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A58990 The second part of Reports of cases taken and adjudged in the court of Chancery, from the 20th year of King Charles II. to the first year of Their present Majesties, King William and Queen Mary Being special cases, and most of them decreed with the assistance of the judges, and all of them referring to the register books, wherein are setled several points of equity, law and practice. To which is added, the late great case between the Dutchess of Albemarle and the Earle of Bathe.; Reports of cases taken and adjudged in the court of Chancery, from the 20th year of King Charles II. to the first year of Their present Majesties, King William and Queen Mary. Part 2. England and Wales. Court of Chancery. 1694 (1694) Wing S2297; ESTC R217071 188,405 430

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said debt nevertheless that debt ought to be made good out of the said Pincheons Estate whatever and decreed accordingly Ramsden contra Farmer al' 28 Car. 2. fo 516. THat Simon Carill was seised in Fee of Lands Lands conveyed to Trustees for payment of Debt conveyed the same to Trustees to sell and dispose thereof for performance of his Will who by his Will devised the said premisses to the said Trustees and their Heirs to pay his debts and made Elizabeth his Wife his Executrix who afterwards married Mr. Barnes and the said Trustees with the consent of the said Elizabeth conveyed the premisses to Sir John Carill and others in Trust in the said Will Trust assigned and the said Barnes after died and the said Elizabeth married one Machell and by Deed 22 Car. 1. the said Trustees Carill c. with Elizabeth conveyed the said premisses to the said Machell and his Heirs and in 1646. the said Machell with the like consent conveyed to Duncombe Heath and Baldwin and their Heirs in Trust that they after the said Simons Debts and Legacies paid should convey to the said Elizabeth and her Heirs or to such as she by Deed or Will appoint That the said Elizabeth raised Monies and paid the said Simons Debts and Legacies and performed the said Will and after the said Machell's death Elizabeth by Will 1650. devised all the said premisses to her Son John Carill for life and after his decease to the first Son of the Body of the said Son lawfully begotten or to be begotten and to his Heirs And if her said Son should not have a Son but one or more Daughters then she devised the premisses to the first Daughter of the Body of her said Son and to her Heirs That the said John Carill in the said Elizabeths life time had a Son whose Name was John who died in her life time and soon after Elizabeth died and her said Son John Carill survived her and never had any other Son after Elizabeth Machells death and the said John Carill died and left the Plaintiff Lettice his eldest Daughter and the Defendant Elizabeth his second Daughter and the Defendant Margaret his third Daughter and the said Lettice the Plaintiff claims the premisses as eldest Daughter But the Defendants Elizabeth and Margaret insist They ought to have their equal parts with the Plaintiff Lettice in the premisses and that the said Simon had not power to make such Settlement or Will but say he was only seised for life of the premisses and that Elizabeth Machell joyned in the Settlement at her Son John Carill's Marriage and if there were such a Will of the said Elizabeth Machell yet the said John Carill had a Son named John Carill Construction of the words of a Will who was Born after the death of the said Elizabeth Machell and lived some time after her death without Issue and by the words of the Will the Trust is determined This Court not being satisfied as to the Birth and death of the said John Carill directed a Tryal on this Issue whether John Carill Grandson of Elizabeth Machell dyed during the Life of the said Elizabeth Machell or after her decease That upon a Tryal on the said Issue it was found that the said John Carill the Grandson outlived the said Elizabeth Trusts determined and therefore the Defendants insist that the Trust limited by the Will of the said Elizabeth Machell is fully determined This Court declared they saw no cause to relieve the Plaintiffs Bill in this matter and so dismist the Bill accordingly Salter contra Shadling 28 Car. 2. fo 66. THat Bryan late Lord Bishop of Winton being possest of the Mannor of Pottern by Lease from the Bishop of Salisbury Will. made to Sir Richard Chaworth in Trust for the said late Bishop of Winton by his Will Devised 200 l. per Annum should be paid out of the profits of the said Lease to William Salter the Plaintiffs late Husband his Nephew during his Life and that the Estate in Law in the said Lease should continue in Sir Richard Chaworth during his Life and the Surplusage of the profits he Devised to the said William Salter to whom he also Devised the Lease after Sir Richard Chaworths death and made Sir Richard Chaworth and others Executors who consented to the said Devise and about 16 Car. 2. William Salter made his Will and as to his Interest in Pottern he devised the same to Trustees that they should permit the Plaintiff to receive the profits during her Widdow-hood on Condition she renewed the Term to 21 years Construction upon the words of a Will once in seven years and if the Plaintiff should Marry or dye then he declared the profits of the Premises to go to his two Daughters Ann and Susanna and the Survivor of them and their Heirs and after their Deaths without Heirs of their Bodies then to his right Heirs and Devised all the rest of his Personal Estate should be to his Executors and Trustees for the benefit of his said Daughters and made the Plaintiff and the said Trustees Executors That the said two Daughters are since dead intestate and the Plaintiff being their Administrator is Intituled to the whole Term and Trust of the said Lease of Pottern as Administrator to her said two Daughters according to the said William Salters Will and the true Exposition thereof the same being devised in manner as aforesaid The defendant Charles Cleaver the Infant being Eldest Son and Heir of Dame Briana Cleaver deceased who was one of the Sisters and Coheirs of the said William Salter and the Defendant Stradlings Wife being his Sister and Coheir insist that according to William Salters Will and for that no present interest in Pottern was Devised to his two Daughters but only Contingent possibility of Interest in case the said Plaintiff should Marry or dye neither of which having since hapned and the said Daughters being since dead the Interest and Term in Pottern ought to come to them as Heirs to the said William Salter and not to the Plaintiff as Administratrix to her two Daughters the rather for that they consented to a decree for Sale of Lands which would have come to them as Heirs at Law to preserve Pottern from Sale for the payment of William Salters debts This Court declared that according to William Salters Will and the disposition therein made of Pottern the whole Interest of the said Term and Trust therein was well passed in the Plaintiff and that the Heirs of Salter can have nothing to do therewith nor have any Interest therein and Decreed the Plaintiff to enjoy the same against the Defendants Still contra Lynn al' 28 Car. 2. fo 195. Bill is to be relieved for 123. Acres of Land THat Philip Jacobson Deceased Settlement being possest of a Capital Messuage or Tenement and Lands by Lease from the Crown Dat. 13 Car. 1. for the Term of 60
Dame Ann Daughter of Sir Robert Cann Articles of Agreement were executed and in pursuance of the Articles a Settlement of part of the premisses was made upon the Defendant Dame Ann for her Joynture and in the said Settlement there was a Covenant on the said Sir Robert Gounings part to lay out as much Mony in the Purchase of Lands as would amount to 110 l. per Annum to be setled on the said Dame Ann for her life remainder to the Heirs of the said Sir Robert Gouning which was intended to be an Inlargement of his Real Estate and to be for the benefit of his Heir but the said Defendant Dame Ann refuseth since the death of Sir Robert Gouning her Husband to whom she is Administratrix to execute the said Covenant in Specie by Purchasing of Lands of 110 l. per Annum to be setled according to the Covenant as aforesaid and which ought to come to the Plaintiffs as Coheirs of the said Sir Robert Gouning The Defendants insisting Covenant to settle Lands of 120 l per Annum to the said Remainder to the Heirs of the Husband Wife Administratrix refuseth the Bill was dismist that the said Covenant was made in favour of the said Dame Ann only and not for the Plaintiffs the Heirs benefit and the Defendant also as Administratrix claims Title to the Mortgaged Lands at Siston insisting that the same are a Chattel Lease for a long Term of years which by Assignment came to Mary Gouning Sister of the said Sir Robert and that she afterwards procured a Release of the Equity of Redemption for 950 l. including therein the Mony due upon the said Mortgage and that she purchased the Reversion in Fee thereof in the name of her Brother Sir Robert which she did on purpose to keep the Lease distinct and separate and that it ought not to go to the Heir but to the Administratrix But the Plaintiff insists That the said Lease ought to attend the Inheritance which Mary Gouning to whom the Plaintiffs are Heirs bought in for that purpose in the name of the said Sir Robert her Brother and that the same ought to come to the Plaintiffs as other the Real Estate of the said Sir Roberts This Court declared Lease to attend the Inheritance as to the Lands at Siston it was an Inheritance and ought to go to the Heirs at Law and decreed accordingly And as touching the Covenant for Purchasing Lands of 110 l. per Annum this Court dismist the Bill Eyre contra Hastings 35 Car. 2. fo 590. THat Henry Eyre deceased Relief upon a Mortgage the Plaintiffs Brother being seized of Lands 22 Car. 2. Mortgaged the same for 200 l. to Giles Eyre the Plaintiffs Son and the said Henry Eyre Covenanted to pay the Mortgage money and gave Bond for performance of the Covenants and the said Henry dying without Issue and Intestate the premisses descended on the Plaintiff as Brother and Heir and Administration was granted to Dorothy his Relict who paid the Mortgage money and Interest then due to the said Giles Eyre the Mortgagee in relief of the Plaintiff who ought to enjoy the premisses discharged of the Mortgage money and the said Dorothy made her Will and the Defendant Ralph Hastings Senior her Executor hath got the Mortgaged premisses Assigned to him and insists He ought to hold the same till the 200 l. and interest be paid him by the Plaintiff That the Defendant Ralph Junior an Infant claims the premisses by the Will of the said Dorothy who devised the same to him To be relieved against them and the Plaintiff to have the Inheritance of the premisses discharged from the payment of the Mortgage money and Interest and the Bond delivered up is the Bill The Defendant Hastings Senior insists Whether Mortgage Money be paid by the Administrator in relief of the Heir That the said Dorothy paid the said Mortgage money and interest but not in relief of or for the benefit of the Plaintiff and thereupon the premisses were Assigned to the said Hastings Senior in Trust for the said Dorothy who had an equitable Right to all her Husbands Estate and Dorothy devised the said premisses to Hastings Junior her Godson The Master of the Rolls decreed the Plaintiff to enjoy the premisses against the Defendant This Cause was Re-heard by the Lord Keeper and this Defendant the Infant insists That he is much prejudiced by the Decree for that thereby he is stript of the Estate in question devised to him by the said Dorothy's Will without payment of the money and interest there being no Covenant in the said Mortgage Deed for payment of the money and interest or any Bond but the Plaintiffs Counsel insisted That Dorothy paid the Mortgage money and interest for the Plaintiffs benefit The Defendant insisted that Dorothy declared the Mortgage money and interest was paid in relief of the Heir at Law This Court declared If there be no Covenant in the Mortgage Deed for payment of the Money the Administrator is not obliged to discharge it That in Case there was not any Covenant in the Deed for payment of the Mortgage money and Interest the said Dorothy the Administratrix was not obliged to discharge the same Massingberd contra Ash 35 Car. 2. fo 466. THis Court ordered a Case to be Stated in this Cause Executory Devises upon the Deed only by way of Executory Devise to bring the question arising into Determination as if in a Will and in such method as if the Trust and Limitations in the deed had been Limited and Created by the Will upon which Case the Judges of the Common Pleas were to Certifie their Opinions Whether the Remainder of a Residuary Estate of the two Leases or Terms in question limited to the Plaintiff were a good Devise or Limitation or not and the said Judges were also to be attended with another Case made upon both Deed and Will and they are to Certifie what the Law is in Case of Executory Devise as also what is fit to be Decreed in Equity The Case on the Deed only by way of Executory Devise is viz. Two several Terms one for 500 and the other for 99 years by Will dated the 1st of November 1679. and devised in these words viz. That Sir Henry Massingberd and his Assigns shall take the Rents Issues and Profits for and during the Term of his life And that after his Decease Elizabeth his Wife should receive the Rents Issues and Profits during her life And after the Decease of the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth the Eldest Son of the said Sir Henry begotten upon the Body of the said Elizabeth shall take the Profits of the said Lands till Age and then to have the whole Term to him his Executors and Administrators And if such Eldest Son happen to dye before he comes of Age then the second Son of their two Bodies shall take the profits of the said premisses till he come of Age
of his Real Estate on Trustees and thereby made a provision for the Maintenance of William the younger during his Minority and therefore they opposed the Plaintiff Frances getting Administration of William the Elder The said Plaintiff Frances Whitmore insisted That by the Will of William the Elder there was no joynt devise made to the said William the Son and the Issue Male and Female of the Sisters of William the Father but a several devise to William the Son with Remainder to the Sisters Issue and that the said William the Son having an Interest vested in him by the Will of his Father and being 18 years Old when he died and he having then a power to have proved his Fathers Will the Earls Executorship during his Minority being determined might have spent or given away the said Estate in his life-time he might surely give away the same by his Will which he having done to the Plaintiff Frances she is thereby well Intituled to the same and that the remainder over to Issue Male and Female of the Sisters the Estate being purely personal is absolutely void This Court hearing several Presidents quoted Devisee Infant lived to 18 years and makes his Will and Executors and dies the Executor shall have the Legacy for that an Interest was vested in the Infant declared That by the Will of the Father there was an Interest vested in William the Son and the remainder over to the Issue Male and Female of the Sisters of William the Elder was void and that William the Son living to 18 years and making his Will as aforesaid and the Plaintiff Frances his Executrix she is thereby well intituled to the surplus of the said personal Estate and decreed the same accordingly Whitlock contra Marriot 1 Jac. 2. fo 700. THis Case being upon a Scandalous Answer Defendant ordered to pay the Plaintiff 100 I for putting in a Scandalous Answer His Lordship declared the said Answer to be very Scandalous and Impertinent and that the expressions taken by the Defendant to the Masters Report were not only more scandalous but also Malicious and that it appearing that Ryley the Defendants Solicitor had put Mr. Lynn a Councellors Hand to the Exceptions without his Knowledge This Court Ordered the said Ryley to be taken into Custody of the Messenger and declared the Answer and Exceptions were not pertinent to the Cause but meerly to defame the Plaintiff His Lordship Ordered the Defendant Marriot to pay to the Plaintiff 100 l. for his Reparation and Costs for the abuse and scandal aforesaid and the said Ryley to pay 20 l. and to stand committed to the Prison of the Fleet till payment thereof be made Ash contra Rogle and the Dean and Chapter of St. Pauls 1 Jac. 2. fo 154. THis Case is upon a Demurrer Bill to enforce the Lord of a Mannour to receive a Petition in nature of a Writ of false Judgment to Reverse a common Recovery demurred to and the demurrer allowed the Plaintiffs Bill is to inforce the Defendant the Lord of the Mannour of Barnes in Surrey to receive the Plaintiffs Petition or Bill in the Nature of a Writ of false Judgment to Reverse a Common Recovery suffered of some Copyhold Lands in the Mannour by Susan R●gle Widow which the Defendant R●gle holds under the said Recovery the Bill setting forth that Katherine Ferrers by the Will of her Husband or by some other good Conveyance was seized in Fee of Free and Copyhold Lands in Barnes formerly her said Husbands in Trust to Convey 200 l. a year thereof upon William Ferrers her Eldest Son and the said Susan his then Wife and Heirs Males of the Body of William Remainder in Tail to Thomas Ferrers the Plaintiffs Father second Son of Katherine and the Heirs of his Body Edward being obliged by Articles upon Susans Marriage with his Son William to settle Lands of that value on Susan for her Joynture That Katherine on that Trust in 1642. surrendred the premisses to the value of 100 l. per Annum to the use of the said William and Susan and the Heirs of their two Bodies begotten remainder to the Right Heirs of William which was a Breach of the Trust in Katherine in limiting an Estate Tail to Susan when it should have been but an Estate for life That William died before the Admittance leaving Issue only his Son William and in 1652. Susan surrendred to one Mitchell against whom the Common Recovery in question was then obtained wherein one Walter was Demandant the said Mitchell Tenant and Susan Vouchee to the use of her self the said Susan for life the Remainder to William Ferrers and the Heirs of his Body the Remainder to the Right Heirs of the Survivor of them the said Susan and William her Son That William the Son died soon after and Susan died in 1684. and the Plaintiffs Father Thomas being dead without Issue Male in case the Common Recovery had not been suffered the premisses would have come to the Plaintiff being the youngest Daughter to her Father as Couzen and Heir both of William Ferrers the Father and William the Son the premisses being Burrough-English and so the Plaintiff was well Intituled to prosecute the Lord of the Mannour in the Nature of a Writ of False Judgment to Reverse the said Recovery wherein there are manifest Errors and Defaults but the said Lord refuses to receive the said Petition and combine with the Defendant Rogle who is Son and Heir of the said Susan by a second Husband who pretends that his Mother Susan surviving her Son William Ferrers the premisses are discended to him by virtue of the use of the said Recovery limited to the Right Heirs of the Survivor of Susan and her Son William so the Plaintiffs Bill is to examine the defects of the said Recovery The Defendants demur for that the Relief sought by the Bill is of a strange and unpresidented Nature being to avoid and reverse a Common Recovery had in the said Mannour 30 years ago and that upon a bare Suggestion generally that the Recovery is erroneous without instancing wherein which may be said in any case The Master of the Rolls declared That as that part of the Bill which seeks to impeach or reverse the said Recovery for any errours or defects therein or compel the said Lord to receive any Petition for reversal thereof or any ways to impeach the same his Honour declared That this Court being the proper Court to supply the defects in Common Assurances and rather to support than to assist the avoiding or defeating of them and there being no presidents of such a Bill as this is he thought not fit to admit of this nor to introduce so dangerous a president whereby a multitude of Settlements and Estates depending on Common Recoveries suffered in Copyhold Courts for valuable Considerations would be avoided and defeated through the negligence or unskilfulness of Clerks and therefore conceived the said Common Recovery ought
the Grandfather either ready Mony or otherwise to be limited by any act thereafter to be executed in his life time or by his last Will to the Sum of 1500 l. apiece together with 20 l. per annum until the said 1500 l. apiece should be paid unto them the same to be in satisfaction of all Moneys that they might claim by force of the said Indenture Tripartite with Proviso That if the said William the Grandfather should by Will or otherwise appoint them 1500 l. apiece or 1500 l. to the survivor of them for their Portions with such yearly Maintenance as aforesaid so as the same should be well and truly paid unto them accordingly Or if before such portions should be paid the said William Every their Brother should die without Issue Male whereby the said premisses should be charged for raising of Portions and Maintenance aforesaid that then the Trustees should not levy the Portions by that Indenture limited other than what should be paid in the life time of William Every their Brother And it is thereby declared that in case the said Susanna or Martha or either of them should die before their Portions in and by the said last Indenture to them limited should become due and payable to them that then the said portion and portions of them or either of them so dying should not go or be to the survivor of them or to any the Executors Administrators or Assigns of them or either of them but should go to whom the said William the Grandfather by Writing or Will should appoint and for want thereof to his Executors or Administrators And it is further declared That the said Susan and Martha shall not have any benefit in case that they or any other for them should take any advantage or benefit by means of the said Indenture Tripartite or any Proviso therein contained And then the 9th of March 1651 William the Grandfather makes his Will therein reciting that he had by several Deeds all dated Feb. 21. Car. 1. granted to Knight Cade Webber and Ford certain Lands in the County of Dorset for terms of years determinable upon the death of certain persons therein mentioned upon trust and for the use and benefit of such person or persons to whom he should by his last Will give limit or appoint the same And by his Will gave limited and appointed all the said Estates and Terms so by him granted to the said Knight Cade Webber and Ford to the Defendants Gold and Doble in Trust that the said Gold and Doble or the survivor of them or the Executors or Administrators of the survivor of them should dispose of all the Rents and Profits of the said Lands or should otherwise sell assign and convey the said Estates and Terms as to them should seem most convenient towards the raising of 1500 l. apiece to the said Susan and Martha And did thereby give and appoint to each of the said Susan and Martha 900 l. to be paid unto them severally out of his personal Estate whereof he should die possessed accounting therein all such Moneys which he had or should lend upon the Specialties taken in the Names of Gold and Doble towards the further raisings of their said Portions unto 1500 l. apiece having as by his Will is expressed by his Deed dated the last day of December then last past mad provision for advancing their said Portions to the Value out of his Lands in Com' Somerset which said Portions his last Will and meaning was should be paid unto them the said Susan and Martha severally at their respective Ages of 21 years or sooner if they should be respectively Married with the Consent of the said Gold and Doble or the Survivor of them with a Proviso That if William Every his Grandson should happen to die without Issue Male of his Body lawfully begotten before the said respective Portions should become payable to the said Susan and Martha according to the time before limited whereby the said Susan and Martha should be Intituled to 1500 l. apiece by virtue of the said Indenture Tripartite made upon his deceased Son's Marriage then the said Legacies or appointments of Portions unto Susan and Martha thereby made should be void and of his Will made Gold and Doble Executors And the Plaintiff as Administratrix of her said two Daughters Susan and Martha exhibited her Bill against Gold and Doble Executors of William the Grandfather and Webber the surviving Trustee in the Deed of the Lands in Somerset and against John Every the Heir in Tail of William the Grandfather and seeks to be Relieved upon the Deeds and Will before-mentioned for the 1500 l. apiece given to Susan and Martha her Daughters The Defendants say That William the Grandfather died in the life time of William the Grandson and that the personal Estate of William the Grandfather came to 4000 l. and that William Every the Grandson was Buried 23 Nov. 1660 and was about 20 years old when he was Buried and Susan the Plaintiffs Daughter was Buried 25 July 1655 and was about 18 years old when she was Buried and Martha the Plaintiffs Daughter was Buried 4 July 1660 and was about 20 years old when she was Buried and it appears there was sufficient Personal Estate to satisfie the several Portions demanded Which Case the Master of the Rolls having considered and upon the Hearing before him Declared That he was satisfied the 1500 l. apiece by the Deed and Will aforesaid for Portions to Susan and Martha Daughters of the Plaintiff was a Debt or Duty well fixed in them by the said Deeds and Will and by their Deaths did accrue and belong to the Plaintiff their Mother as Administratrix to them did Decree the same should be paid accordingly Which Opinion and Decree the Defendants appealed to the Lord Keeper who being assisted with Judges and upon reading the Deeds and Will aforesaid were all clear of Opinion That the Indenture Tripartite A Prior Deed of Settlement barred by a subsequent Deed and New provisions made for Portions of 27 June 7 Car. 1. is not as the Case now stands material or conducing to the state of the Case or to the limitation of the Time for payment of the Portions for that the same is by Deed of Bargain and Sale and Release thereupon in 1651. barred and a New provision made for raising the said Portions in such manner as he should limit by any act in his life time or by his last Will. By which Deed the Survivorship between the two Daughters is barred and a provision made That if either of them die in the life time of William the Grandson the Portion of her so dying shall not go to her Executors but to the Grandson And William the Grandfather having by his Will of the 9th of March 1651. wherein he recites the Deed of Decemb. 1651. limited and appointed 900 l. apiece to be paid to his Daughters severally out of his personal Estate towards
to be Re-heard before the Lord Keeper Bridgman who declared He saw no cause to alter the said former Decree and so confirmed it Brabant contra Perne 21 Car. 2. fo 146 344. DEpositions of Witnesses under the Hand of a Six-Clerk then in a Cause between Butt and Perne about Thirty years since the Plaintiff in this Cause prayed the same might be recorded the Record of the Original Depositions in that Cause being lost But the Defendant Pernes's Counsel insisted Copies of Depositions not to be recorded or exemplified it would be of dangerous consequence and president to suffer Copies of Depositions to be Recorded and used as Evidence in case of Title of Land there being no Cause in Court or parties to the said former Suit there being since the dismission of the said former Suit two Trials brought by the said Butt concerning the said things in question upon both which two Nonsuits passed against the said Butts Title the Witnesses which were examined in this Court being all then living and two Verdicts upon full Evidence on both sides and one other Verdict since 1664. hath been found for the Defendant's Title against the now Plaintiffs Title and some of the Witnesses at the said Trial have sworn otherwise than is expressed in those Copies of the Depositions which the Plaintiff would have now recorded and exemplified This Court would not allow the said Copies of the Depositions to be recorded or exemplified but they being before Ordered so to be by the Master of the Rolls it is Ordered they shall be vacated and made void and cancelled and taken off the File Alexander contra Alexander 21 Car. 2 fo 324. THe Suit is Assets to discover the Estate of Richard Alexander deceased which is come to the Defendants hands to satisfy a debt of 300 l. due to the Plaintiff from the said Richard Alexander The Defendant insisted that the Plaintiff ought not to have Relief in this Court in regard the Assets in the Defendants hands were legal Assets and nothing appeared but that the Plaintiff had her proper remedy at Law having not proved any thing more to be in the Defendants hands than was confessed in the Defendant's Answer But the Plaintiff insisted Bill to discover Affets That this Court hath directed Accounts in cases of this nature to avoid circuity of Action and further charge and trouble of Suits and that this Court being possest of the Cause and the parties at Issue on Proofs the same was as proper for this Court as at Common Law This Court ordered Presidents to be searched where this Court hath directed Accounts and given Relief in this Case and the Cause coming to be heard on the Presidents and Merits thereof and the Plaintiffs insisted that there is sufficient Assets of the said Richard Alexander come to the Defendants hands to satisfie the Plaintiffs debt with Overplus This Court decreed the Defendant to come to an Account for the Estate of one Blackhall unadministred Yate contra Hooke 21 Car. 2. fo 939. THat John Hele on the 23d Dec. 1654. Mortgage by demise and re-demise for 2000 l. mortgaged Longs Court and other Lands to Jasper Edwards his Executors Administrators and Assigns for 99 years and the said Edwards on the 25th of Dec. 1654. re-demised the same to the said John Hele for 98 years at a Pepper Corn Rent on Condition That if the said John Hele his Heirs Executors Administrators and Assigns did not pay to the said Jasper Edwards his Executors Administrators and Assigns 2150 l. at a certain day therein mentioned that then the said Re-demise to be void and Covenanted for him his Heirs Executors and Administrators to pay the same accordingly and in Hillary Term 1654. the said John Hele acknowledged a Judgment of 4000 l. to the said Jasper Edwards for the performance of the Covenants in the said Demise and Re-demise and after in 1656. the said John Hele for 500 l. mortgaged the said premisses to Joseph Jackson his Executors Administrators and Assigns reciting the said Mortgage to Jasper Edwards to have and to hold the said premisses to the said Joseph Jackson his Executors Administrators and Assigns for the residue of the said term demised to the said Jasper Edwards and to hold the Reversion to the said Joseph Jackson his Heirs and Assigns for the use of the said Joseph Jackson his Heirs and Assigns for ever on Condition That if the said John Hele his Executors c. paid to the said Jackson his Executors c. 515 l. in June next following then the said Deed of Mortgage to be void and the said John Hele to Re-enter as in his former Estate and the said John Hele Covenanted with the said Jackson his Heirs c. to pay the said 515 l. and for further confirmation granted to the said Jackson all his Equity of Redemption and afterwards the said Edwards and Hele for 2000 l. paid by Jackson to the said Edwards the said Edwards and Hele assigned the said premisses to Jackson with Condition or Proviso That if the said Hele his Heirs or Executors should pay to the said Jackson his Executors c. 2060 l. then the said demise from Hele to Edwards to be void and afterwards in 1657. Edwards assigned the said Judgment of 4000 l. to the said Jackson his Executors c. and the said Hele in 1660. died leaving the said Defendant Sir Thomas Hooke his Nephew and Heir And the said Jackson having made his Will and devised to his Daughter Sarah Wife of the Defendant Alford 2000 l. and to the said Joseph Jackson his Son 2000 l. with his Lands Tenements c. and to the Heirs of his Body and for want of Issue then the one half of his Lands so given to his Daughter Ann Yate and the other half to his Daughter Earle and the Issue of their Bodies equally and that in case his personal Estate fell short then every Legatee to abate in proportion to make it up the one half and the other half his Son Joseph should make good out of what he had bequeathed to him and made the Defendants Yate Earle and Aldworth Executors and if his Estate should amount to more than he had bestowed then that the said Joseph and Sarah should have the one half of it and his Son Yate and his Wife and his Son Earle and his Wife and what Child he should have living at his decease the other half Afterwards the said Joseph Jackson having in his Account accompted the said Mortgage Mony as part of his personal Estate in 1661 died leaving the said Joseph Jackson his Heir that no Entry had been made either by the Testator in his life time or by the said Joseph his Son and Heir upon the said mortgaged premisses but the said John Hele and Sir Thomas Hooke had received all the Rents and Profits So as the Question was Whether the said Mortgage Moneys are due and payable to the Heir or Executor
that it should extend only to the Testators Sister Ann Carr and her Children and to the Testators Nephews and Nieces now living and that no Kindred out of the degree of a Brother or Sister to the Testator or a Child of such Brother or Sister ought to come in or have any share of the said Residue and that amongst those that are to come into the Distribution the Executor ought chiefly to consider those that have most need that so they that have more need may have more than they that have less and decreed the same accordingly and as to the said John Buncher who was his Sisters Son and so to have share and was particularly recommended to the Executor who the Court declared had a power to give some more than other this Court ordered the Executor to give him somewhat considerably out of the Residue of the said Estate and the Executor to distribute the remainder to such of the Kindred as are to come into the Distribution as shall appear to the said Executor to have most need and in such manner and proportion as he shall think fit and Sir Samuel Clark one of the Masters of this Court is to see right done in this Case Distribution and the Bill wherein the Plaintiffs which are beyond the degrees of Nephews of the said Testator is to stand dismist Bourne contra Tynt 30 Car. 2. fo 636. THe Case is Will. that Roger Brown the Plaintiffs Brother by his Will in 1671. devised to Executors in Trust all Lands as before that time were Mortgaged to him and all Money due thereupon that they should lay out so much of his Personal Estate as remained after Debts and Legacies paid in a purchase of Lands of Inheritance to be setled on the first Son of his Body and the Heirs Males of the Body of such first Son and so to all Sons in Tail Male and for want of such Issue on the Plaintiff for life remainder to the Plaintiffs eldest Son in Tail remainders over to the Plaintiffs Children in Tail and by his Will declared and devised that in case the Child his said Wife was then big withal should be a Daughter then he gave to her 1000 l. to be paid to her at 21 or 6 Months after Marriage and in case she Marryed with consent of the Trustees then the said Portion to be 3000 l. and it was provided by the said Will that the Trustees out of the Interest of the said 3000 l. should pay for the Maintenance of the said Child 80 l. per Annum and it was also provided that in case such Daughter should dye before such Marriage or Age of 21 then her Portion and Mony so devised to her should go and be for the use and benefit of such Person or Persons as should at any time enjoy his Lands of Inheritance according to the Will and thereby declared the same Money to be laid out in a Purchase of Lands to be setled as aforesaid and also declared that the rest of the Personal Estate not given or disposed of by his Will should all be bestowed in Lands of Inheritance and setled as aforesaid and the said Roger Burne dyed without Issue Male of his Body and about three Months after the said Defendant Florence his only Daughter was Born and the Trustees have not pursuant to the Will laid out the Personal Estate in Lands so that the Plaintiff ought to have the Interest of such Money as should have been laid out in Lands The question in this case being whether the 3000 l. and the Interest thereof over and above the 80 l. per Annum Maintenance of the Defendant Florence should be paid to the Defendant or to the Plaintiff who claims the same by virtue of the Will in case the said Defendant Florence had not happened to be Born the Will being made before she was Born and the Plaintiff claiming the 3000 l. and Interest over and above the said 80 l. per Annum in Case she should dye or not be Marryed or incapacitated to dispose thereof The Defendant insists that the Plaintiff having a very considerable Estate from the Testator by the said Will which would have descended to the Defendant Florence in case she had been born and living at the time of the Death of her said Father and that the Plaintiff cannot have any pretence to the interest of the said 3000 l. as aforesaid for that there is not any Clause or Direction in the Will touching the same Portion and Interest devised upon a contingency of dying or Marriage decreed to be paid into Court for the benefit of the Heir according to the Will in case of the Devisees death This Court declared the 3000 l. and Interest over and above the said 80 l. per Annum belongs to the Plaintiff in case the said Florence dye before she receive the same by the said Will and Decreed that the Interest of the 3000 l. be paid into Court and not to be taken out without good Security given by the said Helena to make good the Benefit thereof to the Plaintiff in case the said Florence dye before 21 years or Marryed as aforesaid as the Will directs Elvard contra Warren al' 31 Car. 2. fo 350. THe Defendant being in Contempt for disobeying a Decree Prisoner by Habeas Corpus brought from Bristol and turned over to the Fleet for that he was in contempt and being a Prisoner in Bristol a Habeas Corpus cum causis was ordered to bring him to the Bar of this Court who was brought up and turned over to the Fleet who is there a Prisoner and refuses to obey the said Decree The Court ordered a Sequestration against his Real and Personal Estate Warner contra Borsley 31 Car. 2. fo 629. THe question being Devise whether a Devise of the Plaintiffs Father by his Will of his Personal Estate and Debts to the Plaintiff in remainder after the death of his Mother and the Devise thereof to her in the first place she being Executrix to the said 1st Testator and the Defendant her Executor were good or not The Plaintiff insisted That the Devise of the personal Estate by the Will of the Testator to his Wife was an absolute Devise to her by operation of Law and was vested in her and so consequently in the Defendant who is Executor of the said Alice by virtue of the said Executor and the Devise or Limitation over to the Plaintiff after the death of his said Mother who was Executrix of the first Testator was absolutely void in Law and the said Defendant as Executor to the Plaintiffs said Mother is well intituled to the said personal Estate devised by the Testators said Will. The Plaintiff insisted That the Devise to the Plaintiff in Remainder after death of his Mother was a good Devise and ought to be countenanced the rather in regard such Devise in the life time of the said Testator and Testatrix was
not having made an Appointment it ought to be taken for her Intention that the Plaintiff should have the Mony and therefore decreed the Defendants the Trustees to convey to the Plaintiff and deliver to him 1400 l. and the Securities for the 2000 l. Green contra Rooke 31 Car. 2. fo 351. THat Lawrence Rooke Devise Father to the Defendant Heyman Rooke and to the Plaintiff Mary being seised in Fee or Fee-tail or other Estate of Lands by Deed of the 26th of August 1650. granted the premisses to Edward Scot and others for 80 years if he so long lived and afterwards conveyed the sameon the 27th of the same Month unto Sir Henry Heyman and Peter Heyman and their Heirs for the term of his life and by Deed the 20th of October then next following and by a Recovery in pursuance thereof the said premisses were setled on the said Sir Henry and Peter Heyman and their Heirs for the life of the said Lawrence Remainder as to part to the use of Barbary Wife of the said Lawrence for her life for a Joynture and after as to part to the said Sir Henry and Peter Heyman for 99 years in Trust to raise 1000 l. for the portion of the eldest Daughter of the said Lawrence and then to the use of the first Son of the said Lawrence in Tail Male with the Remainder over That the said Lawrence and Barbara are dead and the Defendant Heyman Rooke is his first Son and the Plaintiff Mary is his eldest Daughter and the Portion of 1000 l. is due to her and the same being unpaid Peter Heyman the surviving Trustee assigned the term of 99 years to the Plaintiff Greene to enable him to raise the Mony and the Defendant Heyman Rooke hath mortgaged the same premisses to the other Defendants so the Question is Who hath the right or equity of Redemption and the Bill is also to have the Plaintiff Maries Portion paid or the equity of Redemption foreclosed The Defendant Heyman Rooke by Plea insisted That George Rooke his Grandfather by Will in 1647. devised the premisses unto Lawrence Rooke his eldest Son and Father to the Defendant Heyman Rooke for life only Remainder to the first second third and fourth Sons of the said Lawrence in Tail Remainder to John Browne and others for their lives in Trust for the better securing and preservation of the several Remainders limited unto the several Sons of the said Lawrence Rooke with Remainders over That the said George Rooke died without revoking or altering the said uses limited in his Will and so Lawrence Rooke could not by the said Deeds or Recovery bar or cut off the Remainder limited in and by the said Will in regard the said Browne and the other Trustees for preserving of the contingent Remainders were living since 1650. in which year the term of 99 years was created This Court declared Devise to Father for life Remainder to the first Son c. Remainder to Trustees for 99 years to support the Remainders it s a good term to support the Remainders notwithstanding the same is limited and inserted after the limitation to the first Son it being in the case of a Will That the term limited to the Trustees in the Will for their Lives for the preservation of the contingent Remainders to the several Sons of the said Lawrence Rooke was a good Term and a State to support the said contingent Remainders notwithstanding the same is limited to the said Trustees and inserted in the said Will after the limitation to the first and other Sons of Lawrence Rooke in Tail Male for the same being in the Will and the intent of the Testator plainly appearing so in the Will they held the said Plea and Demurrer to be good and so dismist the Plaintiffs Bill Trethervy contra Hoblin 26 Car. 2. fo 114. THe Plaintiff being a Purchaser of the premisses Bill to discover a Title calls the Defendant to discover his Title who insists on a long Lease of a 1000 years which was found by Verdict for the Defendant And the Defendant insists for Cost Costs for that the Plaintiffs Suit in this Court was causlesly and vexatiously brought by the Plaintiff The Plaintiff insists 〈◊〉 That he being not able to try the validity of the said Lease at Law during the life of Oliver one of the Defendant This Court is satisfied Suit for discovery and to preserve Testimonies and the Plaintiff to pay no Costs that the Plaintiff had good ground to bring this Suit for a discovery and relief and to preserve the testimony of his Witnesses it falling out to be a severe Case upon the Plaintiff so no reason for the Plaintiff to pay any Cost either at Law or in this Court Boughton contra Butter 32 Car. 2. fo 379. THis Cause was referred to Sergeant Rainsford to certifie touching the Inclosure whether advantagious and whether the Parties had consented thereunto who had drawn up a Certificate Certificate ordered to to be filed though not delivered in the life of the Certifier all written with his own Hand but he dying before he had declared the same It was prayed by the Plaintiff that the said Certificate might be filed and taken to be authentick as if he had delivered the same to either party The Defendant insisted That the said Certificate had no date and that the Sergeant never intended to deliver the same This Court Ordered the said Certificate to be filed notwithstanding the Objections made thereto by the Defendant Tucker contra Searle 31 Car. 2. fo 423. THat John Bassano the Plaintiff Frances Father by deed 20 July 1640. Marriage Settlement in consideration of a Marriage between him and Elizabeth the Plaintiff Frances Mother and a Marriage Portion Covenanted to stand seized of Lands to the use of the said John and Elizabeth for their lives and after to the first Son of the said John and Elizabeth and so to the second third and other Sons and the Heirs of their Bodies remainder to the right Heirs of the said John Bassano the Elder for ever on Condition and Limitation that if the said John Bassano should have Issue Female and not Issue Male by Elizabeth then his Right Heirs to pay the first and second Daughters of the said John by the said Elizabeth 300 l. a piece to be chargeable on the said Lands and if more than two Daghters then the said Lands for the full value of them to be sold should equally be divided amongst such Daughters that the said Bassano had no Issue Male by Elizabeth but had Issue Female viz. Elizabeth their Eldest Daughter the Plaintiff Frances their Second and another Elizabeth their youngest that Elizabeth the Eldest died in the life of her Father and Mother and that at the death of John the Father there being only the Plaintiff Frances living but the said Elizabeth the Mother being ensient with Elizabeth the youngest Daughter of the said John Bassano
if he were intituled to a Bill of Revivor he could not revive for Costs there being no Decree inrolled This Court allowed the Defendants Demurrer and dismist the Plaintiffs Bill of Revivor Raymond contra Paroch Buttolphs Aldgate in Com. Midd. 32 Car. 2. fo 517. THe Plaintiff being one of the Kings Waiters in the Port of London Priviledge and yet used the Trade of a Common Brewer and executed his said place by a Deputy The Defendants insist He is not to be exempted from bearing the Office of Overseer of the poor in the Parish The Plaintiff insists That the Kings Officers who serve his Majesty in Relation to his Revenue ought to be exempted from Parish Offices though they executed their places by Deputy and use an other Trade they being still liable to answer any misdemeaner committed by their Deputies and if their Deputies should be absent at any time they are bound to execute the same themselves which often falls out and Presidents of this Nature have often been found and hopes this Court will not take away any the priviledges such Officers ought to enjoy in right of their Offices and that a Supersedeas of priviledge be allowed the Plaintiff and his Writ of priviledge stand The Defendants insist That the Plaintiff driving a Trade of a Common Brewer and getting Money in the Parish he ought to bear the Offices of the Parish notwithstanding his said Office and if any Priviledge were due it ought to be granted by the Court of Exchequer and not by this Court This Court declared The Kings Officer priviledge from Parish Offices tho' he drive a Trade in the Parish That the Kings Officers ought to have the benefit of their priviledge and the execution thereof by a Deputy nor his dealing in another Trade should not in any sort be prejudicial to him he being to answer for any neglect or misdemeanour committed by his Deputy for that it is not reasonable that the Kings Servants or Officers should have nothing else to subsist on Such priviledge grantable out of Chancery as well as Exchequer but their immediate Services or Places under his Majesty and take no other imployment on them and although a priviledge of that nature be grantable in the Exchequer a Writ of priviledge under the great Seal was and ought to be taken in all respects as effectual and therefore allowed the Plaintiff his priviledge Dominus Bruce contra Gape 32 Car. 2. fo 723. THe question in this case is Deed. Will. Revocation whether the Mannour of Mudghill is within the devise of the Duke of Somerset by his Will in August 1657. of the Residue of the Estate unsold for the benefit of his three Daughters and the Lady Bruce his Grand-Child or whether it belongs to the Lady Bruce only as Heir at Law and whether the same be liable and comprehended in the Trust together with other Manours and Lands to Satisfie the 19100 l. Debts only or is subject with the other Lands in the said Deed and Will for Satisfaction of all the debts of the said Duke William The Case is viz. that the Plaintiff the Lady Elizabeth Wife of the Lord Bruce is Grand child and Heir of William late Duke of Somerset and Sister and next Heir of William also late Duke of Somerset who was the only Son of Henry Lord Beauchamp the Eldest Son of William Duke of Somerset the Grandfather which said Duke William the Grandfather did by deed the 13 Nov. 1652. Convey to the Lord Seymour Sir Olando Bridgman c. and their Heirs the Mannour and Lands in Trust for payment of Moneys to the Lord John Seymour and the Lady Jane Seymour Then upon further Trust to pay Debts amounting to 19100 l. and after in Trust for raising 10000 l. for the Lord John Seymour and 6000 l. for the Lady Jane Seymour and Trustees to account yearly to the right and next Heir of the said Duke with a power of Revocation in the said deed as to all but the said 19100 l. debts and that the said Duke William 19th of April 1654. as to a further provision for the payment of the Debts by deed conveyed to the Earl of Winchelsea and the Defendant Gape and others and their Heirs the Lands in Wilts and Somerset worth 30000 l. and sufficient to pay all his Debts to himself for life and after for payment of Annuities and after his death then to the use of the last Trustees and their Heirs upon special Trust that they should lease out the premisses and with the Mony thereby raised and otherwise with the profits pay all such Debts for which the Plaintiff stood ingaged for the said Duke and that the overplus of the said Mony and Profits to be paid and the Lands unsold to be conveyed to the right Heirs of the said Duke wherein was a power reserved in the said Duke by deed or Will to revoke the said Uses or Trust That the said Duke by deed the 20 of April 1654. reciting that the Lord Beauchamp the Eldest Son died since the deed of the 13 of November 1652. and had left only one Son and the Plaintiff Lady Bruce and that the Lady Bruce was left unprovided for and reciting the deed of the 19 of April 1654. made an Additional provision for the payment of his debts which made the Lands the deed of 1652. of a greater value than would satisfie the said Trust and therefore appointed the last Trustees in the deed of 1652. should out of the Money to be raised by Sail of those Land and the profits thereof pay the Plaintiff Elizabeth Lady Bruce 100 l. per Annum till her Age of 17 and after 300 l. per Annum and then after the debts in the deed of 1652. and Portions to the Lord John and Lady Jane Seymour then to pay Elizabeth the the Lady Bruce 6000 l. portion also with power of Revocation That afterwards the said Duke by Will 15 of August 1657. having as aforesaid secured the said 19100 l. debts devised to his Son the Lord John Seymour and the Heirs Males of his Body the said Mannour of Mudghill and because the Lady Ann Beauchamp his Sister in Law had the same as part of her Joynture and the same was Leased out for the life of Pleydall his Will was that till the same fell in possessision to the Lord Seymour the Trustees in the deed of 1652. should pay him maintenance and they to convey to him when they thought fit and by the said Will taking notice of the deed in 1652. and of the 19 of April 1654. and also of his power of Revocation appointed and declared the Trusts in those deeds for his Grandson William Lord Beauchamp and the Plaintiff the Lady Elizabeth Bruce or for the benefit of his Right Heirs should cease and the same was thereby revoked and appointed the Trustees in those deeds to convey the said premisses to the Lady Frances his Wife and the Earl of
South-hampton and the Earl of Winchelsey and Sir Orlando Bridgman and the said Gape and others and their Heirs upon Trust as to Mudghill as he before had declared and as to the rest of the Mannours and Lands on Trust for payment of all such debts in the said Indentures to be paid and unpaid at his death and for freeing his personal Estate and Executors from the payment thereof and of the Trust in the Deed of 1652 for the Lady Jane Seymour and after these Trusts performed all the Lands unsold and the Reversion thereof be disposed by the Lady Dutchess of Sommerset his Wife and the Trustees by his Will and their Heirs for 21 years from his death to such as the said Lady Dutchess should appoint and in default of such appointment for the raising such sums of Mony for the Plaintiff Elizabeth's portion and maintenance as the Deed of the 20 of April 1654 appoints or in default of such appointment by the Dutchess to go to such Person to whom the Trust of the Inheritance of the premisses after the 21 years is limited by the Will and the conveyance so to be made to the said Dutchess and the other person named in his Will should be upon further Trust that the said Dutchess and the other person should stand seized of the said Lands unsold and the Reversion of such part thereof as should be leased out for lives or years in Trust for William Lord Beauchamp and the Heirs Males of his Body and for want of such Issue forthe benefit of John Lord Seymour for life and after for the benefit of the first and every other Son of his Body and the Heirs Males of their Bodies respectively and for default of such Issue for the benefit of all his Daughters and the Plaintiff the Lady Elizabeth Bruce his Grandchild and all the Daughters of John Lord Seymour and their Heirs equally as Tenants in common and not as Joynt Tenants which Will the said Duke in 1660 ratified by new publishing thereof and all the Trustees in the deed of 1652 being dead except Sir Orlando Bridgman and Gape and the interest in Law being in them by Survivor ship Sir Orlando Bridgman knowing the debts in the deed of 1652 to be paid conveyed all the Lands therein mentioned to the said Dutchess of Sommerset That in 1671 the said William Lord Beauchamp Duke of Sommerset died without Issue whose Heir the Plaintiff the Lady Bruce is and after the Lord John Seymour became Duke of Sommerset and died without Issue by whose death the Plaintiff the Lady Bruce is intituled as Heir to Duke William her Grandfather to the reversion in fee of Mudghill Duke John being only Tenant in Tail thereof and ought to injoy the same it not being liable to pay any debts but is discharged thereof by her Grandfathers Will and not disposed from her by any Act the 19100 l. being all paid So that the questions now before the Court were whether the reversion of Mudghill expectant upon Pleydalls Estate for life as well as the residue of the Estate be liable to all the debts which Duke William owed at his death or only to the 19100 l. debts And secondly Whether the reversion of Mudghill as well as the residue of the Estate after satisfaction of all the debts of Duke William ought to be for the benefit of all Duke Williams Daughters and the Plaintiff Lady Bruce and their Heirs equally or the said reversion to go intirely to the said Lady Bruce as right Heir to Duke William As to the first question the Defendant insisted the said Reversion as well as the other Estate is liable to all the debts for that by the deed of 1652. Mudghill was conveyed for raising of Money for the payment of 19100 l. debts and all other debts that he should owe at the time of his death in which deed it is provided that after the said debts be paid he might by any deed or his last Will Revoke all or any of the said Trusts other than as concerning the 19100. debts yet made no Revocation other than by his last Will and therein he Revoked only those Trusts that were for the benefit of the Lord Beauchamp or the Lady Elizabeth Seymour or his own right Heirs and by the said deed the Legal Estate in Mudghill is setled in the Trustees and their Heirs and the Duke had no power to Revoke the uses or Estates till after the 19100 l. was paid and the said Duke directing his Trustees to convey Mudghill to his Son John he did thereby dispose of an equitable interest only of the reversion of Mudghill and the 19100 l. was not paid in the said Dukes life-time but great part remains unpaid and he hath contracted several new debts since the 20th of April 1654. which the Defendant since paid upon the Securities of the said Lands and Mudghill is one of the Mannours conveyed by the deed of 1652. for the payment of 19100 l. and all other the debts he should owe at the time of his death and altho' the same be directed by the last Will of the said Duke to be setled upon the Lord John Seymour and his Heirs Males yet the said Duke by deed of 1652. had no power to revoke the same for the payment of his debts or if he had he did not revoke the same by the said Will but left Mudghill and other the premisses subject to the payment of his debts and the Trustees understanding such to be the Dukes intention never setled Mudghill on the said Lord John Seymour who being lately dead without Issue the same is subjected to the payment of the said Duke Williams debts and when debts are satisfied the overplus of the Moneys and the said Mudghill and all other the premisses ought to be divided according to the intent of the said Dukes Will and by the said Dukes death and the Releases of the said Trustees the interest in Law became vested in Sir Orlando Bridgman and he conveyed Mudghill c. unto the said Dutchess and the said Gape and other the Trustees and their Heirs that they might therewith pay the said debts and though there be sufficient besides Mudghill to pay all the debts yet by the Will upon which this question doth arise that thereby the Trust for the Right Heirs of the said Duke are revoked in express Terms so that by any deed preceding the said Will the Plaintiff the Lady Bruce cannot claim any advantage as Heir the rather for that by the Will it doth appear that Duke William had an equal regard to his own Daughter and the Plaintiff the Lady Bruce his Grandchild and Heir and it cannot be presumed that he would more concern himself for the Welfare of a Grand-daughter than his own Daughters nor was the said Reversion of Mudghill disposed to the Plaintiff by any words in the Will though he did by express words in his Will Revoke all Trusts for the benefit of his Heirs in
Mudghill as well as the other Lands and made other particular provisions further which shews he did not intend that for her for if he had he would not have Revoked the former Trusts as to that by which she would have been intituled as Heir especially when he hath devised all the Surplus of his Estate which involves Mudghill as well as the rest amongst his own three Daughters and her equally nor doth it any where appear that Mudghill is in any sort exempted from Satisfaction of the Creditors nor could it so be by the said deed made by Sir Olando Bridgman who best knew the intention of all Parties in this matter But the Plaintiffs insisted That the said Duke could not intend Mudghill should be conveyed to the uses declared in the Will for that the same is to be conveyed to the said Lord John and the Heirs Males of his Body which is an Estate of Inheritance and he had power by a common Recovery to have bound the remainder and the reversion after the Estate tale is not Assets in Law and therefore cannot be conceived for the payment of his debts and the rather for that he recites deeds in 1652. and April 1654. and directs the Trustees therein to convey all his Lands and Mannours in those deeds to his Dutchess and others as to the Mannour of Mudghill as before he declared by his Will and as to all the rest of the Mannours he declared for the payment of his Debts so that all the rest excludes the Mannours of Mudghill and upon the whole Will it doth appear the Duke intended no Reversion should pass but Reversions after Estates for life or years and therefore this Reversion of Mudghill which is after an Estate Tail doth not pass and if it had been intended to pass he would have limited it to the said Lord John for life without remainder to his first or other Sons in Tail for he had before given him a better Estate in Mudghill to him and the Heirs of his Body and the Trustees were not to settle Mudghill accordingly until the same fell in possession the same being yet for Pleydalls life This Court on reading the several Deeds and Will declared That although the Lord John might possibly have an Estate Tail in him and doct it but he not doing it this Court can take no notice of it though probably he did forbear to do it because Duke William had Signified his desire Reversion after an Estate in Tail subject to Trusts for payment of debts that he should not have an Estate executed to him till it should fall in possession and not before except the Trustees pleased But the case must be taken as it doth appear before the Court that is Mudghill was once liable to the payment of the Debts of Duke William and tho' 't is pretended that the Will hath taken out Mudghill yet the said Will doth only take out an Estate Tail but the Revesion thereof when the same falls in possession is subject to the same Trust and goes in company with the other Reversions and the same is legally conveyed and doth pass in the general words and therefore this Court is of Opinion that the Reversion of Mudghill is part of the unrevoked Estate and that the Lord Bridgman did well when he made the said Conveyance to the Lady Dutchess and that when the 19100. l. and the said other debts are paid to which Mudghill is as well liable as the other Mannours and Lands then the Trustees ought to convey all the premisses in Fourths and decreed accordingly Maddocks contra Wren 32 Car. 2. fo 22. THe question in this Cause is Mortgage Account with what profits the Defendant Wren shall be charged in ease of the Plaintiff who claims the premisses in question by virtue of a second Mortgage and is admitted to a Redemption on payment of what shall appear due to the Defendant Wren who hath the prior Mortgage The Plaintiff insists That the said Mortgage being of a Lease and the Defendant Wren having possession by Attornment of Tenants he ought to have received the profits whereby his Mortgage would have been fully satisfied yet he permitted the other Plaintiff Dorothy Wife of the Plaintiff Maddox the Mortgager to receive the same and therefore the said Wren ought to be charged whereby the Plaintiff may be let in to have Satisfaction of his Debt This Court declared The prior Mortgagee upon Redemption by the second Mortgagee shall be charged with the profits by whom soever Received after the Second Mortgage That the Defendant Wren ought to be charged with the Rent whether received by the Wife or any other Person after the Plaintiffs second Mortgage made but all received by her before the said second Mortgage he ought not to be charged Coles contra Hancock 32 Car. 2. fo 112. THat Benjamin Coles the 11th of June Revocation of a Will 1678. made his Will in writing and thereby gave to and amongst his then Children naming them viz. Benjamin Samuel Mary and Hannah Portions and appointed his Real Estate to be Sold and added to his Personal Estate and made Elizabeth his Wife his Executrix and the Testator being a Melancholy Person and fearing he might forfeit his Estate by making himself away to prevent a forfeiture by deed the 14 of June 1678. made over all his Personal Estate to Trustees first to pay his debts then to pay some Legacies and all the rest of his Estate to be divided amongst the aforesaid four Children That the Testator afterwards died a natural death but before his death had another Child viz. Sarah who is not provided for either by the said Will or Deed. The question is whether the said Will be Revoked by the said Deed of Trust that if it be Revoked then the said Sarah insists to have her share of her Fathers Estate and that he ought to be looked upon as dying Intestate and at least the Personal Estate ought to be distributed by the Act for distributing Intestates Estates and the deed ought not to stand in her way for that great part of the Estate did consist in debts which were made after the said deed and did not pass to or was vested in the said Trustees and that it is against Natural Right and Conscience that her Father leaving a considerable Estate she should have nothing of it This Court on reading the said Deed and Will is of opinion A Deed of Trust no Revocation of a Will that the said deed of Trust is no Revocation of the said Will being not made with intent to revoke the same but only to prevent the forfeiture in a case which never hapned and Decreed the same to be set aside and the Personal Estate to be distributed according to the Will and the remainder to be divided amongst the four Children Benjamin Samuel Mary and Hannah Estate Devised to be sold for increase of his Childrens Portions and a Child
is born since the Will that Child shall have a share the same being given to them by Name and as to the Real Estate it being ordered by the Testator to be added to his Personal for increase of all his Childrens Portions and the said Sarah being born before he died the same to be Sold and divided amongst the five Children viz. Benjamin Samuel Mary Hannah and Sarah equally Sale contra Freeland 32 Car. 2. fo 272. THat Thomas Freeland the Defendants great Grandfather Will. Settlement Revocation being Seized of the premisses did by his Will in writing devise the same to Nicholas his Son for life only and afterwards to his Grandson John late Husband of the Defendant Frances and Father of the Defendant John and his Heirs for ever That the said Thomas and Nicholas being dead John the Grandson entred and for 300 l. Mortgaged the premisses to the Plaintiff and not long after the said John on confidence of the power he had to dispose of the premisses made his Will and the Defendant Frances Executrix and devised the premisses to be Sold for payment of his Debts But the Defendant insists That the said Thomas the great Grandfather had no power to dispose of the same premisses and if he had he did not pursue it regularly for that he had made a Settlement of the premisses in 1651. upon one Henry Weston and his Heirs to the use of him the said Thomas for life and after to Nicholas his Son for life and after to the use of the said John his Grandson and the Heirs of his Body with remainder over and that the Defendant John the Grandson by virtue of the said deed as Heir in Tail claims the premisses whereas if any such deed were it was with a power of Revocation by any Writing or Will in writing to be executed in the presence of three Witnesses and was revoked by his making his said Will in the presence of three Witnesses though one of them then present did not subscribe the same That the said John the Grandson had the full power of the Estate and the grant made to the Plaintiff ought to be supported in Equity being for valuable consideration though the power was not litterally pursued in the Circumstances of three Witnesses the intent of the Person appearing as sufficiently by two Witnesses as if there were three and submit to the Judgment of this Court The Plaintiff farther insisting That the said Thomas the great Grandfather takes notice in the preamble of his Will of the power by him reserved upon the said Settlement to make any alteration thereof during his life and then by the said Will deviseth the premisses to the said John his Grandson in Fee and he Mortgages to the Plaintiff and there is no Colour but the Defendants ought to redeem or be foreclosed This Court it appearing that there was more than two Witnesses present at the publishing the Will A Settlement with power of revocation by Will in writing executed in the presence of three witnesses but one of them did not Subscribe his Name yet Decreed a sufficient Revocation though two only Subscribed their Names thereto and upon hearing the words of the power and also the Will of the said Thomas Read declared that as this case was Circumstanced there ought to be a Redemption or a foreclosure and that the Will although but two Witnesses to it did sufficiently revoke the said deed of Intail Rose contra Tillier 33 Car. 2. fo 435. THat William Tillier deceased Copyhold Surrendred on Condition to pay 200 l. to Katherine at 21 years of Age and if she die before 21 without Heirs of her Body then to the Surrendree Katherine dies before 21 leaving a Son Decreed the 200 l. to be paid to the Son and the Lands to stand charged therewith 14 Car. 2. Surrendred Copyhold Lands of Inheritance to the use of the Defendant J. Tillier his Heirs and Assigns for ever upon condition that the Defendant should pay or cause to be paid to Katherine Tillier the Daughter of the said William Tillier 200 l. when she should accomplish the Age of 21 and if the said Katherine should die before 21 without Heirs of her Body then the said 200 l. to be for the use of the said Defendant but if default should be made by the said Defendant then the said Copyhold Lands should be to the use of the said Catherine her Heirs and Assigns and the said Surrender to be void and the said Willian Tillier after the said Surrender and before he died by writing appointed the said Defendant not only to pay the said 200 l. to the said Katherine but also 6 l. per Cent. till such time as the same became due That the Plaintiff married the said Katherine and had by her one Son named George that after Katherine died and then George and the Plaintiff took Administration to them both whereby he is intituled to the said 200 l. with damages The Defendant insists That Katherine died before the Age of 21 and so he is not liable to pay the said 200 l. or to give any Account of the Lands or Profits in the Surrender This Court decreed the Defendant to pay the Plaintiff the said 200 l. and that the said Lands so surrendred stand charged therewith Thompson contra Atfield 33 Car. 2. fo 412. THe Bill is to discover a purchase Deed of Frogpoole Marriage Settlement purchased by Henry Atfield the Plaintiffs Great Grandfather to him and his Heirs and that William Thompson the Plaintiffs Grandfather married Mary the eldest Daughter of the said Henry Atfield who declared that he had made the purchase aforesaid for the benefit of the said William and Mary his Wife and for the Heirs of the said Mary and that he would settle the same accordingly but the said Henry Atfield dying before any such Deed was executed yet the said William and Mary were in possession long before the death of the said Henry and paid no Rent and the said Henry leaving a Son at his death viz John Atfield the Defendants Father who having a great affection for Anthony Thompson the Plaintiffs Father who was the Son and only Child of the said William and Mary his Aunt a Match was proposed between the said Anthony and Elizabeth Smith the Plaintiffs Father and Mother which took effect but before and in consideration of the said Marriage the said John Atfield the Defendants Father setled the said premisses on the said Anthony the Plaintiffs Father and his Heirs for ever and the said Anth. had by the said Elizabeth the Plaintiff his eldest Son and Heir But the Defendants pretend the said Deed is defective in Law to have which Deed made good and supply the defect thereof by Equity by the Defendant according to the intent of the original Settlement made by John Atfeild the Defendants Father is the Bill The Defendant insists There could be no such Marriage Agreement for setling
Joynt Creditors That there can be no division of the Joynt Estate whereby to charge any part thereof with the private debts of either party and till the Joynt debts are paid and till division be made of the Surplus both parties are alike interessed and every part of the said Joynt Estate that the Commissioners have no power by the Commission to Administer an Oath to the Plaintiffs for proof of their debts they claiming debts from the said Widdows only and the Commission is against Widdows and Berman Joyntly and not severally and therefore cannot admit of the Plaintiffs Creditors This Court declared That the Estate belonging to the Joynt Trade as also the debts due from the same ought to be divided into Moieties and that each Moiety of the Estate ought to be charged in the first place with a Moiety of the said Joint debts and if there be enough to pay all the debts belonging to the Joynt Trade with an Overplus then such Overplus ought to be applied to pay particular debts of each Partner but if sufficient shall not appear to pay all the Joynt debts and if either of the Partners shall pay more than a Moiety of the Joynt debts then such Partner is to come in before the said Commissioners and be admitted as a Creditor for what he shall so pay over and above his Moiety and decreed accordingly Charles Howard contra le Duke de Norfolk al' 34 Car. 2. fo 722. THe Plaintiff by his Bill seeks to have Execution of a Trust of a Term of 200 years of the Barony of Grostock The Case was this The Earl of Arundel the Duke of Norfolks Father by Lease and Release Perpetuities or Entailing a Term for years with Remainders over Anno 1647. setled the Barony of G. and other Lands to himself for life then to the Countess Elizabeth his Wife for life and after her decease there is a Term limited to the Lord Dorchester and other Trustees for 200 years under a Trust to be declared in a deed of the same date with the Release and the Limitation of the Inheritance after the Term of 200 years is first to Henry Howard now Duke of Norfolk and the Heirs Males of his Body then to Mr. Charles Howard the now Plaintiff Brother of the said Henry and so to all his Brothers Successively in Tail Male remainder over Then by the said other Deed the Earl declares the Trust of the Term of 200 years and that deed in the reciting part declares that it was intended the said Term should attend the Inheritance and the profits should go to such persons and in such manner as was therein after limited viz. to Henry Howard now Duke of Norfolk and the Heirs Males of his Body so long as Lord Thomas Lord Maltrevers Eldest Son of the said Earl of Arundell or any Issue Male of his Body should be living but in case he should die without Issue Male in the life-time of Henry Howard not leaving his Wife enseint with a Son or in case after the death of Thomas without Issue Male the Honour of the Earldom of Arundel should descend to Henry Howard then Henry Howard and his Heirs to be excluded of the Trust and then it should be to Charles the Plaintiff and the Heirs Males of his Body remainder in like manner to other Brothers After this the Contingency doth happen for Thomas Duke of Norfolk dies without Issue and the Earldom of Arundel as well as the Dukedom of Norfolk descended to Henry now Duke of Norfolk by Thomas his death without Issue presently upon this the Marquess of Dorchester the Surviving Trustee Assigns the Term to one Marriott he Assigns it to the now Duke of Norfolk and the Duke suffers a Recovery to the use of him and his Heirs and the Plaintiffs Bill is to have execution of the Trust of this Term to the use of himself and his Heirs Males of his Body The Defendants insist That by the Assignment by Marriott to my Lord Duke Henry the Term was Surrendred and quite gone that the Common Recovery which barred the remainders which the other Brothers had would also be a Bar to the Trust of this Term and that the trust of a Term to Henry and the Heirs Males of his Body until by the death of Thomas without Issue the Earldom should descend upon him and after that to Charles and the Heirs Males of his Body was a void Limitation of the remainder to Charles The Plaintiff insists Though the Term by the Survivor is gone and Merged in the Inheritance yet the Trust of that Term remains in Equity That this is not a Term that attends the Inheritance but it s a Term in gross and so not barred by the Recovery and that the Limitation of the remainder in Contingency is good in Law and Relief ought to be had in this Court The Lord Chancellor Nottingham the Case being of great Consequence calls the Judges to his Assistance viz. the Lord Chief Justice Pemberton the Lord Chief Justice North and the Lord Chief Baron Mountague and they made one single point in the case Whether this Contingent Trust of a Term limited to the Plaintiff Charles and the Heirs of his Body upon the dying of Thomas without Issue Male whereby the Honour did descend to Henry be good in point of Creation and Limitation for as for the Recovery if this be not a good Limitation in point of Creation the Recovery will do nothing so that supposeth it to go along with the Inheritance and if this take effect then it will suffer no prejudice by the Recovery And as for the Assignment by Marriott to the Duke if this Court decree it for the Plaintiff then it is a Breach of Trust and then he must answer for it and so must the Duke for it is a Surrender to a person who had notice of the Trust If for the Defendant then it is of no weight So that the whole rests upon the first single point viz. whether it be a good Limitation upon the Contingency to Charles or as they call it Springing Trust a springing Trust And the said three Judges were all of Opinion that it was a void Limitation and that it ought to be Decreed for the Defendant They said Term in gross and a Term attending the Inheritance the difference there is great difference as to the Limitation of Terms that are in gross and Terms that attend the Inheritance as to Terms in Gross they are not capable of Limitation to one after the death of another without Issue but in Termsattendant upon an Inheritance there may be such a Limitation if the Inheritance be so limited and not else Now the Term is capable of a Limitation to Henry and the Heirs Males of his Body and for want of such Issue to Charles and the Heirs Males of his Body because it hath an Inheritance to support it But now to put another limitation upon it that upon the
dying of Thomas without Issue whereby the Earldom shall descend this shall go over to Charles that cannot be for it hath no Freehold to support it and so it s a Term in gross further there cannot by the Rules of Law or Equity be a Remainder for years of a Term limited after an Estate Tail neither directly nor upon Contingency as in Burges's Case but the Law will allow a remainder directly upon an Estate for life so likewise upon a Contingency if that were to happen during the Continuance of the particular Estate But this case is a step further and not to be allowed they relied chiefly upon Child and Bayles Case which was put thus by Chief Baron Mountague a Devise by A. of a Term to William his Eldest Son and his Assigns and if he die without Issue then to Thomas his youngest Son It was Judged in the Exchequer Chamber to be a void remainder because thereby a perpetuity would ensue though it was argued in that case that it was given upon a Contingency to the younger Son which would soon be Determined and end in a short time Chief Baron Mountague put this for Law a Term may be limited to one and the Heirs Males of his Body upon a Contingency to happen first with Limitation over if that Contingency do not happen it is a good Limitation as if a Term be limited to the Wife for Life and then to the Eldest Son if he over-live his Mother and the Heirs Males of his Body the remainder over to a younger Son if the Eldest Son dye in the life of the Mother the Limitation to the second Son may be good but if there be an Instant Estate Tail created of a Term tho there be a Contingency as to the expectation of him in remainder yet this is such a Total Disposition of a Term as after which no Limitation of a Term can be and so the Judges were of Opinion that the Plaintiff had no Right to the Term but the decree ought to be for the Defendant The Lord Chancellor Nottingham differed from the Judges and Decreed for the Plaintiff He put some steps or Preliminaries which he agreed with them and which were clear 1. That the Term in question though it were attendant on the Inheritance at first yet upon the hapning of the Contingency it s become a Term in gross 2. That the Trust of a Term in gross can be limited no otherwise in Equity than the Estate of a Term in gross can be limited in Law 3. The legal Estate of a Term for years whether it be a long or a short Term cannot be limited to any Man in Tail with the remainder over to another after his death without Issue this is a direct perpetuity 4. If a Term be limited to a Man and his Issue and if that Issue die without Issue the remainder over the Issue of that Issue takes no Estate and yet because the remainder over cannot take place till the Issue of that Issue fail that remainder is void too Reeves Case 5. If a Term be limited to a Man for his life and after to his First Second and Third Son in Tail Successively and for default of such Issue the remainder over though the Contingency never happen yet the remainder is void though there were never a Son born to him that looks like a perpetuity Sir William Buckhursts Case 6. One Case more and that is Burgesss Case A Term is limited to one for life with Contingent remainders to his Sons in Tail with remainder over to his Daughter though he had no Son yet because it was foreign and distant to expect a remainder after the death of a Son to be born without Issue that having a prospect of a perpetuity was adjudged void 7. If a Term be Devised or Trust of a Term limited to one for life with twenty remainders for life Successively and all the Persons in Esse at the time of such limitation these are all good remainders 8. A Term is Devised to one for 18. years after to C. his Eldest Son for life and then to the Eldest Issue Male of C. for life though C. had not any Issue Male at the time of the Devise or death of the Devisor but before the death of C. it s good being a Contingency that would speedily be worn out Cotton and Heaths Case for there may be a Possibility upon a Possibility and a Contingency upon a Contingency and in truth every Executory devise is so and therefore the contrary Rule given by Lord Popham in the Rector of Chedingtons Case is not Reason These things were agreed by all But the Point is The Trust of a term for 200 years is limited to Henry in Tail provided if Thomas die without Issue in the life of Henry so that the Earldom shall descend upon Henry then to go to Charles in Tail and whether this be a Limitation to Charles in Tail is the Question My Lord Chancellor conceived it a good Limitation as a springing Trust to arise upon a Contingency and which is not of a remote or long Consideration As for the Legal Reasons of this Opinion they were these 1. Many Men have no Estates but what consist in Leases for years Now it would be absurd to say That he who has no other Estate than what consists in Leases for years should be uncapable to provide for the Contingencies of his own Family though they are directly in his immediate prospect he shall not make provisions for Wife and Children upon Marriage 2. It was the Opinion of the Lord Chief Justice Pemberton That had it been thus Penned it had been good If Thomas die without Issue Male living Henry so that the Earldom descend upon Henry then the 200 years limited to him and his Issue shall cease but then a new Term of 200 years shall arise and be limited to the same Trustees for the benefit of Charles in Tail Now what difference is there why a man may not raise a new springing Trust upon the same Term as well as a new springing Term upon the same Trust It is true in 6 Ed. 6. in the time of Lord Chancellor Rich all the Judges delivered their Opinion If a Term of years be devised to one provided if Devisee die living I. S. then to go to I. S. is absolutely void But in 19 Eliz. Dier fo 277 328. it was held by the Judges to be a good Remainder Executory Remainder and that was the first time that an Executory Remainder of a Term was held to be good As for Child and Bayles Case the Case is truly Reported by Crook A Term of 70 years is devised to Dorothy for life then to William and his Assigns all the rest of the Term provided that if William die without Issue living at the time of his death then to Thomas which is in effect the present Case but there was more in it William had the whole Term to him and his
Jane his Daughter for her life and after to John Colley her Son and Heir and his Issue Male and for want of such Issue in Trust for the Daughters of the said Jane and after the death of Jane and John Edward was intituled and he together with Sir John Wirley the Surviving Trustees upon Edwards marrying with the Plaintiff did Demise to the said Defendants the Trustees the Mannor-house c. for the Term of 20 years in Trust to pay certain Annuities therein mentioned and to permit Edward Colly for his life to receive the profits of the residue and in case the Marriage took effect and the Plaintiff Ann Survived him then to pay her 130 l. per Annum for her life and after Edwards death to permit the Heirs males of their two Bodies to receive the residue of the profits and for default of such Issue male there is provision for Daughters and supposes the residue of the profits may be limited to any Issue male of Edwards and for want of such Issue to permit the Defendant Jane and Ann since deceased Sister of the said Edward to receive the profits of the Estate as the Deed expresses and that he remembred no other Agreement than what is mentioned in the said Deed and sets forth the Deed of 21 Jan. 26 Car. 2. whereby the said Defendants the Trustees were intituled by Sale or Leases to pay debts and after payment thereof if the Plaintiff Ann should be then living should permit her to receive the residue of the profits for her life and afterher decease the right Heirs of Edward to receive the same that after the time of executing the last mentioned Deed the said Edward made his Will and after some Legacies took notice of the said Deed bearing date the day before and it was declared thereby that the Defendants the Trustees should out of the profits pay all his debts and being fearful those profits should not do did Devise to them all the rest of his personal Estate and made them Executors and after debts paid the residue to the Plaintiff Ann. That Nov. 1676 Edward Colley died after which the said Defendant proved the Will and entred on the Estate But the Defendants Ciber and Jane his Wife insisted That the said Defendant Jane being the only Sister and Heir to Edward Colley are after his debts intituled to the premisses for a long Term to commence after the death of the Plaintiff Ann and have sold their interest to the Defendant Benson Upon reading the said Deed and Will A Term in gross and not to be Entailed the Lord Keeper North was of opinion that the said Term so as aforesaid Created was a Term in gross and so not capable of being intailed and therefore it could not descend to the Heir of Edward Colley but that the same should be liable to the payment of his Debts and that the Plaintiff Ann should hold the 130 l. per An. for her life and after the said Debts paid the Plaintiff Ann should receive the profits of the whole Estate for her life charged with the said Annuity and the said Plaintiffs were to redeem the Mortgage to the Defendant Woodward But as to the Residue of the said Term after the death of the Plaintiff Ann and debts paid how the same should be disposed a Case was ordered to be made A Case being Stated this Cause came to be heard thereon before the Lord Chancellor Jefferies and all the former pleadings being opened as also the Defendant Cibers cross Bill which was to this effect viz. to have the said Term of 820. years to attend the Inheritance and the Case stated appearing to be no otherwise than before is set forth His Lordship on reading the said Deed and Will A Residue of a Term after debtspaid and a life determined Decreed not to the Residuary Legatee but to the Heir the Question being who shall have the remainder of the Term in the said Lease whether the Plaintiff Ann as Residuary Legatee or whether she shall have only an Estate for life his Lordship declared that the Deed and Will do make but one Will and by them there was no more intended to the Plaintiff Ann than an Estate for her life and that she ought to enjoy the whole Mansion House cum pertin ' during her life and also the overplus of the profits of the Residue of the said Estate after Debts and Legacies paid and the Defendant Benson who purchased the Inheritance of Ciber to enjoy the same discharging all things as aforesaid Hall contra Dench 36 Car. 2. fo 799. THat the Plaintiff Grace Hall Will. Revocation being Daughter of William Knight deceased who was Son of Susanna one of the Sisters and Coheirs of Thomas Bridger deceased which said Thomas Bridger being seized in Fee of Lands in Binstead and Middleton and having no Children made his Will in 1663. by which he gave to Tho. Knight Son of the said Willi. Knight all his Lands in Binstead to the said Thomas Knight and the Heirs of his Body and for want of such issue then to the Plaintiff Grace and the Heirs of her Body with Remainders over and by the same Will Devised one Moiety of the Lands in Middleton to the said Thomas Knight and the Heirs of his Body with the like Remainders over and sometimes after the said Will the said Thomas Bridger Mortgaged the said Lands in Binstead to John Comber and his Heirs for 500 l. and the said Bridger repaid the 500 l. and had the Mortgage delivered up and Cancelled but no Reconveyance of the Lands and that the said Comber after that was but a Trustee for Bridger the Mortgagee who in 1682. declared that the Will he made in 1663. should stand and be his last Will and then denied But the Defendant Dench having got the Cancelled Deed in his Custody and the Plaintiff brought an Ejectment under the Title of the Will and got a verdict for the Lands in Middleton but the Defendant at the Tryal setting up a Title in the Defendant Comber upon the Cancelled Mortgage for the Lands in Binstead a Verdict passed for the Defendant so to have the said Mortgage deed delivered up and the Plaintiff to enjoy the premisses according to the said Will is the Bill The Defendants as Co-heirs at Law to Bridger insist That the Testator Bridger never intended that the Estate should go as that Will directed in regard he soon after the said Will Mortgaged the same to Comber and besides the Legatees and Executors in the said Will were most of them dead before the said Bridger and the Mortgage money was not paid till after the Estate forfeited and that the Mortgage to Comber was an absolute Revocation of the said Will and upon an Ejectment brought by the Plaintiff under the said Will the Defendants obtained a Verdict for the Lands in Binstead wherein the validity of the said Will was in issue The Plaintiffs insist That the Verdict obtained
Kindid before distribution that share shall go to her or his Executors or Administrators and not to the Survivor next of Kindred to the first Intestate and before any actual distribution made vest an Interest in the respective persons appointed to have distribution of the surplus of his Estate as much as if it had been Bequeathed by Will and that if any one of them dye before distribution tho' within the year yet the part or share of such person so dying ought to go over to the Executors or Administrators of such party so dying and not to the Survivor or next of Kindred to the first Intestate and that the Lady Katherine was at her death well intituled to a share of her Brother Thomas Wentworths Estate as an Interest thereby vested in her notwithstanding she died within a year after the Intestate and before any distribution made and that the Lord Winchelsey as her Administrator is now well intituled therto and decreed a distribution and the Plaintiff the Lord Winchelsey shall have the Lady Katherines share and proportion of the said Thomas Wentworths Estate accordingly and the Plaintiff the Lady Elizabeth shall have a like share thereof with the Defendant Lister and John Wentworth 2 Jac. 2. so 315. The question being Whether the respective shares of the Plaintiff and Defendant Lister the said Lady Katherine and Elizabeth and the Defendant Lister being only of the half Blood to the Intestate and whether the Mony be vested in Lands or the Lands themselves should be accounted part of the personal Estate of the said Thomas Wentworth or not His Lordship ordered a Case to be made as to those two points The Case being viz That the said Thomas Wentworth died an Infant and unmarried leaving such Brother of the whole Blood and such Brother and Sisters of the half Blood as aforesaid who were his next of Kindred in equal degree and that upon his death a real Estate of near 2500 l. per Annum discended to the Defendant John Wentworth his Brother and Heir and that above 3000 l. of the profits of that Estate received in the Intestates life time by Dame Dorothy Norcliff and the said Trustees which belonged to him and his proper Monies were by them during his Non age and without any direction or power in their Trust but of their own Heads laid out in Purchases in Fee and Conveyances in their Names but in Trust for the said Intestates and his Heirs with this express Clause in the said Conveyances viz. in case-he at his full Age would accept the same at the Rate purchased the purchase being made with his Mony and for his advantage This Court as to the said two Points Half Blood to have an equal share with the whole Blood being assisted with Judges declared That the Plaintiff and the Defendant Lister ought each of them to have an equal share with the Defendant John Wentworth of the surplus of the personal Estate of the said Intestate and the distribution thereof ought to be made among them share and share alike and decreed accordingly And as to the other Point declared Trustees lay out the Monies of an Infant in Lands in Fee This shall be accounted part of his personal Estate he dying a Minor That the Monies laid out in the said Purchases ought to be taken and accounted for as part of the said personal Estate and distributed with the rest and decreed a Sale of the said purchased premisses and distribution thereof to be made as aforesaid Dom ' Middleton contra Middleton 1 Jac. 2. fo 793. THat Sir Thomas Middleton upon his Marriage with the Plaintiff Dame Charlotta Middleton Devise setled a great part of his Estate in Com' Flint and other Countries for her Joynture being seised in Fee of Lands in several Countries viz. Flint Denbigh and Merioneth and setled all his Estate on his first and other Sons on her Body in Tail Male and charged the same with several Terms of years for raising Portions for Daughters viz. If one Daughter and no Issue male 8000 l. and out of his personal Estate intending to make an addition to the Portion of the Plaintiff Charlotta his only Child and to increase the Plaintiff Dame Charlotta's Fortune and Joynture made his Will in 1678. and thereby reciting that whereas upon his Marriage-Settlement it was provided That if he should have a Daughter she was to have 6000 l. Portion as his Will was and he gave to his only Daughter Charlotta in case she should have no Son living at his death 10000 l. more as an addition to her Portion to make her up the same 16000 l. and for raising of the said portions and payment of his debts and Legacies he devised all his said Lands except his Lands limited for his Wives Joynture for her life unto Trustees and their Heirs in Trust to raise out of the Rents and profits of the said premisses the several Sums mentioned for his Daughters portion and the sums of Mony thereafter mentioned and Willed That till one half of the said Daughters portion should be raised his Daughter Charlotta to have 100 l. per Annum for the first four years and afterwards 200 l. per Annum till her moiety of her portion should be raised and after payment of the said portions maintenance debts and legacies he devised the said Trustees to stand seised of all the said premisses except before excepted to the use of the Heirs males of his Body with a Remainder to the Defendant Sir Richard Middleton his Brother for life without impeachment of Waste Remainder to his first Son and Heirs males of his Body with other Remainder to the Defendants Thomas Richard and Charles Middleton Remainder to the right Heirs of the said Thomas and he bequeathed to his said Daughter Charlotta the Plaintiff his Diamond-pendants which his Wife wore and bequeathed to his Wife Dame Charlotta after his death one Annuity of 200 l. per Annum for her life to be raised out of the profits of the said premisses and bequeathed the great Silver Candlesticks to go according to his Grandmothers Will to the Heirs of his Family with his Estate as an Heir Loom and bequeathed the use of all his Goods Stock and Housholdstuff to his Wife the Plaintiff Dame Charlotta for so long as she should live at Chirke Castle and from thence he left the same to his eldest Son and Heirs or such as should be Heir male of his Family according to the limitations aforesaid and his further Will was that his said Wife should have such proportion of the Goods Housholdstuff and Stock for the stocking and furnishing of Cardigan-House and Demean being part of her Joynture as should be judged fit by her Trustees that she might be supplied with Goods and Stock requisite for her House and left to whomsoever should be his Heir all his Stable of Horses and made the Plaintiff Dame Charlotta Executrix and died in 1683. leaving the
Plaintiff Charlotta his Daughter and Heir The Defendant Sir Richard Middleton insisted That Sir Thomas Middleton his Brother had in Consideration of 184 l. to him paid in 1680. conveyed to the said Defendant and his Heirs two Messuages being 11 l. 10 s. per Annum in Com' Denbigh and taking notice that the same was comprized in his Wives Joynture declared he would leave or give his Wife by Will or otherwise a sufficient compensation for the same so that he should not be Troubled And the Defendant insists That the 200 l. per Annum given her by the Will was intended to be as a Compensation and insists That Sir Thomas intended his Daughter more than 16000 l. and that such part of the personal Estate as was not specifically devised to his Executrix which was all he intended her ought to be applied towards satisfaction of the Testators debts and legacies and the Plaintiffs Portion and the rather for that by the true Construction of the Will the real Estate is subjected only supplementarily Real Estate subjected to pay Debts only supplementarily and that part of the personal Estate intended to the Executrix is specifically devised to her the Devise of the Goods and Stock were only intended in case the Plaintiff Dame Charlotta should live on her Joynture but she not residing on her Joynture he insists she is not Intituled to the said Stock and Goods and as to all other the Goods and Stock and Furniture the Defendant was well Intituled by the Will as Heir male of the Family according to the limitation of the Will The Plaintiff insists That the personal Estate not being devised for payment of of debts and provision being made for payment thereof out of the real Estate doth submit to the Court Whether the personal Estate ought to be applied for debts and legacies the real Estate being sufficient to do the same and whether if she be compelled to pay the debrs and legacies therewith she shall not be reimbursed out of the real Estate The Questions arising upon the said Will and now debated are viz. First Whether the personal Estate not specifically devised ought to come in Aid of the real Estate and be subject to the debts and legacies chargeable thereon Secondly Whether the Plaintiff Charlotta ought to have any greater Portion by the Settlement and Will than 16000 l. and whether she ought to have the several yearly Maintenances given by the said Deed and Will and to what time and times and whether the Stable of Horses did not belong unto her as being given to whomsoever shall be the Testator's Heir she being the Testator's Heir Thirdly Whether the Plaintiff the Lady Charlotta Middleton ought not besides her Joynture to have her Annuity of 200 l. per Annum and to have Furniture and Stock for her Joynture House and Lands and to have the Jewels and Chamber plate and Furniture of her Chamber as her Paraphanalia This Court declared it was intended the Daughter should have only 16000 l. Portion and that such of the Goods and Stock and Houshold-stuff at Chirke Castle which were devised to the Defendant Sir Richard Middleton did belong and ought to be enjoyed by the said Sir Richard Personal Estate not specifically devised to be applied to payment of debts and the Real Estate not subjected thereto and that the personal Estate not specifically devised away and which is not to be set out to the Plaintiff the Lady Middleton pursuant to the said Will ought to be applied and paid towards payment of the Debts and Legacies and the Portion of the Daughter and that the Plaintiff the Lady Middleton besides her Joynture which she ought to enjoy free from Incumbrances ought to have and enjoy the said Annuity of 200 l. per Annum Annuity in Augmentation of a Joynture and Arrears given and devised to her by the said Testator and that she ought to have her Paraphanalia and proportion of the Goods Houshold stuff and Stock for furnishing and stocking her Joynture-house and Demeasns to be set out by the Trustees according to the Will and the Daughter to have both the Maintenances by Will and Deed of Settlement and the Stable of Horses and all things specifically devised to her by the Will and decreed accordingly Whitmore contra Weld 1 Jac. 2. fo 106. THat William Whitmore deceased in 1675. by his Will devised to the Earl of Craven for the use of William Whitmore his Son the Plaintiff Frances Whitmores late Husband all the surplusage of his personal Estate and made his Son William Whitmore Executor and the said Earl of Craven his Executor during the Minority of his said Son and the said William the Father died and left a personal Estate of 40000 l. that William the Son at his Fathers death being but of the Age of 13 years the said Earl proved his Fathers Will and possessed all the personal Estate and the said William the Son having attained the Age of 18 years not having proved the said Will and being Intituled to the surplus of the said perfonal Estate in 1684. made his Will and thereby devised to the Plaintiff Frances all his personal Estate and whatsoever lay in his power to give and made her his Executrix and died in 1684. and the Plaintiff Frances being of the Age of 18 years proved his Will and is thereby Intituled to the personal Estate of William the Father But the Defendants one of them being Sister of William the Father and the other the Children and Grandchildren of the Sisters of the said William Whitmore the Father pretend the surplus of the personal Estate of William the Father belongs to them The said William Whitmore the Fathers Will is in these words viz. The Surplus of my Personal Estate my Debts Legacies and Funeral paid and satisfied I give to the Right Honourable William Earl of Craven for the use of my only Son William Whitmore and his Heirs lawfully discended from his Body and for the use of the Issue Male and Issue Female discended from the Bodies of my Sisters Elizabeth Weld deceased Margaret Kemesh and Ann Robinson in Case that my only Son William Whitmore should decease in his Minority without having Issue lawfully discended from his Body I Nominate and appoint my only Son William Whitmore Executor of my last Will and Testament I nominate and appoint the Earl of Craven during the Minority of my only Son William Whitmore Executor of my last Will and Testament The Defendant Dame Ann Robinson insists she is the Surviving Sister of William Whitmore the elder and so is Intituled to the Administration of William the Elder unadministred by William the younger and the Defendant Sir John Robinson and others the younger Children of the said Dame Ann Robinson insist That they are instituted by William the Fathers Will to an equal share of the surplus of the personal Estate of William the Elder the rather for that William the Elder made a Settlement
c. upon Trust to himself for life and after his death to satisfie the said Bond of 3000 l. for payment of 1500 l. to Sir Jonathan for the future Maintenace of the said Frances according to the said Marriage Agreement and in full of Dower and to do all things according as he by his last Will should direct That the said Benjamin by Will 10 Dec. 1681. therein reciting the Condition of the said Bond gave his Wife 1000 l. unpaid of Sir Jonathans Bond and his Trustees to pay 1500 l. with 500 l. he had received of Sir Jonathan in part of his Wives portion which Sums made in all 3000 l. and was to be laid out in a purchase of Lands to be setled to the uses aforesaid and made Hulkot and Fowler Executors in Trust to manage for the Plaintiff whom he made his sole Executor who afterwards took upon him the Execution of the said Will and claims the said 3000 l. to be laid out in Lands to be setled according to the said Marriage Agreement which was in case Benjamin died without Issue the said Lands so to be setled were to come to Benjamins right Heirs and the Plaintiff is Instituted as Heir and Executor of Benjamin The Defendant Pierce confesses the Marriage Agreement and Bonds as in the Bill and that the Marriage between the said Henry and Frances took effect and the said Benjamin is since dead and that since his death the said Defendant Pierce hath married the said Frances and is thereby intituled to the benefit of the Bond entred into by the said Benjamin to Sir Jonathan and the Monies due thereon and to the Third part of Benjamins Lands The Plaintiffs insist That the said Frances dying without Issue the Mony in Sir Jonathan Atkyns his hands ought now to be paid to the Plaintiff This Court upon reading the said Bond and Condition and the Deed and Will of Benjamin declared That by the Marriage Agreement and Condition of the Bond it was very clear that the said Frances having no Issue by the said Benjamin could only have an Estate for life or the Interest of the Mony for her Maintenance and that the Plaintiff is well intituled to have the said 3000 l. paying the Defendant Pierce Interest for the 1500 l. which the said Benjamin the Plaintiffs Testator was bound to lay out and decreed accordingly Kettle by contra Lamb 2 Jac. 2. fo 1064. THat on a Treaty of Marriage between Richard Kettleby the Plaintiffs younger Brother Monies to be laid out in Lands for a Joynture by Marriage Articles and the Defendant Ann now Wife of the Defendant Atwood Articles were entred into and made between Thomas Laud Father of the Defendant Ann of the first part and the said Richard Kettleby of the second part and the Plaintiff and others Trustees of the third part whereby the said Lamb Covenanted to pay 1500 l. to the said Trustees as a Marriage-portion with the Defendant Ann his Daughter and the said Richard Kettleby Covenanted to pay 500 l. more which being 2000 l. was agreed to be laid out in the purchase of Lands to be setled upon the said Richard for life and after on the said Trustees and their Heirs during the life of Richard to preserve the contingent Remainders and after to the use of the said Ann his Wife during her life for her Joynture and after to their first and so to their seventh Son of their two Bodies and their Heirs successively and for want of such Issue to the Daughters and for want of such Issue to the right Heirs of the said Richard Kettleby for ever and that by the said Articles it was agreed that before such purchase could be made the said Trustees should place out at Interest the said 2000 l. and from time to time pay over the Interest to such person to whom the Lands are intended to be purchased was limited as if the same had been purchased and setled accordingly and there was a Proviso in the Articles That if the said Richard died before a purchase should be made leaving no Issue of his Body on the Body of the said Ann his intended Wife and Ann survived him that in that case the 2000 l. or so much thereof as was not laid out in Lands should either be laid out in the purchase of Lands to be setled upon the said Ann for life with Remainder to the right Heirs of Richard or else Three parts thereof the whole to be divided into Four parts of such Moneys as should be paid to the said Ann her Executors c. at her Election so as she made such Election within six Months after the said Richards death otherwise at the Election of Richards right Heir That afterwards the Marriage took effect and 1500 l. of the 2000 l. placed with the said Lamb by the Trustees who paid the Interest thereof to the said Richard Kettleby during his life and before the Mony was laid out in a purchase Richard died Intestete leaving Issue one Daughter named Ann who likewise died in a Month after the said Richard whereupon the Right of the 2000 l. or Lands to be purchased therewith after the death of Ann the Wife accrued to the Plaintiff Edward Kettleby as right Heir of the said Richard Kettleby so to have the 2000 l. invested in Lands and setled according to the said Articles for the benefit of the Plaintiff is the Plaintiffs Suit The Defendant Atwood who hath married the said Ann the Relict of the said Richard Kettleby insists That the said Ann his Wife is Administratrix to Richard her first Husband and the said Ann her Daughter and thereby well intituled to the personal Estate and that according to the Proviso in the said Articles the said Ann had made her Election to have 1500 l. of the 2000 l. to be at her own disposing and that she was well intituled to the other 500 l. as Administratrix to Richard and Ann her said Daughter and that the Marriage Articles being meerly for the benefit of the said Defendant Ann Atwood and her Issue and the Plaintiff no way intituled under the Consideration thereof there was no ground in Equity to compel a performance so as to give the Plaintiff the Defendants portion This Case being heard by the Lord Keeper North he declared That the 2000 l. did belong to the Administratrix of the said Richard Kettleby and ought not to be setled upon his Heir and dismissed the Plaintiffs Bill which dismission being signed and inrolled the Plaintiff brought his Bill of Review against the said Defendants and for Error Assigned that whereas it was declared by the said Lord North that the 2000 l. did belong to the Administratrix of Richard Kettleby and not to be setled upon his Heir That the same ought to be Decreed to be laid out in Land to be setled upon the said Ann only for life Remainder to the Plaintiff as Right Heir of Richard and his Right Heirs for ever according
Assigns during the Lives of the two Defendants Barnaby Robert and Nicholas Love Sons of Dr. Nicholas Love and to the survivor of them in Trust for the said Dr. Love And the said Gilbert Searle in July 17 Jac. demised the said premisses to the said Dr. Nicholas Love for 99 years if the said Nicholas and the Defendants Barnaby and Robert Love the Sons or any of them should so long live and the said Dr. Love had the Original Lease made by the Dean and Chapter delivered to him by the said Searle and afterwards the premisses by mean Conveyances came to Nich. Love the Son who claimed the same absolutely to himself during the said Term and was the reputed Owner thereof And in the late Usurping Times the said Nicholas the Son had the premisses confirmed to him and the said Defendants never pretended any Right possibility or Executory Estate in the said premisses after the death of the said Nicholas the Son And the said Nicholas the Son by Act of Parliament declared forfeited his Estate to His Majesty upon account of Treason and His Majesty granted the premisses to the Duke of York and his Heirs and he 18 Car. 2. granted the premisses and all the Writings to the Plaintiffs their Executors Administrators and Assigns during the residue of the term The Defendants insist That the said Dr. Love the Plaintiffs Father by his Will 15 Car. 1. did Devise the premisses to Dulcibella his Wife for Life for so many years of the said 99 years as should not be spent in her Life and after her death then to the said Nicholas Love the Son for so many years of the said term as he should live and afrer the death of him and the said Dulcibella unto the Defendant Barnabas his Executors Administrators and Assigns for all the residue of the said term and made the said Dulcibella his Executrix who assented the said Will and Executory devise and she enjoyed the premisses during her life and after her dearh which was about 1656 the said Nicholas Love the Son entred and by virtue of the Will possessed the premisses for the residue of the said term as was not spent and not by virtue of any Assignment nor otherwise than the said Executory devise and if the said Nicholas did purchase the premisses of the Usurpers the same ought not to prejudice the Defendant Barnaby's Right and Interest in the premisses by the said Executory devise which he claimeth after the death of Nicholas the Son by virtue of the said Will of his Father as aforesaid and say That Nicholas the Son had no other Estate therein but in expectancy of the death of Dulcibella This Court referred it to be tryed at Law upon this Issue viz. Whether the Defendant Barnaby by the Will of the said Dr. Love hath or shall have any Estate or Interest or possibility in the premisses after the death of the said Nicholas Love the Son if the term so long continue The said Issue was tryed Term is devised to N. and if he die without Issue then to B. this is a void Devise to B. it is too remote a possibility where a Special Verdict was found That Gilbert Searle being possest of the premisses for the Lives of Nicholas Robert and the Defendant Barnaby demised the premisses to Dr. Nicholas Love for 99 years if either of the Three live so long and that the said Dr. afterwards made his Will and devised the premisses to Dulcibella his Wife for her life and after to Nicholas his Son for his Life and if he died without Issue then to the Defendant Barnaby and made the said Dulcibella Executrix who assented to the said Devise That in Easter Term last the Special Verdict was Argued in the Kings-Bench and upon great Debates Judgment was given for the Plaintiff This Court Declared That the Defendant hath no Right or Title to the premisses and Decreed the Plaintiffs their Heirs and Assigns to enjoy against the Defendant Vide this Case well debated at Common Law in Siderfin's Reports p. 450. Windham and Love Moseley cont Maynard 20 Car. 2. fo 999. 22 Car. 2. fo 274. THis Suit is Bill to have a Will decreed to have the Will of Sir Edward Moseley Decreed which upon a Trial hath been found a good Will This Court with the assistance of Judges declared They saw no Cause to decree the said Will. This Cause also is touching Alteration of Possession The Point touching the Decreeing of the said Will Heard and Argued again The Plaintiff insisted That it is the proper Justice of this Court to settle Estates in peace and quietness and pressed to have the Will decreed especially for that no Purchasor would meddle under the Title of the Will and that the Plaintiff was by the Will to raise 10000 l. to be paid according to the directions of the said Will by a time therein prefixed or else he forfeited his Estate therein But the Defendants insisted It is altogether improper to decree a Will in this Court especially to the disinheriting of a Feme Covert and her Son an Infant and that this Court had refused to decree the fame in a former Order with Judges This Court Ordered a New Bill to be brought The Point touching the Condition in the Will Proofs in an Original Cause not allowed to be read on a Bill of Review setled on a Bill of Review the Proofs in the Original Cause not allowed to be read Macklow contra Wilmot 20 Car. 2. fo 548. THe Plaintiff would have the Defendant examined on Interrogatories Defendant not to be Examined upon Interrogatories to discover Deeds and Writings and to be examined to other Matters The Defendant insists That what the Plaintiff now moves for may be of dangerous consequence being to discover the Estates of Purchasors to whom the said Defendants have sold most of the Lands in question and it is now long since the Cause was heard and many Attendances on the Master and Examinations before him and the Decree is Inrolled by the Plaintiff wherefore the Defendant ought not to be examined on Interrogatories being to put up the Order on Hearing in a Point that the Plaintiff at the Hearing did not think fit to move for This Court in regard the Examining of the Defendant on Interrogatories is omitted out of the Decree this Court would not now Order it Dominus Read contra Read 20 Car. 2. fo 146. L.B. THis Case is touching the granting a Ne Exeat Regnum against the Defendant Ne exeat Regnum The Defendanr insisted that the said Writ ought not to be issued out for that the Affidavit of the Lady Read did not contain ground sufficient to warrant it For that the Writ is a Writ of Prerogative on behalf of the Crown and the reason of granting it is that the party against whom it is prayed intends to convey away some considerable Treasure out of the Kingdom or do some other matter
hundred Pounds and Damages Rowley contra Lancaster 21 Car. 2. fo 993. THat Matthew Lancaster bequeathed to John Creeke 100 l. thus viz. Will. 50 l. Devise of Mony to be paid at a Day to come Devisee dies before the Day yet payable to his Administrator in one Month after the Expiration of his Apprenticeship and the other 50 l. within one whole year after the Expiration of the said Apprenticeship and made the Defendant Executor That the Apprenticeship expired 29 Sept. 1664. but John Creeke dying before the Legacy was paid the Defendant refuses to pay it to the Plaintiff the Administrator of the said John Creeke The Defendant insists That he paid the 50 l. due within a Month after the Expiration of the Apprenticeship and that the said John Creeke died before the whole year after the Expiration of his Apprenticeship was expired and therefore the other 50 l. was not due to the Plaintiff This Court being assisted with Judges were clear of Opinion That the said Legacy was Debitum in praesenti solvend in futuro and decreed the said 50 l. to be paid to the Plaintiff with damages Fry contra Porter 21 Car. 2. fo 568. THat the Earl of Newport Will. deceased by his Will devised to the Plaintiff the Lady Ann the Messuage called Newport House with the Appurtenances thus viz I do give and bequeath unto the Lady Ann Countess of Newport my Dear Wife all that my House called Newport-House and all other my Tenements and Hereditaments whatsoever in Middlesex for her Life and after her decease I do give and bequeath the said House and all other my Tenements and Hereditaments as aforesaid to my Grandchild the Lady Ann Knowles the Daughter of Nicholas Earl of Banbury by the Lady Isabella my late Daughter and to the Heirs of her Body lawfully to be begotten Provided always and upon Condition that my said Grandchild the Lady Ann Knowles do marry with the consent of my said Wife and of Charles Earl of Warwick and Edward Earl of Manchester or the Major part of them And in case the said Lady Ann Knowles do and shall marry without the consent of my said Wife and the Major part of my Trustees aforesaid or shall happen to depart this Life without any Issue of her Body then I will and bequeath all the said premisses unto my Grandson George Porter Son of my deceased Daughter the Lady Ann late Wife of Thomas Porter Esq and to his Heirs for ever The Bill is to be Relieved against the Forfeiture of the said Estate for not performing the said Condition in the Will and Marrying against the consent of the Trustees and the Mother Yet the said Mother was told That the Plaintiff was about to marry and said nothing to the contrary whereupon the Plaintiff married and hath Issue The Plaintiff insisting That if any Error were committed in Marrying it was through Ignorance and not Obstinacy she the Plaintiff being very young and knew not of the Proviso or Condition in the said Will and it would be very unreasonable to make the happiness of the Plaintiff to depend upon the consent of Strangers in point of Marriage to put it into their power to keep her during her life either from Marrying or from her Estate and thereby make them Masters of her Affection or Fortune and to disinherit her and her Children But the Defendant insists That the Reason of inserting the said Proviso into the said Will was that the Plaintiff the Lady Ann might be disposed of in Marriage without disparagement and therefore that she should marry with the consent of the said Countess and the two Earls or the Major part of them and of that other Clause viz. That if she married without such Consent then he gave the said House and Premisses to the said Defendant George Porter the Infant and his Heirs for ever and that the said Lady Ann having Married a person very unequal to her Fortune and without such Consent as aforesaid having little or no Estate had made a wilful breach of the said Proviso or Condition in the said Grandfathers Will Lands devised on Condition the Devisee marry with consent and limitation over Devisee marries without Consent she shall not be relieved but the Land decreed to the remainder Man and the said George Porter claims the said House to him and his Heirs by virtue of the said Condition and Limitation over to him by the said Will the construction whereof is to be made out of the Will it self and not otherwise and the said Lady Ann had notice of the said Will before marriage there being discourse of it by the Trustees to her and so the Lady Ann ought not to be relieved against the said Forfeiture or Limitation aforesaid This Court with the Judges and on perusal of Presidents are clear of Opinion and fully satisfied That the Plaintiff ought not to be relieved against the said Forfeiture and that the same was such as ought not to be relieved in Equity and dismist the Plaintiffs Bill Vide this Case in Mod. Rep. p. 300. with Councels and Judges Arguments seriatim Shalmer contra Tresham 21 Car. 2. fo 560. THe Bill is to discover the Deeds of several Lands and whether they were not made in Trust and whether the Debt demanded by the Plaintiff were not mentioned in a Schedule thereunto annex'd The Defendant pleaded Bill to discover Settlements in Trust Plea That the Defendant is a Scrivener and had taken Oath not to discover the Secrets of his Clients Overruled That he was a Scrivener by Profession and hath taken the accustomed Oath that Scriveners do before they are made Free in London whereby he is obliged not to discover the Secrets of those persons business that employ him in that Trade without their leave and that he was employed by and assisted Sir John Langham in the purchasing of the said Lands and the Writings concerning the premisses he drew and hath the Keeping thereof by the said Sir Johns Direction and so ought not to discover the said Writings contrary to his Trust nor any thing relating to this Matter This Court declared That the Oath of a Scrivener doth not oblige from a discovery more than the Oath of any other Free man of London And if it had been in the case of a Counsellor at Law the said Plea had been Insufficient in this case and Overruled the Plea saving he is not to Answer to whom he paid the Purchase Mony Alford cont Pitt 21 Car. 2. fo 181. THe Plaintiffs Suit is Demurrer Remedy at Law Award to have the benefit of an Award To which the Defendant demurred and says That the Plaintiff ought to take his Remedy at Law This Court Overruled the Demurrer Langton al' contra Tracy Astrey 21 Car. 2. fo 376. THe Bill is to have the several Debts due to the Plaintiffs being Creditors of the Defendant Roberts paid The Case is viz. That Thomas
Deed made by the Plaintiff Eliz. in Feb. 1666. Frandulent Deed. before her Marriage with the Plaintiff Sir Philip Howard and that the Plaintiff Sir Philip in right of his said Wife might have all her benefit and interest in or to the Estate of Sir John Baker her former Husband and receive the Rents and profits of the premisses The Case being that Sir John Baker the Father being seized in Fee of Lands by two Deeds Tripartite of Lease and Release made between himself of the one part Sir Robert Newton deceased of the second and Sir John Baker the Son and Dame Eliz. the Plaintiff and sole Daughter of Sir Robert Newton of the third part in consideration of a Marriage between the Plaintiff Dame Eliz. and Sir John Baker the Son and 4000 l. portion conveyed the same to Sir Robert Newton and his Heirs part of which Lands were for the said Dame Eliz. Joynture and Sir John Baker the Father and Dame Mary his Wife being dead Sir John the Son sold part of the premisses for payment of debts part whereof was the Joynture of Dame Eliz. and in consideration of the said Dame Elizabeth joyning in such sale and parting with her Joynture Sir John her Husband in lieu thereof and of 1500 l. to be paid to Dame Elizabeth for a Joynture house limitted the premisses unsold to the said Dame Elizabeth and the Defendants for 400 years upon Trust by Sale thereof to pay the said Dame Elizabeth the said 1500 l. and also the Rents and profits of the whole until Sale and the residue of the said premisses remaining unsold to Dame Elizabeth during her life and after to wait on the Inheritance And in 1658 the Inheritance was conveyed to Sir Robert Newton and his Heirs and he by Will devised the same to the said Dame Elizabeth for life Remainder to the first Son of the Plaintiff Sir Philip and Dame Elizabeth so the Plaintiff being intituled to the 1500 l. and the term of 400 years after the Trusts performed and so ought in right of the said Dame Elizabeth his Lady to continue in the possession of the premisses and receive the Rents and profits thereof which the Defendants refused to do pretending the term of 400 years is limited to them upon other Trusts and in particular that the Plaintiff Dame Elizabeth before her Marriage to the Plaintiff Sir Philip by her Deed of the 9th of February 1666 Assigned to the Defendants all monies then due or to be payable to her by vertue of the Deed in Trust for her benefit and to be at her disposing during the Joynt lives of her and the said Sir Philip whether she Married or continued Sole and that she should have power by writing under her Hand and Seal to dispose thereof for the benefit of her Daughter by her former Husband and that she hath disposed thereof accordingly which said Deed the Plaintiff insists is fraudulent or with power of revocation and never mentioned to Sir Phillip and that Sir Philip after his Marriage setled 500 l. per Annum on the said Dame Elizabeth for a Joynture which he would not have done if he had known or understood the said Dame Elizabeth had made such Deed or disposition as aforesaid of her former Husbands Estate and since their Marriage she desired leave of Sir Philip that she might receive the Rents and profits of the said Lands of her former Husband without mentioning the said Deed and therefore the same ought to be set aside The Defendants do insist the said Dame Elizabeth before her Marriage with the said Philip did declare to him that who ever did Marry her should have no benefit of any Estate that she had by her former Husband and that Sir Philip did agree to bar himself thereof and take no benefit thereby A Widow makes a Deed of her former Husband Estate and marries the second Husband not privy to it the Deed set aside and the second Husband to enjoy the Estate and that Sir Robert Newton looking upon the Estate as setled on his Grand-children as aforesaid and had given his personal Estate and 700 l. per Annum to the Plaintiffs and their Sons and the said Sir Robert Newton never pretended right to the said Estate or intermedled therewith that there is no reason to set a side the said Deed of the 9th of Feb. aforesaid This Court being assisted with the Judges on reading the said Deed it not appearing unto this Court that the said Sir Philip had any notice of the said Deed 9th of Feb. 1666. till after the death of the said Sir Robert Newton which was several years after the Marriage nor was privy or consented to the making of any such Deed but haveing intimation that Dame Elizabeth intended to dispose of her interest in her former Husbands Estate from such Husband as she should Marry broka off the treaty of Marriage which was afterwards brought on again by some Friends of the said Dame Elizabeth and that the said Sir Philip was induced to Marry the said Dame Elizabeth upon the hopes and confidence of having the interest she had in the Estate of the said Sir John Baker her former Husband without which he would never have married her and that the said Sir Philip never knew of the said Deed of the 9th of Feb. 1666 but the same was a fraud upon Sir Phillip and that therefore no use ought to be made thereof and decreed the said Deed of the 9th of Feb. 1666 be absolutely set aside and no use to be made thereof against the said Sir Philip or any claiming under him Poter contra Habbert 24 Car. 2. fo 591. THis Bill is to have a redemption of a Mortgage made in 1636 Mortgage by the Plaintiffes Father to one Abraham Dawes for 5000 l. and for non-payment of the Mortgage mony Sir Thomas Dawes Son and Heir of the said Abraham Dawes entred in 1641 and he and his Assigns have ever since taken the profits And the Defendant insists that the said Thomas Dawes in 49 conveyed the mortgaged premisses to Hugh Hubbert the Defendants Father for 7000 l. and that in 1641 when Sir Thomas Dawes entred there was 5000 l. due on the Mortgage besides interest so he would be charged without 350 l. per Annum for mean profits since that time and would have 6 l. per Cent. Interest for the 7000 l. from the time it appearing on the conveyance This Cause being first heard by Judge Ransford who ordered the Plaintiffs to redeem Computation of interest monies according to the Statute in force and the account for the Interest of the 500 l. to begin from 1636 the time of lending the mony and from that to 1642 Interest to be paid according to Acts then in force and from 42 to 46 Interest at 8 l. and 4 l. per Cent. The Cause being heard again by the Lord Keeper Bridgeman assisted with Judge Tyrrle Morton and Wild who ordered the
years Did by Deed in 1639. in consideration of a Marriage with Elizabeth his then Wife and for that she had parted with her Interest in Goods Consideration c. which by Agreement she had the Disposition of for her own use and other Consideration herein mentioned did Assign over the said Premisses and all his Term therein Lease Assigned in Trust for a Joynture and after for Children to Rumbald Jacobson and Abrah Beard on Trust that the said Eliz. should have the profits during Life and after to James Paul Jane and Mary her Children or such of them as the said Elizabeth should appoint by her Will and for want of such Appointment to the said James Paul Jane and Mary or so many of them as should be living at her decease share and share alike and after Elizabeth dyed Paul the Son being dead in her Lifetime Afterwards by deed in 1643. in consideration of a Marriage between the said Philip Jacobson and Frances Earnely and for a Joynture for the said Frances and for Provision for such Children as he should have by her the said Philip Jacobson and James his Son Assigned over the said Premisses for the remainder of the said Term of 60 years and all his Goods and Houshold stuff unto William Daniel and Alexander Staples their Executors c. on Trust Trust to permit the said Frances and Philip and such Children as they should have between them to receive the profits during the said Term and after the decease of him and his said Wife without Issue then on Trust as to part to suffer the Executors of the said Frances and as to the residue the said James Jacobson his Executors c. to receive the profits during the Term afterwards by deed in 1646. Reciting all Assignments and Indentures aforesaid he the said Philip Jacobson Assigned over the said Premisses and his Term therein to Alexander Staples and Jeffery Daniel their Executors c. on Trust as to the said Frances Jacobson for the Premisses limited to her by her first Joynture and as to several other parcels of Land named as in the said Deed is recited which said last premisses contain 132 Acres which are in Trust for the said James Jacobson from the death of his Father during the residue of the Term and in case the said James should remain unmarryed or being Marryed and should dye without Issue and his Wife being a Widow then the Rents and Profits thereof to remain and be to his younger Brother and Sister Lelease of Trusts and afterwards James and Thomas Earneley Son in Law of the said Philip having Marryed Jane one of the Daughters of the said Philip did 22 Car. 1. Release to Staples and Daniel and to the said Phillip and Joanna Jacobson vid. Executrix of Rombold Jacobson who Survived Beard all and all manner of Trusts and demands whatsoever and Suits in Law or Equity which they or either of them their Executors c. had from the beginning of the World unto the date thereof in all the Lands and Tenements with the Appurtenances then or theretofore in the tenure of Philip Jacobson aforesaid in the County of Wilts and by another Release in Jan. 1647. the said James and Thomas Earneley Released unto the said Philip Jacobson and Joanna Jacobson all manner of Trusts and demands whatsoever in all Lands in the County of Wilts as in the former Release and afterwards by deed in 1653. reciting that there was a Marriage then shortly to be had between the said James Jacobson Son and Heir of Philip Jacobson and one Margaret Still the said Philip did Assign over unto John Still and Nicholas Still their Executor c. the said 123 Acres for the Residue of the Term to the use of James and Margaret for their Lives and after their Deceases to the right Heirs of the said James begotten of Margaret and if Margaret should Survive James and have no Child by him and he dye before the end of the Term then she should have power to sell 51 Acres of the premisses and the Residue to the Executors of Philip and if Margaret dye in the life-time of James not having any Issue of her Body by him begotten then living then to the use of the said James Jacobson his Executors Administrators and Assigns for the residue of the Term which Marriage took effect and Margaret dyed without Issue in the Lifetime of James after whose Decease the said James being in possession by Deed in 1661. for 400 l. Mortgaged the 123 Acres to Elizabeth Brinley and yet enjoyed the 123 Acres till he dyed and the said Elizabeth Assigned over the said Mortgage which now by mean Assignments is come to the Plaintiff and James is dead without Issue or Brother and the Defendants Zenobia Frances and Rachell do him Survive This Court was fully satisfied that the Deed in 1653. Voluntary conveyance by which the said James derived his Title and afterwards made the said Mortgage under which the Plaintiff claims Remainder after a Limitation of a Term to an Issue Male void in Law was a good Conveyance and well executed in James and that the Conveyance in 1646. was a voluntary Conveyance and the Estate thereby claimed by the Defendants created being an Estate in remainder after a Limitation of a Term for years to an issue in Tail was void in Law and Decreed the Plaintiff to the possession of the 123 Acres or the Mony due on the Mortgage and to enjoy against all the Defendants and Decreed that the Plaintiff and Defendant Hopkins who is Administrator of the Mortgager James Jacobson to come to an account Oliver contra Leman al' 29 Car 2. fo 102. A Trial at Law is directed to the Plaintiff to try his Right to a Reversion of Lands after the Death of the Defendant Wainwright so the Plaintiffs desire what time they think fit to try the same A Tryal at Law directed to be within a precise time but the Defendant insists that the Plaintiff ought to be confined to a convenient time which was prayed might be the Rule in this Case and that the Defendant might not be kept in suspence and to wait on the Plaintiffs Convenience when he shall think fit to try the same This Court ordered it to be Tryed in Easter Term next or the Issue be taken pro confesso Stawell contra Austin 29 Car. 2. fo 579. THat George Stawell Father of Vrsula and Elizabeth Stawell being seized in Fee of Lands Construction of a Will by Deed and Recovery thereon setled all the said Lands on the Defendant Sir John and Robert Austin and their Heirs to the said George for Life remainder for such Estates and Charges as he by Will or other writing should appoint remainder to the Heirs Males of his Body with remainders over and by Will persueant to the power reserved by the said Deed devised the premisses setled by the said Deed to the said
Defendant for 99 years after his death upon Trust in Case he left no Son or such as should die before 21 without Heirs Males and should leave one or more Daughters for raising of 12000 l. if but one Daughter for such Daughter and if two or more Daughters then 20000 l. to be raised for their portions to be equally divided between them and to be due and payable at their respective Ages of 21 years or days of Marriage and the said George died leaving no Son and having only three Daughters viz. Vrsula Elizabeth and one Ann Stawell who died since her Father and that the said Testator George his Relict married the Defendant Seymore and she on the death of her Daughter Ann took the Administration of her Estate and also soon after died leaving the portion of the said Ann in the said 20000 l. Un administrated and Administration of the said Anns Estate was granted to the said Vrsula and Elizabeth her Sister who are intituled to the said Anns personal Estate and that the said 20000 l. ought to be raised by the said Trustees out of the Lands setled as aforesaid but the Defendants the Trustees insist That by the words of the Will it is dubious whether the whole 20000 l. ought to be raised or any more than 12000 l. When Land to be charged with portion or not upon the words of the Will the said Ann being dead unmarried and before 21. And the Defendant the Heir insisted That as the Case is the portions of the said Ann ought not to be charged on the said Lands so the only Question before the Court being whether the Trustees shall raise 12000 l. or 20000 l. for the said Plaintiffs Vrsula and Elizabeth It appearing plainly to this Court that by the words of the said Will that if the said Testator George had two Daughters or more Daughter then 20000 l. should be raised This Court is of Opinion and declared that the Lands ought to be charged with the 20000 l. and the payment thereof to the Plaintiffs Vrsula and Elizabeth Lawrence contra Berny 29 Car. 2. fo 156. THis Case is on a Bill of Review Bill of Review This Court declared they would not make Error by construction and where a Decree is capable of being executed by the ordinary Process and Forms of the Court and where things come to be in such a State and Condition after a Decree made that it requires an original Bill and a second Decree upon that before the first Decree can be executed In the first Case whatever the inniqity of the first Decree may be yet till it be reversed the Court is bound to assist it with the utmost process the course of the Court will bear for in all this the Conscience of the present Judge is not concerned because it is not his Act but rather his sufferance that the Act of his Predecessor should have its due effect by ordinary Forms But where the common Process of the Court will not serve but a new Bill and a new Decree is become nenessary to have the Execution of a former Decree is in its self unjust there this Court desired to be excused in making in its own Act to build upon such ill Foundations and charging his own Conscience with promoting an apparent injustice and to this condition hath the Plaintiff Lawrence brought himself for he forbore to apply himself to this Court to support him as one that claimed under the Decree in 1650 or to pray an Injunction to stop Berneys proceeding at Law but stay'd till Berney had recovered the Land by a Tryal at Bar Where no ordinary Process upon the first Decree will serve but there must be a new Bill to pray Execution of the first Decree by a second Decree and been put into Possession by the Sheriff and now no ordinary Process upon the first Decree will serve but he is drawn to a new Bill to pray Execution of the first Decree by a second Deree and this obligeth the Court to examin the grounds of the first Decree before they make the same Decree again And this Court was not of this Opinion alone but it was also the Opinion of others that were before him who had made several Presidents in like Cases and would not enter further into Arguments of the Errors Lawrences Bill was an original Bill to Execute two Decrees in 1650 and 1651 and the Defendant Berney now also Plaintiff it being cross Causes brought his Bill of Review to Reverse the said Decree c. as Unjust and Erroncous That the first Decree by the Lord Coventry in 30 Car. 1. decreed a Sale of the premisses for a performance of the Trust that in 1650 a Decree was made to frustrate the Lord Coventry's Decree Priske contra Palmer 29 Car. 2. fo 323. THis Court was satisfied the Plaintiff had a quiet enjoyment for a long time and declared Want of a surrender Aided That notwithstanding a Surrender is wanting yet the Plaintiffs Title ought to be supplied in Equity and decreed the Plaintiff to enjoy the premisses and the perpetual Injunction to stay all proceedings at Law Woolstenholm contra Swetnam 29 Car. 2. fo 146. THat Thomas Swetnam deceased Settlement being possessed of a Personal Estate and making provision for his Grand-Children being the Children of Thomas his eldest Son being five in number whereof Peter Swetnam was one did by Deed authorize the Defendant William Swetnam who was his second Son and the Defendant Thomas Swetnam who was his Grandchild to receive 32 l. Rent which was an Arrear of 16 l. per Annum Annuity of Foster's Farm in Trust to be divided amongst his said five Grandchildren at the Age of 21 and the said Thomas the Grandfather by some other Deed charged his whole Lands on a Settlement thereof on the Defendant Thomas with the payment of 1000 l. equally amongst his said five Grandchildren whereof the said Peter was one and in further kindness to the said Peter in 1657. by Will gave him 100 l. to be paid out of the Personal Estate and made the Defendant William his Executor and the said Peters Father to increase his Fortune put out several Sums of Mony in the said William's Name and deposited other Mony in the said Defendants hands for the said Peters use and by his Will surther gave to Peter 30 l. and Peter married the Plaintiff Martha and by his Will devised all his Estate to the said Martha whereby the Plaintiff is intituled to the said Devisee and to the said Peters shate in the 1000 l. so to be relieved for the Sum is the Bill The Defendant William insists That Thomas the Father of Peter died possessed of a Personal Estate of 266 l. and the Defendant as his Executor possest it 1000 l. to be raised and divided amongst five Children one dies before distribution the Survivors shall have his share and not the Devisee of him that is dead and paid
his debts being 100 l. and says that the 1000 l. was given to be divided as afore said and as the Defendant William should think fit and that Peter dying before any distribution was made to him thereof the Defendant William ought not to distribute the same amongst the other four and no part of it ought to come to the Plaintiff This Court declared That no part of the 1000 l. doth belong to the Plaintiff in Right of the said Peter or otherwise and dismist the Bill Nance contra Coke 29 Car. 2. fo 64. THe Plaintiff seeks Redemption of a Mortgage made the 17th of Jac. 1. Release pleaded against the Redemption of a Mortgage and allowed the Defendant pleaded a Release of the Mortgagors Interest in Anno 1620. This Court after so long time and such Release could not admit the Plaintiff to Redeem though the premisses were Mortgaged for 376 l. and worth now to be sold 1500 l. Burgrave contra Whitwick al' 29 Car. 2. fo 173. THat George Whitwick deceased Will. having Issue George his only Son and Elizabeth and Martha the Wife of the Defendant Curtis by Will bequeathed to the said Elizabeth 600 l. to be paid unto her as therein after is expressed and to the said Martha 600 l. in like manner and gave the residue of his Personal Estate to the said George his Son to be employed as should be afterwards expressed in his Will and also gave to his said Son and his Heirs all Lands whatsoever and Willed That if either of his said Children should dye in their Minority that the surviving should be Heirs to the deceased in equal portions but if all should die without Issue then he gave his Lands to George the Son of Humfrey Whitwick with Remainders over and ordered the said Portions in convenient time to be laid out in Lands for his said Children and till Lands purchased the Executors to retain the Mony so long as the Overseers should see good at 5 l. per Cent. and made the Defendant Humfrey Whitwick Executor That George the Son died Intestate under Age unmarried that no Land hath been purchased by the Executor That Martha attained 21. and received her Portion and also the Moiety of the residue of the Personal Estate bequeathed to George the Son but refuses to pay Elizabeth her 600 l. and Moiety of the said residue of the Personal Estate she being yet a Minor under 21. yet she is married to the other Plaintiff Burgrave who can give a Discharge The Defendant insiststs According to the meaning of the Will he ought not to pay Elizabeth till the Age of 21 years for in case she die before the said Martha ought to have the other Moiety of the residue of the Personal Estate and he is advised there is a possibility of Survivorship of the Plaintiff Elizabeths Portion and Moiety of the residuary of the Personal Estate and that if he should pay it to the said Elizabeth and she should die before 21 the Defendant Martha may compel him to pay it again But the Plaintiff insists That the Moiety of the residuary Personal Estate devised to the said George not being laid out in Lands falls to the Plaintiff within the words of that Clause in the Will that gives the residue by equal portions to the surviving and so no further Survivorship intended This Court was of Opinion Residuary part of the Personal Estate not subject to any contingency of Survivorship but the Interest presently vested and declared the residuary part of the Personal Estate is not subject to any contingency of Survivorship but that the Interest of that presently vested in the Plaintiff upon the death of the said George the Son and ordered the Defendant the Executor to pay one Moiety of the residuary Personal Estate and in case Elizabeth die before 21 then the 600 l. to be paid to Martha which in the mean time is to be kept in the Defendants hands Morgan contra Scudamore 29 Car. 2. fo 658. THe Plaintiffs being Customary Tenants of the Mannor Renewing Copies upon reasonable Fines in which Mannor the Tenants hold Estates by Copy to them and their Heirs by the words Sibi Suis for 99 years yielding a Rent paying a Herriot and doing of Suit and Service c. And by the Custom of the said Mannor the Lords upon Expiration of every Estate ought to renew upon reasonable Fines and which said Estates by the Custom of the Mannour do descend from Heir to Heir and their Estates to be renewed for reasonable Fines they being expired which the Lords of the Mannor refuse demanding more than the Fee for a Fine whereas two years value was as much as ever was or ought to be given or demanded The Defendant the Lord of the said Mannor insists that there was such a Custom to renew for 99 years but the Fines always at the will of the Lord and such as the Plaintiffs could agree with him for there being no benefit to come to the Lord during the 99 years so the question is whether the Lord shall be at liberty to set what Fine he please or be restreined therein by this Court it appearing that the Fines are Arbitrary The Plaintiffs insist that though the Fines are Arbitrary yet the same are by Law supposed to be reasonable and that in some Cases the Law had adjudged above two years value to be an unreasonable Fine and the Defendant had demanded 10 and 12 years value for a Fine which is very extravagant and the will of the Lord in this Case ought to be limited The Defendant insists that the Plaintiffs Estates and Terms for 99 years expired many years before the Bill Exhibited some of them 30 and others 11 or 12 years since in the life-time of the Defendants Father and some of the Plaintiffs Estates have been granted to others and Fines levied thereon and that the Tenants of the said Mannor do not during the 99 years pay any Fines upon death or alteration so nothing is due to the Lord for 99 years together so that the Defendant insists nine or ten years purchase is a reasonable Custom This Court declared The Lord of a Mannor limited to two years value for a Fine the will of the Lord ought to be limited and that the Plaintiffs onpayment of two years value shall be admitted to their said Estates and hold the same against the Defendant and all claiming under him and that the Plaintiffs shall renew such Estates within one year after the Expiration of their Term in case they be of Age Tenants Decree to renew within one year after the Leases expired or within the four Seas at such time or otherwise within one year after such respective Tenant shall attain the Age of 21 or return from beyond the Seas or else such Tenant shall be for ever foreclosed of any help or benefit and and then the Lord is at liberty to dispose thereof Warwick contra
Cutler 30 Car. 2. fo 285. THe Testator deviseth Lands to be held by his Executors Will. Lands devised to be held by Executors till his Son attain 22 years Son dyes before 22 Executors decreed to hold the Lands till the said 22 years till the Testators Son attained 22 years of Age for maintenance of the Executrix and her Children that the said Testators Son dyed before 22 years of Age. This Court decreed the Executrix to hold the Lands against the next Heir until the said Sons Age of 22 years as if the said Son had lived to 22 years and the Plaintiffs debt on Bond to be paid by the next Heir or the reversion to lye liable and charged therewith Jolly contra Wills 30 Car. 2. fo 523. THat Roger Garland Elder Brother Will. Devise of Goods to J. S. for 11 years the remainder over J.S. decreed to deliver the Goods after the 11 years by Will did give unto John Wills the Defendants late Husband the use of all and singular the Goods Plate c. whatsoever then in his House for Term of 11 years from his death and after the 11 years expired he gave the same to his two Nephews Robert and Roger Garland and to his Niece Elizabeth the Plaintiff to be equally divided amongst them and after the 11 years the said Wills was to deliver them to the Plaintiff The Defendant Wills insists that by the bequest of the said Goods for the 11 years she and her Husband to whom she is Executrix are well intituled to the property of them and that the Devisour is void in Law and Equity This Court decreed the Defendants Will to deliver the goods to the Plaintiffs to be divided according to the Will the said 11 years being expired German contra Dom Colston 30 Car. 2. fo 741. THis Court decreed Legatees to refund to make up Assets that in case hereafter any Debt of Sir Joseph Colston should be discovered and recovered against his Executors the Legatees of Sir Joseph Colston are to refund in proportion what they have received for or towards their Legacies to make up Assets for satisfaction thereof Cotton contra Cotton 30 Car. 2. fo 71. 282. THat Nicholas Cotton being seized in Fee of Copyhold Devise and Free hold Lands in Middlesex and Surry of 500 l. per Annum in 1676. dyed without Issue wherebythe same descended to the Plaintiff as Couzen and Heir to the said Nicholas but the Defendant Katherine Cotton pretends that the said Nicholas Cotton made his Will in Writing 25 years since viz. in 1650. having first surrendred the said Copyhold Land to the use of his Will and bequeathed the same to the said Defendant Mrs. Katherine Cotton his Relict and her Heirs but if such Will were the said Nicholas purchased some Lands since which descended to the Plaintiff and that the said Nicholas a little before his death contracted with Sir Thomas Lee and his Trustees for certain Copyhold and other Lands in Sunbury and was to pay 1110 for the same and paid most of the Mony in his Life-time and had possession The Defendant Mrs. Cotton insists that Nicholas Cotton her late Husband deposited in the Hands of the said Sir Thomas Lee or his Trustees 600 l. designing to purchase the said Land in Sunbury but her said Husband Cotton was to have interest for the said Mony and he only rented the said Sunbury Lands and not purchased them because a good Title could not appear but insist that after the death of her Husband she purchased the premisses and paid 320 l more then the 600 l. paid into the said Sir Thomas Lee's Hands and that her Husband by the said Will devised to her all his Real and Personal Estate and made her Executrix This Cause being now heard by Mr. Articles for a purchase and 600 l. paid but interest was paid for it till the Conveyance executed contractor dyes before any conveyance the 600 l. was part of his personal Estate Justice Windham who on reading the Articles between the said Nicholas Cotton and the said Sir Thomas Lee whereby the said Nicholas Contracted with him for the purchase of his Free and Copyhold Lands in Sunbury in Fee simple for 920 l. is of Opinion that the said Nicholas dyed before any Conveyance made by the said Sir Thomas Lee of the said premisses to the said Nicholas and the said Sir Thomas paying Interest for the said 600 l. and the said Nicholas paying Rent for the said premises the said 600 l. at the death of the said Nicholas was part of his personal Estate and as to that 600 l. could not relieve the Plaintiff but difmist the Bill And as to the Morgage made to Perkins by the said Nicholas and the Defendant his Relict it appearing that part of the Morgaged Lands was before that Morgage made Equity of redemption to whom belongeth setled on the said Nicholas and Katherine in Joynture or otherwise so as the same came to her as Survivor this Court is of Opinion that the Equity of Redemption belongs to her as survivor and not to the Plaintiff But as for the other part of the Mortgaged premisses and other matters in the Plaintiffs Bill for which he seeks relief as Heir The question being whether any republication were of the said Nicholas his Will Republication of a Will and whether the same Lands do belong to the Plaintiff as Heir or to the Defendant Katherine as Devisee by force of the said Will. This Court referred that point to a Tryal at Law upon this Issue whether the said Nichelas Cotton did by his said Will devise the said Lands in Shepperton in the Defendants answer mentioned to be purchased by the said Nicholas Cotton of one Rowsell in Fee in 1659. to the said Katherine or not A Tryal at Law having been had upon the point aforesaid a Special Verdict was by the Lord Chief Justice North's direction sound Lands decreed to the Devisee and on a Solemn Argument before all the Judges of the Common Pleas they unanimously gave Judgment for the Defendant that the Lands in question did belong to the Defendant Katherine as Devisee by the said Will. This Court confirmed the Judges Opinion Civil contra Rich 30 Car. 2. fo 338. THat Sir Edwin Rich made his Will whereby he after some Legacies gives and Bequeaths all the residue of his Estate both real and personal to Sir Charles Rich his Heirs and Assigns for ever and maks him Executor of his Will and in his Will says he left his Estate as aforesaid in Trust with him wherewith to reward his Children and Grand-children according to their demerit This Court declared A general Trust in a Will for Children and not a fixed Trust to create a certainty of right That as to Sir Edwins Estate taking the words of the Will of the said Sir Edwin as they were they could amount to no more than a general Trust in Sir
Charles to reward such of his Children and Grand children as they should demerit and as Sir Charles should think fit and not an absolute fixed Trust to create a certainty of right or in terest as to any certain Proportion in any of the Children or Grand children much less in the Plaintiff Civil Rich who demands the greatest part of the Estate and that it was in the Grandfathers power to give the said Estate or what Proportions thereof as he pleased to any of his Children or Grand-children but whatever of the real Estate of Sir Edwin was disposed or setled by the said Sir Charles by act Executed in his Life time or was devised or given by the Will of the said Sir Charles the Plaintiff not to be releived but dismist the Bill Boeve contra Skipwith 30 Car. 2. fo 140. THe Bill is a Suplemental Bill A Supplemental Bill for a further discovery to have a further discovery from the Defendant by way of Evidence for the better clearing the Matters depending on the Account which the Defendant hath not answered in the former Cause The Plaintiff pleaded the former Bill to which the Defendant answered and the Cause heard and the Account directed This Court ordered the Defendant to answer to all Matters in this Bill not answered to in the former Cause but the Plaintiff not to reply nor to proceed further Dom. Grey al' contra Colvile al' 30 Car. 2. fo 397. THe Plaintiff the Lady Greys Bill is to be relieved for a debt of 1500 l. and Interest on Bond Lands purchased in Trust decreed Assets to to pay Judgment wherein John Colvile did bind himself and his Heirs to repay the same unto the Plaintiff her Executors and Assigns that the same might be paid out of the Lands which were purchased by the said John Colvile with his own proper Mony in the names of himself and the Defendants Wife to hold to them two for their lives and then to the Heirs of Colvile and the rest were purchased in the names of the said Defendants Morriss and Saunders in Trust for the said John Colvile and his Heirs That soon after and before the 1500 l. was paid the said John Colvile died and the right and equity of the premisses during the life of the said Defendants Wife is in Josia Colvile and the Reversion in Fee after the death of the said Wife will descend to the said Defendant Josia Colvile as Son and Heir of the said John Colvile and the profits are received by him or for his use that the said John Colvile dying intestate Administration is granted to Dorothy his Relict who pleads she hath no personal Estate whereupon the Lady Grey commenced a Sute at Law by filing an Original for her said debt against the Defendant Josia as Son and Heir of the said John Colvile and hath got Judgment thereon to have satisfaction for the said debt out of the Reversion of the Lands of John which descended in Fee to the said Defendant Josia Colvile and ought to have satisfaction accordingly but the said Defendant Josia pretendeth he hath nothing by descent in present but the Reversion of the Lands purchased in the names of John Colvile and his Wife after the death of his Wife whereas he and the other two Defendants were only Trustees for John Colvile and his Heirs and their Trust being now come to the Defendant Josia they are liable as Assets in equity for satisfaction of the Plaintiffs debts and the Plaintiff ought to be let into the immediate Possession and the said Josia also insists That the premisses are incumbred by a former Judgment of one Lease for 800 l. and the Plaintiffs Creditors and other the Creditors in their Suit seeking relief against the same Defendants upon the same Trust and Equity and to have their debts paid out of the said Lands they insisting they are Creditors by Judgment grounded on Original of the same day and date with the said Lady Grey and ought to be satisfied in equal degree and time The Plaintiffs Creed and the other Creditors insist Judgments to Attach Lands according to priority of Originals That they for so much as the Estate in Law of Wise is in the Heir that their Judgments ought to Attach the Lands according to priority of Originals and tho' the said Leke have obtained a Decree prior to the Creditors in these Suits yet the same is to be subject to the direction of this Court and ought not to take place but according to the Date of their Originals This Court it being admitted by all that the Original on which the said Lekes Judgment is grounded is prior to all the other Creditors Originals and that the Plaintiff the Lady Grey and Creeds Originals are next in priority and bear the same date one with another and ought next to be satisfied with other Judgments who Originally bear the same date declared that the Estate purchased in the Names of the Defendants Wise as aforesaid was a Trust for life attending the Reversion and so liable to make the several Plaintiffs Satisfaction for their Debts and should be enjoyed by the Plaintiffs against the said Wise and Josiah Colvile the Heir and the Court decreed that if the Estate of Wise as aforesaid were not sufficient then the said Reversionary Lands purchased in the Names of the said Morris and Sanders after the death of Sir John Tufton who hath an Estate for life in the said Lands should go towards Satisfaction of the said Debts Carr contra Bedford 30 Car. 2. fo 64. THe Bill being Will. that Edmund Arnold having no Child by his Will whereof he made the Defendant Bedford Executor gave several Legacies to several persons and uses and gave all the rest and residue of his Moneys and Personal Estate after Debts paid to and amongst his Kindred according to their most need to be distributed amongst them by his Executors saving such Legacies as should by his Will or any Codicil further dispose of and the Testator afterwards by Codicil gave other Legacies and desired that a care and regard should be had to the Plaintiff John Buncher The Defendant the Executor insists that he not knowing to what degroe of Kindred the bequest of the said residue ought to extend he had annexed two Schedules of Remorest Kindred and is advised until their several Claims were examined and setled by this Court he could not safely make a distribution This Court taking into consideration Devise after Debts and Legacies paid the Residue amongst his Kindred according to their most need this to be extended according to the Act for better Settlement of Intestates Estates to what degree of Kindred the Testator's bequest of the residue of his Personal Estate to his Kindred of most need could extend that the Act of Parliament for better setling Intestates Estates was the best Rule that could be observed as to the Limiting the extent of the word Kindred and
consented and agreed to by the Relict and Executrix and so decreed at the former hearing This Court declared Devise of a Personal Estate in Remainder after the death of J.S. is a void Devise and Vests wholy in J.S. she being Executrix That the Devise of the personal Estate to the Plaintiff in Remainder was a void Devise and the said Estate to the Testator immediately thereupon did Attach and vest in the said Alice his Relict and Executrix and the Defendant as her Executor was and is well intituled thereto and decreed accordingly Bredhust contra Richardson 31 Car. 2 fo 695. THat Samuel Russell by his Will gave to his three Daughters Sarah Christian and Elizabeth 540 l. to be divided amongst them viz. For each of them in particular 180 l. but if any one or two of them 540 l. To be divided amongst three Daughters and if one or two dyes without Issue the Daughters to Inherit each other one Marries the Plaintiff and dyes Sans Issue the Plaintiff is intituled to the 180 l. as Administrator to his Wife should dye without leaving a Child that the Daughters should Inherit one anothers Goods Monies Lands and Chattels which the deceased should leave behind them and that the Plaintiff intermarried with the said Elizabeth and that she died without leaving a Child before payment of the said 180 l. The Plaintiff insists That he as Administrator to the said Elizabeh his Wife is intituled to the said 180 l. and her share of the said Goods The Defendant insists That by the words and true intent of the Testator and the said Will the same doth not belong to the Plaintiff but came or in Equity belongs to the Defendants as Surviving Sisters This Court declared the Plaintiff is well intituled to the said 180 l. and decreed accordingly Turner contra Turner 31 Car. 2. fo 102. THat the Plaintiffs Father lent to Ayloff 700 l. and 200 l. at another time for which Ayloff Mortgaged Lands to the Plaintiffs Father and his Heirs with proviso that on payment of 600 l. to the said Plaintiff Father or Heirs then the premisses to be reconveyed to Ayloff that the Plaintiff is Executor to his Father and Brothers and so claims the Mortgages as vesting in the Executors of his Father and not in his Heirs The Defendant being the Son and Heir of the Plaintiffs eldest Brother deceased and Grandson and Heir to the said Plaintiff's Father insists That the Plaintiff and Defendant and others who claimed several shares and parts of the Plaintiffs Fathers personal Estate agreed to a Division thereof amongst themselves and a Division was made and Releases given of each ones demands in Law or Equity to the said Estate and the Plaintiff in particular released and the said Ayloff's Mortgage with the Mony due thereon with other things was set out and allotted to the Defendant by consent of all the parties and received by the Defendant in part of his share and the Plaintiff accounted to the Defendant for the profits of the said Ayloffs Mortgaged premisses received by him and afterwards in 1664 the Defendant had a Decree for the Mortgage Mony against Ayloffs Executor and received the same to which proceedings the Plaintiff was privy and the Defendant says it is unreasonable that the Plaintiff should now make a demand to the said Mortgage to unsetle matters so setled by his own consent but the Plaintiff insists he looked on the premisses at that time to come to the Defendant as Heir and knew not his own Titile thereto and the shares set out came but to 250 l. apiece and Ayloffs Mortgage was worth 800 l. This Court is of Opinion The Heir is decreed to have a right to a Mortgage in Fee and not the Executor that the Plaintiff ought to be relieved and had an undoubted Right to the said Mortgaged premisses and decreed the Defendant to repay all the Mony received by him thereon to the Plaintiff Bois contra Marsh 31 Car. 2. Land Legatees and Mony Legatees decreed to abate in proportion notwithstanding an Agreement to the contrary fo 441. THis Court declared That all the Legatees both Land Legatees and Mony Legatees ought to abate in propotion notwithstanding the Agreement to the contrary and that the said Agreement be set aside Audley contra Dom ' Audley 31 Car. 2. fo 848. THe Bill is to set aside a Lease made by Sir Henry Audley the Plaintiffs Father Power to make Leases if well pursued to the Defendants as Trustees for the Defendant the Lady Audley for 99 years if Henry Francis and Ann Audley Children of Sir Henry by the Defendant the Lady Audley should so long live paying yearly so much Rent as amounts to two parts in three of the yearly Value of the said Houses according to the best improved Value But the Plaintiff insists The said Lease is not made pursuant to the power reserved to the said Henry by a Deed of Settlement made by one Packington in 4 Car. 1. in Consideration of a Marriage between the said Sir Henry and Ann one of the said Packingtons Daughters and Coheirs by which it was declared That the benefit of such power in the said Sir Henry to make Leases was to be for the younger Children of the said Sir Henry by the said Ann his first Wife and the said Lease was not well gained from Sir Henry The Defendant insisted it was made pursuant to the power which was That Sir Henry should have power to make Leases for a provision of any thing he should have or otherwise as he should direct Which Matter was referred to the Lord Chief Justice Hales who declared the power good and that Sir Henry had pursued that power The Plaintiff insisted That the Rent reserved is altogether uncertain and lies only in Averment and that if the Value averred by the Plaintiff should in the least be disproved the Plaintiff would be Nonsuited in any Action And so insisted That it was proper for this Court to fix and establish that for a standing Rent which can be made out to have been two parts of the best improved Value at the time of making the said Lease and that the Rent so to be ascertained the Defendant might Covenant for constant payment thereof This Court on perusal of the said Lease and power and of the Lord Hales Opinion declared the said Lease to be good and sufficient and that unless proof be made of a greater value than the Sum of 290 l. Two parts in three of the improved value reserved as a Rent by a power the constant payment of such a Sum at the time of making the said Lease decreed to be paid whether the premisses rise or fall which hath been constantly paid by the Defendant the Lady Audley and accepted of by the Plaintiff that the said Sum must be taken as two parts of the full value of the premisses at the time of making the said Lease which or the greater
Value if so proved is to continue to be paid whether the said premisses rise or fall in Value and decreed accordingly Hethersell contra Hales 31 Car. 2. fo 845. THe Question in the Case is touching 2500 l. 200 l. allowed a Trustee for Charges and Expences in managing a Trust demanded by the Defendant for his Charges and Expences in managing the Trust in question which began in 1668. and continued till this Defendants Answer was put in in which time the Defendant received 20000 l. and paid the same all away to the Creditors and the Plaintiff had not surcharged the Defendant 6 d. This Court took till this day to consider what was fit to be allowed in a matter of this nature and having considered that the Defendant was a Friend to the Family and undertook the Trust at their great Importunity he having a considerable Estate when he undertook the Trust and considering the charges of Surveying the whole Estate setting and letting the same looking after Tenants adjusting their Accounts calling in their Rents returning Monies to Creditors and treating with and stating their Debts and procuring and agreeing with Purchasors and for Law charges and for keeping Servants and Horses and employing others in Journeys to London and elsewhere and his Care there lying from home a long time was of Opinion That the Defendant might well deserve the whole 2500 l. yet doth allow but 2000 l. which the said Defendant is to have Ray Vx ejus contra Stanhope 31 Car. 2. fo 809. THe Bill is That Sir Edward Stanhope Trust the Plaintiff Elizabeths Grandfather by Deed demised Lands to Trustees for ten years after the said Edwards death upon Trust that they should out of the Profits pay to the Plaintiff Elizabeth for her Maintenance 20 l. per annum until her Age of 21. and should further pay to the Plaintiff Elizabeth at her Age of 21. if she so long keep unmarried 1000 Marks for her Portion That the said Sir Edward died leaving Issue Edward Stanhope the Plaintiff Elizabeths Father his Son and Heir she being then 12 years of Age That after Sir Edwards death the Trustees did not intermeddle but left all to the management of the said Plaintiffs Father who received all the Profits and on that Consideration Edward Stanhope the Plaintiffs Father demised to Trustees the said premisses the Reversion of which he was seized in Fee expectant upon the said Term of 10 years and other Lands whereof he was Seized in Fee to hold for 20 years upon Trust to pay the Plaintiff Elizabeth 20 l. per Annum until her Marriage and 500 l. after her Marriage in such manner as in the said Deed for 20 years is expressed and the same was said to be made in consideration of the Preferment the said Sir Edward intended for the Plaintiff Elizabeth his Grandchild that the Plaintiff received the profits of the premisses in the said former Lease during the 10 years and profits of the Premisses in the said latter Lease so long as he lived and maintained the Plaintiff and in 1658. the Plaintiff Elizabeths Father dyed without Issue Male but in his life after the said Lease for 20 years setled the premisses with other Lands of 500 l. per Annum upon the Defendant his Brother without any consideration save natural Affection and the Defendant hath since received the profits that the Plaintiff Elizabeth was unmarryed at her Fathers Death and was his only Child and about nineteen years before the Bill exhibited she Marryed George Stanhope who dyed and about 7 years since she Marryed the Plaintiff Ray so to have Satisfaction of the 20 l. per annum from her Fathers Death to the time of her Marriage with George Stanhope and the 500 l. and Interest from her said Marriage but the Defendant refuseth to pay the same pretending the said several Terms are expired and that the Lands of 60 l. per Annum descended upon the Plaintiff Elizabeth by her Fathers permission in Satisfaction of the said Money but the Plaintiff insists the Lands descended to her from her Father were charged with 500 l. which she hath paid and she had no other provision made for her out of her Fathers Estate and that the Defendant had an Estate of 500 l. per Annum come to him by a voluntary Settlement from the Plaintiffs Father The Defendant insisted that if the Plaintiff Eliz. Father did make such demise for 20 years he had no power so to do being but Tenant for life by a Settlement made by the said Sir Edward and so the Defendant not liable to pay the Moneys and the Defendant claims the Lands and Premisses by vertue of a Fine and Settlement made by the said Edward Stanhope the Plaintiffs Father wherein the Defendant and his Brother George Stanhope joyned and though the said Defendant is the Heir Male of this Family yet he receives little there out of the said Estate the same being charged with 86 l. per An. and the Plaintiff hath not only enjoyed the said 62 l. per ann charged only with 500 l. but also as Administrator to her said Father received out of his Personal Estate 600 l. and if she should have the 500 l. in question also she would have a greater share out of the Estate Arrears of Annuity decreed to be paid and also a portion of 500 l. upon the Defendants owning it in a Letter than the Defendant This Court upon reading a Letter from the Defendant wherein he owns the 500 l. to be due to the Plaintiff Elizabeth on her Marriage and 20 l. per Annum in the mean time or to that effect declared the Defendant ought to pay the Arrears of the said 20 l. per Annum from the death of the Plaintiffs Father to her Marriage with her first Husband and also the 500 l. with the Interest thereof from the time it was raised out of the profits and decreed the same accordingly Dom. Blois al' contra Blois al' 31 Car. 2. fo 723. THe Bill of the Plaintiff Will. Dame Jane Blois and of Jane her Daughter by Sir William Bloys is viz. that the said Sir William Blois Father of the said Jane the Infant being Seized of Lands by his Will gave all his Real and Personal Estate to the Defendant Dame Elizabeth to the Plaintiff Dame Jane and to the Defendant Mary Brook and Abigal Hodges provided that his Son Charles Blois should have 300 l. per Annum thereof and all his Goods should be equally divided amongst his 4 Children as soon as the said Charles should by a Match raise 9000 l. to be paid to his Sisters and made the four Children Executors and dyed whereby the Plaintiff Dame Jane and the rest of the Executors were Intituled to all the Real and Personal Estate to them and their Heirs as joynt Tenants in Trust nevertheless for the said Elizabeth and Mary and the Infant Plaintiff until the Sum of 9000 l. should be raised
and paid unto them and secured unto them by the Defendant Charles the only Son and Heir of the said Sir William The Defendants Charles Elizabeth Mary Brook and Abigal Hodges insist that Sir William in his Life time upon his second Marriage with the said Plaintiff Dame Jane the Defendants Charles Elizabeth and Mary Brooke being the Issue of the said Sir William by a former Venter by deed setled a great part of his Estate in Trust for the said Dame Jane as her Joynture wherein provision was made whereby the said Plaintiff Jane his Daughter was to have 3000 l. out of his Estate for her Portion and that Sir William declared he intended her no more and that the Defendants Elizabeth and Mary Sisters of the whole Blood to the Defendant Charles should have their Portions out of his Estate made equal with the portion provided for the Plaintiff Jane the Infant as aforesaid and that the 9000 l. to be raised by the Defendant Charles was for all his Sisters Portions including the said Plaintiff Jane the Infant but over and above the said 3000 l. provided for her by the said Settlement and hope this Court will not think it reasonable that the Estate of the Defendant Charles shall be charged with the payment of 6000 l. for the Plaintiff Janes portion which Sir William never intended to be above 3000 l. and insists that the Plaintiff Jane being Sister by the second Venter ought not to have two 3000 l. and they but one 3000 l. who are Sisters of the whole Blood to the said Charles and insist that the said Will was only in affirmation of the said Settlement and that the said Sir William had no great Fortune with the said Dame Jane The Plaintiff Dame Jane and Jane her Daughter insist that by the said Settlement on Marriage with Dame Jane to Sir William there was a provision for Issue Males and if more then a provision for 3000 l. for Issue Females by which the Plaintiff Jane the Daughter claims 3000 l. And then Sir William by his Will devising 9000 l. to be raised out of his Lands for his Daughters Portions viz. 3000 l. apiece not excluding the said Jane she is as much thereby intituled to a third part of the Estate devised as her Sisters are to 3000 l. apiece and there was a good Reason for such double Portion for Jane the Daughter in respect the said Dame Jane did bring to Sir William 500 l. per Annum Joynture and 1000 l. in Mony and although Dame Jane had before her Marriage a separate Maintenance of 250 l. a year out of the said 500 l. per Annum yet it was paid to and received for the use of the said Sir William and Sir William often declared it should be made up to her Child or Children This Court on reading the Marriage Settlement and Will Upon the Construction of a Marriage Settlement and Will only one Portion decreed of 3000 l. and not 6000 l. by which it appeared that the said Will did operate as well upon those Lands in possession as those in Reversion declared there was no proof of any Intention of Sir William the Father to make a double Portion for Jane his Daughter by a second Venter and therefore the Plaintiff Jane the Daughter ought to have but one 3000 l. but that she ought to have it in the first place whether the Lands in present possession devised and the said Reversion which are liable to the said Will be sufficient or not to raise the whole 9000 l. viz. 3000 l. to the Plaintiff Jane and 6000 l. to the Defendant by the first Venter and decreed accordingly Stewkley contra Henley 31 Car. 2. fo 567. THat Sir John Trott deceased Will. being seised in Fee of a Rent charge of 200 l. per Annum but subject to a Redemption on payment of 3400 l. by his Will in 1670. devised the said Rent to Trustees and their Heirs and all benefit thereof on Trust that they should suffer Katherine his Daughter then the Plaintiffs Wife and since deceased her Heirs and Assigns to receive the same to her and their own proper use That shortly after the Grantor of the said Rent charge redeemed the Rent-charge by payment of the 3400 l. to the Plaintiff Stewkley and his said Wife Dame Katherine whereupon they came to an Agreement by Deed touching the said 3400 l. viz. as to 1400 l. thereof should be paid to the Plaintiff he conveying Lands to Trustees to answer the Interest of the said 1400 l. to the said Dame Katherine his Wife in such manner as the said Rent-charge was payable by her Fathers Will and with further power of Appointment in Dame Katherine to direct the payment of any part of the said 1400 l. by her Deed or Will or other Writing under her Hand and Seal to the Plaintiff or Children of the Plaintiff and the said Dame Katherine and as to the remaining 2000 l. it was agreed it should be put out at Interest which Interest and such part of the Principal as the said Dame Katherine should by Writing under her Hand and Seal was to be paid by the Trustees as he should appoint and for want of such Appointment or as to so much as should not be appointed in case she did not survive the Plaintiff her Husband then to her Heirs and Assigns in such manner as the said Rent-charge of 200 l. per Annum was demised to her as aforesaid which 2000 l. was put out accordingly That about 1679. Dame Katherine died without making any demise or appointment at all she knowing the Defendant Charles Stewkley her Son was well provided for so to have the said 3400 l. out of the Trustees hands is the Plaintiffs Suit The Plaintiff insisting A Rent-charge in Fee subject to Redemption devised the Mortgage-Mony is paid Decreed the Administrator to have it and not the Heir That the said 3400 l. was a Personal Estate or a Chose en Action belonging to the said Dame Katherine and so belongs to the Plaintiff as her Administrator But the Defendant the Trustees and the Heir insist That the said Mony belongs to the Heir the said Dame Katherine making no Appointment thereof This Court declared That the Matter in demand was originally a Mortgage and if it had not been Redeemed in the Ladies life time it would have gone to her Administrator and the Lady having made no Appointment other than the said Deed as to the 1400 l. and having only appointed that the 2000 l. should go as the Rent charge of 200 l. per Annum by Sir John Trotts Will should have gone which being once a Personal Chattel and not descendible the operation of Law could not be controlled but that it ought being a Personal Estate to go according to the course of Law to the Plaintiff he being Administrator the rather for that the Heir is amply provided for otherwise his Lordship declaring that the Lady Stewkley
by Will John Bassano taking notice of the aforesaid deed provides that in case Elizabeth his Wife were with Child of a Son then his Executors to pay to the Plaintiff Frances 300 l. but if a Daughter then he had otherwise provided for the Plaintiff Frances and such Daughter by deed and shortly after dyed leaving John Bassano his Son and Heir by a former Venter and shortly after the said Elizabeth the youngest Daughter was Born and died in a Month after and in 1666. Elizabeth the Mother dyed leaving the Plaintiff Frances whereupon John Bassano the younger took the Plaintiff Frances in Guardianship and having the said Will and Deed in his Custody pretended to her she had but 300 l. Portion left her by her Father That in 1669. the Plaintiff Tucker and the Plaintiff Frances inter-married and John Bassano still concealed the said Will and Deed that the Plaintiff Tucker and John Bassano the younger agreed that the 300 l. left to the Plaintiff Frances by her Father should be laid out on Security or Purchase for the benefit of the Plaintiff Frances for life in case she survived the Plaintiff Tucker and accordingly the Plaintiff Tucker Sealed a Deed 10th of December 1669. whereby the Plaintiff released the said 300 l. to the said Bassano the younger upon Trust and the said Bassano Covenants with the Plaintiff that he his Executors or Administrators should either continue the said 300 l. in his or their Hands at Interest or lay out and dispose of the same upon Security or Purchase and permit the Plaintiff Tucker during his life and the Plaintiff Frances during her life to receive the Interest and Benefit thereof and to the Plaintiff Tucker and his Heirs Executors c. That in 1671. Bassano the younger died and made the Defendant Searle his Executor and the said Searle refused to pay the said 300 l. pretending the want of Assets And the Plaintiff Tucker insists to have the said 300 l and interest to be chargeable out of the Walthamstow Lands in regard the said Lands were originally charged therewith but the Defendant the Executor says the said Lands are sold by him to one Woots and the Plaintiff Tucker insists that such Sale was without notice of the Plaintiffs Title and charge of the said 300 l. on the said Lands and that Woots had Collateral Security to secure him against the Plaintiff wherefore in regard the said Lands were Originally charged with 300 l. and the Plaintiffs were drawn in to accept of the said Covenant which is but a personal Security by the contrivance of Bassano the younger who kept the Plaintiff ignorant of the said Deed and Will for that the Plaintiffs Release is only upon Trust for payment of the said 300 l. the Plaintiffs do insist that in equity the said Lands ought still to be chargeable with the said 300 l. and interest and ought not to rely on the said Covenant The Defendant Searle insists that Bassano Junior by his Will devised the Walthamstow Lands to be Sold for payment of his Debts and Legacies which was Sold to Woots as aforesaid for 1260 l. and gave him Collateral Security by Bond of 1500 l. to secure him against the Plaintiffs demands and that the whole Personal Estate of the said Bassano Junior by Sale of Lands and otherwise fell short to pay the Plaintiffs demands the said Searle the Executor having paid Debts of a higher nature and say that the Plaintiff cannot have their whole demands but must come in proportion with other Creditors And the Defendant insists That the Walthamstow Lands ought not to be charged with the said 300 l. for that on a Bill in this Court exhibited by the Plaintiff against Bassano Senior whereby the Portions of the two Elizabeths Sisters of the Plaintiff Frances were demanded to be chargeable on Walthamstow Lands and alledged that Bassano Junior had secured the 300 l. being the Plaintiff Frances Portion by the said deed of Covenant and prayed to have the said two Elizabeth's Portions or the value of the Lands deducting the 300 l. secured to the Plaintiff Frances and in October 25. Car. 2. it was decreed that the Plaintiff should have the 300 l. which belonged to the youngest Elizabeth and the said Lands to be chargeable therewith But the Court then declared they could not decree the 300 l. claimed by the said Plaintiff Frances in her own right but that she must rely on the said Deed of Covenant Defect in a Bill for that they did not complain thereof by their Bill And the Defendant insists that the said decree being Signed and Inrolled the said 300 l. ought not to be charged on the said Lands but that they ought to rely on the said deed of Covenant they having thereby released the said Lands That the Defendant Searles cross Bill is for relief against a Bond of 600 l. on which he is Sued at Law and for Equity did insist Cross Bill for Creditors to take their proportionable shares but the debts having been paid to them and releases given dismist That he was Sued here by the Plaintiff Tucker and his Wife for the 300 l. aforesaid and that there was a decree against him in this Court at the Suit of one Whitton one of the Defendants to that Bill for 700 l. so that if the Plaintiff Tucker and other Creditors should recover their demands there will not be Assets and therefore prayed that the Plaintiff Tucker and Callwall might take their proportionable shares of what Assets was left but the Plaintiff Tucker insisted that the said 300 l. was originally charged on Walthamstow Lands by the said Marriage Settlement and was not discharged by the said Covenant or Release The said other Creditors Callwall c. insists That they have a Verdict against Searle the Executor for the Money due on the said Bond upon Evidence of Assets in Hands and had taken him in Execution and he had paid the said Money thereon and the said Creditors had released the said debts and therefore ought not to be farther troubled for the same This Court declared Lands originally charged with the payment of Portion and a release and covenant in Trust doth not discharge the same the said Walthamstow Lands were originally charged with the Plaintiffs 300 l. and that the said deed of Release and Covenant being made only in Trust for payment of the said Money and when the Plaintiffs were not told of the said Deed and Will did not discharge the same but the said Lands ought to make it good without damages although there were not Assets in the Executors Hands in regard the said Lands were sold under notice of the Plaintiffs demands and further declared he could not relieve the said Searle as against the said Callwall for that he by Coertion of Law had paid the Money recovered against him and the said Callwall had released the same to him and dismist Searles Bill Annand contra Honywood 32 Car. 2. fo
of the Estate to the Testator Whereto the Plaintiff insisted That the Custom of a Sum certain to be mentioned appeared only by a By-Law called Judd's Law in 5 Ed. 6. the which is no estabiished Law in the City to bind the Right of any and there is a great difference in the By Laws in the City which ought to respect their Government and not bind the Right of any person which is governed by the general Custom of the City and which is paramount to any of their By-laws and by the Custom the Right of a Freemans Child is as much preserved to him as any mans Right by the Common Law of the Kingdom besides the naming of the Sum is no more than in order to the setling the Accounts of the said Estate which may be done before a Master in this Court This Coutt upon Reading several Presidents on both sides declared That the said Certificate was conclusive and that the Plaintiff must be let in for a Customary part of her Fathers Personal Estate and decreed the same accordingly The Defendant was ordered to Account for all the Personal Estate of Bennony Honywood Fo. 598. and the Plaintiff thereout to have her Customary part her Marriage Portion being brought into Hotch potch with the rest of the Personal Estate and the Plaintiff to discover the said Portion on Oath and the Defendant to do the like as to what provision he had The Defendant insists What provision he had was Mony deposited by his said Father in the hands of Mr. Colvile and others to purchase Lands or Houses in or near London in pursuance of Articles between the Defendants said Father and the Defendants Wives Father which were made before the Marriage of the Defendants which Lands and Houses so to be purchased is by the said Articles covenanted to be setled on the Defendant and his Wife for life and for her Joynture Remainder in Tail and was in consideration of the Defendants wives Portion and Houses were purchased therewith in Bennony's life and the Defendant is his Son and Heir And the Defendant insists What Mony is deposited by the Father to purchase Lands in pursuance of Marriage Articles is to be taken as Real and not as a Personal Estate and shall not be brought into Hotch-potch That what was so deposited as aforesaid is to be taken as if the Defendants Father himself had purchased Lands and setled the same to the uses aforefaid and ought not to be accounted a personal Estate of the Defendants Father but as Land This Court declared what was deposited by the Defendants Father to purchase Lands in pursuance of the said Articles is to be taken as Lands and not as personal Estate of the Defendants said Father and also declared what was deposited as aforesaid shall not be brought into Hotch-potch but the Defendant is to discover what he had from his Father upon his said Marriage Prigg contra Clay 32 Car. 2. fo 198. THat John Clay by his Will devised 100 l. Will. to the Plaintiff Philip Prigg Jun. and Deborah Prigg his Sister in manner viz. 50 l. to the said Philip at his Age of 21 years on day of Marriage which should first happen by the Defendants his Executors and in the mean time the whole 100 l. to be secured and improved by his Executors for their use and in case either the said Philip or Deborah should die before payment of their Legacies the Survivor to enjoy the whole 100 l. and if both die before payment of their said Legacies then the Testator decreed the whole 100 l. to his Sister the Plaintiff Elinor their Mother besides 100 l. to her to be paid within 6 Months after his death That the said Deborah Prigg died unmarried and before 21 and before she had received the 50 l. Legacy so that the whole 100 l. became due to the Plaintiff Philip Junior The Defendants insists That Deborah died before the Testator and her Legacy of 50 l. became void This Court was sully satisfied Legacies of 50 l. apiece given to two and if either die before 21 the Survivor to have all One dies before the Testator yet the Survivor decreed to have all though Deborah died before the Testator yet the said Devise of 50 l. to her did not become void and being devised over to her Brother Philip the surviving Legatee it belonged to him according to the devise in the Will the rather for that it being a contingent Remainder and might vest after the death of the Testator so long as there was a Survivor it did not belong to the Executors and for that the Testator who lived for some time afterwards did not alter the devise thereof by his Will nor otherwise dispose thereof in Writing and decreed the Defendants to pay the Plaintiff the two 50 Pounds This Order was confirmed by the Lord Keeper Sanders contra Earle 32 Car. 2. fo 102. THat the Plaintiffs late Husband Daniel Earle Will. or some in Trust for him was at his death seised in Fee and also intituled to the Trust of a long Term of the Mannor upon a Sore and Lands in Com' Nottingham which said long Term was in being and subject to be disposed as she should appoint so that he had full power to settle devise or charge the same by his Will and the said Daniel in consideration of a Marriage with the Plaintiff and 2000 l. Portion he in 1676. by Will devised to the Plaintiff besides a Joynture of 1200 l. and if she were with Child of a Son he gave all his Lands and Tenements to such Son in Tail but for default of such he gave them to the Defendants his Brother and their Heirs and if he had a Daughter he devised to such Daughter 500 l. to be paid when she attained her Age of Sixteen and the same to be secured out of his Lands aforesaid and made his said Brothers Executors That the Plaintiff had no Son but a Daughter who lived some time and is since dead and the Plaintiff is her Administratrix whereby she is intituled to her 500 l. presently The Defendant insists That the Plaintiffs said Husband devised to the Plaintiff 1200 l. and devised to her all her Plate Jewels and Goods and Stock in and about the House at Normanton and made the Plaintiff Executrix till the last day of August after the Will and if she who was then with Child had a Son by that time then she to continue Executrix otherwise the Defendants to be joynt Executors and made such devise to the Daughter and the rest of his personal Estate he devised to his Executrix or Executors That the Plaintiff Margaret having but a Daughter the Defendants proved the Will and are intituled to the Legacies therein to them devised and the refidue of the personal Estate and insists That if the Plaintiff as Administratrix to her Daughter be intituled to the 500 l. yet she is not to receive it till
the premisses as aforesaid for that Mary sued her Mother and had her portion out of the personal Estate and though the Defendants Father might intend to give the Plaintiffs Father the premisses and sealed a Deed for that purpose yet he altered his Mind and never perfected it and there was no Consideration for his so doing And the Defendant insists He ought to enjoy the premisses for that by the Plaintiffs own shewing his Title is defective and therefore ought not to receive any countenance in a Court of Equity against the Defendant who is Heir at Law to his Father and Grandfather and comes in and ought to have the Aid of the Court to protect his Title But the Plaintiffs Council insisted That the Defendants detaining of the said Deed is a Fraud and the Consideration of making the said Deed is valuable Defect of Livery and Seisin aided in Chancery and there is no defect therein but want of Livery and Seizin which defect this Court hath often supplied when no Fraud appears in gaining the Deed. This Court the said Deed appearing to be fairly executed by the Defendants Father and that there was no defect therein save only the form of Livery and Seizin and made on such valuable Consideration as Marriage decreed the Defendant to execute Livery and Seizin in the said Deed and make farther assurance of the said premisses to the Plaintiff and his Heirs and the Plaintiff is decreed to enjoy the same against the Defendant Barker contra Hill 33 Car. 2. fo 278. THe Plaintiff having Contracted with the Defendants Father for the purchase of a Copyhold Estate Upon a Contract for Copy-hold Estate and purchase Mony paid the Bargainor dies before Surrender his Heir decreed to surrender the Plaintiff paid the purchase Mony and the Defendants Father agreed to surrender the premisses at next Court and said He had made a Surrender lately to the use of his Will which would enure to the benefit of any Purchaser but before next Court day and any Surrender made the Defendants Father died so the Bill is to have the Defendant his Son and Heir to confirm the Plaintiffs purchase by Surrender or otherwise as this Court shall direct This Court decreed the Defendant when he came of Age to surrender effectually the premisses to the Plaintiff and the Lord of the Mannor presently to admit the Plaintiff Tenant to the premisses Bonnington contra Walthall 33 Car. 2. fo 37. THe Defendant Walthall claims an Annuity of 100 l. per An. Annuity and Interest out of the Estate in question ever since August 1642. with Interest by virtue of a Deed of that date made by himself to Mr. Serjeant Willmot and others whereby it is appointed that the Trustees in the said Deed should dispose of the Monies by them raised by profits and sale of the premisses for payment to the said Defendant and his Assigns during his life and the life of Peter Bonnington the yearly Sum of 100 l. and the said demand of the said 100 l. per Annum and Interest being a Matter of great value and moment in the Cause it is referred to the Judgment of the Court whether all or how long the said 100 l. per Annum shall or ought to be allowed in this point as also the original Cause which was heard 19 Nov. 1679. coming now to be heard again The Plaintiff insisted That the 100 l. per Annum if it was created the same determined by the death of Peter Bonnington But the Defendant Walthall insists to have Allowance for the said Annuity of 100 l. and Interest for the same for 40 years past whereas the Plaintiff insists That the 100 l. per Annum never was nor ought to be allowed to the Defendant for that the Deed of August 1642. under which the Defendant claims the said 100 l. per Annum the same was to be paid in the first place before debts and there being a debt due to one Chambers which the said Defendant brought in against which debt if the said Annuity had been real the Defendant would have opposed the payment of his said 100 l. per Annum being to be paid in the first place and the Defendant not demanding the said Annuity in 40 years and suffering debts to be paid before it it ought to be adjudged a Trust for Peter Bonnington and the rather for that no Consideration appears for such Annuity The Defendant insists That the Plaintiff admits it a Trust and seeks Relief only for the Surplus after Trusts satisfied and determined and this Trust being Continuing the same with Arrears and Interest ought to be paid to the said Walthall This Court on reading the said Deed Annuity not being demanded in 40 years time conceived to be a Trust saw no Consideration for granting the said Annuity and it never being demanded this Court conceived it was a Trust for Bonnington and would not charge the Estate therewith and decreed the Estate to be discharged thereof Ring contra Hele 33 Car. 2. fo 270. THe Plaintiffs Rings Bill is for the Writings and Estate of Sir Henry Hele which he claims by virtue of an Agreement made by the said Sir Henry and him wherein it was agreed that the said Sir Henry should settle his Lands in Wigborough and Bridges in Com' Sommerset on himself for life after to the Heirs of his Body with power to make his Wife a Joynture of Wigborough and to grant Estates thereout for three lives with a Remainder to the Plaintiff Ring and the Heirs of his Body if he Survived and Sir Henry died without Issue with Remainder to Sir Henry's right Heirs with power to Sir Henry to sell Pooles Tenement part of the premisses and Sir Henry was forthwith to suffer a Recovery to dock the Intail of the premisses Consideration and in consideration thereof the Plaintiff Ring was to settle his Estate in Dorset and Sommerset to the use of himself in Tail with Remainder in Tail to Sir Henry Hele with Remainder in Fee to the Plaintiff and that if either party leave Issue to be at liberty to make new dispositions as he pleased That Sir Henry imployed one Chubb and Patten to assist the Plaintiff Ring in Surveying Sir Henry's Estate and after both the Plaintiff Ring and Sir Henry went to Counsel who advised a Deed of bargain and sale of the said Estate from Sir Henry to the Plaintiff Ring which was executed between the said Sir Henry and the Plaintiff Ring and Inrolled and bears date the 26 of March 1673 That before the said Recovery the Plaintiff Ring prepared another Deed dated the 6th of May following to lead the uses thereof according to the said Agreements and a draught of a Settlement of the Plaintiff Rings Estate on Sir Henry both which being perused and approved by Sir Henry were also executed and the Deed to lead the uses of the Recovery recited the said Agreement and Inrolled Deed to make the Defendant
Tenant to the Precipe and Sir Henry declared the said Recovery to be to the uses in the said Agreement and the Plaintiff Ring by his said Deed Covenants with the said Sir Henry to stand seized of the Parsonage and other Lands in Yeovel in Com' Somerset and also in Com' Dorset being all the Estate he was then seized of in Fee in the said Counties and settles them to the uses in the said Agreement Agreement That the said Sir Henry declared himself well satisfied with what he had done and paid the charges of the Writings That the Plaintiff Ring two years after had Issue Male and Sir Henry after married and died without Issue and without making any Joynture or suffering any other Recovery and doing any other act but selling the Inheritance of one Farm so the premisses came to the Plaintiff Ring who entred but the Defendant Hele the only Son of Richard Hele who was Uncle of the said Sir Henry wrought on Sir Henry to make a Will and to Devise the Estate to the Defendant Hele and his Heirs which Devise the said Sir Henry would not make The Defendant insists That the Settlements on the Plaintiff Ring were Forged and that the said Ring never made any Settlement of his Estate on the said Sir Henry or if he did that nothing passed thereby but only by way of Covenant to stand seised and that if the Plaintiff Ring hath got any such Deed to lead the uses of the said Recovery he got it by Fraud and that if there was such a Deed of May 1673 which was after the Recovery to declare the uses thereof it would not alter that of the 26 of March for that the Plaintiff is a Stranger in Blood to the said Sir Henry and it doth not appear that any Inrolment or due Execution was made of the Plaintiffs Rings Settlement so that the pretended Deeds on both sides are void and not to be supported in a Court of Equity but the Plaintiff Ring may bring an Action at Law where it is proper to be tryed and where the Defendant having a good Title under the Will of Sir Henry will make his defence The Plaintiff insisted That the Defendant objected two matters against the Plaintiff Rings demands viz. Forgery and Fraud and if he will insist on the Fraud he must admit the Deeds to be executed and the Defendant admitting de bene esse the Deeds to be executed and to insist only on the Fraud and Circumvention This Court inspecting the said Deeds declared there was great suspition of the reality of the said Deeds but taking into consideration the inequality of the said Estates in the value though not material in this case yet it was a strong presumption that the said Sir Henry Hele did not knowingly leap into such a bargain and then the inequality of assurances is as bad the said Sir Henry Heles Settlement on Ring being a legal Estate Consideration and mentioned to be in consideration that Ring had made a good Settlement of his Estate which he had not the same being void in Law and not to be made good by Equity and the subsequent inconsistent Acts of offering the Estate to be sold and Rings negotiating the affair were above all the rest bad and apparent Badges of Fraud and Circumvention in Ring Badges of Fraud in obtaining the said Deeds from the said Sir Henry Hele and it is remarkable in the Case that Sir Henry by his Will devised his Estate to the Defendant Hele a little before his death This Court therefore dismissed the matter of Rings Bill but upon Heles Bill decreed the Agreement of April and the two Deeds of May 1673 obtained by the said Ring from Sir Henry be for ever hereafter damned and set aside and Ring to reassure to the Defendant Hele and a perpetual Injunction not only to stay all Suits at Law touching the premisses but also for quieting the said Hele in the Posession Com' Craven al' contra Knight al' 34 Car. 2. fo 732. THe Bill is that the Defendant Geo Bankrupts as to partners Widdows being indebted to the Plaintiffs became bound to them in several Bonds and the said Widdows and the Defendant Berman for several years past were Copartners and Widdows by Articles of Copartnership was intituled to two thirds of the whole Stock and the Defendant Berman to one third That the said Widdows and Berman the 25 of August last became Bankrupts and a Commission of Bankrupsy awarded against them the Commissioners of Bankrupts assigned all the Estate of the said Bankrupts to the Defendant Wright and others and refuse to let the Plaintiffs Creditors of Bankrupts to come in and intend to divide the said Estate amongst the Joynt Creditors of Bankrupts by reason whereof the Plaintiffs debts will be utterly lost The Defendants insist Joynt debts to be paid out of the Joynt Stock it was agreed by Indenture of Copartnership that all such debts as should be owing on the joynt account should be paid out of the Joynt Stocks and at the end of the Partnership each Copartner take and receive to his own use his share of Joynt Stock and the Joynt Stock and Trade should not be charged with the private or particular debts of either of the said Partners but that each should pay their private debts out of their particular Estate not included in the said Joynt Stock that if both the said Partners should be living at the end of the first three years of the six years that the said Berman should come in Joynt-Partner accordingly and during the Joynt Trade the said Copartners became Joyntly indebted to the other Defendants Wright c. in 6000 l. and that Widdows became indebted to the Plaintiff as aforesaid without the consent of Berman and the Moneys due on the said Bonds was not brought into the account of that Joynt Stock and the said Widdows was only a Surety and received none of the Moneys and the Defendants insist that the Joynt Creditors ought to be first paid out of the Estate in Partnership and that the Commissioners have no power to grant the Joynt Estate to pay the Plaintiffs they being separate Creditors of Widdows and if a Surplus of the Joynt Estate after the Joynt Creditors be paid then the Plaintiffs can have but a Joynt Moiety of such Surplus towards their Satisfaction the said Bermans Moiety being not liable to pay the said Widdows separate debts and the debts then claimed were the proper debts of the said Widdows and that after all the Joynt debts are paid there will be an Overplus so that thereby the said Berman will be discharged and have Money paid to him but if the Plaintiffs and other separate Creditors of Widdows be admitted to the Joynt Estate there will not be sufficient to pay the Joynt Creditors so thereby not only Bermans Estate will be applyed to pay Widdows debts Separate Creditors but will be liable to the
and then to have the whole Term. And if such second Son die before he comes of Age then the third Son to have and receive as aforesaid and if such Son die before he likewise comes of Age then the fourth Son to have and receive as aforesaid And in Case of no Issue Male between Sir Henry and Elizabeth living at the time of the death of the Survivor of them who shall live to their Age and that there shall be one or more Daughter or Daughters of the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth that then the said Daughter or Daughters their Executors and Administrators to have and take their several equal shares and proportions of the said Rents Issues and Profits for and during the said Terms Unless William Massingberd the new Plaintiff should within six Months after the death of the Survivor of them the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth pay such Daughter or Daughters or secure the several Sums following viz. if but one Daughter 1000 l. and if more then to every one of the rest 500 l. a piece and after the same paid or secured in case there shall be no such Son or Daughter living at the time of the death of the Survivor of the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth or which should live to attain his or her Age then the Residue of the said Terms to go and to be to Sir William Massingberd the now Plaintiff his Executor and Administrators Sir Henry Massingberd dies in Sept. 1680. leaving his Wife Elizabeth Ensient of a Son after born and named Henry who died within six Weeks after Sir Henry and Elizabeth had no other Issue which Elizabeth is now the Defendant Quere Who is eldest Son of Sir Henry Whether the said Devise to William Massingberd the now Plaintiff be good The Case upon both Deed and Will That Sir Henry Massingberd being possed of two several Terms Deed of Trust and Will one for 500 and the other for 99 years by the Indenture 2 Nov. 1679 made an Assignment thereof to Trustees upon Trust To permit and suffer him the said Sir Henry and his Assigns to receive the rent and profits during his life and after his death to permit the Defendant Elizabeth then Elizabeth Rayner his intended Wife to receive the Rents and profits during her life then upon Trust to assign the residue of the said Terms to such person or persons and for such Estates and Terms and in such manner as the said Sir Henry should by Will in writing nominate limit and appoint give devise or dispose thereof or any part thereof and in case the said Sir Henry should die Intestate or should not by his Will nominate limit appoint give devise or dispose of the same and every part thereof that then the Trustees should permit the eldest Son of the Body of the said Sir Henry on the Body of the said Elizabeth to receive the Rents Issues and profits of the premisses undisposed of by the Will of the said Sir Henry till he should attain his Age and should then assign to him his Executors and Administrators the residue of the said Terms and in case the eldest Son should die before Age then the Trustees should permit the second Son to receive the Rents and profits with the like Trust to Assign to him at his Age and so to the 3d and 4th Son in like manner And in case of no Issue male between them at the time of the death of the Survivor of them the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth which should live to attain their respective Ages and that there should be one or more Daughter or Daughters between them that then the Trustees should permit the said Daughter and Daughters her and their Executor and Administrators to take their several equal shares and proportions of the said Rents Issues and profits not devised or disposed of the Will of the said Sir Henry for and during the said Terms unless William Massingberd the now Plaintiff the eldest Son and Heir of the said Sir Henry by a former Venter should within six Months after the death of the Survivor of them the said Henry and Elizabeth pay unto such Daughter or Daughters or secure to the good liking of the Trustees the several Portions therein mentioned for the said Daughter or Daughters and after the said Portions paid or secured or in case there should be neither Son nor Daughter living at the time of the death of the Survivor of them the said Sir Henry and Elizabeth or that should live to their respective Age that then the Trustees should assign the residue of the said Terms to the said William Massingberd his Executors and Administrators Then there is a power of Revocation in the said Sir Henry by Deed or Will to revoke and make void this present Deed and the Estate and Estates Trust and Trusts of the premisses or any part thereof After this Sir Henry made his Will in writing and the Defendant Elizabeth his Lady Executrix Residuary Legatee and Residuary Legatee and devised in these words viz. I do hereby give unto her all my Estate which I have by Deed setled upon her according to the true meaning and intent of the said Settlement And also I give her all those other Lands hereby hereafter Setled upon her according to my true intent of my Settlement thereof for her life or on my Issue by her And I do also give her all my Estate concerning my interest in the Colledge Leases from John Rutter of Canterbury and also all my Goods and Chattels not hereby otherwise disposed of I will that all the Coppyholds any ways appertaining to Paston be taken to the use of my Ececutrix and also the Bishops Lease when need is that it be renewed also to her use and also the Lease for 500 years of Paston all at her charge according to the true intent of my Settlements upon her which I hope my Son William will endeavour as before the Almightly to make good unto her and hers and if either I have no Issue by her or that they or their Issue all die so that the succession be expired Then after my Wives decease I hereby give upon my Sons wilful neglect or refusal of his duty herein and not otherwise all my said Lands not setled on him by his Marriage to all the Daughters of my Daughters Sanderson and Stoughton to be divided among them Yet always provided that if my said Son neither neglect nor refuse any reasonable duty herin Then my Will is that after my Wives decease and that all her Issue by me be either dead or have their Portions paid them as is provided That then all my said Lands setled on her for life whether Copy hold Lease hold or Freehold with all the rest unsetled shall discend and be to him and his Heirs for ever Sir Henry Massingberd left no Issue living by that Wife but left his said Wife Ensient of a Son born alive and named Henry but
by the Defendants as aforesaid was by reason the Title in Law was in Comber the Mortgagee and not upon the Vallidity of the Will and that a Verdict had been had in affirmation of the said Will for other Lands therein mentioned and the Testator was in possession of the premisses at the time of his death This Court the Defendants insisting to have it tryed at Law whether a Revocation of the said Will or not declared there was no Colour to direct any Trial at Law in this Case for that on reading the proofs it plainly appeared When the Mortgage money is paid the Mortgagee and his Heirs are Trustees for the Mortgagor and his Heirs that the Testator expresly declared the said Will should be his last Will and that upon such an express proof it would be vain to direct a Tryal at Law and declared that when the Mortgage money was paid the Morgagee and his Heirs immediately from that time became Trustees for the Mortgagor and his Heirs and the Court having considered of several presidents as well Antient as Modern A Will and after that a Mortgage the Will is Republished its a good Will and not revoked which were full in the point that notwithstanding such Revocation yet there was a Republication of the Will and that the same was a Republication of such a nature that made the said Will a good Will and decreed the Defendant Grace to enjoy the premisses according to the said Will. This Cause came to be Re-heard before the Lord Chancellor Jefferies who was well satisfied with the Republication and declared that notwithstanding the said Mortgage the Will was a good Will and not revoked and confirmed the former decree Pullen contra Serjeant R6 Cor. 2. fo 570. THe Bill is to have a discovery of the Estate of Ann Nurse deceased and a distribution to be made and the Plaintiffs to have their proportions thereof they being next of Kin to the said Ann Nurse viz. the Plaintiff Ann Wife of the Plaintiff Pullen Sister by the Mothers side of the said Testatrix Ann Nurse and the other Plaintiffs are of the same degrees of Consanguinity and so are Intituled to their equal shares of her Personal Estate Executrix dies before the Testator there shall be Administration cum Testamento annex ' and the said Ann Nurse made Ann the Wife of William Hodges Executrix who died before the said Ann Nurse and the said Ann Nurse died without altering of her Will That after her death the Defendant Serjeant a Relation to the said Ann Nurse took Administration of the said Ann Nurse's Personal Estate The Defendant insists That he being only Brother and one of the nearest Relations to Ann Nurse the Testatrix and her said Executrix dying before she Administred with the Will annexed and paid Debts and Legacies and is willing to Distribute as the Court shall direct and craves the Direction of the Court whether the Plaintiffs being of the half-blood shall have equal proportion with the Defendant and others of the whole blood This Court declared They of the half-blood shall have equal share of the Personal Estate with those of the whole blood That the Plaintiff who are of the half blood to the said Ann Nurse were equally intituled to a Distribution of the said Estate and to an equal share of the Defendant Serjeant and others who are of the whole blood and decreed the same accordingly Keale contra Sutton 36 Car. 2. fo 773. THE Defendant being Arrested in the Marshalls Court A Prohibition granted for Arresting in the Marshalls Court for matters arising in Berkshire for matters arising in Berkshire out of the Jurisdiction of that Court This Court granted a Prohibition which being Disobeyed an Attachment was ordered against the Persons Disobeying the same and the Defendant to proceed upon the same Carvill contra Carvill 36 Car. 2. fo 142. THat the Testator Robert Carvill by Will the fifth of June 1675. Will. and thereby gave the Plaintiffs several Legacies and also Legacies to the Defendants which he appointed to be paid by Sale of Lands after the death of his Sister Rosamond whom with the Defendants he made Executors and gave his said Executors residium bonorum and in 1678. died and the said Rosamond is dead That the Defendant Robert Carvill being the Eldest Son of Henry the Testators Brother is his Heir at Law who insists That the Testator made no such Will and that he claims the said Lands by Dissent or if any such Will was made the Testator was non compos at the making thereof and that no Person was named in the said Will to Sell the said Lands and insists on the Act against Frauds and Perjuries and Avers Statutes of Frauds and Perjuries That the Testator died not till 1680. and that he did not make and sign that Will according to the said Act there being no Witnesses that have Attested it according to that Act and doth therefore insist that the same is void in Law as to the Devise of Lands and that the same are come to him as Heir and he hath since Recovered the same at Law and insists also that the said Will is void in Law because no Person is appointed to make Sale and being but a voluntary Disposition for payment of Legacies and not Debts the Plaintiff ought to have no Relief to make the same good in Equity to the Disinherison of the Defendant the Heir at Law But the Plaintiffs insisted Though the Testator died after the said Act viz. December 1678. yet the Will was made long before the 24th of June 1677. and so is not within the intention of the said Act and that though no Person be in express words named to Sell the Lands yet the Sale ought to be made by his Executors and the Heir ought to be Compelled to joyn in the Sale The Defendant the Heir insisted That though the Will might be out of the provision of the Act being made before the making of the Act yet there is no good proof that any such Will was made or published by the Testator This Court directed it to Law on this Issue Devisavit vel non devisavit Will or not Will. and a Verdict passed for the Plaintiff This Cause coming to be heard on the equity reserved and this Court being satisfied with the Verdict which was viz. That the said Robert Carvill the Testator did make and publish such Will and thereby devised the said Lands to be sold as aforesaid This Court upon reading the Will Lands Devised to be sold and now express't to sell the same Executors Decreed to sell decreed the said Lands to be sold by the said Executors and the said Legacies to be paid thereout according to the said Will. Norton contra Mascall 36 Car. 2. fo 544. THE Suit is to have a voluntary Award performed A voluntary Award Decreed to be performed the Defendant insisted It being a voluntary
the same that she shall release the 2000 l. per Annum within Three years after his death or else that Devise to be void The Remainder of his Lands in Berks to Sir Walter Clergyes pur vie and after in Tail Male Remainder to his Cousin Henry Monk in Tail Male Remainder to his own Right Heirs To Bevile Greenvile Son to the Earl of Bath his Freehold Lands in Surrey and Southampton for life and then in Tail Male Remainder to his Cousin Tho. Monck pur vie and then in Tail Male Remainder to his Cousin Henry Monck in Tail Male Remainder to his own right Heirs His Lands in Devon to Colonel Thomas Monck for life and then in Tail Male Remainder to his Cousin Henry Monck in Tail Male remainder to his own right Heirs All his Lands in Ireland to his Cousin Henry Monck in Tail Male with Remainder to his own right Heirs Provided That if he have any Issue all devises of any Sums of Mony except for his Funeral his Father's Monument Alms-houses and Legacies to his Executors shall be void and if he leave any Issue the premisses devised to Sir Walter Clergyes Mr. Greenvile Thomas and Henry Monck and their Issue shall go to his Issue viz. to his Sons successively in Tail Male if Daughters in Tail with Remainders to the said persons as before Provided If he leave Issue Male he deviseth to his Wife as an Additional Joynture to her Rent charge Lands in Devon and Essex for her life and makes the Dutchess during her life and in case of her death the Dutchess of Newcastle Guardians of his Children he shall have And in case it happen that Colonel Thomas Monck or any Heirs males of his Body shall live to come and be in possession of the premisses devised to him he desires they will live at Potheridge the Ancient Seat of the Family and desires his Majesty to grant them the Title of Baron Monck of Potheridge that it may remain in the Family in Memory of his Father and himself and his Service his Father had the Honour to do the Crown in the Restauration and makes the Duke of Newcastle Lord Cheney Jarvis Peirpoint Sir Walter Clergyes Sir Thomas Stringer Henry Pollexfen Esq and others Executors That the Duke gave direction to Henry Pollexfen Esq to make this Will and when drawn was fully approved of by the Duke upon mature deliberation Which Will being in Three parts he carefully lock'd up and after leaving Two parts of his Will to two persons and kept the Third he went to Jamaica That the Duke when in Jamaica heard Colonel Thomas Monck was dead in Holland sent to the Earl of Bathe Sir Tho. Siringer and others to send over for Chripher Monck the Colonels eldest Son to Educate him so as to fit him to bear the Character of one to whom he intended the greatest part of his Estate if he died without Issue In September 1688. the Duke sickned in Jamaica and there again published his said Will and declared that if he died the Box and Will should be delivered to the Dutchess and died in October following That the Dutchess at her Return from Jamaica found that the Earl of Bathe set up another Will dated 3. Aug. 1675. whereby the Remainder of the greatest part of the Estate was given to the Earl of Bathe and his Heirs and likewise a Settlement by way of Lease and Release in corroboration of that Will by which he seeks to avoid and frustrate the Will of 1687. That the Duke sent to the Earl of Bathe for the Will of 1675. if any such to have it delivered to him that he might make another Will That the Will of 1687. was Sealed at Sir Robert Claytons the same day after other Writings had been by him sealed to the Lord Chancellor Jeffreys of some Lands sold to him and that the Dutchess nor any of her Relations ever knew or heard of the said Deeds till after the Dukes death nor known to Sir Thomas Stringer who was the Dukes standing Councel and the Plaintiffs farther insist if there were such Deed yet it ought not to avoid or impeach the said last Will though the power of Revoking the same was not literally pursued yet the same in Equity ought to be taken as a Revocation and the rather for that at the making of the Will the Duke remained owner of the Estate and he lookt upon himself so to be for that he had since the said pretended Deeds sold some part of the Estate to Chancellor Jefferies without any Revocation and the Earl of Bath paid no valuable Consideration and that he ought to be protected in the enjoyment of the personal Estate and the Specifick Legacies devised to her in the Will of 1687. tho' the Will of 75. if any such be was intended by the Duke principally to hinder the discent to his next Heir and the Deeds if such there be were for the same purpose and that tho' the Deed recites to confirm the last Will of 75. yet does in several places controul it and alter it whereby and by the extraordinary strange and unprecedented Declarations Provisoes and Covenants therein the Plaintiff believes the Deeds were never executed by the Duke or if so that he was surprised therein and pray Relief in the premisses To this the Defendant makes Answer Answer and sets forth the Will of 1675. whereby the greatest part of the whole Estate was given to the Earl and his Heirs and sets forth the Considerations of his so doing as Antient Kindred and Esteem between Duke George and the Earl of Bath and several Services and good Offices that he had done the Family and likewise sets forth that being well satisfied with such his disposition of his Estate and finding that he had been often importuned to alter the same and fearing lest the repeated Practises and Arts attempted against such his Disposition might some time or other surprise him into a Compliance Consulted with Sir William Jones and other his Councel how to Obviate such practises and to settle his Estate in such manner as that it might not be avoided although for his ease he should at any time seem to yield to the Sollicitations of his near Relations whereupon in Anno 1681. the Duke makes a Settlement wherein he begins That for the assuring of the Honour Manours c. upon a Person of Honour c. and for the Corroborating and Confirming the said Will of 75. and to the end that no pretended last Will should be set up by any Person whatsoever and for the Natural Affection that he beareth to the Earl of Bath c. grants by Lease and Release several Mannors Lands and Tenements c. some in Possession and some in Remainder upon the Earl of Bath in Fee and so to Walter Clergies c. in which Deed there was this Proviso Proviso That if the Duke shall at any time during his life be minded to make void the said Indenture