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A64753 The reports and arguments of that learned judge Sir John Vaughan Kt. late chief justice of His Majesties court of Common Pleas being all of them special cases and many wherein he pronounced the resolution of the whole court of common pleas ; at the time he was chief justice there / published by his son Edward Vaughan, Esq. England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas.; Vaughan, John, Sir, 1603-1674.; Vaughan, Edward, d. 1688. 1677 (1677) Wing V130; ESTC R716 370,241 492

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than many of his Predecessors have done particularly that most Learned and Reverend Judge the Lord Hobart whose single Opinions in many Cases publish'd being built upon excellent Reason carry great weight with them at this day whether the Author may be so fortunate Time must determine But I hope such as shall think fit to oppose such of his Opinions wherein he is singular will first Reverse the Reasons of them for if they be not vanquish'd the Conclusions thence deduc'd must prevail So Reader I commit him to you heartily wishing you the benefit design'd by this Publication WE all knowing the great Learning Wisdom and Integrity of the Author Do for the Common Benefit allow the publishing of these Reports and Arguments in the same Letter as now they are Printed Finch C. Ri. Raynsford Fra. North. Tho. Twisden W. Montagu W. Wylde Tim. Littleton Hugh Wyndham Rob. Atkyns Edward Thurland V. Bertie Tho. Jones Will. Scroggs REPORTS OF S ir John Vaughan LORD CHIEF JUSTICE Of the COURT of COMMON-PLEAS Hil. xvii xviii Caroli 2. Reg. C.B. Ro. 1032. John Tufton Knight and Baronet Plaint vers Rich. Temple Knight of the Bath and Bar. Chamberlain Hammersley Cl. John Bish of Lich. and Cov. Defen In a Quare Impedit for hindring him to present a fit Person to the Vicaridge of the Church of Burton-Basset in the County of Warwick being void and belonging to his Gift THE Plaintiff sets forth That whereas Thomas Temple Kt. and Bar. was seised of two third Parts of the Mannor of Burton Basset to which one third Part of the Advowson of the Vicaridge aforesaid that is to present a fit Person to the same Vicaridge the first time when the same then after should happen next to be void And after the same first Presentation then every third turn of the same Vicaridge being void for ever appertains and did appertain in his Demesne as of Fee And one Edward Wootton Kt. Lord Wootton was seised of one other third part of the Mannor aforesaid and of one third part of the Rectory Impropriate of Burton Basset To which third parts one other third part of the Advowson of the Vicaridge aforesaid that is to present a fit Person to the same Vicaridge the second turn when the same Vicaridge then after should happen next to be void And after the same second Presentation then every third turn of the same Vicaridge being void for ever doth appertain and then did appertain in his Demesn as of Fee That the said Thomas Temple was likewise seised of another third part of the Advowson of the Vicaridge aforesaid that is to present a fit Person to the same the third turn when the same Vicaridge then after should happen next to be void And after such third Presentation then every third turn of the same Vicaridge being void for ever Ut de uno grosso per se ut de feodo jure That the said Thomas Temple being seised of the two third parts of the said Mannor To which c. the said Vicaridge became void by the resignation of Thomas Freeman then last Incumbent That thereupon the said Thomas Temple presented in his turn to the said Vicaridge one John Reignalds his Clerk who was admitted instituted and inducted thereto in the time of the late King James That the said Edw. Wootton being seised of the said other third part of the said Mannor and third part of the Rectory aforesaid to which c. dyed thereof so seised at Burton Basset aforesaid That after his death the said third Parts to which c. descended to one Thomas Lord Wootton his Son and Heir whereby the said Thomas Lord Wootton became thereof seised in his Demesne as of Fee That being so seised he levyed a Fine of the said third Parts to which c. in the Common-Pleas 4. Car. 1. in octab S. Martini to Nicholas Pay Esq and Reignald Pay Gent. Com-Plainants the said Lord Wootton Mary his Wife and one Henry Wootton Knight deforc That the said Fine was to the use of the said Lord Wootton and Mary his Wife during their natural lives and the longer liver of them Then to the use of the first Son of the body of the Lord Wootton and the Heirs Males of the body of such first Son begotten and so to the sixth Son successively and the Heirs Males of their bodies and so to every other the Sons of the said Lord Wootton successively Then for default of such issue to the use of Margaret Wootton third daughter of the said Lord Wootton and Mary his Wife and of such Husband with whom the said Margaret should happen to marry for term of such husbands natural life If the said Margaret should so appoint the same per aliquod scriptum sub manu sigillis suis And of the Heirs Males of her body begotten for part of her marriage portion then to the use of the Heirs of her body begotten And for default of such to the use of the right Heirs of the said Thomas Lord Wootton for ever That by the said Fine and Statute of Uses the said Lord Wootton and Mary his wife were seised of the said two third parts to which c. for their Lives with the Remainders over as aforesaid That being so seised the said Vicaridge became void by the death of the said John Reignalds And the said Lord Wootton presented to the same in his turn one John Cragg who was accordingly instituted and inducted tempore Car. 1. That the said Tho. Temple being seised of the other third part of the said Advowson in gross levyed a Fine among other things of the said third part of the said Advowson to Edward Peeter and Thomas Peeter Esquires Com-plainants and the said Thomas Temple and Hester his wife being deforceants That this Fine was so levyed to the use of one William Peeter Esq and his Heirs That the said William Peeter being seised by vertue of the said Fine and Statute of Uses the said Vicaridge became void by the Resignation of the said John Cragg and the said William Peeter presented in his turn thereto one Robert Kenrick his Clerk who was accordingly admitted instituted and inducted tempore Car. 1. That the said Tho. Temple being seised of the said two third parts of the said Mannor to which c. dyed so seised at Burton Basset aforesaid That after his death the said two third Parts to which c. descended to one Peter Temple his Son and Heir who was thereof seised and dyed so seised That after his death the same descended to the said Richard Temple his Son and Heir who was and yet is seised of the said two third Parts That being so seised the said Vicaridge became void by the death of the said Robert Kenrick which vacancy was the third vacancy of the said Vicaridge after the said first Presentation of the said Thomas Temple That the said Richard 12. Decembris anno 1654. presented to the said Vicaridge in his turn
is not sufficient by the Rule of the Act of 25. unless confirmed by the King It was otherwise in the Popes case before the Act. There are many Presidents in Mr. Noy's Book where in like Obj. 2 case the King after the death of a Bishop holding in Commendam after his translation to another See and after his resignation hath presented All those Presidents are since the Twentieth of the Queen which Answ 1 cannot alter the Law 2. Who knows in the cases of death whether those Presentations were not by consent of the Patrons and doubtless there are Presidents wherein the Patrons did present else this Question had been earlier But Judicandum est legibus non exemplis Vpon Translation of a Bishop holding a Commendam in the Answ 2 Retinere as long as he continued Bishop there the King ought to present for the Dispensation is determined upon his remove and then is as if it had not been and a Dispensation gives no property to the Living nor takes away any But where property is given to the Living as by Presentation Institution and Induction or by Grant as in Appropriations Hob. Colts and Glovers Case and sometimes otherwise by the King such presenting or granting for a year or six is to grant it during life As an Atturnment cannot be for a time nor a Confirmation nor a Denization or Naturalization and the like but such Acts are perfect Manwarings Case 21 Jac. Crook f. 691. as they may be notwithstanding Restriction to time as is agreed well in Manwaring's Case I shall say nothing of the case of Resignation as not being in the present Question Judgment was given by the Opinion of the whole Court That the Avoidance was by Death not by Cession Hill 19 20 Car. II. C. B. Rot. 1785. Baruck Tustian Tristram Plaintiff Anne Roper Vicountess Baltinglass Vidua Defendant in a Plea of Trespass and Ejectment THe Plaintiff declares That the Defendant vi Armis entred into 20 Messuages 1000 Acres of Land 200 Acres of Meadow and 500 Acres of Pasture cum pertinentiis in Thornbury Shalston Evershaw Oldwick Westbury and Looffield and into the Rectory of Thornbury which Thomas Gower Kt. and Baronet and George Hilliard to the said Baruck demis'd the First of Octob. 19 Car. 2. Habendum from the Feast of St. Michael the Arch-angel last past for the term of Five years next ensuing into which he the said Baruck the same day entred and was ousted and ejected by the Defendant ad damnum 40 l. To this the Defendant pleads Not Guilty And the Jury have found specially That the Defendant is not guilty in all those Tenements besides 5 Messuages 400 Acres of Land 50 Acres of Meadow 100 Acres of Pasture cum pertinentiis in Thornbury Shalston Evershaw Oldwick and Westbury and in the Rectory of Thornbury and besides in one Messuage 100 Acres of Land 50 Acres of Meadow and 100 Acres of Pasture cum pertinentiis in Looffield And as to the Trespass and Ejectment aforesaid in the said five Messuages c. and in the Rectory of Thornbury the Iury say upon their Oath that before the said Trespass and Ejectment suppos'd 22 Junii 12 Jac. Sir Arthur Throgmorton Kt. was seis'd in Fee of the aforesaid Rectory and Tenements last mentioned and of the said Premisses in Looffield and so seis'd A certain Indenture Tripartite was made 22 Junii 12 Jac. between him the said Sir Arthur of the first part Edward Lord Wootton Augustine Nicholls Kt. Francis Harvey Esq and Rowly Ward Esq of the second part and Sir Peter Temple and Anne Throgmorton Daughter of the said Sir Arthur of the third part To this effect That the said Sir Arthur Throgmorton did covenant and promise with the said Lord Wootton and Sir Augustine Nicholls in consideration of Marriage to be had between the said Sir Peter Temple and the said Anne and other the considerations mentioned in the said Indenture by Fine or Fines before the Feast of St. Michael the Arch-angel next ensuing or other good Conveyance to be levied by him and the said Dame Anne his wife to the said Lord Wootton c. The scite and precinct of the Priory of Looffield the Rectory of Thornbury and divers Mannors Lands and Tenements in the said Indenture mentioned several yearly Rents therein mentioned and all other his Lands in the Counties of Northampton Buckingham and Oxford at any time belonging to the said Priory to convey and assure To the use of himself for life without Impeachment of Waste Then to the use of Dame Anne his Wife Then to the use of the said Sir Peter Temple and the said Anne his Wife during their natural lives and the longer Liver of them and after both their Deceases To the use of the first Son of the Body of Anne by the said Sir Peter begotten and of the Heirs Males of the Body of the said first Son so to the sixth Son Then to the use of all other Sons in succession in like manner of the Body of Anne begotten by the said Sir Peter And for default of such Heirs To the use of all the Issues Female of the Body of the said Anne by the said Sir Peter begotten and the Heirs of the Bodies of the said Issues Female For default thereof To the first Son of the said Anne by any other Husband and his Heirs Males and so to the tenth In like manner to the Issues Female of the Body of Anne with divers Remainders over A Proviso That it be lawful for Sir Arthur at all times during his life to lett set and demise all or any the said Premisses aforesaid which at any time heretofore have been usually letten or demised to any person or persons for and during the term of One and twenty years or under in possession and not in Reversion or for or during any other number of years determinable upon one two or three Lives in Possession and not in Reversion reserving the Rents therefore now yielded or paid or more to be yearly due and payable during such Lease and Leases unto such person and persons unto whom the said Premises so to be demised shall come and be by virtue of these Presents if no such demise had been made so long as the same Lessees their Executors and Assigns shall duly pay the Rents and perform their Conditions according to the true meaning of their Indentures of Lease and commit no waste of and in the things to them demised The like Proviso verbatim for Sir Peter Temple and Anne his Wife to make like Leases during their Lives and the Life of the longer liver of them after the death of Sir Arthur and Dame Anne his Wife That a Fine was accordingly levied c. to the uses aforesaid They find that all the Messuages Lands Tenements and Rectory in the Declaration mentioned are compris'd in the said Indenture Tripartite They find the death of Sir Arthur Throgmorton and Anne his Wife 2. Septemb.
could not be granted but to one because its nature was confin'd to one A man cannot have an Assise of Common in his own Soyl nor an Admensuratio pasturae and a Common being a thing that lies in grant he cannot grant it to himself and no other can grant it in his Soyl to him So as I conclude one or more may have Solam separalem Communiam from other Commoners but not from the Lord who is no Commoner I cannot discern the use of this kind of Prescription for the Tenants for if it be to hinder the Lord from approving the Common I think they are mistaken The Statute of Merton gives the Owner of the Soyl power to approve Common Grounds appendant Cok. 2. Instit f. 86.475 West 2. c. 46. or appurtenant by Prescription as this is if sufficient Pasture be left for the Commoners without considering whether the Commoners had the Common solely to themselves excluding the Lord or otherwise For as to Approvement which the Statute provided for the Lord was equally bound pasturing with his Tenants or not pasturing with them Therefore the Statute consider'd not that but that the Lord should approve his own ground so the Commoners had sufficient whatever the nature of the Common were To prescribe to have in such a part of the Lord's Lands Communiam for their Cattel excludes not the Lord. To prescribe to have their Pasturam Communem for their Cattel is the same thing and excludes not the Lord. To prescribe to have solam separalem Communiam is naught by Admittance Why then to prescribe to have solam separalem Pasturam Communiam which is agreed to be the same with Communiam is naught also Now to express another way that they have solam separalem Pasturam Common to them or wherein they Common changeth not the matter in the meaning but order of the words The Statute of Merton is cap. 4. 1. The Lords could not make their profit de Vastis Boscis Pasturis Communibus when the Tenants had sufficientem pasturam quantum pertinet ad tenementa sua 2. Si coram Justiciariis recognitum sit quod tantum pasturae habeant quantum sufficit c. 3. Et quod habeant liberum ingressum egressum de tenementis suis usque ad pasturam suam tunc recedant quiet 4. And that then the Lords faciant commodum suum de terris vastis pasturis 5. Et si per Assisam recognitum fuerit quod non habent sufficientem pasturam 6. Tunc recuperent Seisinam suam per visum Juratorum ita quod per Sacramentum eorum habeant sufficientem pasturam 7. Quod si Recognitum sit quod habeant sufficientem pasturam c. Communibus pasturis is once named Pastura sua for Communia sua seven times and the word Communia not named in this Act but where it mentions 8. The Writ of Novel disseisin de Communia pasturae suae which makes eight times 1. The granting solam separalem Pasturam of or in Black-acre may signifie an exclusion only of having Pasture in White-acre or any other place than Black-acre 2. The granting solam separalem pasturam of or in Black-acre may signifie the exclusion of any other person to have Pasture in Black-acre but the Grantee in which sense the word Solam signifies as much as totam pasturam 3. If the Grant be of all the Pasture the Grantor reserves nothing to himself of that which he grants but all passes into the Grantee but if the Grantor restrains the Grant after general words of granting all the Pasture the Restriction is for the benefit of the Grantor Therefore when the Grant is of Solam separalem pasturam of or in Black-acre all the Pasture is supposed to pass without restriction to the Grantee but if words follow in the Grant pro duabus vaccis tantum or pro averiis levantibus cubantibus super certum tenementum that is a restriction for the benefit of the Grantor for a man cannot in the same Grant restrain for his own benefit the largeness of his Grant and yet have no benefit of his restriction The Court was divided The Chief Justice and Justice Tyrrell for the Plaintiff Justice Archer and Justice Wylde for the Defendant Hill 20 21 Car. II. C. B. Rot. 1552. Adjud'gd 23 Car. II. C. B. Gardner vers Sheldon In Ejectione Firmae for Lands in Sussex Vpon not Guilty pleaded IT is found by the Special Verdict that long before the supposed Trespass and Ejectment One William Rose was seis'd of the Land in question in his Demesne as of Fee and so seis'd made his last Will and Testament November the Second 13 Jac. prout sequitur and sets forth the Will wherein among other things As touching the Lease which I have in my Farm called Easter-gate and all my Interest therein I do give and assign the said Lease and all my Interest therein unto my Friends John Clerk George Littlebury and Edward Rose to the intent that with the Rents and Profits thereof they may help to pay my Debts if my other Goods and Chattels shall not suffice And after my Debts paid my will is that the Rents and Profits of the said Land shall wholly go for and towards the raising of Portions for my two Daughters Mary and Katherine for each of them Six hundred pounds and for my Daughter Mary Two hundred pounds more which was given her by my Father her Grand-fathers Will. And those Sums being raised my will is the Rents and Profits of the said Land shall be wholly to the use and benefit of my Son George c. Item I give to my daughter Mary my greatest Silver Bowl Item I give to my daughter Katherine one plain Silver Bowl c. My will and meaning is That if it happen that my Son George Mary and Katherine my daughters to die without Issue of their Bodies lawfully begotten then all my Free-lands which I am now seis'd of shall come remain and be to my said Nephew William Rose and his Heirs for ever They find that the said William Rose the Testator before the Trespass viz. the First of June 14 Jac. died at Easter-gate in the said County of Sussex seis'd as aforesaid That at the time of his death he had Issue of his body lawfully begotten George Rose his only Son and Mary and Katherine his two Daughters That George the Son entred into the Premisses the First of July 14 Jac. and was seis'd prout Lex postulat Then after and before the time of the Trespass viz. June the Eight and twentieth 14 Car. 2. George died so seis'd of the Premisses at Easter-gate aforesaid That at the time of his death he had Issue of his body two Daughters Judith now wife of Daniel Sheldon one of the Defendants and Margaret now wife of Sir Joseph Sheldon the other Defendant That after the death of George their Father the said Judith and Margaret
entred and were seis'd before the Trespass suppos'd prout Lex postulat That Mary one of the daughters of the said William Rose July the First 1 Car. 2. died and that Katherine her Sister surviv'd her and is still living That the said Katherine October the First 20 Car. 2. at East-Grimsted entred into the said Tenements and was seis'd prout Lex postulat and the same day and year demis'd the same to the said Thomas Gardner the Plaintiff from the Feast of St. Michael the Arch-angel then last past for the term of Five years then next following By virtue whereof the said Thomas Gardner entred and was possessed until the said Joseph and Daniel Sheldon the same First day of October 20 Car. 2. entred upon him and Ejected him If upon the whole matter the Justices shall think the said Joseph and Daniel Sheldon culpable they find them culpable and assess Damages to Six pence and Costs to Twenty shillings But if the Justices shall conceive them not culpable they find them not culpable upon the words My will is if it happen my Son George Mary and Katherine my Daughters do dye without Issue of their Bodies lawfully begotten then all my Free Lands which I am now seised of shall come remain and be to my said Nephew William Rose and his Heirs for ever The first Question is Whether by this Will any Estate be Q. 1 devis'd to the Son and Heir of the Testator or to his Sisters If any Estate be devis'd what Estate is so devis'd to them Q. 2 or any of them The third Question is What Estate is by this Will devis'd Q. 3 to the Nephew and if any be how it shall take effect whether as a Remainder or as an Executory devise 1. As to the first it is clear That no Estate is devis'd to the Son or Daughters or any of them by express and explicit devise but if any be it is devis'd by implication only and collection of the Testators intent 2. If any Estate be given by this Will by Implication to the Son or Daughters or any of them it must be either a Joynt Estate to them for their lives with several inheritances in tayl or several Estates tayl to them in Succession that is to one first and the Heirs of his or her body and then to another and so successively 3. Such an Intail in Succession cannot possibly be because it appears not by the Will who should first take and have such Estate and who next c. and therefore such an Intail were meerly void for the incertainty of the person first taking as was rightly observ'd and assented to at the Bar. It remains then That the Estate devis'd by this Will if any be to the Son and his two Sisters must be a joynt Estate for their lives with several Inheritances to them in tayl by implication only And I am of Opinion That no such Estate is devis'd by this Will to the Son and two Daughters and I shall first observe That the Law doth not in Conveyances of Estates admit Estates to pass by implication regularly as being a way of passing Estates not agreeable to the plainness requir'd by Law in transferring Estates from one to another And for that the Case is A man according to the Custome of the Mannor Seagood and Hones Case 10 C. 1. Cr. f 336. surrendred to the use of Francis Reeve and of John Son of the said Francis and of the longest liver of them and for want of Issue of John lawfully begotten the Remainder to the youngest Son of Mary Seagood John had only an Estate for life and no Estate tayl by implication it being by conveyance Though as the Book is it might perhaps be an Estate tayl by Will which shews Estates by implication are not at all favour'd in Law though in mens last Wills they are allow'd with due restrictions In a Will Estates are often given by implication But I shall take this difference concerning Estates that pass by implication though it be by Will An Estate given by implication of a Will if it be to the disinheriting of the Heir at Law is not good if such implication be only constructive and possible but not a necessary implication I mean by a possible implication when it may be intended that the Testator did purpose and had an intention to devise his Land to A. but it may also be as reasonably intended that he had no such purpose or intention to devise it to A. But I call that a devise by necessary implication to A. when A. must have the thing devis'd or none else can have it And therefore if the implication be only possible and not necessary the Testators intent ought not to be construed to disinherit the Heir in thwarting the Dispose which the Law makes of the Land leaving it to descend where the intention of the Testator is not apparently and not ambiguously to the contrary Spirt Bences C. 8 Car. 1. Cro. 368. To this purpose the Case is 8 Car. 1. where Thomas Cann devis'd to Henry his youngest Son Item I give to the said Henry my Pastures in the South-fields and also I will that all Bargains Grants and Covenants which I have from Nicholas Welb my Son Henry shall enjoy and his Heirs for ever and for lack of Heirs of his Body to remain to my Son Francis for ever It grew a Question Whether this were an Intayl to Henry of the South-fields or only of the Bargains and Grants which the Testator had from Welb which was a very measuring Case and in determining this Case All the Four Judges agreed That the words of a Will which shall disinherit the Heir at Common Law must have a clear and apparent intent and not be ambiguous or any way doubtful So are the very words of the Book and therefore they resolv'd in that Case That only the Bargains and Grants had from Welb were intayl'd to the youngest Son and that he had only an Estate for life in the Pastures in the South-fields 1. I shall therefore now clear the difference I have taken That the Heir shall never be disinherited by a devise in a Will by implication and not explicit where the implication is only a possible implication and not a necessary implication 2. In the second place I shall shew That the words of this Will do not import a devise to the son and the two daughters for their lives joyntly with respective Inheritances in tayl to the Heirs of their several bodies by any necessary implication but only by an implication that is possible by construction 3. In the third place I shall shew That being so as to the Case in question it is not material whether the devise by way of Remainder to the Nephew be void or not 4. In the fourth place ex abundante and to make the Will of the Testator not ineffectual in that part of the Will I shall shew That the Nephew hath
during the wives life which was not to be intended 15 El. Moore f. 123. n. 265. Another Case I shall make use of is a Case Paschae 15 El. A man seis'd of a Messuage and of divers Lands occupied with it time out of mind leased part of it to a stranger for years and after made his last Will in these words I will and bequeath to my wife my Messuage with all the Lands thereto belonging in the occupation of the Lessee and after the decease of my Wife I will that it with all the rest of my Lands shall remain to my younger Son The Question in that Case was Whether the wife should have the Land not leased by implication for her life because it was clear the younger Son was to have no part until the death of the wife And the Lord Anderson at first grounding himself upon that Case in Brook as it seems of 29 H. 8. twice by Brook remembred in his Title Devise n. 28. and after n. 52. was of opinion That the wife should have the Land not leased by implication But Mead was of a contrary opinion for that it was expresly devis'd That the wife should have the Land leas'd and therefore no more should be intended to be given her but the Heir should have the Land not in lease during the wives life To which Anderson mutata opinione agreed Hence perhaps many have collected That a person shall not take Land by Implication of a Will if he takes some other Land expresly by the same Will but that is no warrantable difference For vary this Case but a little as the former case was varied That the Land in lease was devis'd to the wife for life and after the death of the wife all the Devisors land was devis'd to the youngest Son as this Case was and that after the death of the wife and the youngest son the Devisors Heir should have the Land both leas'd and not leas'd it had been clear that the Heir exactly according to the Case of 13 H. 7. should have been excluded from all the Land leas'd and not leas'd until after the death of the wife and the younger son And therefore in such case the wife by necessary implication should have had the Land not leas'd as she had the Land leas'd by express devise and that notwithstanding she had the leas'd Land by express devise for else none could have the Land not leas'd during the wives life Horton vers Horton 2 Jac. Cr. f. 74. 75. Wadham made a Lease for years upon condition the Lessee should not alien to any besides his Children The Lessee deviseth the term to Humphrey his son after the death of his wife and made one Marshall and another his Executors and died The Lessor entred as for breach of the Condition supposing this a devise to the wife of the term by implication The opinion of the Judges was It was no devise by implication but the Executors should have the term until the wives death but it was said If it had been devis'd to his Executors after the death of his wife there the wife must have it by implication or none could have had it But Popham denied that Case because if the devise had been to the Executors after the wives death the Executors should when the wife died have had the term as Legatees but until her death they should have it as Executors generally which by all opinions fully confirms the difference taken That a devise shall not be good by implication when the implication is not necessary and in this Case all agreed the Case in 13 H. 7. to be good Law because the implication there was necessary Edward Clatch being seis'd of two Messuages in Soccage tenure Dyer 15 16 El. 4. 330. b. and having Issue a Son and two Daughters by three several Venters His Son being dead in his life time and leaving two Daughters who were Heirs at Law to the Father devis'd one of the Messuages to Alice his Daughter and her Heirs for ever and the other to Thomazine his Daughter and her Heirs for ever with limitation That if Alice died without Issue living Thomazine Thomazine should then have Alice's part to her and her Heirs and if Thomazine died before the Age of Sixteen years Alice should have her part in Fee also And if both his said Daughters died without Issue of their bodies then the Daughters of his Son should have the Messuages The youngest daughter of the Testator died without Issue having past her Age of sixteen years It was resolv'd That the words in the Will If his two Daughters died without Issue of their Bodies did not create by implication cross remainders in tayl to the Devisors Daughters whereby the eldest should take the part of the youngest but her part should go to the Heirs at Law according to the Limitation of the Will and those words were but a designation of the time when the Heirs at Law should have the Messuages Note That one of the Daughters dying without Issue the Heirs at Law by the Will had her part without staying until the other Daughter died without Issue 1. From these Cases I first conclude That only possible implication by a Will shall not give the Land from the right Heir but a necessary implication which excludes the right Heir shall give it 2. That the difference taken is not sound That one shall not take by implication of a Will any Land where the same person hath other Land or Goods expresly devis'd by the same Will for if the implication be necessary the having of Land or any other thing by express devise will not hinder another taking also by implication as appears in the three Cases by me made use of viz. 13 H. 7. 3 E. 6. 15 Eliz. cited out of Moore 3. Whether any thing be given expresly by Will or not a possible Implication only shall not disinherit the Heir where it may as well be intended that nothing was devis'd by implication as that it was But if any man think that to be material in this Case the Daughters had respective Portions expresty devis'd them viz. Six hundred pounds to each of them and therefore shall not have the Land also by implication only possible to disinherit the right Heir Quest 2 For the second point These words My Will is if it happen my Son George Mary and Katharine my Daughters to dye without Issue of their Bodies lawfully begotten then all my Free-lands shall remain and be to my said Nephew William Rose and his Heirs for ever are so far from importing a devise of the Land to the Son and Daughters for their lives with respective Inheritances in tayl by any necessary implication that both Grammatically and to common intendment they import only a designation and appointment of the time when the Land shall come to the Nephew namely when George Mary and Katherine happen to dye Issuless and not before And where
to dispense with a Corporation as it seems K. James had in this Case when the Patent was granted but by Law cannot his Power and consequently his Prerogative is less than if he could 1. Malum prohibitum is that which is prohibited per le Statute Per le Statute is not intended only an Act of Parliament but any obliging Law or Constitution as appears by the Case For it is said The King may dispense with a Bastard to take Holy Orders or with a Clerk to have two Benefices with cure which were mala prohibita by the Canon Law and by the Council of Lateran not by Act of Parliament 2. Many things are said to be prohibited by the Common Law and indeed most things so prohibited were primarily prohibited by Parliament or by a Power equivalent to it in making Laws which is the same but are said to be prohibited by the Common Law because the Original of the Constitution or prohibiting Law is not to be found of Record but is beyond memory and the Law known only from practical proceeding and usage in Courts of Justice as may appear by many Laws made in the time of the Saxon Kings of William the First and Henry the First yet extant in History which are now received as Common Law So if by accident the Records of all Acts of Parliament now extant none of which is elder than 9 H. 3. but new Laws were as frequent before as since should be destroyed by fire or other casualty the memorials of proceeding upon them found by the Records in Iudicial proceeding would upon like reason be accounted Common Law by Posterity 3. Publique Nusances are not mala in se but mala politica introducta though in some passages of Coke's Posthuma's they are termed mala in se because prohibited at Common Law which holds not for the reasons before given For liberty of High-ways strangers have not in Forreign Territories but by permission therefore not essential to Dominion because it may be lawfully prohibited 2. Liberty of the High-ways is prohibited with us in the night by the Statute of Winchester in some seasons of the year and in times of warr and for apprehension of Thieves in time of Peace c. The Assise of Bread and Ale is constituted by Statute and may be taken away Forestalling the Market and ingrossing hath like institution the first was prohibited by Athelstans Laws and William the First 's and may be permitted by a Law the second is allowed by the late Laws when Corn is at a certain low price quaere the Law tempore Car. 2. the pulling down of Bridges wholly or placing them in other places may be done by a Law and what may be or not be by a Law is no malum in se more than any other prohibitum by a Law is Judgment was given by the Advice of the Judges in the Kings Bench Quod Quaerens nil Capiat In a formedon in the Reverter Mich. 25 Car. II. C. B. Rot. 253. John Bole Esquire and Elizabeth his wife and John Ely Gent. and Sarah his wife Demandants against Anne Horton Widow Tenant of _____ The Writ ONe Messuage Thirty Acres of Land Fifteen Acres of Meadow Twenty Acres of Pasture and of the third part of One Messuage One hundred and forty Acres of Land Four and forty Acres of Meadow Eighty three Acres of Pasture with the Appurtenances in Tickhill and Wellingly which William Vescy Gent. Grand father of the said Elizabeth and Sarah whose Coheirs they are gave to John Vescy during the life of the said John and after the decease of the said John to the heirs males of the body of the said John begotten and for default of such issue to Robert Vescy and the heirs males of his body begotten and for default of such issue to William Vescy son of the said William the Grandfather and to the heirs males of his body begotten and for default of such issue to Matthew Vescy and the heirs males of his body begotten And which after the death of the said John Robert William the Son and Matthew to the said Elizabeth and Sarah Cosins and Coheirs of the said William the Grandfather that is to say Daughters and Coheirs of the said John Son and Heir of the said William the Grandfather ought to revert by form of the said gift for that the said John Robert William the Son and Matthew are dead without heirs males of their bodies lawfully begotten Then counts that The Count. William the Grandfather was seis'd of the Premisses in demand in his Demesne as of Fee and held the same in Soccage of the late King Charles as of his honour of Tickhill in the said County in free Soccage by fealty only and so seis'd the Eight and twentieth day of November 1628. at Tickhill aforesaid made his last Will in writing and thereby devised the said Lands to the said John Vescy for life and after to the heirs males of his body begotten And for default of such issue to Robert Vescy and the heirs males of his body and for default of such issue to William Vescy the Son and the heirs males of his body and for default of such issue to Matthew Vescy and the heirs males of his body and after the Six and twentieth of December 1628. at Tickhill aforesaid died so seis'd And the said John after his death entred and was seis'd by force of the said gift and died so seis'd without heir male of his body After the death of John Robert entred by vertue of his said Remainder and was seis'd accordingly and so seis'd died without heir male of his body after whose death William entred by vertue of his said Remainder and was seis'd accordingly and he being so seis'd Matthew died without heir male of his body and after the said William died seis'd of the premisses without heir male of his body After the death of which William the Son for that he died without heir male of his body begotten the right of the Premisses reverts to the said Elizabeth and Sarah who together with their said Husbands demand as Cosens and Coheirs of the said William the Grandfather that is to say Daughters and Coheirs of the said John Son and Heir of the said William the Grandfather and which after the death of the said John Robert William and Matthew for that they died without any heir male of their bodies ought to revert to them The Tenant Anne for Plea saith That the said William The Barr. whose Cosens and Coheirs the said Elizabeth and Sarah are by his Deed dated the Seventh of November 1655. in consideration of a marriage to be solemnized between him and Anne the now Tenant then by the name of Anne Hewett and of 1200 l. marriage Portion and for a Ioynture for the said Anne and in satisfaction of all Dower she might claim out of his Lands And for setling the said Lands upon the issue and heirs of
recovered in Damages 101 Debt 1. Debts by simple contracts were the first Debts that ever were and are more noble than Actions on the Case upon which only damages are recoverable 101 2. Actions in the debet detinet are actions of property which is not in an action on the Case ibid. 3. Actions upon Bond or Deed made in Wales Ireland Normandy c. where to be tryed 413 4. Wheresoever the Debt grew due yet the Debtor is indebted to the Creditor in any place where he is as long as the Debt is unsatisfied 92 5. It lies not for a Solicitor for his soliciting Fees but for an Attorney it well lies and there shall be no ley Gager in it 99 Declaration See Pleading 1. The Plaintiff must recover by his own strength and not by the Defendants weakness 8 58 60 2. When the Plaintiff makes it appear to the Court that the Defendants Title is not good yet if the Plaintiff do not make out a good Title for himself he shall never have Judgment 60 3. The form of a Declaration in London according to their custome 93 4. The King may vary his Declaration but it must be done the first Term 65 5. In a Quare Impedit the Plaintiff must in his Declaration alledge a presentation in himself or those from whom he claims 7 57 Demand See Request 1. A Demand of Rent is not requisite upon a Limitation because Non-payment avoids it 32 2. But where there is a condition there must be a demand before entry ibid. 3. Where there are several Rents the demands must be several 72 4. If more Rent is demanded than is payable the demand is void ibid. Devastavit See Executors   Devise Devisor Devisee 1. The Law doth not in Conveyances of Estates admit Estates to pass by Implication regularly but in Devises they are allowed with due restrictions 261 262 c. 2. If an Estate given by Implication in a Will be to the disinheriting of the Heir at Law it is not good if such Implication be only constructive and possible but not a necessary Implication 262 263 267 268 3. The necessary Implication is that the Devisee must have the thing Devised or none else can have it 262 263 4. A. deviseth his Goods to his wife and after her decease his Son and Heir shall have the House where they are this is a good Devise of the House to the wife by Implication because the Heir at Law is excluded by it and then no person can claim it but the wife by Implication of the Devise 263 264. 5. A. having issue Thomas and Mary devises to Thomas and his Heirs for ever and for want of Heirs of Thomas to Mary and her Heirs This is an Estate tayl in Thomas 269 270 6. My will is if it happen my Son George Mary and Katherine my Daughters to dye without issue of their bodies lawfully begotten then all the Freehold Lands I am now seized of shall remain and be to my Nephew A. B. The construction and meaning of these words quid operatur by them 260 261 262 263 264 c. 7. If Land is devised to H. and his heirs as long as B. hath heirs of his body the remainder over such latter Devise will be good not as a Remainder but as an Executory Devise 270 8. My son shall have my Land to him and his heirs so long as any heirs of the body of A. shall be living and for want of such heirs I devise it to B. here B. shall take by future and Executory Devise 270 9. A Devise to the son and heir in Fee being no other than what the Law gave him is void 271 10. A Devise that if the son and heir pay not all the Legacies then the Land shall go to the Legatories upon default of payment this shall vest in the Legatories by Executory Devise 271 11. A. had issue W. T. and R. and devises to T. and his heirs for ever and if T. died without issue living W. that then R. should have the Land this is a good Fee in T. and R had a good Estate in possibility by Executory Devise upon the dying of T. without issue 272 12. An Executory Devise cannot be upon an Estate tayl 273 13. I bequeath my son Thomas to my Brother R to be his Tutor during his minority here the Land follows the custody and the Trust is not assignable over to any person 178 179 c. 14. A Devise of the Land during the minority of the Son and for his maintenance and education until he come of age is no devising of the Guardianship 184 Discent 1. Children inherit their Ancestors Estates without limit in the right ascending Line and are not inherited by them 244 2. In the collateral Lines of Uncle and Nephew the Uncle as well inherits the Nephew as the Nephew the Uncle 244 3. In the case of Aliens nothing interrupts the common course of Discents but Defectus Nationis 268 Disclaimer 1. In a Quare Impedit upon the Bishops Disclaimer there is a Judgment with a Cessat Executio quousque c. Dismes See Tythes   Disseisor 1. A Disseisor Tenant in possession may Rebut the Demandant without shewing how he came to the possession which he then hath but he must shew how the warranty extended to him 385 386 Dispensation See Title Statutes 14. 1. The Pope could formerly and the Arch-bishop now can dispense for a plurality 20 23 2. How many Benefices a Bishop may retain by Dispensation 25 3. A Dispensation for years and good 24 4. A Dispensation after the Consecration of a Bishop comes too late to prevent the Voidance 20 5. If a man hath a Benefice with cure and accepts another without a Dispensation or Qualification the first becomes void and the Patron may present 131 132 6. No Dispensation can be had for marrying within the Levitical Degrees 214 216 239 7. A Dispensation obtained doth jus dare and makes the thing prohibited lawful to be done by him who hath it 333 336 8. Freedom from punishment is a consequent of a Dispensation but not its effect 333 9. What penal Laws the King may dispense with and what not 334 335 336 c. 10. Where the Suit is only the Kings for the breach of a penal Law and which is not to the damage of a third person the King may dispense 334 336 339 340 11. Where the Offence wrongs none but the King he may dispense with it 344 12. Where the Suit is the Kings only for the benefit of a third person there he cannot dispense 334 336 339 340 13. Offences not to be dispensed with 342 14. A Dispensation to make lawful the taking from a man any thing which he may lawfully defend from being taken or lawfully punish it if it is taken must be void 341 15. Dispensations void against Acts of Parliament for maintaining Native Artificers 344 16. Where the exercise of a Trade is generally prohibited
the words of a Will are of ambiguous and doubtful construction they shall not be interpreted to the disinheriting of the right Heir as is already shew'd This being clear That there is no devise by this Will of the Land by implication in any kind to the Son and Daughters it follows that Katherine the surviving Daughter of the Testator and Lessor of the Plaintiff had no Title to enter and make the Lease to the Plaintiff Gardner and then as to the Case in question before us which is only Whether the Defendants be culpable of Ejecting the Plaintiff It will not be material whether The devise to the Nephew William Rose be void or not and if not void how and when he shall take by the devise which may come in question perhaps hereafter But to that point ex abundante and to make the Will not ineffectual in that point of the devise to the Nephew if no Estate for lives or other Estate be created by this Will by Implication to the Son and Daughters it follows That the Nephew can take nothing by way of Remainder for the Remainder must depend upon some particular Estate and be created the same time with the particular Estate Cok. Litt. f. 49. a. The Remainder is the residue of an Estate in Land depending upon a particular Estate and created together with the same and the Will creating no particular Estate the consequent must be That the Land was left to descend in Fee-simple to the heir at law without creating either particular Estate or Remainder upon it Sir Edward Coke hath a Case Cok. Litt. f. 18. a. but quotes no Authority for it If Land be given to H. and his heirs as long as B. hath heirs of his body the Remainder over in Fee the Remainder is void being a Remainder after a Fee-simple though that Fee-simple determines when no heirs are left of the body of B. whether that case be law or not I shall not now discuss in regard that when such a base Fee determines for want of Issue of the body of B. the Land returns to the Grantor and his heirs as a kind of Reversion and if there can be a Reversion of such Estate I know not why a Remainder may not be granted of it but for the former reason this can be no Remainder because no particular Estate is upon which it depends and if the Lord Coke's Case be law it is the stronger Cok. Litt. f. 18. a. Sect. 11. that no Remainder is in this Case But without question a Remainder cannot depend upon an absolute Fee-simple by necessary reason For when all a man hath of Estate or any thing else is given or gone away nothing remains but an absolute Fee-simple being given or gone out of a man that being all no other or further Estate can remain to be given or dispos'd and therefore no Remainder can be of a pure Fee-simple To this purpose is the Case of Hearne and Allen in this Court 2 Car. 1. Cr. f. 57. Richard Keen seis'd of a Messuage and Lands in Cheping-Norton having Issue Thomas his Son and Anne a Daughter by the same Venter devis'd his Land to Thomas his Son and his heirs for ever and for want of heirs of Thomas to Anne and her heirs and died It became a Question Whether Thomas had an Estate in Fee or in Tayl by this Will for he could not dye without heir if his Sister outlived him who was to take according to the intent of the Devisor Two Judges held it and with reason to be an Estate tayl in Thomas and the Remainder to the Daughter who might be his heir shew'd That the Devise to him and his heirs could be intended only to be to him and the heirs of his body But three other Judges held it to be a devise in Fee but all agreed if the Remainder had been to a Stranger it had been void for then Thomas which is only to my purpose had had an absolute Estate in Fee after which there could be no Remainder which is undoubted law The Case out of Coke's Littleton and this Case are the same to this purpose That a Remainder cannot depend upon a Fee-simple yet in another respect they much differ For in this last Case after an Estate in Fee devis'd to Thomas and if he died without heir the Remainder to a Stranger or Sister of the half blood not only the Remainder was void as a Remainder but no future devise could have been made of the land by the Devisor for if Thomas died without heir the land escheated and the Lords Title would precede any future devise But in that Case of Sir Edward Coke which he puts by way of Grant if it be put by way of devise That if land be devised to H. and his heirs as long as B. hath heirs of his body the Remainder over such later devise will be good though not as a Remainder yet as an Executory devise because somewhat remain'd to be devis'd when the Estate in Fee determin'd upon B. his having no Issue of his Body And as an Executory Devise and not as a Remainder I conceive the Nephew shall well take in the present Case And the intention of the Testator by his Will will run as if he had said I leave my Land to descend to my Son and his Heirs according to the Common Law until he and both my Daughters shall happen to dye without Issue And then I devise my Land to my Nephew William Rose and his Heirs Or as if he had said my Son shall have all my Land To have and to hold to him and his Heirs in Fee-simple as long as any Heirs of the bodies of A.B. and c. shall be living and for want of such Heirs I devise my Land to my Nephew William Rose and his Heirs The Nephew shall take as by a future and Executory Devise And there is no difference whether such devise be limited upon the contingent of three Strangers dying without Heirs of their bodies or upon the contingent of three of the Devisors own Children dying without Heirs of their Bodies for if a future devise may be upon any contingent after a Fee-simple it may as well be upon any other contingent if it appear by the Will the Testator intended his Son and Heir should have his Land in Fee-simple This way of Executory devise after a Fee-simple of any nature was in former Ages unknown as appears by a Case in the Lord Dyer 29 H. 8. f. 33. concerning a Devise to the Prior of St. Bartholomew in West-Smithfield by the clear Opinion of Baldwin and Fitz herbert the greatest Lawyers of the Age. But now nothing more ordinary The Cases are for the most part remembred in Pell and Browns Case that is Dyer f. 124. Ed. Clatch his Case f. 330. b. 354. Wellock Hamonds Case cited in Borastons Case 3. Rep. Fulmerston Stewards Case c. I shall instance two Cases
the said William to be begotten of her the said Anne Infeoffed James Lane and John Lane Gentlemen of the said Premisses Habendum to them their heirs and assigns for ever To the use of the said William Vescy the Feoffer and his assigns for term of his life without impeachment of Waste and after to the use of the said Anne the Tenant if the Marriage succeeded between them for term of her life for her Joynture and after her decease to the use of the heirs males of his body on her body begotten forever and for want of such issue to the use of the heirs females of him the said William Vescy upon her body begotten and for want of such issue to the use of the right heirs of him the said William Vescy And bound him and his heirs to warrant the premisses as aforesaid to the said Feoffees and their Heirs to the uses aforesaid By vertue whereof and of the Statute of Uses the said William was seis'd for term of his life with the Remainder over as aforesaid And after the said marriage was had and solemnized between him and the Tenant Arine That William died so seis'd without any issue of his body and Anne surviv'd him and entred and by vertue of the said Feoffment and the Statute of Uses is seis'd in her Demesne as of Freehold for term of her life And that the said warranty of the said William descended from him to the said Elizabeth and Sarah as Cosins and Coheirs of him the said William the Son that is to say Daughters and Coheirs of John Vescy Brother and Heir of the said William the Son and demands Iudgment if against the said Warranty the Demandants shall be received to demand and avers her self and Anne Hewett named in the Feoffment to be the same person The Replication The Demandants reply and confess the Feoffment to uses of William as is pleaded in Barr to Lane and Lane and their heirs with warranty But further say That the said William Vescy the Son after that is the Four and twentieth of December 14 Car. 2. at Tickhill aforesaid died without any issue of his body which they are ready to aver and demand Iudgment if they shall be barred of their Action against the said Anne by the said Feoffment and warranty The Rejoynder Anne the Tenant rejoyns that the Replication is insufficient and demurs thereupon The matter of the Replication is all set forth in the Defendants Plea in Barr but only the time of William Vescy's death which was not material upon which the Demandants ought to have demur'd and not to have replyed impertinently The Case upon the Pleading William Vescy seis'd of the Land in question in his Demesne as of Fee held of King Charles the First in free Soccage as of his Honour of Tickhill by his last Will and Testament devis'd the same to John Vescy his eldest Son and the heirs males of his body and for default of such to Robert Vescy and the heirs males of his body and for default of such to William Vescy his Son and the heirs males of his body and for default of such to Matthew Vescy and the heirs males of his body and died Then John entred and died seis'd without issue male leaving two daughters Elizabeth and Sarah now Demandants together with their Husbands After his death Robert entred and died seis'd without issue male Then William entred and was seis'd and Matthew in the life of William died without issue male William by his Deed Indented in Consideration of an intended marriage with Anne the now Tenant and for other Considerations infeoffed James Lane and John Lane Habendum to them and their Heirs to the use of William the Feoffor for term of his life and after to the use of Anne Hewet now the Tenant for her life then to the use of the heirs males of his body upon her begotten and for default of such to the use of the heirs females of his body on her begotten and for default of such to the use of his right Heirs And bound him and his Heirs to warrant to the said Feoffees and their Heirs William by vertue of the said Feoffment and of the Statute of Uses was possessed and after he married the now Tenant and died seis'd as of his Freehold without any issue of his body After his death Anne his wife now Tenant by vertue of the said Feoffment and Statute of Uses entred and was posssessed Against whom Elizabeth and Sarah Daughters and Coheirs of John Vescy and Cosins and Coheirs of William the Devisor bring their Formedon in the Reverter Anne the Tenant in possession would rebutt and barr them by the said warranty of William Vescy the Son whose Cosins and Coheirs they are videlicet the Daughters and Coheirs of John eldest Brother of the said William And whether the said Anne Tenant by the said Feoffment and Statute of Uses can rebutt them by the said warranty is the general Question For Resolution of which I must make these previous Questions The first is If before the Statute of 27 H. 8. to Vses Tenant in tayl had made a Feoffment in Fee to uses with warranty to the Feoffees and their Heirs such Feoffees in a Formedon in the Reverter brought against them by the Heirs of the Donor could have rebutted and barr'd them by the warranty of the Tenant in tayl For if the Feoffees to use in such case could not have barr'd the Heirs of the Donor before the Statute by the warranty it is evident the Cestuy que use since the Statute cannot barr them for he can have no more power since the Statute than the Feoffees to use had before the Statute by the warranty I put the Case before the Statute for clearness sake only for though since the Statute there are Feoffees to use as before yet no question can be made upon their rebutter by a warranty because the Estate is out of them by the Statute as soon as it is in them And as to this the Case in effect is no more than Whether the warranty of Tenant in tayl which must be admitted to be a Collateral warranty descending upon the Donor or his Heirs will barr him or them of the Reversion The second Question I make admitting the Heirs of the Donor to be barr'd by the warranty of Tenant in tayl descending upon them is Whether after the Statute of Uses the Cestuy que use can have any benefit of the warranty granted to the Feoffees to use either by way of Voucher or Rebutter Because the Cestuy que use is not in possession in the per by the Feoffees but by the Statute of Uses The third Question is admitting generally that the Cestuy que use shall have benefit of the warranty made to the Feoffees to use Whether yet in this Case Anne the Tenant being a Cestuy que use shall have benefit of the warranty made to the Feoffees Because neither William
the Remainder because it is a Collateral warranty but because the Statute de Donis doth not restrain his warranty from barring him in the Remainder as hath been clear'd but leaves it as at Common Law but it doth restrain his warranty from barring him in the Reversion as shall appear There is one Case in Littleton remarkable for many Reasons where the warranty of Tenant in tayl is lineal and not collateral to the person in Remainder and therefore binds not if the Case be Law as may be justly doubted as Littleton is commonly understood Litt. Sect. 719. Land is given to a man and the heirs males of his body the Remainder to the heirs females of his body and the Donee in tayl makes a Feoffment in Fee with warranty and hath Issue a Son and a Daughter and dieth this warranty is but a lineal warranty to the Son to demand by a Writ of Formedon in the Descender and also it is but lineal to the Daughter to demand the same Land by a Writ of Formedon in the Remainder unless the Brother dieth without Issue male because she claimeth as Heir female of the body of her Father engendred But if her Brother release to the Discontinuee with warranty and after dye without Issue this is a collateral warranty to the daughter because she cannot conveigh the right which she hath to the Remainder by any means of descent by her brother 1. Here the warranty of the Father Donee in tayl is but lineal to the Daughter in Remainder in tayl But she claims saith the Book her Remainder as heir female of the body of the Donee in tayl which differs the Case from other persons in Remainder of an Estate tayl But of this more hereafter 2. And by the way in this Case Sir Edward Coke though he hath commented upon it hath committed an over-sight of some moment by using a Copy that wanted a critical emendation For where it is said That the warranty of the Father is but lineal to the Daughter to demand the Land by a Formedon in the Remainder unless the Brother dye without Issue-male because she claims as Heir female of the body of her Father By which reading and context the sense must be That if the Son dye without Issue male of his body then the warranty of the Father is not lineal to the Daughter cujus contrarium est verum for she can claim her Remainder as heir female of the body of her Father and thereby make the Fathers warranty lineal to her but only because her Brother died without Issue male That which deceived Sir Edward Coke to admit this Case as he hath printed it was a deprav'd French Copy thus Si non frere devyast sans Issue male which truly read should be Si son frere devyast and the Translation should be Not unless the Brother dye without Issue male but If her Brother dye without Issue male Another reason is that his French Copy was deprav'd Because the French of it is Si non frere devyast sans Issue male which is no Language for that rendred in English is Vnless Brother dye For it cannot be rendred as he hath done it unless the Brother dye without the French had been Si non le frere devyast and not Si non frere devyast Sir Edward Coke's first Edition of his Littleton and all the following Editions are alike false in this Section I have an Edition of Littleton in 1604. so deprav'd which was long before Sir Edward Coke publisht his but I have a right Edition in 1581. which it seems Sir Edward Coke saw not where the Reading is right Si son frere devyast sans Issue male Therefore you may mend all your Littletons if you please and in perusing the Case you will find the grossness of the false Copies more clearly than you can by this my Discourse of it And after all I much doubt whether this Case as Littleton is commonly understood that is That this lineal warranty doth not bind the Daughter without Assets descending be Law my Reason is for that no Issue in tayl is defended from the warranty of the Donee or Tenant in tayl but such as are inheritable to the Estates intended within that Statute and no Estates are so intended but such as had been Fee-simples Conditional at the Common Law And no Estate in Remainder of an Estate tayl that is of a Fee Conditional could be at Common Law All Issues in tayl within that Statute are to claim by the Writ there purposely formed for them which is a Formedon in the Descender not in Remainder 3. A third thing to be cleared is That the Statute de Donis did not intend to preserve the Estate tayl for the Issue or the Reversion for the Donor absolutely against all warranties that might barr them but only against the Alienation with or without warranty of the Donee and Tenant in tayl only for if it had intended otherwise it had restrain'd all Collateral warranties of any other Ancestor from binding the Issue in tayl which it neither did nor intended though well it might such warranters having no title 4. The Statute de Donis did not intend to restrain the Alienation of any Estates but Estates of Inheritance upon Condition expressed or implyed such as were Fee-simples Conditional at Common Law And therefore if Tenant for life aliened with warranty which descended upon the Reversioner such Alienation or Warranty were not restrained by this Statute but left at Common Law 1. Because the Estate aliened was not of Inheritance upon Condition within that Statute 2. He in the Reversion had his remedy by entring for the forfeiture upon the Alienation if he pleas'd which the Donors of Fee-simples Conditional could not do These things cleared I think it will be most manifest by the Statute de Donis and all ancient Authority That the warranty of Tenant in tayl though it be a Collateral warranty will not barr the Donor or his Heir of the Reversion After the Inconvenience before recited That the Donees disinherited their Issue against the form of the Gift then follows Et praeterea cum deficienti exitu de hujusmodi Feoffatis Tenementum sic datum ad donatorem vel ad ejus haeredes reverti debuit per formam in Charta de dono hujusmodi expressam licet exitus si quis fuerit obiisset per factum tamen Feoffamentum eorum quibus Tenementum sic datum fuit sub conditione exclusi fuerunt hucúsque de Reversione eorundem Tenementorum quod manifeste fuit contra formam doni Hitherto the Inconveniences and Mischiefs which followed the Issue of the Donees and to the Donor when they fail'd by the Donees power of Alienation are only recited in the Statute without a word of restraint or remedy The follows the remedy and restraint in these words only and no other Propter quod Dominus Rex perpendens quod necessarium utile est in praedictis casibus which
Grantee of the Rent-charge is now dispenc'd with which was not before the Statute For if that were now requisite the Conizors could not only not distrain for the Rent due before the Fine but not for the Rent due since the Fine nor doth the Statute help the matter because the Cestuy que use is in possession of the Rent by the Statute and therefore needs no Attornment for that is true when the Conizee hath a perfect possession but without Attornment the Conizee had no perfect possession impowring him to distrain and therefore the Statute can bring no perfect possession to the uses to that end And so Sir Edward Coke agrees the Law Cok. Litt. f. 307. Sect. 55● that since Littleton wrote If the Conizee of a Fine before Attornment by Deed indented and inroll'd bargains and sells a Seigniory to another the Bargainee shall not distrain because the Conizee that is the Bargainor could not for want of Attornment But on the other side a man perfectly seis'd of a Seigniory Rent Reversion or Remainder bargains and sells by Deed indented and inroll'd according to the Statute the Bargainee shall distrain without Attornment by vertue of the Statute And if a Fine be now levied to a man to the use of a third person the third person shall distrain without any Attornment made not only to himself by reason of the Statute but to the Conizee by the Resolution in Sir Moyle Finch his Case for otherwise the Fine were to little purpose Which Case though it make an Attornment not necessary where it is impossible to be had that the Conveyance might not be useless in effect and an intended right to be de novo introduc'd altogether hindred Shall it therefore destroy an old Attornment which cannot but be had and is still in being for no other use or end but to deprive the Conizors of a Rent and former Right justly due to introduce a general inconvenience upon all that have granted Leases for lives and are occasioned to settle their Estates And there is great difference between a Fine levied of a Reversion or of a Rent-charge to the use of a third person and to the use of the Conizors for a third person can never distrain unless either an Attornment were to the Conizee which is impossible because no possession continues in him so as to receive an Attornment or unless the construction of the Statute according to Sir Moyle Finch his Case to make the Conveyance of effect to Cestuy que use made the Attornment because it could not be had not necessary which is a great strain and violence upon the true reason of Law That a Conveyance which in reason could not be good without Attornment should be sufficient because it could not have an Attornment which was necessary to make it sufficient And this practice hath been frequent since the Statute of Uses Sir Will. Pelham's Case as in making a Recovery against his nature to be a forfeiture because taken as a Common Conveyance To make Vses declared by Indenture between the parties made a year after the Recovery to be the Vses of the Recovery Downan's Case 9. Rep. with such Limitations as are mentioned in Downan's Case the 9. Rep. L. Cromwell's Case 2. Rep. f. 72. b. To make a Rent arise out of the Estate of Cestuy que use upon a Recovery which was to arise out of the Estate of the Recoveror and his possession which is a principal point in Cromwell's Case and resolv'd because by the intention of the parties the Cestuy que use was to pay the Rent 14 Eliz. Harwell versus Lucas Moore 's Rep. f. 99. a. n. 243. Bracebridge's Case is eminent to this purpose Tho. Bracebridge seis'd of the Mannor of Kingbury in Com. Warwick made a Lease for One and twenty years of Birchin Close parcel del Mannor to Moore and another Lease of the same Close for Six and twenty years to commence at the end of the first Lease to one Curteis rendring Rent and after made a Feoffment of the Mannor and all other his Lands to the use of the Feoffees and their Heirs and Assigns upon Condition that if they paid not 10000 l. within fifteen daies to the said Tho. Bracebridge or his Assigns they should stand seiz'd to the use of Bracebridge and Joyce his Wife the Remainder to Thomas their second Son in tail with divers Remainders over The Remainder to the Right Heirs of Thomas the Father Livery was made of the Land in possession and not of Birchin Close and no Attornment the Feoffees paid not 10000 l. whereby Bracebridge the Father became seis'd and the first Tenant for years attorn'd to him Adjudg'd 1. That by Livery of the Mannor Birchin Close did not pass to the Feoffees without Attornment 2. That the Attornment of the first Lessee was sufficient Moore f. 99. n. 243. 3. Though the use limited to the Feoffees and their Heirs was determined before the Attornment yet the Attornment was good to the contingent use upon not paying the mony In the Resolution of this Case Wild Archer and Tyrrell Justices were for the Plaintiff and Vaughan Chief Justice for the Defendant Trin. 21. Car. II. C. B. Rot. 1714. The King Plaintiff in a Quare Impedit per Galfridum Palmer Atturnatum suum Generalem Robert Bishop of Worcester Thomas Jervis Esquire and John Hunckley Clerk Defendants THE King counts That Queen Elizabeth was seis'd of the Advowson of the Church of Norfield with the Chappel of Coston in gross in Fee in Jure Coronae and presented one James White her Clerk who was admitted instituted and inducted That from the said Queen the Advowson of the said Church with the said Chappel descended to King James and from him to King Charles the First and from him to his Majesty that now is who being seis'd thereof the said Church with the Chappel became void by the death of the said James White and therefore it belongs of right to him to present and the Defendants disturbe him to his damage of 200 l. which the said Attorney is ready to verifie for the King The Defendants plead severally and first the Bishop that he claims nothing in the said Church and the Advowson but as Ordinary The Defendant Jervis saith That long before the said Presentation suppos'd to be made by the late Queen one Richard Jervis Esquire was seis'd of the Mannor of Norfield with the Appurtenances in Com. praedicto to which the Advowson Ecclesiae praedictae tunc pertinuit adhuc pertinet in his Demesne as of Fee and so seis'd the said Church became void by the death of one Henry Squire then last Incumbent of the said Church and so continued for two years whereby the said late Queen praetextu lapsus temporis in default of the Patron Ordinary and Metropolitan Ecclesiae praedictae pro tempore existentis dictae nuper Reginae devolutae by her Prerogative afterward that is tertio die Decembris
28 Eliz. by her Letters Patents under the Great Seal bearing date the said year and day at Westminster to the said Church then being void presented the said James White who was admitted instituted and inducted tempore pacis c. That the said James White being so Rector of the said Church and the said Richard Jervis seis'd of the said Mannor to which the said Advowson pertained c. the said Richard after at Norfield aforesaid died so seis'd After whose death the same descended to one Thomas Jervis Esquire as Son and Heir of Richard and from him descended to one Sir Thomas Jervis Knight who enter'd and was seis'd and so seis'd the said Sir Thomas Jervis 30. March 14 Car. 1. March the 30th 14 Car. 1. by his Deed in writing seal'd at Norfield aforesaid granted to one Phineas White the Advowson of the said Church for the first and next avoidance only whereby the said Phineas was possessed for the next avoidance of the said Advowson and so possessed the said Church became void by the death of the said James White which was the first and next avoidance after the said Grant to Phineas Phineas by virtue of his said Grant presented one Timothy White his Clerk who was thereupon admitted instituted and inducted tempore pacis tempore Car. 1. The said Timothy being Rector and the said Sir Thomas Jervis seis'd as aforesaid The said Sir Thomas died seis'd at Norfield aforesaid and the said Mannor with the Appurtenances descended to Thomas the Defendant as his Son and Heir who enter'd and was and yet is seis'd and being so seis'd the said Church became void by the death of the said Timothy White and the said Thomas Jervis the Defendant presented the other Defendant John Hunckley who was admitted instituted and inducted long before the Writ purchas'd Then Traverseth Absque hoc That the late Queen was seis'd of the said Advowson with the Chappel of Coston aforesaid in gross and as of Fee Jure Coronae suae Et hoc paratus est verificare and demands Judgment si Actio John Hunckley the Incumbent taking by protestation That the late Queen was not seis'd nor presented as by the Declaration is suppos'd for Plea saith That Richard Jervis was seis'd of the Mannor of Norfield with the Appurtenances in Com. praedicto and the Advowson of the said Church appertain'd thereto and pleads the same Plea verbatim as to the Queens Presentation of White and all other things as Jervis the Patron pleaded and the presentation of himself and that he was by the presentation of the other Defendant Jervis admitted instituted and inducted into the said Church Septemb. 15. 1660. and Traverseth Absque hoc that the King was seis'd of the said Advowson and Chappel in Gross as of Fee Et hoc paratus est verificare and demands Judgment The Attorney General replies and as to the Bishop claiming nothing but as Ordinary Demands Judgment and a Writ to the said Bishop and hath it with a Cesset Executio until the Plea determined between the King and the other Defendants And as to the Plea of the said Thomas Jervis the Patron the Attorney maintains the Seisin of the late Queen and of King James King Charles the First and of the King that now is of the said Advowson of the said Church and Chappel as by the Count before is declared And that the said Phineas White of his own wrong by usurpation upon the late King Charles the First to the said Church then void by the death of the said James White presented the said Timothy White and Traverseth Absque hoc That the Advowson of the said Church was or is pertaining to the Mannor of Norfield and demand Judgment and a Writ to the Bishop And as to the Plea of the Incumbent the Attorney replies as before to the Patrons Plea That the late Queen King James King Charles the First and the King that now is were seis'd of the said Advowson in gross as of Fee and that the said Phineas White presented the said Timothy by usurpation upon King Charles the First and Traverseth the appendancy of the Advowson Ecclesiae praedicta to the Mannor of Norfield The Patron Jervis rejoyns and demurs upon the Attorney's Replication as insufficient and assigns for Cause that the Attorney hath Travers'd matter not traversable and that the Traverse ought to have been omitted out of the Replication as also that the said Plea is repugnant in it self and wants form And John Hunckley the Incumbent rejoyns That the said Advowson is pertaining to the said Mannor as he alledged in his Plea before Et de hoc ponit se super Patriam and the Attorney similiter Imperfections in the Pleading 1. Vpon this Quare Impedit brought there is a good Title to present surmis'd for the King but no more and there is much difference between a Title appearing for the King and suppos'd only 2. The Defendant by his Plea in Barr hath not well Travers'd the King's Title for it is travers'd but in part for only the Seisin of the Advowson in the Queen is travers'd whereas properly the Seisin and Presentation of the Queen by reason of her Seisin ought to have been traversed by Absque hoc That the Queen was seis'd of the Advowson in gross and presented 3. The Seisin of the Advowson which makes not a Title alone nor is not either traversable or inquirable by the tender of a demy mark in the King's Case Fitz. N. Br. f. 31. Letter D. Littl. Coke 294. b. in droit d'Advowson is not traversable neither alone in a Quare Impedit But no Demurrer being thereupon nor no Issue taken upon that Traverse no more shall be said of it 4. The King may alledge Seisin without alledging any time as Sir Edward Coke saith in a droit d'Advowson 26 H. 8. f. 4. a. Hob. Digby Fitz. herb f. 102. and Moore and Newmans Case f. 80. and 103. Rice and Harrisons Case Yelverton f. 211. 5. The Defendants Traverse was not necessary because he had confess'd and avoided the Queens Presentation by saying it was by Lapse if the Defendant had rested upon avoiding the Queens Presentation 6. The Attorney General ought to have maintain'd his Count and travers'd the Queens Presentation by Lapse 7. He doth not do so but deserts making the Kings Title appear and falls upon the Plaintiffs Title that the Advowson was not appendant 8. He offers a double Issue that the Presentation of Phineas White was by Vsurpation and the Advowson not appendant to the Mannor Certain Premisses If a man Counts or Declares in a Quare Impedit That he or his Ancestors or such from whom he claims were seis'd of the Advowson of the Church but declares of no Presentation made by him or them such Count or Declaration is not good and the Defendant may Demurr upon it so is the express Book following 1. A man shall not have a Quare Impedit Fitzh Nat. Br.
it is said The Rent was granted out of the Twenty Acres being the Locus in quo by the Name of all the Grantors Lands and Hereditaments in King's Norton and that a per nomen in that Case is not good The Case of Grey and Chapman was urg'd 43 Eliz. Cro. f. 822. where by Indenture S. one Prudence Cousin let a House and Twenty Acres of Land by the Name of all her Tenements in S. But it was not alledg'd in what Vill the Acres were The Court was of Opinion in Arrest of Judgment that the naming of the Vill in the per nomen was not material Another Case to the same purpose was urg'd of Gay against Cay where a Grant in possession was pleaded 41 Eliz. Cro. f. 662. pl. 10. and not as in Reversion And upon view of the Record the Grantor had granted Tenementa praedicta per nomen of a Mesuage which A. P. held for life where the per nomen was adjudg'd not to make good the Grant The Court is of Opinion notwithstanding these Cases That in the present Case the per nomen is well enough because it is alledg'd the Grantor was seis'd of Two hundred Acres of Land in Kings Norton whereof the locus in quo being Twenty Acres is parcel By reason whereof the Rent being granted out of every parcel of the Two hundred Acres it is well enough to say it was granted out of the Twenty Acres per nomen of all his Lands in Kings Norton because the Twenty Acres are alledg'd to be parcel of all his Lands there being Two hundred Acres But in Chapman's Case It is not alledg'd that the Twenty Acres of Land demis'd were parcel of all the Tenements in S. per nomen of which the Twenty Acres were to pass As for the second Case of Gay it was not possible that Lands granted as in possession should pass per nomen of Land that was in Reversion The second Exception is Because the Clause of Entry and Distress in the Deed upon Oyer of it differs from the Clause of Entry and Distress alledg'd in the Conizance For in the Conizance it is said It should be lawful to Enter and Distrain if the rent were unpaid and behind after any of the Feasts whereon it was due that is at any Feast that should first happen after the death of Anne or Thomas Greaves for the Rent did not commence before But by the Deed If the Rent were behind at any the Feasts the Entry and Distress is made to be lawful for it during the joynt Lives of Anne and Thomas Greaves the Uncle and during their joynt lives it could not be behind for it commenc'd not till one of them were dead Scarplus Handkinson 37 El. Cro. f. 420. words repugnant and sensless to be rejected So as the sense must run That if the Rent were behind it should be lawful to distrain during the joint Lives of Anne and Thomas Greaves which was before it could be behind for it could not be behind till the death of one of them Therefore those words during their joynt natural lives being insensible ought to be rejected For words of known signification but so placed in the Context of a Deed that they make it repugnant and sensless are to be rejected equally with words of no known signification Judgment pro Defendent The Chief Justice delivered the Opinion of the Court. Trin. 16 Car. II. C. B. Rot. 2487. But Adjudg'd Mich. 20 Car. II. Bedell versus Constable BY the Act of 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. It is among other things Enacted That where any person hath or shall have any Child or Children under the Age of One and twenty years and not married at the time of his death It shall and may be lawful to and for the Father of such Child or Children whether born at the time of the decease of the Father or at that time in ventre sa mere or whether such Father be within the Age of One and twenty years or of full Age by his Deed executed in his life time or by his last Will and Testament in writing in the presence of two or more credible Witnesses to dispose of the custody and tuition of such Child or Children for and during such time as he or they shall respectively remain under the Age of One and twenty years or any lesser time to any person or persons in possession or remainder other than Popish Recusants And such disposition of the Custody of such Child or Children made since the Four and twentieth of February 1645. or hereafter to be made shall be good and effectual against all and every person or persons claiming the custody or tuition of such Child or Children as Guardian in Soccage or otherwise And such person or persons to whom the custody of such Child or Children hath been or shall be so disposed or devised as aforesaid shall and may maintain an Action of Ravishment of Ward or Trespass against any person or persons which shall wrongfully take away or detain such Child or Children for the Recovery of such Child or Children and shall and may recover Damages for the same in the said Action for the use and benefit of such Child or Children And such person or persons to whom the custody of such Child or Children hath been or shall be so disposed or devised shall and may take into his or their custody to the use of such Child or Children the profits of all Lands Tenements and Hereditaments of such Child or Children and also the custody tuition and management of the Goods Chattels and personal Estate of such Child or Children till their respective Age of One and twenty years or any lesser time according to such Disposition aforesaid and may bring such Action or Actions in relation thereto as by Law a Guardian in Common Soccage might do By the Will is devised in these words I do bequeath my son Thomas to my Brother Robert Towray of Rickhall to be his Tutor during his Minority Before this Act Tenant in Soccage of Age might have dispos'd his Land by Deed or last Will in trust for his Heir but not the Custody and Tuition of his Heir for the Law gave that to the next of Kinn to whom the Land could not descend But Tenant in Soccage under Age could not dispose the Custody of his Heir nor devise or demise his Land in trust for him in any manner Now by this Statute he may grant the Custody of his Heir but cannot devise or demise his Land in trust for him for any time directly for if he should the devise or demise were as before the Statute as I conceive which is most observable in this Case I say directly he cannot but by a mean and obliquely he may for nominating who shall have the Custody and for what time by a consequent the Land follows as an incident given by the Law to attend the custody not as an Interest devis'd or demis'd
by the party This difference is very material for if the Father could devise the Land in trust for him until his Son came to One and twenty as he can grant the Custody then as in other Cases of Leases for years the Land undoubtedly should go to the Executor or Administrator of him whom the Father named for the tuition and the trust should follow the Land as in other Cases where Lands are convey'd in trust But when he cannot ex directo devise the Land in trust then the Land follows the Custody and not the Custody the Land and the Land must go as the Custody can go and not the Custody as the Land can go Coke Litt. f. 49. a. 1 H. 7. 28. 8 H. 7. 4. As where a House or Land belongs to an Office or a Chamber to a Corody the Office or Corody being granted by Deed the House and Land follows as incident or belonging without Livery because the Office is the principal and the Land but pertaining to it A second Consideration is That by this Act no new custody is instituted but the office of Guardian as to the duty and power of the place is left the same as the Law before had prescrib'd and setled of Guardian in Soccage But the modus habendi of that office is alter'd by this Act in two Circumstances The first 1. It may be held for a longer time viz. to the Age of the Heir of One and twenty where before it was but to Fourteen 2. It may be by other persons held for before it was the next of Kindred not inheritable could have it now who the Father names shall have it So it is as if an Office grantable for life only before should be made grantable for years by Parliament or grantable before to any person should be made grantable but to some kind of persons only The Office as to the Duty of it and its essence is the same it was But the Modus habendi alter'd If therefore this new Guardian is the same in Office and Interest with the former Guardian in Soccage and varies from it only in the Modus habendi then the Ward hath the same legal Remedy against this Guardian as was against the old But if this be a new Office of Guardianship differing in its nature from the other the Heir hath no remedy against him at all in Law For though this new Guardian be enabled to have such Actions as the old might have yet this Act enables not the Heir to have like Actions or any other against him as he might against the Guardian in Soccage The Intent of this Statute is to priviledge the Father against common right to appoint the Guardian of his Heir and the time of his Wardship under One and twenty But leaves the Heirs of all other Ancestors Wards in Soccage as before Therefore I hold 1. That such a Special Guardian cannot transferr the Custody of the Ward by Deed or will to any other 2. That he hath no different Interest from a Guardian in Soccage but for the time of the Wardship 1. When an Act of Parliament alte●s the Common Law the meaning shall not be strained beyond the words except in Cases of publick Vtility when the end of the Act appears to be larger than the enacting words But by the words the Father only can appoint the Guardian therefore the Guardian so appointed cannot appoint another Guardian 2. The Mother hath the same concern for her Heir as the Father hath But she cannot by the Act name a Guardian therefore much less can the Guardian named by the Father 3. The Father cannot by the Act give the custody to a Papist but if it may be transferr'd over by him whom the Father names or by Act in Law go to his Executor or Administrator it may come to a Papist against the meaning of the Act. 4. Offices or Acts of personal Trust cannot be assign'd for the Trust is not personal which any man may have Dyer 2 3 Eliz. f. 189. b. 5. At the Common Law none could have the Custody and Marriage of a mans Son and Heir apparent from the Father yet the Father could not grant or sell the Custody and Marriage of his Heir apparent though the marriage was to his own benefit as was resolved by the greater number of the Iudges in the Lord Bray's Case who by Indenture had sold for Eight hundred pounds the Custody and Marriage of his Son and Heir apparent in the time of Henry the Eighth to the Lord Audley Chancellor of England Lord Cromwell Lord Privy Seal Sir William Paulett Treasurer of the Houshold The Marquis of Winchester Lord Treasurer Dyer supra f. 190. b. pl. 19. The Reason given is That the Father hath no Interest to be granted or sold to a Stranger in his eldest Son but it is inseparably annex'd to the person of the Father Two Judges differ'd because an Action of Trespass would lye for taking away a mans Heir apparent and marrying him whence they conclude he might be granted as a Chattel 11 H. 4. f. 23. a. Fitz. N. Br. Tresp f. 90. b. Lett. G. f. 89. Lett. O. But an Action of Trespass will lye for taking away ones Servant For taking away a Monk where he was cloyster'd in Castigationem Pro Uxore abducta cum bonis Viri yet none of these are assignable West 1. c. 48. By the Statute of Westminster the First If the Guardian in Chivalry made a Feoffment of the Wards Lands in his Custody during his Minority the Heir might forthwith have a Writ of Novel Disseisin against the Guardian and Tenant and the Land recover'd should be deliver'd to the next of kinn to the Heir to be kept and accompted for to him at his full Age. This was neither Guardian in Soccage nor Chivalry Coke 2. Inst f. 260. b. By 4 5 P.M. c. 8. No woman child under 16. can be taken against his will whom the Father hath made Guardian by Deed or Will yet this is no Lease of the Custody till 16. nor is it assignable Ratcliffs C. 3. Rep. Shoplands C. 3 Jac. Cr. f. 99. but a special Guardian appointed by the Statute and such a Guardian could not assign over nor should it go to his Executors by the Express Book This Case likewise and common Experience proves That Guardian in Soccage cannot assign nor shall the Custody go to his Executors though some ancient Books make some doubt therein For expresly by the Statute of 52 H. 3. the next of kin is to answer and be accomptable to the Heir in Soccage as this special Guardian is here by Westminster the First These several sorts of Guardians trusted for the Heir could neither assign their Custody nor did it go to their Executors because the Trust was personal and they had no Interest for themselves The Trust is as personal in this new Guardian nor hath he any Interest in it for himself and
therefore he shall not assign it A Guardian in Soccage cannot transferr his Custody because it is a personal Trust but the Trust of this special Guardian is more personal therefore that he shall transferr it concludes strangely The Office of a Philizer is an Office of personal Trust to do the business of the Court and not assignable 28 H. 8. f. 7. Dyer no Execution can be upon it Sir George Reynels Case an Office of Trust and Confidence cannot be granted for years because then it might go to persons that is to Executors or Administrators never trusted or confided in So is Littleton expresly That all Offices of Trust Sect. 379. as Steward Constable Bedlary Bailiffwick must be personally occupied unless they be granted to be occupied by a Deputy and are not assignable And a more near or tenderer Trust cannot be than the Custody and Education of a mans Child and Heir and preservation of his Estate It may be said That in these Cases the Law doth particularly appoint the Guardians and therefore no others can be But in the Case at Barr the Father appoints the person not the Law It is true there is a difference in the Cases but not to make the Trust more assignable in the one Case than the other Where the Law appoints who shall be trusted the Trust cannot be refused as in the several Guardians before mentioned But where the Person names the Trustee the Trust may be refused but once accepted it cannot be transfer'd to others more than where the Law names the Trustee An Executor hath a private office of Trust for we speak not of publique and is named by the Testator not by the Law therefore he may refuse but cannot assign his Executorship But it is true an Executor may make an Executor due Circumstances observed who shall discharge the first Testators Trust but the reason is that after Debts paid and Legacies the Surplus of the Goods belongs to the Executor proprio jure An Administrator hath a private Office of Trust he cannot assign nor leave it to his Executor he is not named by the Intestate but by the Law in part for him but not peremptorily he may not claim it if he will because it must pass through the Ordinary A mans Bailiff or Receiver are Offices of personal Trust and not assignable so is the Office of every Servant An Arbitrator or one authorized to sell a mans Land to give Livery or receive it cannot assign it is a personal Confidence 1. A Custody is not in its nature Testamentary it cannot pay Debts nor Legacies nor be distributed as Alms. 2. It is not accomptable for to the Ordinary as Intestates Goods are 3. The Heir ought to have a Guardian without interruption but an Executor may be long before he proves the Will and may at length refuse An Administration long before it be granted and after may be suspended by Appeal and in these times the Ward hath no certain Guardian responsal for his Estate or Person Shopland's C. 3 Jac. Cr. f. 99. And where it may be said That these are naked Authorities and the persons have no Interest but a Guardian hath Interest he may lett and sett the Wards Land during minority Avow in his own name Grant Copy-hold Estates and the like It is an Interest conjoyned with his trust for the Ward I speak not here of equitable trusts without which Interest he could not discharge the trust but it must be an Interest for himself which is transferrable or shall go to his Executor All Executors and Administrators have Interest and Property necessary to their Trusts for they may sell the Goods or Leases of the Testator or Intestate without which they could not execute the Trust A Monk made an Executor might do the like who in his own right could have no Interest or Property But such Interest proves not that the Executors or Administrators may assign their Trust Guardian in Soccage may demise his Guardianship and grant over his Estate N. Br. f. 145. b. Letter H. quod nota or that it shall go to their Executors for it is agreed in that Case of Shopland That such Interest as a Guardian in Soccage hath shall not go to his Executor but is annexed to his Person and therefore not transferrable So as I take the sense of the Act collected in short to be Whereas all Tenures are now Soccage and the next of kinn to whom the Land cannot descend is Guardian until the Heirs Age of Fourteen yet the Father if he will may henceforth nominate the Guardian to his Heir and for any time until the Heirs Age of One and twenty and such Guardian shall have like remedy for the Ward as the Guardian in Soccage by the Common Law hath Another Exposition of this Act hath been offer'd as if the Father did devise his Land by way of Lease during the minority of the Heir to him to whom he gave the Custody in Trust for the Heir and so the Land was assignable over and went to the Executors but follow'd with the Trust 1. This is a forc'd Exposition to carry the Custody to any Stranger to the Father or to the Child or to any that may inherit the Land contrary to the ancient and excellent policy of the Law 2. By such an Exposition the Heir should have no Accompt of such a Lessee as he may against a Guardian but must sue in equity for this Statute gives Actions such as Guardians might have to him who hath the Custody but gives none against him 3. If such Lessee should give the Heirs marriage Coke Litt. f. 896. the Heir hath no Remedy but the Guardian in Soccage shall accompt for what the marriage was worth Stat. Malbridge c. 17. The Statute only saith That such person nominated by the Father may take to his Custody the Profits of all Lands Tenements and Hereditaments of such Child and Children and also the Custody Tuition and Management of the Goods Chattels and personal Estate of such Child or Children And may bring such Action in relation thereto as a Guardian in Soccage might do None of which words will charge him with the value of the Marriage if he had nothing for it Na. Br. f. 139. b Lett. H. 4. If the Heir be in custody of such a Lessee and be Guardian by nearness of kinn to another Infant The Guardian of the Heir by Law is Guardian to both but such a Lessee hath no pretence to be Guardian of the second Infant by any word of the Act For he is neither an Hereditament or Goods or Chattels of the first Infant As to the second part If the Father being of Age should devise his Land to J. S. during the Minority of his Son and Heir in trust for his Heir and for his Maintenance and Education until he be of Age. This is no devising of the Custody within this Statute for he might have done this before
unnatural For as a Husband to her the Son is both to command and correct the Mother as his wife but as a Son to be commanded and endure her Correction as Mother So between the Father and Daughter there is a Reverence from the Daughter to the Father inconsistent with the parity between man and wife and Laws give often a power over the daughter which they forbid over the wife And the reverence and obedience from the Grand-child to the Grand-mother in what degree soever is the same as to the Mother and the same consequences follow For if the Mother or Father have power absolute or in tantum over the Son or Daughter to create reverence to them the same hath the Grand-mother or Grand-father and so forwards For if B. the Father have absolute or qualified power over A. the Son and C. the Grand-father hath the same over B. the Father then hath C. the Grand-father the same over A. the Son not immediately but mediately by the Father To this purpose the Case put in Platt's Case in the Com. is most opposite A woman Guardian of the Fleet marries her Prisoner in Execution he is immediately out of Execution for the Husband cannot be Prisoner to his Wife it being repugnant that she as Jaylor should have the Custody of him and he as Husband the Custody of her To this purpose also it is remarkable what that great Scholar and Lawyer Hugo Grotius hath Eximo ab hac generalitate matrimonium parentum cujuscunque gradus cum liberis quae quo minus licita sint ratio ni fallor satis apparet Grot. de Jure belli l. 2. c. 5 Paragr 12. Nam nec maritus qui superior est lege matrimonii eam reverentiam praestare potest matri quam natura exigit nec patri filia quia quanquam inferior est in matrimonio ipsum tamen matrimonium talem inducit societatem quae illius necessitudinis reverentiam excludat But as to other Relations the same Author in the same place De Conjugiis eorum qui sanguine aut affinitate junguntur satis gravis est quaestio non raro magnis motibus agitata nam causas certas ac naturales cur talia conjugia ita ut legibus aut moribus vetantur illicita sint assignare qui voluerit experiendo discet quam id sit difficile imo praestari non possit I add only That as the mutual duties of Parents and Children consist not with their marrying one another so the Procreations between them will have a necessary and monstrous inconsistence of Relation For the Son or Daughter born of the Mother and begot by the Son as born of the mother will be a Brother or Sister to the Father but as begot by him will be a Son or Daughter So the Issue procreate upon the Grand-mother as born of the Grand-mother will be Uncles or Aunts to the Father as begot by the Son they will be Sons or Daughters to him and this in the first degrees of Kindred Besides by the Laws of England Children inherit their Ancestors without limit in the right ascending Line and are not inherited by them But in the Collateral Lines of Uncle and Nephew the Uncle as well inherits the Nephew as the Nephew the Uncle In the Civil Law the Agnati viz. the Father or Grand-fathers Brother are loco parentum and the Canons borrow it thence but that is because they were Legitimi Tutores or Guardians by Law to their Nephews with us the Lord of whom the Land is held is Guardian or the next of Kin to whom the Land cannot descend and by the same reason they should be loco parentum In a Synod or Convocation holden in London in the year 1603. of the Province of Canterbury by the Kings Writ and with Licence under the Great Seal to consent and agree of such Canons and Constitutions Ecclesiastick as they should think fit Several Canons were concluded and after ratified under the Great Seal as they ought to be among which the Ninety ninth Canon is this No person shall marry within the Degrees prohibited by Gods Law and expressed in a Table set forth by Authority Canons 1 Jac. 1603. Can. 99. in the year of our Lord 1563. and all marriages so made and contracted shall be adjudg'd incestuous and unlawful And the aforesaid Table shall be in every Church publickly set up and fixed at the charge of the Parish This Table was first publisht in Arch-bishop Parker's time in 1563. I know not by what Authority then and after made a Canon of this Convocation with the Kings Licence under the Great Seal and so confirm'd and since continually set up in Parishes By which expresly the Degrees by Gods Law prohibited are said to be expressed in that Table and is the same as No person shall marry within the Degrees prohibited by Gods Law and which are expressed in the Table Any other Exposition of the Canon will be forc'd and violent and the Table set up for the Peoples direction from Incest but a snare and a deceit to them And this marriage is not prohibited in that Table There is an Objection That by the Canon and Civil Law this Degree of Marriage in question is prohibited It is true but by the Statute of 32 H. 8. c. 38. All Prohibitions by the Canon or Civil Law quatenus Canon or Civil Law are wholly excluded and unless the marriage be prohibited by the Divine Law it is made lawful But suppose the Canon or Civil Law were to be taken as a measure in the subject of marriage of what were lawful With the Canon Law of what time would you begin for it varies as the Laws Civil of any Nation do in successive Ages Before the Council of Lateran it was another Law than since for marriages before were forbid to the Seventh Degree from Cosen Germans inclusively since to the Fourth Every Council varied somewhat in the Canon Law and every Pope from the former and often from himself as every new Act of Parliament varies the Law of England more or less and that which always changeth can be no measure of Rectitude unless confin'd to what was the Law in a certain time and then no reason will make that a better measure than what was the Law in a certain other time As the Law of England is not a righter Law of England in one Kings Reign than in another yet much differing Nerva forbad it Heraclius permitted it Grot. Annot. 167. So doth the Civil Law before the marriage of Claudius the Emperour with Agrippina his Brothers daughter the marriage of the Uncle with his Neece was not allowed among the Romans But by a Law of the People and Senate upon that Occasion such marriages were permitted Many others of the like kind Nor did the Canon Law and perhaps truly take more persons to be prohibited within the Levitical Degrees than are there expressed What else is the meaning of that place
not the Land devis'd to him when the son and the two daughters dye without Issue of their respective bodies by way of Remainder which cannot be but by way of Executory devise which well may be 5. That by such Executory devise no perpetuity is consequent to it or if it were such a perpetuity is no way repugnant or contrary to Law To manifest the difference taken between an implication in a Will that is necessary and implication that is only possible the first Case I shall cite is that known Case 13 H. 7. which I shall exactly put as it is in the Book at large 13 H. 7. f. 17. Br. Devise pl. 52. A man devis'd his Goods to his wife and that after the decease of his wife his son and heir shall have the House where his Goods are The son shall not have the House during the wives life for though it be not expresly devis'd to the wife yet his intent appears the son shall not have it during her life and therefore it is a good devise to the wife for life by implication and the Devisors intent Quod omnes Justitiarii concesserunt Here I observe 1. That this was a devise of the House to the wife by necessary implication for it appears by the Will that the Testators son and heir was not to have it until after the death of the wife and then it must either be devis'd to the wife for life by necessary implication or none was to have it during the wives life which could not be 2. I observe upon this Case That though the Goods were by particular devise given to the wife and expresly that was no hindrance to the wives having the House devis'd to her also by her husband by implication necessary which I the rather note because men of great name have conceiv'd That where the devisee takes any thing by express devise of the Testator such devisee shall not have any other thing by that Will devis'd only by implication Which difference if it were according to Law it makes clearly against the Plaintiff because his Lessor being one of the Daughters of the Testator had devis'd to her expresly for a Portion and therefore she should not have any Estate in the Land by the same Will by a Devise by Implication as is pretended But the truth is that is a vain difference that hath been taken by many as I shall anon evince and therefore I shall not insist upon any Aid from it to my conclusion 3. I note that this Devise being before the Statute of 32 H. 8. of Wills the House devis'd must be conceiv'd devisable by Custome at the Common Law Before I proceed further I must take notice that Brook in abridging the Case of 13 H. 7. in the same numero saith Devise Br. n. 52. It was agreed tempore H. 8. per omnes That if a man will that J. S. shall have his Land in Dale after the death of his wife the wife shall have the House for her life by his apparent intent I note first That this Case is imperfectly put in Brook for it mentions a devise of the Land in Dale to J. S. after the death of his wife and then concludes that the wife shall have the House for her life by his apparent intent whereas no mention is made of a House but of the Land in Dale in the devise And this Case seems to be only a memory of another Case Br. Devise 29 H. 8. n. 48. not abridg'd by Brook out of any other Year-book but reported in his Abridgment in the Title Devise as a Case happened in 29 H. 8. which is That if a man will that J. S. shall have his Land after the death of his wife and dies the wife of the Devisor shall have those Lands for term of her life by those words ratione intentionis voluntatis Which Cases being in truth but one and the same Case seem to go further than the Case of 13 H. 7. for there as I observ'd before the wife was to take by necessary implication because the Heir was excluded expresly by the Will during the life of the wife But by this Case in Br. Title Devise n. 48. 52. there is no excluding of the Heir and yet it is said the wife shall have the Land during her life by implication which is no necessary implication as in the Case of 13 H. 7. but only a possible implication and seems to cross that difference I have taken before But this Case of Br. hath many times been denied to be Law and several Iudgments have been given against it I shall give you some of them to justifie the difference I have taken exactly as I shall press the Cases Trinity 3 E. 6. A man seis'd of a Mannor part in Demesne 3 E. 6. Moore Rep. f. 7. n. 24. and part in Services devis'd all the demesne Lands expresly to his wife during her life and devis'd to her also all the Services and chief Rents for Fifteen years and then devis'd the whole Mannor to a stranger after the death of his wife It was resolved by all the Justices That the last devise should not take effect for any part of the Mannor but after the wives death but yet the wife should not have the whole Mannor by implication during her life but should have only the demesnes for her life and the Rent and Services for Fifteen years and that after the Fifteen years ended the Heir should have the Rents and Services as long as the wife liv'd Here being no necessary Implication that the wife should have all the Mannor during her life with an exclusion of the Heir she had no more than was explicity given her by the Will viz. the Demesnes for life and the Rents and Services for Fifteen years but after the Fifteen years the Heir had the Rents and Services for it could be no more at most but a possible Implication that the wife should have the whole Mannor during her life But with a small variance of this Case if the demesnes had been devis'd to the wife for life and the Services and Rents for Fifteen years and the whole Mannor after the wives life to J. S. and that after the wives life and the life of J. S. his Heir should have had the Demesnes and Services and Rents in that Case it had been exactly the same with the Case of 13 H. 7. because the Devisors intent had been then apparent that the Son was not to have the Mannor or any part until the wife and stranger were both dead and as it was adjudg'd the stranger had nothing in the Mannor until the wifes death therefore in that case by necessary implication the wife must have had both Demesnes and Services during her life notwithstanding the explicit devise to her of the Rents and Services for Fifteen years otherwise none should have had the Rents and Services after the Fifteen years
The first is Haynsworths and Prettyes Case Where a man seis'd of Land in Soccage having Issue two Sons and a Daughter devis'd to his youngest Son and Daughter Twenty pounds apiece to be paid by his eldest Son and devis'd his Lands to his eldest Son and his Heirs upon Condition if he paid not those Legacies that his Land should be to his second Son and Daughter and their Heirs The eldest Son fail'd of payment After Argument upon a Special Verdict It was resolv'd by the Court clearly That the second Son and Daughter should have the Land 1. For that the devise to his Son and his Heir in Fee Hill 41. El. Cr. 833. a. being no other then what the Law gave him was void 2. That it was a future devise to the second Son and Daughter upon the contingent of the eldest Sons default of payment 3. That it was no more in effect than if he had devis'd That if his eldest Son did not pay all Legacies that his land should be to the Legatories and there was no doubt in that Case but the land in default of payment should vest in them Which Case in the reason of law differs not from the present Case where the land is devis'd by devise future and executory to the Nephew upon a contingent to happen by the Testators Son and Daughters having no issue 18 Jac. Pell Browns C. Cro. f. 590. The second Case is that of Pell and Brown the Father being seis'd of certain land having Issue William his eldest Son Thomas and Richard Brown devis'd the land to Thomas and his Heirs for ever and if Thomas died without Issue living William then William should have the lands to him his Heirs and Assigns 1. This was adjudg'd an Estate in Fee-simple in Thomas 2. That William by way of Executory devise had an Estate in Fee-simple in possibility if Thomas died without Issue before him And it being once clear That the Estate of Thomas was a Fee-simple determinable upon a contingent and not an Estate tayl and so in the present case it being clear'd that George the Testators Son had the land descended to him in Fee from the Testator and took no Estate tayl expresly or by implication from the Will it will not be material whether the Contingent which shall determine that Fee-simple proceeds from the person which hath such determinable Fee or from another or partly from him and partly from another as in Haynsworth's Case the Son determined his Fee-simple by not paying the Legacies in Pell and Brown's Case Thomas his Fee-simple determined by his dying without Issue living William the Fee-simple vested in George the Son by descent determines when he and his two Sisters dye without Issue and upon such determination in every of these Cases the future and executory devise must take effect But the great Objection is That if this should be an executory devise to the Nephew upon the contingent of George the Son and both his Sisters dying without Issue It will be dangerous to introduce a new way of perpetuity for if a man have several Children and shall permit his Estate to descend or by his Will devise it to his Heir so as he may therein have an unquestionable Fee-simple which is the same with permitting it to descend he may then devise it futurely when all his Children shall dye without Issue of their bodies to J. S. and his Heirs as long as A. B. and C. strangers shall have any Heirs of their bodies living and then to a third person by like future devise For if he should devise it futurely to J. S. and his Heirs as long as J. S. had any Heirs of his body it were a clear Estate tayl in J. S. upon which no future devise could be but it would be a Remainder to be docked This Objection was in some measure made by Doderidge in Pell and Browns Case and the Iudges said there was no danger Vid. Stiles Rep. Gay Gaps Case 258 275. because the Estate in Fee of Thomas did not determine by his dying without Heir of his body generally but by dying without Issue living William for if the land had been given to Thomas and his Heirs for ever and if he died without Heirs of his body then to William and his Heirs Thomas his Estate had been judg'd an Estate tayl with the Remainder to William and not a Fee upon which no future or executory devise can be So was it adjudg'd in Foy and Hinds Case 22 Jac. Cr. f. 695. 6. and anciently 37 Ass p. 18. 5. H. 5. f. 6. and to be within the reason of Mildmay and Corbets Case of Perpetuities But in Pell and Browns Case the Iudges said it was more dangerous to destroy future devises than to admit of such Perpetuities as could follow from them any way by determinable Fee-simples which is true for a Fee simple determinable upon a contingent is a Fee-simple to all intents but not so durable as absolute Fee-simples And all Fee-simples are unequally durable for one will escheat sooner than another by the failer of Heirs An Estate of Fee-simple will determine in a Bastard with his life if he want Issue An Estate to a man and his Heirs as long as John Stiles hath any Heir which is no absolute Fee-simple is doubtless as durable as the Estate in Fee which John Stiles hath to him and his Heirs which is an absolute Fee-simple Nor do I know any Law simply against a Perpetuity but against Intails of Perpetuity for every Fee-simple is a perpetuity but in the accident of Alienation and Alienation is an incident to a Fee-simple determinable upon a contingent as to any more absolute or more perdurable Fee-simple The Chief Justice Justice Archer and Justice Wylde for the Defendant Justice Tyrrell for the Plaintiff Judgment for the Defendant Hill 21 22 Car. II. C. B. Craw versus Ramsey Philip Craw is Plaintiff and John Ramsey Defendant In an Action of Trespass and Ejectment THE Plaintiff declares That Lionel Tolmach Baronet and Humphrey Weld Esquire January the Twentieth the Sixteenth of the King demis'd to the Plaintiff the Mannor of Kingston with the appurtenances in the County of Surrey one Messuage two Barns one Dove-house two Gardens eighty Acres of Land and ten Acres of Meadow with the appurtenances in Kingston aforesaid and other places and also the Rectory of Kingston aforesaid To have and to hold to the said Philip and his Assignes from the Feast of the Nativity last past for five years next ensuing By virtue whereof he entred into the Premisses and was possessed until the Defendant the said Twentieth of January in the Sixteenth year of the King entred upon him and Ejected him with force to his Damage of Forty pounds To this the Defendant pleads he is not Culpable Vpon a Special Verdict it appear'd That Robert Ramsey Alien Antenatus had Issue 1. Robert 2. Nicholas 3. John 4. George Antenatos
as the Kings Bench 157 Commendam 1. Capere in Commendam is good where the Patron is not prejudiced 25 2. Retinere in Commendam is good where consented to by him that was to present to the Avoidance 25 3. Commendam Retinere may be for years 24 25 4. How many Benefices a Bishop may retain by a Dispensation 25 5. Although the King confirms it yet the Incumbent derives no Estate from the King but only by the Patrons presentment 26 Common See Title Statute 1. 1. No Common of Pasture can be claimed by Custome within the Mannor that may not be prescribed for out of the Mannor 254 2. Inhabitants not Incorporated cannot prescribe in a Common 254 3. How Copyholders must prescribe for Common ibid. 4. Where the Tenant may prescribe to have sola separalis Communia and where not 255 256 5. One or more Tenants may have solam separalem Communiam from other Commoners but not from the Lord 256 6. Where the Commoner claims habere solam separalem Pasturam how and upon what Action Whether the Lord shall be excluded or no the matter will come in question 253 7. Where a Commoner prescribes for Common for Cattel levant and couchant Antiquo Messuagio without any Land the prescription is naught because Cattel cannot be levant and couchant to a Common intent upon a Messuage only 252 253 8. Where the Lord may approve against the Commoners being an Exposition of the Statute of Merton 256 257 Common Pleas Court 1. The Common Pleas or Exchequer may upon the Return of a Habeas Corpus d scharge a Prisoner if it appear the Imprisonment is against Law 157 2. If the Imprisonment is just or doubtful and uncertain the Common Pleas cannot bayl him but must remand him 157 3. A Prohibition for incroaching of Jurisdiction lies in the Common Pleas 157 Condition 1. The difference between a Condition and Limitation 32 2. A Devise to the Son and Heir and if he did not pay all the Legacies that then it shall remain to the Legatees In default of payment this shall vest in the Legatees by Executory Devise 271 Condition of an Obligation 1. A Bond is entred into with Condition for quiet Enjoyment the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff entred and might have quietly enjoyed the Plaintiff replyed That he was outed by J. S. the Replication is void because he did not say that J. S. had a good Title 121 122 Confirmation 1. A Confirmation cannot be for a time 27 2. Where it shall enlarge an Estate 44 45 3. The Kings Confirmation of a Commendam transfers no Right to the Incumbent 26 Constable See Title Officer   Construction of Law See Title Law 1. It is both equitable and of publick convenience that the Law should assist men to recover their dues when detained from them 38 2. It is an absurdity to say That a man hath a Right to a thing for which the Law gives him no remedy 47 138 Copyholder 1. They cannot prescribe against the Lord to have solam separalem Pasturam 254 255 2. How the Copyholders must prescribe for Common 254 Corporation 1. The King may dispense with a Corporation for any thing which in its nature may be dispensed with 347 348 2. The King may dispense with a Corporation as to penal Laws 349 350 3. What Licenses made by the King to Corporations are good and several instances of them 348 349 350 4. What Licenses to a Corporation are not good 351 352 Costs See Damages 1. Upon a Nonsuit or Discontinuance upon an Action brought against Officers they shall have their double Costs by the Statute of the One and twentieth of King James 117 Covenant 1. All Covenants between the Lessor and Lessee are Covenants in Law or express Covenants 118 2. An express Covenant restrains the general Covenant in Law 126 3. Where the Covenant is to enjoy against one or more particular men and where against all men 127 4. By a Covenant in Law the Lessee is to enjoy his Term against the lawful entry or interruption of any man but not against tortious Entries because the Lessee hath his proper remedy against the wrong-doers 118 119 5. If a stranger who hath no right outs the Lessee he shall not bring Covenant against the Lessor because he hath remedy by Action against the stranger But if he enter by elder Title then he shall have Covenant because he hath no other remedy 119 120 6. Though the Covenant is that the Lessee shall enjoy against all persons yet he shall not have Covenant against the Lessor unless he be legally outed 119 120 121 123 7. The Law shall never adjudge that a man covenants against the wrongful acts of strangers except the words are full and express 121 8. When the Covenant is to enjoy against all men the Covenant is not expresly to enjoy against tortious acts neither will the Law so interpret it 123 125 Coverture See Baron and Feme   County Palatine See Title Franchise   Court or Courts See Common Pleas Kings Bench. 1. The Court of Kings Bench cannot pretend to the only discharging of prisoners upon Habeas Corpus unless in case of priviledge but the Chancery may do it without question 157 2. Prohibitions for incroaching Jurisdiction may issue as well out of the Common Pleas as Kings Bench ibid. 209 3. The Judges of the Temporal Courts have full conizance of what Marriages are within the Levitical Degrees and what not 207 4. They have likewise conizance of what Marriages are incestuous and what not and may prohibit the Ecclesiastical Courts from questioning such Marriages 207 5. The Secular Judges are most conizant of Acts of Parliament 213 6. If a Court give Judgment judicially another Court is not bound to give the like Judgment unless it think that Judgment first given to be according to Law 383 7. The Court of the Sessions in London doth not differ in its essence nature and power from another Sessions in the Country but all differ in their accidents which make no alteration in their actings in the eye of the Law 140 Custome See Prescription 1. How things become strangely unnatural to man by custome only 224 Customes for Merchandize See Title Statutes 2 25. 1. The Customes called Custumae Antiquae for Wooll Wooll-fells and Leather were granted by Parliament to King Edward the First in the third year of his Reign and was no Duty at the Common Law 161 162 163 2. The several properties that Wines must have which are lyable to pay Tunnage and Poundage by the Act of 12 Car. 2. 165 3. No goods are to pay Custome but those which are brought in to Merchandize not such as come in by accident as in case of wreck 165 166 171 172 4. By the common Law all wrecks were the Kings and therefore not lyable to pay Custome because they were his own 164 Damages See Costs 1. In an Action upon the Case the whole Debt is
to the King to license as he thought fit 355 2. The intent of the Act being That every man should not sell Wine that would his Majesty could not better answer the ends of the Act than to restrain the sellers to Freemen of London to the Corporation of Vintners men bred up in that Trade and serving Apprenticeships to it ibid. 13 El. c. 12 Not reading the Articles 1. Immediately upon not reading the Articles the Incumbent is by this Statute deprived ipso facto 132 2. Upon such Deprivation the Patron may present Ante 14. and his Clerk ought to be admitted and instituted but if he do not no Lapse incurrs until after Six months after notice of such Deprivation given to the Patron 132 3. Where the Incumbent subscribes the Articles upon his Admission and Institution that makes him perfect Incumbent pro tempore 133 4. But if he hath a Benefice and afterwards accepts another and doth not subscribe nor read the Articles then he never was Incumbent of the second and consequently never accepted a second Benefice to disable him from holding the first 132 133 134 1. That all Leases by Spiritual persons of Tythe c. 13 Eliz. cap. 10. Concerning Leases to be made by Ecclesiastical persons parcel of their Spiritual Promotions other than for One and twenty years or three Lives reserving the accustomed yearly Rent shall be void 2. This Statute intended that Leases in some sense might be made of Tithes for One and twenty years or three Lives and an ancient Rent Reserved but of a bare Tythe only a Rent could not be reserved for neither Distress nor Assise can be of such a Rent 203 204 3. Therefore a Lease of Tythe and Land out of which a Rent may issue and the accustomed Rent may be reserved must be good within the intent of the Statute 204 7 Jac. cap. 5.21 Jac. cap. 12. For Officers to be sued in the proper County 1. The question upon these Acts was Whether an Officer or any in their assistance that shall do any thing by colour of but not concerning their Office and be therefore impleaded shall have the benefit of these Acts. 2. Or if they are impleaded for any thing done by pretence of their Offices and which is not strictly done by reason of their Office but is a mis-seazante Whether they may have the like benefit 3. Without this Act the Action ought to be laid where the Fact was done and the Act is but to compel the doing of that where an Officer is concerned that otherwise Fieri debuit 114 4. The Statute intends like benefit to all the Defendants where the Fact is not proved to be done where the Action is laid as if the Plaintiff became Non-suit or suffered a Discontinuance viz. that they should have double costs 117 12 Car. 2. cap. 4. For granting Tonnage and Poundage to the King 1. Those Wines which are to pay this Duty according to the Act must be Wines brought into Port as Merchandise by his Majesties Subjects or Strangers 165 2. But Wines which are by their kind to pay Duty if they shall be brought into Ports or Places of this Kingdom neither by his Majesties Subjects nor Aliens they are not chargeable with this Duty ibid. 3. If they are not brought into the Ports and Places as Merchandize viz. for Sale they are not chargeable with the Duty 165 170 4. Wines coming into this Kingdom as Wreck are neither brought into this Kingdom by his Majesties Subjects nor Strangers but by the Wind and Sea 166 5. Wreck'd Goods are not brought into this Kingdom for Merchandise viz. for Sale but are as all other the Native Goods of the Kingdom for sale or other use at the pleasure of the owner ibid. 6. All Goods chargeable with the Duties of this Act must be proprieted by a natural born Merchant or Merchant Alien and accordingly the greater and lesser Duty is to be paid 166 168 7. All Goods subject to this Duty may be forfeited by the disobedience and mis-behaviour of the Merchant-proprietor or those entrusted by him 167 1. The intent of this Statute is to priviledge the Father against common Right 12 Car. 2 cap. 24. To enable the Father to devise the Guardianship of his Son to appoint the Guardian of his Heir and the time of his Wardship under One and twenty 179 2. Such a special Guardian cannot transfer the custody by Deed or Will to any other 179 3. He hath no different Estate from a Guardian in Soccage but for the time the of Wardship 179 4. The Father cannot by this Act give the custody to a Papist 180 5. If the Father doth not appoint for how long time under One and twenty years his Son shall be in Ward it is void for Uncertainty 185 6. The substance of the Statute and sense thereof is That whereas all Tenures are now Soccage and the Law appoints a Gardian till Fourteen yet the Father may nominate the Gardian to his Heir and for any time until his Age of One and twenty and such Gardian shall have like remedy for the Ward as Gardian in Soccage at the Common Law 183 Supersedeas 1. If a priviledged person as an Attorney c. or his Menial Servant is sued in any Jurisdiction forreign to his priviledge he may have a Supersedeas 155 Surplusage 1. Surplusage in a special Verdict 78 Suspension 1. A Suspension of Rent is when either the Rent or Land are so conveyed not absolutely and finally but for a certain time after which the Rent will be again revived 199 2. A Rent may be suspended by Unity for a time and afterwards restored 39 Tayl See Title Warranty 1. SEE an Exposition upon the the Statute de Donis 370 371 372 c. 2. What shall be a good Estate Tayl by Implication in a Devise 262 3. A. having Issue Thomas and Mary deviseth to Thomas and his Heirs for ever and for want of Heirs of Thomas to Mary and her Heirs This is an Estate Tayl in Thomas 269 270 4. A Copyholder in Fee surrenders to the use of F. his Son and J. the Son of F. and of the longest liver of them and for want of Issue of J. lawfully begotten the Remainder to M. here it being by Deed J. had only an Estate for Life but had it been by Will it had been an Estate Tayl by Implication 261 5. The Warranty of the Tenant in Tayl descending upon the Donor or his Heirs is no barr in a Formedon in the Reverter brought by them although it be a Collateral Warranty 364 365 6. The lineal Warranty of Tenant in Tayl shall not bind the Right of the Estate Tayl by the Statute de Donis neither with or without Assets descending 365 Tenures See Title Estates   Testament See Devise 1. A Custody as a Gardianship in Soccage is not in its nature Testamentary it cannot pay Debts nor Legacies nor be distributed as Alms 182 Title 1. When you would