath and George Paul for their Lives and they are sworn and admitted in Court Mich. 5 Car. 1. Upon the Surrender of Sir Robert Heath and Sir George Paul to Sir Nicholas Hide then Chief Justice he grants it to Robert Henley and Samuel Wightwick for their Lives and they are admitted and sworn Trin. 1654. Upon Wightwick's Surrender to H. Roll then Chief Justice Henly being then under Sequestration the Chief Justice grants it to Sam. Wightwick and to Robert Henly Junior for their Lives and they are admitted and sworn Mich. 12 Car. 2. Upon the Surrender of Samuel Wightwick and Robert Henly to Sir Robert Foster then Chief Justice he grants it to Henly and Wightwick for their Lives and they are sworn Wightwick died soon after and Sir Robert Henly enjoy'd it under that Grant 32 years And it was observed on behalf of the Defendant That in all these Records produced and read in Court after the mention of the Surrender to the Chief Justice there are these words To
contra ligeantie sue debitum and as to this it was argued That it was not necessary to use those very Words That they are not Terms of Art such as are absolutely necessary they are not like to the Words Burglariter Felonice Murdravit and the like That proditorie implies it that 't is plainly apparent to be contrary to his Allegiance That all the whole Indictment shews it to be so 't is not weighing his Allegiance 't is against his true natural Liege Lord and Sovereign That it appears he was a natural born Subject That the very Words themselves are only of Aggravation That they may as well be laid precedent to the Fact as in the Conclusion That here is that which is Tantamount That Sir Henry Vane's Indictment was thus Cotton and Messingers Sid. 328. The Scotch Officers in Suffolk Lamberts Hackshams Titchburns and many more That 't is true the Fact in the Indictment ought not to be made good by Intendment or Inference but if there be Words which shew that the Party owed Allegiance it s enough An alien Enemy is not indictable in this manner but here 't is shewn That he is a Person capable of committing Treason and that the Act done was against his Duty and Obedience which he owed as a Subject That many Precedents have been thus That nimia subtilitas in jure reprobatur That a Certainty to a common Intent is sufficient Longs case That in 2 Rolls abr 82. contra coron ' et dignitat ' suas is held not necessary wherefore and for other Reasons then urged 't was prayed That the Reversal might be reversed and the King restored c. On the other side it was argued That this Reversal was just That this Arraignment being Joint for want of separatim makes the Proceeding Erroneous That the Precedents do use the Word separatim and abundance of Entries were mentioned as Leach and Ruthford et al' 28 Hen. 8. Dudely Gates and Palmer 1 and 2 Phil. and Mar ' Throgmorton and Weddall 2 and 3 Ph. and M. Peckham and Daniel eodem Anno. Blunt and Danverse 44. Eliz. Earl of Ess and S. eodem Anno. Guy Fawks and Sir Everard Digby 3 Jac. 1. Harrison Scot and the other Regicides 12 Car. 2. 1660. Green Berry and Hill for the Murder of Sir E. Godfrey 1678. Ireland Pickering and Grove 31 Car. 2. rot ' 242. Whitebread Fenwick et al' 32 Car. 2. rot ' 224. Johnson et al' 2 Will. et Mar. num ' 57. and Lord Preston and Ashton Trin. 3 Will. et Mar. n. 16. separatim allocut ' and many more Besides the Nature of the thing is such as requires a several Arraignment because they may plead several Pleas and they are several Offences and tho' they plead in this Case severally that 's not enough for they ought to be askt severally But this was not so much insisted on as the next Error the Omission of secreta in the Judgment 't is part of the Judgment upon the 25 Edw. 3. for compassing c. tho' for coining 't is only to be drawn and hanged according to Morgan's Case Cro. Car. 383 Stamp 182. 3. Inst 15 17. Finch's Law lib. 2. cap. Treason they are all secreta membra abscindant ' as well as interiora all common Books have it as Bolton's Justice of the Peace tit Prefidents of Indictments for High Treason 38 42. Dalton's Justice p. 335. Sheppard's Epitome tit Crown and all those common Abridgments c. Lord Preston and Ashton's was drawn by good Advice Harrison and al' 12 Car. 2. Ireland Pickering and Grove 1678. Whitehread's 1679. Walcott's 1683. Langhorn's 31. Car. 2. Colonel Sidney's 1683. The Earl of Stafford's in 1680. was thus upon Debate and Consultation with all the Judges Dominus Rex versus Owen 1 Rolls Rep 185 186. there 't is mentioned But then it was chiefly insisted on That the Reversal was to be maintained for the Error in the Indictment that contra ligeantie sue debitum was the general Form that all the great Men in all Ages who had been of Counsel for the Crown had inserted it That all the Indictments the first Assizes after Monmouth's Rebellion which were drawn or perused by Sir H. Poll ' had this Conclusion That Ashtons Crosses Gaunts Cornishes Earl of Staffords Batemans Ayliffs Goodenoughs Hone Blague Rowse Armstrong Sir Robert Peyton Langhornes Lord Bellasis Venner Harrisons Faukes Sir Everard Digbyes Patricius Dolphie Pasch 41 Eliz. John Tipping 34 Eliz. are all thus and the Prints are so likewise 3 Inst 214. Fitzh Justiee pag. 218. Plowd 387. Coke's Entries 361. Cro. Car. 120 122 123. and a great number of Particulars more which might be cited Then 't was urged that Reason doth require this for that Treason is punishable as a Breach of Allegiance that that is the very Essence of Treason that if the Fact be not alledged to be against his Allegiance 't is not Treason that 't is by reason of his Allegiance that he can commit Treason and therefore 't is that an Alien Enemy who was never protected can't commit Treason because he owed no Allegiance and there may be many Acts done which look like a levying of War without any Breach of Allegiance and for that was quoted King John's Charter made at Rumney Mead 18 die Junii Anno Regni 17 Rot. Pat. 17. m. 13. a Transcript whereof is in Matthew Paris 245. Anno 1215. which Charter was ratified four times within nine years after The first Confirmation was granted 1 Hen. 3. and probably at his Coronation for there was a Charter dated at Glocester 6 Febr. Rot. Pat. 1 Hen. 3. m. 13. that they should enjoy Libertatibus Regno nostro Anglie a Patre nostro et nobis concessis In the second year of his Reign he sends a Mandate to the several Sheriffs to proclaim this Charter amongst others Rex c. Salutem Mittimus tibi Chartas de Libertatibus c. Mandantes quatenus eas legi facias in pleno comitatu tuo Dat' 22 Febr. Rot. Claus 2 Hen. 3. Then was cited Fox's Acts and Monuments ad Ann. 1218. That after Michaelmas this King held a Parliament at Westminster wherein he confirmed and ratified by his Charter all the Franchises and Liberties which were made and given by King John his Father In the seventh year of his Reign viz. the Sixteenth of his Age he took the Government into his own Hands and then the Archbishop of Canterbury in open Parliament doth mind him of the Oath sworn in his Name by the Earl of Pembroke Rectore Regis Regni and others at the Pacification between him and the Dauphin that he would restore and confirm those Liberties to his Subjects for which the War broke out between his Father and the Barons Then was quoted what Henry the Third promised when he invited Henry de Lucy to come in to him 1 Hen. 3. m. 16. which is in very strange language if his Allegiance had been broken Then was cited Sadler
the Sentence given by the Constable and Marshal in the Suit before them concerning a Coat of Arms Rot. Claus 12 Rich. 2. m. 4. Appeal by Bond vers Singleton 't is in a Cause of Arms in our Court before our Constable and Marshal wherein Sentence was given by them 1 pars Pat. 17 Rich. 2. m. 12. Thus it appears by a Commission for the Execution of the Office of Constable of England Committimus vobis officium hujusmodi Constabularii ad querelam Thome Moor in hac parte una cum Edmundo de Mortimore Mareschallo Anglie audiendum secunda pars Patent ' 48 Edw. 3. m. 20. in dorso As also by a Claim at the Coronation of H. 5. before Beauchamp Earl of Warwick then Lord Steward John Mowbray Earl Marshal Son to the then Duke of Norfolk claimed under a Grant in 20th of Rich. 2. of the Office of Earl Marshal of England to hold Court with the Constable and to hold Pleas before them and Copies of these Precedents were said to have been ready in Court Further to prove the joynt Authority were cited several of our Old Books 48 Edw. 3. fol. 3. in a Case of Debt upon an Indenture by which P. was retained by the Defendant with two Squires of Arms for the War in France Belknapp said of such Matter this Court cannot have conusance but 't is triable before the Constable and Marshal In the Case of Pountney and Bourney 13 Hen. 4.4 the Court of King's Bench call it the Court of the Constable and Marshal And in 37 Hen. 6.3 upon another occasion Prisot said this Matter belongs to the Constable and Marshal And Coke 4 Inst 123. says that they are both Judges of the Court and that the Constable sometimes gave Sentence is no Argument that the Marshal was no Judge with him it only proves him the Chief who in most Courts doth usually give the Rule Nor is the Earl Marshal's receiving Writs from the Constable to execute his Commands any Argument that he sits there only as a Ministerial Officer and not as a Judge for he may be both as in many Corporations Mayors are Judges of the Court and yet have the Custody of their Goals too and so have the Sheriffs of London their Compters tho' they strictly are Judges of their several Courts 2. During the Vacancy of the Earl Marshal's Office the Constable alone had the Judicature as in 11 Hen. 7. on Holy-rood-day the Earl of Darby being then Constable of England sate and gave Judgment alone in a Cause between Sir Thomas Ashton and Sir Piers Leigh upon a Coat of Arms but this needs no Proof since 't is contended on the other side that the Court doth belong only to the Constable 3. 'T was argued that the Earl Marshal hath set alone and given Judgment and to prove that it was said this Court was held when there was no Constable before Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolk Lord High Treasurer and Earl Marshal of England who Died 16 Hen. VIII and next after him before Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk then Earl Marshal who Died 37 Hen. VIII after him the Court was held and Sentences given by Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolk who Died in 1512. and after him in the 30 Eliz. the Earl of Essex sat as Earl Marshal and heard and determined Causes judicially and the chief Judge sat then as Assistant with him in Court and then after the Death of the Earl of Essex it was in Commission to my Lord Treasurer Burleigh and others and then the great Oase of Sir F. Mitchell was heard and determined at which several Judges assisted and the Sentence of degradation was executed upon him 26. April 1621. and then was Cited the Case of Pool and Redhead 12 Jac. 1.1 Roll's Rep. 87. where 't was held that the proper remedy for Fees of Knighthood was to sue to the Earl Marshal and Coke says in the same Case the Common-Law does not give remedy for precedency but it belongs to the Earl Marshal And since that in Parker's Case which was 20 Car. II. Syd 353. the Earl Marshal was agreed to have the absolute determination of matters of Honour in the Court of Chivalry as much as the Chancellor hath in matters of Equity And the Error on the other side was occasioned by not distinguishing between the Ancient Jurisdiction of this great Court at the Common-Law and the Jurisdiction given to the Constable and Marshal under those names by Statute for the latter cannot be executed by one alone and that distinction answers the Authority in 1 Inst 74. which grounded the mistake that there is no Court of Chivalry because there 's no Constable whereas the reason why in Sir Francis Drake's Case the not constituting of a Constable silenced the Appeal was from the 1 Hen. IV. Cap. 14. which orders all Appeals of Murder committed beyond Sea to be before the Constable and Marshal by name But the Ancient Jurisdiction of this Court by prescription wherein both the Constable and Marshal were Judges severally or together and which each of them did and could hold alone remains still as much in the Earl Marshal alone as it ever was in him and the Constable Then it was argued that no Prohibition lay to this Court because none had ever been granted and yet greater occasions then now can be pretended by reason of the large Jurisdiction which this Court did in Ancient time exercise many Petitions were frequently preferred in Parliament Complaining of the Incroachments of this Court in Edw. I. Edw. III. Rich. II. Hen. IV. and Hen. VIth's time as appears in 4 Inst. 125. 2 Hen. IV. num 79. and 99. 1 Roll's Abridg. 527. and yet no Prohibition granted or moved for which according to Littleton's Text is a very strong Argument that it doth not lie The Statute of 13 Rich. II. 2. is an Argument against it because after several Complaints of the Incroachments of this Court another remedy is given which had been needless if this had been legal nay it shews the Opinion of the Parliament that there was no other way of relief and soon after the making of this Statute in the same Reign two Privy Seals were sued upon it in the Case of Poultney and Bourney 13 Hen. IV. 4. 5. Besides this might be grounded on the Antiquity and greatness of this Court for as to the subject matter of it 't is by Prescription a Court for determining matters of Honour to preserve the distinction of degrees and quality of which no other Courts have Jurisdiction and the right and property in Honours and Arms is as necessary to be preserved in a Civil Government as that in Lands or Goods Then 't was urged that this Court hath Jurisdiction even of Capital Offences its extent is large 't is throughout the Realm even in Counties Palatine even beyond the Seas its manner of proceeding is different in a Summary way by Petition its trial of Fact may be by Duel as is 4
Disorder and most Proceedings informal and in the English Tongue in such a mean Court where are few Precedents to guide them where the Parties themselves are not empowered to draw up their own Proceedings as here above but the whole is left to the Steward who is a Stranger to the Person concerned and therefore 't is hard and unreasonable that Mens Purchases should be prejudiced by the Ignorance Unskilfulness or Dishonesty of a Steward or his Clerks that there is scarce one Customary Recovery in England which is exactly agreeable to the Rules of the Common Law that the questioning of this may in consequence endanger multitudes of Titles which have been honestly purchased especially since there can be no aid from the Statutes of Jeofailes for they do not extend to Courts Baron 'T was further urged That there was no Precedent to enforce Lords of Mannors to do as this Bill desired that the Lords of Mannors are the ultimate Judges of the Regularity or Errours in such Proceedings that there 's no Equity in the Prayer of this Plaintiff that if the Lord had received such Petition and were about to proceed to the Reversal of such Recovery Equity ought then to interpose and quiet the Possession under those Recoveries That Chancery ought rather to supply a Defect in a Common Conveyance if any shall happen and decree the Execution of what each Party meant and intended by it much rather than to assist the annulling of a Solemn Agreement executed according to Usage tho' not strictly conformable to the Rules of Law For which Reasons it was prayed that that Appeal might be dismissed and the Dismission below confirmed and ' was accordingly adjudged so The Countess of Radnor versus Vandebendy al. APpeal from a Decree of Dismission in Chancery the Case was to this effect The Earl of Warwick upon Marriage of his Son settles part of his Estate upon his Lady for a Jointure and after failure of Issue Male limits a Term for 99 years to Trustees to be disposed of by the Earl either by Deed or Will And for want of such Appointment then in trust for the next in Remainder and then limited the whole Estate in such manner as that a third part of a Moiety thereof came to the Lord Bodmyn the Appellants late Husband in Tail general with the Reversion in Fee to the Earl and his Heirs The Son died without Issue the Earl by his Will appoints the Lands to his Countess for so many years of the Term as she should live and to her Executors for one year after her Death and charges the Term with several Annuities some of which remain in being The Respondent's Father purchased part of these Lands from the Lord Bodmyn after his Marriage and had the Term assigned to him The Lord Bodmyn dyes the Appellant brings her Writ of Dower in C. B. the Respondent pleads the Term for 99 years and she Exhibits her Bill praying that she may after the discharge of the Earls Incumbrances have the benefit of the Trust as to a third of the Profits of this Term and upon hearing the Cause the Lord Chancellor saw no cause to give Relief but dismissed her Bill There were many Particulars in the Case and many Proceedings before both in Law and Equity but this was the whole Case as to the general Question Whether a Tenant in Dower shall have the benefit of the Trust of a Term which is ordered to attend the Inheritance against a Purchaser after the Marriage The Lord Chancellor Jeffryes had been of opinion with the Appellant but the Cause coming to be heard again a Dismission was decreed and now it was argued against the Decree on behalf of the Appellant that Equity did entitle her to the Thirds of this Term that a Tenant by the Curtesie is intitled to it and br the same reason a Tenant in Dower that the Term created by the Settlement was to attend all the Estates limited by that Settlement and in Trust for such Persons as should claim under it which the Appellant doth as well as the Respondents that it was in consequence to attend all the particular Estates carved or derived from the others the Term was never in its creation designed for this purpose to prevent or protect against Dower that in the Case of Snell and Clay the Tenant in Dower had it in Chancery against the Heir at Law and that this was the same Case a Purchaser with notice of that Incumbrance of Dower the Vendor being then married this was an Estate of which the Husband was full Owner and received the whole Profits that in proportion 't is as much a Trust for her for her Thirds during Life as it is a Trust for the Respondents for the Inheritance she claims under her Husband who had the benefit of the whole Trust If there be a Mortgage by an Ancecestor upon the whole Eqinty will permit her to redeem paying her proportion according to the value of her Thirds for Life and the same reason holds in this Case and there 's no Precedent in Equity to the contrary And many Precedents in favour of Tenant in Dower were cited and much Reason well urged from parallel Cases to entitle the Lady to her proportion of the Trust of this Term. On the other side 'T was said that Dower is an Interest or Right at the Common Law only that no Title can be maintained to have Dower but where the Common Law gives it and that is only to have the Thirds of that which the Husband was seized of and if a Term were in being no Feme was ever let in but after the determination of that Term that this is the first pretence set up for a Dower in Equity the Right is only to the Thirds of the Rent reserved upon any Term and 't is a new thing to affirm that there shall be one sort of Dower at Law and another in Chancery that 't is and always hath been the common received Opinion of Westminster-hall and of all Conveyancers that a Term or Statute prevents Dower that if a Purchaser can procure it the same becomes his Defence that this is what the Wisdom of our Forefathers thought fit to use and tho' some Mens reasoning may render it in appearance as absurd yet the consequence of an alteration will be much more dangerous than the continuance of the old Rules that tho' this Lady's Case be unfortunate yet the multitude of Purchasors who have bought upon full consideration and have been advised and still conceive themselves safe under this Law will be more unfortunate if the Law be broken Then ' was argued That there could be no Equity in this Case for it must be not only from the Party Appellant but also against the Respondent and that 't is not because he bought the whole Her Portion her Quality and her being a Wife create no Equity as to the Purchaser 't would perhaps be prevalent against an Heir but
good for them and that they had the like Power of Appeals Writs of Error and Impeachments c. and that the Cognizance of such Appeals in England would produce great inconveniencies by making poor people to attend here whereas they might with less trouble and expence have Justice at home that this did agree with the reasons of that Ancient Statute 4 Inst 356. that persons having Estates in Ireland should Reside in that Kingdom else half of their Estates should go to maintain the Forts there That this practice of receiving Appeals here would be vexatious to the people of that place and that no Court could have Jurisdiction but by grant or prescription and that there could be no pretence for either in this place Then was it ordered in these or the like Words Whereas a Petition and Appeal was offered to the House the Day of last from the Society of the Governour and Assistants London of the New Plantation in Ulster in the Kingdom of Ireland against a Judgment given by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal of Ireland in Parliament there Assembled on the day of last upon the Petition and Appeal of William Lord Bishop of Derry against the Decree or Orders made in the said Cause in the Court of Chancery there Whereupon a Committee was appointed to consider of the proper method of Appealing from Decrees made in the Court of Chancery in Ireland and that pursuant to the Orders of the said Committee and a Letter sent to the Lords Justices of Ireland by Order of this House several precedents have been transmitted to this House by the said Lord Justices Copies whereof were ordered to be delivered to either side After hearing Counsel upon the Petition of the said Society of London presented to this House praying that they might be heard as to the Jurisdiction of the House of Lords in Ireland in receiving and judging Appeals from the Chancery there as also Counsel for the Bishop of Derry after due Consideration of the Precedents and of what was offered by Counsel thereupon It is ordered and adjudged by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled That the said Appeal of the Bishop of Derry to the House of Lords in Ireland from the Decree or Orders of the Court of Chancery there made in the Cause wherein the said Bishop of Derry was Plaintiff and the said Society of the Governour and Assistants London of the New Plantation in Ulster in Ireland were Defendants was coram non judice and that all the proceedings thereupon are null and void and that the Court of Chancery in Ireland ought to proceed in the said Cause as if no such Appeal had been made to the House of Lords there and if either of the said Parties do find themselves Agrieved by the said Decree or Orders of the Chancery of Ireland they are at liberty to pursue their proper Remedy by way of Appeal to this House Sir Caesar Wood alias Cranmer versus Duke of Southampton APpeal from a Decree in Chancery the Case was thus Sir Henry Wood the Appellant's Unkle makes a Settlement in Consideration of a Marriage to be had between his Daughter Mary and the Duke c. to the uses following i.e. in Trust to Receive and Pay out of the Profits 450 l. a Year to the Lady Chester for the Education and Maintenance of his Daughter till twelve years of Age then 550 l. a year till Marriage or Seventeen years of Age which should first happen and in Trust to pay the Residue of the Profits to the Duke after Marriage he first giving Security to the said Trustees to provide Portions and Maintenance for the Daughters of the Marriage equal to the Sum he should receive and in case there should be none then the same Money to remain to the Respondent and if the said Mary should die before Marriage or Age of Seventeen years to such Uses as Sir H. W. should appoint And if Mary after Sir Henry's death die under Sixteen the Respondent then unmarried to any other Woman or after and before Seventeen the Respondent then living and unmarried or if before Seventeen she should marry any other or if she should refuse the Respondent then 20000 l. out of the Profits to the Duke But if the said Marriage shall take effect after Mary's Age of Sixteen years and she shall have Issue Male by the Respondent then for the better Settlement of the Premisses upon the Issue Male and a more ample Provision and Maintenance for the Respondent and his Wife and the longest Liver of them in Trust for the said Duke and Mary for and during their Lives and the Life of the longer liver of them and after their Deaths to the first Son c. in Tail Male and for default of Issue Male to the Daughters And for default of such Issue in Trust for such Persons only as Sir Henry should appoint and in default thereof to the right Heirs of Sir Henry Sir Henry W. at the same time makes his Will tho' dated after the Settlement reciting that he had settled the Premisses upon the Duke and Mary for their Lives and the Life of the Longer liver of them c. and confirms it and in Case the said Martiage should not take effect according to the Limitations of the Settlement or if the said Respondent should die without Issue by Mary or if he have Issue by her and that Issue die without Issue then the Remainder to Mary for Life and afterwards to her first Son and after several mediate Remainders then to the Appellant for Life c. and after to Thomas Webb c. Sir Henry Wood dies the Marriage between Mary and the Duke afterwards takes effect upon her arrival to years of Consent and they lived in that state till she was near Seventeen years of Age and then she dies without Issue The Court of Chancery decreed the Profits of the Estate to the Duke for Life It was argued for the Appellant That here was a precedent Copulative Condition that if the Marriage take effect after Sixteen and there be Issue then to the Duke and neither of these being in the Case the Decree is not consistent with the positive words of the Settlement for that the Duke was to have it upon no other terms That by this Settlement the Duke was thus provided for 1. If the Marriage did not take effect by Mary's refusal or taking another Husband the Duke was to have 20000 l. 2. If the Marriage did take effect and Issue was had then the Duke was to have an Estate for Life but not otherwise that the words are plain and certain that there must not only be a Marriage but Issue Male between them that tho' it should be agreed to be a good Marriage within the intention of the Settlement she living till after Sixteen years of Age yet when a Condition Copulative consisting of several Branches as this doth is made precedent to any Use or
receive the Allegations and Matters given in Evidence for the Plaintiff as sufficient to maintain his Title whereas they were given in Evidence and considered and if it be meant as a sufficient Evidence to controul and over-rule all other that doth not belong to the Court in Trials to determine unless referred to them upon demurrer to Evidence but is the proper business of the Jury and if the Party be aggrieved the Remedy is an Attaint Nor can it be pretended that the Defendants Evidence was admitted to over-rule the Record produced because no Objection was made to the Defendants Evidence at the Trial and the same was all given before the Record of 15 Ed. 3. was produced and consequently the Jury must consider the force of it for Evidence on both sides being given by the Law of England the Decision of the Right belongs to the Jury and the Act of Edw. 3. being repealed 't is no Matter of Law but the most which could be made of it was that it was Evidence which must be left to the Jury together with the Defendants Evidence But no Bill of Exception will lye in such a Case by the Statute when the Evidence given is admitted as Evidence and left to a Jury and where no Opposition was made to the Defendants Evidence as here in this Case and therefore in this Case a Bill of Exception could not be warrantable because the Plaintiff's Evidence was not refused or over-ruled nor was the Defendant's Evidence fit to be rejected or so much as opposed by the Plaintiff And as to the Allegations made by the Counsel and not proved those never could be an Exception And for these and other Reasons the Judges refused to Seal their Bill Upon this a Writ of Error is brought and a Petition was exhibited to the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament assembled in the Name of the Lady Isabella Dutchess of Grafton and William Bridgman her Trustee showing that King Charles the Second granted the Office in question to W. B. for the Lives of Henry Earl of Arlington Henry Duke of Grafton and of the Petitioner the Lady Isabella in Trust for the Duke his Executors and Administrators to commence after the Death of Sir Robert Henly that upon the death of Sir Robert Henly the Petitioner by virtue of the said Grant was well intituled to the said Office but was interrupted in receiving the Profits by Rowland Holt Esq Brother to the Lord Chief Justice Holt and by Edward Coleman Gent. who pretended to be admitted thereto by some Grant from the Chief Justice that thereupon an Assize was brought for the said Office which came to Trial and the Petitioners Counsel insisted upon an Act of Parliament proving the King to have the Right of granting the said Office which the Judges would not admit to be sufficient to prove the King's Right to grant the same That the Petitioners Counsel did thereupon pray the benefit of a Bill therein to be allowed and sealed by the Judges according to Law And the Petitioner's Counsel relying upon the said Act of Parliament as sufficient proof of the King 's Right duly tendred a Bill of Exceptions before Judgment in the Assize which the Judges upon the Trial said they would Seal yet when tendred to them in Court before Judgment would not Seal the same Thereupon Judgment was entred against the Petitioners Title in the Assize by default of the Judges not allowing and sealing the said Bill according to the Duty of their Office by Law whereby they are hindred from making the Matter of the said Bill part of the Record of the said Judgment now brought and depending before your Lordships upon a Writ of Error in Parliament for reversing the said Judgment in the Assize and so are precluded from having the full benefit of the Law by the said Writ of Error to examine reverse and annul the said Judgment Wherefore the Petitioners prayed that their Lordships would be pleased to order the said Judges or some of them to Seal the said Bill of Exceptions to the end the said Case might as by Law it ought come intirely before their Lordships for Judgment c. Upon reading this Petition 't was ordered that the Lord Chief Justice and the rest of the Judges of the Court of King's Bench should have Copies of the Petition and put in their Answer thereunto in Writing on ..... next At the Day appointed there was deliver'd an Answer in these or the like words The Answer of William Dolben William Gregory and Giles Eyre Knights three of their Majesties Justices assigned to hold Pleas in their Court of King's Bench at Westminster to the Petition of the most noble Isabella Dutchess of Grafton and William Bridgman exhibited by them to your Lordships THese Respondents by Protestation not owning or allowing any of the Matters of the Petition to be true as they are therein alledged and saving to themselves the benefit of all the several Statutes herein after mentioned and all the Right they have as Members of the Body of the Commons of England to defend themselves upon any Trial that may be brought against them for any thing done contrary to their Duty as Judges according to the due Course of the Common Law which Right they hold themselves obliged to insist upon in answer to the said Petition think themselves bound to shew and offer to your Lordships consideration That the Petition is a Complaint against them for refusing to Seal a pretended Bill of Exceptions contrary to a Statute in that behalf as the Petition pretends without setting forth the tenour of the said Statute or what that pretended Bill was whereas that Statute is the Statute of Westminster 2. cap. 31. and doth enact That if any impleaded before any Justices doth offer an Exception and pray the Justices to allow the same and they refuse so to do the Party offering the Exception is thereby to write it and pray the Justices to Seal it which they or one of them are thereby enjoyned to do So that if the pretended Bill was duly tendred to these Respondents and was such as they were bound to Seal these Respondents are answerable only for it by the Course of the Common Law in an Action to be brought on that Statute which ought to be tried by a Jury of Twelve honest and lawful Men of England by the Course of the Common Law and not in any other manner And the Respondents further shew and humbly offer to your Lordships consideration That the Petition is a Complaint in the nature of an Original Suit charging those Respondents with a Crime of a very high Nature in acting contrary to the Duty of their Office and so altogether improper for your Lordships Examination or Consideration not being any more triable by your Lordships then every Information or Action for breach of any Statute Law is all which Matters are by the Common Law and Justice of the Land of Common Right to be
tried by a Jury And the Petition is wholly of a new Nature and without any Example or Precedent being to compel Judges who are by the Law of the Land to act according to their own judgments without any Constraint or Compulsion whatsoever and trenches upon all Mens Rights and Liberties tending manifestly to destroy all Trials by Jury And it is further manifest That this Complaint is utterly improper for your Lordships Examination for that your Lordships cannot apply the proper and only Remedy which the Law hath given the Party in this Case which is by awarding Damages to the Party injured if any Injury be done for these are only to be assessed by a Jury And they these Respondents are so far from apprehending they have done any wrong to the Petitioners in this Matter that they humbly offer with your Lordships leave to wave any Priviledge they have as Assistants to this Honourable House and appear gratis to any Suit that shall be brought against them in Westminster-hall touching the Matter complained of in the Petition And they further with all humility offer to your Lordships Consideration That as they are Judges they are under the Solemn Obligation of an Oath to do Justice without respect of Persons and are to be supposed to have acted in this Matter with and under a due regard to that Sacred Obligation and therefore to impose any thing contrary upon them may endanger the breaking of it which they humbly believe your Lordships will be tender of And they further humbly shew to your Lordships That by a Statute made in the 25th of Edw. 3. cap. 4. it is enacted That from thenceforth none shall be taken by Petition or Suggestion to the King or his Councel unless by Indictment or Presentment of good and lawful People of the Neighbourhood or by Process by Writ Original at Common Law and that none shall be put out of his Franchise or Freehold but by the Course of the Common Law And by another Statute in the 28th of Edw. 3. cap. 3. it is expresly provided that no Man shall be put out of his Lands and Tenements nor imprisoned or disinherited but by due Process of Law And by another Statute made in the 42 Edw. 3. cap. 3. it is enacted That no Man shall be put to answer without Presentment before Justices or Matter of Record on due Process and Original Writ according to the old Law of the Land And the Respondents further say That inasmuch as the Petition is a Complaint in the nature of an Original Cause for a supposed Breach of an Act of Parliament which Breach if any be is only examinable and triable by the Course of the Common Law and cannot be so in any other manner and is in the Example of it dangerous to the Rights and Liberties of all Men and tends to the Subversion of all Trials by Juries these Respondents conceive themselves bound in Duty with regard to their Offices and in Conscience to the Oaths they have taken to crave the benefit of defending themselves touching the Matter complained of in the Petition by the due and known Course of the Common Law and to rely upon the aforesaid Statutes and the Common Right they have of Free-born People of England in Bar of the Petitioners any further proceeding upon the said Petition and humbly pray to be dismissed from the same Then it was after Debate ordered That Counsel be heard at the Bar of the House on the said Petition And afterwards upon the Day appointed for the hearing of Counsel it was insisted on in the behalf of the Petitioners That here was a Right and a Right proved and no ways to come at it but this that if a Bill of Exceptions be tendred and refused this House can command them to do it that this proceeding of the Judges is to stifle the Matter of Law the Writ upon the Statute must be returnable here and cannot be otherwise that this follows the Judgment into Parliament that this House is to judge of every thing belonging to that Judgment that if this cannot be done there will be a failure of Justice that there have been Writs of Error upon Judgments with the Bill of Exceptions annexed that Damages to be recovered in an Action gives no Reparation for the Office that the Action must be brought before the Judges and so it must be a Dance in a Circle that as to the Judges Oaths the Justices of Peace are upon their Oaths and yet they may be committed that this is not fit for a Jury to try Whether the Judges have done well or ill in refusing to Seal this Bill of Exceptions This Refusal is the way to keep the Law within the Bounds or Walls of Westminster-hall and effectually to prevent its ever coming hither that this was not a Complaint of the Judges that as yet they would not accuse them of a Crime they only said fac hoc vive that the Court of King's Bench below doth the same thing to the Judges in Ireland they command others and ought to be commanded that they themselves send Mandatory Writs as the Cases are in Yelvert ' Cro. Car. That the Lords had directed the Judges in many things and so they did in Jeffrey Stanton's Case that by Command under the Privy Seal things have been done which otherwise would not and my Lord Shaftsbury was remanded to the Tower upon the Authority of that Case 15 Edw. 3. the Statute says that the Peers shall Examine for by great Men are meant the Peers Then were urged certain Cases where the Lords had commanded the Chancery to proceed speedily and to give Judgment c. Earl of Radnor's Case Englefield and Englefield and other like Cases were quoted and from thence they argued the Power of the Lords to command the Judges to do the thing desired 'T was argued on the other side against the Petition to this effect That this was a Cause of great consequence in respect of the Persons concerned as also of the Subject Matter it being the Complaint of a Noble Peeress against three of the Judges before whom she was lately a Suitor and concerning the Jurisdiction of this House That this Petition was the most artificial which could be contrived to hinder the Justice of the Law and to procure a Determination in prejudice of Two hundred thirty five years enjoyment that it is designed to get a Cause to be heard and adjudged on a Writ of Error by the Evidence onone side only or rather by that which was no Evidence at all if the Copy produced at the Trial was true for now upon the return of what they desire nothing of the Defendants Evidence would or could appear When a Bill of Exceptions is formed upon the Statute it ought to be upon some point of Law either in admitting or denying of Evidence or a Challenge or some Matter of Law arising upon Fact not denied in which either Party is over-ruled by the
cum aggravatione pene corporalis somewhat more than Death Then this being a Common Law Punishment and not prescribed by any Statute the knowledge of it must be fetcht from our Law-Books and from Presidents for the General Practise of the Realm is the Common Law 't is describ'd with an ipso vivente in Smith's Republica Anglic. p. 28. lat Edit pag. 245. Stamf. 182. en son view which is tantamount and Stamford wrote 2 Eliz. In Coke's 3 Inst 210. 't is ipsoque vivente comburentur Pulton de Pace Regni 224. and many other Books were cited to the same effect And 't was affirmed that there was no Book which recited the Judgment at large but had this Particular in it Several Books do in short put it That for Treason the Party shall be Drawn and Hanged and Quartered but those are only Hints of the Chief Parts not Recitals of the Judgment it self In the English Book of Judgments printed 1655. pag. 292. 't is mentioned particularly as the Kings Bench have adjudged it should be The Duke of Buckingham's was so 13 Hen. 8. Stow's Chronicle 513. shews that he was the Person Then 't was said they have been thus in every Age without interruption 'till 26 Car. 2. Humfrey Stafford's Case 1 H. 7.24 which was per consensum omnium Justiciariorum tho' quoted on the other side as shortly stated in the Year-Book yet on the Roll which hath been seen and perused 't is with an ipso vivente Plowden 387. and Rastal's Entries 645. the same Case is thus Coke's Ent. 699. is so likewise John Littleton in 43 Eliz. Coke's Ent. 422 423 and 366. is so In the Lord Stafford's Case 33 Car. 2. by the Direction of this House and with the Advice of all the Judges was the Judgment so given by the Earl of Nottingham then Lord High Steward In the Lord Preston's Case 't is so which was drawn by Advice of the then Attorney and Sollicitor the present Keeper and Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. As to the Objection That vivens prosternatur doth imply it and that 's enough It was answered That ipso vivente comburentur implies both but not e contra and all the Presidents shew the latter to be requisite And as to the Case of David Prince of Wales mentioned in Fleta there 's only a Relation of what was the Execution not of what was the Judgment And Coke 2 Inst 195. says That the Judgment was in Parliament and therefore the same can be no President to this purpose and any one that runs over Cotton's Records will find the Judgments in Parliament to be different as the Nature of the Case required No Argument can be drawn from the Acts of the Legislature to govern Judiciary Proceedings however John Hall's Case 1 Hen. 4. Cott. 401. is as now contended for Before the 1 Hen. 7. there were some Erroneous Attainders and the 29 Eliz. takes notice of them as so errneous The Judgments against Benson and Sir Andrew Helsey cited below are plainly erroneous they dispose of the Quarters which they ought not but leave the same to the King's pleasure Sir Andrew's President is a monstrous arbitrary Command by Writ to Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer ordering them to Examine him and to give Judgment in manner as in the Writ is directed that therefore is not to be justified and 't was before 25 Edw. 3. Henry Ropers 21 Rich. 2. doth dispose of the Quarters and hath other Errors in it and so have William Bathurst's and Henry South's which were in 3 Hen. 4. But from that time to 26 Car. 2. there 's none which do omit it The four Presidents at the Old Baily were against Popish Priests and what private politick Reasons or Commands might occasion the omission is unknown and Hampden was not Executed but his Judgment was upon a Confession and his Life saved the reason of which is also unknown So that there have been none Executed upon such Erroneous Judgments And that there are no more Presidents with the Omission is a good Argument that those many which have this Particular in them are good and legal the constant Current having been this way proves the same to be the Common Law And this is the most severe part of the Punishment to have his Bowels cut out while alive and therefore not to be omitted As to the Earl of Essex's Case in Moore and Owen's Case in Roll's Rep. the first is only a Report of the Case and the last a descant upon the Judgment but neither do pretend to recite the whole Judgment Then to pretend that this Judgment cannot be Executed is to arraign the Wisdom and Knowledge of all the Judges and Kings Counsel in all Reigns And Tradition saith that Harrison one of the Regicides did mount himself and give the Executioner a Box on the Ear after his Body was opened c. Then 't was argued That if it be a necessary part of the Judgment and be omitted it is a fatal Error and doth undoubtedly in all Cases give a good reason for the Reversal of such Judgment as in the Common Case of Debt where dampna are omitted in the Judgment tho' for the Advantage of the Defendant as is Beecher's Case and Yelv. 107. Besides if this be legal then all those Attainders in which this Particular is inserted must be illegal for 't is impossible that both the Judgments should be right for either those are more severe than they should be or this is more remiss To say that 't is discretionary is to give the Judges a power which they themselves have disclaimed and to Reverse this Reversal is to tell the Court of Kings Bench that they are not obliged to follow the General Practise of their Predecessors that they are obliged to no form in their Judgment for Treason that nothing but Death and being Drawn to it are essential and according to that Doctrine a Woman might receive the Judgment of Quartering and a Man might be Burnt and both according to Law But the Constitution of this Kingdom hath prescribed and fixed Rules and Forms which the Executive Power is obliged and bound to follow that as nothing can be made or construed to be an Offence at the Pleasure of the Court so no Judgment can be given for any known Offence at Pleasure But the Law either Statute or Common hath established what is an Offence and what is its Punishment and there is nothing of Arbitrary Power allowed in respect of either Wherefore upon the whole it was prayed that the Reversal might be affirmed and it was affirmed accordingly Sir Evan Lloyd Baronet and Dame Mary his Wife and Sidney Godolphin Esq and Susan his Wife Appellants Versus Sir Richard Carew Baronet an Infant the Son and Heir of Sir John Carew Baronet deceased Respondent APpeal from a Decree of Dismission in Chancery The Case was thus Rice Tannott died seized in Fee of several Lands in the several Counties of Salop
the Alienation even of an Ideot and then after Office the Practise is to Issue a Scire facias to him in possession or to the Alienee and so is Fitzh tit Scire facias pl. 2. 106. All these Methods prescribed by the Law would be useless if the Acts themselves were void Then 't is as certain that the Office must be found during the Parties Life and during the insanity and not afterwards If there had been an Office 't would only avoid it with a prospect as it would be in case of an Heir after death Even after an Office the King cannot have the Profits from the time of the Alienation which shews it not it not void from the beginning If a Suit be against an Ideot after Inquisition the Ideot cannot plead it but the King shall send a Supersedeas to the Judges suggesting the Inquisition so that even then the Party himself cannot avoid it As to the other way of avoiding it by the Heir it must be by Writ or Entry and till Entry or Writ the Act remains good But here 's no Contest with the Party himself or with his Heirs but with a Remainder Man This Act of Surrender was no tortious Act it wrought no discontinuance there was no Trust in him to preserve the Contingent Remainder A Feoffment with livery is allowed not to be void and yet that may do a wrong by discontinuance c. As to the pretence that a Warrant of Attorney to make livery is void that doth not reach this Case for here 's an Act done by himself which would have passed the Estate as by and from himself if he had been of sound Mind Then 't was desired that the other side would shew any such Case as this whereas multitudes of Gifts Grants Releases Bonds and other Specialties sealed and delivered by the Party himself are allowed to be good and the same reason holds for a Surrender made in Person and there 's no difference between a livery made in Person and a Surrender the Act being Personal and not by another under his Authority makes the livery good and so it ought to be here 18 Ed. 4.2 Perkins sect 139. And 't is observable in 39 Hen. 6.42 per Priscott upon the Inquisition 't is reseized and revested into the Interest of the Ideot and consequently of the King and if revested 't was once out of him Now here 's no prejudice to the Man himself by this Opinion he is taken care of and his Acts avoided by the King on his behalf and his Heirs may avoid them But that Strangers should take notice of them as void was denied and therefore prayed that the Judgment should be reversed On the other side it was argued with the Judgment That this never was a Surrender that 't was against sense and reason to allow the Acts of a Madman a Person distracted to be valid to any purpose that in case of livery it had been allowed to be only voidable by reason of the solemnity and notoriety of the thing but in case of a Deed or a Thing passing only by Deed 't was otherwise and Bracton Britton Fleta and the Register were cited where 't is declared who can take and who can alien and that a Madman cannot alien and Fitzh is of Opinion that the Writ of dum non fuit compos may be brought by himself that there was a notion scattered in the Books that such Acts are only voidable but the reason of the Law is otherwise 39 Hen. 6.42 hath the distinction that Feoffment with livery is good but if livery be by Warrant of Attorney 't is void If it be a Feoffment with Warranty by Deed and possession delivered with his own hands yet the warranty is void because the Deed is void Perk. 5. The Deed of a Mad-man is void if he grants a Rent 't is void If an Infant makes a Warrant of Attorney 't is void so is Whittingham's Case A Deed and a Will are not to be distinguished and by the same reason that the one is void the other is so Finch 102. is general All Deeds of a Man of non sane memorie are null 12 Rep. Shulter's Case 'T is an offence to procure a Deed from him The Civil Law makes all his Acts which he doth without consent of his Curator to be void A Madman is taken pro absente 'T is a Rule unaccountable That a Man shall not stuitifie himself that he shall not be able to excuse himself by the Visitation of Heaven when he may plead Duress from Men to avoid his own Act. 'T is absurd to say That a Deed procured from a Man in a Fever or in Bethlehem shall be valid to any purpose Fitzherbert who was a good Lawyer ridicules the pretence and maintains That he himself may avoid such Act. Then were cited 2 Inst 14. Lloyd and Gregory 1 Cro. 501 502. Perkins tit Grant 13. Then it was said That in this Case there needs not much Argument the Reason of the Thing exposes the pretended Law And the Judges have declared that this Surrender is void the word amens or demens imply that the Man hath no Mind and consequently could make no Conveyance Wherefore 't was prayed that the Judgment should be affirmed and without much debate it was accordingly affirmed Henry Earl of Lincoln by Susanna Countess of Lincoln his Mother and Procheine Amye Appellant Versus Samuel Roll Esq Vere Booth Hugh Fortescue Esq and Bridget his Wife al' Respondents AApeal from a Decree of Dismission in Chancery The Case was thus Edward late Earl of Lincoln who was Son and Heir of Edward Lord Clinton the only Son of Theophilus Earl of Lincoln deceased being seized in Fee of the Mannors of c. after his Mothers decease who is yet living and of other Lands of about 3000 l. per Annum part of the ancient Estate of the Family And designing that in default of Issue-Male by himself his Estate should go with the Honour made his Will 20 Sept. 34 Car. 2. and thereby devised the Premisses to Sir Francis Clinton for Life Remainder to his first and other Sons in Tail-Male with many Remainders over to such Persons in Tail-Male to whom the Honour might descend and directed that his Houshold Goods at ...... should remain there as Heir Loomes to be enjoyed by the next Heir-Male who should be Heir of Lincoln and made the said Sir Francis the Appellants Father and after his Death Earl of Lincoln Executor On the sixth of Novemb. 36 Car. 2. Earl Edward made another Will in writing in like manner with the alteration of some Personal Legacies and afterwards in April 1686. and in Dec. 1690. did republish his Will Then Earl Edward sold part to Richard Wynne Esq for 24491 l. 3 s. 6 d. and mortgaged the Premisses in question to him for 12200 l. Then Earl Edward by Deeds of Lease and Release dated the 27th and 28th of April 1691. conveys his whole Estate to
of Cases were quoted concerning the King's Grants Misrecitals false Recitals and Deceit c. Then it was strenuously insisted upon That the Recitals and the Granting Clause must be consider'd and judged of together that the contrary Opinion is to make the Granting Part to be without any Consideration 't is to have a Conclusion without Premisses an igitur without a Cause That eadem servitia can never be intended new ones That secundum tenorem must referr to the Appendant Advowson and therefore the Advowson in gross here declared upon and pleaded to can never pass by this Grant and upon the whole it was prayed That the Judgment might be affirmed It was replied on behalf of the Plaintiff in Error That as to the Variance in the Title of Knight no Answer had been given to the reasonable Distinction between the Case of Grants and that of Writs and Indictments that here was no Proof or Appearance of a Diversity of Persons That as to the Grant it self secund ' tenorem could mean only a Reference to the Interest or Estate granted by them not to the thing or the Nature of it That such Words signified only as fully and largely they had no express Relation to the Quality of the Advowson whether in gross or appendant That by such Niceties any or most Patents might be avoided That Grants of Honours as well as of Interests if questioned must be under the same Rule and the Considerations upon which they are grounded may be subject to Inquiry if true or false c. That the Patent of it self without Reference to the pleading was good That the Judgment desired was to condemn a Patent as void because another Patent recited in it was so which perhaps was not fully recited and if it were was not in Judgment before the Court and the substance of what was urged before was in short repeated and prayed That the Judgment might be revers'd and it was accordingly revers'd and Mr. Pierse Scroope being dead presented Francis Pemberton his Clerk who was admitted instituted and inducted c. FINIS THE NAMES OF THE Principal Cases 1. DOminus Rex Viscount Purbeck Page 1 2. Duvall versus Price Page 12 3. John Duvall and Elizabeth his Wife versus William Terry of London Merchant Page 15 4. William Dolphin and Katharine his Wife versus Francis Haynes Page 17 5. Dormer Sheppard al' versus Joseph Wright al' Page 18 6. Whitfield Ux ' al' versus Paylor Ux ' al' Page 20 7. Thomas Arnold versus Mr. Attorney General and Matthew Johnson Esq Thomas Bedford Gent. Page 22 8. Sir Richard Dutton versus Richard Howell Richard Grey and Robert Chaplyn Executors of Sir John Witham decased Page 24 9. Philips versus Bury Page 35 10. Dr. William Oldis versus Charles Donmille Page 58 11. Smith Ux ' versus Dean and Chapter of St. Paul's London and Lewis Ruggle Page 67 12. The Countess of Radnor versus Vandebendy al' Page 69 13. Dominus Rex versus Baden Page 72 14. Hall al' Executors of Thomas Thynne versus Jane Potter Administratrix of George Potter Page 76 15. The Society of the Governour and Assistants of the New Plantation of Vlster in the Kingdom of Ireland versus William Lord Bishop of Derry Page 78 16. Sir Caesar Wood aliàs Cranmer versus Duke of South-hampton Page 83 17. Sir Caesar Wood aliàs Cranmer versus Thomas Webb Page 87 18. Jonathan Lord Bishop of Exeter al' versus Sampson Hele. Page 88 19. Robert Davis versus Dr. John Speed Page 104 20. Wats al' versus Crooke Page 108 21. Lee Warner versus William North. Page 110 22. Briggs versus Clark ibid. 23. William Bridgman al' versus Rowland Holt al' Page 111 24. Dominus Rex versus Walcort Page 127 25. Sir Evan Lloyd Bar. and Dame Mary his Wife and Sidney Godolphin and Susan his Wife versus Richard Carew Bar. an Infant the Son and Heir of Sir John Carew Bar. deceased Page 137 26. Sir William Morley Knight of the Bathe versus Peter Jones Page 140 27. Sir Edward Hungerford and John Hill Executors and Devisees of Sir William Basset versus Edward Nosworthy Page 146 28. Sir Simon Leach al' versus John Thompson Lessee of Charles Leach Page 150 29. Henry Earl of Lincoln versus Samuel Roll al' Page 154 30. John Fox Gen ' versus Simon Harcourt Esq Page 158 31. Henry Lord Bishop of London and Dr. Birch versus Attorney General pro Domino Rege Page 164 32. Dominus Rex versus Reginald Tucker Page 186 33. Joseph Eastmond Executor of Hester Eastmond and Samuel Neyle versus Edwyn Sands Clerk Page 192 34. Magdalen Foubert versus Charles de Cresseron Page 194 35. Philip Jermin and Sarah his Wife versus Mary Orchard Page 199 36. Bennet Swayne versus William Fawkner and John Lane Executors of B. M. Page 207 37. Dominus Rex versus Episcop ' Cestr ' and Richard Pierse Page 212