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A28468 Nomo-lexikon, a law-dictionary interpreting such difficult and obscure words and terms as are found either in our common or statute, ancient or modern lawes : with references to the several statutes, records, registers, law-books, charters, ancient deeds, and manuscripts, wherein the words are used : and etymologies, where they properly occur / by Thomas Blount of the Inner Temple, Esq. Blount, Thomas, 1618-1679. 1670 (1670) Wing B3340; ESTC R19028 517,540 312

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Parish within the City of London and Suburbs and elswhere who yearly chuse Officers for the Parish and take care of its concernments so called because they usually meet in the Vestry of the Church Uesture Vesturd Signifies a Garment but we turn it Metaphorically to betoken a Possession or an admittance to a Possession or Seisin So is it taken in Westm 2. cap. 25. And in this signification it is borrowed from the Feudists with whom Investitara imports a Delivery of Possession by a Spear or Staff and Vestura Possession it self Hottoman verbo Investitura Vestura terrae i. Segetes quibus terra Vestitur MS. Uesture of an Acre of Land Anno 14 Edw. 1. stat 1. Is the profit of it So in Extenta Manerii 4 Edw. 1. It is inquirable How much the Vesture of an Acre is worth and how much the Land is worth when the Wood is felled Uetitum namium Namium signifies a Taking or Distress and Vetitum forbidden as when the Bailiff of a Lord Distrains Beasts or Goods and the Lord forbids his Bailiff to deliver them when the Sheriff comes to Replevy them and to that end drives them to places unknown or when without any words they are so eloigned as they cannot be replevied Divers Lords of Hundreds and Court Barons have power to hold Plea De Vetito Namio in old Books called De Vet. 2 Inst fol. 140. Sir Henry Spelman says it is Antiqua Juris nostri locutio brevis Regis nomen See Naam Uicario deliberando occasione cujusdam Recognitionis c. Is a Writ that lies for a Spiritual Person imprisoned upon forfeiture of a Recognisance without the Kings Writ Reg. of Writs fol. 147. Uicis venellis Mundandis Is a Writ that lies against a Major or Bailiffs of a Town c. for the clean keeping their Streets Reg. of Writs fol. 267. b. Uicar Vicarius The Priest of every Parish is called Rector unless the Predial Tithes be impropriated and then he is called Vicar Quasi vice fungens Rectoris Sciant quod ego Johannes Webbe perpetuus Vicarius Ecclesiae Parochialis de Bromyord Dedi Domino David Hay perpetuo Vicario Ecclesiae Parochialis de Anenebury duas acras terrae c. Dat. 8 Hen. 5. They stiled themselves Perpetui Vicarii because every Vicaridge hath a constant Succession as a Corporation and never dies The Canonists mention four species of Vicars Quidam sunt perpetui ad Parochiales Ecclesias constituti quidam non perpetui sed ad aliquos actus constituti ut temporales isti dicuntur mercenarii Quidam sunt speciales non ad curam sed ad certum locum articulum vel actum constituti Quidam nec perpetui nec ad curam nec ad certum actum sed generaliter dantur ad omnia See Vocab utriusque Juris verbo Vicarius Uice-Chamberlain called Under-Chamberlain Anno 13 Rich. 2. stat 2. cap. 1. Is a great Officer in Court next under the Lord Chamberlain and in his absence hath the command and controlment of all Officers whatsoever appertaining to that part of his Majesties Houshold which is called the Chamber or above stairs Uicegerent Anno 31 Hen. 8. cap. 10. A Deputy or Lieutenant Uicinage Fr. Voisinage Neighborhood nearness Mag. Char. cap. 14. See Venue Uicinetum See Visne Uicount alias Uiscount Vicecomes Signifies as much as Sheriff Between which two words I finde no other difference but that the one comes from our Conquerors the Normans the other from our Ancestors the Saxons of which see more in Sheriff Vicount also signifies a degree of nobility next to an Earl which Camden Britan. pag. 170. says Is an old name of Office but a new one of dignity never heard of among us till Henry the Sixths dayes who in his eighteenth year in Parliament created John Lord Beaumont Viscount Beaumont but far more ancient in other Countries Cassan de Gloria mundi par 5. consider 55. See Sheriff And Seldens Titles of Honor fo 761. Uicountiels Vicecomitilia Are certain Ferms for which the Sheriff pays a rent to the King and makes what profit he can of them v. Stat. 33. 34 Hen. 8. ca. 16. 2 3 Ed. 6. ca. 4. 4 Hen. 5. ca. 2. Writs Vicountiel are such Writs as are triable in the County or Sheriffs Court Old Nat. Br. fo 109. of which kind you may see divers Writs of Nusance set down by Fitzh in his Nat. Br. fo 184. b. See Anno 6 Rich. 2. ca. 3. Uicountiel Rents Mentioned 22 Car. 2. ca. 6. see Vicountiels Uidimus Anno 15 Hen. 6. ca. 3. See Innotescimus Uiew Fr. Veue i. Visus conspectus Signifies the act of Viewers For when any Action real is brought and the Tenant knows not well what land it is that the Demandant asks then he may pray the view which is that he may see the land which is claimed of this Britton writes ca. 45. This course of proceeding we received from the Normans as appears by the grand Custumary ca. 66. and 80. This view is used as in other cases so in an Assise of rent-service rent charge or rent seck Fitz. Nat. Brev. fo 178. and in a Writ de Curia claudenda Idem fo 128. In a Writ of Nusance idem fo 183. In a Writ Quo jure Idem fo 128. In the Writ de rationabilibus divisis Idem fv 129. And in the Writ de secta ad molendinum Idem fo 123. see the New Book of Entries verbo view and how this view is made in Fleta lib. 4. ca. 6. See Veiours and Westm 2. ca. 48. Uiew of Frankpledge Visus Franci plegii Is the Office which the Sheriff in his County Court or the Bailiff in his Hundred performs in looking to the Kings peace and seeing that every man be in some pledge This is called by Bracton Res quasi sacra quia solam personam Regis respicit introducta pro pace communi utilitate lib. 2. ca. 16. num 8. See Frankpledge Leet Decennier See New Book of Entries on this word Ui laica removendo Is a Writ that lies for the removing a forcible possession of a Benefice kept by Lay-men and is sometimes granted upon the Certificate of the Bishop into the Chancery that there is such a force in his Diocess sometimes onely upon a surmise thereof made by the Ineumbent himself and has a several form for either case Fitz. Nat. Brev. fo 54. Reg. of Writs fo 59 60. Uigil Vigilia Anno 2 3 Ed. 6. ca. 19. is used for the eve or day next before any solemn Feast because then Christians of old were wont to watch fast and pray in their Churches Uill Villa Is taken for a Mannor and sometimes for a Parish or part of it Villa apud Saxones nostros antiquos Romano sensu accipi videtur pro praedio unius alicujus in rure cum idoneis aedibus ad reponendos cjusdem fructus honestato Non autem primitus pro multarum
ΝΟΜΟ-ΛΕΞΙΚΟΝ A Law-Dictionary Interpreting such difficult and obscure WORDS and TERMS As are found either in Our Common or Statute Ancient or Modern LAWES WITH REFERENCES to the several Statutes Records Registers Law-Books Charters Ancient Deeds and Manuscripts wherein the Words are used And Etymologies where they properly occur Coke on Littl. fol. 68. b. Ad rectè docendum oportet primùm inquirere Nomina quia rerum cognitio à nominibus rerum dependet By THOMAS BLOVNT of the Inner Temple Esq In the SAVOY Printed by Tho. Newcomb for John Martin and Henry Herringman at the Sign of the Bell in S. Pauls Churchyard and a little without Temple-Bar and in the New Exchange 1670. To the Right Honorable Sir Orlando Bridgeman Knight and Baronet Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England Sir John Kelynge Knight Lord Cheif Justice of His Majesties Court of Kings Bench and Sir John Vaughan Knight Lord Cheif Justice of His Majesties Court of Common Plea● MY LORDS AS it is certainly my bounden duty to offer and submit these my timorous and bashful endeavors to your great Judgments so it is my Interest to implore the benignity of your auspicious Patronage of them For the publishing these Papers I had onely two Motives The first and principal to erect a small Monument of that vast respect and deference which I have for your Lordships who are not onely the Oracles of our Law and Grand Exemplars of Justice but the glory and ornament of that Honorable Society whereof however unworthy I boast my self a Member and which at present justly claims the preheminence above the rest by producing more persons dignified with the Judiciary scarlet Robe then the other Three and filling up by due merit the most eminent Seats of Judicature in the Nation The other to gratifie an ambitious inclination of my own of leaving behinde me somewhat how inconsiderable soever that may in some measure excuse me to posterity from having been a truantly and useless Member of that Learned and Active Body If your Honors shall allow me to have fulfil'd my duty in the one and obtained my design in the other I have the desired effect of my Labors Nor hath my greatest ambition any thing higher to aym at then that I may with your Lordships permission subscribe my self My Lords Your most humble and obedient Servant THO. BLOUNT Inner Temple 20 June 1670. Preface SOme will perhaps wonder why I took so much pains to write this Book and object that we have two good Ones of this kind extant Cowels Interpreter and Terms of the Law nay haply thrust in Leighs Phylological Commentary as a third I answer though it is not my design to raise the reputation of this Work by disvaluing Those yet it may be allowable modestly to declare their Defects that my undertaking this may not appear unnecessary Doctor Cowel was certainly a Learned Man and his Enterprise very commendable but his Profession the Civil Law and that he did not singly intend his Interpreter for us appears by his often expressing what each word signifies in the Common Law to distinguish it from the Civil in which learning he bestowes a considerable part of his Book He ingenuously says His design is the advancement of knowledge and to incite others to finish his model and supply his defects which in truth are not a few For he directly mistakes the meaning of some Words and derivation of others as Ordel Mindbruch Brodehalpeny Furlong Avishering Thirdwith-hawanman c. He confounds Realty with Royalty and Commote with Comorth which are distinct words In the word Honor he sayes that in reading he has observ'd thus many Honors in England and sets down 25 wherein either his Reading was short or his observations defective for I have collected above twice that number out of approved Authors and Records in being when he wrote He is sometimes too prolix in the derivation of a Word setting down several Authors Opinions without categorically determining which is the true as in Exchequer Withernam Herald Earle Justices of Trailbaston Pawnage Purlieu c. And lastly gives us divers bare Words without explication as Cone Key Calendring Coggs Duch Lancegay Palingman Bread of treet c. which I have supply'd Not but that I have lest some quaere's too but those in Words of greater difficulty The Author of the Law-Terms was without doubt not less learned but wrote so long since that his very Language and manner of expression was almost antiquated till help'd by the late correction of it He has added to divers Words several Cases in Law relating thereto in general not tending much to their explication which I have declin'd lest the bulk should swell too big and the principal Design be wav'd He omits the Etymons for the most part and is much more copious in the first part of the Alphabet then in the later which argues the Author had not time or perseverance to finish it They are both much wanting in the number of Words especially the later For Cowel glean'd many after the Author of the Law-Terms had inn'd his Harvest yet both have much useless and repealed Law in them as in reference to Tenures by Knights-service and their Appendi●●s Wardship Villenage Purveyance Star-chamber Knighthood c. For thus sayes the learned Author of the Preface to Roll's Abridgment As time and experience and use and some Acts of Parliament have abridg'd some and antiquided other Titles so they have substituted and enlarged others Cowel also especially in the Folio Edition besides the misalphabeting is extreamly misprinted yet the Terms of the Law will still deservedly retain an usefulness pro tanto and particularly for the Law-French to instruct the young Student therein Leigh affords not the least Objection against my Undertaking for he is a Commentator not an Expositor his Title speaks it though sometimes he acts a little in both capacities Having found these among other as I judg'd important defects in those Authors consider'd the usefulness of Books of this Nature and reflected on these Expressions of the Oracle of our Law Here as in many other places it appears how necessary it is to know the signification of Words And again That the explanation of ancient Words and the true sence of them is requisite to be understood per verba notiora I was encourag'd to bestow my endeavour herein And it will abate the wonder that I who inter doctos me non effero should yet not onely assume the liberty in many places to correct those learned Authors but also make an additional collection of above a thousand Words if it be consider'd That they wanted those Helps I have had viz. That incomparable Glossarium Arohaiologicum of Sir Henry Spelman The elaborate Institutes of Sir Edward Coke That excellent Dictionarium Saxonico-Latino-Anglicum of Mr. Somner The Learned Works of Mr. William Dugdale Mr. Fabian Philips and others publish'd since those Authors wrote My Genius has also led me though sometimes
and hath given name to a Writ granted to recover damage thereupon Scavage Schevage Schewage and Scheauwing From the Sax. sceawian Ostendere Is a kind of Toll or Custom exacted by Mayors Sheriffs c. of Merchant strangers for Wares shewed or offer'd to sale within their liberties which is prohibited by the Statute 19 Hen. 7. ca. 8. In a Charter of Henry the Second to the City of Canterbury it is written Scewinga and in Man Ang. 2 Par. fo 890. b. Sceawing The City of London does still retain the Custom to a good yearly profit Of which Custom the half endell appertaineth to the Sherifs and the other balfen del unto the Hostys in whose Houses the Marchants ben lodged And it is to wet that Scavage is the Shew bycause that Marchantys shewen unto the Sherifs Marchaundyses of the which Custums ought to be taken ore that ony thing thereof be sold c. Out of an old printed Book of the Customes of London Scavenger From the Belgic Scavan i. To scrape or shave away Two in every Parish of London and its Suburbs are yearly chosen into this Office who hire Men called Rakers and Carts to cleanse the Streets and carry away the dirt and filth thereof mentioned 14 Car. 2. ca. 2. The Germans call him a Drecksimon from one Simon a noted Scavenger of Marpurg Scire facias Is a Writ judicial most commonly to call a man to shew cause to the Court whence it issues why Execution of a Judgment passed should not go out This Writ is not granted before a year and a day be passed after the Judgment given Old Nat. Br. fo 151. See Anno 25 Edw. 3. Stat. 5. ca. 2. and 39 Eliz. ca 7. And see other diversities of this Writ in Reg. of Writs and new Book of Entries Scite Anno 32 Hen. 8. ca. 20. See Site Skarkalla or Scarkella It was especially given in charge by the Justices in Eyre that all Juries should inquire de hiis qui piscantur cum Kiddellis Skarkallis Cokes 2 Part Inst fo 38. But he does not declare what Skarkalla is Scot Sax. sceat i. A part or portion Is according to Rastal A certain custom or common Tallage made to the use of the Sheriff or his Bailiffs Scot sayes Camden out of Matth. Westm illud dicitur quod ex diversis rebus in unum acervum aggregatur Anno 22 Hen. 8. ca. 3. Bearing neither Scot Lot nor other charges c. Anno 33 Hen. 8. ca. 9. In Records it is sometimes written Scoth Scot and Lot Anno 33 Hen 8. ca. 9. Signifies a custumory contribution laid upon all Subjects according to their ability Hoveden in principio Hen. 2. writes it Anlote Anscote In the Lawes of William the Conqueror set forth by Lambert you have these words ca. 125. Et omnis Francigena qui tempore Edwardi propinqui nostri fuit in Anglia particeps Consuetudinum Anglorum quod dicunt Anhlote Anscote per solvantur secundum legem Anglorum Again Rex omne injustum Scottum interdixit Hoveden in Anno 1088. Scot from the Sax. sceat ut supra Lot Sax. Llot i. Sors WIllielmus Rex Anglorum Herberto Norwicensi Episcopo omnibus Baronibus suis de Norfolc Suffolc salutem Sciatis me dedisse Sanctae Trinitati Norwicensi Ecclesiae rogatu Rogeri Bigoti terram Michaelis de Utmonasterio terram de Tanerham quae ad eandem terram pertinet quietam semper liberam ab omnibus Scotis Geldis omnibus aliis Consuetudinibus T. Eudonc Dapifero apud Westm c. Scotal or Scotale Scotalla Scotalium Is a word used in the Charter of the Forest ca. 7. Nullus Forestarius vel Bedellus faciat Scotallas vel Garbas colligat vel aliquam Collectam faciat c. Manwood Par. 1. pa. 216. defines it thus A Scotal is where any Officer of the Forest keeps an Alehouse within the Forest by color of his Office causing men to come to his House and there to spend their Money for fear of displeasure It is compounded of Scot and Ale which by transposition of the words is otherwise called an Aleshot and by the Welshmen Cymmorth MEmorandum quod praedicti tenentes de South-malling debent de consuetudine inter eos facere Scotalium de xvi denariis ob Ita quod de singulis sex denariis detur 1 denar ob ad potandum cum Bedello Domini Archiepiscopi super praedictum Feodum Ex vetere Consuetudinario Manerii de Southmalling in Archivis Archiep. Cantuar. Scrudland Sax. Terra cujus proventus vestibus emendis assignati sunt Land allotted for buying apparel or cloathing Ita Eadsius quidem Presbyter in Charta sua Ecclesiae Cantuar. data Dedit etiam terram illam apud Orpedingtunam in vita sua pro anima sua Deo in Ecclesia Christi servientibus in Scrudland i. Fundum vestiarium Sax. Dict. Scutage Scutagium Sax. Scildpenig Hen. 3. for his voyage to the Holy-Land had a Tenth granted by the Clergy and Scutage three marks of every Knights-Fee by the Laity Baker in Hen. 3. This was also granted to Henry the Second Richard the First and King John Scutagio habendo Was a Writ that lay for the King or other Lord against the Tenant that held by Knights-Service to serve by himself or a sufficient man in his place in War against Scots or French or else to pay c. Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 83. Scutum armorum A Sheild or Coat of Armes Noverint universi per presentes me Johannam nuper uxorem Will. Lee de Knightley Dominam rectam haeredem de Knightley dedisse Ricardo Peshale filio Humfridi Peshale Scutum armorum meorum Habend tenend ac portand utend ubicunque voluerit sibi haeredibus suis imperpetuum Ita quod nec ego nec aliquis alius nomine meo aliquod jus vel clameum seu calumpniam in praedicto Scuto habere potuerimus sed per presentes sumus exclusi inperpetuum In cujus Dat. apud Knightley Anno 14 Hen. 6. Scyre-gemot Sax. scyregemot Was a Court held twice every year as the Sheriffs Turn is at this day by the Bishop of the Diocess and the Ealdorman in Shires that had Ealdormen and by the Bishops and Sheriffs in such as were committed to Sheriffs that were immediate to the King wherein both the Ecclesiastical and Temporal Laws were given in charge to the Country Seldens Titles of Honor fo 628. See Consistory Seal Sigillum Is well known The first sealed Charter we find extant in England is that of King Edward the Confessor upon His foundation of Westminster Abby Dugdales Warwickshire fo 138. b. Yet we read in the MS. History of Offa King of the Mercians Rex Offa literas Regii Sigilli sui munimine consignatas eidem Nuncio commisit deferendas And that Seals were in use in the Saxons time see Taylors History of Gavelkind fo 73. See Wang Anno 1536. Domini etiam atque Generosi relictis
Berghmaysters that they faithfully Perform their Duties on the Minery And make Arrests and eke impartially Impanel Jurors Causes for to try And see that Right be done from time to time Both to the Lord and Farmers on the Minc Bernet Incendium from the Sax. byrnan to burn Is one of those crimes which by Henry the First 's Laws cap. 13. Emendari non possunt See Opentheff Bery or Bury from the Sax. Byr i. Habitatio A dwelling place a Mansion-house or Court a chief Farm The cheif House of a Mannor or the Lords Seat is still so called in some parts of England as in Herefordshire there are the Beries of Stockton Luston Hope c. Anciently also used for a Sanctuary Berton Bertona a Sax. bere hordeum ton villa Est area in aversa parte aedium ruralium primartarum in qua horrea stabula vilioris officii aedificia sita sunt in qua fodentur domestica animalia negotiationes rusticae peraguntur Rex Thesaurario Baronibus suis de Scaccario salutem Quia volumus quod Castrum nostrum Glocestriae nec-non Tina Bertona Gloc. corpori dicti Comitatus nostri Gloc. annectantur c. Claus 32 Edw. 1. m. 17. Berwica A Hamlet or Village appurtenant to some Town or Mannor often found in Doomsday from the Sax. bereƿica a Corn-Farm or Villa frumentaria Manerium minus ad maius pertinens non in gremio Manerii sed vel in confinio vel dis-junctiùs interdum situm est Spel. Besaile Fr. Bisayeul i. The Father of the Grand-father Signifies a Writ that lies where the Great Grand-father was seised of any Lands or Tenements in Fee-simple the day he died and after his death a stranger abates or enters the same day uppn him and keeps out his Heir c. The form and further use of this Writ read in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 221. Besca A Spade or Shovel From the Fr. bescher to Dig or Delve In communi pastura turbas cum una sola besca fodient nihil dabunt Prior. Lew. Custamar de Hecham pa. 15. Hence perhaps Una bescata terrae inclusa Mon. Angl. p. 2. fol. 642. a. may signifie a peice of Land usually digged such as Gardiners sow Roots in Bestials Fr. Bestiails i. Beasts or Cattle of any sort Anno 4 Edw. 3 cap. 3. It is written Bestail and is generally and properly used for all kinde of Cattle Mentioned also in 12 Car. 2. cap. 4. Bidale or Bid-all Precaria potaria from the Sax. biddan i. To pray or sapplicate Is the invitation of Friends to drink Ale at the House of some poor Man who thereby hopes a charitable contribution for his relief still in use in the West of England and falsly written Bildale in some Copies of Bracton lib. 4. cap. 1. num ult And mentioned 26 Hen. 8. cap. 6. See Sothale Bidding of the Beads Anno 27 Hen. 8. cap. 26. Was anciently an invitation or notice given by the Parish Priest to his Parishioners at some special times to come to Prayers either for the Soul of some Friend departed or upon some other particular occasion And to this day our Ministers do usually on the Sunday precedent bid such Festivals as happen in the week following Holidays that is desire or invite their Parishioners to observe them Bidding comes from the Sax. biddan i. To desire or intreat and Bead in that language signifies a Prayer Bidripe Bidripa See Bederepes Biga Properly a Cart or Chariot drawn with two Horses coupled side to side but in our ancient Records it is used for any Cart Wain or Waggon Et quod eant cum Bigis carris caeteris falleris super tenementum suum c. 2 Mon. Angl. fol. 256. b. Bigamus Is he that hath married two or more Wives or a Widdow as appears in the Statutes 18 Edw. 3. cap 2. and 1 Edw. 6. cap. 12. 2 Part. Cokes Inst fol. 273. Bigamy Bigamia Signifies a double marriage or the marriage of two Wives it is used for an impediment to be a Clerk Anno 4 Edw. 1. 5. Upon those words of S. Paul to Timothy Chap. 5. 2. Oportet ergo Episcopum irreprehensibilem esse unitis uxoris virum Upon which the Canonists founded that Doctrine That he that hath married a Widow is by their interpretation taken to have been twice married And both these they not onely exclude from holy Orders but deny them all Priviledges that belong to Clerks But this Law is abolished by 1 Edw. 6. cap. 12. and 18 Eliz. cap. 7. Which allow to all Men that can read as Clerks though not within Orders the benefit of Clergy in case of Felony not especially excepted by some other Statute Brook tit Clergy Bilanciis deferendis Is a Writ directed to a Corporation for the carrying of Weights to such a Haven there to weigh the Wools that such a Man is licenced to transport Reg. of Writs fol. 270. a. Bilawes or rather By-laws from the Gothish By pagus and lagen Lex or from the Sax. Bilage i. Leges obiter pro re nata conditae are particular Orders made in Court Leets or Court Barons by common assent of the Resiants for the good of those that make them in some particular Cases whereto the Publick Law does not extend Coke Vol. 6. fol. 63. Kitchin fol. 45 79. In Scotland they are called Laws of Burlaw or Birlaw which are made and determined by consent of Neighbors elected by common consent in the Birlaw Courts wherein Knowledge is taken of Complaints betwixt Neighbor and Neighbor which men so chosen are Judges and Arbitrators to the effect aforesaid and are called Birlaw-men For Bawr or Bawrsman in Dutch is Rusticus and so Birlaw or Burlaw Leges Rusticorum Skene By Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 5. the Wardens and Assistants for making and regulating the Trade of Norwich Stuffs are impowred to make By-Laws c. Anno 20 Car. 2. cap. 6. Bilinguis Signifies in the generality a double-tongued Man or one that can speak two Languages yet it is used for that Jury which passeth in any Case betwixt an Englishman and an Alien whereof part must be Englishmen and part strangers Anno 28 Edw. 3. cap. 13. Bill Billa Is diversly used First it is a security for Money under the Hand and Seal of the Debtor and is without condition or forfeiture for non-payment 2. Bill is a Declaration in Writing expressing either the wrong the Complainant hath suffered by the party complained of or else some fault committed against some Law or Statute of the Realm This Bill is most commonly addressed to the Lord Chancellor of England especially for unconscionable wrongs done sometimes to others having Jurisdiction according as the Law whereon they are grounded does direct It contains the Fact complained of the Damages thereby sustained and Petition of Process against the Defendant for redress See more in West par 2. Symbol tit Supplications Bill of Store Is a kinde of
nos Hugonem de Okelesthorp Adam silium Ade de Thowes generum ejusdem Hugonis sc quod ego Adam non dabo impignorabo vendam nec alienabo aliquam partem tenementi mei de quo fui vestitus saisitus praedicto die nec tenementi mihi contingentis nomine baereditatis sine voluntate assensu praedicti Hugonis vel haeredum suorum Et quod amabiliter tractabo uxorem meam filiam praedicti Hugonis Et nisi fecero ibo per septem dies sabati nudus per medium forum de Harewode quando plenius fucrit secundum or dinationem dicti Hugonis Omnia autem praescripta fideliter sine fraude observanda pro me haeredibus meis tactis sacrosanctis juravi affidavi Et ne istud alicui hominum vertatur in dubium nos praedicti Hugo Adam sigilla nostra partium hiis mutuis scriptis apposuimus Hiis testibus Stephano Sperry tunc Cyrographar Civitatis Ebor. Daniele de Tottie Clerico Ricardo de Waleys de Acculum Ade de Northfolch Thomâ Edwyn Allutario de Ebor. aliis Ex M. S. penes Gul. Dugdale Ar. Covenant Foedus The late Solemn League and Covenant first hatch'd in Scotland was a Seditious Conspiracy too well known to need any Explication it was Voted Illegal and Irreligious by Parliament in May 1661. and provision is made against it by the Statute 14 Car. 2. cap. 4. Where it is declared to have been imposed on the Subjects of this Realm against the known Laws and Liberties of the same Covent or Convent Conventus Signifies the Society or Fraternity of an Abby or Priory as Societas does the number of Fellows in a College Bracton lib. 2. cap. 35. Coverture Fr. Any thing that covers as Apparel a Coverlet but it is particularly applied to the state and condition of a married Woman who by our Law is Sub potestate viri and therefore disabled to contract with any to the prejudice of her self or husband without his consent and privity or at least without his allowance and confirmation Broke hoc titulo Omnia quae sunt uxoris sunt ipsius viri Vir est caput mulieris Sine viro respondere non potest Bracton lib. 2. cap. 15. lib. 4. cap. 24. And if the husband alien the wifes Land during the Coverture she cannot gainsay it during his life See Cui ante divortium and Cui in vita Covine Covina Is a deceitful Compact or Agreement between two or more to prejudice a third person As if Tenant for Life conspires with another that this other shall recover the Land which the Tenant holds in prejudice of him in Reversion Plow Com. fol. 546. Count Fr. Conte Signifies the original Declaration in a Real Action as Declaration is in a personal Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 26. Libellus with the Civilians comprehends both Yet Count and Declaration are sometimes confounded as Count in Debt Kitchin fol. 281. Count or Declaration in Appeal Pl. Cor. fol. 78. Count in Trespass Britton cap. 26. See Declaration Countée Fr. Comte A Comitando because they accompany the King Was next to the Duke the most eminent Dignity of a Subject before as well as since the Conquest and those who in ancient time were created Countees were Men of great Estate and Dignity For which cause the Law gives them great priviledges as their persons may not be arrested for Debt Trespass c. because the Law intends that they assist the King with their Council for the Publick Good and preserve the Realm by their Prowess and Valor they may not be put upon Juries If issue be taken whether the Plaintiff or Defendant be a Countee or not This shall not be tried by the Countrey but by the Kings Writ Also the Defendant shall not have a day of Grace against a Lord of the Parliament because it is intended he attends the Publick And of old the Countee was Praefectus or Praepositus Comitatus and had the charge and custody of the County whose Authority the Sheriff now hath Coke lib. 9. fol. 49. And is therefore called Viscount See Earl Countenance Seems to be used for credit or estimation Old Nat. Br. fol. 111. And likewise Anno 1 Edw. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 4. in these words Sheriffs shall charge the Kings debtors with as much as they may levy with their Oaths without abating the debtors Countenance See Contenement Counter from the Lat. Computare Is the name of two Prisons in London the Poultry Counter and Woodstreet Counter whereinto if any enter he is like to account ere he get thence Counter-mand Is where a thing formerly executed is afterward by some Act or Ceremony made void by the party that first did it As if a Man makes his last Will and devises his Land to I. S. and afterward enfeoffs another of the same Land here this Feoffment is a Countermand to the Will and the Will void as to the disposition of the Land Counter-plée Signifies a Replication to Ayde Prier For when Tenant by curtesie in Dower or other Real Action prays the View or Aid of the King or him in the Reversion for his better defence or else if a stranger to the Action begun desires to be received to say what he can for the safegard of his Estate that which the Demandant alleageth against this request why it should not be admitted is called a Counter-plee In which sence it is used 25 Edw. 3. Stat. 3. cap. 7. Counter-rols That Sheriffs shall have Counter-rols with the Coroners as well of Appeals as of Enquests c. Anno 3 Edw. 1. cap. 10. Countors Fr. Contours Have been taken for such Serjeants at Law as a Man retains to defend his cause or speak for him in any Court for their Fee Horns Mirror lib. 2. cap. des Loyers And of whom thus Chaucer A Sheriff had he béen and a Contour Was no where such a worthy Uavasour They were anciently called Serjeant-Countors-Coke on Littl. fol. 17. a. County Comitatus Signifies the same with Shire the one coming from the French the other from the Saxons both containing a circuit or portion of the Realm into which the whole Land is divided for the better Government of it and more easie Administration of Justice So that there is no part of this Nation that lies not within some County and every County is governed by a yearly Officer whom we call a Sheriff Fortescu cap. 24. Of these Counties there are four of special mark which therefore are termed Counties Palatines As Lancaster Chester Durham and Ely Anno 5 Eliz. cap. 23. we may read also of the County Palatine of Pembroke and of Hexam Anno 33 Hen. 8. cap. 10. which last did belong to the Archbishop of York This Act nor any thing therein contained shall not extend to the County Palatine of Hexam within the County of Northumberland ne to the County Palatine of Ely within the County of Cambridge c. But by the Stat. 14 Eliz cap.
Poll which names arise from the form or fashion of them the one being cut in and out in the top or side which we call Indented the other being plain A Deed Indented is a Deed consisting of two parts or more for there are Tripartite and Quadripartite Deeds in which it is expressed That the parties thereto have to every part thereof interchangably set their several Seals The cause of their Indenting is that it may appear they belong to one business or contract A Deed Poll or polled anciently called Charta de una parte is a plain Deed without Indenting as if we should say The Indenting is polled or cut off and is used when the Vendor for example onely Seals and there is no need of the Vendees sealing a Counterpart by reason the nature of the Contract is such as it requires no Covenant from the Vendee unless in such case the Vendor will out of caution or curiosity have a Counterpart to see upon any occasion what Covenants himself hath given See Coke on Littl. fol. 35. b. Déemsters or Demsters from the Saxon dema i. a Judge or Umpire All Controversies in the Isle of Man are decided without Process Writings or any Charges by certain Judges whom they chuse from among themselves and call Déemsters Camd. Brit. tit British Islands Deer-Hays Are Engins or great Nets made of Cords to catch Deer Anno 19 Hen. 7. cap. 11. De essendo quietum de Tolonio Is a Writ that lies for those who are by priviledge freed from the payment of Toll which read at large in Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 226. De expensis militum Is a Writ commanding the Sheriff to levy four shillings per diem for the expences of a Knight of the Shire And a like Writ De expensis Civium Burgensium to levy two shillings per diem for every Citizen and Burgess of Parliament 4 Inst fol. 46. De facto Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 30. Which is actually done done indeed Default Fr. Defaut Is an Offence in omitting that which we ought to do Of this Bracton hath a whole Tract lib. 5. tract 3. By whom it appears that Default is most notoriously taken for non-appearance in Court at a day assigned Of this you may also read Fleta lib. 6. cap. 14. and Coke on Littl. fol. 259. b. Defeizance of the Fr. Desfaire i. to undo or defeat Signifies a Condition relating to a Deed as to a Recognizance or Statute which being performed by the Recognizor the Deed is disabled and made void as if it never had been done The difference between a Proviso or Condition in Deed and a Defeizance is That those are inserted in the Deed or Grant this is usually in a Deed by it self Of which you may read West at large Par. 1. Symb. lib. 2. sect 156. Defend Fr. Defendre Signifies in our ancient Laws and Statutes to prohibit or forbid As Usuarios defendit quoque Rex Edwardus ne remanerent in Regno LL. Ed. Conf. cap. 37. 5 Rich. 2. cap. 7. Of which thus Chaucer Where can you say in any manner age That ever God defended Marriage And in 7 Edw. 1. we have a Statute entituled Statutum de defensione portandi arma c. It is defended by Law to Distrain in the Highway Coke on Littl. fol. 161. To this day in divers parts of England we say God defend instead of God forbid And the Fench Moneth is more truly called the Defence Moneth i. the Forbidden Moneth See Fench Moneth Defendant Defendens Is he that is sued in an Action Personal as Tenant is he who is sued in an Action Real See Impediens Defendemus Is a word used in Feofments and Donations and hath this force that it binds the Donor and his Heirs to defend the Donce if any Man go about to lay any servitude on the thing given other then is contained in the Donation Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 10. See Warranty Defender of the Faith Defensor fidei Is a peculiar title given to the Kings of England by the Pope as Catholicus to the King of Spain Christianissimus to the King of France and Advocatus Ecclesiae to the Emperor Which title was given by Pope Leo the Tenth to King Henry the Eighth for writing against Martin Luther in behalf of the Church of Rome and the Bull for it bears date Quinto Idus Octobr. 1521. which may be seen at length in the Lord Herberts History of Henry the Eighth fol. 105. Deforcement Deforciamentum Matth. Paris fol. 422. Quicunque deforciaverit eis dotem de ipso deforciamento convicti fuerit id est Per vim abstulerit A withholding Lands or Tenements by force from the right owner See Deforceor and Coke on Littl. fol. 331. b. Deforciant Anno 23 Eliz. cap. 3. The same with Deforceor Deforceor Deforciator of the Fr. Forceur i. expugnator Is one that overcomes and casts out by force and differs from Disseisor First in this because a Man may disseise another without force which is called Simple Disseisin Britton cap. 53. Next because a Man may deforce another that never was in possession For example if more have right to Lands as Common Heirs and one entring keeps out the rest the Law says He deforceth them though he do not disseise them Old Nat. Br. fol. 118. And Littleton cap. Discontinuance fol. 117. says He who is inseoffed by the Tenant in Tail and put in Possession by keeping out the Heir of him in Reversion being dead doth deforce him though he did not disseise him because he entered when the Tenant in Tail was living and the Heir had no present right A Deforceor differs from an Intruder because a Man is made an Iutruder by a wrongful entry onely into Land or Tenement void of a Possessor And a Deforceor is he that holds out the right Heir as abovesaid Bracton lib. 4. cap. 1. Degrading See Disgrading Delegates Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. Are Commissioners so called because delegated or appointed by the Kings Commission under the Great Seal to sit upon an Appeal to the King in the Court of Chancery in three Cases First When a Sentence is given in any Ecclesiastical Cause by the Archbishop or his Official Secondly When any Sentence is given in any Ecclesiastical Cause in places exempt Thirdly When a Sentence is given in the Admiral Court in Sutes Civil and Marine by order of the Civil Law 4 Part. Inst fol. 339. Anno 8 Eliz. cap. 5 Deliverance See Replegiare Delf from the Sax. delfan to dig or delve Is a Quarry or Mine where Stone or Coal is dug Anno 31 Eliz. cap. 7. And in a Charter of Edward the Fourth there is mention of a Mine or Delf of Copper Camd. Demain or Demesn Dominicum Gallis Domanium Italis Demanium Accipitur multipliciter says Bracton Est autem Dominicum quod quis habet ad mensam suam propriè sicut sunt Bordlands Anglicè i. Dominicum ad mensam Item dicitur Dominicum
full Age shall never be recceav'd to disable his own person Coke lib. 4. fol. 123 124. Disalt Signifies as much as to disable Littleton in his Chapter of Discontinuance Discarcatio An unloading Ex Codice M. S. in Turr. Lond. Disboscatio A turning Wood-ground into Arable or Pasture an assarting See Assart Disceit See Deceit and Deceptione Discent Latin Discensus French Descente An order or means whereby Lands or Tenements are derived unto any Man from his Ancestors As to make his discent from his Ancestors Old Nat. Br. fol. 101. is to shew how and by what particular degrees the Land in question came to him from his Ancestors This Discent is either Lineal or Collateral Lineal Discent is convey'd downward in a right-line from the Grandfather to the Father and from the Father to the Son and from the Son to the Nephew c. Collateral Discent springs out of the side of the whole blood as Grandfathers brother Fathers brother c. If one die seised of Land in which another has right to enter and it descends to his Heir such discent shall take away the others right of entry and put him to his Action for recovery thereof Stat. 32 Hen. 8. ca. 33. Coke on Litt. fol. 237. Disclaimer from the French Clamer with the privative Dis Is a Plea containing an express denyal renouncing or disclaiming As if the Tenant sue a Replevin upon a Distress taken by the Lord and the Lord Avow saying That he holds of him as of his Lord and that he Distreyned for Rent not paid or Service not perform'd then the Tenant denying to hold of such Lord is said to Disclaim and the Lord proving the Tenant to hold of him the Tenant loseth his Land Also if a man denying himself to be of the Blood or Kindred of another in his Plea is said to Disclaim his Blood See Coke on Litt. fol. 102. and Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 197. If a man Arraigned of Felony Disclaim Goods being cleared he loseth them See Broke and New Book of Entries tit Disclaimer And Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 186. In Chancery if a Defendant by his Answer Disclaim the having any interest in the thing in question this is also called a Disclaimer Discontinuance Discontinuatio Signifies an interruption intermission or breaking off as Discontinuance of Possession or of Process The effect of Discontinuance of Possession is this That a Man may not enter upon his own Land or Tenement alienated whatsoever his right be to it of his own self or by his own authority but must bring his Writ and seek to recover Possession by Law As if a Man alien the Lands he hath in right of his Wife or if Tenant in Taile make any Feoffment or Lease for Life not warranted by the Stat. 32 Hen. 8. by Fine or Livery of Seizin such Alienations are called Discontinuances which are indeed impediments to an Entry whereby the true owner is left onely to his Action See the Institutes of the Common-Law ca. 43. and Cokes Reports lib. 3. Case of Fines The effect of Discontinuance of Plea is That the opportunity of Prosecution is lost and not recoverable but by beginning a new Sute For to be Discontinued and to be put without Day is all one and nothing else but finally to be dismissed the Court for that instant So Crompton in his Jurisdict fol. 131. useth it in these words If a Justice Seat be Discontinued by the not coming of the Justices the King may renew the same by His Writ c. In this signification Fitz. in his Nat. Br. useth it divers times as Discontinuance of Corody fol. 193. a. To Discontinue the right of his Wife fol. 191. L. and 193. L. Discontinuance of an Action Discontinuance of an Assize fol. 182. D. 187. B. Anno 31. Eliz. ca. 1. 12 Car. 2. ca. 4. and 14 ejusdem ca. 10. Coke on Littl. fol. 325. Disfranchise 14 Car. 2. ca. 31. To take away ones Freedom or Priviledge it is the contrary to Enfranchise which vide Disgrading or Degrading Degradatio Is the punishment of a Clerk who being delivered to his Ordinary cannot purge himself of the offence whereof he was convict by the Jury and it is the privation or devesting of the Holy Orders which he had as Priesthood Deaconship c. Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 130 138. There is likewise the Disgrading of a Lord Knight c. Sir Andrew Harkley Earl of Carlisle was convicted degraded and attainted of Treason Hill 18 Edw. 2. Coram Rege Rot. 34 35. And by the Stat. 13 Car. 2. cap. 15. William Lord Monson Sir Henry Mildmay and others therein named were degraded from all Titles of Honor Dignities and Preheminencies and none of them to bear or use the Title of Lord Knight Esquire or Gentleman or any Coat of Arms for ever after c. By the Canon Law there are two sorts of degrading one Summary by word onely the other Solemn by devesting the party degraded of those Ornaments and Rights which are the Ensigns of his Order or Degree See Seldens Titles of Honor fol. 787. Disherison Fr. Desheritement Is an old word signifying as much as Disinheriting It is used in the Statute of Vouchers made 20 Edw. 1. Our Lord the King considering his own damage and disherison of his Crown c. And in 8. Rich. 2. cap. 4. Disheritor The Sheriff shall forthwith be punished as a Disheritor of our Lord the King and his Crown Anno 3 Edw. 1. cap. 39. One that disinheriteth or puts another out of his inheritance Dismes Decimae Are Tythes or the Tenth Part of all the Fruits either of the Earth or Beasts or our Labor due to God and consequently to him who is of the Lords lot and had his share viz. our Pastor Also the Tenths of all Spiritual Livings yearly given to the Prince called a Perpetual Dism Anno 2 3 Edw. 6. cap. 35. Which in ancient times were paid to the Pope till he gave them to Richard the Second to aid him against Charles the French King and those others that upheld Clement the Seventh against him Pol. Virg. Hist Angl. lib. 20. Lastly It signifies a tribute levied of the Temporalty Holinshed in Hen. 2. fol. 111. Disparagement Disparagatio Was used especially for matching an Heir in Marriage under his or her degree or against decency See Cowels Institutes tit De Nuptiis sect 6. and Coke on Littl. fol. 107. b. Dispauper When any person by reason of his poverty attested by his own Oath of not being worth 5 l his Debts being paid is admitted to sue in forma pauperis if afterwards before the sute be ended the same party have any Lands or Personal estate faln to him or that the Court where the sute depends think fit for that or other reason to take away that priviledge from him then he is said to be dispaupered that is put out of the capacity of suing in Forma Pauperis Disrationare Est contrarium ratiocinando asserere vel
used for that Duty and Allegiance which every good Subject owes to his Liege-Lord the King Soveraigne Lord I Henry Percy become your Subgette and Leige Man and promit to God and you that hereafter I Faith and Trouth shall hear to you as to my Sovereign Leige Lord and to your Heirs Kings of England of life and limme and of earthly worshippe for to live and die ayeinst all erthly People and to You and to Your Commandements I shall be obeysant as God me help and his Holy Evangelists 27 Oct. 9 Ed. 4. Claus 9 Ed. 4. m. 13. in dorso See Lieges Ligeance Ligeantia a Ligando Is a true and faithful obedience of the Subject to his Soveraign Sometimes it signifies the Dominion or Territory of the Liege Lord. As Anno 25 Ed. 〈◊〉 Stat. 2. Children born out of Ligeance of the King Also the same with Ligeancy See Coke on Litt. fo 129. a. and Calvins Case 7. Rep. Limitation of Assize Limitatio Assizae Is a certain time set down by Statute wherein a Man must allege himself or his Ancestor to have been seized of Lands sued for by a Writ of Assize See the Stat● of Merton ca. 8. and Westm 1. ca. 38. So it is used in Old Nat. Br fo 77. in these words The Writ de Consuetudinibus servitiis lyeth where I or my Ancestors after the limitation of Assize were not seized of the Customs c. But before the limitation of Assize we were seized c. Linarium A place where Flax is sown a flax-plat Et messuagium quod est juxta cimiterium cum linario quod jacet juxta praedictum Messuagium Pat. 22 Hen. 4. Par. 1. m. 33. Littera As tres Carectatas Litterae three Cartloads of Straw or Litter Mon. Angl. 2 Par. fo 33 b. Libery from the Fr. Livre i. Insigne Gestamen Signifies a Hat Coat Cloak or Gown which a Noble or Gentleman gives to his servants or followers with cognizance or without and is mentioned in 1 Rich. 〈◊〉 ca. 7. and 3 Car. 1. ca. 4. and divers other Statutes See Reteiner Also before the Stat. of 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. it did signifie a delivery of possession to those Tenants which held of the King in Capite or Knights-service for the King by his Prerogative had primier seisin or the first possession of all Lands and Tenements so holden of him Stamf. Praerog ca. 3. fo 12. it was in the nature of a Restitution sayes Sir Edward Coke And the Writ which lay for the Heir to obtain the possession or seisin of his Lands at the Kings hands was called his Livery Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 155. but by the said Statute all Wardships Liveries c. are taken away and discharged Livery of seisin Deliberatio seisinae Is a delivery of possession of Lands Tenements or other corporeal thing for of things incorporeal no Livery of seisin may be to one that has right or a probability of right thereto For as Bracton sayes lib. 2. ca. 18. num 3. Traditio debet esse vestita non nuda It is a Ceremony used in conveyance of Lands or Tenements where an estate in Feesimple Feetayl or a Freehold passeth And it is a testimonial of the willing departure of him who makes the Livery from the thing whereof Livery is made And the receiving of the Livery is a willing acceptance by the other party of all that whereof the other hath devested himself The common manner of delivery of Seisin is thus If it be in the open Field where is no House nor building and if the estate pass by Deed one openly reads it or declares the effect of it and after that is fealed the Vendor takes it in his hands with a clod of Earth upon a twig or bough which he delivers to the Vendee in the name of Possession or Seisin according to the effect of the Deed But if there be a House or Building upon the Land then this is to be done at the door of it none being left at that time within the house and the Ring of the door delivered to the Vendee who enters alone shuts the door and presently opens it again If it be a House without Land or Ground the Livery is made and Possession taken by delivery of the Ring of the door and Deed onely And where it is without Deed either of Lands or Tenements there the party declares by word of Mouth before witnesses the estate he parts with and then delivers Seisin or Possession in manner asoresaid And so the Land or Tenement passeth as well as by Deed and that by force of the Livery of Seisin See West par 1. Symbol lib. 2. sect 196. and Coke on Littl. fol. 48. a. This was anciently a Pair of Gloves a Ring Knife Ear of Wheat c. was delivered in sign or token of Livery and Seisin Local Localis Tied or annexed to a place certain As the thing is local and annexed to the Freehold Kitchin fol. 180. An Action of Trespass for Battery c. is transitory not local that is not needful that the place of the Battery should be set down as material in the Declaration or if it be set down that the Defendant should Traverse the place set down by saying he did not commit the battery in the place mentioned in the Declaration and so avoid the Action And again fol. 230. the place is not local that is not material to be set down in certainty or that the Action should be tried or laid in the same County where the Fact was done The gard of the person and of the Lands differs in this because the person being transitory the Lord might have his Ravishment de Gard before he was seised of him but not of the Land because it is local Perkins Grants 30. Locus Partitus Signifies a Division made between two Towns or Counties to make tryal in whether the Land or place in question lies Fleta lib. 4. cap. 15. num 1. Lode Ship A kinde of Fishing Vessel mentioned 31 Edw. 3. stat 3. cap. 2. Lodeworks One of the Works belonging to the Stannaries in Cornwal for which see Stremeworks Lodemerege Item en droit de Lodemerege dient les avantditz Jurez que leur sembli cest case ils ne scayvent meilleur advise ne remedy mays que ce soit desore user fait per maner quest conteyne en le Ley D'Oleron Pryns Animad on 4 Inst fol. 116. Logating An unlawful game mentioned 33 Hen 8. cap. 9. now disused Logwood Is a kinde of Wood which divers use otherwise called Block-wood brought from Compethe and other rem●●● parts and was prohibited by Stat. 23 Eliz. ca. 9. and 39 ejusdem cap. 11. But since by Stat. 14 Car. 2. cap. 11. the importation and use of it is allowed Loich or Loych Fish 31 Edw. 3. stat 3. cap. 2. And that no Fish called Loych Fish be chosen or tried but onely in thrée parts that is to say Lob Ling and
Mint see in Cowels Interpreter verbo Mint Minute tythes Minutae sive minores decima Small Tythes such as usually belong to the Viccar as of Herbs Seeds Eggs Honey Wax c. See 2 Part Inst fo 649. and Udal Tindals case Hill 22 Jac. where the tyth of Woad was adjudged to be minuta decima 3 Part Crokes Rep. fo 21. See Tithes Misaventure or Misadventure Fr. Mesadventure i. Infortunium Has an especial signification for the killing a man partly by negligence and partly by chance As if one thinking no harm carelesly throwes a stone or shoots an Arrow wherewith he kills another In this case he commits not Felony but onely loseth his goods and has a Pardon of course for his life Stam. Pl. Cor. lib. 1. ca. 8. Britton ca. 7. distinguishes between Aventure and Misavonture The first he makes to be meer chance as if a Man being upon or near the Water be taken with some sudden sickness and so fall in and is drowned or into the fire and is burnt Misaventure he says is where a man comes to his death by some outward violence as the fall of a Tree the running of a Cart-wheel the stroke of a Horse or such like So that Misadventure in Stamfords opinion is construed somewhat more largely then Britton understands it West part 2. Symbol tit Inditement Sect. 48 49. makes Homicide casual to be meerly casual or mixt Homicide by meer chance he defines to be when a man is slain by meer fortune against the mind of the killer as if one hewing the Axe flies off the haft and kills a man And this is al one with Brittons Misaventure Homicide by chance mix'd he defines Sect. 50. to be when the killers ignorance or negligence is joyned with the chance as if a man lop Trees by a high-way side in which many usually travel and cast down a Bough not giving warning c. by which Bough a man is slain Miscognisant Ignorant or not knowing In the Stat. 32 Hen. 8. ca. 9. against Champertie and Maintenance It is ordained that the Justices of Assise shall twice in the year in every County cause open Proclamation to be made of this present Act and of every thing therein contained c. to the intent that no person should be ignorant or miscognisant of the dangers and penalties therein contained Miscontinuance Kitchin fo 231. the same with Discontinuance which see Mise A French word signifying expence or disbursement sometimes written Missum in Lat. and sometimes Misa has divers significations first it is a kind of honourable gift or customary present with which the People of Wales are wont to salute every new King and Prince of Wales at their entrance into that Principality It was anciently given in Cattel Wine and Corn for sustentation of the Princes Family but when that Dominion was annexed to the English Crown the Gift was changed into Money and the Summ is 5000 l. Sterling or More and it hapned to be thrice paid in King James's Reign First at his own coming to the Crown and that Principality Secondly when Prince Henry was created Prince of Wales And Thirdly When King Charles the First succeeded him in that Principality Anno 27 Hen. 8. ca. 26. it is ordained That Lords Mayors shall have all such Mises and profits of their Lands as they have had in times past c. Misae etiam dicuntur praestationes illae quas ob fruendas pristinas immunitates Cestriae Palatinatus subditi novo cuique Comiti impendunt i. 3000 Marks for that County Sometimes Mises are taken for Taxes or Tallages Anno 25 Edw. 1. ca. 5. Sometimes for Costs or Expences as pro misis custagiis for Costs and Charges in the Entries of Judgments in personal Actions Mise is also a word of Art appropriated to a Writ of right so called because both parties have put themselves upon the meer right to be tryed by the grand Assise or by Battel so as that which in all other Actions is called an Issue in a Writ of Right in that case is called a Mise But in a Writ of Right if a collateral point be tryed there it is called an Issue and is derived from missum because the whole cause is put upon this point Coke on Litt. fol. 294. b. Anno 37 Ed. 3. ca. 16. To joyn the Mise upon the Meer is as much as to say to joyn the Mise upon the cleer right and that more plainly to joyn upon this point whether has the more right the Tenant or Demandant Mise is sometimes used as a Participle for cast or put upon Cokes 6 Rep. Saffins Case and sometimes corruptly for Mease a Messuage or Tenement As a Mise-place in some Mannors is taken to be such a Messuage or Tenement as answers the Lord a Herriot at the death of its owner 2 Inst fo 528. which in our French is written Mees Ceste Endenture temoigne que come Will. Terrye de Dounham tiegne de Johan de Veer Coonte d'Oxenford un Mees sys acres de terre c. dat 14 Ed. 3. penes Wil. Andrew Baronet Miserere Is the name and first word of one of the Paenitential Psalmes most commonly that which the Ordinary gives to such guilty Malefactors as have the benefit of the Clergy allowed by Law and it is usually called the Psalm of mercy Misericordia Is used for an Arbitrary Amerciament or Punishment imposed on any Person for an offence For where the Plaintiff or Defendant in any Action is amerced the Entry is always Ideo in misericordia c. And it is called Misericordia as Fitzherbert says Nat. Br. fol. 75. for that it ought to be but small and less then the offence according to the tenor of Magna Charta cap. 14. Therefore if a Man be unreasonably amerced in a Court not of Record as in a Court Baron c. there is a Writ called Moderata Misericordia directed to the Lord or his Bailiff commanding them that they take Moderate Amerciaments according to the quality of the fault Est enim misericordia Domini Regis says Glanvile quà quis per juramentum legalium hominum de viceneto eatenus amerciandus est ne aliquid de suo honorabili contenemento amittat And again Mulcta lenior sic dicta quòd lenissima imponitur misericordia graviores enim mulctas Fines vocant atrocissimas Redemptiones See Glanv pag. 75. a. And see Moderata Misericordia He shall be in the great Mercy of the King Westm 1. cap. 15. Misfeasans Misdoings or Trespasses Jury to enquire of all Purprestures Misfeasans 2 Part Croke fol. 498. And Misfeasor a Trespasser 2 Inst fol. 200. Mishering Est de estre quit de amerciemenz pur quereles en aucun Courts devant qui que il seyt nent ordinament ou proprement demonstre MS. LL. Temp. E. 2. See Abishersing and Miskering Miskenning Meskenninga LL. Hen. 1. cap. 12. Iniqua vel injusta in jus vocatio inconstanter loqui in
Spelman says Hoc minus congrue and deduces it from Pagella g in n transeunte sic veteres quidam mannificat pro magnificat A Schedule or Page as a Panel of Parchment or a Counterpane of an Indenture But it is used more particularly for a Schedule or Roll containing the names of such Jurors as the Sheriff returns to pass upon any Trial. Reg. of Writs fol. 223. a. Kitchin fol. 226. And the Empanelling a Jury is the entring their names by the Sheriff into a Panel or little Schedule of Parchment in Panello Assizae Anno 8 Hen. 6. cap. 12. Haud recte D. Coke in Gloss ad Littl. sect 234. who says Panel is an English word and signifies a little part for a Pane is a part and a Panel is a little part c. Thus Spelman on the word Panella Pannage or Pawnage Pannagium Fr. Panage Pasnage Signifies alimentum quod in Sylvis Colligunt pecora ab arboribus dilapsum as Mast of Beech Acorns c. Also the Money taken by the Agistors for the Food of Hogs with the Mast of the Kings Forest Cromp. Jurisd fol. 155. Westm 2. cap. 25. Pawnage says Manwood is most properly the Mast of the Woods or Hedg-rows or the Money due to the owner of the same for it And Linwood defines it thus Pannagium est pasius pecorum in nemoribus in sylvis utpote de glandibus aliis fructibus arborum sylvestrium quarum fructus aliter non solent colligi Tit. de Decimis Mentioned also Anno 20 Car. 2. cap. 3. Quisque Villanus habens 10 porcos eat unum porcum de Pasnagio Domesday tit Leominstre in heresscire This word in ancient Charters is thus variously written Pannagium Panagium Pasnagium Pathnagium Patnagium and Paunagium Pape Papa from the old Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying a Father Was anciently applied to some Clergy-men in the Greek Church but by usage is particularly appropriated in the Latin Church to the Bishop of Rome otherwise called the Pope A name very frequent in our ancient Year Books especially in the times of those Kings who too much abandoning their Imperial Authority suffered an Outlandish Bishop that dwelt One thousand miles off to take from them the disposition of many Spiritual Preferments sometimes by Lapse sometimes by Provision or otherwise For redress whereof divers Statutes were made whilest this Kingdom was of the Roman Communion but his whole power was not taken away here till towards the later end of Henry the Eighth's Reign Parage Paragium See Parcinerie Paramount Compounded of two French words Par i. per and monter ascendere Signifies the highest Lord of the Fee For there may be a Tenant to a Lord that holds over of another Lord the first is called Lord Mesn the second Paramount Fitz. Nat. Br. 135. M. Some hold that no Man can simply be Lord Paramount but onely the King for he is Patron Paramount to all the Benefices in England Doctor Student cap. 36. See Mesn Paraphanalia in the Civil Law Paraphernalia Are those Goods which a Wife besides her Dower or Joynture is after her Husbands death allowed to have as furniture for her Chamber wearing Apparel and Jewels if she be of quality Which are not to be put into her Husbands Inventary especially in the Province of York See Touchstone of Wills fol. 201. Parabail quasi per-availe Signifies the lowest Tenant or him that is immediate Tenant to the Land and he is called Tenant Paravail because it is presumed he hath prosit and avail by the Land 2 Inst fol. 296. See 9 Rep. Cony's Case Parcella terrae A parcel or small peece of Land Sciant quod ego Stephanus Wington de Bromyord Dedi Roberto de Donampton pro triginta solidis argenti unam parcellam terrae meae cum pertinen jacen in Bromyord c. Sine Dat. Parcel-maker Is an Officer in the Exchequer that makes the parcels of the Escheators accounts wherein the Escheators charge themselves with every thing they have levied for the Kings use since they came in Office and deliver the same to one of the Auditors of the Court to make up the Escheators account therewith See Practice of the Exchequer pag. 99. Parceners quasi Parcellers i. Rom in Parcellas dividens See Coparceners Parcinerie Participatio from the Fr. Partir i. Dividuum facere Signifies a holding of Land Pro indiviso or by Joyntenants otherwise called Coparceners For if they refuse to divide their common inheritance and chuse rather to hold it joyntly they are said to hold in Parcinery Littl. fol. 56 57. In Domesday it is thus said Duo fratres tenuerunt in Paragio quisque habuit aulam suam potuerint ire quo voluerint Pardon Fr. Is most commonly used for the remitting or forgiving a Felonious or other offence committed against the King and is twofold one Ex gratia Regis the other Per cours de ley Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 47. The first is that which the King in some special regard of the person or other circumstance gives by his absolute Prerogative or Power The other is that which the King granteth as the Law and Equity perswades for a light offence as Homicide casual when one kills a Man having no such intent See New book of Entries verbo Pardon Park Parcus Fr. Parc. Is a quantity of ground enclosed and stored with wild beasts tam sylvestres quam campestres which a man may have by prescription or the Kings Grant Crom. Juris fo 148. A Park differs from a Chase or a Warren for a Park must be enclosed if it lie open it is a good cause of seisure of it into the Kings hands as a free Chase may be if it be enclosed and the owner cannot have an Action against such as hunt in his Park if it lie open See Forest Guliel Conq. liberam fecit Ecclesiam de Bello de opere Parcorum Spel. vide 13 Car. 2. ca. 10. Parco fracto Is a Writ that lies against him who violently breaks a Pound and takes out Beasts thence which for some trespass done were lawfully impounded Reg. of Writs fo 166. and Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 100. Park-bote Is to be quit of enclosing a Park or any part thereof 4 Inst fo 308. Parish Parochia Signifies the precinct or territory of a Parish-Church and the particular charge of a secular-Priest For every Church is either Cathedral Conventual or Parochial Cathedral is where there is a Bishop seated so called a Cathedra Conventual consists of Regular Clerks professing some Order of Religion or of Dean and Chapter or other Society of Spiritual men Parochial is that which is instituted for the saying of Divine-Service and Ministring the Holy-Sacraments to the People dwelling within the Parish or a certain compass of ground and certain Inhabitants belonging to it Our Realm was first divided into Parishes by Honorius Arch-bishop of Canterbury in the year of our Lord 63● Cam. Brit. pa. 160. who reckons 9284