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A34797 The interpreter, or, Book containing the signification of words wherein is set forth the true meaning of all ... words and terms as are mentioned in the law-writers or statutes ... requiring any exposition or interpretation : a work not only profitable but necessary for such as desire thoroughly to be instructed in the knowledge of our laws, statutes, or other antiquities / collected by John Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1658 (1658) Wing C6644; ESTC R31653 487,806 288

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carens appaerentiam arboris habet non existentiam Summa Syl. Verbo Usura quaest 6. Est ergo Cambium siccum uxta hanc acceptionem in quà etiam accipitur in extrav Pii quinti idem quod Cambium fictum Non autem habet propriam naturam Cambii sed mutui et usurae At vero secundum Laurentium de Navarra in commento de usuris et Cambiis citatam Cambium siccum in alia acceptione minus communi summum est ●ambium in quo Campsor prius dat quam accipiat Dicitur autem isto modo ficcum quia sine praevia acceptione dat Campsor Quod tamen ut sic acceptum autore Sylvestro licitè celebratur aliquando Quiatun● verum et reale Cambium est diffe ens genere ab eo Cambio in quo Campsor prius recipit Quiae in isto Campsor semper primò dat et de●nde accipit Drift of the Forest seemeth to be nothing but an exact view or examination what cattel are in the Forest that it may be known whether it be overcharged or not and whose the beasts be This drist when how often in the year by whom and in what manner it is to be made See Manwood parte 2 of his Forest Laws cap. 15. Drait d' Advorizen See Recto de advocatione Ecclesiae Droit close See Recto clausum Droit de dower See Recto dotis Droit sur disclaimer See Recto sur diselaimer Droit patens See Recto patens DU Duces tecum is a Writ commanding one to appear at a day in the Chancery and to bring with him some piece of evidence or other thing that the Court would view See the new book of Entries verbo Duces tecum Duke Dux commeth of the French word Duc. In signifieth in ancient times among the Romans Ductorent exercitus such as led their armies who if by their prowesse they obtained any famous victory they were by their Souldiers saluted Imperatores as Hotoman verbo Dux de verbis feudal proveth out of Livy Tully and others Sithence that they were called duces to whom the King or people committed the custody or regiment of any Province Idem cod And this seemeth to proceed from the Lombards or Germans Sigon de reg ' no Ital. l. 4. In some Nations this day the Soveroigns of the Countrey are called by this name as Duke of Russia Duke of Sweden Here in England Duke is the next in secular dignity to the Prince of Wales And as M. Cambden saith heretofore in the Saxons times they were called Dukes without any addition being but meer officers and leaders of Armies After the Conquerour came in there were none of this title until Edward the thirds dayes who made Edward his son Duke of Cornwal After that there were more made and in such sort that their titles descended by inheritance unto their posterity They were created with solemnity per cincturam gladii cappaeque circuli aurei in capite impositionem vide Camd. Britann pag. 166. Zazium de feudis parte 4. num 7. et Cassan de consuetud Burg. pag. 6. et 10. and Ferns glory of generosity pag. 139. Dutchy court is a Court wherein all matters appertaining to the Dutchy of Lancaster are decided by the decree of the Chancellour of that Court. And the original of it was in Henly the fourths dayes who obtaining the Crown by deposing Richard the second and having the Dutchy of Lancaster by descent in the right of his mother he was seised thereof as King and not as Duke So that all the liberties franchises and Jurisdictions of the said Dutchie passed from the King by his grand Seal and not by Livery or Attournment as the possessions of Ever wick and of the Earldom of March and such others did which had descended to the King by other Ancestors than the Kings but at last Henry the fourth by authority of Parlament passed a Charter whereby the possessions liberties c. of the said Dutchy were severed from the Crown Yet Henry the seventh reduced it to his former nature as it was in Henry the fifts dayes Cromptons Jurisd fol. 136. The officers belonging to this Court are the Chancelour the Atturney Recelver general Clerk of the Court the Messenger Beside these there be certain Assistants of this Court as one Atturney in the Exchequer one Atturney of the Dutchy in the Chancery four Learned men in the Law retained of Councel with the King in the said Court. Of this Court M. Gwin● in the Preface to his Readings thus speaketh The Court of the Dutchy or County Palatine of Lancaster grew out of the grant of King Edward the third who first gave the Dutchy to his Son John of Gaunt and endowed it with such Royal right as the County Palatine of Chester had And for as much as it was afterward extinct in the person of King Henry the fourth by reason of the union of it with the Crown the same King suspecting himself to be more rightfully Duke of Lancaster than King of England determined to save his right in the Dutchy whatsoever should befall of the Kingdome and therefore he separated the Dutchy from the Crown and setled it so in the natural persons of himself and his Heirs as if he had been no King or Politick body at all In which plight is continued during the reign of King Henry the fifth and Henry the sixth that were descended of him But when King Edward the fourth had by recovery of the Crown recontinued the right of the house of York he seared not to appropriate that Dutchy to the Crown again and yet so that he suffered the Court and Officers to remain as he found them And in this manner it came together with the Crown to King Henry the seventh who liking well of that Policy of King Henry the fourth by whose right also he obtained the Kingdom made like separation of the Dutchy as he had done and so left it to his posterity which do yet injoy it Dum fuit infra aetatem is a Writ which lieth for him that before he came to his full age made a Feofment of his Land in Fee or for term of life or in tail to recover them again from him to whom he conveyed them Fitz. nat br fol. 192. Dum non fuit compos mentis is a VVrit that lyeth for him that being not of sound memory did alien any Lands or Tenements in Fee-simple Fee-tail for term of life or of years against the alience Fitzherb nat br fol. 202. Duplicat is used by Crompton for a second Letters Patent granted by the Lord Chancellour in a case wherein he had formerly done the same and was therefore thought void Cromptons Jurisd fol. 215. Dures Duritia cometh of the French dur i. durus veldurete 1. duritas and is in our Common law a Plee used in way of exception by him that being cast in prison at a mans sute or otherwise by beating or threats hardly used sealeth any Bond unto him during his
Chief Justice of England with three or four Justices assistants four or five as Fortescue saith cap. 51. and Officers thereunto belonging the Clerk of the crown a Praenatory or Protonotary and other six inferior Ministers or Atturneys Camb. Britan. pag. 112. See Latitat How long this Court was moveable I find not in any Writer But in Brittons time who wrot in K. Ed. the 1. his dayes it appeareth it followed the Court as M. Gwin in his said preface well observeth out of him See Justice of the Kings Bench. Kings silver is properly that money which is due to the King in the court of Common Plees in respect of a licence there granted to any man for passing a fine Coke vol. 6. fol. 39. a. 43. b. Kintall of woad iron c. is a certain waight of Merchandize to the value of an hundred or somthing under or over acording to the divers uses of sundry nations This word is mentioned by Plowden in the case of Reniger Fogassa KN Knave is used for a man-servant anno 14 Edward 3. stat 1. ca. 3. and by M. Verstigans judgement in his restitution of decayed intelligence ca. 10. is borrowed of the Dutch enapa cnave or knave which signifie all one thing And that is some kind of officer or servant as scild-knapa was he that bore the weaon or shield of his superiour whom the Latins call Armigerum and the Frenchmen Escuyer Knight miles is almost one with the Saxon Cnight i. administer and by M. Camdens judgement pag. 110. derived from the same With us it signifieth a Gentleman or one that beareth arms that for his vertue and especially martiall prowesse is by the King or one having the Kings authority singled as it were from the ordinary sort of Gentlemen and raised to a higher account or step of dignity This among all other Nations hath his name from the horse because they were wont in antient time to serve in warres on horseback The Romans called them Equites The Italians at these dayes term them Cavallieri The Frenchmen Chevalliers The German Reiters The Spaniard Gavellaros or Varones à Cavallo It appeareth by the Statute anno 1 Ed. 2. cap. 1. that in antient times Gentlemen having a full Knights fee and holding their land by Knights service of the King or other great person might be urged by distress to procure himself to be made knight when he came to mans estate for the answerable service of his Lord in the kings wars To which point you may also read M. Camden in his Britann pag. 111. But these customs be not now much urged this dignity in these dayes being rather of favour bestowed by the Prince upon the worthier sort of Gentlemen than urged by constraint The manner of making knights for the dignitie is not hereditarie M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 111. shortly expresseth in these words Nostris verò temporibus qui Equestrem dignitatem suscipit flexis genibus educto g'adio leviter in humero percutitur Princeps his verbis Gallicè affatur Sus vel sois Chevalier au nom de Dieu id est Surge aut Sis eques in nomine Dei The Solemnity of making knights among the Saxons M. Stow mentioneth in his Annals pag. 159. See the privileges belonging to a Rnight in Ferns Glorie of Generosity pag. 116. Of these Knights there be two sorts one Spiritual another Temporal Cassanaus in gloria mundi parte 9. Considerat 2. of both these sorts and of many subdivisions read him in that whole part The Temporal or second sort of Knights M. Fern in his Glory of generosity pag. 103. maketh threefold here with us Knights of the Sword Knights of the Bath and Knights of the Soverain Order that is of the Garter of all which you may read what he saith I must remember that mine intent is but to explain the terms especially of our common Law Wherefore such as I find mentioned in Statutes I will define as I can M. Skene de verbor significat verbo Milites saith that in the antient Laws of Scotland Freeholders were called Milities which may seem to have been a custom with us also by divers places in Bracton who saith that Knights must be in Juries which turn Freeholders do serve Knights of the Garter Equites Garterii are an Order of Knights created by Edward the third after hee had obtained many notable victories King John of France and King James of Scotland being both his prisoners together and Henry of Castile the Bastard expulsed out of his Realm and Don pedro being restored unto it by the Prince of Wales and Duke of Aquitane called the Black Prince who for furnishing of this Honourable Order made a choice out of his own Realm and all Christendome of the best and most excellent renowned Knights in Vertues and Honour bestowing this dignity upon them and giving them a Blew Garter decked with Gold Pearl and precious Stones and a Buckle of Gold to wear daily on the left legge only a Kirtle Crown Cloak Chaperon a Coller and other stately and magnifical apparel both of stuff and fashion exquisite and heroical to wear at high Feasts as to so high and Princely an Order was meer Of which order he and his successours Kings of England were ordained to be the Soveraigns and the rest fellows and brethren to the number of twentie six Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. prim cap. 20. I have seen an antient monument whereby I am taught that this Honorable Company is a College or a Corporation having a Common Seal belonging unto it and consisting of a Soveraign Gardian which is the King of England that alwayes governs this order by himself or his Deputy of twenty five Companions called Knights of the Garter of fourteen secular Chanons that be Priests or must be within one year after their admission 13. Vicars also Priests and 26. poor Knights that have no other sustenance or means of living but the allowance of this house which is given them in respect of their daily Prayer to the Honour of God and according to the course of those times of Saint George There be also certain officers belonging to this order as namely the Prelate of the Garter which office is inherent to the Bishop of Winchester for the time being the Chancellor of the Garter the Register who is alwaies Dean of Windsor The principal King at Armes called Garter whose chief function is to mannage and marshal their Solemnities at their yearly Feasts and installations Lastly the Usher of the Garter which as I have heard belongeth to an Usher of the Princes Chamber called Blacke rod. There are also certain ordinances or Constitutions belonging unto this Society with certain forfeitures and sometime penances for the breakers of them which constitutions concern either the Solemnities of making these Knights or their duties after their creation or the Privileges belonging to so high an order but are too large for the nature of this poor Vocabularie
duty in mony to be paid by the Sheriff upon his account in the Exchequer anno secundo tertio Ed. 6. cap. 4. Prest mony is so called of the French word Prest i. explicatus tromptus expeditus for that it bindeth those that have received it to be ready at all times appointed Primage is a duty due to the Mariners and Saylers for the loading of any ship at the setting forth from any Haven anno tricesimo secundo Henrici octavi capitulo decimo quarto Primier seisin prima seisina ad verbum signifieth the first possession It is used in the Common law for a branch of the Kings Prerogative whereby he hath the first possession of all lands and tenements through the Realm holding of him in chief whereof his tenant dyed seised in his demeasn as of fee and so consequently the rents and profits of them untill the heir if he be of age do his homage if he be under years untill he come to years See Stawnf praerog capite tertio Bracton libro quarto tract 3. cap. prim Primo beneficio See Beneficio Prince Princeps is a French word and taken with us diversly sometime for the King himself but more properly for the Kings eldest son who is Prince of Wales as the eldest Son to the French King is called Dolphire both being Princes by their nativity Master Fern in the glory of generosity page 138. For Edward the first to appease the tumultuous spirits of the Welch-men who being the antient Indigene of this Land could not in long time bear the yoak of us whom they call Strangers sent his wife being with child into Wales VVhere at Carnarvan she was delivered of a Son thereupon called Eaward of Carnarvan and afterward asked the VVelsh-men seeing they chought much to be governed by strangers if they would be quietly ruled by one of their own nation who answering him Yea Then quoth he I will appoint you one of your own Country-men that cannot speak one word of English and against whose life you can take no just exception and so named unto them his son born in Carnarvan not long before From which time it hath continued that the Kings eldest Son who was before called Lord Prince St ronf praerog cap. 22. fol. 75. hath been called Prince of Wales Stowes Annals pag. 303. See anno vicesimo septimo Henrici octavi cap. 26. et anno 28 ejusdem cap. 3. Principality of Chester anno 21 Rich. 2. cap. 9. See County palatin● and Cromptons divers jurisdictions fol. 137. Prior perpetual or dative et removeable an 9 R. 2. cap. 4. and anno 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. paulo ante finem Lord prior of Saint Johns of Jerusalem anno 26 H. 8. cap. 2. Priors aliens Priores alieni were certain religious men born in France and governours of religious houses erected for outlandish men here in England which were by Henry the fifth thought no good members for this land after such conquest obtained by him in France and therefore suppressed Whose livings afterwards by Henry the sixth were given to other Monasteries and houses of learning Stowes Annals pag. 582. See anno 1 H. 5. cap. 7. but especially to the erecting of those two most famous colleges called the Kings Colleges of Cambridge and Faton Priority prioritas signifieth in our common law an antiquity of tenure in comparison of another not so antient As to hold by priority is to hold of a Lord more antiently than of another Old nat br fol. 94. So to hold in posteriority is used by Stawnf praerog cap. 2. fol. 11. And Crompton in his jurisdiction fol. 117. useth this word in the same signification The Lord of the priority shall have the custody of the body c. fol. 120. If the tenent hold by priority of one and by posteriority of another c. To which effect see also Fitzh nat br fol. 142. Bartolus in his Tractate de insigniis et armis useth these very words prioritas et posterioritas concerning two that beat one coat armour Prisage seemeth to be that custome or share that belongeth to the King out of such merchandize as are taken at sea by way of lawfull prize anno 31 Eliz. cap. 5. Prisage of Wines anno 1 H. 8. cap. 5. is a word almost out of use now called Butlerage it is a custome whereby the Prince challengeth out of every bark loaden with wine containing less than forty tun two tun of wine at his price Prise prisa commeth of the French prenare i. capere It signifieth in our Statutes the things taken by purveyours of the Kings subjects As anno 3 Edw. 1. cap. 7. et anno 28 ejusdem stat 3. cap. 2. It signifieth also a custome due to the King anno 25 ejusdem cap. 5. Register origin folio 117. b. Prisoner priso commeth of the French prisonn●er and signifieth a man restrained of his liberty upon any action civil or criminal or upon commandement And a man may be prisoner upon matter of Record or matter of fact prisoner upon matter of record is he which being present in Court is by the Court committed to prison only upon an arest be it of the Shyreeve Constable or other Stawnf pi cor li. pri ca. 32. fo 34 et 35. Privie commeth of the French privè i. familiaeris and signifieth in our Common law him that is partaker or hath an interest in any action or thing as privies of bloud Old nat br fol. 117. be those that be linked in consanguinity Every heir in tayl is privy to recover the land intayled eodem fol. 137. No privity was between me and the tenent Littleton fol. 106. If I deliver goods to a man to be carried to such a place and he after he hath brought them thither doth steal them it is felony because the privity of delivery is determined as soon as they are brought thither Stawn pl. co lib. prim cap. 15. fol. 25. Merchants privy be opposite to Merchants strangers anno 2 Edw. tertii cap. 9. cap. 14. anno ejusdem stat 2. cap. 3. The new Expositour of law-terms maketh divers sorts of privies as privies in estate privies in deed privies in law privies in right and privies in blood And see the examples he giveth of every of them See Perkins Conditions 831 832 833. and Sir Edward Cook lib. 3. Walkers case fol. 23. a. lib. 4. fol. 123. b. 124. a. where he maketh four kinds of privies viz. privies in bloud as the heir to his Father c. privies in representation as executors or administratours to the deceased privies in estate as he in the reversion and he in the remainder when land is given to one for life and to another in fee the reason is given by the Expositour of law-terms for that their estates are created both at one time The fourth sort of privies are privies in tenure as the Lord by escheat that is when the land escheateth to the Lord for
mind cap. 28. where he saith That contracts be some naked and sans garnment and some furnished or to use the literal signification of his word apparelled but a naked Obligation giveth no action but by common assent And therefore it is necessary or needfull that every Obligation be apparelled And an obligation ought to be apparelled with these sive sorts of garnements c. Howbeit I read it generally used for a warning in many places and namely in Kitchin fol. 6. Garnisher le court is to warn the Court. And reasonable garnishment in the same place is nothing but reasonable warning and again fol. 283. and many other Authors also But this may be well thought a Metonymy of the effect because by the warning of parties to the Court the Court is furnished and adorned Garrantie See Warrantie Garter Garterium cometh of the French Jartiere or Jartier i. periscelis fascia poplitaria It signifieth with us both in divers Statutes and otherwise one especiall Garter being the ensigne of a great and Noble Society of Knights called Knights of the Garter And this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Poeta among the Graecians was Homer among the Romans Virgil because they were of all others the most excellent This high order as appeareth by M. Camden pag. 211. and many others was first instituted by that famous King Edward the third upon good successe in a skirmish wherin the Kings Garter I know not upon what occasion was used for a token I know that Polydore Virgil casteth in another suspition of the originall But his grounds by his own confession grew from the Vulgar opinion yet as it is I will mention it as I have read it Edward the third King of England after he had obtained many great victories king John of France king James of Scotland being both prisoners in the Tower of London at one time and king Henry of Castile the Bastard expulsed and Don Pedro restored by the Prince of Wales did upon no weighty occasion first erect this order in Anno 1350. viz. He danceing with the Queen and other Ladies of the Court took up a Garter that happened to fall from one of them whereat some of the Lords smiling the king said unto them That ere it were long hee would make that Garter to be of high reputation and shortly after instituted this order of the Blew Garter which every one of the order is bound dayly to wear being richly decked with Gold and precious stones and having these words written or wrought upon it Honi soit qui maly pence which is thus commonly interpreted Evill come to him that evil thinketh But I think it might be better thus Shame take him that thinketh evill See knights of the Garter M. Ferne in his glory of generosity agreeth with M. Camden and expressier setteth down the victories whence this order was occasioned whatsoever cause of beginning it had the order is inferior to none in the world consisting of 26. martial and heroical Nobles whereof the king or England is the chief and the rest be either Nobles of the Realm or Princes of other Countries friends and confederates with this Realm the Honour being such as Emperours and kings of other Nations have desired and thankfully accepted it he that will read more of this let him repair to M. Camden and Polydore and M. Ferne fol. 120. ubi supra The Ceremonies of the chapter proceeding to election of the investures and robes of his installation of his vow with all such other Observations see in M. Segars new book intituled Honour militarie and civill lib. 2. cap. 9. fol. 65. Garter also signifieth the principall kings at Armes among our English Heralds created by king Henry the fifth Stow. pag. 584. Garthman anno 13 R. 2. stat 1. ca. 19. anno 17. ejusd ca. 9. Gavelet is a special and antient kind of Cessavit used in Kent where the custome of Gavell kind continueth whereby the tenent shall forfeit his Lands and tenements to the Lord of whom he holdeth if he withdraw from him his due rents and services The new Expounder of Law Termes whom read more at large I read this word anno 10. Edw. 2 cap. unico where it appeareth to be a Writ used in the Hustings at London And I find by Fleta that it is used in other liberties as the Hustings of Winchester Lincolne York and the Cinque ports lib. 2. cap. 55. in principio Gavelkind is by M. Lamberd in his exposition of Saxon words verbo Terra et scripto compounded of three Saxon words gyfe cal cin omnibus cognatione proximis data But M. Verstegan in his restitution of his decayed intelligence cap. 3. called it Gavelkind quasi give all kind that is give to each child his part It signifieth in our Common law a custome whereby the Land of the Father is equally divided at his death amongst all his Sons or the Land of the Brother equally divided among the Brethren if he have no issue of his own Kitchin fol. 102. This custome is said to be of force in divers places of England but especially in Kent as the said Authour reporteth shewing also the cause why Kentish men rather use this custome than any other Province viz. because it was a composition made between the Conquerour and them after all England beside was conquered that they should enjoy their ancient customes whereof this was one For. M. Camden in his Britannia pag. 239. saith in expresse words thus Cantiani eâ lege Gulielmo Normanno se dediderunt ut patrias consuetudines illaesas retinerent illamque imprimis quam Gavelkind nominant Haec terrae quae eo nomine censentur liberis masculis ex aequis portionibus dividuntur vel faeminis si masculi non fuerint adding more worth the noting viz. Hanc haereditatem cùm quintum decimum annum attigerint adeunt sine Domini consensu cuilibet vel dando vel vendendo alienare licet Hac filii parent thus furti damnatis in id genus fundis succedunt c. This custome in divers Gentlemens lands was altered at their own petition by Act of Parliament anno 31 H. 8. cap. 3. But it appeareth by 18 H. 6. cap. pri that in those dayes there were not above thirty or fourty persons in Kent that held by any other Tenure See the new Terms Gavelet and Gavelkind Gawgeour gaugeator seemeth to come of the French Gawchir i. in gyrum torquere It signifieth with us an Officer of the Kings appointed to examine all Tunnes Hogsheads Pipes Barrels and Tercians of Wine Oil Honey Butter and to give them a mark of allowance before they be sold in any place And because this mark is a circle made with an iron Instrument for that purpose It seemeth that from thence he taketh his name Of this Office you may find many Statutes the first whereof is anno 27 Ed. 3. commonly called the Statute of provision or Purveyours cap. 8. GE Geld signifieth with the
French herault and in M. Virstigans judgement proceedeth originally from two Dutch words here i. exercitus and healt i. pugil maganimus As if he should be called the champion of the army having by especial office to challenge unto battel or combat With us it signifieth an officer at armes whose function is to denounce Warr to proclaim peace or otherwise to be imployed by the King in marshall messages or other businesse The Romanes called them plurally Feciales Master Stow in his Annals deriveth them from heroes pag. 12. which he hath from other that writ of that subject whose conjecture I leave to the Reader Their office with us is described by Polydore lib. 19. in this sort speaking of the Knights of the Garter he saith Habent insuper apparitores ministros quos heraldos dicunt quorum praefectus armorum Rex vocitatur hii belli pacis nuncii Ducibus Comitibusque à Rege factis insignia aptant ac corum funer a curant He might have added further That they may be the Judges and examiners of Gentlemens armes that they martiall all the solemnities at the coronations of Princes manage combats and such like There is also one and the same use of them with us and with the French nation whence we have their name And what their office is with them See Lupanus lib. prim de Magist Francorum ca. Heraldi There be divers of them with us whereof three being the chief are called Kings at armes And of them Garter is the principall instituted and created by Henry the fifth Stows Annals pag. 584. whose office is to attend the Knights of the Garter at their solemnities and to martial the solemnities of the funerals of all the greater Nobilitie as of Princes Dukes Marquesses Earles Viscounts and Barons Yet I find in Plowden casu Reniger et Fogassa That Edward the fourth granted the office of King of Heraulds to one Garter cum feudis et proficuis ab antiquo c. fol. 12. b. The next is Clarentius ordained by Edward the fourth for he attaining the Dukedom of Clarence by the death of George his brother whom he beheaded for aspiring to the Crown made the herald which properly belonged to the Duke of Clarence a King at armes and called him Clarentius His proper office is to martial and dispose the funerals of all the lesser Nobility as Knights and Esquires through the realm of the South side or Trent The third is Norry or Northroy whose office is the same on the North side of Trent that Clarentius hath on this side as may well appear by his name signifying the Northern king or king of the North parts Beside these there be six other properly called Heralds according to their original as they were created to attend Dukes c. in martial expeditions viz. Yorke Lancaster Somerset Richmond Chester Windlesour Lastly there be four other called Marshalls or Purse vants at armes reckoned after a sort in the number of Heraulds and doe commonly suceed in the place of the Heraulds as they die or be preferred and those be Blew Mantle Rougecrosse Rougedragon and Percullis The Feciales among the Romans were Priests Nam Numa Pompilius divini cultus institutionem in octo partes divisit ita etiam sacerdotum octo ordines constituit c. Septimam partem sacrae constitutionis collegio eorum adjecit qui Feciales vocantur Erant autem ex optimis domibus viri electi per omne ipsi vitae tempus sacrati quorum partes in eo versabantur ut fidei publicae inter populos praeessent neque justum aliquod bellum fore censebatur nisi id per Feciales esset indictum Qui ut Festus ait à faciendo quòd belli pacisque faciendae apud eos jus esset Feciales dicti sunt Corasius Miscel juris civil lib. 1. cap. 10. num 12. Herbage herbagium is a French word and signifieth in our Common law the fruit of the earth provided by nature for the bit or mouth of the cattel But it is most commonly used for a liberty that a man hath to feed his cattel in another mans ground as in the forest c. Cromptons Jurisdiction fol. 197. Herbenger commeth of the French heberger or esberger hesberger i. hospitio excipere It signifieth with us an Officer of the Princes Court that allotteth the Noblemen and those of the houshould their Lodgings It signfieth also in Kitchin an Innekeeper fol. 176. Hereditaments hereditamenta seem to signifie all such things immoveable be they corporeall or incorporeall as a man may have to himself and his heirs by way of inheritance Vide anno 32. Henr. 8. cap. 2. or not being otherwise bequeathed doe naturally and of course descend to him which is our next heir of bloud and fall not within the compasse of an executor or administrator as chattels do Heriot see Hariot HI Hide of land hida terrae Saxonicè hideland●s is a certain measure or quantity of land by some mens opinion that may be plowed with one plow in a year as the author of the new terms saith verbo Hidage By other men it is an hundred acres By Beda who calleth it Familiam it is as much as will maintain a family Crompton in his jurisdiction fol. 220. saith that it consisteth of an hundred acres every acre in length forty perches and in bredth four perches every perch sixteen foot and a halfe And again fol. 222. A hide of land containeth an hundred acres and eight hides or eight hundred acres contain a Knights fee. Of this read more in Master Lamberts Explication of Saxon words verba Hida terrae See Carve Hide and gaine Old nat Brev. fo 71. Coke lib. 4. Tirringhams case signifieth earable land See Gainage Hidage hidagium is an extaordinary taxe to be paid for every hide of land Bracton lib. 2. cap. 6. writeth thus of it Sunt etiam quaedam communes praestationes quae servitia non dicuntur nec de consuetudine veniunt nisi cum necessitas intervenerit vel cum Rex venerit sicut sunt Hidagia Coragia et Carvagia et alia plura de necessitate et ex consensu communi totius regni introducta quae ad Dominum feudi non pertinent c. Of this read the new Expounder of Law Terms who saith that Hidage is to be quit if the king shall tax all the lands by hides and yet also granteth it to be the tax it self saying that it was wont to be an usual kind of taxing as well for provision of armour as payments of money Hinefare see Heinfare Hidel 1. H. 7. ca. 6. seemeth to signifie a place of protection as a sanctuary Hierlome see Heirlome Hine seemeth to be used for a Servant at husbandrie and the master-hine a servant that overseeth the rest Anno 12. Richard 2. cap. quarto Hoblers hobellarii are certain men that by their tenure are tyed to maintain a little light Nagge for the certifying of any invasion made by enemies or such like
of summs under forty shillings Crompton fol. 231. agreeth with him It is called a Justicies because it is a commission to the Sheriff ad Justiciandam aliquem to doe a man right and requireth no return of any certificate of what he hath done Bracton lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 13. num 2. maketh mention of a Justicies to the Sheriff of London in a case of Dower See the new book of Entries Justicies Justification Justificatio is an upholding or shewing a good reason in Court why he did such a thing as he is called to answer as to Justifie in a cause of Replevin Broke titulo Replevin KE KEeper of the great Seal Custos Magni Sigilli is a Lord by his Office and called Lord-Keeper of the great Seal of England c. and is of the Kings privy Councel under whose hands pass all Charters Commissions and Grants of the King strengthened by the great or broad Seal Without the which Seal all such Instruments by Law are of no force for the King is in interpretation and intendment of Law a Corporation and therefore passeth nothing firmly but under the said Seal This Lord Keeper by the Statute anno 5 Eliz. cap. 18. hath the same and the like place authority preheminence Jurisdiction execution of Laws and all other Customes Commodities and advantages as hath the Lord Chancellor of England for the time being Keeper of the privy Seal Custos privati Sigilli is a Lord by his Office under whose hands pass all Charters signed by the Prince before they come to the broad or great Seal of England He is also of the Kings privy Councell He seemeth to be called Clerk of the privy Seal anno 12 Rich. 2. cap. 11. But of late daies I have known none to bear this Office by reason the Prince thinketh good rather to keep his Seal in his own hands and by private trust to commit it to his principal Secretary or some such one of his Councel as he thinketh fit for that function Keeper of the Touch anno 2 H. 6. cap. 14. seemeth to be that Officer in the Kings Mint which at this day is termed the Master of the Assay See Mint Keeper of the Forest Custos Forestae is also called Chief Warden of the Forest Manwood parte prim of his Forest laws pag. 156. c. and hath the principal government of all things belonging thereunto as also the check of all Officers belonging to the Forest And the Lord Chief Justice in Eyr of the Forest when it pleaseth him to keep his Justice Seat doth forty daies before send out his general Summons to him for the warning of all under Officers to appear before him at a day assigned in the Summons This see in Manwood ubi supra KI King Rex is thought by M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 105. to be contracted of the Saxon word Cyninge signifying him that hath the highest power and absolute rule over our whole Land and thereupon the King is in intendment of Law cleared of those defects that Common persons be subject unto For he is alwaies supposed to be of full age though he be in years never so young Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 134. Kitchin fol. 1. He is taken as not subject unto death but is a Corporation in himself that liveth ever Crompton ibidem Thirdly he is above the Law by his absolute power Bracton lib. 1. cap. 8. Kitchin fol. 1. And though for the better and equal course in making Laws he do admit the three Estates that is Lords Spiritual Lords Temporal and the Commons unto Counsel yet this in divers learned mens opinions is not of constraint but of his own benignity or by reason of his promise made upon oath at the time of his Coronation For otherwise were he a Subject after a sort and subordinate which may not be thought without breach of duty and loyalty For then must we deny him to be above the Law and to have no power of dispersing with any positive law or of granting especial Privileges and Charters unto any which is his only and clear right as Sir Thomas Smith well expresseth lib. 1. cap. 3. de Repub. Anglica and Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 3. and Britton ca. 39. For he pardoneth life and limme to Offendors against his Crown and Dignity except such as he bindeth himself by Oath not to forgive Stawnf pl. Cor. l. 2. ca. 35. And Habet omnia jura in manu sua Bracton l. 2. c. 24. nu 1. And though at his Coronation he take an Oath not to alter the laws of the Land yet this Oath notwithstanding he may alter or suspend any particular Law that seemeth hurtfull to the publique Estate Blackwood in Apologia Regum cap. 11. See Oath of the King Thus much in short because I have heard some to be of opinion That the Laws be above the King But the Kings Oath of old you may see in Bracton lib. 3. cap. 9. nu 2. for the which look in Oath of the King The Kings Oath in English you may see in the old Abridgement of Statutes titulo Sacram. Regis Fourthly the Kings only Testimony of any thing done in his presence is of as high nature and credit as any Record Whence it commeth that in all Writs or Precepts sent out for the dispatch of Justice he useth none other Witness but himself alwaies using these words under it Teste me ipso Lastly he hath in the right of his Crown many Prerogatives above any common person be he never so potent or honorable whereof you may read you fill in Stawnfords Tractate upon the Statute thereof made anno 17 Ed. 2. though that contain not all by a great number What the Kings power is read in Bracton lib. 2. cap. 24. nu pri 2. King of Heralds Rex Haraldorum is an Officer at Armes that hath the preeminence of this Society See Herald This officer of the Romans was called Pater Patratus Kings Bench Bancus Regius is the Court or Judgement Seat where the King of England was wont to sit in his own person and therefore was it moveable with the Court or Kings houshold And called Curia Domini Regis or Aula R●gia as Master Gwin reporteth in the Preface to his Readings and that in that and the Exchequer which were the only Courts of the King untill Henry the Thirds dayes were handled all matters of Justice as well Civil as Criminal whereas the Court of Common Plees might not be so by the Statute anno 9 H. 3. cap. 11. or rather by Master Gwins opinion was presently upon the grant of the great Charter severally erected This Court of the Kings bench was wont in ancient times to be especially exercised in all Criminal matters and Plees of the Crown leaving the handling of private contracts to the County Court Glanvil lib. 1. cap. 2 3 4 lib. 10. cap. 18. Smith de Repub. Anglicana lib. 2. cap. 11. and hath President of it the Lord
in every Tun anno 12 Edw. 4. ca. 3. anno 6 H. 8. ca. 14. anno pri Ed. 6. ca. 13. anno pri Jacobi ca. 33. I have heard it also called a duty due to the Mariners for unloading their Ship arrived in any Haven after the rate of every Tun. Torny See Turney Totted anno 42 Edw. 3. cap. 9. anno 1 Ed. 6. cap. 15. is a word used of a debt which the forein Apposer or other Officer in the Exchequer noteth for a good debt to the King by writing this word Tot unto it Tourn See Turn Tout tempa prist uncore est that is to say in English Alway ready and is at this present This is a kind of Plee in way of excuse or defence unto him that is sued for with-holding any debt or duty belonging to the Plaintiff See of this Broke his Abridgement fol. 258. TR Traile baston See Iustices of trial baston Traitor traditor proditor See Treason Transgressione is a writ called commonly a writ or action of Trespass Of this Fitzherbert in his Natura brevium hath two sorts one Vicountiel so called because it is directed to the Sheriff and is not returnable but to be determined in the County The form whereof differeth from the other because it hath not these words Quire vi armis c. and this see in Fitzherberts natura brev fol. 84 G. The other is termed a writ of trespasse upon the case which is to be sued in the Common bank or the Kings Bench in which are alwaies used these words vi et armis c. And of this you have Fitzh nat br f. 92. E. See Trespass See the divers use of this writ in the Register original in the Table Transcript anno 34 35 H. 8. cap. 14. is the copy of any original written again or exemplified Transcripto Recognitionis factae coram Justiciariis itinerantibus c. is a writ for the certifying of a Recognizance taken before Iustices in Eyre into the Chancery Regist orig fol. 152. b. Transcripto pedis finis levati mittendo in Cancellariam is a writ for the certifying of the foot of a fine levyed before Justices in Eyre c. into the Chancery eodem fol. 169. et Register judicial fol. 14. Travers commeth of the French Traverser i●transfigere It signifieth in our Common law sometime to deny sometime to overthrow or undo a thing done Touching the former signification take these words in Wests Symbol parte 2. titulo Chancery Sect. 54. An answer saith he speaking of an answer to a bill in Chancery is that which the Defendent pleadeth or saith in Bar to avoid the Plaintiffs bill or action either by confession and avoiding or by denying and traversing the material parts thereof And again Section 55. A replication is the Plaintiffs speech or answer to the Defendants answer which must affirm and pursue his bill and confess and avoid deny or traverse the Defendants answer And the formal words of this traverse are in Lawyers French sans ceo in Latine absque hoc in English without that See Kitchin fol. 227. titulo Affirmative et Negative In the second signification I find it in Stawnfords praerog cap. 20. through the whole Chapter speaking of traversing an Office which is nothing else but to prove that an Inquisition made of goods or lands by the Escheatour is defective and untruly made So traversing of an Inditement is to take issue upon the chief matter thereof which is none other to say than to make contradiction or to deny the point of the Inditement As in presentment against A. for a Highway over-flown with water for default of scowring a ditch which he and they whose estate he hath in certain land there have used to scowr and cleanse A. may traverse either the matter viz. that there is no Highway there or that the ditch is sufficiently scowred or otherwise he may traverse the cause viz. that he hath not the land c. or that he and they whose estate c. have not used to scowr the ditch Lamb. Earenarcha lib. 4. cap. 13. pag. 521 522. Of Traverse see a whole chapter in Kitchin fol. 240. See the new book of Entries verbo Traverse Treason traditio vel proditio commeth of the French trahison i. proditio and signifieth an offence committed against the the amplitude and Majesty of the Common wealth West parte secund symbol titulo Inditement sect 63. by whom it is there divided into High treason which other call altam proditionem and Petit treason High treason he defineth to be an offence done against the security of the Common wealth or of the Kings most excellent Majesty whether it be by imagination word or deed as to compass or imagine treason or the death of the Prince or the Queen his Wife or his Son and Heir apparent or to deflowre the Kings wife or his eldest Daughter unmarried or his eldest sons wife or levy war against the King in his Realm or to adhere to his enemies aiding them or to counterfeit the Kings great Seal privy Seal or mony or wittingly to bring false mony into this Realm counterfeited like unto the mony of England and utter the same or to kill the Kings Chancellor Treasurer Iustice of the one bench or of the other Iustices in Eyr Iustices of Assise Iustices of Oyer and Terminer being in his place and doing of his office anno 25 Ed. prim cap. 2. or forging of the Kings seal Manuel or privy signet privy seal or forein coyn current within the Realm anno 2 Mar. cap. 6. or diminishing or impairing of mony current anno 5 Eliz. cap. 11. et anno 14 El. ca. 3. et 18 Eliz. ca. pri and many other actions which you may read there and in other places particularly expressed And in case of this treason a man forfeiteth his lands and goods to the King only And it is also called treason Paramount anno 25 Ed. 3. ca. 2. The form of Iudgement given upon a man convicted of high treason is this The Kings Serjeant after the verdict delivered craveth Iudgement against the Prisoner in behalf of the King Then the Lord Steward if the traitor have been noble or other Iudge if he be under a Peer saith thus N. Earl of P. For so much as thou before this time hast been of these treasons indited and this day arraigned for the same and put thy self upon God and thy Peers and the Lords thy Peers have found thee guilty my Iudgement is that thou shalt be conveyed unto the Tower of London whence thou camest and from thence drawn through the midst of London to Tiburn and there hanged and living thou shalt be cut down thy bowels to be cut out and burnt before thy face thy head cut off and thy body to be divided into four quarters and disposed at the Kings Majesties pleasure and God have mercy upon thee Petit treason is rather described by examples than any where logically
the name I take to be this because that whereas Parsons ordinarily be not accounted domini but usufructuarii having no right of fee simple Littleton titu Discontinuance these by reason of their perpetuity are accounted owners of the fee simple and therefore are called proprietarii And before the time of Richard the second it was lawfull as it seemeth simply at the least by mans law to appropriate the whole fruits of a benefice to an Abbey or Priory they finding one to serve the cure But that King made so evill a thing more tolerable by a Law whereby he ordained that in every licence of appropriation made in Chancery it should expresly be contained that the Diocesan of the place should provide a convenient sum of mony yearly to be paid out of the fruits towards the sustenance of the poor in that Parish and that the Vicar should be well and sufficiently endowed anno 15 R. 2 c. 6. Touching the first institution and other things worth the learning about Appropriations read Plowden in Grendons Case fo 496. b. seq as also the new terms of Law verbo Appropriation To an appropriation after the Licence obtained of the King in Chancery the consent of the Diocesan Patron and Incumbent are necessary if the Church be full but if the Church be void the Diocesan and the Patron upon the Kings license may conclude it Plowden ubi supra To dissolve an appropriation it is enough to present a Clerk to the Bishop For that once done the benefice returneth to the former nature Fitz. nat br fol. 35. E. Approvour approbatur commeth of the French approuver i. approbare comprobare calculum albo adjicere It signifieth in our Common law one that confessing felony of himself appealeth or accuseth another one or more to be guilty of the same he is called so because he must prove that which he hath alleged in his appeal Stawnf pl. cor fo 142. And that proof is by battel or by the Country at his election that appealed The form of this accusation you may in part gather by M. Cromptons Justice of Peace fo 250 251. that it is done before the Coroner either assigned unto the felon by the Court to take and record what he saith or els called by the felon himself and required for the good of the Prince and Commonwealth to record that which he saith c. The oath of the Approver when he beginneth the combat see also in Crompton in the very last page of his book as also the Proclamation by the Herald Of the antiquity of this Law you may read something in Horns mirror of Justices lt 1. in fine cap. del Office del Coroner Of this also see Bracton more at large lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 21. 34. and Stawnf pl. cor lib. 2. cap. 52. cum seq Approvers of the King Appruatores Regis be such as have the letting of the Kings demesnes in small Mannors to the Kings best advantage anno 51. H. 3. Stat. 5. See Approve Approve appruare commeth of the French approver i. approbare comprobare caleulum albo adjicere it signifieth in the Common law to augment or as it were to examine to the uttermost For example to approve land is to make the best benefit thereof by increasing the rent c. So is the Substantive Approvement used in Cromptons Jurisd fol. 153. for the profits themselves So is it likewise in the Statute of Merton ca. 4. anno 2. H. 3. land newly approved Old nat br fol. 79. So the Sheriffs called themselves the Kings approvers anno 1. Ed. 3. cap. 8. which is as much in mine opinion as the gatherers or exactors of the Kings profits And anno 9. H. 6. cap. 10. Bailiffes of Lords in their franchises be called their approvers But anno 2. Ed. 3. cap. 12. Approvers be certain men especially sent into leveral Counties of the Realm to increase the Farms of Hundreds and Wapentakes which formerly were set at a certain rate to the Sheriffs who likewise demised them to others the County-Court excepted Approvement appruamentum see Approve See the Register judicial fol. 8. br 9 a. See the New terms of Law verbo Approvement AR Arbitratour arbiter may be taken to proceed from either the Latine arbitrator or the French arbitre it signifieth an extraordinary Judge in one or moe Causes between party and party chosen by their mutual consents West parte 2. Symbol titulo Compromise Sect. 21. who likewise divideth arbitrement into general that is including all actions quarrels executions and demands and special which is of one or more matters facts or things specified codem sect 2 3 4. The Civilians make 2 difference between arbitrum arbitratorem li. 76. π. pro socio For though they both ground their power upon the compromise of the parties yet their liberty is divers For arbiter is tyed to proceed and judge according to Law with equity mingled arbitrator is permitted wholly to his own discretion without solemnity of process or course of Judgement to hear or determine the controversie committed unto him so it be juxta arbitrium bont viri Arches court Curia de arcubus is the chief and antientest Consistory that belongeth to the Archbishop of Canterbury for the debating of Spiritual causes and so is called of the Church in London dedicated to the blessed Virgin commonly called Bow-Church where it is kept And the Church is called Bow-Church of the fashion of the Steeple or clocher thereof whose top is raised of stone Pillars builded Arch-wise like so many bent bows The Judge of this Court is termed the Dean of the Arches or the Official of the Arches Court Dean of the Arches because with this officialty is commonly joined a peculiar Jurisdiction of thirteen Parishes in Londor termed a Deanrie being exempted from the authority of the Bishop of London and belonging to the Archbishop of Canterbury of which the Parish of Bow is one and the chief because the Court is there kept Some others say that he was first called Dean of the Arches because the official to the Archbishop being many times imployed abroad in Ambassages for the King and Realm the Dean of the Arches was his Substitute in his Court and by that means the names became confounded The jurisdiction of this Judge is ordinary and extendeth it self thorow the whole Province of Canterbnry So that upon any Appeal made he forthwith and without any further examination of the Cause sendeth out his Citation to the party appealed and his inhibition to the Judge from whom the Appeal is made Of this he that will may read more in the book intituled De antiquitate Ecclesiae Britan. historiae Arma moluta seem to be sharp weapons that do cut and not blunt that do only break or bruise Bract. lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 23. Stawnf pl. cor fo 78 79 whereof Bracton bath these words arma moluta plagam faciunt sicut gladius hisacuta
Coursetour of the court and hath been chosen of some one of he clerks in the remembrancers offices or of the clerk of the Pipes office He at the days of prefixion taketh oath of all high Sheriffs and their under Sheriffs and of all Escheatours Bayliffs and other accountants for their true accounting He taketh the oath of all Collectours Controllers Surveyours and searchers of the Custom houses that they have made true entrances in their books He apposeth all Sheriffs upon their Summons of the Pipe in open Court He informeth the rest of the Barons of the course of the Court in any matter that concerneth the Kings Prerogrative He likewise as the other Barons taketh the declaration of certain receivers accounts and examineth the letters and sums of such of the former accountants as are brought unto him These Barons of the exchequer are antient officers for I find them named West 2. c. 11. an 13 Ed. 1. they be called Barons because Barons of the realm were wont to be employed in that office Fleta li. 2. c. 24. S. Tho. Smith saith of them that their office is to look to the accounts of the Prince and to that end they have Auditors under them as also to decide all causes appertaning to the Kings profits coming into the Exchequer by any means This is in part also proved by the Stat. an 20. Ed. 3. ca. 2. anno 27 ejusd stat 2. ca. 18. anno 5. R. 2. stat 1. ca. 9. 12. et anno 14. ejusd ca. 11. And hereupon they be of late men learned in the Common Law of the Realm whereas in autient times they were others viz. majores et discretiores in regno sive de clero essent sive de curia Ockam in his lucubrations de fisci regii ratione Horn. in his mirrour of Justices saith that Barons were wont to be two and they Knights cap. De la place del Eschequer Then be there in this signification Barons of the Cinque Ports anno 31 Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 2. an 33 H. 8. cap. 10. which are two of every of the seven towns Hastings Winchelsey Rye Rumney Hithe Dover and Sandwich that have places in the lower-house of Parliament Cromptons jurisd fol. 28. Baron in the third signification is used for the husband in relation to his wife which is so ordinary in all our law-writers that write in French as it were superfluous to confirm it by any one Baronet I read this word anno 13 R. 2. stat 2. cap. 1. But I hold it falsly printed for Baneret or else to signifie all one with it Baronye baronia baronagium is the fee of a Baron In which account are not onely the fees of Temporal Barons but of Bishops also who have two respects One ●s they are Spiritual men without possessions as was the Tribe of Levie among the Israelites being susteined by the onely First fruits and Tenths of the other Tribes Josh cap. 13. vers 14. The other respect they have groweth from the bounty of our English Kings whereby they have Baronies at the least and are thereby Barons or Lords of the Par●iament This Baronie as Bracton saith lib. 2. cap. 34. is a right indivisible and therefore if an inheritance be to be divided among Co-parteners Though some capital messuages may be divided yet si capitale messuagium sit caput Comitatus vel caput Baroniae he faith they may not be parcelled The reason is ne sic caput per plu●es particulas dividatur plura jura comitatuum baroniarium deveniant ad nihilum per quod deficiat Regnum quod ex Comitatibus Baroniis dicitur esse constitutū Barre Barra commeth of the French barre or barriere i. repagulum obex vectis It is used in our Common law for a peremptory exception against a Demand or plaint and is by the Author of the terms of Law defined to be a Plee brought by the Defendant in an Action that destroyeth the Action of the Plaintiff for ever It is divided into a Barre to common intent and a Barre scecial A Barre to a common intendment is an ordinary or general Barre that ordinarily disableth the Declaration or Plee of the Plaintiff A Barre special is that which is more than ordinary and falleth out in the case in hand or question upon some special circumstance of the fact Plowden casu Colthirst fol. 26. a.b. For example an Executor being sued for his Testators debt pleadeth that he had no goods left in his hands at the day when the Writ was purchased or taken out against him This is a good barre to common intendment or prima facie But yet the case may so fall out that more goods might come to his hands sithence that time which if the Plaintiff can shew by way of replication then except he have a more especial plee or barre to allege he is to be condemned in the action See also Plowden in the case aforenamed fol. 28. a. b. and Broke t●●ul● Barre num 101. and Kitchin fol. 215. Barre also in the same signification is divided into barre material and barre at large Kitchin fol. 68. A barre material as it seemeth may otherwise be called a barre special as when one in the stop of the Plaintiffes Action pleadeth some particular matter as a descent from him that was the undoubted owner a Feoffment made by the Ancester of the Plaintiff or such like A bar at large is when the Tenent or Defendant by way of exception doth not traverse the Plaintiffs title by pleading not guilty nor confe ie and avoid it but onely maketh to himself a title in his barre As if in an Assise of novel disseisin the Tenent plead a Feoffment of a stranger unto him and gives but a colour onely to the Plaintiff Of this there is an apt example to be found 5 H. 7. fol. 29. Barre is also in regard of the effect divided into barre perpetual and barre pro tempore Perpetual is that which overthroweth the action for ever Barre pro tempore is that which is good for the present and may fail hereafter look an example or two in Broke titu Barre nu 23. where he saith that to plead plenè administravit is good until it may appear that more goods come to the Executors hands afterward which also holdeth for an heir that in an action of his Ancesters debt pleadeth rien per discent This word is also used for a material bar as the place where Sergeants or Councellers stand to plead causes in Court or Prisoners to answer to their Indictment Of which our Common lawyers that be licensed to plead in other Countries called licentiati are termed Baristers anno 24 H. 8. cap. 24. Barrator barectator cometh from the French Barat i. astutia and is neer the French it self in signification For barateur in that tongue betokeneth a deceiver and a barator in our Common law is a common wrangler that setteth men at ods and is
belonging unto the same Fleta lib. 2. cap. 6. 7. Chamberlain of any of the Kings courts anno 7 Edw. 6. cap. 1. Chamberlain of the Exchequer anno 51 H. 3. stat 5. anno 10 Ed. 3. cap. 11. anno 14 ejusdem cap. 14. anno 26 H. 8. cap. 3. Chamberlain of North Wales Stow pag. 641. Chamberlain of Chester Cromptons jurisd fol. 7. This Officer is commonly the receiver of all rents and revenues belonging to that person or City whereunto he is Chamberlain Vide Fletam lib. 2. cap. 70. § Si autem The Latine word seemeth to expresse the function of this officer For camerarius dicitur à camer a i. testitudine sive fornice ●quia custodit pecun●as quae in cameris praecipuè reservantur Onyphrius de interpret vocum ecclesiasticarum It seemeth to be borowed from the Feudists who define the word camera thus Camera est locus in quem the saurus recolligitur vel conclave in quo pecunia reservatur Zasius de feudis part 4. num 7. and Peregrinus de jure fisci lib. 6. tit 3. saith that camerarius vel camberlingus quem quaestorem antiqui appellarunt in rebus fisci primum locum tenet quia thesaurarius custos est publicae pecuniae Sane officium hoc primipilatus fuisse nonnulli senserunt There be two officers of this name in the Kings Exch●quer who were wont to keep a controlement of the pells of receipt and exitus and kept certain keyes of the treasure cofers which is not now in use They keep the keyes of the Treasurie where the leagues of the Kings predecessors and divers ancient books do remain There is mention of this officer in the Statute an 34. 35 H. 8. cap. 16. There be also Under-chamberlains of the Exchequer which see in Under-chamberlain Champartie cambipartita aliâs champertie seemeth to come from the French champert i. vectigal and signifieth in our Common law a maintenance of any man in his sute depending upon condition to have part of the thing be it lands or goods when it is recovered Fitz. nat br fol. 171. and champertours be they that move plees or sutes or cause to be moved either by their own procurement or by other and pursue at their proper costs for to have part of the land in variance or part of the gains anno 33 Ed. 1. stat 2. in fine Whereunto adde the third statute made the same year This seemeth to have been an ancient fault in our Realm For notwithstanding these former statutes and a form of writ framed unto them yet anno 4 Ed. 3. cap. 11. it was again enacted that whereas the former statute provided redresse for this in the Kings Bench onely which in those dayes followed the Court from thenceforth it should be lawful for Justices of the Common plees likewise and Justices of Assises in their circuits to inquire hear and determine this and such like cases as well at the sute of the King as of the Party How farre this Writ extendeth and the divers forms thereof applyed to several cases See Fitz. nat br fol. 171. and the Register orig fol. 183. and the new book of Enteries verbo Champertie Every Champertie imployeth maintenance Cromptons jurisd fol. 39. See also his Justice of Peace fol. 155. b. c. These with the Romans were called redemptores litium qui sc quotidian as lites mercantur aut qui partem litis paciscuntur l. si remuner andi § Maurus π. Mandati l. si contra l. per diversas Co. eodem 13. C●anpion campio is thus defined by Hottoman in verbis feudalibus Campio est certator pro alio datus in duello à campo dictus qui circus erat decertantibus definitus In our Common law it is taken no les●e for him that trieth the combat in his own case than for him that fighteth in the place or quarrel of another Bracton lib. 3 tract 2. cap. 21. num 24. who also seemeth to use this word for such as hold by Seargante or some service of another as campiones faciunt homagium domino suo lib. 2. cap. 35. Of this read more in Battel and Combat 30. Chanceler cancellarius cometh of the French chancelier Vicentius Lupanus de magistratibus Francorum saith that cancellarius is no Latine word howbeit he citeth divers Latine Writers that do use it With him agreeth that excellent man Petrus Pithaeus libro 2. adversariorum cap. 12. and whereas Lupanus would derive it from the verb cancello Pithaeus confe●eth he hath good colour for his opinion though he think it not sound and therefore rather deduceth it à cancellis Cancellare is liter as vel scriptum linea per medium duct a damnare and seemeth of it self like wise to be derived à cancellis which signifie all one with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greek which we in our tongue call a Le●is that is a thing made of wood or iron barres laid crosse-waies one over another so that a man may see through them in and out And is to be thought that Judgement seats in old time were compassed in with those barres being found most necessary to defend Judges and other Officers from the presse of the multitude and yet never the more to hinder any mans view that had a desire or cause to observe what was done Cancellarius at the first by the opinion of Lupanus signified the registers or actuaries in Court grapharios sc qui conscribendis excipiendis judicum act is dant operam Pithaeus saith they were such as we now call Secretarios But this name in our daies is greatly advanced and not only in other Kingdomes but in ours also is given to him that is the chief man for matter of Justice in private causes especially next unto the Prince For whereas all other Justices in our Common-wealth are tied to the Law and may not swerve from it in judgement the Chancelor hath in this the Kings absolute power to moderate and temper the written Law and subjecteth himself onely to the Law of nature and conscience ordering all things juxta aequum bonum And therefore Stanford in his Prerogative cap. 20. fol. 65. saith that the Chancelor hath two powers one absolute the other ordinarie meaning that though by his ordinary power in some cases he must observe the form of proceeding as other ordinary Judges yet that in his absolute power he is not limited by the written law but by conscience and equity according to the circumstances of the matter in question But how long he hath had this power some would doubt For Polidorus Virgilius lib. 9. historiae Anglica hath these words of William the Conquerour Instituit item Scribarum Colleginm qui diplomata scriberent ejns Collegii magistrum vocabat Cancellarium qui paulatim supremus factus est Magistratus qualis hodie habeiur And see Flet. lib. 2. cap. 13. This high Officer seemeh to be derived from France unto us as many other
is an officer in Court so called because he hath the check and controllement of the yeomen of the Gard and all other ordinary yeomen or huissiers belonging either to his Majesty the Queen or Prince either giving leave or allowing their absences or defects in attendance or diminishing their wages for the same He also nightly by himself or Deputy taketh the view of those that are to watch in the Court and hath the setting of the watch This officer is mentioned anno 33 Henric. 8. cap. 12. Clerk Marshal of the Kings house seemeth to be an Officer that attendeth the Marshall in his Court and recordeth all his proceedings anno 33 Henr. 8. cap. 12. Clothe of Raye an 27 E. 3 stat 1. cap. 4. Closhe is an unlawful game forbidden by the the statute anno 17 E. 4. cap. 3. which is casting of a bowl at nine pinnes of wood or nine shank bones of an ox or horse Clove is the 32 part of a weigh of cheese i. eight pound anno 9 H. 6. cap. 8. Cloves caryophilli are a spice known by sight to every man They are flowers of a tree called caryophillus gathered and hardned by the Sun Of their nature you may read in Gerards Herbal lib. 3. cap. 144. This is comprised among such spices as be to be garbled an 1 Jacob. c. 19. CO Cocket cockettum is a seal appertaining to the Kings Custome-house Regist orig fol. 192 a. and also a scrow of parchment sealed and delivered by the officers of the Custome-house to Merchants as a warrant that their merchandise be customed anno 11 H. 6. cap. 16. which parchment is otherwise called literae de coketto or literae testimoniales de coketto Regist. ubi supr fol. 179 a. So is the word used anno 5 6 Edw. 6. cap. 14. an 14 Edw. 3. stat 1. c. 21. This word is also used for a distinction of bread in the statutes of bread and ale made anno 51 H. 3. where you have mention of bread coket wastelbread bread of trete and bread of Common wheat Coferer of the Kings houshold is a principal officer of his Majesties Court next under the controller that in the Counting-house and elsewhere at other times hath a special charge and oversight of other officers of the houshold for their good demeanour and carriage in their offices to all which one and other being either Sergeants Yeomen Grooms Pages or children of the kitchin or any other in any room of his Majesties servants of houshold and payeth their wages This officer is mentioned an 39 Eliz. cap. 7. Cogs anno 23 H. 8. cap. 18. Conisor of a fine is he that passeth or acknowledgeth a fine in Lands or Tenements to another Cognisee is he to whom the fine is acknowledged West parte 2. symbol tit Fines sect 2. Cognizance cometh from the French cognisance id est intelligentia intellectus notio cognitio with us it is used diversly sometime signifying a badge of a serving-mans sleeve whereby he is discerned to belong to this or that Noble or Gentleman sometime an acknowledgement of a fine or confession of a thing done as cognoscens latro Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 3.20 32. cognoscere se ad villanum Idem lib. 4. tract 3. cap. 16. As also to make cognisance of taking a distresse sometime as an audience or hearing of a matter judicially as to take cognisance sometime a power or jurisdiction as cognisance of plee is an ability to call a cause or plee out of another Court which no man can do but the King except he can shew Charters for it Manwood parte 1. of his Forest laws pag. 68. See the new Termes of the Law and the new book of Entries verbo Conusance Cognatione see Cosenage Cognisour see Conisour Cognitionibus mittendis is a Writ to a Justice or other that hath power to take a Fine who having taken acknowledgement of a Fine deferreth to certifie it into the Court of Common plees commanding him to certifie it Reg. orig 68. b. Coin cuneus vel cuna seemeth to come from the French coin id est Angulus which probably verifieth the opinion of such as do hold the ancientest sort of Coyn to be cornered and not round Of this Lawyers substantive cuna commeth the Lawyers verb cunare i. to coyn Cromtons Justice of peace fol. 220. Coliander seed or rather coriander seed Semen coriandri is the seed of an hearb so called medicinable and wholesome for divers goo● purposes which see in Gerards Herbal l. 2. cap. 379. It is numbered among the drugges that be to be garbled an 1 Jacob. cap. 19. Collaterall collateralis commeth of the Latine Laterale id est that which hangeth by the side Lateralia viatoria π. de lega fidelium tertio l. 102. seem to signifie a budget or cap-case to hang by a saddel pomel Collaterall is used in the Common law for that which commeth in or is adhering of the side as collaterall assurance is that which is made over and beside the deed it self For example if a man covenant with another and enter bond for the performance of his covenant the bond is termed collaterall assurance because it is externall and without the nature and essence of the covenant And Crompt Jurisd fol. 185. sayeth that to be subject to the fee ding of the Kings Deer is collaterall to the spoyl within the Forest in the like manner may we say That the liberty to pitch booths or standings for a Fair in another mans ground is collaterall to the ground The private woods of a Common person within a Forest may not bee cut without the Kings licence For it is a prerogative collaterall to to the soil Manwood parte 1. of his Forest laws p. 66. Collaterall warranty see Warranty Collation of benefice collatio beneficii signifieth properly the bestowing of a Benefice by the Bishop that hath it in his own gift or patronage and differeth from Institution in this for that institution into a benefice is performed by the Bishop at the motion or presentation of another who is patron of the same or hath the Patrons right for the time Extra de institutionibus De concessione praebendarum c. And yet is collation used for presentation anno 25 Edw. 3. stat 6. Collatione fact a uni post mortem alterius c. is a writ directed to the Justices of the Common Plees commanding them to direct their writ to a Bishop for the admitting of a Clerk in the place of another presented by the King that during the sute between the King and the Bishops Clerk is departed For judgment once passed for the Kings Clerk and he dying before he be admitted the king may bestow his presentation upon another Regist orig fol. 31. b. Collatione heremitagii is a writ whereby the king conferreth the keeping of an Ermitage upon a Clerk Register orig fol. 303 308. Colour color signifieth in the Common law a probable plee but in truth
places they there have this commissary is but superfluous and most commonly doth rather vex and disturb the Country for his lucre than of conscience seek to redresse the lives of offenders And therefore the Bishop taking prestation money of his Archdeacons yearely pro exteriori jurisdictione as it is ordinarily called doth by super-onerating their circuit with a commissary not only wrong Archdeacons but the poorer sort of subjects much more as common practice daily teacheth to their great woe Commission commissio is for the most part in the understanding of the Common law as much as delegatio with the Civilians See Brook titulo Commission and is taken for the warrant or Letters Patents that all men exercising jurisdiction either ordinary or extraordinary have for their power to hear or determine any cause or action Of these see divers in the table of the Register original verbo Commissio Yet this word sometime is extended further than to matters of judgement as the Commission of Purveyers or takers anno 11 H. 4. cap. 28. But with this epitheton High it is most notoriously used for the honourable Commission Court instituted and founded upon the Statute 1 Eliz. cap. 1. for the ordering and reformation of all offences in any thing appertaining to the jurisdiction ecclesiastical but especially such as are of higher nature or at the least require greater punishment than ordinary jurisdiction can afford For the world being grown to that loosenesse as not to esteem the censure of excommunication necessity calleth for those censures of fines to the Prince and imprisonment which doe affect men more neerly Commission of rebellion commissio rebellionis is otherwise called a writ of Rebellion Breve Rebellionis and it hath use when a man after proclamation made by the Sheriff upon an order of the Chauncery or court of Statrechamber under penalty of his allegeance to present himself to the Court by a certain day appeareth not And this commission is directed by way of command to certain persons to this end that they or three two or one of them doe apprehend or cause to be apprehended the party as a rebell and contemner of the Kings lawes wheresoever they find him within the Kingdom and bring him or cause him to be brought to the court upon a day therein assigned The true copie of this commission or Writ you have in Cromptons divers jurisdictions Court de Starre-Chamber as also in West tractat touching proceedings in chancery Sectio 24. Commissioner commissionarius is he that hath commission as Letters Patents or other lawful warrant to execute any publike office as Commissioners of the office of Fines and Licenses West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 106. Commissioners in Eyr anno 3 Ed. 1. cap. 26. with infinite such like Committee is he to whom the consideration or ordering of any matter is referred either by some Court or consent of parties to whom it belongeth As in Parliament a Bill being read is either consented unto and passed or denied or neither of both but referred to the consideration of some certain men appointed by the house farther to examine it who thereupon are called Committees Committee of the King West part 2. symbol titulo Chancerie sect 144. This word seemeth to be something strangely used in Kitchin fol. 160. where the widow of the Kings Tenent being dead is called the Committee of the King that is one committed by the ancient law of the land to the Kings care and protection Common bench bancus communis is used some time for the Court of Common plees anno 2 Ed. 3. cap. 11. So called as M. Cambden saith in his Britannia pag. 113. quia communia placita inter subditos ex jure nostro quod commune vocant in hoc disceptantur that is the Plees or Controversies tryed between Common persons Common fine finis communis of this Fleta hath these words Quibus expeditis speaking of the businesse finished by Justices in Eyr consueverunt Justiciarii imponere villatis juratoribus hundredis toti comitatui concelamentum omnes separatim amerciare quod videtur voluntarium cùm de per jurio concelau●ento non fuerint convicti sed potius dispensandum esset cum eis quod anim as in statera posuerint pro pacis conservatione lib. 1. cap. 48. § Quibus And a little following § Et provisum he hath these words Et provisum ests quòd communes misericordiae vel fines comitatuum amerciatorum in finibus ininerum Justiciariorum ante recessum ipsorum Justiciariorum per sacramenta militum aliorum proborum hominum de comitatu eodem affidentur super eos qui contribuere debent unde particulae Justiciariis liberentur ut cum aliis extractis suis ad Scaccarium liberare valeant These last words of his have relation to the statute Westminst pr. cap. 18. which read See Fine Common Plees communia placita is the Kings Court now held in Westminster Hall but in antient time moveable as appeareth by the Statute called Magna charta cap. 11. as also anno 2 Ed. 3. cap. 11. and Pupilla oculi parte 5. cap. 22. But M. Gwin in the Preface to his Readings saith that until the time that Henry the third granted the great Charter there were but two Courts in all called the Kings Courts whereof one was the Exchequer the other the Kings Bench which was then called Curia Domini regis and Aula regia because it followed the Court or King and that upon the grant of that Charter the Court of Common plees was erected and setled in one place certain viz. at Westminster And because this Court was setled at Westminster wheresoever the King lay thereupon M. Gwin ubi supra saith that after that all the Writs ran Quòd sit coram Justiciariis meis apud Westmonasterium whereas before the party was commanded by them to appear coram me vel Justiciariis meis simply without addition of place as he well observeth out of Glanvile and Bracton the one writing in Henry the seconds time before this Court was erected the other in the latter end of Henry the thirds time who erected this Court. All civil causes both real and personal are or were in former times tryed in this Court according to the strict law of the Realm and by Fortescue cap. 50. it seemeth to have been the onely Court for real causes The chief Judge thereof is called the Lord chief Justice of the Common Plees accompanied with 3 a 4 Assistants or Associates which are created by Letters Patents from the King and as it were enstalled or placed upon the Bench by the Lord Chancelor and Lord chief Justice of the Court as appeareth by Fortescue cap. 51. who expresseth all the circumstances of this admission The rest of the Officers belonging to this Court are these The Custos brevium three Protonotaries otherwise called Prenotaries Chirographer Filazers 14. Exigenters 4. Clerk of the Warrants Clerk of the Juries or Jurata
fol. 102. calleth the Coroner of the Kings house of whose authority see S. Edw. Cokes reports lib. 4. fol. 46. a. b. And I know certain Charters belonging to Colleges and other corporations whereby they are licensed to appoint their Coroner within their own precincts Farther of this office see also Fitzh nat br fol. 76. A. B. Sir Thomas Smith lib. 2. cap. 21. de repub Anglo and Lamb. Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 3. pag. 380. And the office of the Coroner in Scot land what it is read M. John Skene de verbo signif verbo Iter. Corporation Corporatio is that which the Civil law calleth Vniversitatem or Collegium A bodie Politick authorised by the Kings Charter to have a common Seal a head Officer one or more and members able by their common consent to grant or to receive in law any thing within the compasse of their Charter even as one man may do by Law all things that by law is not forbidden and bindeth the Successours as a single man bindeth his Executor or Heir See Brokes his abridgement titulo Corporation and the new Terms of Law Eodem Corpus cum causa is a Writ issuing out of the Chancerie to remove both the body and the record touching the cause of any man lying in execution u●on a judgment for debt into the Kings Bench c. there to lye until he have satisfied the judgement Fitzh nat br fol. 251. E. Corrector of the staple is an officer or Clerk belonging to the Staple that writeth and recordeth the bargains of Merchants there made anno 27 Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 22 23. The Romans called them Me●sarios Corruption of blood is an infection growing to the state of a man attainted of Felony or Treason and to his issue For as he leeseth all to the Prince or other Lord of the Fee accordingly as his case is so his issue cannot be heirs to him or to any other Ancestor of whom they might have claimed by him And farther if he were noble or a Gentleman before he and his children are made unnoble and ungentle in respect of the father New Terms of the Law Corse present are words borrowed from the French signifiing a Mortuarie anno 21 H. 8. c. 6. The true French is corps praesenté i. the body presented or tendered The reason why the Mortuarie is thus also termed seemeth to be for that where a Mortuarie was wont to be due the body of the best Beast was according to the law or custome offered or presented to the Priest Corselet is a French word signifying a little Body in Latine corpusculum It is used with us for an armour to cover the whole body or trunk of a man anno 4 5. Ph. Mar. cap. 2. where with the Pikemen commonly set in the front and flanks of the battel are armed for the better resistance of the enemies assaults and the surer guard of the Gunners placed behind or within them being more sleightly armed for their speedier issuing in and out to discharge their Pieces See Barrets discourse of War lib. 3. dialog 2. Cosenage cognatione is a Writ that lyeth where the Tresail that is Tritavus the father of the Befail or of the great Grand-father is seised in his Demesn as of Fee at the day of his death of certain lands or tenements and dyeth and then a Stranger entreth and abateth For then shall his Heir have this Writ of Cosenage the form whereof see in Fitzh nat br fol. 221. Of this also read Britton at large cap. 89. Cosening is an offence unnamed whereby any thing is done guilefully in or out of contracts which cannot be fitly termed by any especial name West parte 2. Symbolaeogr titulo Indictments sect 68. It is called Stellionatus in the Civil law of Stellio the beast which is lacertae genus versutissimum as Cujacius in his paratitles calleth it and quo nullum an mal homini invidet fraudulentius Plinie lib. 3. cap. 10. Cotage cotagium is a house without land belonging unto it anno 4. Ed. pri statut prima And the inhabitant of such a house is called a Cotager But by a later statute no man may build a Cotage but he must lay 4. Acres of ground unto it 31 Eliz. cap. 7. Cote is a kind of reffuse wool clung or clotted together that it cannot be pulled asunder anno 13. R. 2. stat 1. cap. 9. It lignineth also as much as Cotage in many places as also it did among the Saxons Verstegan in his Restitut of decayed intelligence in entiquities Covenable rationabilis is a French word signifying fit or convenient or suitable convenably endowed anno 4. H. 8. ca. 12. it is antiently written convenable as in the statute an 27. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 17. Covenant conventio is the consent of two or more in one self thing to doe or give somewhat West parte 2. symbol lib. 1. sect 4. It seemeth to be as much as pactum conventum with the Civilians which you read oftentimes in Tullie Pactum conventum quod et vulgo vesticum vocant opponitur nudo pacto vetue ab omni juris solennitate destatuto Hujus exempla ponere difficile esse Jason existimavit Conventum aiunt quod vestitur autre aut verbis aut literis aut contractus cohaerentiâ aut rei interventu Oldendorpius And covenant in this signification is either a covenant in law or a covenant in fact Coke li. 4. Nokes case fol. 80. or covenant expresse and covenant in law idem li. 6. fo 17. a. Covenant in law is that which the law intendeth to be made though in words it be not expressed as if the lessour doe demise and grant c. to the Leassee for a certain term the Law intendeth a covenant of the Leassers part that the Leassee shall during his whole term quietly enjoy his Lease against all lawfull encumbrance Covenant in fact is that which is expresly agreed between the parties There is also a covenant meerly personall and a covenant reall Fitzh nat br fo 145. And he seemeth to say that a covenant reall is whereby a man tyeth himself to passe a thing reall as land or tenements as a covenant to levy a Fine of land c. A covenant meerly personal of the other side is where a man covenanteth with another by deed to build him a house or any other thing or to serve him or to in feoff him c. Covenant is also the name of a writ for the which see Conventione Instruments of covenant you may see good store in West parte 1. Symbolaeog lib. 2. sectio 100. See also the new book of Entries verbo Covenant Covent conventus signifieth the sooiety or fraternity of an abby or priorie as societas signifieth the number of fellowes in a College Bracton lib. 2. cap. 35. It commeth of the French convent i. coenobium Coverture is a French word signifying any thing that covereth as apparell a coverlet c. and deduced
permitteth it is by Law guilty of the fault committed by him that escapeth be it Felony Treason or Trespass Negligent escape is when one arrested and afterwards escapeth against his will that arrested him and is not pursued by fresh sute and taken again before the party pursuing hath lost the sight of him Idem cap. 27. But there read more of this matter for there be doubts worth the consideration And of the course of punishment by the Civil Law in this point read in Practica criminali Claudii de Battandier reg 143. read also Cromptons Justice fol. 35. b. fol. 36. 37. and read the new Terms of Law There is an escape of beasts likewise and therefore he that by charter is quietus de escapio in the forrest is delivered of that punishment which by order of the forrest lyeth upon those whose beasts be found within the land forbidden Cromptons Jurisdict fol. 196. Eschequer Scaccarium cometh of the French Eschequier i. abacus tabula lusoria and signifieth the place or Court of all receipts belonging to the Crown and is so termed as I take it by reason that in ancient times the accomptants in that Office used such Tables as Arithmetitians use for their calculations for that is one signification of Abacus amonst others Polydor. Virgil. lib. 9. hist Anglc. saith that the true word in Latine is Statarium and by abuse called Scaccarium In mine opinion it may well seem to be taken from the German word Schatz signifying as much as Thesaurus or Fiscus And from this fountain no doubt springeth the Italian word Zecch●● signifying a mint and Zecherit aliâs Zechieri the Officers thereunto belonging Descis Ge●uen 134. M. Cam. in his Britan. pag. 113. saith that this Court or office took the name à tabula ad quam assidebant proving it out of Gervasius Tilburiensis whose words you may read in him This Court is taken from the Normans as appeareth by the Grand Custumarie cap. 56. where you may find the Eschequier thus described The Eschequier is called an assembly of High Justiciers to whom it appertaineth to amend that which the Bailiffes and other meaner Justiciers have evil done and unadvisedly judged and to do right to all men without delay as from the Princes mouth Skene de verbo Significatione verbo Scaccarium hath out of Paulus Aemilius these words Saccarium dicitur quasi S. at arium quòd homines ib● in jure sistantur vel quòd sit stataria perennis curia cum caeterae curiae essent indictivae nec loco nec tempore state where he saith also of himself that in Scotland the Eschequer was stable but the other Session was deambulatorie before James the fist qui instituit Statariam curiam cum antea esset indictiva he addeth farther Others think that Scaccarium is so called à similitudine ludi Scaccorum that is the play of the Chests because many persons meet in the Chequer pleading their causes one against the other as if they were fighting in arraied battel Others think that it cometh from an old Saxon word Scata as writeth S. Thomas Smith which signifieth Treasure taxation or Imposts whereof account is made in the Chequer This Court consisteth as it were of two parts whereof one is conversant especially in the judicial hearing and deciding of all causes appertaining to the Princes Cofers anciently called Scaccarium computorum as Ockam testifieth in his lucubrations the other is called the receipt of the Exchequer which is properly imployed in the receiving and payment of money Crompton in his Jurisdictions fol. 105. defineth it to be a Court of Record wherein all causes touching the revenues of the Crown are handled The officers belonging to both these you may find named in M. Camddens Britannia cap. Tribunalia Angliae to whom I refer you The Kings Exchequer which now is setled in Westminster was in divers Counties of Wales anno 27 H. 8. cap. 5. but especially cap. 26. Escheate Eschaeta cometh of the French escheoir i. cadere accidere excidere and signifieth in our Common law any lands or other profits that fall to a Lord within his Manor by way of forfeiture or the death of his Tenent dying without Heir general or especial or leaving his Heir within age or unmarried Magna Charta c. 31. Fitzh nat br f. 143. T c. Escheat is also used sometime for the place circuit within the which the King or other Lord hath escheats of his Tenents Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 2. pupilla oculi parte 2. cap. 22. Escheat thirdly is used for a VVrit which lieth where the Tenent having estate of Fee-simple in any Lands or Tenements holden of a superior Lord dyeth seised without Heir general or especial For in this case the Lord bringeth this VVrit against him that possesseth these Lands after the death of his Tenent● and shall there by recover the same in lieu of his services Fitzh nat br fol. 144. These that we call Escheats are in the Kingdom of Naples called Excadentia or bona excadentiala as Baro locat excadentias eo modo quo locatae fuerunt ab antiquo it a quod in nullo debita servitia minuantur non remittit Gallinam debitam Jacobutius de Franchis in praeludiis ad feudorum usum tit 1. num 29. num 23. v. Maramae singularia verbo Excademia And in the same signification as we say the Fee is escheated the Feudists use feudum aperitur lib. 1. feudal titulo 18. § 2. titul 15. titul 26. § 4. Escheatour Escaetor cometh of Escheat and signifieth an officer that observeth the Escheats of the King in the County whereof he is Eseheatour and certifieth them into the Exchequer This officer is appointed by the L. Treasurer and by Letters Patents from him and contineth in his office but one year neither can any be Escheatour above once in three years anno 1 H. 8. cap. 8. anno 3. ejusdem cap. 2. See more of this officer and his authority in Cromptons Justice of peace See anno 29 Ed. 1. The form of the Escheatours oath see in the Register original fol. 301. b. Fitzh calleth him an officer of record nat br fol. 100. C. because that which he certifieth by vertue of his office hath the credit of a Record Officium escaetriae is the Escheatourship Regist orig fol. 259. b. Escuage Scutagium cometh of the French escu i. clypeus a buckler or shield In our Common law it signifieth a kind of Knights service called service of the Shield whereby the Tenent holding is bound to follow his Lord into the Scotish or Welsh wars at his own charge for the which see Chivalrie But note that Escuage is either uncertain or certain Escuage uncertain is properly Escuage and Knights service being subject to homage fealty ward and marriage so called because it is uncertain how often a man shall be called to follow his Lord into those wars and again what his charge will be in
words Billa vera or disallow by writing Ignoramus such as they doe approve if they touch Life and Death are farther referred to another Jury to be considered of because the case is of such importance but others of lighter moment are upon their allowance without more work fined by the Bench except the party travers the Inditement or challenge it for insufficiency or remove the cause to a higher Court by Certiorari in which two former cases it is referred to another Jury and in the latter transmitted to the higher Lamb. Eir. li. 4. ca. 7. and presently upon the allowance of this Bill by the Grand Enquest a man is said to be indited Such as they disallow are delivered to the Bench by whom they are forthwith cancelled or torn The Petit Iury consisteth of twelve men at the least and are empaneled as well upon criminal as upon civil causes those that passe upon offences of Life and Death doe bring in their verdict either guiltie or not guilty wherupon the Prisoner if he be found guilty is said to be convicted and so afterward receiveth his judgement and condemnation or otherwise is acquitted and set Free Of this read Fortes cap. 27. Those that passe upon civil causes real are all or so many as can conveniently be had of the same Hundred where the land or tenement in question doth lie and four at the least And they upon due examination bring in their verdict either for the Demandant or Tenent Of this see Fortescue cap. 25 26. According unto which judgement passeth afterward in the Court where the cause first began and the reason hereof is because these Justices of Assise are in this case for the ease of the Country only to take the verdict of the Jury by the vertue of the writ called Nisi prius and so return it to the Court where the cause is depending See Nisi prius Joyn with this the chapter formerly cited out of the Custumary of Normandie and that of King Etheldreds laws mentioned by Master Lamberd verbo Centuria in his explication of Saxon words And by these two words you shall perceive that as well among these Normans as the Saxous the men of this Jury were Associates and Assistants to the Judges of the Court in a kind of equalitie whereas now adayes they attend them in great humility and are as it were at their command for the service of the Court the words set down by M. Lamberd are these In singulis centuriis comitia sunto atque liberae conditionis viri duodeni aetate superiores un à cum praeposito sacra tenentes juranto se aedeo virum aliquem innocentem hand condemnaturos sontemve absoluturos to this joyn also the 69. chapter of the said Custumary See Enquest See 12. Men. See Lamberds Eirenarch lib. 4. cap. 3. pag. 384. Juris utrùm is a writ that lieth for the incumbent whose predecessour hath alienated his lands or tenements the divers uses of which writ see in Fitzh nat br fol. 48. Jurisdictiou Jurisdictio is a dignity which a man hath by a power to doe Iustice in causes of Complaint made before him And there be two kinds of Jurisdictions the one that a man hath by reason of his fee and by vertue thereof doth right in all plaints concerning his fee The other is a Iurisdiction given by the Prince to a Bayliff this division I have in the Custumary of Normandie cap. 2. which is not unapt for the practice of our Commonwealth for by him whom they call a Bayliff wee may understand all that have commission from the Prince to give judgement in any cause The Civilians divide jurisdictionem generally in imperium jurisdictionem and imperium in merum et mixtum Of which you may read many especiall tractats written of them as a matter of great difficulty and importance Justes cometh of the French Joustes i. decursus and signifieth with us contentions between Martial men by speares on horsback anno 24 H. 8. cap. 13. Justice Justiciarius is a Freneh word and signifieth him that is deputed by the King to doe right by way of judgement the reason why he is called Justice and not Judex is because in ancient time the latine word for him was Justitia and not Justiciarius as appeareth by Glanv lib. 2. cap. 6. Roger Hoveden part poster suorum annalium fo l 413. a. and divers other places which appellation we have from the Normans as appeareth by the Grand Custumary cap. 3. And I doe the rather note it because men of this function should hereby consider that they are or ought to be not Justi in their judgements but in abstract ipsa justitia howbeit I hold it well if they perform their office in concreto Another reason why they are called Justiciari● with us and not Judices is because they have their authority by deputation as Delegates to the King and not jure magistratus and therefore cannot depute others in their stead the Justice of the Forest only excepted who hath that liberty especially given him by the Statute anno 32 H. 8. cap. 35. for the Chancellor Marshal Admiral and such like are not called Justiciarii but Judices of these Justices you have divers sorts in England as you may perceive here following The manner of creating these Justices with other appurtenances read in Fortescue cap. 51. Justice of the Kings bench Justiciarius de Banco Regis is a Lord by his office and the chief of the rest wherefore he is also called Capitalis Justiciarius Angliae his office especially is to hear and determine all plees of the Crown that is such as concern offences committed against the crown dignity and peace of the King as treasons felonies mayhems and such like which you may see in Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. per totum and in Stawnf treatise intituled The plees of the Crown from the first chapter to the fifty one of the first Book But either it was from the beginning or by time is come to passe that he with his Assistants heareth all personal actions and real also if they be incident to any personal action depending before them See Cromptons jurisd fol. 67. c. Of this Court Bracton lib. 3. ca. 7. nu 2. saith thus Placita vero civilia in rem personam in Curia domini Regis terminanda coram diversis Justiciariis terminantur Habet enim plures curias in quibus diversae actiones terminantur illarum curiarum habet unam propriam sicut aulam regiam justiciariios capitales qui proprias causos Regis terminant aliorum omnium par querelam vel per privilegium sive libertatem ut si sit aliquis qui implacitari non debeat nisi coram domino Rege This Justice as it seemeth hath no patent under the broad Seal For so Cromp. saith ubi supra He is made only by Writ which is a short one to this effect Regina Johanni Popham militi salutem Sciatis
see the usual form hereof particularly set down whereunto joyn the new Exposition of Law terms Lieutenant see Lieftenant Lieutenant of the Tower seemeth to have been an Officer under the Constable an H. 4. cap. 15. LO Locus partitus signifieth a division made between two Towns or Countries to make trial in whether the Land or place in question lieth Fleta lib. 4. cap. 15. nu 1. Locall localis signifieth in our Common law as much as tyed or annexed to a place certain Example the thing is local and annexed to the freehold Kitchin folio 180. And again in the same place An action of trespass for battery c. is transitory not local that is not needfull 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 And the gard of the person and of the lands differeth in this because the person being transitory the Lord may have his Ravishment de Gard before he be seised of him but not of the Land because it is local Perkins Grants 30. Lobbe is great kind of North sea fish an 31 Ed. 3. stat 3. ca. 2. Lodemanage is the hire of a Pslot for conducting of a ship from one place to another Loich fish as Lob Ling Cod an 31 Ed. 3. stat 3. cap. 2. Lodeworks is one of the works belonging to the stanneries in Cornwall for the which read M. Cambdens Britan. in his title of Cornwall pag. 119. See Stremework Lollards Lollardi were in account and reputation of those times Heretiques that abounded here in England in the daies of Edward the third and Henry the fifth an 2 H. 5. cap. 7. whereof Weekliefe was the chief as Stow saith in his Annals pa. 425. who by this report went bare footed and basely cloathed to wit in base russet garments down to the Heels they preached and especially against Monks and other religious men Of these read more in him and others that writ of those times The name Lindwood derià Lolio quia sicut lolium inficit segetes sic Lollardi multociens inficinnt fideles simplices inter quos conversantur in ca. finali de Haereticis verbo Lollardiae But Tritemius in his Chronicle deduceth the name from one Gualter Lolhard a German as the first Author of that Sect living about the year of our Redemption 1315. Lord Dominus by Master Cambdens opinion is a contract of Lafford which is the Danish word for dominus It is a word of honor with us and is used diversly Sometime being attributed to a man that is noble by birth or creation which sort are otherwise called Lords of the Parliament Sometime to those that be so called by the courtesie of England as all the Sons of a Duke or the eldest son of an Earl Sometime to men honorable by office as Lord Chief Justice c. And sometime to a mean man that hath fee and so consequently the homage of Tenents within his Manour for by his Tenents he is called Lord and by none other and in some places for distinction sake he is called Land-lord It is used nevertheless by the Writers of the Common law most usually in this signification and so is it divided into Lord above and Lord measn Lord Measn is he that is owner of a Mannour and by vertue thereof hath Tenants holding of him in fee and by copy of Court-roll and yet holdeth himself over a Superiour Lord who is called Lord above or Lord paramount Old nat br fol. 79. Although I think none simply to be accounted Lord paramount but the Prince because all other hold mediately or immediately of him and he of none In this signification I like wise read Very Lord and very Tenent eodem fo 42. and Brook titulo Heriot n. 1. where I think very Lord is he which is immediate Lord to his Tenent and him to be Very Tenent to that Lord of whom he immediately holdeth So that if there be Lord above Lord measn and Tenant the Lord above is not very Lord to the Tenent nor the tenent very tenent to the Lord above Lord in grosse Fitzh nat brev fol. 3. is he that is Lord having no manour as the King in respect of his Crown idem fol. 5. f. See him also fo 8. a b. where I find a Case wherin a private man is Lord in gross viz. a man make a gift in tayl of all the land he hath to hold of him and dieth his heir hath but a Seignory in gross Lorimersy an 1 Richard 2. cap. 12 is one of the Companies of London that maketh Bits or Briddles of Horses and such like the name seemeth to be taken from the Latin Lorum and is elsewhere written Lorinors Lotherwit aliâs Leyerwit is a liberty or privilege to take amends of him that defileth your Bond-woman without licence Rastals expositinn of words It is an amends for lying with a Bond-woman Saxon in his description of England cap. 11. Some think it should be rather written Legerwit for Leger is the Saxon word for a Bed or Logherwit of the old word Logher being of the same signification See Bloodwit and Lyerwit LU Lusernes see Furre Lushoborow is a base coyn used in the daies of King Edward the third coyned beyond Seas to the likeness of English mony and brought in to deceive the King and his subjects To avoid the which it was made Treason for any man wittingly to bring in any such anno 25 Edward the third stat 4. cap. secundo MA MAcegriefs aliâs Macegrefs be such as willingly buy and sell stollen flesh Briton cap. 29. fol. 71. b. Cromptons Justice of Peace fol. 193. a. Magna assisa eligenda is a Writ directed to the Sheriff to summon four lawfull Knights before the Justices of Assise there upon their Oaths to chuse twelve Knights of the vicenage c. to pass upon the great Assise between A. Plaintiff and B. Defendant c. Regist orignal fol. 8. a. Magna Charta called in English the great Charter is a Charter containing a number of Laws ordained the ninth year of Henry the third and confirmed by Edward the first The reason why it was tearmed Magna Charta was either for that it contained the sum of all the written laws of England or else that there was another Charter called the Charter of the Forest established with it which in quantity was the lesser of the two I read in Holinshed that K. John to appease his Barons yielded to Laws or Articles of Government much like to this great Charter but we now have no ancienter written law than this which was thought to be so beneficial to the Subject and a Law of so great equity in comparison of
Sacramentales à Sacramento id est juramento diceb antur ii qui quamvis rei de qua ambigebatur testes non fuissent tamen ex ejus cujus res agebatur animi sententia in eadem quae ille verba jurabant illius videlicet probitate innocentia confisi Nam tuum demum adhibebantur cum testes nulli extarent See the rest The formal words used by him that maketh his Law are commonly these Hear O ye Justices that I do not owe this sum of mony demanded neither all nor any part thereof in manner and form declared so help me God and the contents of this Book To make services or custom is nothing else but to perform them Old nat brev folio 14. To make Oath is to take Oath Maletent in the Statute called the confirmation of the liberties of c. anno 29 E. 1. cap. 7. is interpreted to be a toll of forty shillings for every sack of Wool Srow in his Annals calleth it a Maletot pag. 461. See also the Statute de Tallagio non concedendo an 35 ejusdem stat Malin see Marle Manbote signifieth a pecuniary compensation for killing of a man Lambert in his Exposition of Saxon words verbo Aestimatis Of which read Roger Hoveden also in parte poster suorum annal f. 344. a b. Mandamus is a writ that lyeth after the year and day whereas in the mean time the writ called Diem clausit extremum hath not been sent out to the Escheatour for the same purpose for the which it should formerly have been sent forth Fitzh nat brev fol. 253. B. See Diem clausit extremum Mandamus is also a charge to the Sheriff to take into the Kings hands all the lands and tenements of the Kings widow that against her oath formerly given marieth without the Kings consent Register fol. 295. b. See widow Mandatum is a commandment judicial of the King or his Justices to have any thing done for the dispatch of Justice where of you shall see diversity in the Table of the Register judicial verbo Mandatum Manor Manerium see meth to come of the French manoir i. domicilium habitatio M. Skene de verb. signif verb. Manerium saith it is called mane ium quasi manurium because it is laboured with handy work by the Lord himself It signifieth in our Common law a rule or government which a man hath over such as hold Land within his fee. Touching the original of these Manors it seemeth that in the beginning there was a certain compasse or circuit of ground granted by the King unto some man of worth as a Baron or such like for him and his Heirs to dwell upon and to exercise some Jurisdiction more or lesse within that compass as he thought good to grant Performing him such services and paying such yearly rent for the same as he by his grant required and that afterward this great man parcelled his Land to other meaner men injoining them again such services and rents as he thought good and by that means as he became Tenent to the King so the inferiours became Tenents unto him See Perkins Reservations 670. and Andrew Horns Book intituled the Mirrour of Justices l. 1. cap. du Roy Alfred See the definition of a Manor Fulb. fol. 18. And this course of benefiting or rewarding their Nobles for good service have our Kings borrowed from the Emperors of Rome or the Lombard Kings after they had setled themselves in Italy as may well appear by Antonius Contius in methodo feudorum c. 1. de origin libris Feudorum And I find that according to this our custom all lands holden in fee throughout France are divided into Fiefz and arrierifiefz where of the former are such as are imediatly granted by the K. the second such as the Kings feudataries do again grant to others Gregorti Syntagm lib. 6. ca. 5. nu 3. But the inconstancie of mans estate and the mutability of time hath brought to passe that those great men or their posterity have alienated these Mansions and lands so given them by their Prince and others that had none have by their wealth purchased many of them And again that many for capital offences have forfeited them to the King and that thereby they still remain in the Crown or are bestowed again upon others so that at these dayes many be in the hands of mean men such as by their skill in Law or Physick by Merchandize Grazing or such other good husbandry have gathered wealth and inabled themselves to purchase them of those that by descent received them from their ancestors in greater abundance than wit to keep them But whosoever possesseth these Maners the liberty belonging unto them is real and predial and therefore remaineth still though the owners be changed In these dayes a Maner rather signifieth the Jurisdiction and royaltie incorporeal than the land or site For a man may have a Maner in grosse as the law termeth it that is the right and interest of a Court Baron with the perquisites thereunto belonging and another or others have every foot of the land thereunto belonging Kitchin fol. 4. Broke hoc titulo per totum Bracton lib. 4. ca. 31. num 3. divideth manerium in capitale non capitale See Bracton lib. 5. tractat 5. ca. 28. nu pri See Fee The new ex● ositor of Law terms faith that Maner is a thing compounded of divers things as of a house land earable pasture meadow wood rent advonzen Court Baron and such like And this ought to be by long continuance of time to the contrary whereof mans memory cannot discern c. Mansio Mansio as Bracton defineth it lib. 5. cap. 28. nu pri is a dwelling consisting of one or more houses without any neighbour And yet he granteth forthwith that Mansio Mansioni pessit esse vicinata I find it most commonly used for the Lords chief dwelling house within his fee whether it have neighbours adjoyning or not otherwise called the capital mesuage Bracton lib. 2. ca. 26. or the chief Maner place Mansio amongst the antient Romans was a place appointed for the lodging of the Prince or Souldiers in their journey furnished with convenient entertainment by the neighbours adjoyning And in this sense we read primam mansionem for the first nights lodging and so in order It is probable that this word Mansion doth in some construction signifie so much land as Beda calleth Familiam in his Ecclesiastial History For Master Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verb. Hida terrae saith that that which he calleth familiam others ●ince call Manentem vel mansam Mansus and Mansum I read of in the Feudists which as Hotoman saith in verbis feudalibus est neque domus neque area neque hortus sed ager certi modi ac mensurae And again in Commentariis Feudorum lib. p. tit 4. vers de Manso Agri deserti et inculti certa mensura dabantur cultoribus quasi in
Remembrancers of the Exchequer Rememoratores be three Officers or Clerks one called the Kings Remembrancer anno 35 El. cap. 5. The other the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer upon whose charge it seemeth to lye that they put all Justices of that Court as the Lord Treasurer and the rest in remembrance of such things as are to be called on and dealt in for the Princes behoof The third is called the Remembrancer of the first-fruits Of these you may read something anno quinto Rich. 2. stat pri cap. 14. 15. to the effect above specified These anno 37 Ed. 3. cap. 4. be called Clerks of the Remembrance It seemeth that the name of this Officer is borrowed from the Civilians who have their Memorales qui sunt notarii Cancell●riae in regnò subjecti officio Quaestoris Lucas de penna C. lib. 10. tit 12. nu 7. The Kings Remembrancer entreth in his Office all recognisances taken before the Barons for any the Kings Debts for apparences or for observing of Orders He takes all bonds for any of the Kings debts or for appearance or for observing of Orders and maketh Proces upon them for the breach of them He writeth Proces against the Collectors of customs and subsidies and fifteenths for their accounts All informations upon penal Statutes are entred in his Office And all matters upon English-Bills in the Exchequer-chamber are remaining in his Office He maketh the Bills of compositions upon penal Laws taketh the stallments of debts maketh a Record of a Certificate delivered unto him by the Clerk of the Star-chamber of the fines there set and sendeth them to the Pipe He hath delivered unto his Office all manner of indentures fines and other evidences whatsoever that concern the assuring of any lands to the Crown He yearly in crastino animarum readeth in open Court the Statute for the election of Shyreeves and giveth those that chuse them their oath he readeth in open Court the Oath of all the Officers of the Court when they are admitted The Treasurers remembrancer maketh process against all Shyreeves Escheators Receivers and Bayliffs for their accompts He maketh process of Fierifacias and Extent for any debts due to the King either in the Pipe or with the Auditors He maketh process for all such Revenew as is due to the King by reason of his Tenures He maketh Record whereby it appeareth whether Shyreeves and other accountants pay their profers due at Easter and Michaelmas He maketh another Record whereby it appeareth whether Shyreeves and other Accountants keep their daies of prefixion All Extreats of Fines Issues and Amerciaments set in any Courts of Westminster or at the Assises or Sessions are certified into his Office and are by him delivered to the Clerk of Extreats to write Proces upon them He hath also brought into his Office all the accompts of Customers Controllers and other accomptants to make thereof an entry of Record The Remembrancer of the first fruits taketh all compositions for first Fruits and Tenths and maketh Process against such as pay not the same Remitter commeth of the French remettre i. restituere reponere and signifieth in our Common law a restitution of one that hath two Titles to Lands or Tenements and is seised of them by his latter Title unto his Title that is more antient in case where the latter is defective Fitzherber● natura brev fol. 149. F. Dyer folio 68. num 22. This in what Case it may be granted to any man see in Brook titulo Remitter and the Terms of Law The Doctor and Student of this matter hath these words If land descend to him that hath right to that Land before he shall be remitted to his better Title if he will Ca. nono fo 19. b. See the new Book of Entries verbo Remitter Render commeth of the French Rendre i. reddere retribuere restituere and signifieth in our Common law the self-same thing For example this word is used in levying of a fine For a Fine is either single by which nothing is granted or rendred back again by the Cognizee to the Cognizour or double which containeth a grant or render back again of some Rent common or other thing out of the Land it self to the Cognisor c. West parte 2. Symbol titulo Fines Sect. 21 30. F. Also there be certain things in a Manor that lie in Prender that is which may be taken by the Lord or his Officer when they chance without any offer made by the Tenant as the Ward of the body of the Heir and of the Land Escheats c. and certain that lye in Render that is must be delivered or answered by the Tenant as Rents Reliefs Heriots and other services Idem codem Sect. 126. C. Also some service consisteth in seisance some in Render Perkins Reservations 696. Rent reditus commeth of the French Rent i. vectigal pensitatio annua and signifieth with us a sum of mony or other consideration issuing yearly out of Land or Tenements Plowden casu Browning fol. 132. b. fol. 138. a. 141. b. There be three sorts of Rents observed by our Common Lawyers that is Rent service Rent charge and Rent seck Rent service is where a man holdeth his Land of his Lord by Fealty and certain Rent or by Fealty Service and certain Rents Littleton lib. 2. cap. 12. fol. 44. or that which a man making a Lease to another for term of years reserveth yearly to be paid him for the same Terms of Law verbo Rents who giveth this Reason thereof because it is in his liberty whether he will distrein or bring an action of Debt A Rent charge is that which a man making over an estate of his Land or Tenements to another by deed indented either in fee or fee tail or lease for term of life reserveth to himself by the said Indenture a sum of Mony yearly to be paid unto him with clause of distress or to him and his heirs See Littleton ubi supra A Rent seck otherwise a dry Rent is that which a man making over an Estate of his Land or Tenement by Deed indented reserveth yearly to be paid him without clause of Distresse mentioned in the Indenture Littleton ubi supra And Terms of the Law verbo Rents See the new Expositor of Law Terms See Plowden casu Browning fol. 132. b. See the differences between a Rent and an Annuity Doctor and Student cap. 30. Dialog primo Reparatione facienda is a writ which lyeth in divers cases whereof one is where three be Tenants in Common or Joynt tenents or pro indiviso of a Mill or house which is fallen into decay and the one being willing to repair it the other two will not In this Case the party willing shall have this writ against the other two Fitz. nat br fol. 127. where read at large the form and many uses of this writ as also in the Regi orig fol. 153. b. Repeal commeth of the French Rappel i. Revocatio and
Officers the staples had belonging to them you may see anno 27 Edw. 3. stat 2. cap. 21. Star-Chamber Camera stellata is a Chamber at Westminster so called as Sir Thomas Smith conjectureth lib. 2. cap. 4. either because it is full of windows or cause at the first all the roof thereof was decked with Images of guilded Stars And the latter reason I take to be the truer because anno 25 Henry 8. capit prim It is written the Sterred Chamber In this Chamber every week twice during the term and the very next day after Term is there a Court held by the Lord Chancellor or Keeper and other honourable personages of the Realm This Court seemeth to have taken beginning from the Statute anno 3. Hen 7. ca. or Whereby it is ordained that the Lord Chancellor and Treasurer of England for the time being and the Keeper of the Kings Privy Seal or two of them calling to them a Bishop and a temporal Lord the Kings most Honourable Councel and the two chief lustices of the Kings Bench and Common place for the time being or other two lustices in their absence should have power to call before them and punish such misdoers as there be mentioned The saults that they punish be Routs Riots Forgerits Maintenances Embraceries Perjuries and such other Mislemeanours as are not sufficiently provided for by the Common law It appeareth both by Sir Thomas Smith li. 2. de Repub. Anglor ca. 4. and by experience also that at this day the whole number of the Princes most honourable Privy Councel and such other Barons spiritual or temporal as be called thither by the Prince have place in this Court with those above named Of this Court thus speaketh Master Gwin in the Preface to his readings It appeareth in our books of the Terms of King Edward 4. And of the Report of Cases hapning under the usurpation of Richard the third that sometime the King and his Councel and sometime the Lord Chancellor and other great personages did use to sit judicially in the place then and yet called the Star-Chamber But for as much as belike that Assembly was not ordinary therefore the next Kings Henry the seventh and his Son Henry 8. took order by two several laws viz. 3 Hen. 7. cap. pri 21 H. 8. ca. 2. That the Chancellor assisted with others there named should have power to hear complaints against Retainours Embraceours Misdemeanours of Officers and such other offences which through the power and countenance of such as do commit them do lift up the head above other faults and for the which inferiour Iudges are not so meet to give correction And because that place was before dedicated to the like service it hath been ever since accordingly used Touching the Officers belonging to this Court see Camden pag. 112. et 113. Statute statutum hath divers significations in our Common law First it signifieth a Decree or Act of Parliament made by the Prince and three Estates which is the body of the whole Realm And though it borrow the name from that kind of Decree which those Cities that were under the Roman Empire made for the particular Government of themselves over and above the universal or common law of the Empire yet in nature it commeth nearest to that which the Romans called Legem for that as that was made by the whole People Noble and Ignoble so this is ordained by those that represent the whole number both of Prince and subjects one and other through the whole Kingdome The difference neverthelesse was this that Lex was offered to the consideration of the People by the Magistrate of the Senate or Consull but the Bills or suggestions whence our Statutes spring are offered by any of either house and so either passed or rejected In this signification a Statute is either general or special Coke lib. 4. Hollands case fol. 76. a. Statute in another signification is a short speech taken for a bond as statute Merchant or statute staple anno 5 H. 4. cap. 12. The reason of which name is because these Bonds are made according to the form statutes expresly and particularly provided for the same which direct both before what Persons and in what manner they ought to be made west parte prim symbol lib. 2. Sect. 151. where he defineth a statute Merchant thus A Statute Merchant is a bond acknowledged before one of the Clarks of the statutes Merchant and Maior or chief Warden of the City of London or two Merchants of the said City for that purpose assigned or before the Maior chief Warden or Master of other Cities or good Towns or other sufficient men for that purpose appointed sealed with the seal of the Debtor and of the King which is of two pieces the grater is kept by the said Maior chief Warden c. and the lesser peece thereof by the said Clarks The form of which bond you may see in Fleta lib. 2. cap. 64. § 2. to be such Noverint universi me N. de tali commitatu teneri N. in 10 Marcis solvendis cidem ad festum Pent. Anno Regni Regis c. et nisi fecers concedo quod currant super me et Haeredes meos districtio et poena provis in statuta Domini Regis edito apud Westm Datum London tali die anno supra dicto The fee for the same Seal is for statutes knowledged in Fairs for every pound an half-penny and out of Fairs a fording The execution upon statute Merchant is first to take the body of the Debtor if he be lay and can be found if otherwise then upon his Lands and goods The bond is founded upon the Statute anno 13 Ed. prim stat 4. Of this also as of the Statute staple see the new book of Entries verbo statute Merchant and read in Fleta ubi supra more touching this matter worth the reading Statute staple to use the very words of Master West is either properly so called or improperly A Statute staple properly so called is a Bond of Record knowledged before the Maior of the Staple in the presence of one of the two Constables of the same staple for which seal the fee is of every pound if the sum exceed not 100 pound and half peny and if it excced an 100 pound of every pound a farthing And by vertue of such Statute staple the Creditor may forthwith have execution of the body lands and goods of the Debtor and this is founded upon the Statute anno 27 Ed. 3. cap. 9. A Statute staple improper is a bond of Record founded upon the Statute anno 23 H. 8. cap. 6. of the nature of a proper Statute staple as touching the force execution thereof and knowledged before one of the chief Justices and in their absence before the Maior of the Staple and Recorder of London The forms of all these bonds or statutes see in West parte pri symb lib. 2. sect 152 153 154 155. Statutes is also
that attend in their course and have their dyet at the Secretaries table More largely you may read of their office in the statute made anno 27 H. 8. cap. 11. Clerk of the privy seal clericus privati sigilli is an officer whereof there be four of number that attendeth the Lord Keeper of the privy Seal or if there be none such upon the principal Secretary writing and making out all things that be sent by warrant from the Signer to the privy Seal and are to be passed to the great Seal as also to make out as they are tearmed privy Seals upon any special occasion of his Majesties affairs as for loan of money and such like Of this officer and his function you may read the statute an 27 H. 8. cap. 11. He that is in these dayes called the Lord Keeper of the privy Seal seemeth in antient time to have been called Clerk of the privy Seal and to have been reckoned in the number of the great officers of the realm Read the statute anno 12 R. 2. cap. 11. Clerk of the Juries or Jurata writs clericus Juratorum is an Officer belonging to the Court of the Common plees which maketh out the Writs called Habeas corpora and Distringas for appearance of the Jury either in Court or at the Assises after that the Jury or Panel is returned upon the Venire facias He entreth also into the Rolles the awarding of these Writs and maketh all the continuance from the going out of the Habeas corpora until the verdict be given Clerck of the Pipe clericus Pipae is an Officer in the Kings Exchequer who having all accounts and debts due to the King delivered and drawn out of the Remembrancers offices chargeth them down into the great Roll who also writeth summons to the Sheriff to levy the said debts upon the goods and cattels of the Debtours and if they have no goods then doth he draw them down to the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer to write extreats against their Lands The antient renew of the Crown remaineth in charge before him and he seeth the same answered by the Fermers and Sheriffs to the King He maketh a charge to all Sheriffs of their summons of the Pipe and Green wax and seeth it answered upon their accounts He hath the drawing and ingrossing of all leases of the Kings land Clerk of the Hamper or Hanaper clericus Hanaperii is an Officer in Chauncery anno 2 Edw. 4. cap. 1. otherwise called Warden of the Hamper in the same statute whose function is to receive all the money due to the Kings Majesty for the seals of Charters Patents Commissions and Writs as also fees due to the Officers for enrolling and examining the same with such like He is tied to attendance on the Lord Chauncellour or Lord Keeper daily in the Term time and at all times of sealing having with him leather bagges wherein are put all Charters c. after they be sealed by the Lord Chancellour and those bagges being sealed up with the Lord Chauncellours private Seal are to be delivered to the Controller of the Hamper who upon receipt of them doth as you shal read in his office This Hanaper representeth a shadow of that which the Romans tearmed Fiscum that contained the Emperors treasure Clerk of the Plees clericus placitorum is an Officer in the Exchequer in whose office all the Officers of the Court upon especial privilege belonging unto them ought to sue or to be sued upon any action Clerk of the Treasury clericus the saurariae is an Officer belonging to the Common plees who hath the charge of keeping the records of the Court and maketh out all the records of Nisi prius hath the fees due for all searches and hath the certifying of all records into the Kings Bench when a Writ of Error is brought and maketh out all Writs of Supersedeas de non molestando which are granted for the Defendants while the Writ of Error hangeth Also he maketh all Exemplifications of Records being in the Treasurie He is taken to be the servant of the chief Justice and removeable at his pleasure whereas all other Officers are for tearm of life There is also a Secundary or Under-Clerk of the Treasurie for assistance which hath some allowances There is likewise an Underkeeper who alway keepeth one key of the Treasury door and the chief Clerk of the Secundary an other so the one cannot come in without the other Clerk of Essoines clericus essoniorum is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common plees who onely keepeth the Essoins rolle and hath for entring every essoin six pence and for every exception to barr the essoin in case where the party hath omitted his time six pence He hath also the providing of parchment and cutting it out into rolls and marking the numbers upon them and the delivery out of all the rolles to every Officer and the receiving of them again when they be written and the binding and making up of the whole bundles of every term and this he doth as servant to the chief Justice For the chief Justice is at charge for all the parchment of all the rolles Clerk of the outlawries clericus utlagariarum is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common plees being onely the servant or Deputy to the Kings Atturny general for making out the writs of capias utlaga●um after outlawry And the Kings Atturnies name is to every one of those writs And whereas seven pence is payd for the Seal of every other writ betwixt party and party there is but a penny payd for the Seal of this writ because it goeth out at the Kings sute Clerk of the sewers clericus suerarum is an officer appertaining to the Commissioners of sewers writing all things that they do by vertue of their commission for the which see Sewers and see the statute of anno 13 Elizab. cap. 9. Clerk controller of the Kings house whereof there be two is an officer in Court that hath place and seat in the Counting-house and authority to allow or disallow the charges and demands of persuivants or messengers of the Green cloath purveyours or other like He hath also the oversight and controlling of al defaults defects and miscarriages of any the inferiour officers and to sit in the Counting-house with the superior officers viz. the Lord Steward Treasurer Controller and Cofferer either for correcting or bettering things out of order and also for bringing in Countrey provision requisite for the Kings houshold and the censure for failing of carriages and carts warned and charged for that purpose This Officer you have mentioned an 33 H. 8. cap. 12. Clerk of the Nihils clericus Nihilorum is an officer in the Exchequer that maketh a roll of all such summes as are nihiled by the Sheriffs upon their estreats of green wax and delivereth the same into the lord Treasurers Remembrancer his office to have execution done upon it for the King Clerk of the check