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A34029 Modern reports, or, Select cases adjudged in the Courts of Kings Bench, Chancery, Common-pleas, and Exchequer since the restauration of His Majesty King Charles II collected by a careful hand. Colquitt, Anthony.; England and Wales. Court of Chancery.; England and Wales. Court of King's Bench.; England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas.; England and Wales. Court of Exchequer. 1682 (1682) Wing C5414; ESTC R11074 235,409 350

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Will because he hath not put it out of him there arises an Vse and a Trust for himself But in our case he hath put the Vses out of himself for there are several Vses declared But there is a further difference if Simon Mayne had declared the Vse to others absolutely and had reserved liberty to himself to have altered it by his Will that might have altered the case But here the Proviso is That if at the time of his death he shall have a Son c. so that it is reduced to him upon a Condition and Contingency As to the power of Revocation he cited the Duke of Norfolks case in Englefields case which Twisd said came strongly to this Adjourned V. infr An Information was exhibited against one for a Libel Coleman The party has confessed the matter in Court and therefore cannot plead not guilty Twisd You may plead not guilty with a relicta verificatione Horne Ivy. TResp for taking away a Ship The Defendant justifies under the Patent whereby the Canary-Company is incorporated and granted that none but such and such should Trade thither on pain of forfeiting their Ships and Goods c. and says that the Defendant did Trade thither c. the Plaintiff demurs Polynxfen He ought to have shown the Deed whereby he was authoriz'd by the Company to seize the Goods 26 H. 6. 8. 14 Ed. 4. 8. Bro. Corp. 59. though I agree that for ordinary Imployments and Services a Corporation may appoint a Servant without Deed as a Cook a Butler c. Plo. Com. 91. A Corporation cannot Licence a stranger to sell Trees without Deed 12 H. 4. 17. Nor can they make a Diuessor without Deed nor deliver a Letter of Attorney without Deed. 9 Ed. 4. 59. Bro. Corp. 24. 34. 14 H. 7. 1. 7 H. 7. 9. Rolls 514. tit Corporation Dr. Bonhams case Again the plea is double for the Defendant alledgeth two causes of a breach of their Charter viz. their taking in Wines at the Canaries and importing them here which is double Then there is a clause that gives the forfeiture of Goods and Imprisonment which cannot be by Patent 8 Rep. 125. Waggoners case Noy 123. in the case of Monopolies This Patent I take also to be contrary to some Acts of Parliament viz. 9 Ed. 3. c. 1. 2 Ed. 3. cap. 2. 2 Rich. 2. cap. 1. 11 Rich. 2. cap. 2. and these Statutes the King cannot dispence withall by a Non obstante Twisd For the first point I think they cannot seize without Deed no more then they can enter for a Condition broken without Deed. Keel We desire to be satisfied whether this be a Monopoly or not It was ordered to be argued Pryn versus Smith SCire Facias in this Court upon a Recognizance by way of Bail upon a Writ of Error in the Exchequer Chamber The Defendant pleaded that the Plaintiff did after Iudgment sue forth a Capias ad satisfaciend out of this Court to the Sheriff of Middlesex whereupon he was taken in Execution and suffered to escape by the Plaintiffs own consent Jones We have demurred because they do not lay a place where this Court was holden nor where the Plaintiff gave his consent Redman Pyne AN Action upon the Case was brought for speaking these words of the Plaintiff being a Watch-maker viz. He is a bungler and knows not how to make a good piece of work but there was no colloquium laid of his Trade Pemberton The Iury have supply'd that having found that he is a Watch-maker And it is true that words shall be taken in mitiori sensu but that is when they are doubtful Caudry's case 1 Cro. 196. Twisden I remember a Shoe-maker brought an Action against a man for saying that he was a Cobler And though a Cobler be a Trade of it self yet held that the Action lay in Glyn's time Saunders If he had said that he could not make a good Watch it would have béen known what he had meant but the words in our case are indifferent and perhaps had no relation to his Trade Ordered to stay Vere Reyner AN Action upou the Case upon a promise to carry duas carectatas c. Rotheram It s uncertain whether carectata signifies a Horse-load or a Cart-load Judgment nisi c. Twisd I have known if a Iudgment be given and there is an agréement betwéen the parties not to take out Execution till next Term and they do it before that the Court has set all aside One brought up by Habeas Corpus out of the Cinque-Ports upon an Information for breaking Prison where he was in upon an Execution for Debt Barrell moved against it Twisd Suppose a man be arrested in the Cinque-Ports for a matter arising there and then another hath cause to arrest him here is there not a way to bring him up by Habeas Corpus Barrell It was never done but there has béen a Habeas Corpus thither ad faciend recipiend Keel If a man be in Prison in the Fléet we bring him up by Habeas Corpus in case there be a Suit against him here Twisd Where shall such a man be sued upon a matter arising out of the Cinque-Ports Barrell If it be transitory he must be sued there if local elsewhere Twisd Then you grant if local that there must be a Habeas Corpus And so it was allowed in this case Two Iustices of Peace made an Order in Session-time against one Reignolds as reputed Father for the kéeping of a Bastard-child Reignolds appealed to the same Sessions where the Iustices made an Order that one Burrell should kéep it Jones moved to set aside this Order though an Order of Sessions upon an Appeal from two Iustices because he said the first Order being made in Session time that Sessions could not be said to be the next within the Stat. of 18 Eliz. and because the Iustices at the Sessions did not quash the Order made by two Iustices Keel They ought to have done that Twisd They may vacat the first Order and refer it back to two Iustices as res integra The Order being read one clause of it was that Burrell should pay 12 d. a wéek for kéeping the Child till it came to be twelve years of age which Twisden said was ill for it ought to be so long as it continues chargeable to the Parish The parties were bound over to appear at the next Assizes in Essex Darby-shire versus Cannon SYmpson moved that the Defendant having submitted to a Rule of Court for referring the matter and not performing the Award an Attachment might be granted against him Which was granted but when the party comes in upon the Attachment he may alledge that the Award is void and if it appear to be so he shall not be bound to perform it Owen Hannings IN a Trial at Bar upon a Scire facias to avoid a Patent of the Office of Searcher exception was taken to a Witness that he was to
such power nay if he have Children they must be living at his death Further by these Provisoes if the Contingencies do happen he hath but a power to declare the Vses he hath no Interest in him at all Litt. Sect. 463. It is one thing to have a power or possibility of limiting an Interest another to have an Interest vested 7 Rep. 11. Moor's Reports 366. about the delivery of a Ring where they hold that if it had been to have been done with his own hand it had not been forfeited The case of Sir Edward Clere is different from ours for if a man make a feoffment to the use of his last Will or to the use of such persons as shall be appointed by his last Will in this case he remains a perfect owner of the Land But if a man makes a Conveyance with power to make Leases or to make an Estate to pay Debts he hath here no Interest but a naked power The Duke of Norfolk's case is full in the point A Conveyance to the use of himself for life the Remainder to his Son in Tail with power to revoke under Hand and Seal adjudged not forfeited and yet he had a power to declare his mind as in our case Pagett's case Moor 193 194. Keeling If this way be taken a man may commit Treason pretty cheaply Twisden Whoever hath a power of Revocation hath a power of Limitation The reason is because else the feoffées would be seized to their own Vse Sir William Shelly's case in Latch Twisden There is no difference betwixt the Duke of Norfolk's case and this only here it is under his hand writing and there under his proper hand writing Afterward Term. Pasch 23 Car. 2. 1671. the Court delivered their Opinions Hales being then Chief Iustice Morton I conceive the Iudgment in the Common-Pleas is well given As for the first point whether this Conveyance made by Sir Simon Mayn be fraudulent or not the Counsel themselves have declined it and therefore I shall say nothing to it For the second I conceive no larger Interest is forfeited then during the Life of the Father If it be objected that the Father had by this Proviso jus disponendi I answer it is true he had a power if he had been minded so to do but it was not his mind and Will Now animus hominis est ipse homo but he must not only be minded so to do but he must declare his pleasure Hobart saith if a man will create a power to himself and impose a Condition or Qualification for the Execution of it it must be observed Now here is a personal and individual power seated in the heart of a man And it seems to me a stronger case then that of the Duke of Norfolk put in Englefield's case where yet the Condition was not given to the King by the Statute of Hen. 8. There was a later case adjudged in Latch betwéen Warner and Hynde a case that walked through all the Courts in Westminster-hall there by reason of the ipso declarante it could not be forfeited Rainsford I hold it is not forfeited My reason is because the Proviso is at an end and determined for when he dyed and made no Will there 's an end of the Proviso The altering of the old Trust is to be done by Sir Simon Mayn and it is inseparable from his person nothing can be more inseparable then a mans Will Moor 193. Twisd I am of the same Opinion Hales was of the same Opinion that nothing was forfeited but during Sir Simon 's life The Proviso he said did not create a Trust but potestatem disponendi which is not a Trust He said he did not understand the difference betwéen the Duke of Norfolk's case and this Accordingly the Iudgment was affirm'd In a cause wherein one Aston was Attorney Keeling said That a man may discontinue his Action here before an Action brought in the Common-Pleas But if he do begin there and then they plead another Action depending here and then they discontinue I take it the Attorney ought to be committed for this practice Twisden When I was at the Bar Error was brought and Infancy assigned when the Man was thirty years old and the Attorney was threatned to be turned out of the Roll. Serjeant Newdigate moved for a Certiorari to remove an Indictment hither from Bedford against several Frenchmen for Robbery Keeling Will it remove the Recognisances there to appear Twisden I never knew such a motion made by any but the King's Attorney or Solicitor Rainsford There is no Indictment yet before a Iudge of Assise Keeling You may have a Certiorari but it must not be delivered till the Indictment be found and then the Iudge hath the Prosecutors there and may bind them over hither and so the Trial may be here Keel A Iury was never ordered to a view before their appearance unless in an Assise Twisd Neither shall you have it here but by consent Nosworthy versus Wyldeman THe Plaintiff declares in an Indeb Assumpsit that the Defendant was endebted to him in 50 l. for so much money received of the Plaintiff by one Thomas Buckner by the appointment and to the use of the Defendant After a Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Plaintiff could not have an Action for money received by the Defendant to the use of the Defendant But because it might be money lent which the Defendant received to his own use though he was to make good the value to the Plaintiff the Court will presume after a Verdict that it appeared so to the Iury at the Trial. For where a Declaration will bear two constructions and one will make it good and the other bad the Court after a Verdict will take it in the better sense And accordingly the Plaintiff had Iudgment Willams versus Lee. AN Action of Account It was prayed that the Court would give further day for giving the Account the matter being referred to Auditors Twisden The Auditors themselves must give further day Keeling The Auditors are Iudges whether there be a voluntary delay or not If they find the parties remiss and negligent they must certifie to the Court that they will not account Roberts Mariott MOved to discontinue an Action of Debt upon a Bond. Keeling We will not favour Conditions Ruled that the other side should shew cause why they should not discontinue Buckly versus Turner ACtion upon the case upon a Promise The case was that Edward Turner Brother to the Defendant was endebted to the Plaintiff for a Quarters Rent and the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff mitteret prosequi praedictum Edwardum Turner so the words are in the Declaration promised to pay the money After a Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that here is not any consideration for there is no loss to the Plaintiff in sending to prosecute c. nor any benefit but
Man brings an Action of Debt against B. Sheriff of the County Palatine of Lancaster and sues him to an Outlawry upon mean Process and has a Capias directed to the Chancery of the County Palatine who makes a Precept to the Coroners of the County being six in all to take his body and have him before the Kings Iustices of the Court of Common-Pleas at Westminster such a day One of the Coroners being in sight of the Defendant and having a fair opportunity to Arrest him doth it not but they all return non est inventus though he were easie to be found and might have been taken every day Hereupon the Plaintiff brings an Action against the Coroners and lays his Action in Middlesex and has a Verdict for 100 l. Serj. Baldwin moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Action ought to have been brought in Lancaster he agreed to the cases put in Bulwer's case 7 Rep. where the cause of Action arises equally in two Counties but here all that the Coroners do subsists and determines in the County Palatine of Lancaster for they make a Return to the Chancery of the County Palatine only and it is he that makes the Return to the Court He insisted upon Dyer 38 39 40. Husse Gibbs 2. He said this Action is grounded upon two wrongs one the not arresting him when he was in sight the other for returning non est inventus when he might easily have been taken now for the wrong of one all are charged and entire damages given He said two Sheriffs make but one Officer but the case of Coroners is different each of them is responsible for himself only and not for his Companion Serjeant Turner Pemberton contra They said the Action was well brought in Middlesex because the Plaintiffs damage arose here viz. by not having the body here at the day They cited Bulwer's case Dyer 159. b. the Chancery returns to the Court the same answer that the Coroners return to him so that their false Return is the cause of prejudice that accrues to the Plaintiff here The ground of this Action is the return of non est inventus which is the act of them all that one of them saw him and might have arrested him and that the Defendant was daily to be found c. are but mentioned as arguments to prove the false Return And they conceived an Action would not lie against one Coroner no more then against one Sheriff in London York Norwich c. But to the first exception taken by Baldwin they said admitting the Action laid in another County then where it ought yet after Verdict it is aided by the Statute of 16 17 Car. 2. if the Ven. come from any place of the County where the Action is laid it is not said in any place of the County where the cause of Action ariseth now this Action is laid in Middlesex and so the Trial by a Middlesex Iury good let the cause of Action arise where it will Cur̄ That Statute doth not help your case for it is to be intended when the Action is laid in the proper County where it ought to be laid which the word proper County implies But they inclined to give Iudgment for the Plaintiff upon the reasons given by Turner Pemberton Adjornatur Bird Kirke IT was resolved in this case by the whole Court 1. That if there be Tenant for life the Remainder for life of a Copy-hold and the Remainder-man for life enter upon the Tenant for life in possession and make a surrender that nothing at all passeth hereby for by his entry he is a Disseisor and has no customary Estate in him whereof to make a surrender 2. That when Tenant for life of a Copy-hold suffers a Recovery as Tenant in Fee that this is no forfeiture of his Estate for the Free-hold not being concern'd and it being in a Court-Baron where there is no Estoppell and the Lord that is to take advantage of it if it be a forfeiture being party to it it is not to be resembled to the forfeiture of a Free-Tenant that Customary Estates have not such accidental qualities as Estates at Common Law have unless by special Custom 3. That if it were a forfeiture of this and all other forfeitures committed by Copy-holders the Lord only and not any of those in Remainder ought to take advantage And they gave Iudgment accordingly North Chief Justice said that where it is said in King Lord's case in Cr. Car. that when Tenant for life of a Copy-hold surrenders c. that no use is left in him but whosoever is afterward admitted comes in under the Lord that that is to be understood of Copy-holds in such Mannors where the Custom warrants only Customary Estates for life and is not applicable to Copy-holds granted for life with a Remainder in Fee Anonymus A Writ of Annuity was brought upon a Prescription against the Rector of the Parish Church of St. Peter in c. the Defendant pleads that the Church is overflown with the Sea c. the Plaintiff demurs Serjeant Nudigate pro Querente The Declaration is good for a Writ of Annuity lies upon a prescription against a Parson but not against an heir F. N. B. 152. Rastall 32. the plea of the Church being drowned is not good at best it is no more then if he had said that part of the Glebe was drowned it is not the building of the Church nor the consecrated ground in respect whereof the Parson is charged but the profits of the Tythes and the Glebe Though the Church be down one may be presented to the Rectory 21 H. 7. 1. 10. H. 7. 13. 16 H. 7. 9. Luttrel's case 4 Rep. Wilmote contra The Parson is charged as Parson of the Church of St. Peter we plead in effect that there is no such Church and he confesseth it 21 Ed. 4. 83. Br. Annuity 39. 21 Ed. 4. 20. 11 H. 4. 49. we plead that the Church is submersa obruta c. which is as much a dissolution of the Rectory as the death of all the Monks is a dissolution of an Abbathie It may be objected that the Defendant has admitted himself Rector by pleading to it but I answer 1. An Estoppel is not taken notice of unless relyed on in pleading 2. The Plaintiff by his demurrer has confessed the Fact of our plea. By which mean the matter is set at large though we were estopped The Court was clearly of opinion for the Plaintiff The Church is the Cure of Souls and the right of Tythes If the material Fabrick of the Parish-Church be down another may be built and ought to be Judicium pro Quer ' nisi c. Term. Trin. 27 Car. II. in Communi Banco Vaughton versus Atwood alios TRespass for taking away some Flesh-meat from the Plaintiff being a Butcher The Defendant justifies by virtue of a Custom of the Mannor of c. that the Homage used
have the security given by the Defendant for his appearance it is all one to him whether it be good or no. Strode contra Why must the Sheriff always aver that he has taken sufficient Sureties if their sufficiency be not material Why is an Action allowed to lie if the Sheriff take no Sureties at all since according to my Brothers Opinion the party has no interest in them If the Law be as they argue the Statute has left the Plaintiff in a worse condition then he was at the Common Law for it has deprived him of the remedy that he had before and the Amercements belong not to him but to the King Cur ' The sufficiency of the bail is not material it is only for the Sheriffs own security If he take no bail at all an Action lies against him for then he does not act by colour of this Law Atkyns The Statute is not advantagious to the Plaintiff at all unless the Sheriff let go the prisoner without taking any bail and then he must render treble damages And by the Opinion of the whole Court Iudgment was given for the Defendant Moor versus Field A Custom was alledged that all persons in a Parish that had Shéep upon their ground on Candlemas-day should be discharged of Tythes of all Sheep that should be upon their ground after in that year upon payment of full Tythes for all the Sheep that were there upon that day and this was adjudged an unreasonable Custom Serjeant Turner argued for it and cited Rolls Abr ' 2 part 647 648. Term. Hill 28 29 Car. II. Communi Banco Strode versus l'Evesque de Bath Wells and Sir George Horner and Masters QUare Impedit the Plaintiff entitles himself by vertue of a Grant of the next Avoidance made by Sir George Horner and counts that Sir George was seized in fee of the Mannor of Dowling to which the advowson was appendant and presented J. S. who was admitted instituted c. and that then he granted the next Avoidance to the Plaintiff and that J. S. died and it belongs to him to present Serjeant Barton The Plaintiff has failed in his Count he says That Sir George was seized and presented but he does not say That he presented tempore pacis F. N. B. 33. Hob. 102. 6 Co. 30. 1 Inst 249. F. N. B. 31. 5 Co. 72. Vaug. 53. Strode When the Plaintiff makes his Title by a Presentation he ought to say That it was tempore pacis but Sir Georges Title is by reason of his being seized of the Mannor of Dowling to which the Advowson is appendant So that the difference as to that will be betwixt an Advowson in gross and an Advowson appendant Cur. When a man shews a precedent Right and then alledges a Presentation in pursuance of that Right as in this case the Plaintiff does in Sir George Horner there it needs not be alledged to have been tempore pacis but where no Title is alledged so that the Presentation only makes the Title there it must be pleaded tempore pacis Davies Cutt. DAvies as Administrator to Eliz. B. a feme Covert brings an Action of Debt upon a Bond against Cutt. The Defendant pleads That Administration of the Wives goods ought de jure to be committed to the Husband who was then alive upon this there was a Demurrer and it was resolved for the Plaintiff for he is rightful Administrator till his Letters of Administration are repealed James Johnson TRespass For taking and driving away some Beasts of the Plaintiff the Defendant justifies for that he and all they whose Estate he has in such a Mannor the Mannor of Blythe have had a Toll for all Beasts driven over the said Mannor viz. ½ d. a Beast if under twenty and if above then 4 d. a score Issue being joyned upon this justification a special Verdict was found viz. That the Mannor aforesaid was parcel of the Possessions of the Priory of Blythe that the Prior had by Prescription such a Toll as appurtenant to the said Mannor that by the dissolution it came to the Crown and so to Sir Gervase Clifton and at last to one Bingley in whose Right as Servant to him the Defendant justifies but then they conclude that if the Defendant may entitle himself to it by a que estate they find for the Defendant if not then for the Plaintiff Serjeant Baldw. For the Plaintiff it does not appear whether the Toll which the Defendant claims be a Toll-thorough or a Toll-traverse or what sort of Toll it is A Toll-thorough is against common Right because it is to be taken in the Kings High-way And no Prescription can be for it unless he that claims it shew that the Subject has some advantage by it And when a man claims a Toll-traverse he must lay it to be for a way over his own Freehold Keil 148. Statham Toll 2. Pl. 236. Moor 574. Cr. Eliz. 710. Keil 152. A Toll supposeth a Grant from the Crown and therefore when the Mannor of Blythe came to the Crown the Toll was disjoyned from the Mannor and became in gross Nor can a Toll be appendant to a Mannor nor claimed by a que estate Serjeant Maynard The Iury have found exactly whatever the Defendant has disclosed in his Plea and have made a special conclusion upon a Point of pleading Toll may be appurtenant to a Mannor as well as any other profit a prendre Nor does it become in gross by the Mannor coming to the Crown The difference is as to that betwixt things that had a being in the Crown before they were granted out to Subjects and things which had not 9. Rep. The Case of the Abbot of Strata Marcella There is no such legal difference between a Toll-thorough and a Toll-traverse as has been offered the words are used promiscuously in our Books A Toll-thorough may be by Prescription without any reasonable cause alledged of its commencement for having been paid time out of mind the true cause of its beginning in the intendment of the Law cannot be known And for the que estate indeed a thing that lies in grant cannot be claimed by a que estate directly by it self but it may be claimed as appurtenant to a Mannor by a que estate in the Mannor c. Cur. accord and gave Iudgment for the Defendant Atkyns When Toll is claimed generally it shall be intended Toll-thorough and so is the case in Cr. Eliz. 710. Smith Shepheard Lord Townsend versus Hughes AN Action upon the Stat. de Scandalis Magnatum for these words viz. My Lord Townsend is an unworthy Person and does things against Law and Reason Vpon issue Not Guilty there was a Verdict for the Plaintiff and four thousand pounds damages given The Defendant moved for a new Trial because of the excessiveness of the damages and a President was cited a of new Trial granted upon that ground and no other And Atkins was for granting a new Trial. North
a distinction Our Saviour is called the Son of David though there were 28 Generations betwixt David and him And a republication may impose another sense upon words different from what they had when they were first written as if a man devise all his Lands in Dale and have but two Acres in Dale the words now extend to no more then those two Acres and if he purchase more and dye without any new publication the new purchased Lands will not pass But if there were a new publication after the purchase they would then pass well enough If a man has issue two Sons called Thomas and he makes a devise to his Son Thomas this may be ascertained by an averment Now suppose that Thomas the deviseé dye living the Father and afterward the Father publisheth his Will anew and says that he did intend that his Son Thomas now dead should have had his Land but now his Will and intent is that Thomas his younger Son now living shall take his Land by the same Will In this case to be sure the second Son Thomas shall take by the devise Here the import of the words is clearly altered by the republication Atkyns The words of this Will would not of themselves be sufficient to carry the Land to the Grand-child nor would the intention of the Devisor do it without them but both together do the business Quae non prosunt singula juncta juvant Wyndham Scroggs differed in Opinion and the cause was adjourned to be argued the next Term. North. A man admitted in forma pauperis is not to have a new Trial granted him for he has had the benefit of the Kings Iustice once and must acquiesce in it We do not suffer them to remove causes out of inferiour Courts They must satisfie themselves with the Iurisdiction within which their Action properly lieth Farrington Lee. ASsumpsit The Plaintiff declares upon 2 indebitatus Assumpsits and a third Assumpsit upon an insimul computasset The Defendant pleaded non Assumpsit infra sex annos the Plaintiff replied that himself is a Merchant and the Defendant his Factor and recites a clause in the Statute in which Actions of Account between Merchants and Merchants and Merchants and their Factors concerning their Trade and Merchandize are excepted and avers that this money became due to the Plaintiff upon an account betwixt him and the Defendant concerning Merchandise c. the Defendant makes an impertinent rejoynder to which the Plaintiff demurs Nudigate pro Querente This Statute is in the nature of a penal Law because it restrains the liberty which the Plaintiff has by the Common Law to bring his Action when he will and must therefore be construed beneficialy for the Plaintiff Pl. 54. Cr. Car. 294. Finche Lambe's case to this purpose Also this exception of Accounts between Merchants and their Factors must be liberally expounded for their benefit because the Law-makers in making such an exception had an eye to the incouragement of Trade and Commerce The words of the exception are other then such Accounts as concern the Trade of Merchandise c. now this Action of ours is not indeed an Action of Account but it is an Action grounded upon an Account And the Plaintiff being at liberty to bring either the one or the other upon the same cause of Action and one of the Actions being excepted expresly out of the limitation of the Statute the other by Equity is excepted also He cited Hill 17 Car. 1. in Marshe's Reports 151. Jones 401. Sandys Blodwell Mich. 13 Car. 1. and prayed Iudgment for the Plaintiff Serjeant Baldwin contra He said it did not appear in the Declaration that this Action was betwixt a Merchant and his Factor so that then the plea in bar is prima facie good And when he comes and sets it forth in his Replication he is too late in it and the replication is not pursuant to his Declaration But all the Court was against him in this Then he said the Statute excepted Actions of Account only and not Actions upon an indeb Assumpsit Cur ' Whereas it has been said by Serjeant Nudigate that the Plaintiff here has an Election to bring an Action of account or an Indebitat Assumpsit that is false for till the Account be stated betwixt them an Action of Account lies and not an Action upon the Case When the Account is once stated then an Action upon the case lies and not an Action of Account Et per North if upon an Indebitat Assumpsit matters are offered in evidence that lie in account I do not allow them to be given in evidence North Wyndham Scroggs the exception of the Statute goes only to Actions of Account and not to other Actions And we take a diversity betwixt an account current and an account stated After the account stated the certainty of the Debt appears and all the intricacy of account is out of doors and the Action must be brought within six years after the account stated But by North if after an account stated upon the ballance of it a sum appear due to either of the parties which sum is not paid but is afterward thrown into a new account between the same parties it is now slip't out of the Statute again Scroggs The Statute makes a difference betwixt Actions upon Account and Actions upon the case The words would else have been All Actions of Account and upon the Case other then such Actions as concern the Trade of Merchandise But it is otherwise penned other then such Accounts as concern c. and as this case is there is no account betwixt the parties the account is determined and the Plaintiff put to his Action upon an insimul computasset which is not within the benefit of the exception Atkyns I think the makers of this Statute had a greater regard to the persons of Merchants then the causes of Action between them And the reason was because they are often out of the Realm and cannot always prosecute their Actions in due time The Statute makes no difference betwixt an account current and an account stated I think also that no other sort of Tradesmen but Merchants are within the benefit of this exception and that it does not extend to Shop-kéepers they not being within the same mischief Adjurnatur Horn versus Chandler COvenant upon an Indenture of an Apprentice wherein the Defendant bound himself to serve the Plaintiff for seven years The Plaintiff sets forth the custom of London That any person above 14 and under 21 unmarried may bind himself Apprentice c. according to the custom and that the Master thereupon shall have tale remedium against him as if he were 21 and alledges that the Defendant did go away from his Service per quod he lost his Service for the said term which term is not yet expired The Defendant pleads a frivolous plea. To which the Plaintiff demurs Heley Though such a Covenant shall
Smith versus Smith ASsumpsit The Plaintiff declared whereas himself and the Defendant were Executors of the last Will and Testament of J. S. and whereas the Defendant had received so much of the money which was the Testators a moiety whereof belonged to the Plaintiff and whereas the Plaintiff Pro recuperatione inde Sectasset the Defendant that he the said Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff abstineret a Secta praedicta prosequenda monstraret Quoddam computum did promise him 100 l. and avers that he did forbear c. quod ostentavit quoddam Computum praedictum After a Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment by Jones for the Defendant as followeth Though I do not see how that which one Executor claims against another is recoverable at all unless in Equity yet I shall insist only on this that here is no good consideration alledged for it is only alledged in general that the Plaintiff Sectasset It is not said so much as that it was legali modo in a legal way whereas it ought to be set forth in what Court it was c. that so the Court might know whether it were in a Court which had Iurisdiction therein or no and so are all the Presidents in Actions concerning forbearance to sue In point of Evidence the first thing to be shewn in such a case as this is that there was a Suit c. Saunders for the Plaintiff That being the prime thing necessary to be proved since the Verdict is found for us must be intended to have been proved But however if this consideration be idle and void yet the other maintains the Action and so the Court agreed viz. that one was enough It was agreed that if the Plaintiff averred only that he had shewed Quoddam Computum that unless the consideration had been to shew any account it had been naught for quoddam is aliud Dy. 70. nu 38 39. 1 H. 7. 9. but it being Quoddam computum praedict ' it was well enough Computum praedictum refers it to the particular account discoursed of between them It was agreed that it had been best to have said Monstravit in the averment that it might agree with the allegation of the consideration But yet the word ostentavit though most commonly by a Metonimy it signifies to boast yet signifieth also to shew or to shew often as appears by all the Dictionaries and therefore it is well enough Take Iudgment Sir Francis Duncombe's Case IT was held If a Writ of Error abate in Parliament or the like and another Writ of Error be brought in the same Court it is no Supersedeas But if the first Writ of Error be in Cam̄ Scacc ' c. and then a Writ be brought in Parliament c. it is a Supersedeas by the Opinion of all the Iudges against my Lord Cooke vide Heydon versus Godsalve 2 Cr. 342. Browne versus London INdeb ' Assumpsit for fifty three pounds due to the Plaintiff upon a Bill of Exchange drawn upon the Defendant and accepted by him according to the custom of the Merchants c. After a Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in arrest of Iudgment that though an Action upon the Case does well lie in such case upon the Merchants yet an Indeb ' Assumpsit may not be brought thereupon Winnington I think it doth well lye Debt lies against a Sheriff upon levying and receiving of money upon an Execution Hob. 206. Now this is upon a Bill of Exchange accepted and also upon the Defendants having effects of the drawer in his hands having read the value for so it must be intended because otherwise this general Verdict could not be found Rainesford This is the very same with Milton's Case lately in Scacc ' where it was adjudged that an Indeb ' Assumpsit would not lye In this case he added that the Verdict would not help it for though my Lord Chief Baron said it were well if the Law were otherwise yet he and we all agreed that a Bill of Exchange accepted c. was indeed a good ground for a special Action upon the case but that it did not make a Debt first because the acceptance is but conditional on both sides If the money be not received it returns back upon the drawer of the Bill He remains liable still and this is but collateral Secondly because the word Onerabilis doth not imply Debt Thirdly Because the case is primae Impressionis there was no President for it Then Offley who was of Council pro Defendente in the case at bar said that he was of Council for the Plaintiff in the Exchequer case and that therein direction was given to search Presidents and that they did search in this Court and in Guildhall and that there was a Certificate from the Attorneys and Prothonotaries there that there was no President of such an Action Adjornatur Twisden I remember an Action upon the Case was brought for that the Defendant had taken away his Goods and hidden them in such secret places that the Plaintiff could not come at them to take them in Execution and adjudged it would not lye Watkins versus Edwards ACtion of Covenant brought by an Infant per Guardian ' suum for that the Plaintiff being bound Apprentice to the Defendant by Indenture c. the Defendant did not keep maintain educate and teach him in his Trade of a Draper as he ought but turned him away The Defendant pleads that he was a Citizen and Freeman of Bristol and that at the General Sessions of the Peace there held there was an Order that he should be discharged of the Plaintiff for his disorderly living and beating his Master and Mistress and that this Order was inrolled by the Clarke of the Peace as it ought to be c. To which the Plaintiff demurred It was said for the Plantiff that the Statute 5 El. cap. 4. doth not give the Iustices c. any power to discharge a Master of his Apprentice in case the fault be in the Apprentice but only to minister due Correction and Punishment to him Cur̄ That hath been over-ruled here The Iustices c. have the same power of discharging upon complaint of the Master as upon complaint of the Apprentice Else that Master would be in a most ill case that were troubled with a bad Apprentice for he could by no means get rid of him Secondly it was urged on the Plaintiffs behalf that he had not for ought that appears any notice or summons to come and make his defence V. 11 Co. 99. Baggs case And this very Statute speaks of the appearance of the party and the hearing the matter before the Iustices c. Saunders pro Defendente In this case the Iustices are Iudges and it being pleaded that such a Iudgment was given that is enough and it shall be intended all was regular Twisden Rainesford That which we doubt is whether the Defendant ought not
Legacies and that the Devisee has paid almost all and fails in one or so there may be good cause of relief because he has paid much and is somewhat in the nature of a purchasor This is not like a Legacy This is upon the Statute Where it is said a man may Devise at his Will and pleasure i.e. absolutely upon Condition upon Limitation or any way that the Law warrants Suppose there had been a special Act of Parliament disposing as the Earl has done in this case could there be any colour in Equity to alter or vary this Law And here 't is equally as concluding as that since the Statute gives a man power to dispose as expresly and otherwise Equity would alter and dispose of all property and all things that came in question But let Notice or Consent c. be requisite or not 't is Triable at Law But I stand upon this that there ought to be no relief in Equity It was insisted that her Grandmother gave a kind of consent but I take that for nothing For though the Grandmother would not have offered or proposed a Marriage yet she ought not to marry without her consent Nor is the Lords Post-Consent any thing for consent cannot be had for things which cannot be otherwise as a man cannot be said to consent to his Stature or the colour of his hair c. A man may know of what Opinion he is or was but 't is impossible for a man to know of what Opinion he would have been in the circumstances of Action which he never tryed I conclude the Plaintiff ought not to have relief in Equity But if any matter in Law will help them they are not excluded from it Keling Cheif Justice I think there ought to be no relief in this Case I have considered it as well as I can and I think nothing is more fit to be observed then thief Customary Rules for Children they are very good restraints for Children and ought to be made good here to encourage obedience and discourage those who would make a Prey of them and if there were not hope for men to hasten their fortunes by this means there would be few adventures of this nature I have lookt upon the Presidents c. and I find they come not to this Case except only one and that is but seven years old and the other are for money for which there is reason because the party may be substantially relieved and satisfied otherways If there had been no limitation over there may be some reason why it may be intented that it was only in terrorem I do not think all Cases upon Wills are irremediable here because of the Statute If the breach of the Condition be in a circumstance only as in the Case where the consent was given but not in writing as it ought it may be relieved for that was a caution to the Consentor that he should not give consent before strangers and trust to the swearing of a parol-consent I never yet saw any devise obliging to have any such consent after the parties age of 21 years so that there is no great hardship in it And if there should be any ill design in those who have the trust and power to consent in with-holding their consent it might be relieved here I think none would make a decree that if she died without issue the Defendant should have it and this is the same But equity can never go against the substantial part of a Conveyance or Will but that must be governed by the parties agreement or appointment Equity ought to arise upon some collateral or accidental emergent 'T is not in Terrorem indeed without a penalty There can be no collateral Averment Being an Infant is nothing for this is only a provision while she is an Infant Besides the case of the Forfeiture of the double value is a very good instance for the Notice If she had notice of this Will yet they that came to steal her knew it not for they did not come to take a shorn sheep and therefore no relief is deserved by the Plaintiff In Honesty and Conscience those Bonds ought to be kept strict I confess I would not have the Plaintiff tempted to a further Suit but indeed in saying that I go further then I need Bridgeman Lord Keeper If I were of another Opinion yet I would be bound by my Lords for I did not send for them not to be bound by them But I was of their Opinion from the beginning And I am glad now that we are delivered from a common Error and that men may make such provisions as may bind their Children But to justifie the Decree a little 1 Here is 5000 l. appointed to George Porter so that the ample provision was made for him and it may the rather be intended that this Estate was wholly designed for the Plaintiff 2 Here was a Post-consent and those persons were in loco parentum Now if the Earl had as possibly he might have thus pardoned and been reconciled to the Marriage he would probably have given the Plaintiff the Estate and that is a reason to induce us to the same For I think it clear that an Estate by Act of Parliament is liable to the same Relief Regulation c. as any other Estate An Estate Tail though that be by Statute yet is liable to be cut off c. If there had beén a time limited then there had been more reason to bind her up to have consent But there ought to be a restraint put in these Cases That of the double forfeiture was truly and well observed Where no body is bound to give Notice it is to be taken but besides she is not heir for that might have made a great difference This I thought not to say Vpon the whole I am of my Opinion with my Lords and I am glad I have their assistance Let the Bill be dismissed FINIS A TABLE of the Principal Matters contained in the foregoing REPORTS A. Abatement A Plea may be good in abatement though it contain also matter that goes in barr 214 Accord Accord with satisfaction 69 Account Pray'd that the Court would give further day for giving in the Account 42 Plea in barr and Plea before Auditors 65 Action for words Words spoken of a Watchmaker 19 Of a Justice of Peace 22 23 You are a Pimp and a Bawd and fetch young Gentlewomen to young Gentlemen 31 32 Action for words spoken of an Attorney 172 Action upon the Case For suing the Plaintiff in placito debiti for 600 li. and affirming that he owed him 600 li. whereby he was held to extraordinary Bail 4 Action upon a Promise in consideration that the Plaintiff mitteret prosequi such a Suit c. held good 43 For a false Return V. Tit. Return For a Libel V. Libel V. Market Against a Master of a Ship for keeping Goods so negligently that they were stollen away whilst the Ship
be Deputy to the party that would avoid the Patent Twisd If a man promise another that if he recover his Land the other shall have a Lease of it he is no good Witness so neither is this man But by the Opinions of the thrée other Iudges he was allowed because the Suit here is between the King and the Patentée Worthy Liddall SAunders moved for a Prohibition to the Spiritual Court in a Suit there for calling the Plaintiff Whore Twisd Opinions have been pro and con upon this point The Spiritual Court has a Iurisdiction in cases of Whoredom and Adultery but if Suits there were allowed for such railing words they would have work enough from Billingsgate Saunders relyed upon this that they were only words of heat Keel They are Iudges of that Saunders In Mich. 11 Jac. Rot. 664. Cryer versus Glover in Com. B. The suggestion was that she struck him and he said thou art a Whore and I was never struck by a Whores hand before there a Prohibition was granted and I conceive the reason was because there was a provocation so in our case it appears that they were Scolding According 15 Jac. Rot. 325. Short versus Cole 15 Car. 2. between Loveland Goose The Court refused to grant a Prohibition Maddox WAllop moved for a Prohibition to the Spiritual Court for one Maddox Incumbent of a Donative within the Diocess of Peterborough who was cited into the Spiritual Court for marrying there without a Licence and cited Fairechilds case Yel 60. But per Keeling Moreton Rainesford the Prohibition was denied Twisden doubted but said if they might punish him in the Ecclesiastical Court pro reformatione morum at least they could not deprive him Doctor Poordage BArtue moved for a Writ of Priviledge for him he being a practising Physitian in Town and chosen Constable in a Parish The Court said if the Office go by Houses he must make a Deputy But upon consideration the motion was refused and a difference made between an Attorney or Barrister at Law and a Physitian the former enjoy their Priviledge because of their attendance in publick Courts and not upon the account of any private business in their Chambers and a Physitians Calling is a private Calling Wherefore they would not introduce new Presidents Sir John Kirle versus Osgood AN Action for words viz. Sir John Kirle is a forsworn Justice and not fit to be a Justice of Peace to sit upon the Bench and so I will tell him to his face Moved in arrest of Iudgment because to say a man is forsworn is not Actionable for it may be understood of swearing in common discourse Jones They are Actionable because applied to his Suite Stukely's case 4 Rep. Fleetwood's case in Hob. Though a mans Office is not named yet if the words do refer in themselves or are applyed to it they are Actionable so in our case Winnington They are not Actionable for they admit of a construction in mitiori sensu in Stukely's case that has béen cited corruption in his Office is necessarily implyed but not in this case Rolls 56. Keeling He calls him in effect a corrupt Iustice and that supplies the communication concerning his Office words must be construed according to common acceptation Morton I sée little difference betwéen this and Sir John Isam's case 1 Cro. 14. Sir William Massam's case Rainsford accorded He cited 1 Rolls 53. 4 Rep. Stukelies case Twisden was of the same Opinion for the words read to disgrace him in his Office Iudgment for the Plaintiff Hastings Attorny of the K. B. WInnington complained to the Court an his behalf that he being an Attorney of this Court was not suffered to appear for his Clyent in the Court at Stepney That Court he said was erected by Letters Patents within these two years and the Attornies of this Court being an ancient Court ought not to be excluded On the other side it was urged that they had a certain number of Attornies appointed by their Charter as there is at the Marshals Court Keeling This is a new Court and for my part I think our Attornies cannot be excluded Hastings may bring his Action If a Patent erecting a new Court may limit a certain number of Attornies that shall practise there it may as well limit a certain number of Counsel Coleman They have so in the Marshalsey and in London Keeling Their Courts in London are ancient and their Customs confirmed by Acts of Parliament The now Court of the Marshalsey is indéed a new erected Court for the old Court of the Verge was another thing and as for their having a certain number of Counsel or Attornies the question is the same with this before us whether they can legally exclude others I do not see how the King by a new Patent can ou●●e any man of his priviledge Twisden said it was a new point and that he had never heard it stir'd before Afterwards being moved again Keeling said they should have their Iudgments quickly if they stood upon it Twisd I have known this ruled if you say you will refer the cause to such a man that ex consequente the cause must stay because that man is made Iudge and that the staying of the cause is implyed in the reference Dominus Rex versus Vaws MOved to quash a Presentment for refusing to be sworn Constable of an Hundred because the Presentment does not mention before whom the Sessions were held which was quash'd accordingly and Twisden said the Clerk of the Peace ought to be fined for returning such a Presentment Birrell Shawe SCire facias against the Bail The Defendant pleads that before the return of the Writ of Scire facias there was a Capias ad satisfaciend against the principal by vertue whereof he was taken and paid the money but alledges no place where the payment was Twisd You cannot make good this fault Dodwell Ux. versus Burford THe Plaintiffs in an Action of Battery declared that the Defendant struck the Horse whereon the Wife rode so that the Horse ran away with her whereby she was thrown down and another Horse ran over her whereby she lost the use of two of her Fingers The Iury had given them 48 l. damages and they moved the Court upon view of the maihem to increase them whereupon the Declaration was read but the Court thought the damages given by the Iury sufficient Smith versus Bowin ACtion upon a promise The Plaintiff declares that the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff would suffer him to take away so much of the Plaintiffs Grass which the Defendant had cut down promised to pay him so much for it and also to pay him six pounds which he owed him for a Debt After a Verdict for the Plaintiff Williams moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Plaintiff was an Infant and he not being bound by the agreement that the Defendant ought not to be bound by it
have but one Elegit At another day the Iudges gave their Opinions severally that Iudgment ought to be given in this Court upon the whole Record for that it is an entire Record and the Execution one and if Iudgment were to be given there upon the demurrer there must be two Executions And because the Record shall not be remanded Twisden said the Record it self was here and that it had been so adjudged in King and Holland's case and in Dawkes Batter's case though my Lord Chief Baron being then at the Bar urged strongly that it was but the tenour of the Record that was sent hither And it is a Maxim in Law that if a Record be here once it never goes out again for that here it is coram ipso Rege so that if we do not give Iudgment here there will be a failer of Iustice because we cannot send the Record back The Iury that tries the Issue must assess the damages upon the demurrer The Record must not be split in this case Accordingly Iudgment was given here Willbraham Snow TRover Conversion Vpon Issue Not-guilty the Iury find a special Verdict viz. that one Talbot recovered in an Action of Debt against one Wimb and had a Fierr facias directed to the Sheriff of Chester whereupon he took the Goods into his possession and that being in his possession the Defendant took them away and converted them c. and the sole point was whether the possession which the Sheriff has of Goods by him levied upon an Execution is sufficient to enable him to bring an Action of Trover Winnington I conceive the Action does not lie An Action of Trover and Conversion is an Action in the right and two things are to be proved in it viz. a Property in the Plaintiff and a Conversion in the Defendant I confess that in some cases though the Plaintiff have not the absolute property of the Goods yet as to the Defendants being a wrong-doer he may have a sufficient property to maintain the Action against him But I hold that in this case the property is not at all altered by the seizure of the Goods upon a Fieri facias for that he cited Dyer 98 99. Yelvert 44. This case is something like that of Commissioners of Bankrupts they have power to sell and grant and assign but they cannot bring an Action their Assignees must bring all Actions It is true a Sheriff in this case may bring an Action of Trespass because he has possession but Trover is grounded upon the right and there must be a Property in the Plaintiff to support that whereas the Sheriff takes the Goods by vertue of a nude Authority As when a man deviseth that his Executors shall sell his Land they have but a nude Authority Cur. The Sheriff may well have an Action of Trover in this case As for the case in Yelvert 44. there the Sheriff seiz'd upon a Fieri facias then his Office determined then he sold the Goods and the Defendant brought Trover And it was holden that the Property was in the Defendant by reason of the determining of the Sheriffs Office and because a new Fieri facias must be taken out for that a venditioni exponas cannot issue to the new Sheriff They compared this case to that of a Carryer who is accountable for the Goods that he receives and may have Trover or Trespass at his Election Twisden said the Commissioners of Bankrupts might have an Action of Trover if they did actually seize any Goods of the Bankrupts as they might by Law Rainsford said let the Property after the seizure of Goods upon an Execution remain in the Defendant or be transferred to the Plaintiff since the Sheriff is answerable for them and comes to the possession of them by the Law it is reasonable that he should have as ample remedy to recover damages for the taking of them from him as a Carryer has that comes to the possession of Goods by the delivery of the party Morton said if Goods are taken into the custody of a Sheriff and the Defendant afterward become Bankrupt the Statute of Bankrupts shall not reach them which proves the Property not to be in the Defendant Twisd I know it hath been urged several times at the Assizes that a Sheriff ought to have Trespass and not Trover and Counsel have pressed hard for a special Verdict Morton My Lord Chief Justice Brampston said he would never deny a special Verdict while he lived if Counsel did desire it Gavell Perked ACtion for words viz. You are a Pimp and a Bawd and fetch young Gentlewomen to young Gentlemen Vpon Issue Not-guilty there was a special Verdict found Jones The Declaration says further whereby her Husband did conceive an evil Opinion of her and refused to cohabit with her But the Iury not having found any such special damage the question is whether the words in themselves are Actionable without any relation had to the damage alledged I confess that to call one Bawd is not Actionable for that is a term of reproach used in Scolding and does not imply any act whereof the Temporal Courts take notice for one may be said to be a Bawd to her self But where one is said to be a Bawd in such actions as these it is actionable 27 H. 8. 14. If one say that another holds Bawdry it is Actionable 1 Cro. 329. Thou keepest a Whore in thy House to pull out my Throat these words have been adjudged to be Actionable for that they express an act done and so are special and not general railing words In Dimock's case 1 Cro. 393. Two Iustices were of Opinion that the word Pimp was Actionable of it self But I do not relie upon that or the word Bawd but taking the words all together they explain one another the latter words show the meaning of the former viz. that her Pimping and Bawdry consisted in bringing young men and women together and what she brought them together for is sufficiently expressed in the words Pimp and Bawd viz. that she brought them together to be naught And that is such a Slander as if it be true she may be indicted for it and is punishable at the Common Law The Court was of the same Opinion and gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff Nisi c. Healy Warde ERror of a Iudgment in Hull Weston The Action is brought upon a promise cum inde requisitus foret and does not say cum inde requisitus foret infra Jurisdictionem Twisd Though the agreement be general cum inde requisitus foret yet if he does request within the Iurisdiction it is good enough and so it has been ruled and this Error was disallowed Boswill Coats TWo several Legacies are given by Will to Alice Coats and John Coats the Executors deposit these Legacies in a third persons hand for them and take a Bond of that third person conditioned That if the Obligor at the request of
question it had béen well enough now why may not a pair be understood of Sets or Suits or so many as will serve for a bed if it shall not be taken for a couple They quoted some cases in which it had béen adjudged that in Trover and Conversion for several things though it did not appear how many of each sort there were yet it had been held good Twisden acknowledged that there had been such Resolutions but said he knew not what to think of such cases considering the uncertainty of the Declarations And the word pair in our case is as uncertain as may be there a pair of Gloves a pair of Cards a pair of Tongs The word applyed to some things signifies more to others less and what shall it signifie here but by thrée Iudges against Twisden the Plaintiff had Iudgment Fox alii Exec ' of Pinsent versus Tremain THe Plaintiffs being Executors and some of them under age all appeared by Attorney and thereupon it was prayed that Iudgment might be stayed for 1. An Infant cannot make a Warrant of Attorney 2. An Infant appearing by Attorney may be amerced pro falso clamore and the reason is because it does not appear that he is under age but if he appear by guardian or prochein amy he shall not be amerced 3. The Infant may be much prejudiced For these reasons and because they said the practice had gone accordingly Iudgment was stayed The cases cited pro con were 3 Cro. 424. 2 Cro. 441. 1 Roll 288. Hutton Askew's case A Scire facias brought by two Executors reciting that there was a third but within age resolved that all must joyn Colt Sherwood's case resolved that an Infant Executor cannot defend by Attorney Twisden Where there are several Executors and one or more under age and the rest of full age all must joyn in an Action and Administration durante minore aetate cannot be granted if any of them be of full age Vid. infr Haspurt Wills A Special Action brought upon the Custom of Wharfage and Cranage in the City of Norwich The Declaration sets forth that they have a common Wharfe and a Crane to it and then they set forth a Custom that all Goods brought down the River and passing by shall pay such a Duty Obj. That the Custom is not good for that it is Toll-thorough which is malum Tolnetum Twisd There is a case in Hob. 175. of a bad Custom of paying the Charges of a Funeral though the Plaintiff were a Stranger and not buried in the Parish So here if they had unladed at the Key they should have paid the whole Duty nay if they had unladed at any other place in the City there would have béen some reason for it or if the Declaration had set forth that they had cleansed the River At Gravesend they claimed a Toll of Boats lying in the River of Thames and it was adjudged in Parliament to be malum Tolnetum To stay Heskett Lee. A Writ of Error was brought to reverse a Iudgment given in a common Recovery in the County Palatine of Lancaster Weston The Tenant in the common Recovery is an Infant and appears by his Guardian but there is a fault in the admittance for whereas he ought to have been admitted as Defendant in this form scil A. B. admittitur per C. D. Gardianum suum ad comparendum defendendum he is admitted in the Record ad sequendum The second Error is in the appearance which is entred in this manner sc qui admissus est ad sequendum c. following the Error of the admittance ut Gardianus ipsius Thomae in propria persona sua venit defendit c. so that he is admitted ad sequendum which is the act of the Plaintiff And as Guardian he defends which is the act of the Defendant and further it is said that the Guardian appears in propria persona which cannot be Now I conceive that the Assignment of the Guardian and the appearance of the Guardian is triable by the Record and if the Infant should bring an Action against his Guardian he must declare that he was admitted to appear and defend his right Now whether will this admittance ad sequendum warrant such a Declaration I conceive it will not and that therefore the Recovery is erroneous Winnington I am for them that claim under the Recovery And I conceive this whole Record is not only good in substance but according to the form used in all common Recoveries If an Infant Tenant appear per Gardianum either as Defendant or Vouchée he shall be bound as well as one of full age And if the Guardian faint-pleads or mispleads the Infant hath an Action against him 9 Ed. 4. 34 35. Dyer 104. b. In our case there is a common Recovery wherein the Tenant is an Infant who ought to appear by his Guardian whether the admittance of him here by his Guardian be well entred or no is the question the word sequi signifies only to follow the cause and the Defendant doth prosecute and act a Venire by Proviso may be taken out at the Defendants Suit 35 H. 8. 7. so in a Replevin the Defendant is the prosecutor and the Tenant doth sue in common Recoveries and is the only person that doth prosecute and act so that I think the word is proper It is true one book is cited where prosequendum is void in an Ejectment 2 Cro. 640 641. Sympson's case but that Iudgment is upon the point of prochein amy There is a President for me in 6 Car. 1. which I believe was the president of this case And Sir Francis Englefield's case where the Infant came in as Vouchée is the same with ours As for the second Error assigned viz. that the Guardian is said to come in propria persona In the Earl of Newport's Case and in Englefield's Case propria persona is in the same manner as here Now the Law doth not regard so much the manner of the admittance as that a good Guardian be admitted Twisden This is a Recovery suffered upon a Privy Seal from the King and upon a marriage settlement upon good consideration and therefore ought to be favoured The word sequatur is as proper for the Defendant as for the Plaintiff And for the second the words propria persona are well enough being applyed to the Guardian who does in proper person appear for the Infant For an Infant to suffer a common Recovery if it were res integra it would hardly be admitted But if an Infant will reverse a common Recovery he ought to do it whilest he is under age as it was adjudged here about two years ago according to my Lord Coke's Opinion Weston If you stand upon that whether an Infant having suffered a common Recovery may reverse it after he is come of full age I desire to be heard to it Cur. advisare vult Tildell Walter A Vicar Libelled in
suffered him to go at large whither he would and at the day of Return he returned that he had his body ready Jones They have demurred to the Declaration which I conceive to be a good Declaration For take the case that there went a Latitat to the Sheriff and the Sheriff took the person upon it and let him go at large no body will deny but that an Action of Escape will lye against him and when he makes such a false Return as here that he has the body ready why will not an Action lie for a false Return and this is no new case but hath béen adjudged Moor. plac 596. 3 Cro. 460. ibid. 624. it is at the Plaintiffs Election to follow the Sheriff with Amercements or to bring his Action for the false Return And when this Action has been brought formerly they were forced to plead the Statute none ever demurred generally Twisden I remember a case in 21 Car. 1. Rot. 616. betwéen Franklyn Andrews where an Action upon the Case was brought against a Sheriff for such a false Return he pleaded the Statute and they held in that case that the Sheriff could not Return any thing else but Cepi corpus And old Hodson that sate here remembred the case of Langton Gardiner reported in 3 Cro. and said the Court did amerce the Sheriff for a bad Return but the Iudgment was given in that case for the Plaintiff because there was a Traverse aliter vel alio modo which could not be unless a false Return had been confessed and the Court ordered Iudgment to be entred for the Plaintiff for that cause In the case of Franklyn the Court held that upon Issue Not-guilty the Statute might be given in Evidence but upon a Demurrer you ought to plead the Statute and the general Demurrer cannot be help'd in this case unless you will say that it is a general Law Whelpdale's case is that the Statute must be pleaded because it is a particular Law but it concerns Extortion in all Sheriffs and the Statute of 13 Eliz. that concerns all Parsons touching Non-residency is held to be a general Law and it is not to be stirr'd now but if the point were to be adjudged again perhaps we might be of another Opinion Keeling They have relyed here upon the false Return and the general Demurrer I take to be well enough Morton Rainsford accorded wherefore Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff Lake versus King THe Plaintiff brought an Action upon the Case for publishing a Libell in which he was defamed c. the publication was in delivering several Printed Papers wherein the Plaintiff was slandered to several Members of a Committée of the House of Commons Jones It is true if a man make a complaint in a Legal way no Action lyeth against him for taking that course if it be in a competent Court But that that we say is not lawful in this case is his causing the matter to be Printed and Published agreeable to this case are the common cases of Letters if a man will write a scandalous Letter and deliver it to the party himself this is no Slander But if he acquaints a third person with it an Action will lie So here since he will publish this matter by Printing it or if he had but written it it might have been Actionable for the Members ought not to be prepossessed King versus Standish AN Action upon the Statute of Praemunire for impeaching in the Chancery a Iudgment given in the Kings-Bench The Defendant demurred Bigland for the Defendant The question is whether the Court of Chancery be meant within the Statute of 27 Ed. 3. 3. This question has béen controverted formerly but has not béen stirr'd within these 40 years last past It concerns the Chancery as it is a Court of Equity Now the Statute cannot be applyed to the Chancery as such for it was not a Court of Equity at that time and if so then must the Statute be applyed to other Courts where the gravamen then was Mr. Lambert in his Iurisdiction of Courts says of this Court that the King did at first determine Causes in Equity in person and that about 20 Ed. 3 the King going beyond Sea delegated this power to the Chancellor And then he says several Statutes were made to enlarge the Iurisdiction of this Court as 17 Rich. 2. cap. 6. c. But the Chancellor took not upon him ex Officio to determine matters in Equity till Edward the Fourth's time For till then it was done by the King in person or he delegated whom he pleased So that the Gravamen of that Statute could not be in the Chancery 2. It is not possible that the King can be disinherited in his own Courts and therefore the Statute must be understood of Courts that stand in opposition to the Kings Courts and only forreign Courts But this Court is held by the Kings Seal and the Iudgments in it are according to the Kings Conscience Thirdly It is said in the Statute that the Offenders shall have a day given them to appear before the King and his Council or in his Chancery c. and it is strange that the Chancery should give the remedy if that were one of the Courts wherein the Offence were incurred My fourth reason is from the penalty the penalty is very rare and great for they must be put out of the Kings Protection their Lands forfeited and their bodies imprison'd at the Kings pleasure The penalty is fitted well for those that draw the Kings Subjects out of the Kings Iurisdiction but so great a penalty to be inflicted for suing in the Kings Courts is not so reasonable If a man sue in the Ecclesiastical Court for a matter Temporal shall he incur a Premunire An Action upon the Case may lye when a man is mistaken in the Court in which he ought to sue but to make it a Praemunire seems not so reasonable The Vsurpations of the Bishop of Rome were the cause of the making of this Statute and all other Statutes of Praemunire 28 Ed. 3. cap. 1. 16 H. 6. cap. 5. the complaint was all along of the Bishop of Rome's Vsurpations but not a word of the Chancery Sir John Davies in his case of Praemunire tells us that all the Statutes were made upon this occasion Of all the Attainders of Praemunire there never was one for suing in the Chancery The great Objection is from these words in the Statute or which do sue in any other Court now say they this last disjunctive must be applyed to this Court and not to the Court or Courts mentioned before But I answer there were other Ecclesisiastical Courts within this Realm besides that that was a standing Court and had a constant dependance upon the Pope here and they were aimed at by this disjunctive Those Courts derived their Iurisdiction from the Court of Rome and not from the King There is an Authority in the point in
the Wife does but nominate what person shall take by the Will This is a plain case and free from uncertainty and ambiguity which else the word dispose will be liable to But Iudgment was given ut supra Howell versus King TRespass for driving Cattel over the Plaintiffs ground The case was A. has a way over B's ground to Black-Acre and drives his Beasts over A's ground to Black-acre and then to another place lying beyond Black-acre And whether this was lawful or no was the question upon a demurrer It was urged that when his Beasts were at Black-acre he might drive them whither he would Rolls 391. nu 40. 11 H. 4. 82. Brook tit chimin On the other side it was said that by this means the Defendant might purchase a hundred or a thousand Acres adjoyning to Black-acre to which he prescribes to have a way by which means the Plaintiff would lose the benefit of his Land and that a Prescription presupposed a grant and ought to be continued according to the intent of its original Creation The whole Court agreed to this And Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Warren qui tam c. versus Sayre THe Court agreed in this case that an Information for not coming to Church may be brought upon the Stat. of 23 Eliz. only reciting the clause in it that has reference to Stat. 1. of the Queen and that this is the best and surest way of declaring Term. Hill 26 27 Car. II. in Com. Banco Williamson Hancock Hill 24 25 Car. 2. Rot. 679. TEnant for life the Remainder in Tail Tenant for life levies a Fine to J. S. and his heirs to the use of himself for years and after to the use of Hannah and Susan Prinne and their heirs if such a sum of money were unpaid by the Conusor and if the money were paid then to the use of the Conisor and his heirs And this Fine was with general warranty The Tenant for life died the money unpaid and the warranty descended upon the Remainder-man in Tail And the question was whether the Remainder-man were bound by this warranty or not Serjeant Maynard argued that because the Estate of the Land is transferred in the Post before the warranty attaches in the Remainder-man that therefore it should be no Bar. He agréed that a man that comes in by the limitation of an use shall be an Assignee within the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 34. by an equitable construction of the Statute because he comes in by the limitation of the party and not purely by Act in Law but this case of ours is upon a collateral garranty which is a positive Law and a thing so remote from solid reason and equity that it is not to be stretch'd beyond the maxime That the Cestuy que use in this case shall not vouch is confessed on all hands and there is the same reason why he should not rebutt He said the resolution mentioned in Lincoln Colledge case was not in the case nor could be the warranty there was a particular warranty contra tunc Abbatem Westmonasteriensem successores suos which Abby was dissolved long before that case came in question He said Justice Jones upon the arguing of Spirt Bence's case reported in Cr. Car. said that he had been present at the Iudgment in Lincoln Colledge case and that there was no such resolution as is there reported Serjeant Baldwin argued on the other side that at the Common Law many persons might rebutt that could not take advantage of a warranty by way of Voucher as the Lord by Escheat the Lord of a Villain a Stranger a Tenant in possession 35 Ass placito 9. 11 Ass placito 3. 45 Ed. 3. 18. placito 11. 42 Ed. 3. 19. b. a fortiori he said he that is in by the limitation of an use being in by the act of the party though the Law co-operate with it to perfect the assurance shall rebutt The Court was of Opinion that the Cestuy que use might rebutt that though Voucher lies in privity an abater or intruder might rebutt F. N. B. 135. 1 Inst 385. As to Serjeant Maynard's Objection that he is in the Post they said they had adjudged lately in Fowle Doble's case that a Cestuy que use might rebutt So it was held in Spirt Bence's case Cr. Car. and in Jones 199. Kendal Foxe's case That Report in Lincoln Colledge case whether there were any resolution in the case or no is founded upon so good reason that Conveyances since have gone according to it Atkyns said there was a difficult clause in the Statute of Uses viz. That all and singular person and persons c. which at any time on this side the first day of May c. 1536. c. shall have c. By this clause they that came in by the limitation of an use before that day were to have the like advantages by Voucher or Rebutter as if they had béen within the degrees If the Parliament thought it reasonable why was it limited to that time Certainly the makers of that Law intended to destroy Vses utterly and that there should not be for the future any Conveyances to Vses But they supposed that it would be some small time before all people would take notice of the Statute and make their Conveyances accordingly and that might be the reason of this clause But since contrary to their expectations Vses are continued he could easily be satisfied he said that Cestuy que use should rebutt Wyndham was of Opinion that Cestuy que use might vouch he said there was no Authority against it but only Opinions obiter They all agreed for the Defendant and Iudgment was given accordingly Rogers versus Davenant Parson of White-Chappel NOrth Chief Justice The Spiritual Court may compell Parishioners to repair their Parish-Church if it be out of Repair and may Excommunicate every one of them till it be repaired and those that are willing to contribute must be absolved till the greater part of them agrée to assess a Tax but the Court cannot assess them towards it it is like to a Bridge or a High-way a Distringas shall issue against the Inhabitants to make them Repair it but neither the Kings Court nor the Iustices of Peace can impose a Tax for it Wyndham Atkyns Ellis accorded The Church-Wardens cannot none but a Parliament can impose a Tax but the greater part of the Parish can make a By-Law and to this purpose they are a Corporation But if a Tax be illegally imposed as by a Commission from the Bishop to the Parson and some of the Parishioners to assess a Tax yet if it be assented to and confirmed by the major part of the Parishioners they in the Spiritual Court may proceed to Excommunicate those that refuse to pay it Compton Vx. versus Ireland Mich. 26 Car. 2. Rot. 691. SCire facias by the Plaintiffs as Executors to have Execution of a Iudgment
desirous to have the money paid before the day took another Bond for the same sum payable sooner and that this was in full satisfaction of the former Bond upon this plea the Plaintiff took issue and it was found against him And Serjeant Maynard moved that notwithstanding this Verdict Iudgment ought to be given for the Plaintiff for that the Defendant by his plea has confessed the Action and to say that another Bond was given in satisfaction is nothing to the purpose Hob. 68. so that upon the whole it appears that the Plaintiff has the right and he ought to have Iudgment 2 Cr. 139. 8 Co. 93. a. and day was given to shew cause why the Plaintiff should not have Iudgment Vide infra hoc eodem Termino Savill against the Hundred of THe Plaintiff in an Action upon the Stat. of Wint. had a Verdict and it was moved in arrest of Iudgment that the Felonious taking is not said to be in the High-way 2 Cro. 469 675. North. An Action lies upon the Stat. of Winton though the Robbery be not committed in the High-way to which the Court-agreed and the Prothonotaries said that the Entries were frequently so Per quod c. Calthrop Philippo ONe J. S. had recovered a Debt against Calthrop and procured a Writ of Execution to Philippo the then Sheriff of D. but before that Writ was executed Calthrop procured a Supersedeas to the same Philippo who when his year was out delivered over all the Writs to the new Sheriff save this Supersedeas which not being delivered J. S. procures a new Writ of Execution to the new Sheriff upon which the Goods of Calthrop being taken he brings his Action against Philippo for not delivering over the Supersedeas After a Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in arrest of Iudgment that the Action would not lie for that the Sheriff is not bound to deliver over a Supersedeas 1. Because it is not a Writ that has a return 2. Because it is only the Sheriffs Warrant for not obeying the Writ of Execution The Prothonotaries said that the course was to take out a new Writ to the new Sheriff Serjeant Strode argued that the Supersedeas ought to be delivered over because the Kings Writ to the old Sheriff is Quod Com' praedict ' cum pertinentiis uno cum rotulis brevibus memorandis omnibus officium illud tangentibus quae in custodia sua existunt liberet c. Reg. 295. 3 Co. 72. Westby's case Besides the Supersedeas is for the Defendants benefit and there is no reason why the Capias should be delivered over which is for the Plaintiffs benefit and not the Supersedeas which is for the Defendants And he said an Action will lie for not delilivering over some Writs to the new Sheriff though those Writs are not returnable as a Writ of Estrepement The Court inclined to his Opinion but it was adjourned to a further day on which day it was not moved Bascawin Herle versus Cooke THo Cook granted a Rent-charge of 200 l. per annum to Bascawin Herle for the life of Mary Cook habend ' to them their heirs and assigns ad opus usum of Mary and in the Indenture covenanted to pay the rent ad opus usum of Mary Bascawin Herle upon this bring an Action of Covenant and assign the breach in not paying the Rent to themselves ad opus usum of Mary The Defendant demurs 1. Because the words in which the breach is assign'd contain a negative pregnant Baldwin for the Plaintiff we assign the breach in the words of the Covenant Cur ' accord 2. Because the Plaintiff does not say that the money was not paid to Mary it would satisfie the Covenant 3. This Rent-charge is executed to Mary by the Stat. of Uses and she ought to have distrained for it for she having a remedy the Plaintiffs out of whom the Rent is transferred by the Statute cannot bring this Action Hereupon two questions were made 1. Whether this remedy by Action of Covenant be transferred to Mary by the Stat. of Uses or not And 2dly if not whether the Covenant were discharged or not North Wyndham When the Statute transfers an Estate it transfers together with it such remedies only as by Law are incident to that Estate and not collateral ones Atkyns accordant There is a clause in the Statute of 27 H. 8. c. 10. which gives the Cestuy que use of a Rent all such remedies as he would have had if the Rent had been actually and really granted to him but that has place only where one is seized of Lands in trust that another shall have a Rent out of them not where a Rent is granted to one to the use of another They agreed also that the Covenant was not discharged And gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff Nisi c. Higden versus VVhitechurch Executor of Dethicke A Udita Querela The Plaintiff declares that himself and one Prettyman became bound to the Testator for the payment of a certain sum that in an Action brought against him he was Outlawed that Dethick afterward brought another Action upon the same Bond against Prettyman and had Iudgment that Prettyman was taken by a Cap. ad satisfaciend ' and imprisoned and paid the Debt and was released by Dethick's consent upon this matter the Plaintiff here prays to be relieved against this Iudgment and Outlawry The Defendant protestando that the Debt was not satisfied pleads the Outlawry in disability The Plaintiff demurs Baldw. for the Plaintiff Non datur exceptio ejus rei cujus petitur dissolutio He resembled this to the cases of bringing a Writ of Error or Attaint in neither of which Outlawry is pleadable 3 Cr. 225. 7 H. 4. 39. 7 H. 6. 44. Seyse contra Outlawry is a good plea in Audita querela 2 Cr. 425. 8 Co. 141. this case is not within the maxime that has been cited a writ of Error and Attaint is within it for in both them the Iudgment it self is to be reversed But in an Audita querela you admit the Iudgment to be good only upon some equitable matter arising since you pray that no Execution may be upon it Vide 6 Ed. 4. 9. b. Jason Kite's case Mich. 12 Car. 2. Rot. 385. Adj. Pasch 13. Cur ' accord ' If the Iudgment had been erroneous and a writ of Error had been brought the Outlawry which was but a superstructure would fall by consequence but an Audita querela meddles not with the Iudgment the Plaintiff here has no remedy but to sue out his Charter of Pardon Blythe Hill supra 221. THe case being moved again appeared to be thus viz. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt upon a Bond against the Defendant as heir to the Obligor The Defendant pleaded that the Obligor his Ancestor dyed intestate and that one J. S. had taken out Letters of Administration and had given the Plaintiff
Windham and Scroggs contr for that the Iury are the sole Iudges of the damages At another day it was moved in arrest of Iudgment That the words are not actionable And of that Opinion was Atkyns But North Windham Scroggs contr And so the Plaintiff had Iudgment Atkyns The occasion of the making of the Stat. of 5 Rich. 2. appears in Sir Robert Cotton's Abr. of the Records of the Tower fol. 173. num 9. 10. he says there That upon the opening of that Parliament the Bishop of St. Davids in a Speech to both Houses declared the Causes of its being summoned and that amongst the rest one of them was to have some restraint laid upon Slanderers and Sowers of Discord which sort of men were then taken notice of to be very frequent Ex malis moribus bonae Leges The Preamble of the Act mentions false News and horrible Lyes c. of things which by the said Prelates c. were never said done nor thought So that it seems designed against telling stories by way of News concerning them The Stat. does not make or declare any new Offence Nor does it inflict any new Punishment All that seems to be new is this 1. The Offence receives an aggravation because it is now an Offence against a positive Law and consequently deserves a greater Punishment as it is held in our Books That if the King prohibit by his Proclamation a thing prohibited by Law that the Offence receives an aggravation by being against the King's Proclamation 2. Though there be no express Action given to the party grieved yet by operation of Law the Action accrews For when ever a Statute prohibits any thing he that finds himself grieved may have an Action upon the Statute 10 Rep. 75. 12 Rep. 100. there this very Case upon this Statute was agreed on by the Iudges So that that is the second new thing viz. a further remedy An Action upon the Stat. 3. Since the Stat. the party may have an Action in the tam quam Which he could not have before Now every lye or falsity is not within the Stat. It must be horrible as well as false We find upon another occasion such a like distinction It was held in the 12 Rep. 83. That the High-Commission Court could not punish Adultery because they had Iurisdiction to punish enormous Offendors only So that great and horrible are words of distinction Again it extends not to small matters because of the ill consequences mentioned Debates and Discord betwixt the said Lords c. great peril to the Realm and quick subversion and destruction of the same Every word imports an aggravation The Stat. does not extend to words that do not agree with this Description and that cannot by any reasonable probability have such dire effects The Cases upon this Statute are but few and late in respect of the antiquity of the Act. It was made Anno 1379. for a long time after we hear no tydings of an Action grounded upon it And by reading it one would imagine that the makers of it never intended that any should be But the Action arises by operation of Law not from the words of the Act nor their intention that made it The first Case that we find of an Action brought upon it is in 13 H. 7. which is 120 years after the Law was made so that we have no contemporanea expositio which we often affect That Case is in Keil 26. the next in 4 H. 8. where the Duke of Buckingham recovered 40 l. against one Lucas for saying that the Duke had no more conscience than a Dog and so he got money he cared not how he came by it He cited other Cases and said he observed That where the words were general the Iudges did not ordinarily admit them to be actionable otherwise when they charged a Peer with any particular miscarriage Serjeant Maynard observed well That the Nobility and great men are equally coucerned on the Defendants part for Actions upon this Statute lie against them as well as against the meanest Subject Acts of Parliament have been tender of racking the King's Subjects for words And the Scripture discountenances mens being made Transgressors for a word I observe that there is not one case to be met with in which upon a motion in arrest of Iudgment in such an Action as this the Defendant has prevailed The Court hath sometimes been divided the matter compounded the Action has abated by death c. but a positive Rule that Iudgment should be arrested we find not So that it is time to make a President and fix some Rules according to which men may demean themselves in converse with great persons Misera est servitus ubi jus est vagum Since we have obtained no Rules from our Predecessors in Actions upon this Statute we had best go by the same Rules that they did in other Actions for words In them when they grew frequent some bonnds and limits were set by which they endeavoured to make these Law certain The Actions now encrease The stream seems to be running that way I think it is our part to obviate the mischief So he was of Opinion That the Iudgment ought to be arrested but the Court gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff North. There are three sorts of Hab. Corp. in this Court 1. Hab. Corp. ad respondendum and that is when a man hath a cause of suit against one that is in prison he may bring him up hither by Hab. Corp. and charge him with a Declaration at his own suit 2. There is a Hab. Corp. ad faciendum recipiendum and that Defendants may have that are sued in Courts below to remove their Causes before us Both these Hab. Corp. are with relation to the suits properly belonging to the Court of Common Pleas. So if an inferiour Court will proceed against the Law in a thing of which we have Conisance and commit a man we may discharge him upon a Hab. Corp. this is still with relation to Common Pleas. A third sort of Hab. Corp. is for priviledged Persons But a Hab. Corp. ad subjiciendum is not warranted by any Presidents that I have seen Term. Pasch 29 Car. II. in Communi Banco Hall Booth NOrth In Actions of Debt c. the first Process is a Summons if the Defendant appears not upon that a Cap. goes and then we hold him to Bail The reason of Bail is upon a supposition of Law that the Defendant flies the Iudgment of the Law And this supposition is grounded upon his not appearing at the first For if he appear upon the Summons no Bail is required And this is the reason why it is held against the Law for any inferiour Court to issue out a Capias for the first Process For the liberty of a man is highly valued in the Law and no man ought to be abridged of it without some default in him A Church is in decay the Bishops Court must
300 l. is as a penalty imposed upon him if he refuse to make such a Grant And if he shall not c. instead of the word not put the words refuse to c. and the case will be out of doubt Besides the annuity to be granted is but 20 l. per annum for a life and 300 l. in money is more then the value of it so that it cannot be intended a sum to be paid in lieu or recompence of it but must be taken for a penalty But suppose it to be a dis-junctive Condition then we ought to have an Election whether we would do but as this case is the Plaintiff by his negligence has deprived us of our Election For Authorities he cited Gerningham Ewer's case Cr. Eliz. 396. 539. 4 H. 7. fol. 4. 5 Co. 21. b. Laughter's case Warner Whyte's case resolved the day before in the Kings Bench. There is a rule laid down in Morecomb's case in Moors Reports 645. which makes against me but the resolution of that case is Law and there needed no such rule That case goes upon the reason of Lambs case 5 Rep. when a man is obliged to pay such a sum as J. S. shall assess J. S. being a meer stranger the Obligor takes upon him that J. S. shall assess a sum in certain and he must procure him to do it or he forfeits his Obligation But in our case nothing is to be done but by the Obligee himself Pemberton contra He argued that the Obligors Election is not taken away for though no Deed were tendred him he might have got one made and the tender of that would have discharged the Condition of his Bond. Indeed this will put him to charge but he may have an Action of Debt for what he lays out He cited the cases cited by Walmesley in Moor 645. betwixt Milles Wood 41 Eliz. Gowers case 38 39 Eliz. c. North. The case of Warner White adjudged yesterday in the Court of Kings Bench is according to Law the condition there was that J. S. should pay such a sum upon the 25th of December or should appear in Hillary Term after in the Court of Kings Bench. J. S. died after the 25th day of Dec ' and before Hill Term and had paid nothing upon the 25th of December In that case the Condition was not broken by the non-payment and the other part is become impossible by the act of God But I think that if the first part of a Condition be rendred impossible by the act of God that the Obligor is bound to perform the other part But in the case at the bar the Obligors Election is taken away by the act of the Obligee himself And I see no difference betwixt this case and that of Gerningham Ewer in Cr. Eliz. if the Condition of an Obligation be single to make such assurance as shall be advised by the Council of the Obligee there concilium non dedit advisamentum is a good plea and the Obligor is not bound to make an assurance of his own head no more shall he be bound to do it when the Condition is in the dis-junctive to save his Bond. In both cases the Condition refers to the manner of the assurance and it must be made in such manner as the words of the Condition import So he said he was of Opinion against the Plaintiff Wyndham Where the Condition of an Obligation is in the disjunctive the Obligor must have his Election But in this case there is no such thing as a disjunctive till such time as there be a request made to seal a Deed of Annuity and then the Obligor will have an Election either to execute the assurance or to pay the 300 l. but no such request being made it should seem that the Obligor must pay the 300 l. at his peril Atkyns agreed with the Chief Iustice and so did Scroggs wherefore Iudgment was ordered to be entred against the Plaintiff Nisi causa c. within a week Quare impedit The Plaintiff declared upon a grant of the Advowson to his Ancestor and in his Declaration says hic in Cur̄ prolat ' but indéed had not the Deed to shew Serjeant Baldwin brought an Affidavit into Court that the Defendant had gotten the Deéd into his hands and prayed that the Plaintiff may take advantage of a Copy thereof which appear'd in an Inquisition found temp Edw. 6. Cur̄ When an Action of Debt is brought upon a Bond to perform Covenants in a Deed and the Defendant cannot plead Covenants perform'd without the Deed because the Plaintiff has the original deed and perhaps the Defendant took not a Counterpart of it we use to grant imparlances till the Plaintiff bring in the deed And upon Evidence if it be proved that the other party has the deed we admit Copies to be given in Evidence But here the Law requires that the deed be produced you have your remedy for the deed at Law We cannot alter the Law nor ought to grant an emparlance Stead Perryer EJectione firmae A man has a Son called Robert Robert has likewise a Son called Robert The Grandfather deviseth the Land in question to his Son Robert and his heirs Robert the deviseé dies in the devisors life time Afterwards the devisor makes a new publication of the same Will and declares it to be his intention that Robert the Grand-child should take the Land in question per eandem voluntatem instead of his Father and dyed And all this was found by special Verdict upon a Trial betwixt Robert the Grand-child and a Daughter of the elder Brother of Robert the first devisee Pemberton The Land does not pass by this Will the devise to Robert became void by his death and cannot be made good by a republication A publication cannot alter the words of a Will so as to put a new sense upon them Land must pass by Will in writing Robert the Grand-son is not within this Will in writing The Grandfathers intention is not considerable in the case Skipwith contra I agree the case between Brett Rygden in the Commentaries to be Law but there are two great diversities between this case and that 1. There was no new publication 2. In this case Robert the Father and Robert the Son are cognominous He cited Dyer 142 143. Trevilians case Fuller Fuller Cr. Eliz. 422. Moor 353. Cr Eliz. 493. North Atkyns Without question Robert the Grand-child shall take by this Will If he never had had a Son called Robert or if Robert the Son had been dead at the time of making the Will the Grand-child would then without dispute have taken by these words Now a new publication is equivolent to a new writing The Grand-child is not directly within the words of the Will but they are applicable to him He is a Son though he be not begotten by the body of the devisor himself He is a Son with
not bind an Infant neither by Common Law nor 5 Eliz. 1. Cr. 170. yet by this custom it shall in Pasch 21 Jac. B. R. Cole versus Holme there was such an Action against an Apprentice the Defendant pleaded Nonage the Plaintiff replyed the custom of London and that the Indenture of Apprentiship was inrolled as it ought to be c. and this was certified by the Recorder Serjeant Finch to be the custom and thereupon Iudgment was against the Defendant it is a Manuscript Jones The custom ought to have been alledged that he should have an Action of Covenant against him which is not done here and customs shall be taken strictly not by implication Moreover the Plaintiff declares for a loss not yet sustained the term not being ended Cur. The custom is sufficiently alledged to give and make good an Action of Covenant Tale remedium implies it Those words are applicable to all things relating to this matter viz. That the Master may correct him may go to a Iustice of Peace And also may have an Action of Covenant against him V. Hutt 63. 4. as against a man of full age Winch. 63. 4. And though by Common Law or the Statute his Covenant shall not bind him yet by the custom it shall But Twisden desired to sée Offley's Report As to the declaring for the loss of the term part whereof is unexpired though it has beén adjudged to be naught after a Verdict yet in this Case which is upon demurrer it may be helped For the Plaintiff may take damages for the departure only not the loss of service during the term and then it will be well enough Judgment nisi c. Jones versus Powel WOrds spoken of an Attorney Thou canst not read a Declaration per quod c. Cur. The words are actionable though there had been no special damages For they speak him to be ignorant in his Profession and we shall not intend that he had a distemper in his eyes c. Judic pro querente Anonymus THe Defendant in an Action of false Imprisonment justified the taking and imprisoning the Plaintiff by vertue of an Order of Chancery that he should be committed to the Fleet and the Plea judged naught because an Order is not sufficient It ought to have beén an Attachment he should have pleaded Quoddam breve de attachamento c. Osborne versus Walleeden REplevin The Defendant avows in right of his Wife for a Rent-charge devised to her for life by her former Husband But in the Will there was this Clause viz. If she shall marry c. he the Executor shall pay her 100 l. and the rent shall cease and return to the Executor She doth marry and the Executor does not pay the 100 l. The question was Whether the rent should cease before the 100 l. be paid Jones for the Plaintiff the rent ceaseth immediately upon her Marriage and she shall have remedy for the 100 l. in the Spiritual Court If the words had been He shall pay her 100 l. and from that time the rent shall cease It had been otherwise if she had died presently after the marriage her Executor should have had the 100 l. Brewer and Sanders for the Defendant she hath not a present interest in the 100 l. In this very Case the Common Pleas delivered their Opinion That this 100 l. ought to be paid before the rent should cease But for imperfection in the pleading we could not have Iudgment there Roll. She has no present interest in the 100 l. nor can her Executors have any and the rent shall not cease till the payment of it For first It is devised to her for life not during her Widowhood Secondly The rent issues out of the Inheritance and by the construction of the Will it shall go to the Executor for by cease in the Will is meant cease as to the Wife and the Executor is in nature of Purchasor and ought to pay the money before he has the rent and he ought to pay it out of his own Estate if he will have the rent For otherwise if it be lookt upon as a Legacy if he have no Assets she shall be immediately stript of her rent and have nothing Twisden I think the Divisors meaning was to give her a present interest in the 100 l. and if so the rent must cease presently upon the marriage But since it is to be issuing out of the Inheritance it is doubtful And since my Brothers are both of Opinion for the Avowant let him have Iudgment Then it was Objected That the Avowry was ill For it ought to have been in the Wifes name as well as the Husbands and alledged that Roll. 1 part 318. N. num 2. makes a Quaere and séems to be of opinion that Wise versus Bellent which is to the contrary is not Law V. 2 Cr. 442. 3. Twisd That was his Opinion it may be when he was a Student You have in that Work of his a common place which you stand too much upon I value him where he reports Iudgments and Resolutions But otherwise it is nothing but a Collection of Year-Books and little things noted when he made his Common Place Books His private opinion must not warrant or controul us here It has béen adjudged That the Husband alone may avow in right of his Wife Delaval versus Maschall DEbt upon a Bond the Condition whereof was That if J. S. and J. D. Arbitrators did make an Award on or before the 19. of February and if the Defendant should perform it then the Obligation should be void and then follow these words And if they do not make an Award before the 19. of February then I impower them to choose an Umpire and by these Presents bind my self to perform his Award The Defendant pleads That they did not make an Award The Plaintiff replies and sets forth an Award made upon the said 19. of February by an Vmpire chosen by the Arbitrators and alledges a breach thereof The Defendant demurs Sanders for the Defendant Here is no breach of the Condition of the Bond. For that which relates to the performing the Vmpires Award it following those words Then the Obligation shall be void is no part of the Condition and if any Action is to be brought upon that part it ought to be Covenant 2. The Award made by the Vmpire is void because made the 19. of February which was within the time limited to the Arbitrators for their power and the Vmpire could not make an award within that time because their power was not then determined as was lately adjudged in Copping versus Hornar Jones for the Plaintiff The Condition is good as to this part It is all but one Condition A man may make several Defeasances or Conditions to defeat the same Obligation Brook Condition 66. There is a continuance of this Condition It is said I bind my self by these presents which refers to the Lien before in the
tail and the remainder over is so too and both these parties are in aequali gradu to the Devisor and therefore their being both in a parity it would be hard to take the Estate from him to whom and in whose Scale the Law hath thrown the advantage 3 It appears by the body of the Will that the Earl did as really intend it should go over if she married without consent as if she died without Issue for they are both in the same clause There may be as much reason to turn it into a Fee-simple in case as she had died without Issue as in this case For so I doubt the penning of this decretal Order does And 4 I rest upon this It is a Case without a President I remember after that Lanyett's Case had been adjudged that 6 Car. there was a Case I suppose Saunders versus Cornish of a Limitation in Tail Cro 3 part fo 230 it was of a Lease for years and so was adjudged void and then a devise over and it was adjudged void And the Iudges said so far it is gone and we will go no further because we do not know where it will rest I know there is no intrinsical difference in Cases by Presidents But there is a great difference in a Case wherein a man is to make and where a man sees and is to follow a President in the one Case a man is more strictly bound up but in the other he may take a greater liberty and Latitude For if a man be in doubt in aequilibrio concerning a Case whether it be equitable or no in prudence he will determine according as the Presidents have been especially if they have been made by men of good authority for Learning c. and have been continued and pursued Here must be some boundary or we shall go we know not whither It were hard a Court of Equity should do that that is not fit to be done in any Court below a Parliament The Presidents do not come home to the Case Most of them are in case of money Legacies and in some of those Cases we may give allowance in respect of the Law of another forum to which they belong But this is in case of Land only vid ' Swynborne 4. Co. 12. chap. indeed he is no authority but there is a very good Exemplification of this matter 5 I shall consider the allays and circumstances which are observed and offered to qualifie this Case and induce relief 1 'T is said that this clause was only in terrorem and some Witnesses have been examined to prove it But I am not satisfied how collateral averments can be admitted in this case For then how can there be any certainty 2 Cro 145. A Will will be any thing every thing nothing The Statute appointed the Will should be in writing to make a certainty and shall we admit collateral averments and proofs and make it utterly uncertain 2 'T is said in this Case the effect of the Proviso has beén obtained for the Trustees have now declared their consent I must say it is not full for they do not say they would have consented but that possibly such reasons might have been offered as they should have done it And possibly I say not They like good men have only declined the shewing an ineffectual contradicting of a thing which is done and cannot now be recalled undone or altered Besides if there had been but a circumstantial variation the consent afterwards might have been somewhat But here it is in the very substance In the Case before cited at the Bar by Mr. Serjeant Ellis where the consent was to be had in writing and it was had only by Paroll there was great Equity that it should be relieved because it was only a provident circumstance and wisdom of the Devisor viz. for the more firme obliging the party to ask consent which the Devisor considered might be pretended to be had by slight words in ordinary and not solemn Communication or else in passion and heat as in this case when the Plaintiff would not consent to the approved Marriage with the Lord Morpeth the Countess said she might marry where she would Which words imported a neglect of care for the future over the Plaintiff because she would not be ruled by the Countess in accepting the tender of so commendable a Marriage as also for the benefit of the Devisee in the Case aforesaid That in case the Devisee did marry with the consent of the Trustee he might not after through prejudice c. avoid it by denial of such consent and so defeat or perplex the Devisee for want of proof of such his consent 3 'T is said the party is an Infant Why an Infant is bound by a Condition in Fact by Law 't is true we are now in Equity But in Equity since this refers to an Act which she though an Infant is capable of doing viz. to marry it were unreasonable that she should be able to do the Act and not be obliged by Equity to observe the Conditions and Terms which concern and relate to that Act. So that it is all one as if she had been of full age The Statute of Merton cap. 5. provides that Usury shall not run against Infants and yet the same Statute cap. 6. appoints That if an Infant marry without the Licence of his Lord c. he shall forfeit double the value of his Marriage and it is reasonable because Marriage is an Act which he may do by Law while he is under age 4 As to the point of Notice 1 Whether Notice be requisite or no in point of Law I will not determine But I must needs say that it must be referred to Law But 2 If it be not requisite in Law how far a Court of Equity might relieve for want of it I will not now take upon me to determine I will not trench upon matters Gratis of which I know not what will be the consequence But I conceive in this case the Fact is not yet settled whether there were notice or not and it were a hard matter That because no Notice is here proved it should be taken for granted there was none For here are several circumstances that seem to shew there might be Notice and a publick voice in the House or an accidental Intimation c. may possibly be sufficient Notice I shall therefore leave it as a fit thing to be tryed and till that the case in my understanding is not ripe And therefore I will add no more I think this Decree ought to be altered if not set aside But as this Case is there ought to be no relief Vaughan Chief Justice I shall conclude as my Lord Chief Baron did That as this case is there ought to be no relief I will single out this case from several things not material to it as my Lord Chief Baron did c. I think if Land be devised on Condition to pay
neither Keeling If an Infant let you a House shall he not have an Action against you for the Rent Twisd I have known an Action upon the case brought by an Infant upon a promise to pay so much money in consideration that he would permit the Defendant to enjoy such a House it was long insisted upon that this was not a good consideration because not reciprocal for the Infant might avoid his promise if an Action were grounded upon it against him but it was adjudged to be a good consideration and that the Action was maintainable And in the principal case the Court gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff Nisi c. Bear versus Bennett TWisden When a man is arrested and has lain in Prison three Terms and is discharged upon Common bail whether shall the Plaintiff ever hold the Defendant to special Bail afterward for the same cause if he begins anew Keel If he may then may a man be kept in Prison for ever at that rate At last it was agreed that if he would pay the Defendant his Costs for lying so long in prison he should have special Bail Mr. Masters moved for a Prohibition to the Spiritual Court to stay a Suit there against a man for having married his Wives Sisters Daughter alledging the Marriage to be out of the Levitical degrees Cur. Take a Prohibition and demur to it for it is a case of moment Dominus Rex versus Turnith MOved to quash an Indictment upon 5 Eliz. cap. 2. for exercising a Trade in Chesthunt in Hertfordshire not having been an Apprentice to it for seven years because the Statute says they shall proceed at the Quarter-Sessions and the word Quarter is not in the Indictment Twisden That word ought to be in And I believe the using of a Trade in a Country Village as this is is not within the Statute Morton accorded Rainesford It will be very prejudicial to Corporations not to extend the Statute to Villages Twisden I have heard all the Iudges say that they will never extend that Statute further then they needs must Obj. further That there wanted these words sc Ad tunc ibidem onerati jurati for which all the three Iudges Keeling being absent conceived it ought to be quash'd A cause was removed out of London by Habeas Corpus wherein the Plaintiff had declared against the Defendant as a feme sole Merchant and Bartue moved for a Procedendo because he said they could not declare against her here as a feme sole for that she had a Husband Jones contra The Husband may then be joyned with her for he is not beyond Sea Twisd I think a Procedendo must be granted for the cause alledged It was resolved in Langlin Brewin's case in Cro. though not reported by him that if the Wife use the same Trade that her Husband does she is not within the Custom And they are to determine the matter there whether this case be within their Custom perhaps a Victualler as this Trade is is not such a Trade as their Custom will warrant and whether it will warrant it or not is in their Iudgment A Procedendo was granted Tomlin versus Fuller A Special Action on the Case was brought for keeping a passage stopt up so that the Plaintiff could not come to cleanse his Gutter After Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that there ought to have been a request for the opening of it Answ It s true where the Nusance is not by the party himself there must be notice before the Action brought but in this case the wrong began in the Defendants own time Twisden I know this hath been ruled where a man made a Lease of a House with free liberty of ingress c. through part of the Lessors House the Lessor notwithstanding might shut up his doors and was not bound to leave them open for his coming in at one or two of the Clock at night but he must keep good hours And must the Defendant in this case keep his Gate always open expecting him wherefore it seems he ought to have laid a request Cur. It s aided by the Verdict Twisden It is not good at the Common Law and the Defendant might well have demurred for that cause Judgment pro Querente Butler Play UPon a motion for a new Trial in a cause where the matter was upon protesting a Bill of Exchange Serj-Maynard said the protest must be on the day that the money becomes due Twisden It hath been ruled That if a Bill be denied to be paid it must be protested in a reasonable time and that 's within a Fortnight but the Debt is not lost by not doing it on the day A new Trial was denied Hughes Underwood KEeling The very Sealing of the Writ of Error is a Supersedeas to the Execution Twisd There was once a Writ of Error to remove the Record of a Iudgment between such and such but some of the parties names were left out and by my Brother Wyld's advice that Writ not removing the Record they took out Execution But the Court was of Opinion that though the Record was not removed thereby of which yet they said he was not Iudge whether it was or not yet that it so bound up the cause that they could not take out Execution It is indeed good cause to quash the Writ of Error when it comes up but Execution cannot be taken out Term. Hill 21 22 Car. II. 1669. in B. R. Jefferson Dawson IN a Scire facias upon a Recognisance in Chancery entered into by one Garraway There was a demurrer to part and issue upon part And the question was whether this Court could give Iudgment upon the demurrer Jones The Iudgment upon the demurrer must be given in Chancery The Court of Chancery cannot try an Issue and therefore it is sent hither to be tryed but with the demurrer this Court has nothing to do Indeed the books differ in case of an Issue sent hither out of Chancery whether the Iudgment shall be here or there Keilway says it ought to be given here My Lord Coke in his 4 Inst says it must be given in Chancery But none ever made it a question whether Iudgment upon a demurrer were to be given here or there V. Co. Jurisdiction of Courts fol. 80. Saunders contra When there is a demurrer upon part and Issue upon part the Record being here this Court ought to give Iudgment because there can be but one Execution Keeling If the Record come hither entirely we cannot send it back again I cannot find one Authority that the Record shall be removed from hence He cited Keilway 941. 21 H. 7. Co. 2. 12. Co. Entries 678. 24 Ed. 3. fol. 65. there it is held that Iudgment shall be given here upon a demurrer Now if it must not be given here there must be two Executions for the same thing or else they must loose half for they can
a disadvantage to the party that owed the money besides there is an uncertainty whither or to whom he should send Twisd Mittere prosequi is well enough for the Plaintiff must be at charge in it Keeling Certainly it ought to have been omitteret and if it be so in the Office-book we will mend it Twisden This being after a Verdict if you mend it they must have a new Trial for then it becomes another promise Jones moved for Iudgment and said he found the word mitto did signifie to send forbear cease or let alone as mitte me quaeso I pray let me alone in Terence And in the Latine and English Dictionary it hath the sense of forbearing Keeling I think the consideration not good unless the word mitto will admit of that sense If it have a propriety of sense to signifie forbear in reference to things as well as persons it will be well Whereupon the Dictionary being brought it was found to bear that sense And Twisden said if a word will bear divers senses the best ought to be taken after a Verdict Court Let the Plaintiff take his Iudgment Richards Hodges DEbt upon a Bond. The Condition was to save a Parish harmless from the charge of a Bastard-child The Defendant pleaded Non damnificatus The Plaintiff replies that the Parish laid out three shillings for keeping the Child The Defendant rejoyns that he tendred the money and the Plaintiff paid it de injuria sua propria Whereupon it was demurred the question being whether this re-joynder were a departure or no from the Bar Saunders It is a good Rejoynder for in our Bar we say that the Parish is not damnified that is not damnified within the intent of the Condition If I am to save a man harmless and he will voluntarily run himself into trouble the Condition of my Bond is not broken And so our Rejoynder is pursuant to our Bar and shows that there is no such damnification as can charge us Twisden The Rejoynder is a departure as in an Action of Covenant for payment of Rent if the Defendant pleads performance and the Plaintiff reply that the Rent is unpaid for the Defendant to rejoyn that it was never demanded is a departure You should have pleaded thus viz. that non fuit damnificat till such a time and that then you offered to take care of the Child and tendred c. Iudgment for the Plaintiff Nisi c. Smith Lluellyn al. Commission of Sewers THey were brought into Court by Attachment because they proceeded to Fine a person after a Certiorari delivered Twisd Sir Anthony Mildmay was a Commissioner of Sewers and for not obeying a Certiorari was Indicted of a Praemunire and was fain to get the Kings pardon And I have known that upon an unmannerly receit of a Prohibition they have been bound to the good Behaviour Keeling When there are Informations exhibited against you and you are fined a 1000 l. a man which is less then it was in King Edward the Third's time for then a 1000 l. was a great deal more then it is now you will find what it is to disobey the Kings Writ Afterwards they appeared again and Coleman said the first Writ was only to remove Presentments the second to remove Orders and we have made two Returns the one of Presentments the other of Orders A general Writ might have had a general Return Keeling Before you file the Return let a clause of the Statute of 13 Eliz. cap. 9. be read which being done he said that by the Statute of 23 Henr. 8. no Orders of the Commissioners of Sewers are binding without the Royal Assent now this Statute makes them binding without it and enacts that they shall not be Reverst but by other Commissioners Yet it never was doubted but that this Court might question the Legality of their Orders notwithstanding And you cannot oust the Iurisdiction of this Court without particular words in Acts of Parliament There is no Iurisdiction that is uncontroulable by this Court Sir Henry Hungate's case was a famous case and we know what was done in it Morton Since the making this Statute of Eliz. were those cases in my Lord Coke's Reports adjudged concerning Chester Mills If Commissioners exceed their Iurisdiction where are such matters to be reformed but in this Court If any Court in England of an inferiour Iurisdiction exceed their bounds we can grant a Prohibition Twisd I have known it ruled in 23 Car. 1. That the Statute of 13 Eliz. cap. 9. where it is said there shall be no Supersedeas c. hath no reference to this Court but only to the Chancery But this is a Certiorari whereby the King doth command the Cause to be removed voluit that it be determined here and no where else So the Court fined them for not obeying two Certioraries but fining them that brought them 5 l. a piece Jones moved That one who was Partner with his Brother a Bankrupt being Arrested might be ordered to put in Bail for the Bankrupt as well as for himself Twisden If there are two Partners and one breaks you shall not charge the other with the whole because it is ex maleficio but if there are two Partners and one of them dye the Survivor shall be charged for the whole In this case you have admitted him no Partner by Swearing him before the Commissioners of Bankrupts So not granted Rawlin's Case MOved by Sergeant Scroggs That Rawlins having personated one Spicer in acknowledging a Iudgment that therefore the Iudgment might be set aside Twisden The Statute that makes it Felony does not provide that the Iudgment shall be vacated One Tymberly escaped with his life very narrowly for he had personated another in giving Bail but the Bail was not filed Then he moved that the Defendant had paid the Fées of the Execution which the Plaintiff ought to have done So the Court granted an Attachment against the Bayliff Taylor Wells TRover Conversion decem parium tegularum valorum Anglice of ten pair of Curtains and Valons Obj. That it is not certain what is meant by a pair whether so many two's or so many Sets and that in Web Washburn's case 1652. four pair of Hangings held not good Twisden I remember that a pair of Hangings has been held naught Trover Convers pro decem Ovibus Agnis not expressing how many Ewes and how many Lambs ruled naught Another Action of Trover de velis not saying how many held to be naught It was urged that ten pair of Curtains and Valons is certain enough for by pair shall be understood two and so there are Twenty in all If it be objected that it does not appear how many of each I answer the words ten pair shall go to both Besides it is after a Verdict and therefore ought to be made good if by any reasonable construction it may If it had been ten Sets or ten Suits then without
of the great Sessions have power to try all Murthers as the Iudges here have and the Statute of 26 H. 8. for the Trial of Murthers in the next English County was made before that of the 34 H. 8. Twisden I never yet heard that the Statute of 34 H. 8. had repealed that of 26 Henr. 8. It is true the Iudges of the Grand Sessions have power but the Statute that gives it them does not exclude this Court. To be moved when the Chief Iustice should be in Court Franklyn's Case FRanklyn was brought into Court by Habeas Corpus and the Return being read it appeared that he was committed as a Preacher at Seditious Conventicles Coleman prayed he might be discharged he said this Commitment must be upon the Oxford Act for the last Act only orders a Conviction and the Act for Vniformity Commitment only after the Bishops Certificate And the Oxford Act provides that it shall be done by two Iustices of the Peace upon Oath made before them and in this Return but one Iustice of Peace is named for Sir William Palmer is mentioned as Deputy Lieutenant and you will not intend him to be a Iustice of Peace Nor does it appear that there was any Oath made before them Twisden Vpon the Statute of the 18th of the Queen that appoints that two Iustices shall make Orders for the keeping of Bastard-children whereof one to be of the Quorum I have got many of them quash'd because it was not exprest that one of them was of the Quorum Whereupon Franklyn was discharged Vpon a motion for time to plead in a great cause about Brandy Twisden said if it be in Bar you cannot demand Oyer of the Letters Patents the next Term but if it be in a Replication you may because you mention the precedent Term in the Bar but not in the Replication Yard Ford. MOved by Jones in Arrest of Iudgment an Action upon the Case was brought for keeping a Market without Warrant it being in prejudice of the Plaintiffs Market He moved that the Action would not lie because the Defendant did not keep his Market on the same day that the Plaintiff kept his which he said is implied in the case in 2 Rolls 140. Saunders contra Vpon a Writ of Ad quod dampnum they enquire of any Markets generally though not held the same day In this case though the Defendants Market be not held the same day that ours is yet it is a damage to us in forestalling our Market Twisden I have not observed that the day makes any difference If I have a Fair or Market and one will erect another to my prejudice an Action will lye and so of a Ferry It s true for one to set up a School by mine is damnum absque injuria Ordered to be moved again Pawlett moved in Trespass that the Defendant pleaded in Bar that he had paid 3 l. and made a promise to pay so much more in satisfaction and said it was a good plea and did amount to an accord with satisfaction an Action being but a Contract which this was Twisden An Accord executed is pleadable in Bar but Executory not Twisden There are two clauses in the Statute of Vsury if there be a corrupt agreement at the time of the lending of the money then the Bonds and all the Assurances are void but if the agreement be good and afterward he receives more than he ought then he forfeits the treble value Bonnefield HE was brought into Court upon a Cap. Excom and it was urged by Pawlett that he might be delivered for that his name was Bonnefield and the Cap. Excom was against one Bromfield Twisden You cannot plead that here to a Cap. Excom You have no day in Court and we cannot Bail upon this but you may bring your Action of False Imprisonment Caterall Marshall ACtion upon the Case wherein the Plaintiff declares that in consideration that he would give the Defennant a Bond of sufficient penalty to save him harmless he would c. and sets forth that he gave him a Bond with sufficient penalty but does not eppress what the penalty was This was moved in Arrest of Iudgment Jones After a Verdict it is good enough as in the case in Hob. 69. Twisd If it had been upon a Demurrer I should not have doubted but that it had been naught Rainsford Morton But the Iury have judged the penalty to be reasonable and have found the matter of fact Twisden The Iury are not Iudges what is reasonable and what unreasonable but this is after a Verdict And so the Iudgment was affirm'd the cause coming into the Kings Bench upon a Writ of Error Martin Delboe AN Action upon the Case setting forth that the Defendant was a Merchant and transmitted several Goods beyond Sea and promised the Plaintiff that if he would give him so much money he would pay him so much out of the proceed of such a parcel of Goods as he was to receive from beyond Sea The Defendant pleaded the Statute of Limitations and doth not say non assumpsit infra sex annos but that the cause of Action did not arise within six years The Plaintiff demurs because the cause is betwéen Merchants c. Sympson The plea is good Accounts within the Statute must be understood of those that remain in the nature of Accounts now this is a sum certain Jones accorded This is an Action upon the Case and an Action upon the Case betwéen Merchants is not within the exception And the Defendant has pleaded well in saying that the cause of Action did not arise within six years for the cause of Action ariseth from the time of the Ships coming into Port and the six years are to be reckoned from that time Twisden I never knew but that the word Accounts in the Statute was taken only for Actions of account An insimul computasset brought for a sum certain upon an Account stated though betweén Merchants is not within the Exception So Iudgment was given for the Defendant The King versus Leginham AN Information was exhibited against him for taking unreasonable Distresses of several of his Tenants Jones moved in arrest of Iudgment that an Information would not lye for such cause Marlebr cap. 4. saith that if the Lord take an unreasonable Distress he shall be amerced so that an Information will not lye And my Lord Coke upon Magna Carta says the party grieved may have his Action upon the Statute but admit an Information would lye yet it ought to have been more particular and to have named the Tenants it is not sufficient to say in general that he took unreasonable Distresses of several of his Tenants And the second part of the Information viz. that he is communis oppressor is not sufficient Rolls 79. Moor 451. Twisden It hath so been adjudged that to lay in an Information that a man is communis oppressor is not good And a Lord cannot be indicted
Hales in that case said that upon a penalty you need not make a demand as in case of a nomnine poenae as if I bind my self to pay 20 l. on such a day and in default thereof to pay 40 l. the 40 l. must be paid without any demand Hales If a man cut and carry away Corn at the same time it is not Felony because it is but one Act but if he cut it and lay it by and carry it away afterwards it is Felony Hales If a Declaration be general Quare clausum fregit and doth not express what Close there the Defendant may mention the Trespass at another day and put the Plaintiff to a new Assignment But if he say Quare clausum vocat Dale fregit c. there the conclusion Quae est eadem transgressio will not help Fitz-gerard Maskall ERror of a Iudgment in the Kings Bench in Ireland the general Error assigned Offered 1. That the Eject was brought de quatuor molendinis without expressing whether they were Wind-mills or Water-mills Hales That is well enough The Presidents in the Register are so Secondly That it was of so many Acres Jampnor ' bruer ' not expressing how many of each Cur ' That hath always been held good It was then objected that the Record was not removed upon which it was ordered to stay Pemberton moved for a Prohibition to the Spiritual Court for that they cited the Minister of Mary-bone which is a Donative to take a faculty of Preaching from the Bishop Hales If the Bishop go about to visit a Donative this Court will grant a Prohibition But if all the pretence be that it is a Chappel and the Chaplain hired and the Bishop send to him that he must not Preach without Licence it may be otherwise Twisden Fitzherbert saith if a Chaplain of the Kings Free-Chappel keep a Concubine the Bishop shall not Visit but the King Hales Indeed whether there be all Ornaments requisite for a Church the Bishop shall not enquire nor shall he punish for not Repairing Originally Free-Chappels were Colledges and some did belong to the King and some to private men And in such a Chappel he that was in was entituled as Incumbent and not a Stipendiary To hear Counsel Moved by Stroud for a Prohibition to the Bishops Court of Exeter because they proceeded to the Probate of a Will that contained Devises of Lands as well as bequests of personal things Hales Their proving the Will signifies nothing as to the Land Stroud urged Denton's case and some other Authorities Hales The Will is entire and we are not advised to grant a Prohibition in such case Hales It is the course of the Exchequer in case of an Outlawry to prefer an Information in the nature of a Trover and Conversion against him that hath the Goods of the party Outlawed Parsons Perns TWo Women were Ioyntenants in Fée One of them made a Charter of Feoffment and delivered the Déed to the Feoffee and said to him being within view of the Land Go enter and take possession but before any actual entry by the Feoffee the feoffor and feoffee entermarry And the question was whether or no this Marriage coming between the delivery of the Deed and the Feoffees Entry had destroyed the operation of the Livery within the view Polynxfen It hath not for the power and authority that the Feoffee hath to enter is coupled with an Interest and not countermandable in Fact and if so not in Law If I grant one of my Horses in my Stable nothing passeth till Election and yet the grant is not revocable so till attornment nothing passeth and yet the Deed is not revocable If the Woman in our case had married a Stranger that would not have been a revocation Perk. 29. I shall compare it to the case of 1 Cro. 284. Burdet versus Now for the interest gotten by the Husband by the Marriage he hath no Estate in his own right If a man be seized in the right of his Wife and the Wife be attainted of Felony the Lord shall enter and oust the Husband he gains nothing but a bare perception of profits till Issue had after Issue had he has an Estate for life Where a man that hath title to enter comes into possession the Law doth execute the Estate to him 7 H. 7. 4. 2 R. 2. tit Attornment 28 Ed. 3. 11. Bro. tit Feoffment 57. Moor fol. 85. 3 Cro. 370. Hales said to the other side you will never get over the case of 38 Ed. 3. My Lord Coke to that case saith that the Marriage without Attornment is an execution of the grant but that I do not believe for the attendance of the Tenant shall not be altered without his consent The effectual part of the Feoffment is Go enter and take possession Twisden Suppose there be two Women seized one of one Acre and another of another Acre and they make an exchange and then one of them marries before Entry shall that defeat the Exchange Hales That is the same case So Iudgment was given accordingly Zouch Clare THomas Tenant for life the Remainder to his first second and third son the Remainder to William for life and then to his first second and third son and the like Remainders to Paul Francis and Edward with Remainders to the first second and third son of every one of them William Paul Francis and Edward levy a Fine to Thomas Paul having Issue two Sons at the time Then Thomas made a Feoffment And it was urged by Mr. Leak that the Remainders were hereby destroyed Hales Suppose A. be Tenant for life the Remainder to B. for life the Remainder to C. for life the Remainder to a Contingent and A. and B. do joyn in a Fine doth not C's right of Entry preserve the contingent Estates If there had béen in this case no Son born the contingent Remainders had béen destroyed but there being a Son born it left in him a right of Entry which supports the Remainders and if we should question that we should question all for that is the very basis of all Conveyances at this day And Iudgment was given accordingly Term. Pasch 24 Car. II. 1672. in B. R. Monke versus Morris Clayton AN Action was brought by Monke against the Defendants and Iudgment was given for him They brought a Writ of Error and the Iudgment was affirmed Jones moved that the money might be brought into Court the Plaintiff being become a Bankrupt Winning ' This case was adjudged in the Common-Pleas viz. a man brought an Action of Debt upon a Bond and had a Verdict and before the day in Bank became a Bankrupt it was moved that that Debt was assigned over and prayed to have the money brought into Court but the Court refused it Coleman We have the very words for us in effect for now it is all one as if Iudgment had been given for the Assignées of the Commissioners Twisden How can we
of Jerman it was held that all my Estate comprehends all my Title and Interest in the Land If a man deviseth all his Inheritance this carries the Fee-simple of his Land and the word all his Estate is as comprehensive as that Hales Wyld By a Grant or Release of totum statum suum the Fee-simple will pass if the words had been all my Tenant-right Lands it had been otherwise but the word Estate is more then so if a man deviseth all his Copy-hold Estate will not all his whole Interest pass Adjornatur Norman Foster AN Action of Debt upon a Bond to perform Covenants in an Indenture of Lease one Covenant is for quiet enjoyment and the Plaintiff assigns for breach that a Stranger entred but does not say that he had Title Hales Habens Titulum at that time would have done your business My Lord Dyer's case is that another entred claiming an Interest but that is not enough for he may claim under the Lessee himself He mentioned the cases in Moor 861. Hob. 34. Tisdale Essex If the Covenant had been to save him harmless against all lawful and unlawful Titles yet it must appear that he that entred did not claim under the Lessee himself Hales If I Covenant that I have a lawful right to grant and that you shall enjoy notwithstanding any claiming under me these are two several Covenants and the first is general and not qualified by the second And so said Wyld and that one Covenant went to the Title and the other to the possession Dyer 328. An Assumpsit to enjoy sine interruptione alicujus that is whether by Title or by Tort a quiet possession being to be intended to be the chief cause of the Contract 3 Leon. 43. 2 Cro. 425 315. 444. Adjornatur Angell convicted of Barretry produced a Pardon which was of all Treasons Murders Felonies and all Penalties Forfeitures and Offences The Court said the words all Offences will pardon all that is not capital Blackburn Graves A Copy-holder surrenders to the use of several persons for years successive the Remainder in Fee to J. S. Wyld An admittance of a particular Tenant is an admittance of all the Remainders to all purposes but only the Lords Fine and if the Custom be that the Fine paid by the first Tenant shall go to all the Remainders then the admittance of the first man is to all intents and purposes an admittance of all that come after In this case the possession of the Lessée for years is the possession of the Remainder-man In one Baker Dereham's case there was a surrender to the use of a man and his Heirs of Copy-hold Land that discended according to the Custom of Borough-English the surrenderee dyed before admittance and the Opinion of the Court was that the right would discend to the youngest according to the Custom Vpon a case moved Hales said That if a Tenant in Common bring a personal Action without his fellow joyning in the Suit the Defendant ought to take advantage of it in abatement but if he plead Not-guilty it shall be good but then he shall recover damages only for a moiety If a Tenant in Common seal a Lease of Ejectment he shall recover but a moiety A Iustice of Peace committed a Brewer for not paying the duty of Excise the Brewer was brought into Court by Habeas Corpus Sympson It ought to appear that he was a common Brewer Hales The Statute doth prohibit the bringing of a Certiorari but not a Habeas Corpus And want of averment of a matter of fact may be amended in a Return in Court and if it be not true at their peril be it So it was mended Money owing upon a Iudgment given in the Kings Court cannot be attached Term. Hill 25 26 Car. II. 1673. in B. R. Baker Bulstrode DEbt upon a Bond. The Condition was to Seal and execute a Release to the Plaintiff The Defendant demurs because the Plaintiff did not alledge in his Declaration a tender of a Release It was urged that the Condition was not to make but only to Seal and Execute c. But per Curiam he is bound to do it without a tender And the word Execute or the word Seal comprehends the making And Lamb's case was cited Warren Prideaux Trin. 24 Car. 2. Rot. 1472. A Distress and Avowry for Toll The prescription was for Toll in consideration of maintaining the Key and keeping a Bushel to measure Salt viz. That in consideration thereof he and those c. have had time out of mind c. a Bushell of Salt of every Ship that comes laden with Salt into Slipper-point For the Avowant it was alledged that the maintaining of the Key is for publick good Co. Magn. Cart. 222. Rolls 265. It s true it is not alledged that they did actually use the Weights and Measures 1 Leon. 231. but it being alledged that the Ship came within Slipper-point it is enough to charge the Plaintiff with the payment As for the Distress taken which is part of the Ships lading viz. Salt it is objected that it cannot be distrained because it is part of the thing from which the duty ariseth but I answer that this is not like to a Distress upon Land nor to be judged of according to the rules allowed in cases of such Distresses There were cited on this side 21 H. 7. 1. 3 Cro. 710. Smith Shepheard Dyer 352. Courtney contra I conceive this prescription ought to have some consideration and to be grounded on a meritorious cause to bind a Subject The keeping of the Bushell is no meritorious cause because it is presumed that the party hath the use of it himself Hales The prescription is not for a Port but a Wharfe If any man will prescribe for a Toll upon the Sea he must alledge a good consideration because by Magna Charta and other Statutes every one hath liberty to go and come upon the Sea without impediment Wyld This Custom or Prescription is laid to have a Bushell of Salt of every Ship that comes within the Slipper-point if a Ship be driven in by stress of weather and goes out again the first opportunity that presents shall that Ship pay Hales If he had said that he had a Port and was bound to maintain that Port and that he and all those whose Estate he had c. that might have been a good Prescription but in this case there must be a special inducement and compensation to the Subject by reason of those Statutes by which all Merchants and others have liberty to come in and go out They inclin'd that the Prescription was not good Anonymus A Trial at Bar concerning the River of Wall-fleet the question was whether had not the right of Fishing there exclusive of all others Hales In case of a private River the Lords having the Soil is a good evidence to prove that he hath the right of Fishing and it puts the
man be accursed barred of the Company or Society of Christians cut off from the body of Christ accounted as a Heathen and Publican for not allowing maintenance to his wife when the Church enjoyns him so to do and shall not this be accounted a sufficient remedy for the wife I fear it is the want of Religion and due credence to the Censures of the Church which occasions this Objection rather then real want of sufficient remedy in Law for her relief The last matter to be answered is rather the Opinion of my Brother Twisden and Tyrrell in their arguments then an Objection in this case namely if an Action upon the case doth not lye against the husband upon the Contract of the wife for necessary Apparel yet an Action of Trover and Conversion doth lye against him for the Stuff and so one way or other the husband must pay the reckoning If the Law should be so it were a Conversion with a witness for then the husband should seem to be sub potestate foeminae he might glory in the words of St. Paul I would have you know that the head of the woman is the man But if the wife shall set his cap or lay his headship in the Gaol it shall not be in the power of the husband to prevent or avoid it one kind of Divorce between husband and wife is when Action of Trespass is brought against them and the husband only appears and Process issue out against the wife until she be waived and outlawed she can never purchase her pardon or reverse the outlawry unless the husband will appear so that if the husband please he is divorced 14 H. 6. 14. a. If the wife be outlawed by erronious Process and the husband will not bring a Writ of Error he may by this way be rid of a Shrew and that doth countervail a Divorce 18 E. 4. 4. a. By these books it appears that the Law puts a power in the husband to be rid of his wife and provides a remedy to tame a Shrew but I never heard before that the Law hath left it in the power of the wife to do so by her husband and I do not remember that my Brothers did vouch any Authority or give any reason for maintenance of their Opinions and therefore I may with freedom deny the Law to be as they have said besides the nature of an Action of Trover proves that it lies not in this case The count is that the Plaintiff was possessed of such Goods and names them as of his own proper Goods and casually left them that the Goods came to the Defendants hands by finding yet he knowing them to belong to the Plaintiff refuseth to deliver them to him but hath converted them to his own use so that an Action is grounded upon a wrong supposed to be done by the Defendant in converting the Goods of the Plaintiff knowingly to his own use against the will of the Plaintiff and that is the reason why the Plaintiff in that Action must prove a demand of the Goods and an actual Conversion by the Defendant or else he fails in the Action In an Action of the Case for that the Defendant did find the Goods of the Plaintiff and delivered them to persons unknown Non deliberavit modo forma is no Plea without saying Not-guilty where the thing rests in Feasance and if the Action be that the Plaintiff was possessed Ut de bonis propriis and the Defendant did find and convert them to his own use It is no plea that the Plaintiff was not possessed Ut de bonis propriis but he must plead Not-guilty to the misdemeanour and give the other matter in Evidence 33 H. 8. Mar. Bro. Action sur le case In Trover the Plaintiff declares that he was possessed of such Goods and casually left them and the Defendant found them and converted them to his own use the Defendant did plead that the Plaintiff did gage the Goods unto him for 10 l. and that he detained the Goods for 10 l. this is no Plea but he ought to plead Not-guilty and give this matter in Evidence for the Action doth suppose a wrong which the Defendant ought to answer 4 E. 6. Action sur le case 113. What wrong is done to the Plaintiff in our case when he himself sells and delivers the Goods It is not like the case where two men by mutual consent Wrastle or play at Football together will an Action of Assault and Battery lye for the one against the other when the act is done by their mutual agreement before hand Put the case of Sale made to a man upon credit and the Vendee promiseth to pay for the Goods at Michaelmas but fails to pay the money accordingly shall the Salesman have Trover against the Vendee because he pays not the money at the day and will the Sale to this Feme Covert alter the case or the Law as to the Action its true that for a Conversion by the woman before Coverture or by the wife during the Coverture an Action of Trover lies against the husband and wife but that is for a Conversion by wrong when she takes the Goods and converts them against the will of the owner 1 Cro. 10. 254. Remis Humfrey's case as in case where a man comes to buy Goods and offers 10 l. for them and the owner agreés to accept the money whereupon the buyer takes the Goods away without payment or delivery by the owner there an Action of Trespass or Trover lies notwithstanding the bargain 21 H. 7. 6. otherwise it is if they agree upon a price and the Vendor takes the Vendee's word for payment and delivers the Goods unto him there the Vendor is put to his Action for the money upon the Contract and shall not bring Trover for the Goods 14 H. 8. 22. If an Infant give or sells Goods and delivers them with his own hand he shall have no Action of Trespass against the Donee or Vendee by reason of the delivery 21 H. 7. 39. 26 H. 8. 2. but if an Infant give or sell Goods and the Vendee or Donee takes them by force of the gift or sale the Infant may have an Action of Trespass against him So in our case If a Feme Covert takes Wares of a Shop-keeper against his will upon pretence of buying them an Action lies against the husband but if the owner sell the Goods to the wife upon trust and delivers the Goods unto her he shall not have an Action of Trespass against the husband by reason of this delivery If a man take my wife and cloath her this amounts unto a gift of the Apparel unto her 11 H. 4. 83. and I may take my wife with the Apparel and no Action lies against me by the same reason when a man delivers Stuff or other Wares to my wife knowing her to be a Femé Covert to make Apparel without my privity or allowance this shall be
less absolute than that of the Lords It doth not appear but that this Commitment was for breach of priviledge but nevertheless if it were so this Court may give relief as appears in Sir John Benions case before cited for the Court which hath the power to judge what is Priviledge hath also power to judge what is Contempt against Priviledge If the Iudges may judge of an Act of Parliament a fortiori they may judge of an Order of the Lords 12 E. 1. Butlers case where he in Reversion brought an Action of Wast and died before Iudgment and his Heir brought an Action for the same Wast and the King and the Lords determined that it did lye and commanded the Iudges to give Iudgment accordingly for the time to come this is published as a Statute by Poulton but in Ryley 93. it appears that it is only an Order of the King and the Lords and that was the cause that the Iudges conceived that they were not bound by it but 39 E. 3. 13. and ever since have adjudged the contrary If it be admitted that for breach of Priviledge the Lords may commit yet it ought to appear on the Commitment that that was the cause for otherwise it may be called a breach of priviledge which is only a refusing to answer to an Action whereof the House of Lords is restrained to hold plea by the Statute 1 H. 4. And for a Contempt committed out of the House they cannot commit for the word Appeal in the Statute extends to all Misdemeanors as it was resolved by all the Iudges in the Earl of Clarendons case 4 Julii 1663. If the Imprisonment be not lawful the Court ought not to remand to his wrongful Imprisonment for that would be an act of Injustice to imprison him de novo Vaughan 156. It doth not appear whether the Contempt was a voluntary act or an omission or an inadvertency and he hath now suffered five months Imprisonment False Imprisonment is not only where the Commitment is unjust but where the deteynor is too long 2 Inst 53. In this case if this Court cannot give remedy peradventure the Imprisonment shall be perpetual for the King as the Law is now taken may Adjourn the Parliament for ten or twenty years But all this is upon supposition that the Session hath continuance but I conceive that by the Kings giving his Royal Assent to several Laws which have been enacted the Session is determined and then the Order for the Imprisonment is also determined Brook tit Parliament 36. Every Session in which the King signs Bills is a day of it self and a Session of it self 1 Car. 1. cap. 7. A special Act is made that the giving of the Royal Assent to several Bills shall not determine the Session 't is true 't is there said to be made for avoiding all doubts In the Statute 16 Car. 1. cap. 1. there is a Proviso to the same purpose And also 12 Car. 2. cap. 1. 11. R. 2. H. 12. By the Opinion of Coke 4 Inst 27. the Royal Assent doth not determine a Session but the Authorities on which he relies do not warrant his Opinion For 1. In the Parliament Roll 1 H. 6. 7. it appears that the Royal Assent was given to the Act for the Reversal of the Attainder of the Members of Parliament the same day that it was given to the other Bills and in the same year the same Parliament assembled again and then it is probable the Members who had been attainted were present and not before 8 R. 2. n. 13 is only a Iudgment in case of Treason by virtue of a power reserved to them on the Statute 25 E. 3. Roll Parliament 7 H. 4. n. 29. and is not an Act of Parliament 14 E. 3. n. 7 8 9. the Aid is first entred on the Roll but upon condition that the King will grant their other Petitions The inference my Lord Coke makes that the Act for the Attainder of Queen Katherine 33 H. 8. was passed before the determination of the Session is an Error for though she was executed during the Session yet it was on a Iudgment given against the Queen by the Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer and the subsequent Act was only an Act of Confirmation but Coke ought to be excused for all his Notes and Papers were taken from him so that this book did not receive his last hand But it is observable that he was one of the Members of Parliament 1 Car. 1. when the special Act was passed And afterwards the Parliament did proceed in that Session only where there was a precedent agreement betwixt the King and the Houses And so concluded that the Order is determined with the Session and the Earl of Shaftesbury ought to be discharged _____ argued to the same effect and said that the Warrant is not sufficient for it doth not appear that it was made by the Iurisdiction that is exercised in the House of Peers for that is coram Rege in Parliamento So that the King and the Commons are present in supposition of Law And the Writ of Error in Parliament is Inspecto Recordo nos de Consilio advisamento Dominorum Spiritual ' Temporalium Commun ' in Parliament ' praed ' existen ' c. It would not be difficult to prove that anciently the Commons did assist there And now it shall be intended that they were present for there can be no averment against the Record The Lords do several acts as a distinct House as the debating of Bills enquiring of Franchises and Priviledges c. And the Warrant in this case being by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal cannot be intended otherwise but it was done by them in their distinct capacity And the Commitment being during the pleasure of the King and of the House of Peers it is manifest that the King is principal and his pleasure ought to be determined in this Court If the Lords should Commit a great Minister of State whose advice is necessary for the King and the Realm it cannot be imagined that the King should be without remedy for his Subject but that he may have him discharged by his Writ out of this Court This present recess is not an ordinary Adjournment for it is entred in the Iournal that the Parliament shall not be assembled at the day of Adjournment but adjourned or prorogued till another day if the King do not signifie his pleasure by Proclamation Some other exceptions were taken to the Retorn First That no Commitment is retorned but only a Warrant to the Constable of the Tower to receive him Secondly The Retorn does not answer the mandate of the Writ for it is to have the body of Anthony Earl of Shaftesbury and the Retorn is of the Warrant for the imprisonment of Anthony Ashly Cooper Earl of Shaftesbury Maynard to maintain the Retorn The House of Lords is the supream Court of the Realm 'T is true this Court is superiour to all Courts
cannot deprive us of the benefit of the Common Law and in the Vice-Chancellors Court they proceed by the Civil Law If you allow this demand there will be a failer of Justice for the Defendants being a Corporation cannot be arrested they can make no stipulation the Vice-Chancellors Court cannot issue Distringas's against there Lands nor can they be excommunicated Presidents we find of Corporations suing there as Plaintiffs in which case the afore-mentioned inconvenience does not ensue but none of Actions brought against Corporations Maynard contra Servants to Colledges and Officers of Corporations have been allowed the priviledge of the Vniversity which they could not have in their own right and if in their Masters right a fortiori their Masters shall enjoy it The word persona in the demand will include a Corporation well enough Vaughan Chief Justice Perhaps the words atque confirmat ' c. in the demand of Conisance are not material for the priviledges of the Vniversity are grounded on their Patents which are good in Law whether confirm'd by Parliament or not The word persona does include Corporations 2 Inst 536. per Coke upon the Statute of 31 Eliz. cap. 7. of Cottages and Inmates A demand of Conisance is not in derogation of the Common Law for the King may by Law grant tenere placita though it may fall out to be in derogation of Westminster-Hall Nor will there be a failer of Justice for when a Corporation is Defendant they make them give Bond and put in Stipulators that they will satisfie the Iudgment and if they do not perform the Condition of their Bond they commit their Bail They have enjoyed these priviledges some hundreds of years ago The rest of the Iudges agreed that the Vniversity ought to have Conisance But Atkyns objected against the form of the demand that the word persona privilegiata cannot comprehend a Corporation in a demand of Conisance howsoever the sense may carry it in an Act of Parliament Ellis Wyndham If neither Schollars nor priviledged persons had been mentioned but an express demand made of Conisance in this particular cause it had then been sufficient and then a fault if it be one in Surplusage and a matter that comes in by way of Preface shall not hurt Atkyns It is not a Preface they lay it as the foundation and ground of their claim The demand was allowed as to matter and form Rogers Danvers DEbt against S. Danvers and D. Danvers Executors of G. Danvers upon a Bond of 100 l. entred into by the Testator The Defendants pleaded that G. Danvers the Testator had acknowledged a Recognisance in the nature of a Statute Staple of 1200 l. to J. S. and that they have no assets ultra c. The Plaintiff replied that D. Danvers one of the Defendants was bound together with the Testator in that Statute to which the Defendants demur Baldwin pro Defendente If this plea were not good we might be doubly charged It is true one of us acknowledged the Statute likewise but in this Action we are sued as Executors And this Statute of 1200 l. was joynt and several so that the Conisee may at his Election either sue the surviving Conisor or the Executors of him that is dead so that the Testators Goods that are in our hands are lyable to this Statute It runs concesserunt se utrumque eorum if it were joynt the charge would survive and then it were against us It is common for Executors upon pleinment administer pleaded to give in Evidence payment of Bonds in which themselves were bound with the Testator and sometimes such persons are made Executors for their security The Opinion of the Court was against the Plaintiff whereupon he prayed leave to discontinue and had it Amie Andrews ASsumpsit The Plaintiff declares that whereas the Father of the Defendant was endebted to him in 20 l. for Malt sold and promised to pay it that the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff would bring two Witnesses before a Iustice of Peace who upon their Oaths should depose that the Defendants Father was so endebted to the Plaintiff and promised payment assumed and promised to pay the money then avers that he did bring two Witnesses c. who did swear c. The Defendant pleaded non Assumpsit which being found against him he moved by Sergeant Baldwin in Arrest of Iudgment that the consideration was not lawful because a Iustice of Peace not having power to administer an Oath in this case it is an extrajudicial Oath and consequently unlawful And Vaughan was of Opinion that every Oath not legally administred and taken is within the Statute against prophane swearing And he said it would be of dangerous consequence to countenance these extrajudicial Oaths for that it would tend to the overthrowing of Legal proofs Wyndham Atkins thought it was not a prophane Oath nor within the Statute of King James because it tended to the determining of a controversie And accordingly the Plaintiff had Iudgment Horton Wilson A Prohibition was prayed to stay a Suit in the Spiritual Court commenced by a Proctor for his Fees Vaughan Wyndham No Court can better judge of the Fees that have been due and usual there then themselves Most of their Fees are appointed by constitutions Provincial and they prove them by them A Proctor lately libell'd in the Spiritual Court for his Fees and amongst other things demanded a groat for every Instrument that had been read in the cause the Client pretended that he ought to have but 4 d. for all They gave Sentence for the Defendant the Plaintiff appealed and then a Prohibition was prayed in the Court of Kings Bench. The Opinion of the Court was that the Libell for his Fees was most proper for the Spiritual Court but that because the Plaintiff there demanded a customary Fee that it ought to be determin'd by Law whether such a Fee were customary or no and accordingly they granted a Prohibition in that case It is like the case of a modus for Tythes for whatever ariseth out of the custom of the Kingdom is properly determinable at Common Law But in this case they were of Opinion that the Spiritual Court ought not to be prohibited and therefore granted a Prohibition quoad some other particulars in the Libell which were of temporal cognisance but not as to the suit for Fees Wyndham said if there had been an actual Contract upon the Retainer the Plaintiff ought to have sued at Law Atkyns thought a Prohibition ought to go for the whole Fées he said had no relation to the Iurisdiction of the Spiritual Court nor to the cause in which the Proctor was retain'd No Suit ought to be suffered in the Spiritual Court when the Plaintiff has a remedy at Law as here he might in an Action upon the case for the Retainer is an implied Contract A difference about the grant of the Office of Register in a Bishops Court shall be
2. Suppose the Defendant had taken issue upon the Statutes being burnt and it had been found to have béen burnt and yet had been found afterwards the Defendant could not have any benefit of this Verdict He said it was a proper case for Equity Slater Carew DEbt upon a Bond. The Condition was that if the Obligor his heirs Executors c. do yearly and every year pay or cause to be paid to Tho. and Dor. his wife during their two lives that then c. the Husband dies and the question was whether or no the payment should continue to the Wife Serjeant Baldwin argued that the money is payable during their lives and the longer liver of them he cited Brudnel's case 5 Rep. and 1 Inst 219. b. that whenever an Interest is secured for lives it is for the lives of them and the longer liver of them and Hill's case adjudged Pasch 4 Jac. Rot. 112. in Warburton's Reports Seyse contra The interest of this Bond is in the Obligee the Husband and Wife are strangers and therefore the payment ceaseth upon the death of either of them and of that Opinion was the whole Court and grounded themselves upon that distinction in Brudnel's case betwixt where the Cestuy que vies have an interest and the cases of collateral limitations They said also that in some cases an interest would not survive as if an Office were granted to two and one of them dyed unless there were words of Survivorship in the Grant So the Plaintiff was barred Term. Mich. 26 Car. II. in Communi Banco Farrer Brooks Administrat of Jo. Brooks THe Plaintiff had Iudgment in Debt against John Brooks the intestate and took out a Fieri facias bearing teste the last day of Trin. Term de bonis catallis of John Brooks before the Execution of which Writ John Brooks dies and Eliz. Brooks administers the Sheriffs Bayliff executes the Writ upon the Intestates Goods in her hands Vpon this Serjeant Baldwin moved the Court for Restitution for that a Fieri facias is a Commission and must be strictly pursued Now the words of the Writ are de bonis of John Brooks and by his death they cease to be his Goods The Plaintiff will be at no prejudice the Goods will still remain lyable to the Iudgment only let the Execution be renewed by Scire facias to which the Administratress may plead somewhat Wyndham The property of the Goods is so bound by the Teste of the Writ as that a Sale made of them bona fide shall be avoided which is a stronger case And since the Intestate himself could not have any plea why should we take care that the Administrator should have time to plead And of that Opinion was all the Court after they had advised with the Iudges of the Kings Bench who informed them that their practice was accordingly But Vaughan faid that in his Opinion it was clearly against the rules of Law But they said there were cases to this purpose in Cr. Car. Rolls Moor c. Liefe Saltingstone's Case EJect ' firmae The case upon a special Verdict was thus viz. Sir Rich. Saltingstone being seized in Fee of Rees-Farm on the 17th day of Febr ' in the 19th year of the King made his Will in writing in which were these words viz. for Rees-Farm in such a place I will and bequeath it to my Wife during her natural life and by her to be disposed of to such of my Children as she shall think fit Sir Richard dyed his Wife entred and sealed such a Writing as this viz. Omnibus Christi fidelibus c. Noveritis that whereas my Husband Sir Richard Salting-stone c. reciting that clause in the Will I do dispose the same in manner following that is to say I dispose it after my decease to my Son Philip and his heirs for ever The Wife died and Philip entred and dyed and left the Lessor of the Plaintiff his Son and heir The question was what Estate Philip took or what Estate the Testator intended should pass out of him This case was argued in Easter-Term last past by Serjeant Scroggs for the Plaintiff and by Serjeant Waller for the Defendant and in Trinity-Term by Serjeant Baldwin for the Plaintiff and Serjeant Newdigate for the Defendant They for the Plaintiff insisted upon the word dispose that when a man deviseth his Land to be disposed by a stranger it has been always held to be a bequeathing of a Feé-simple or at least a power to dispose of the Fee-simple 19 H. 8. 10. Moor 5 Eliz. 57. per Dyer Weston Welshe but they chiefly relyed on Daniel Uply's case in Latch The Defendants Councel urged that the heir at Law ought not to be disinherited without very express words That if the Devisor himself had said in his Will I dispose Rees-Farm to Philip that Philip would have had no more then an Estate for life and what reason is there that the disposal being limited to another should carry a larger Interest then if it had been executed by the Testator himself This Term it was argued at the Bench and by the Iudgments of Ellis Wyndham Atkyns Iustices the Plaintiff had Iudgment they agreed that the Wife took by the Will an Estate for her own life with a power to dispose of the Fee She cannot take a larger Estate to her self by implication then an Estate for life because an Estate for life is given to her by express limitation 1 Bulst 219 220. Whiting Wilkins case For cases resembling the case in question were cited 7 Ed. 6. Brook tit Devise 39. 1 Leon. 159. Daniel Uply's case Clayton's case in Latch It is objected that in Daniel Uply's case there are these words at her will and pleasure to which they answered that if she have a power to dispose according to her discretion and as she her self pleaseth and then expressio eorum quae tacite insunt nihil operatur If I devise that J. S. shall sell my Land he shall sell the Inheritance Kelloway 43 44. 19 H. 8. fol. 9. Where the Devisor gives to another a power to dispose he gives to that person the same power that himself had Vaughan Chief Justice differed in Opinion he said it is plain that the word dispose does not signifie to give for if so then it is evident that the Lessor of the Plaintiff cannot have any title for if the Wife were to give then were the Estate to pass out of her which could not be by such an appointment as she makes here but must be by a legal Conveyance Besides she cannot give what she has not and she has but an Estate for life If then it does not signifie to give what does it signifie let us a little turn the words and a plain certain signification will appear I will and bequeath Rees-Farm to such of my Children as my Wife shall think fit at her disposal at this rate
Defendant should be charged to the value of the whole personal Estate or only for as much as he converted Serjeant Barrell argued That he ought to be charged for the whole because 1. He is made Executor by the Will and he is thereby compleat Executor before Probate to all intents but bringing of Actions 2. He has possession of the Goods and is chargeable in respect of that 3. He caused some to be sold and paid a Debt which is a sufficient administration There is found to discharge him 1. His refusal before the Ordinary But that being after he had so far intermeddled avails nothing Hensloe's case 9 Co. 37. An Executor de son tort he confessed should not be charged for more then he converted and shall discharge himself by delivering over the rest to the rightful Executor But the case is different of a rightful Executor that has taken upon him the burden of the Will The second thing found to discharge him is the granting of Administration to another but that is void because here is a rightful Executor that has administred in which case the Ordinary has no power to grant Administration Hob. 46. Keble Osbaston's case The third thing found to discharge him is the delivery of the Goods over to the Administrator but that will not avail him for himself became responsible by his having possession and he cannot discharge himself by delivering the Goods over to a stranger that has nothing to do with them If it be objected that by this means two persons will be chargeable in respect of the same Goods I answer that payment by either discharges both Cr. Car. Whitmore Porter's case The Court was of Opinion that the committing of Administration in this case is a mere void act A great inconvenience would ensue if men were allowed to Administer as far as they would themselves and then to set up a beggarly Administrator they would pay themselves their own Debts and deliver the residue of the Estate to one that 's worth nothing and cheat the rest of the Creditors If an Administrator bring an Action it is a good plea to say that the Executor made by the Will has administred Accordingly Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Major Stubbing versus Birde Harrison REsolved that a plea may be a good plea in abatement though it contain matter that goes in bar they relyed upon the case in 10 H. 7. fol. 11. which they said was a case in point and Salkell Skelton's case 2 Rolls Reports and Iudgment was given accordingly Term. Trin. 28 Car. II. in Communi Banco PEr North Chief Iustice if there are Accounts betwéen two Merchants and one of them becomes Bankrupt the course is not to make the other who perhaps upon stating the Accounts is found endebted to the Bankrupt to pay the whole that originally was entrusted to him and to put him for the recovery of what the Bankrupt owes him into the same condition with the rest of the Creditors but to make him pay that only which appears due to Bankrupt on the foot of the Account otherwise it will be for Accounts betwixt them after the time of the others becoming Bankrupt if any such were Wing Jackson TRespass Quare vi armis the Defendant insultum fecit upon the Plaintiff was brought in the County Court and Iudgment there given for the Plaintiff But it was reversed here upon a Writ of false Iudgment because the County Court not being a Court of Record cannot fine the Defendant as he ought to be if the cause go against him because of the vi armis in the Declaration but an Action of Trespass without those words will lie in the County Court well enough Anonymus A Vicar libell'd in the Spiritual Court for Tythes of of young Cattle and surmised that the Defendant was seised of Lands in Middlesex of which Parish he was Vicar and that the Defendant had Common in a great Waste called Sedgemore-Common as belonging to his Land in Middlesex and put his Cattle into the said Common The Defendant prayed a Prohibition for that the Land where the Cattle went was not within the Parish of Middlesex The same Plaintiff libelled against the same Defendant for Tythes of Willow-Faggots who suggests to have a Prohibition the payment of 2 d. a year to the Rector for all Tythes of Willow The same Plaintiff libelled also for Tythes of Sheep The Defendant to have a Prohibition suggests that he took them in to feed after the Corn was reaped pro melioratione agriculturae infra terras arabiles non aliter As for the first of these no Prohibition was granted because of that clause in 2 Edw. 6. whereby it is enacted that Tythes of Cattle feeding in a Waste or Common where the Parish is not certainly known shall be paid to the Parson c. of the Parish where the owner of the Cattle lives For the second they held that a modus to the Rector is a good discharge against the Vicar For the third they held that the Parson ought not to have Tythe of the Corn and Sheep too which make the ground more profitable and to yield more Per quod c. Ingram versus Tothill Ren. REplevin Trevill leased to Ingram for 99 years if Joan Ingram his wife Anthony John Ingram his Sons should so long live rendring an Heriot or 40 shillings to the Lessor and his Assigns at the election of the Lessor his heirs and Assigns after their several deaths successive as they are named in the Indenture Trevill deviseth the Reversion John dyes and then Joan dies and the question was whether or no a Heriot were due to the Devisee upon the death of Joan. The Court agreed that the Avowry was faulty because it does not appear thereby whether Anthony Ingram was alive or not at the time of the distress taken for if he were dead the Lease would be determined North. Though Anthony were alive the Devisee of Trevill could not distrain for the Heriot for that the reservation is to him and his Assigns and although the Election to have the Heriot or 40 shillings given to the Lessor his heirs or Assigns yet that will not help the fault in the reservation Ellis There is another fault in the pleading for it is pleaded that Trevill made his Will in writing but it is not said that he dyed so seized for if the Estate of the Devisor were turned to a right at the time of his death the Will could not operate upon it Also it is said that the Avowant made his Election and that the Plaintiff habuit notitiam of his Election but it is not said by whom notice was given for these causes Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff It was urged likewise against the Avowant that no Heriot could be due in this case because Joan did not die first but the course of succession is interrupted and that a Heriot not being due of
another Bond in full satisfaction of the former Vpon this issue being joyned it was found for the Defendant It was said for him that one Bond might be taken in satisfaction of another and 1 Inst 212. b. 30 Ed. 1. 23. Dyer 29. were cited North Chief Iustice If the second Bond had been given by the Obligor himself it would not have discharged the former but here being given by the Administrator so that the Plaintiffs security is bettered and the Administrator chargeable de bonis propriis I conceive it may be a sufficient discharge of the first Bond. Wyndham accord ' else the Administrator and Heir might both be charged Scroggs accord Atkyns There are many Authorities in the point and all directly that one Bond cannot be given in satisfaction of another So is Cr. Eliz. 623 697 716. 727. and many others But yet I hold that Iudgment ought to be given for the Defendant for though it be an impertinent issue yet being found for him he ought by the Statute of 23 H. 8. to have Iudgment If no issue at all had been joyned it would have been otherwise 2 Cro. 44. 575. Serjeant Maynard cites 9 H. 6. but that case was before the Statute so I ground my Iudgment upon that point North. I took it that unapt issues are aided by the Statute but not immaterial ones And so said Scroggs Judic ' pro Defendente Nisi c. Southcot Stowell Intrat ' Hill 25 26 Car. 2. Rot. 1303. COvenant for non-payment of money The case was thus viz. Thomas Southcote had issue two Sons Sir Popham and William and in consideration of the marriage of his Son Sir Popham covenanted to stand seized to the use of Sir Popham and the heirs Males of his body and for default of such issue to the use of the heirs Males of his own body the remainder to his own right heirs Sir Popham dies leaving issue Edward his Son and four Daughters then Thomas the Father died and then Edward died without issue and the question was whether Sir Pophams Daughters or William had the better title Two points were made 1. Whether the limitation of the Remainder to the Heirs Males of the body of the Covenantor were good in its creation or not 2. Admitting it to be good originally whether it could take effect after the death of Edward he leaving Sisters which are general heirs to the Covenantor North Wyndham Atkyns upon admission of the first point were of opinion for William and that he should have the Estate not by purchase but by descent from Edward for after the death of the Father both the Estates in tail were vested in him and he was capable of the remainder by purchase and being once well vested in a purchaser the Estate shall afterwards run in course of descent Scroggs doubted But they all doubted of the first point and would advise V. infr ' Pasch 29 Car. 2. It was said by the Iustices in the Countess of Northumberlands case That if a Knight be but returned on a Iury when a Nobleman is concerned it is not material whether he appear and give his Verdict or no. Also that if there be no other Knights in the County a Serjeant at Law that is a Knight may be returned and his priviledge shall not excuse him Gayle Betts DEbt upon a Bond. The Defendant demands Oyer of the Bond and Condition which was to pay forty pounds per annum quarterly so long as the Defendant should continue Register to the Arch deacon of Colchester and says that the Office was granted to A. B. C. for their lives and that he enjoyed the Office so long as they lived and no longer and that so long he paid the said 40 l. quarterly The Plaintiff replies that the Defendant did enjoy the Office longer and had not paid the money The Defendant demurs supposing the replication was double Cur ' The Replication is not double for the Defendant cannot take issue upon the non-payment of the money that would be a departure from his plea in bar so if upon a plea of nullum fecit arbitrium the Plaintiff in his Replication set forth an award and a breach the Defendant cannot take issue upon the breach for that would be an implicite confession of what he had denied before North. If the Defendant plead that he did not exercise the Office beyond such a time till which time he paid the money the Plaintiff may take issue either upon the payment till that time or reply upon the continuance but if he do the latter he must shew a breach for the continuance is in it self no breach Ellis Yarborough ACtion upon the Case against a Sheriff for an Escape The Plaintiff declares that one G. was endebted to him in 200 l. and that the Defendant took him upon a Latitat at the Plaintiffs suit and afterward suffered him to escape The Defendant pleads the Statute of 23 H. 6. cap. 10. and that he let G. out upon Bail according to the said Statute and that he had taken reasonable Sureties A. B. persons having sufficient within the County The Plaintiff replies and traverses absque hoc that the Defendant took Bail of persons having sufficient within the Country the Defendant demurs Skipwith The Sheriff is compellable to take Bail If he take insufficient Bail the course is for the Court to amerce the Sheriff and not for the party to have an Action upon the case Cr. Eliz. 852. Bowles and Lassell's case and Noy 39. if the Sheriff takes no Bail an Action lies against him and all Actions brought upon this Statute are founded upon this suggestion 3 Cro. 460. Moor. 428. 2 Cro. 280. but if he take insufficient bail it is at his own peril and no Action lies the Sheriff is Iudge of the bail and the sum is at his discretion Cr. Jac. 286. Villers Hastings and so are the number of the persons he may take one two or three as he pleaseth He cited Cr. Eliz. 808. Clifton Web's case Besides the traverse is pregnant for it implies that the persons have sufficient out of the County and the Sheriff is not bound to take bail only of persons having sufficient within the County Serjeant Barrell contra The Court not agreeing in their Opinions upon the matter of Law it was put off to the next Term to be argued Baldwin for the Defendant cited 3 Cr. 624. 152. 2 Cr. 286. Noy 39. Rolls tit Escape 807. Moor 428. that the Sheriff is compellable to let him to bail and is Iudge of the sufficiency of the Sureties The Statute was made for the Prisoners benefit for the mischief before was that the Sheriff not being compellable to bail him would extort money from him to be bailed and the word sufficient is added in favour of the Sheriff and so are the words within the County The Sheriff is not compellable to assign the bail Bond and then if the Plaintiff cannot
against the Infant Sir Heneage Finch Solicitor General The Witnesses who swear that the Earl said He would give the Estate to her prove nothing to the purpose For he did so but upon a condition That they did not hear The after-consent of the Earls or the Countess ought not to make it good which consent at last perhaps was extorted by importunity or compassion For at first they disapproved the Marriage Marrying without consent and dying without issue are coupled in the same Line and the Estate shall as effectually pass over to the Defendant upon the one Limitation as the other For such consent is matter ex post facto and suspitiously to be scan'd For we ought in this Case by Law to proceéd strictly and not derogate from my Lord Newport's intent which plainly appears by the letter of his Will that his Grand-Child should ask consent of such he had thereby appointed to consent before her Marriage were solemnized the actual solemnization of which was an act so permanent that it would admit of no alteration or dissolution An act of such force and efficacy tending clearly and immediatly to the ruine of their Right and Title to the Estate in question and rendring it wholly uncapable of Reviver by any other means than what the Common and Civil Laws of this Realm do permit The post-consent therefore will not avail the Plaintiffs in this Court. Otherwise the Defendant claiming by this Limitation should have indeéd advantage but such as is inconsiderable being liable to alteration by the pleasure of this Court. And for a strict observation of the Testators words the same ought to be in Equity as well as at Law What great respect the old Heathens paid to the Wills of deceased persons may appear in these following Verses Sed Legum Servanda fides suprema voluntas Quod mandat fierique jubet parere necesse est The Countess saying likely in passion That she might marry whom she would c. did not amount to a dormant Warrant to her to marry without consent I am upon Conjecture still that the Plaintiff will insist upon these particulars for it looks as if they would because they read them Doubtless the primary intention of the Clause was in terrorem But the Secondary was that if she offended she should undergo the penalty His intention is to be gathered out of the words only and what ever they say the Earl intended does not press the Question Our Frée-hold is setled in us by vertue of an Act of Parliament I lay it down for a Foundation That a Father may settle his Estate so as that the Issue shall be deprived of it for Disobedience and not be relievable in Equity And now 't is not possible that any Council could advise a man to do it stronger than it is done in this Case And shall a Child break these Bonds and look Disobedience in the face here V. 1 Cr. 476. post 694. 696. If it had been only provided that she should marry with the consent c. and no further it might have been somewhat But since he goes on and makes a Limitation over c. he becomes his own Chancellour and upon this difference are all the Presidents and even those of devising portions viz. devising them over or not as I have understood Infancy can be no excuse in case of the breach of a condition of an Estate in which the Infant is a Purchasor So that nothing rests now in this Case but the point of Notice And why should not the Infant be bound to take notice in this Case as he is to take notice in case of a Remainder wherein he is a Purchasor But if notice be necessary it is not to be tried here now If we had brought an Ejectment and supposing notice had been necessary we had failed in the proof thereof should we have beén har'd for ever as by this perpetual Injunction we should be and shall it be done now without proof If we are not bound to prove Notice at Law much less are we bound to prove it here This Case is Epidemical and concerns all the Parents of England that have or shall have Children that the Obligations which they lay upon their Children may not be cancelled wholly and this Court under colour of Equity protect them in it and be a City of Refuge for relief of such the foulness of whose actions deny them a Sanctuary Pecke If Infancy would excuse such a Clause would signifie nothing For most persons especially of that Sex marry before full age The Lords give no reason why they changed their Opinions Serjeant Fountain Yelverton's Case in 36 Eliz. is a President in the Point for us and Shipdam's Case is much like it This being of a devise Land and that of Money which if it were paid the Land was to go over The grand Objection is That here is an Estate vested by a settlement which is not to be avoided or defeated But I doubt whether a man can lay such a Restraint that there shall not be Relief in any case of Emergency and Contingency Part 712. 3. V. in Leo. 37. It is a part of the fundamental Iustice of the Nation that men should not make Limitations wholly unalterable as by the Common Law men cannot make a Feé unalienable You give relief every day where there are express Clauses that there shall be no relief in Law or Equity where a thing is appointed to be c. without relief in Law or Equity you relieve against them and look upon them to be void In our Case suppose she had married a great Lord or suppose a person had brought notice of the Trustees consent would you not have given relief But secondly I deny the Assumption This Case is not so I agrée it had been well done if they had askt my Lady Newports consent But is there a word in the Will that if the Plaintiff did not he should have no relief in Equity The Estate was devised to my Lady Newport during her life so that the Plaintiff could not be in possession and she might have lived till the Plaintiff was 21 years old Could not my Lady Newport have said Have a care how you marry for you forfeit the Estate if you marry without the consent of two of us three All Ingredients and Circumstances must be taken in a matter of Equity Is it an argument to say He has no Estate therefore take away his Wifes Estate then there will be nothing to maintain her It is agréed That if the Approbation had been precedent it had been well Now she had no notice before the Marriage that it was necessary and when she had that notice she got the approbation and that though subsequent is good enough because it was askt and gotten as soon as she had Notice that she ought to have it The Will is hereby sufficiently observed for the intent of the Will was that she should have such an
Martij prox sequentem the money is payable the same month 112 V. Tit. Survivor The Condition of a Bond runs thus viz. That if the Obligee shall within six months after his Mothers death settle upon the Obligor an Annuity of 20 l. per annum during life if he require the same or if he shall not grant the same if then he shall pay to the Obligor 300 l. within the time aforementioned then the Obligation to be void is this a disjunctive Condition or not 264 265 c. Words allowed to be part of the Condition of a Bond though following these words then the Obligation to be void 274 275 Consideration V. Action upon the Case V. Etiam 284 Constable Moved to quash an Order made by the Justices of Peace for one to serve as Constable 13 Contingent remainder Supported by a Right of Entry 92 Conventicles To meet in a Conventicle whether a breach of the Peace or no 13 Conusance V. Tit. Vniversity Copy Copy of a Deed given in Evidence because the Original was burnt 4 Copies allow'd in evidence 266 Copyhold Tenant for life of a Copyhold He in the remainder entreth upon the Tenant for life and makes a Surrender nothing passeth 199 Tenant for life of a Copyhold suffers a Recovery as Tenant in Fee-simple this is no forfeiture 199 200 Of all Forfeitures committed by Copyholders the Lord only is to take advantage 200 Coroner V. Enquest Corporation What things can a Corporation do without Deed and what not 18 Costs An Executor is not within the Statute to pay Costs occasione dilationis executionis c. 77 Cottage An Enditement for erecting a Cottage contra formam Statuti quasht because it is not said That it was inhabited 295 Covenant Action of Covenant upon the Warranty in a Fine the Plaintiff assigns his Breach that a stranger habens legale jus titulum did enter c. but does not not say that it was by vertue of an Eigne Title 66 67 101 292 293 Covenant to make such an Assurance as Council shall advise 67 Covenant for quiet Enjoyment 101 A man does assignare transponere all the money that shall be allowed by any Order of a Foreign State does an Action of Covenant lie upon these words or not 113 An Action of Covenant lies against a Woman upon a Covenant in a Fine levied by her when she was a Feme Covert 230 231 V. Ibidem exceptions to the pleading in such Action Covenant to stand seized A man Covenants to stand seiz'd to the use of the Heirs of his own body 98 121 159 V. Limitation d' Estates V. Vses County-Courts V. 171 172 215 249. County-Palatine V. 2. Counterplea of Voucher V. 8. Court of Kings Bench. It s Jurisdiction is not ousted without particular words in an Act of Parliament 45 V. Habeas Corpus Cure of Souls What Ecclesiastical Persons have Cure of Souls and what not 11 12 Cur ' advisare vult During a Cur ' adv vult one of the parties dies how must Judgment be entred 37 Custom Custom of a Mannor for the Homage to chuse every year two Surveyors to destroy corrupt Victuals exposed to sale a good Custom 202 A Custom to be discharged of Tythes of Sheep all the year after in consideration of the payment of full Tythes of all the Sheep they have on Candlemas-day 229 D. Damages EXcessive Damages no good Cause for a new Writ of Enquiry 2 Demand Requisite or not requisite 89 Departure in Pleading V. 43 44 227 289. Depositions V. Tit. Evidence Debt For Rent upon a Lease for years 3 Debt upon a Bond against two Executors they pleaded a Statute acknowledged by the Testator of 1200 li. and no assets ultra c. the Plaintiff replies That one of the Executors was bound together with the Plaintiff in that Statute 165 Devise Of a term for years V. Limitation of Estates By a Devise of all a man's Estate what passeth 100 I give Rees-Farm to my Wife during her natural life and by her to be disposed of to such of my Children as she shall think fit What Estate passeth hereby 189 A man has a Son called Robert Robert has likewise a Son call'd Robert The Grand-Father deviseth Land to his Son call'd Robert and his heirs Robert the Devisee dies living the Father The Devisor makes a new publication of the same Will and declares it to be his intention that Robert the Grand-Child should take the Land per eandem voluntat Does the Grand-Child take or no 267 268 A man deviseth a Rent-Charge to his Wife for her life but that if she marry that then his Executor shall pay her 100 l. and the rent shall cease and return to the Executor she does marry and the Executor does not pay the 100 l. The question is Whether the Rent shall cease before the 100 l. be paid or not 272 273 Distribution Administrators must make Distribution to those of the half-blood as well as to those of the whole 209 Donative V. 11 12 22 90. Double Plea V. 18 227. E. Ecclesiastical persons A Chapter of which there is no Dean is restrain'd by the Statute of 13 Eliz. 204 A Grant of next avoidance restrain'd ibid. Such Grant void ab initio ibid. Ejectione firmae De quatuor molendinis good Of so many Acres jampnor ' bruere without saying how many of each good 90 The Plaintiff in Ejectment dies before Judgment 252 Entry to deliver a Declaration in Ejectione firmae shall not work to avoid a Fine 10 Error A Writ of Error will lie in the Exchequer-Chamber upon a Judgment in a Scire facias grounded upon a Judgment in one of the Actions mentioned in 27 Eliz. 79 It shall not be assign'd for Error of Judgment in an inferior Court that the matter arose out the Jurisdiction but it must be pleaded 81 Escape V. 116. A Trial at Bar upon an Escape In an Action for an Escape the Defendant pleads That he let the Prisoner to bail according to the Stat. of 23 H. 6. cap. 10. and that he had taken reasonable Sureties of persons having sufficicient c. The Plaintiff replies and traverseth the sufficiency of the Sureties 227 Estoppel By the condition of a Bond. 113 Exchange of Lands Two women seized one of one Acre and another of another and they make an exchange then one of them marries before entry shall that defeat the exchange 91 Excise The Statute for Excise prohibits the bringing of a Certiorari but not Habeas Corpus 103 Executors V. Costs V. Appearance In what order Executors are to pay Debts c. 174 175 Executor dur ' minor ' aetate 174 175 An Executor must entitle himself to the Executorship to enable him to retain for his own debt 208 An Executors refusal before the Ordinary after Administration is a void act 213 Action of Debt against an Executor the Defendant pleads That the Testator made a Will but did not make him Executor therein that he
had bona notab in divers Diocesses and the Archbishop of Canterbury committed Administration to the Defendant and concludes in Bar. V. Divers exceptions taken to the Plea 239 V. Administrators Evidence V. Copy A suspension of a rent may be given in Evidence upon nil debet pleaded 35 118 Evidence of a Deed. 94 An Action of Debt brought upon an Escape May a fresh Suit be given in Evidence upon nil debet pleaded 116 Copies and Exemplifications allowed to be given in Evidence when the Originals are burnt 117 Pleinment administer pleaded Payment of some Debts c. and delivering over the residue of the personal Estate to the Infant Executor when he comes of age may be given in Evidence 174 In an Action of Assumpsit grounded upon a Promise in Law payment may be given in Evidence not where the Action is grounded upon an express Promise 210 Hear-says how far allowable in Evidence 283 Depositions in Chancery allow'd to be read 283 284 F. False Imprisonment IN an Action of false Imprisonment the Defendant Justifies by vertue of a Warrant out of a Court within the County Palatine of Durham V. 170 171 172. several exceptions to the pleading The Defendant in false Imprisonment justifies by vertue of an Order of the Court of Chancery nought 272 Felony To cut down Corn and carry it away at the same time is no Felony But to cut it down and lay it by and carry it away afterwards is Felony 89 Feme sole Merchant V. 26. Fieri facias The Sheriff may execute a Writ of Fieri facias upon the Goods of the Defendant in the hands of his Administrator he dying after the Teste of the Writ and before Execution 188 Fine V. Ejectione firmae An interest for years in what Cases bar'd by a Fine and in what not 217 Fishing Common and several Pischary and fishing in publick and in private Rivers 105 106 Forcible Entry Enditement of forcible Entry 73 Forfeiture A man settles a term in trust for himself during his life and afterwards in trust for several of his Friends provided that if he have any issue of his body at the time of his death the trust shall cease and the assignment be to the use of such issue provided also that if he be minded to change the Uses that he may have power so to do by writing in the presence of two or more Witnesses or by his last Will. Then he commits Treason and is attainted by Act of Parliament and dies having issue Male at the time of his death but without making any revocation of the Uses of this settlement no more of this term is forfeited than during his own life only 16 17 38 39 40 Forma Pauperis A man that is admitted in Forma pauperis is not to have a new Trial nor is suffer'd to remove an Action out of an inferior Court 268 Formedon in Descender Exceptions to the Count. 219 220 Foreign Attachment Whether or no is a Debt due to a Corporation within the Custom of Foreign Attachment 212 Fraudulent Conveyance A Deed may be voluntary and yet not fraudulent V. 119 G. Gager de Ley. A Man cannot wage his Law in an Action brought upon a Prescription for a duty 121 Gardian Infant Tenant in a Common Recovery is admitted by Gardian ad sequendum whether that be Error or not 48 49 Gavelkind A Rent de novo granted out of Gavelkind-land shall descend according to the descent of the Land 96 97 c. Grant le Roy. V. 195 196 c. H. Habeas Corpus WHat time to plead has the party that comes in upon a Habeas Corpus 1 Habeas Corpus to remove one out of the Cinque-Ports 20 V. Excise Though the Return be filed the Court of Kings Bench may remand or commit the Prisoner to the Marshalsey at their Election 144 A Member of the House of Lords committed by the House for a Contempt cannot be set at liberty the Court of Kings Bench upon a Habeas Corpus be the Cause of his Commitment what it will 144 145 146 c. Habeas Corpus though returnable two days after the end of the Term yet ties up the inferior Court 195 Whether does a Habeas corpus ad subjiciendum lie in Court of Common Pleas 235 Heir Two Actions of Debt against an Heir upon two several Obligations of his Ancestor The Plaintiff in the second Action obtains Judgment first and whether shall be first satisfied 253 I. Jeoffails WAnt of an averment helpt after Verdict 14 V. 199 Inclosures Inquisition upon the Statute against pulling down Inclosures 66 Indebitatus assumpsit Indebitat assumpsit pro opere facto lies well enough 8 For money received of the Plaintiff by one Thomas Buckner by the appointment and to the use of the Defendant Good after a Verdict 42 Lies not against the Executors of a Treasurer of Sub-Treasurer of a Church or the like 163 An Action is brought upon an indebitat assumpsit and quantum meruit the Defendant pleads That the Plaintiff and himself accounted together and that the Plaintiff in consideration that the Defendant promised to pay him what was found due to him upon the foot of the Account discharged him of all former Contracts 205 206. and held to be a good Plea Indebitat assumpsit will not lie upon a Bill of Exchange accepted 285 286 Indebit assumpsit for Wares sold and no Evidence given of an agreement for the price 295 Indictment An Act of Parliament creates a new Offence and appoints other ways of proceeding than by Endictment yet if there are no negative words an Indictment lies 34 Indictment for these words viz. When ever a Burgess of Hull puts on his Gown Satan enters into him 35 Moved to quash an Inditement because the year of our Lord in the caption was in figures 78 Infant A man declares That the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff would let him take so much of his Grass promised c. held to be good Consideration though the Plaintiff were an Infant 25 V. tit Appearance V. tit Apprentice V. tit Recovery V. tit Notice Information An Information does not lie against a Lord for taking unreasonable Distresses of several of his Tenants 71 288 V. tit Recusants Intendments V. 67. Issue V. 72. Judge No Action upon the Case lies against a Judge upon a wrongful commitment 184 185 Juries If a Knight be but return'd on a Jury when a Peer is concern'd it 's not material whether he appear and give his Verdict or no 226 L. Labourers AN Enditement for retaining a Servant without a Testimonial from his last Master quasht for imperfection 78 Lease A Licence to enjoy till such a time whether it be a Lease or no and how to be pleaded 14 15 Uncertain limitations and impossible limitations of commencements of Leases 180 A Bishops Lease good upon which the whole rent is reserved upon part of what was accustomably demised 203 204 Libel V. 58. Limitation V. Condition